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🎂 A night birthday party… on a boat, in the middle of the Mekong?Last night, it actually happened.We cruised through Can...
13/04/2026

🎂 A night birthday party… on a boat, in the middle of the Mekong?

Last night, it actually happened.

We cruised through Can Tho at night, stopped by the walking street for a bit of local life, then headed back to the river — dinner, lights, and a small surprise waiting.

A birthday celebration, right on the water. 🎉
Simple, unexpected, and honestly… pretty special.

Happy Birthday again to our lovely guest — thank you for choosing to spend your night with us. 💚

And to everyone who joined, thank you for the great energy.
With Homey, sometimes it’s more than just a tour — it’s a moment.

📞 Hotline: (+84) 966 381 848
🌐 www.homeytravel.com





IN A VIETNAMESE HOUSE, WHY DOES EVERY CORNER HAVE A GOD?In the Mekong Delta, a house is not just for the living. It is s...
08/04/2026

IN A VIETNAMESE HOUSE, WHY DOES EVERY CORNER HAVE A GOD?

In the Mekong Delta, a house is not just for the living. It is shared with a small system of deities - each one quietly placed in a different corner.

There is a god for the land by the door, one for the ancestors inside, and one in the kitchen who watches everything that happens in the family.

These beliefs have existed for generations, and over time, they have become more than rituals. They shape how people behave.

If a god is believed to be watching, people become more careful - in what they say, how they treat each other, and how they live day to day. Not out of fear, but out of a quiet awareness that nothing is completely unseen.

To understand a Vietnamese home, especially in the Mekong, you don’t just look at the space.
You look at the invisible presence within it.

1. Altar of Heaven (Bàn Thờ Trời)

Often placed outside the house, usually in the front yard, this small altar is dedicated to Heaven (Ông Trời).
It is usually very simple - just a small pedestal under the open sky with incense and a cup of water.
People come here to show respect to the highest power, asking for good weather, peace, and protection.
Because it stands without a roof, it creates a direct connection between the family and the sky above.

2. Ancestor Altar (Bàn Thờ Gia Tiên)

Inside the house, the ancestor altar is usually the most important one.
It holds photos or memorial tablets of family members who have passed away. Offerings such as fruit, tea, or incense are placed here on special days.
Ancestors are not seen as distant spirits, but as part of the family - still present, still watching over the next generations.

3. God of Wealth and Earth God (Thần Tài - Thổ Địa)

Near the entrance, many homes place a small altar for:
• Thần Tài (God of Wealth) – linked to money and business
• Thổ Địa (Earth God) – the spirit who guards the land

These altars are usually close to the ground, with small statues, incense, and simple offerings.
For shop owners and small businesses, this is one of the most active altars in daily life.

4. The Kitchen Gods (Ông Táo)

In the kitchen lives Ông Táo, the Kitchen Gods.
They are believed to observe daily family life — especially what happens around meals and inside the home.
At the end of the lunar year, he return to heaven to report what they have seen.
Because of this, the kitchen is not just a place to cook, but a place where family life is quietly “recorded”.

5. Personal Guardian Deity (Thần Bổn Mạng)

In traditional belief, each person is thought to be protected by a personal deity or Bodhisattva throughout their life.
When people marry, families may consult to identify a shared guardian, believed to bring harmony and balance.
In many Mekong households, this belief appears through “Male guardian – Female guardian”:
• Male guardian is simple, placed at the center of the ancestor altar
• Female guardian is more decorative, with small symbolic items like a mirror or comb
Together, they represent the balance of masculine and feminine forces in family life.
This practice is usually maintained until around the age of sixty, when a ritual is performed to return these worship items to a local shrine, marking the end of this spiritual stage.

⸻ Follow Homey to read more about Mekong!
📞 Hotline: (+84) 966 381 848
🌐 www.homeytravel.com

Thank you for joining our Con Son Island TourA romantic trip… From watching the famous flying snakehead fish, walking th...
04/04/2026

Thank you for joining our Con Son Island Tour

A romantic trip…
From watching the famous flying snakehead fish, walking through fruit gardens, visiting floating fish farms,
to trying com no together — simple things, but somehow so fun.

See you again on another Mekong adventure!

📞 Hotline: (+84) 966 381 848
🌐 www.homeytravel.com







02/04/2026

❌ Being served dinner
✅ Cooking your own dinner

From visiting the local market and preparing the ingredients to enjoying the final meal — a simple experience, but very “Mekong”.

Join our Cooking Class in Can Tho with us!

📞 Hotline: (+84) 966 381 848
🌐 www.homeytravel.com

🚲🍳 One of our favorite experiences in Can ThoStart the journey with a bicycle tour through local villages, then finish t...
31/03/2026

🚲🍳 One of our favorite experiences in Can Tho

Start the journey with a bicycle tour through local villages, then finish the day in the kitchen — cooking and sharing a Mekong meal together.

It’s simple, fun, and very local.

Thank you to our lovely guests for joining the experience with Homey Travel. We’re happy to be part of your Mekong memories. 💚

This activity is available regularly in Can Tho if you’d like to explore the Mekong in a more authentic way.

📞 Hotline: (+84) 966 381 848
🌐 www.homeytravel.com






💦 Wait… Thailand has Songkran?Can Tho has something wilder.If you think water splashing only happens in Thailand’s New Y...
01/03/2026

💦 Wait… Thailand has Songkran?
Can Tho has something wilder.

