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On the 30th of Tet, the streets of Hanoi were much quieter than before, only the kumquat and peach streets were crowded. Pictured is Nguyen Van Tu (Chuong My district, Hanoi) standing selling kumquat on Lac Long Quan Street. He said that the kumquat tree has been sold here for 10 days, but still 60% of the kumquat root still has no buyers, even though the price is half cheaper than last year – Photo: KHUONG XUAN
A kumquat vendor on Hoang Hoa Tham Street is trying to persuade customers to buy very beautiful kumquat trees for only a few hundred thousand to sell. Small flower traders said that because of COVID-19, the price of Tet bonsai is cheap, there are very few people who go to see Tet – Photo: KHUONG XUAN
At Au Co Flower Street, Ms. Hoi and Ms. La are trying to sell the last peach branches from the family’s Nhat Tan peach field. The two women said that due to a warm year this year, the peaches bloom early and the prices are very cheap. A bunch of chopped peaches costs only VND 20,000 and a large branch, Ms. Hoi, sells for VND 300,000, but no one buys – Photo: KHUONG XUAN
Ms. La said that only 30% of her own peaches have been sold since the beginning of the harvest. The unsold numbers still flourish in the field. Today, 30 days of Tet, the two women tried to sit on the dike to sell all the excavations to take out and then return home to worship their ancestors – Photo: KHUONG XUAN
On Tet 30, only fresh flowers, selling old coriander trees, seem crowded. However, this year’s flowers are also quite cheap compared to other years due to the COVID-19 epidemic. In the photo, a woman sells packets of old essences on Nghia Tan street for people to buy to plug in or heat for bathing, priced at 20,000 – 30,000 VND / large pack – Photo: KHUONG XUAN
On the morning of the 30th Lunar New Year, Mr. Linh, a homeowner at 275 Au Co Street, spent the entire morning moving a truck of smelly white chrysanthemums in front of his house. Linh said: “In front of my house is the night flower market in Hanoi, right next to it is the Quang An flower market. These days, trucks carry a lot of flowers on the street. These days they stack flowers without selling them. So I left the flower carriage in front of my house that stunk “- Photo: KHUONG XUAN
The owner of the house on 275 Au Co Street (Hanoi) spends the morning of the 30th of Tet to throw away the pile of white chrysanthemums that smell bad in front of the house because the florist cannot sell for what he has 3 days left – Video: KHUONG XUAN
Mr. Linh threw every bouquet of smelly white chrysanthemums on the road to Au Co Dam, waited for the sun to dry for the flowers to dry, and then burned them. If you don’t move, the pile of flowers as tall as a mountain of language in front of your house will smell stinky during the Tet holidays – Photo: KHUONG XUAN
Although it was only 30 years old, its owners dumped hundreds of unsold peach branches on the Au Co. dike road. By late afternoon, most of the kumquat pots, which are not exhausted, will be left on the street. Mr. Dinh, a kumquat on Lac Long Quan Street, said: “If we can’t sell, we have to put down the money, but rent a car to take the kumquat to the garden.” – Photo: KHUONG XUAN
The bus station is quiet because people have returned to their places of origin or have stood still in Hanoi against COVID-19.
Inside the My Dinh bus station on the morning of the 30th of the New Year, not a single person passed – Photo: KHUONG XUAN
The scene outside the My Dinh bus station on the morning of Tet Solo 30 there were a few passengers waiting to catch the last bus to return home. Even outside the bus station gate on Pham Hung Street, the gripping drivers’ force was many times more crowded than the passengers arriving at the bus station – Photo: KHUONG XUAN