If you're thinking of where to have coffee in Hanoi, go to the cafe which is home to the White-eye Bird Club. Locals know the place well, a street cafe near Thien Quang Lake, a very tranquil place to have your morning coffee. But as soon as the bird owners come with their birds in cages, the tranquility is replaced by a symphony of birds who had been trained by their owners to sing. Birds love to sing in a company so they tweet their hearts out as their owners share stories with their coffee.
We read about this place in the Vietnam Airlines Heritage Magazine and so we headed to this place. Many people in Hanoi love to raise birds. They have cages in their homes and in their stores. They take care of these birds, choose them very well and train them to sing. Their favourite is the white-eyed bird as they have strong voices, a competitive spirit and their songs seem to last longer. We saw this competitive spirit in one of the birds. The owner hanged the cage on a hanger on a tree close by and not on the string where all the other cages were. The bird was not happy. It was jumping up and down trying to tell its owner that it wants to be closer to the others.
You should see some of the bird cages for these birds. For serious collectors, they pay up to $10,000 for some of the old and well-designed ones made of ivory, tortoise shells, exotic wood, or other horns. The competition does not stay with cages. They go into the bird food holder they call the "coong" which must match the cages well. One "coong" made of elephant tusk can cost you over a thousand dollars.
Caring for these birds is not easy. Our friend's husband has to wake up very early to clean the cage, bath his birds and feed them. To bathe them they are transferred into a bathing cage so they can be bathed without holding in your hands.
Training them to sing requires time, patience and sensitivity. Those who are serious about their birds say they don't anymore travel for long holidays as their birds require full-time attention. To keep the birds on their singing, bird owners bring them to friend's house or to this cafe so they can compete with the bird having the most range, variations in tones and even the ability to change voices to mimic the other birds as the winner.
View Other Posts on Hanoi:
Hoan Kiem Lake
West Lake
We read about this place in the Vietnam Airlines Heritage Magazine and so we headed to this place. Many people in Hanoi love to raise birds. They have cages in their homes and in their stores. They take care of these birds, choose them very well and train them to sing. Their favourite is the white-eyed bird as they have strong voices, a competitive spirit and their songs seem to last longer. We saw this competitive spirit in one of the birds. The owner hanged the cage on a hanger on a tree close by and not on the string where all the other cages were. The bird was not happy. It was jumping up and down trying to tell its owner that it wants to be closer to the others.
You should see some of the bird cages for these birds. For serious collectors, they pay up to $10,000 for some of the old and well-designed ones made of ivory, tortoise shells, exotic wood, or other horns. The competition does not stay with cages. They go into the bird food holder they call the "coong" which must match the cages well. One "coong" made of elephant tusk can cost you over a thousand dollars.
Caring for these birds is not easy. Our friend's husband has to wake up very early to clean the cage, bath his birds and feed them. To bathe them they are transferred into a bathing cage so they can be bathed without holding in your hands.
Training them to sing requires time, patience and sensitivity. Those who are serious about their birds say they don't anymore travel for long holidays as their birds require full-time attention. To keep the birds on their singing, bird owners bring them to friend's house or to this cafe so they can compete with the bird having the most range, variations in tones and even the ability to change voices to mimic the other birds as the winner.
View Other Posts on Hanoi:
Hoan Kiem Lake
West Lake
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