Sơn La: Fall in Love with the Dazzling To Day Blossoms Bursting Across Nam Nghiep’s Hills

Nậm Nghiệp Village, Son La: Dazzling Pink Tớ Dày Blossoms Paint the Northwest Mountains, Heralding Spring's Return
The Tớ Dày flower season paints the mountains pink
This season, across the high altitudes of Nậm Nghiệp Village, Ngọc Chiến Commune, Mường La District, Sơn La Province, the wild cherry blossoms, locally known as 'Tớ Dày' flowers, are once again in vibrant bloom, with beautiful clusters swaying in the wind. These wild cherry trees grow naturally, becoming a highlight that attracts much attention from both locals and tourists who come to admire the flowers.
Nậm Nghiệp Village is situated at an altitude of 2500m above sea level, boasting the coolest climate in Mường La District. It is home to 100 households of the Black H'Mông ethnic group, who have lived here for generations.
The H'Mông people in the Northwest region are very fond of wild cherry blossoms, also known as 'Tớ Dày' flowers, because they symbolize the spirit of the Northwest mountains and forests, embodying much of the H'Mông community's soul and way of life. 'Pẳng Tớ Dầy,' the name of this flower, was also given by the H'Mông people. Particularly, in the minds of the H'Mông community in Sơn La specifically, and the Northwest in general, the blooming of Tớ Dày flowers signals the arrival of spring.

Nậm Nghiệp Village, Ngọc Chiến Commune, Mường La District, Sơn La Province, is blanketed in the pink hues of wild cherry blossoms.
When Tớ Dày flowers burst into bloom across the forests, they add vibrant color to the majestic highlands, illuminating the mountains, hills, and villages as if they've donned a new coat. At this time, nature enters a season of harmony, growth, and new life, and people also step into spring with abundant joy, dreams, and hope.
Tớ Dày is a woody tree species with a wide canopy, growing on hillsides, mountain slopes, or deep valleys, in high-altitude areas hundreds of meters above sea level, where the climate is harsh throughout the year, with fluctuating and distinct temperature differences.

The pretty pink color of the cherry blossoms adorns a corner of the village.
Tớ Dày flowers, also known as wild cherry blossoms, typically bloom around the H'Mông ethnic community's Tết (New Year), a few months before the Kinh people's Tết. They reach their peak bloom about a month before the Lunar New Year. When the Tớ Dày flowers are in full bloom, it's also the time when H'Mông young men and women in the sunny, windy, and misty highlands call out to each other to attend festivals and celebrate spring.

Tớ Dày flowers belong to the peach blossom family. The H'Mông people in Mù Cang Chải often call them 'pằng tớ dầy,' which translates to 'wild cherry blossoms' in Vietnamese. The flowers typically bloom at the end of the year and last until the end of the Lunar New Year.
Tớ Dày trees typically grow in high mountainous regions. Interestingly, they only produce abundant buds, many flowers, and their characteristic vibrant color when growing in areas with harsh climate and weather conditions.
In September and October, Tớ Dày trees begin to shed their leaves, channeling sap and nutrients to the tender young shoots and flower buds just emerging on their slender, bare branches.
By November, the tree's energy, refined and conserved during hot sunny days and cold rainy periods, concentrates and accumulates in each young shoot and flower bud.
By late December, as the weather turns cold, the wild cherry blossom hills of Nậm Nghiệp Village begin to show their colors, with hundreds of trees bursting into bloom, creating a wonderfully vibrant spectacle. Then, when the sun shines, the young shoots and flower buds, having been nurtured by the gentle early spring rains, will race to bloom as if awakening from a long slumber.
Both the Tớ Dày flowers and young shoots emerge and grow simultaneously. However, at this stage, the tender leaves on the branches are still small and have a glossy brown hue, which is overshadowed by the delicate pink of the petals and the vibrant red of the stamens, clustered together to dominate the scene with their brilliant colors, adorning the landscape.

Midway up the mountain, where the H'Mông Nậm Nghiệp village is nestled, the vibrant red and pink hues of the Tớ Dày flowers can be seen everywhere.
Tớ Dày flowers not only possess the wild beauty of the Northwest mountains and forests but also embody a simple, pure, and elegant charm.
Compared to traditional peach blossoms, Tớ Dày flowers have a deeper, more vibrant color, adorned with long red stamens. From the moment they bud and begin to bloom, Tớ Dày flowers bring a joyful signal, a message to the H'Mông communities in the highlands and mountainous regions: a new spring is arriving. Despite such a poetic and magnificent landscape, very few people know about the wild cherry blossom hills in Nậm Nghiệp.

Tớ Dày flowers grow on woody trees and only bloom at altitudes above 1,000 meters above sea level.
Tớ Dày flowers, or wild cherry blossoms, blanket every path in pink. These cherry blossoms are like the rosy cheeks of the locals each winter, reflecting the gentle and cheerful spirit of the indigenous people welcoming distant visitors, making tourists fall even more in love with this land.

Tớ Dày flowers have five delicate pink petals with long red stamens, forming large, vibrant clusters on slender, tall, and wide-canopied trees.
If you're looking for a place to admire the beauty of this flower, Nậm Nghiệp is definitely a destination you shouldn't miss. The rustic charm and tranquility of this beautiful Northwest region are major draws, allowing visitors to immerse themselves in nature and capture 'million-like' photos.

Wild cherry blossoms are also known as 'Tớ Dày' flowers because Tớ Dày flowers symbolize the mountains and forests of the Northwest.
In the 'highlands' of Nậm Nghiệp Village, surrounded by mountains and forests, the Tớ Dày flower season is in full bloom, as if beckoning visitors. People's spirits also become more vibrant as they step into spring, the season of love and festivals.
For 'travelers' from the lowlands who get to admire this 'endemic' flower of the Northwest mountains, their hearts will feel calm, and their homesickness will lessen in the presence of the pristine beauty of the Tớ Dày flowers.
Son La 5031 view
Update day : 16/12/2023
Source : vanhoavaphattrien.vn Affiliate links
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