Thursday, August 16, 2012

Vietnamese Food

Increasingly famous worldwide with restaurants sprawled over the globe, yet no Vietnamese food abroad can equal in flavor or quality to that made in Vietnam itself. In brief, Vietnamese cuisine depends heavily on rice grown in water paddies throughout the country, with dishes varying from simple everyday meals to most complex dishes designed for the King. Reaching a balance between fresh herbs and meats; as well as a selective use of spices to reach a fine taste, Vietnamese food can be considered one of the healthiest yet most divine cuisines worldwide.
Spices and ingredients
Vietnam’s ingredients reflect its geography and climate. Rice (grown in water paddies throughout the country) is the main starch used in everyday meals, and is also made into different kind of cakes and noodles. Besides a number of Buddhist vegetarian dishes, most Vietnamese dishes or meals are a combination of a variety of vegetables, herbs and meats.
Common herbs may include lemon grass, lime or kaffir. Popular meats are pork, beef, chicken, prawn and various fish. Lamb, duck, birds, and even dog or other wild animals are also used but not widely. Fish sauce and soy sauce are used as both flavorings and dipping sauces for nearly every dish.
Peanuts are also used widely in Vietnamese cuisine.
Vegetarians and those with allergies should be careful and ask beforehand while enjoying Vietnamese cuisine.
Style of cooking
The Vietnamese cook their food in a variety of ways: deep fry, stir fry, boil, steam. Unlike the Chinese, the Vietnamese use a minimal amount of oil while cooking. Vietnamese cooks aim to preserve the freshness and natural taste of food as much as possible. Hence Vietnamese cuisine is often considered as one of the healthiest foods in the world.
Food of three regions
Like everything else, Vietnamese food also differs geographically from location to location. North Vietnam’s food uses soy sauce, fish sauce and prawn sauce and has many stir fried dishes.
With harsh weather and less developed agriculture than the South, North Vietnamese tend to use less meat, fish and vegetables; and black pepper (instead of chili) to create spice. The taste is strict and less sweet, but more salty than in other regions.
Central Vietnam is distinct in its extreme spices and color of food. Hue’s cuisine, affected by royal cuisine once created for kings and queens, emphasized on quality and quantity – A meal constitutes of many complex dishes served only at small proportions.
Southern Vietnamese are heavily affected by Cambodia, Thai and Chinese cuisines (due to trade and immigrants). Southerners prefer sweet tastes (created by adding sugar or coconut milk) and spicy tastes (created by chili peppers).
A variety of dried fish and sauces originate from the South. Southerners prefer seafood and use simple cooking methods with larger and less servings.
Customs
Influenced by the Chinese, chopsticks and spoons are used in Vietnam. Many foods (such as cakes) are wrapped in banana or coconut leaves. When eating with elders, younger Vietnamese always ask the elders to eat first.
A typical family meal
A typical Vietnamese meal (lunch or dinner) will include steamed rice; a soup dish to eat with rice, a meat or fish dish and a vegetarian dish (either stir fried or boiled).
Vietnamese do not eat in separate servings, but the food is placed in the middle. Each member of the family has a small bowl and chopsticks with which they take food from the table throughout the meal.
Vietnamese noodles and cakes
Besides the typical meal with rice, Vietnamese cuisine has many different types of noodles and cakes (mostly made from rice). To name a few: beef soup noodles (pho), crab noodle (bun rieu), spring rolls (nem), sticky rice cake (chung cake)…


Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Trang An - Bai Dinh Pagoda 1 day

Tour Name: Trang An – Bai Dinh Pagoda Private Tour
Duration:
Full day from Hanoi
8:20: Our tour guide and car pick up at your address to depart for Ninh Binh province (120 Kms).Start tour Trang An – Bai Dinh Pagoda.
10:20: Arrive in Buddha Prayer place in Bai Dinh Pagoda, the biggest pagoda in Vietnam with 500 La Han statues, biggest bronze Buddha statue in Vietnam with 10 meters in height, 100 tons in weight. Have lunch in local restaurant with some local special dishes such as Goat meat with elderberry, pork storage vessel
13:00 Depart to visit Trang An tourist attraction, take boat trip to visit cave complex: Sang Cave, Toi Cave, Ba Giot Cave, Nau Ruou in mystery and wildness, see scenery of mountain and rivers  Ha Long on land of Ninh Binh.
16:00: Getting on the car for returning to Hanoi.
18:00: Back to Hanoi at your address, Trang An – Bai Dinh Pagoda Tour ends.
To enjoy most Trang An – Bai Dinh Pagoda Tour, You should take along with: Long sleeve clothes, hat or umbrella, sun cream, sunglasses, Vietnam dongs

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Ha Long Bay Tour

Travel to Vietnam,Classic Vietnam,Tours in Vietnam,Halong bay tours,Mekong Cruises,Vietnam Muslim tours,Daily Departure,Beach Holiday
Most of travelers choose a tour due to shortage of time and comfortable services. There are many travel agents in Hanoi which offer the Ha Long bay - Cat Ba island tours at different prices. If you search around Hanoi Old Quarter, you will find their price is very competitive. My advice is 1) do a search before you book a tour, and 2) choose a good and reputable company to avoid your trip to be ruined.
The Ha Long bay - Cat Ba island tour price ranges from US$25-US$200 (1-2-3 day tours), depending on quality of the boats and services, number of people on the same tours, overnight on boat or at hotel, kayaking, food, English speaking guide etc. There have been both good and bad comments about the tours. Most of the complaints were about the cheap tours or bad agents that did not provide what they promised and failed to satisfy your expectations. You may end up with many people on the boat, lack of food, low quality of boat and unhappy trip. If you think about the distance you will travel between Hanoi and Ha Long town (approx 300km two ways) by bus, then the costs for boat, food, hotel and entrance tickets, as well as commission that hotel/agent receives, it will be difficult to make a good trip at a very cheap price.
There are some types of tours as follows:
1-day tour: this is a very busy day trip, as your bus ride Hanoi - Ha Long town takes almost 4 hours, then you cruise in the bay for a few hours (including lunch on boat and kayaking if someone likes) then go back to Hanoi (another 4 hours by bus).
2-day tour: there are some options that travel agents will offer you to choose. For example, 2-day tour for only Ha Long bay (overnight at hotel or on boat), 2-day tour for both Ha Long Bay and Cat Ba island (overnight on the island). On the second tour, you will have a very little time on Cat Ba island. When you go there, it's already 5-6pm, just sleep one night at hotel then leave early morning next day, back to Ha Long town by boat.
3-day tour: You will have one day on Cat Ba island, either trekking at national park, or visiting a fishing village, or doing whatever you want.
You can travel on your own, but then you will have to hire a boat for yourself or find some people to share the boat. In my understanding, the travel agents do not want to let independent travelers to join the boat with their tourists. For saving time and convenience, most people choose to go on a package tour.