If you think water splashing only happens in Thailand’s New Year festival…
you haven’t seen Tong On Festival in the Mekong Delta.

TOMORROW, on the 14th day of Lunar January, locals gather at Mieu Ba Xom Chai in CAN THO for a river ritual that is both spiritual and surprisingly fun.

Tong On is not just about prayers.
It’s about sending bad luck away.

Fishing communities in the Mekong have practiced this ritual for generations. Between the 12th–14th lunar days, they perform ceremonies for peace, offer prayers to local deities and ancestors, then parade a symbolic “Tong On boat” through the neighborhood before releasing it into the Hau River at an auspicious hour.

The idea?
Let the river carry away everything unlucky from the old year.

And yes… sometimes people splash water.
Sometimes drums beat loudly.
Sometimes lion dancers appear.

You might come to observe quietly.
You might leave completely soaked.

It’s not a show.
It’s not staged for tourists.
It’s a living river tradition — raw, loud, meaningful, and very Mekong.

📍 Can Tho City
📅 14th day of Lunar January or March 2nd of Solar Calendar.

If you’re lucky enough to be here during this time, don’t just watch from the shore. Step in. The river always welcomes you.

📞 Hotline: (+84) 966 381 848
🌐 www.homeytravel.com










03/02/2026

A Morning at Cai Rang Market

The market wakes up fast.
Motorbikes, voices, baskets of vegetables moving in every direction — all at once.

For visitors, it feels unfamiliar at first.
No clear path, no pauses. You find your way by following the crowd, learning the rhythm step by step.

Everything looks too fresh.
Meat just cut. Greens still wet from the river. Fruit stacked without labels, without prices — only trust and habit.

This is Cai Rang in the morning.
Busy, raw, and very much alive.

📍 Cai Rang, Can Tho

📞 Hotline: (+84) 966 381 848
🌐 Website: www.homeytravel.com






26/01/2026

Mekong Cool Driver 😎🚤

It’s about feeling the flow, sharing a few laughs,
and becoming part of Mekong life — even just for a moment.

Simple. Real. Unforgettable. 🌊🌴

✨ Experiences you don’t just watch — you live them.








The Fish That Gets Bitten by MosquitoesThe mudskipper has been listed as one of the six strangest animals on Earth — and...
15/01/2026

The Fish That Gets Bitten by Mosquitoes

The mudskipper has been listed as one of the six strangest animals on Earth — and honestly, it deserves the title.

It lives mainly in mangrove forests and coastal mudflats in southern Vietnam. At first glance, the mudskipper already looks… suspicious. Its bulging eyes sit high on its head, as if someone glued two marbles on top and called it a fish.

But the real weirdness goes far beyond appearances. Scientists have discovered that the mudskipper’s front fins have evolved into weight-bearing limbs, allowing it to walk on land, jump, and then casually return to the water to swim — which it still does surprisingly well.

Breathing on land? Also not a problem. Before leaving the water, the mudskipper stores moisture in its gills, and its skin can absorb oxygen, letting it stay out of water for extended periods and even wander farther inland than most fish would ever dare.

Experts estimate that it took around 300 million years of evolution for the mudskipper to achieve this level of amphibious perfection — the unbelievable ability to move freely and hunt on land.

And yet, after all that evolutionary effort, there is one enemy it never saw coming.

Mosquitoes.

Yes.
Mudskippers get bitten by mosquitoes.

Three hundred million years of evolution — and still no hands to swat them.

If only the mudskipper had evolved arms.

💚 Homey Travel
🌐 www.homeytravel.com | 📞 (+84) 966 381 848

💚 Thank You for Choosing Homey Travel!Thank you for traveling with us and for the kind words!We’re happy you enjoyed the...
14/01/2026

💚 Thank You for Choosing Homey Travel!

Thank you for traveling with us and for the kind words!
We’re happy you enjoyed the tour — and for sure…
handsome guides always is a part of the Homey package 😉😆 (may be number 1 of Mekong)

Hope to see you again soon —
for another great tour… and maybe another handsome guide 😄🚤

💚 Homey Travel
🌐 www.homeytravel.com | 📞 (+84) 966 381 848


🦀 Catching Clams, Mekong StyleShoes off. Pants rolled up.Hands in the mud — and lots of laughter.Catching clams isn’t ab...
07/01/2026

🦀 Catching Clams, Mekong Style

Shoes off. Pants rolled up.
Hands in the mud — and lots of laughter.

Catching clams isn’t about skill,
it’s about getting dirty, having fun,
and living a moment like the locals do.

Mud, smiles, and a memory you won’t forget. 😄

📍 Mekong Delta
💚 Homey Travel
🌐 www.homeytravel.com | 📞 (+84) 966 381 848







04/01/2026

🌙 Evening River Experience in Can Tho

A relaxed evening on the river —
starting with a small boat ride from our homestay into the city,
a walk through the night market for street food and local vibes,
then cruising back under the lights of Can Tho Bridge.

Dinner on the boat, river breeze, lantern reflections —
simple moments, good company, and a beautiful night in Can Tho.

Thank you to our lovely guests for joining this special evening with us.
See you again on the river. 💚

💚 Homey Travel
🌐 www.homeytravel.com | 📞 (+84) 966 381 848









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Can Tho
900000

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