May- Rice fields month

Every year, the Meo people in the program only grow one rice crop and harvest it in September. That's why, every time we enter May, the last rays of spring sunshine prepare to give way to the summer sunshine. When it's fierce, it's also the time when heavy rains pour down, and water from the high fields pours into the lower fields, forming a giant and endless water tower stretching from one mountain range to another.

During this month, Hagiang easy riders team will take you to see  a magnificent picture of the northern mountains and forests created by the farmers here. The blend of layers of flooded terraced fields on the green background of mountains and hills promises to be a majestic, "unique" scene that attracts many photographers and professional backpackers.
 
 
During the tour, The Hagiang easy riders will take visitors stand from the highest position looking down at the small rice fields on each layer of the terraced fields in the rainy season, admiring their majestic beauty. Somewhere are the shapes of hard-working farmers, each person per field, plowing the land - leading water from the top of the mountain to the fields - bringing water together in ditches to flood the fields. From high to low, each floor, each layer going down to the lowest fields.
 
 
During the trip in May, the scenery looked more majestic than ever but also as soft and flexible as other months. That's why, each time the schedule wears a different shirt, but in general, each shirt is beautiful and unique.
 
During the wet seasons, the Meo people in the rocky plateau not only grow rice but also grow corn. During heavy rains, the corn strips grow as fast as they blow. The Meo people have surprised tourists as well as people from far away with their ingenuity and dexterity in growing corn fields on rock holes that are still lush and green. Falling water season is also the moment when the weather is very cool and comfortable when showers can suddenly pour down like a teenage girl. This is considered an ideal place to stay for those who want to temporarily get away from the dust and heat of the city.
 
 
The joy of the ethnic people here is very simple, it is not elaborate or rich like the prosperous urban land in the capital, but simply joy when the harvest is good and they have enough to eat. , something to wear until next season. That's why the Meo people "research" very meticulously, how to manage the water in the field just enough to sow seeds in the flooding season, and when to drain the water so that the rice sticks to the soil and germinates.
 
 
When the water falls, people here eagerly go to work in the fields to bring water to distant fields or when it rains to work in the fields. Along with rainwater, they connect bamboo pipes from the mountains to bring water into the fields to help soak the soil before sowing seeds.
 
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