Tourist route and How to go from A to B

Most of tourists visit the following popular cities/sites:
North: Hanoi, Ha Long Bay, Sapa, Mai Chau, Ninh Binh
Central: Hue, DMZ, Hoi An, Da Lat
South: HCMC, Mekong Delta, Cu Chi Tunnels, Nha Trang, Mui Ne
My advice is that you should spend only one or two days in the big cities like Hanoi or HCMC then get out of it. There are way too many people with millions of motorbikes, plus the noise, air pollution and unorganized traffic in these cities. The beauty of Vietnam is the countryside area and natural landscape.Vietnam has a good transport system and you can easily move around by plane, train, bus, motorbike and cyclo. It takes time to travel on the highways, as the average speed is only 50 km per hour. Depending on your time and interest, you can choose to experience all 3 regions of Vietnam or just one of them.
If you have 7-10 days, I suggest you spend your time in one or two regions. If you have 2-3-4 weeks, you can see all the major sites. However, it takes much time to go from A to B, so you might spend much time on the road. My favorite destinations in Vietnam are Ha Giang, Con Dao islands, Ninh Binh, Mui Ne and Buon Me Thuot.
Following is the major tourist sites from north to south:
1. HANOI - The capital city with many museums, lakes, parks and old French buildings. On 10 October 2010, Hanoi celebrated the 1,000th year anniversary. From the Noi Bai international airport to the city's center (Hoan Kiem lake), the distance is 30km. You can go by taxi, Vietnam Airlines mini bus or public bus. The Old Quarter is the area where you can find cheap hotels, restaurants and travel agents, mainly on Luong Ngoc Quyen st., Hang Bac st., Ma May st., Hang Be st.
2. HA LONG BAY (UNESCO world heritage site with 1,969 islands in the bay): Most people book a 1-2-3 day tour to Ha Long Bay and Cat Ba island (beaches, caves, jungle, fishing villages). You also can go on your own but it's a little more complicated. Please read a separate paragraph below.
3. SAPA (mountain scenery, trekking to villages of the Black H'mong and Red Dzao ethnic minority people): Most people go by overnight train from Hanoi to Lao Cai. You also can go by bus, but it takes a full day. From Lao Cai train station, the distance is 38km to Sapa and 70km to Bac Ha. Most people spend 2 nights on train and 2 days for trekking. You also can book a trekking tour to the summit of the Fansipan mountain (9km from Sapa) with altitude 3,143m which is the highest peak in Indochina.
4. NINH BINH (beautiful countryside, streams, caves, mountains on the rice fields): You can go from Hanoito Ninh Binh by train or tourist bus. If you can afford the costs, then rent a car and driver. There are many sites to visit in this province: Phat Diem stone church, Bai Dinh pagoda,Van Long nature reserve, Trang An nature reserve, Hoa Lu temple, Bich Dong cave, Tam Coc cave, Kenh Ga, Hang Te, and Cuc Phuong national park.
5. MAI CHAU (Thai ethnic minority villages): You can book a 2 day tour to Mai Chau through the agents inHanoi and trek around villages of the Thai people, enjoy the musical and song performance in the evening and sleep on floor of stilt houses. You also can go by local bus from Hanoi (Ha Dong bus station).
6. HUE (the old capital of Vietnam in the 19th century, visit the Imperial Citadel, tombs, cruise along the Perfume river): It's possible to go from Hanoi/Sai Gon/Da Nang to Hue by train, tourist bus or plane (an hour flight). You should spend 2 days in this city, in which half day at the Imperial Citadel, one day to cruise along the Perfume river and visit 3 tombs of the Kings. Cheap hotels, restaurants and travel agents can be found on Hung Vuong street and the nearby area, which is very close to the Perfume river and Truong Tien bridge. You can walk to the citadel and Dong Ba market.
7. DMZ - Demilitarized Zone during the American War (Vinh Moc tunnels, Ben Hai river - the demarcation line from 1954 - 1975, Khe Sanh combat base): You can book this tour in Hue city. The bus leaves Hue city at 6am and you can go back to Hue city at 6pm, or head north from Dong Ha town.
8. HOI AN (UNESCO world heritage site, old town with ancient houses, Japanese bridge): You can travel by bus or train from Hue/Nha Trang to Hoi An. If you fly, the nearest airport is located in Da Nang city, then you go by taxi (30km) to Hoi An. Read my blog about Ba Na hills, Son Tra peninsula and Hoi An: Hội An - Tết 2011 (the Year of the Cat) The distance from Nha Trang to Hoi An is pretty far and it may take a day to travel by bus. Most tourist bus goes through the Hai Van pass tunnel to save time. If you can hire a car and driver and want to see the great view of the pass
9. MY SON Holy Land (UNESCO world heritage site, old brick temples of the Champa kingdom): You can book a half-day tour in Hoi An, or hire a car and driver to visit the site.
10. NHA TRANG (beaches, islands, scuba diving): The nearest airport is Cam Ranh (40km south of Nha Trang). It's possible to fly to Cam Ranh from Hanoi/Da Nang/HCMC, or go by train and by bus. You can book a one day tour to visit 4 islands or other sites like Monkey island or Yang Bay waterall. Other great sites are Doc Let beach (60km north of Nha Trang) and Thap Ba hotspring/mud bath.
11. MUI NE (beaches, sand dunes, fishing villages): Tourist bus can take you to Mui Ne from Sai Gon/Nha Trang/Da Lat. There are two sand dunes (yellow and white ones), Suoi Tien stream, kite surfing activity in Mui Ne. If you go by train, then the train station is located in Phan Thiet city.
12. DA LAT (Central Highlands, cool weather, waterfalls and lakes): Tourist bus from Sai Gon/Mui Ne/Nha Trang via Ninh Thuan with a short visit to Cham brick towers is a good choice. You also can fly from Hanoi/HCMC to Lien Khuong Airport (28km north of Da Lat city). If you spend a couple of days in this city, you can visit all the major sites (I made a list of must-sees with a local motorbike driver and we visited 16 sites).
13. HO CHI MINH CITY or SAI GON (the most developed city in Vietnam): People prefer calling "Sai Gon" as this name is short. You can fly from all major cities in Vietnam to HCMC. The airport is not far from the city's center, so you can go by taxi or public bus. De Tham and Pham Ngu Lao streets in District 1 are the area where you can find cheap hotels, travel agents, bars and restaurants.
14. MEKONG DELTA (floating villages & markets): Most people book tours (1-2-3 day tours) to this region. If you want to go to Can Tho on your own, there is Mai Linh mini bus service. Can Tho is the biggest city in the Mekong Delta. The airport is open recently, so you can fly from Hanoi to Can Tho. If you want to go toCambodia by the river way, you can book a tour from Sai Gon or Chau Doc to Phnom Penh.
15. CU CHI TUNNELS (used by the Vietnamese communists during the American War) & CAO DAITEMPLE: Both sites are located in Tay Ninh province. You can book a one day tour at the travel agents in HCMC.


