The festival, celebrated annually by the Tay ethnic minority people in the province on the eighth day of the lunar New Year, is a religious ritual dedicated to the god of agriculture to win his blessing for verdant crops and prosperity for villagers throughout the year.

It consists of an offering ritual, a ploughing ceremony and folk games.

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Ploughing ceremony at the festival

When the offerings are ready, a shaman deferentially recites prayers in the Tay dialect, inviting gods and goddesses to the rite and asking for their blessing for the village to have bumper crops and growing herds of cattle and be freed from diseases and misfortune.

The offering ritual is followed by the ploughing ceremony, in which the festival host leads a carefully selected male buffalo to make the first furrows of the year. In Tay belief, villagers will get good luck and yield bumper crops throughout the year if this buffalo makes straight furrows.

Then comes the most exciting part of the festival, folk games, central to which is nem con (throwing con (cloth ball) through the ring on the top of the con pole). Other games in the festival include tug of war, blind man’s bluff and yen playing (a game similar to badminton, but played between a man and a woman).

Long Tong is the most typical festival of the Tay, a big ethnic minority group living in the Northern mountain region with a population of over 1.6 million.

The festival was named national intangible cultural heritage in 2013.

Source: VNA