CAMBODIA'S FORMER KING NORODOM SIHANOUK DIES IN BEIJING

CAMBODIA'S FORMER KING NORODOM SIHANOUK DIES IN BEIJING

VIVIAN ZHANG XINYU RELEASES NEW PHOTOSHOOT

Hot model Zhang Xinyu (also known as Vivian Zhang) has a new photoshoot released.

CAMBODIAN AUTHORITIES TO DEPORT PIRATE BAY CO-FOUNDER

Gottfrid Svartholm Warg (L) and Peter Sundin from Pirate Bay in Stockholm, on February 15, 2009, give their views on the eve of their trial. Cambodian authorities have agreed to deport Warg from the country today.

TURNING THE MEDIA TIDE IN MYANMAR

Information Minister U Aung Kyi during the interview at the Myanmar Radio and Television offices in Yangon on Sunday.

KHMER GIRL: WORKERS WAITING FOR A BARGAIN

GAngkor Beer promoters strike last year in Phnom Penh. Informal workers, a class that includes beer promoters, tuk tuk drivers and farmers, are among those who stand to benefit most from the upcoming trade-union law, observers say – and workers say it can’t come soon enough.


Showing posts with label Culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Culture. Show all posts

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Culture-Cows snub rice at ceremony

Prince Norodom Chakravuth is carried by attendants at the start of the Royal Ploughing

The predictions are in: corn and beans. That’s what Cambodian farmers should plant this season, according to yesterday’s bovine oracle that is the traditional Royal Ploughing Ceremony. The annual ceremony, held in front of Phnom Penh’s National Museum beside the Royal Palace, marks the beginning of agricultural production and the rainy season. King Norodom Sihamoni and National Assembly president Heng Samrin presided over the ceremony that was also attended by Prince Norodom Chakravuth and Princess Sisowath Chansita, who wore brightly coloured traditional Khmer costumes to mark the occasion. After about an hour of ceremonial ploughing on a grassy field, a pair of Royal Oxen doubled down on corn and beans, overlooking other offerings such as sesame and rice. Also snubbed was wine, which, if consumed, portends disaster for crops. The Royal Oxen also ate grass, which the Royal Palace’s soothsayer said indicated that cows, buffalo and horses may face diseases over the coming season. The soothsayer didn’t forget to give a nod to other external factors that might influence crop growth. “We would like to pray that the rain and weather will be regular and will bring high production of agriculture,” he said. The oxens’ choice made 52-year-old farmer Em Panha “worried that rice production this year might be not good enough because the oxen did not eat rice – maybe there will be flooding in the coming planting season”.
(Source:PhnomPenhPost)