When is the best time to visit Vietnam?

There are 4 seasons in northern Vietnam and 2 seasons (dry and rainy seasons) in central and southern regions. It's cooler in Da Lat city (the Central Highlands) and very cold in Sapa as well as the northernmost region during the winter time (November to February).
North: The best time to visit this region is April, September to December. It's very hot and humid during the summer time, especially from June to August (including rain). The coldest months in northern Vietnam are January and February, in average, 8-20°C in Hanoi and it can get down to 0°C in Sapa, freezing and even snow.
Central region: Typhoons often hit central coast from July to October. The central region (from Quang Tri province to Phu Yen province) also experiences rain and flood during October and November.
South: November to February are the best months to visit this region. The rainy season lasts from May to October. The hottest months are March and April.
January or February is the month when Vietnamese celebrate their Lunar New Year (Tet). It may be a little inconvenient to travel before and during this time. Many people go home before the holiday, then back to work after that (in detail, before Tet from south to north, and after Tet from north to south), so traffic can be very busy. Shops and museums are closed on the 30th December of the Lunar calendar and during the first 3 days of the New Year. The good side is that you can enjoy the atmosphere and see how Vietnamese celebrate this important event with fireworks in the big cities.
Vietnam's UNESCO World Heritage:
1. Ha Long Bay in Quang Ninh province
2. Phong Nha Caves - Ke Bang National Park in Quang Binh province
3. Hue Imprerial City in central Vietnam
4. Hoi An Ancient Town - 30km south of Da Nang city
5. My Son Sanctuary - 69km southwest of Da Nang city
6. The royal music in Hue city
7. The gong performance in the Central Highlands
8. Quan Ho folk songs in Bac Ninh province
9. Ca Tru singing in Hanoi city
10. Wood-blocks of the Nguyen Dynasty
11. Stelae at the Temple of Literature in Hanoi city
12. Thang Long imperial citadel in Hanoi city
13. Giong festival in Phu Dong temple and Soc temple of Hanoi city
14. Ho dynasty citadel in Thanh Hoa province
15. Xoan singing in Phu Tho province

Friday, August 10, 2012

Halong Bay 1 day

Listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site, Ha long Bay is one of Vietnam’s most spectacular natural wonders. The tiny limestone islands are dotted with many beaches and grottoes created by the wind and the waves that provide an excellent backdrop for swimming or just lazing about from the deck of our luxury boat
Car and guide will pick you up at the hotel about 8.00 depart to Ha Long city - the capital of Quang Ninh province. We stop half way for a short break in Hai Duong province. Arrive in Ha Long city about 11.30.

Have lunch at a local restaurant or on the boat. After lunch, the guide takes you to the boat for cruising Ha Long Bay (4 - hours), where you have a chance to visit the two most beautiful caves - Thien Cung cave or the Palace Of Heaven Grotto and Dau Go Cave or Wooden Stake Grotto and we take a look at the Floating Village of the fisherman and the Fighting cocks. At about 4.00 pm the boat goes back to Ha Long city and we get on the bus to go back to Ha Noi. We arrive in Ha Noi at about 7.00 pm. Trip ends.

The Best of Vietnam 14 days

This tour is designed for travelers who prefer to visit from south to north. Starting from Ho Chi Minh city - the metropolis in the south of Vietnam and driving along the seashore and discovering step by step historical sites, sunlight beaches, ancient palaces, unique Ha Long Bay to the tribal market of Sapa up in the northern Vietnam makes the trip unforgettable.

Day 1: Ho Chi Minh city arrival  (GP)
On arrival at Tan Son Nhat Airport , our guide will meet and transfer you to your hotel. Free time to discover the city & have dinner on your own. Overnight in Ho Chi Minh City.
Day 2: Cu Chi Tunnel - Ho Chi Minh City (B, G)
In the morning, transfer to Cu Chi to explore the remarkable underground tunnel network and former Viet Cong stronghold, 30 km northwest of Ho Chi Minh City. Cu Chi Tunnels consist of a network of more than 200 km of underground tunnels used by resistance fighters during the U.S./Vietnam War. Drive back to HCMC.
In the afternoon, visit Ho Chi Minh City with Reunification Palace, War Remnant Museum, Notre Dame Cathedral and the former US Embassy. Shopping at Ben Thanh market. Overnight in Ho Chi Minh City .
Day 3: Ho Chi Minh City - My Tho - Can Tho - Boat Cruise (B, L, G)
Pick up at your hotel in HCMC. Depart for My tho. Take the boat ride through the Bao Dinh natural canal; view the stilt houses and the fruit plantation along the river sides. Visit the My Tho wholesale fruit market. Proceed to the Tortoise island. Lunch served in the heart of the orchard. Enjoy the nice boat ride through the Tan Thach natural canal in Ben Tre, cruise under the shadow of the water coconut trees. Visit the family where you can experience the agricultural lifestyle. Trekking through the fruit plantation in Thoi Son Island , enjoy the rowing boat ride along the creeks before returning to My Tho by motorized boat.
Proceed to Can Tho. Have dinner on your own and overnight at hotel in Can Tho. (Local home stay will be arranged upon request).
Day 4: Cai Rang - Ho Chi Minh City (B, L, G)
7:00 AM After breakfast, take the morning boat trip to visit the Cai Rang floating market with the busy scene right at the time. Keep cruising through the small channels system; visit the rice noodles making village. Experience the " Monkey Bridge ” in the Delta. Break time for lunch. Return to Ho Chi Minh city via Vinh Long to visit the local snake market.
Day 5: Ho Chi Minh City - Da Nang - Hoi An (B, DP in HCMC, GP in Hoi an)
Free at your leisure before transferring to the airport for the flight at noon to Da Nang, the third biggest city. Stop in Da Nang to visit the Cham Museum containing the most extensive collection of Cham art worldwide.
You explore the old merchant town -  the colorful blend of Chinese Assembly Halls, beautiful Japanese-covered Bridge, narrow winding streets and ancestral family homes. Be tempted by its art galleries, handcrafted woodwork, ceramics, lanterns, embroidery and tailor shops where an entire wardrobe can be made overnight.
Day 6: Hoi An - My Son - Hoi An (B, L, G)
We will start a full day tour to My Son, 40km southwest of Hoi An, which flourished from the late 400s to the mid 1200s, and which was an important Holy Land of the Champa people. The My Son Sanctuary is an exceptional example of cultural interchange, with the introduction the Hindu architecture of the Indian sub-continent into South-East Asia . Back to Hoi An in the afternoon. Have dinner and overnight in Hoi An.
Day 7: Hoi An - Hue (B, G)
Drive from Hoi An to Hue . Stop en route at the Marble Mountains , famed for its stonecutters and for being a "Viet Cong" guerilla hideout during the Vietnam War. Keep driving to Hue , passing over a spectacular mountain pass and by a seaside fishing village. Upon arrival in Hue visit the Imperial Citadel. Drive to the outskirts of Hue to visit the elaborate tomb of Emperor Tu Duc. Free time for shopping at Dong Ba Market. Overnight in Hue.
Day 8: Hue - Boat Cruise - Hanoi (B, G in Hue, GP in Hanoi)
Morning boat cruise through the centre of Hue on the romantic Perfume River. Visit the seven-storey Thien Mu Pagoda along the riverbank. Check out and transfer to airport for the flight to Hanoi. Arrive Hanoi and take a rest. Overnight in Hanoi.
Day 9: Hanoi - Halong Bay (B, L, D, GP)
Breakfast, leave Hanoi by road for Ha Long Bay. Arrive in Ha Long and board our traditional sailing junk. While cruising the exquisite waters, sample the local fresh seafood. Start a fantastic cruise in Halong bay and sightseeing Dog Island, Incense Urn Island, Fighting Coq Island, Finger Island, Hoa Cuong Island and explore the mystery of Sung Sot Cave (Surprise Cave). Enjoy a swim in the emerald waters of Ha Long Bay at any spot that you wish to visit. Watch the sun set over the bay whilst enjoying a delicious dinner. Overnight on board .
Day 10: Halong Bay - Hanoi - Lao Cai (Brunch, GP)
Wake up to fresh coffee and a wholesome breakfast before cruising to visit Man’s head island, Tortoise island, Bai Tu Long bay and take small bamboo boat to visit Luon cave. After another wonderful fresh seafood lunch on board, transfer back to Hanoi.
In the evening, you will be picked up to transfer to the railway station for the train to Lao Cai province. Overnight on train.
Day 11: Lao Cai - Sapa (B, L, G in Sapa)
Arrive in Lao Cai in early morning. Have breakfast in Lao Cai. Meet and transfer to “the town of fog” of Sapa by van. Check in and free time to visit Ham Rong Mountain with scenic spots: Gate of Heaven, Garden of Orchid , and the Silver Waterfall. In the afternoon, trekking tour to Cat Cat village, 3km south of Sapa which is a steep and very beautiful hike down like everywhere in this area. After dinner on your own, free time to discover typical “Love Market” and taste grilled eggs, sugarcanes, sweet potatoes … Overnight in Sapa.
Day 12: Sapa - Lao Cai - Hanoi (B, L, D, G in Sapa)
After breakfast, we drive to Lao Chai. It's home to black H'mong and Dzay (or Nhang). Continue to visit Ta Van village, where Black H’mong lives. Have picnic lunch. Then the van picks you up and transfers to Lao Cai station for the night train to Hanoi. Have dinner at a local restaurant in Lao Cai. Overnight on train.
Day 13: Hanoi city (B, G)
Pick up at Hanoi station and have breakfast before visiting the rich cultural and historical city with Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum, One Pillar Pagoda, the Temple Of Literature- first university of Vietnam.
In the afternoon, visit the Museum of Fine Arts and watch Water puppet show or listen to Ca Tru ...and shopping in the old quarter. Overnight in Hanoi.
Note: No hotel for early check in in this day.
Day 14: Hanoi departure (B, DP)
Free for your leisure until transfer to airport for flight come back home. End of tour.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Sapa Homestay 3days/ 4 nights

Sapa homestay tours. Nestled in a valley in the Hoang Lien Son Mountains of Vietnam, close to the Chinese border, Sapa was originally built by the French in 1922 as a hill station retreat from the oppressive summer heat of Hanoi.
Night 1: Hanoi - Laocai - Sapa holidays (Overnight on the train)
8h00pm. Hotel pick-up then transfer to Hanoi Railway Station for the night train at 21:15 to Laocai Station. Sleep on the train.(4 people/cabin or 2 people/cabin on request).

Day 1: Laocai -Sapa trekking - Laochai - Tavan Village (visiting 2 villages & Homestay in Tavan village)
Picked up at Laocai Station early in the morning by our bus. Arrive at Sapa round 8:00 AM; Breakfast start at 10h30am to get to Laochai village. Enjoy the overall pictures of the villages among terraces. Visit the H'mong living in wooden and bamboo houses. Picnic lunch on the way  then Continue trekking to Tavan village to visit the Dzay minority. Have dinner and homestay in Tavan village at Dzay family.

Day 2: Ta Van - Giang Ta Chai (visiting 2 villages)
Get up early in the morning to enjoy the daily life of the ethnic minorities in the village. Breakfast; take the road to GiangTaChai village of the Red Dzao minority via the paths between terraces and through bamboo forests. Visit silver waterfall and suspension Rattan Bridge, visit the people in the village and then cross MuongHoa River up to the mountain to visit the last village of the trek - Supan village of the H'mong. Get back to Sapa by jeep. On the way back, enjoy visiting the ancient stone circle where stones are decorated with ancient carvings. Check in hotel.

Day 3: Catcat - Laocai - Hanoi. (Overnight on express train)
Breakfast, visit village of the black H'mong (Catcat), walk around visiting people in the village and the hydroelectric power station built by the French in the old days. Back town have lunch and check out hotel, free to explore the town until take bus to get to Laocai Station for the night train back to Hanoi.
Arrive in Hanoi around 5.00 AM. The end of the tour.

Vietnam Travel Guide

This Vietnam guide is a summary of what we learned on our travels in this magnificent country which we hope will prove to be a useful resource in preparing your trip.
Don't Mention the War?
The first thing that most people think of when they think of Vietnam is the Vietnam War (known here as the American War). Our first piece of advice is to forget the war.
Of course there are war memorials all over the country and reminders of a war that only ended in 1975 but to all intents and purposes the war is of no significance to modern day tourists except for US Veterans returning to visit places where they had been during the war. You'll find interesting war related excursions from certain cities such as to the Cu Chi Tunnels from Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC) or to the Demilitarised Zone (DMZ) from Hue but the war is now a part of the country's past as it looks towards a wealthy future in which tourism will play a key role. The message from the Vietnamese people ... "Tourists Welcome".
Facts about Vietnam
A few interesting facts about Vietnam ... The population is 83 million and the capital is Hanoi. The Government is Communist but only 3 million people are members of the Communist Party. Economically the country is one of the "Asian Tigers" with annual growth rates around 8%. The distance between HCMC and Hanoi is 1700km. There are an estimated 10 million motor bikes on the roads and when you leave you'll feel as though you saw them all.
When to Visit Vietnam
Where and when to go to Vietnam is an important decision because of the climate which varies greatly between the monsoonal north and the tropical south. There is no month when it is ideal to visit both the north and the south though we were fortunate in November/December, experiencing warm, humid and mainly dry conditions in the south, wet and warm in the centre and dry but cool conditions in the north with rain not far away.
Getting Around Vietnam
When we first started to plan our trip we read various Vietnam travel guides and surfed the internet as we tried to come up with a suitable itinerary. In reality the itinerary almost writes itself and once you arrive you'll be amazed just how easy it is to get around by bus, train, private vehicles with driver and domestic flights. All means of transport are easily accessible, efficient and extremely good value.
Dollars and Euros go a long way in Vietnam, for example you can buy an open bus ticket from HCMC to Hanoi (that's 1700km remember) for just $28 US with stopovers in Dalat, Nha Trang, Hoi An and Hue. Transport and accommodation options are available to suit all budgets.
The route we followed on our last trip was as follows: Ho Chi Minh City - Dalat - Central Highlands - Hoi An - Hue - Hanoi. The majority of visitors don't go via the Central Highlands but tend to travel north or south via Nha Trang on the coast which is one of the country's lesser desirable destinations. Now it's up to you to start planning your itinerary.
The map of Vietnam highlights the principal tourist destinations which together with our Vietnam Travel Guide will provide all the information you need to make the most of your journey.

Tags: Travel to Vietnam, Classic Vietnam, Vietnam Tours, Halong bay tours, Mekong Cruises, Vietnam Muslim tours, Daily Departure Tours, Beach Holiday, Ha Long Cruise, sitec, sitec jsc

Why travel to VIETNAM?

Vietnam has exerted itself to be a favorite destination of more and more tourists. There’s a Hanoi elegant with friendly people, a Sapa with colourful-dressed minorities, a Halong Bay with amazing caves listed on UNESCO World Heritage. There’s a Hue romantic with palace and rain, a tranquil Hoi An where you can have clothes made in one day, a Danang dynamic by Han river. There’s a Nha Trang with best bays of the world, a Saigon busy and modern like New York, a Mekong-delta with fascinating floating market. The North, Centre, and South of Vietnam all bear a deep cultural trace, which remains in tourists’ memories for years. With everything from mountains to seas, from cold to hot weather, from city to countryside, Vietnam has everything you may come up with!

Friday, August 3, 2012

Getaway in Nha Trang 6 days

The town of Nha Trang is built along a wide sandy beach fringed with coconut palms. Close to the town, it is busy with vendors offering a wide range of refreshments and services, but quieter further away. Once known as Viet Nam’s St. Tropez, Nha Trang is the closest thing to a Western-style resort in the country. The beach is safe for swimming, although heavy rain in November and December makes the normally crystal-clear water very murky. Boat trips take visitors for cruises and barbeques on the several rocky islands in the bay. There are several scuba diving centres with good facilities. Apart from one small beachside resort, there are no hotels above mid-range standard. There is a wide selection of inexpensive Vietnamese and international restaurants and some after-dark entertainment. Eighty kilometres to the north is Whale Island. An attractive natural area with a single resort hotel and diving centre, it is an excellent location for diving, water sports, romantic holidays and relaxation.

The town of Nha Trang is built along a wide sandy beach fringed with coconut palms. Close to the town, it is busy with vendors offering a wide range of refreshments and services, but quieter further away. Once known as Viet Nam’s St. Tropez, Nha Trang is the closest thing to a Western-style resort in the country. The beach is safe for swimming, although heavy rain in November and December makes the normally crystal-clear water very murky. Boat trips take visitors for cruises and barbeques on the several rocky islands in the bay. There are several scuba diving centres with good facilities. Apart from one small beachside resort, there are no hotels above mid-range standard. There is a wide selection of inexpensive Vietnamese and international restaurants and some after-dark entertainment. Eighty kilometres to the north is Whale Island. An attractive natural area with a single resort hotel and diving centre, it is an excellent location for diving, water sports, romantic holidays and relaxation.
  • Travel by air from Ho Chi Minh City, Da Nang or Hanoi
  • Travel by overnight sleeper train from Ho Chi Minh.

A Glimpse of Vietnam 10 days

For ten days, you’ll experience the best of Vietnam. Your trip will start in Hanoi, then process to Ha Long Bay, Hue – the imperial city, Hoi An – the ancient town and end in Ho Chi Minh City with a day trip to Me Kong Delta. This trip can also be tailor-made to start from Ho Chi Minh City upon requests.
Day 1: Hanoi arrival (GP)
On arrival at Noi Bai Airport in the afternoon, you will be met and transferred to your hotel. Free for your leisure. Overnight in Hanoi.
Day 2: Hanoi - Halong Bay (B, L, D, GP)
Breakfast, leave Hanoi by road for Ha Long Bay. Arrive in Ha Long and board our traditional sailing junk. While cruising the exquisite waters, sample the local fresh seafood. Start a fantastic cruise in Halong bay and sightseeing Dog Island, Incense Urn Island, Fighting Coq Island, Finger Island, Hoa Cuong Island and explore the mystery of Sung Sot Cave (Surprise Cave). Enjoy a swim in the emerald waters of Ha Long Bay at any spot that you wish to visit. Watch the sun set over the bay whilst enjoying a delicious dinner. Overnight on board .
Day 3: Ha Long Bay -  Hanoi (Brunch, GP)
Wake up to fresh coffee and a wholesome breakfast before cruising to visit Man’s head island, Tortoise island, Bai Tu Long bay and take small bamboo boat to visit Luon cave. After another wonderful fresh seafood lunch on board, transfer back to Hanoi. Overnight in Hanoi.
Day 4: Hanoi - Hue (B, L, G in Hanoi, GP in Hue)
In the morning, transfer to Ba Dinh Square. Visit Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum, One Pillar Pagoda, which was built in the 11th century in the shape of a lotus according to the legend of the King’s dream. Tour continued with the Temple Of Literature, the first university in Vietnam, dedicated to Confucius and Vietnamese most successful scholars. Study about Vietnamese craft at Craftlink. Have lunch at local restaurant.  Proceed to visit the museum of Ethnology and watch Water puppet show. Then, it is your free time for shopping before transferring to the airport for flight to Hue.
Upon arrival, transfer Hue hotel. Overnight in Hue.
Please note that the Ho Chi Minh’s Mausoleum closes on Mondays and Fridays, other Museums close on Mondays
Day 5: Hue -  Hoi An (B, L, G)
After breakfast at hotel, take the morning boat cruise on Perfume river to visit Thien Mu pagoda and Minh Mang tomb. Then, transfer to visit the Imperial Citadel and the Forbidden Purple City. Have lunch and transfer to Hoi An. Stop enroute to visit the Marble Moutain and Hai Van pass. Check in hotel in Hoi An. Dinner on your own. Overnight in Hoi An.
Day 6: Hoi An free (B)
A free day in Hoi An to spend as you wish. Overnight in Hoi An.
Day 7: Hoi An -  Da Nang - Ho Chi Minh City (B, DP in Hoi An, G in Ho Chi Minh City)
After breakfast, free to explore the old merchant town of Hoi An with Chinese Assembly Halls, beautiful Japanese-covered Bridge, narrow winding streets and ancestral family homes. Be tempted by its art galleries, handcrafted woodwork, ceramics, lanterns, embroidery and tailor shops.
In the afternoon, transfer to Danang airport for flight to Ho Chi Minh city. Pick up and transfer to hotel. Lunch and dinner on your own. Overnight in Ho Chi Minh city.
Day 8: Cu Chi tunnels & Ho Chi Minh City tour (B, G)
After breakfast, we venture beyond the city limits to the former Viet Cong stronghold at Cu Chi, where we explore this remarkable tunnel network. Return to Ho Chi Minh city at noon.
In the afternoon, visit the dynamic energy of Ho Chi Minh City with Notre Dame Cathedral and the former US Embassy and shopping at Ben Thanh market or take the optional tour. Lunch and dinner on your own. Overnight in Ho Chi Minh city.
Day 9: Mekong delta day trip (B, L, G)
In the morning, you will depart for My Tho Town in the Mekong Delta, 70km from Ho Chi Minh City. Stop to visit Ben Luc Temple which belongs to local Cao Dai Religion. After arrival in My Tho, you will take the motorized boat through the natural canal, view the fish market and islets of Dragon, Phoenix, Tortoise and Unicorn. Lunch at a local house on the island with local specialties. Transfer to a sampan row boat along the natural canal. Visit fruit plantation farm, bee farm, coconut candy factory & enjoy taking a horse-cart ride. Back to My Tho wharf by boat and visit Dong Tam snake farm if time permits. Drive back to HCMC in the late afternoon. Dinner on your own. Overnight in HCMC.
Day 10: Departure (B, DP)
A good opportunity to do some last minute shopping before your transfer to Ho Chi Minh City Airport for your ongoing flight. Trip ends.

VIETNAM HERITAGE OVERTURE 9 DAYS

A nine-day introduction to Vietnam’s rich heritage - natural and manufactured, art and artefact, majestic and vernacular. It includes three cultural World Heritage sites and Ha Long Bay, Vietnam’s famous limestone seascape.
Day 1: Hanoi arrival (D, GP)
Arriving at Noi bai Airport in hanoi, you'll be met and driven to your hotel,  you’ll have time to relax after your journey. Later, you’ll be picked up for a welcome dinner at a good restaurant hosted in a French colonial building. In the evening, you’ll have tickets for a performance of traditional Water Puppetry (an art form unique to northern Viet Nam, and a good, light-hearted introduction to its rural culture). Your overnight stay will be in Hanoi.
Day 2: Hanoi’s tangible and intangible heritage (B, L, G)
An all-day tour of Vietnam’s thousand-year-old capital city, possibly including the Ethnology Museum, the Art Museum. In the afternoon, you’ll visit the stilt house of a famous Vietnamese artist to view his antique collection and restoration work. Next, you’ll meet another talented painter who will enjoy showing you his lacquer and oil painting artwork. Your guide can then show you the bustling Old Quarter. Apart from its maze of small streets, it’s an architectural pot-pourri - traditional tube houses, religious buildings, colonial houses, artisans’ dwellings and modern concrete constructions. Your overnight stay will be in Hanoi.
Day 3: Hanoi/Ha Long (B, L, D, G)
After an early breakfast, you’ll leave for Ha Long Bay, one of the most spectacular UNESCO World Heritage Areas and the world’s largest marine limestone ‘karst’ landscape. There you’ll board your boat, a wooden junk built from the model of the old Vietnamese court vessels with sails, a wide transom and rectangular superstructure, that will take you first to the busy World Heritage area and then to some of the less well-known grottoes and caves. Weather permitting, you’ll be able to swim, fish, climb a hill (not a mountain!) for an overview of the Bay’s remarkable seascape, or venture into some of the sea level caves in a small sampan. All your meals will be provided on board, usually based on fresh seafood, and you’ll sleep in a twin cabin with an en suite toilet and shower.
Day 4: Ha Long/Hanoi (Brunch, DP)
You’ll spend the morning cruising Ha Long Bay, followed by brunch, just before docking around noon and leaving for Hanoi. You should arrive in the late afternoon and spend the night in Hanoi.
Day 5: Hanoi/Hue (B, DP in Hanoi, G in Hue)
You’ll have a free morning before we pick you up for a noon flight to Hue. When you arrive, you’ll be met by our guide and driven to visit the Imperial Citadel of Hue, the nearby Antiquity Museum and the local Dong Ba market. Your overnight stay will be in Hue.
Day 6: Hue (B, L, D, G)
After breakfast, you’ll be met by our guide to board a riverboat to take you upstream on the Perfume River to visit the tranquil Thien Mu Pagoda. In the afternoon, you’ll visit Emperor Tu Duc’s mausoleum and one of Hue’s ‘garden houses’. After returning to your hotel to freshen up, you’ll return to sit down for dinner in the pleasant surroundings and a comfortable atmosphere of another of the garden houses. You’ll spend the night in Hue.
Day 7: Hue/Danang/Hoi An (B, L, G)
In the morning, you’ll drive to Danang (the views from top of Hai Van Pass are excellent – you’ll be able to see Lang Co beach and the lagoon far below, and Danang spread out before you to the south). Upon arriving in Danang, you’ll have a brief look at the remarkable Hindu statuary in the Cham Museum before leaving for Hoi An. After lunch, you’ll have a guided visit to the Ancient Town. Your overnight stay will be in Hoi An.
Day 8: Hoi An/My Son/Hoi An (B, G)
After breakfast, you’ll be driven to My Son Sanctuary, once the spiritual capital of the Cham Kingdom that dominated SE Asia for nearly a thousand years, and now a World Heritage Area. Its remarkable brick towers were badly bombed by the Americans, but are still impressive as is its remote valley setting. Your afternoon will be free to relax on the beach or wander around Hoi An. Your overnight stay will be in Hoi An or Danang.
Day 9: Hoi An/Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City departure (B, G)
You’ll be picked up in good time to board either the morning or afternoon flight to Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City for your departure flight. Trip ends.
 

Vietnam is a land full of adventurous riches

Vietnam is a place full of adventure – from cultural experiences or mountain treks, there’s always some destination waiting to be explored.

According to Lonely Planet, the Southeast Asian nation is a prime location for some adrenaline-inducing thrills.

“Whether you prefer to scale the heights of jagged peaks or plumb the depths of coral reefs, Vietnam will deliver something special… just being here is one long adventure, but these experiences will take it to a whole new level,” states the travel experts.

In Halong Bay, travelers can go kayaking into hidden lagoons and caves inaccessible by regular boats. If paddling sounds like too much work, they can float along the water’s surface while kite surfing. In addition, the reefs off Nha Trang and Con Dao are perfect for scuba diving.

The famous Mekong Delta is one of the best places to ride a bicycle, as the area is fairly remote, but still has established paths. The views are spectacular and there’s always the option of taking a boat trip down the river as a break from all that peddling. In north side of the country, motorbiking is a great way to trek through the mountains.

Vietnam is best explored with a small group of adventure travelers.

Good trip with cheap cost for your vacation

Are you planning the vacation for your family to Vietnam this year? However you have not still given your decision because of so many reasons. Of course, budget is one of trouble you can not forget in your mind. To clear this trouble, I have some tips for you to get the good trip but save money for your vacation inVietnam.
1. Travel during low season
If you are smart travelers, you should find information of low season at destinations, you can save so much money. Such as: accommodation, food, tour services…….There will be less tourists in low season, it is not crowded with people, the travel agents will be easier to book services for you.
The weather in Vietnam is rather complicated, that is why low season will be changed in different destinations. I give an example: Less foreign tourists visit Hanoi from May to July because the weather is rather hot. In rainy season( from October to December), not many foreign tourists visit Hue. Sometimes you will have chance to get discount or “special off” at low season. So you should check with travel consultant to have more information before your trip.
2. Update information of discount tour from travel agent
I really agree with you that shopping around is the good way many foreign tourists do if they are not busy. Time is money. There is one way to save both of them; I advise you should keep update information of the good travel agent you know. Social media at travel agents is more developing today. That’s why, it’s easy you can registry receiving news letter from the blog, facebook, twitter or official website of the good travel agent you choose.
3. Telling your budget- The clever negotiating way
Do not hesitate to ask for a deal or a better price accordingly with your budget! As I worked as travel consultant I still encourage our clients to tell the budget and give the good services for them.
You always ask for the as cheap as meanwhile the travel agent always would like as much as profit. Both of you will can not meet if you do not have more time to tell about the detail of services. The good travel consultant will tell you what services you can skip or not to save money but still help you the good trip. The price of tour is usually fixed but telling your budget, you may ask the travel consultant the less price accordingly your budget.
4. Less budget of Accommodation & Transport:
The price of your package is almost depended on the price of accommodation and transport. So if you want to reduce the price of trip, no way, you need to have the smart choice of accommodation and transport. Making reservation the flight ticket as soon as you can. For accommodation, you should keep in mind that 3-star hotels are smaller, but you can find very good hotels for a great price. Keep in mind that hotels that are very near local attractions will be more expensive than hotels located 2 or 3 blocks away.
5. Book early:
If you stick your date of trip, should not delay booking with the good travel agent you choose.
Some of the best deals may be had booking early and not last minute. Most tour operators and cruise companies offer discounts for early booking. If there is a specific date you want to travel and or you have a specific resort or destination in mind, you are better off to book early and secure your vacation than to risk waiting for a cheap family vacation deal that may or may not happen.
In crisis of economic, your budget for vacation is also limited. However, the smart travelers will know how to have a good trip with great fun at cheap price- This is my purpose to write this tip. If you still have questions in your mind about your next trip in Vietnam, do not hesitate to contact with us. Have a good trip in Vietnam!

Bia Hoi (Vietnamese Fresh Beer)

Bia Hơi (Vietnamese fresh beer) appeared in Vietnam in the 1890s, after the secrets of brewing were introduced by the French. Just one place, the Hommel brewery, turned out the stuff, and it was a fairly modest enterprise employing just 30 workers capable of producing 150 litres a day. The beer was also sold bottled, but it was so expensive that it was only for the wealthy people.
After the French left Vietnam in 1954, the Hommel brewery was renamed the Hanoi Brewery. But the refreshing amber fluid still took a while to become popular, until the brewery hit on the novel idea of producing an instant draught beer known as Bia Hơi, literally translated as “fresh beer”.
The locals still didn’t think much of the drink; they preferred the traditional Vietnamese rice wine. Then the government clamped down on home production of spirits, and people began to realise that the legal alternative, Bia Hơi, made a refreshing, low-alcohol summer drink. It is now popular that Bia Hơi shops where the beverage is consumed provide one of the abiding images of northern Vietnam.
Bia Hơi is not merely a drink, it has become a whole culture and way
At the "Bia Hơi corner" which is the crossing of Tạ Hiền and Lương Ngọc Quyến streets in Hanoi's Old Quarter, two cyclos are passing by the Bia Hơi shops.
of life. There are some 3,000 Bia Hơi shops in Hanoi. Bia Hơi is cheap enough - only some thousands VND a glass at most, and considerably less in some places.
Foreigners too, both visitors and residents, have been seduced by Bia Hơi culture. In Hanoi, there is a famous "Bia Hơi corner" at crossing of Tạ Hiền and Lương Ngọc Quyến streets in the Old Quarter, which is a popular place for the western backpackers. Sitting on the pavement on a tiny plastic chair watching the world go by as evening falls, sinking a few glasses, coughing your guts up after trying "Thuốc lào" (rustic tobacco pipe) - it’s all a wonderful entertainment.

What should we do to improve Halong Bay?

Halong Bay is Vietnam’s marquee attraction, the one unmissable site that is on most tourists’ itineraries when they visitthe country. And rightly so – it’s a truly spectacular, magical spot, thousands of limestone rocks jutting out of the sea, harbouring floating fishing villages and home to countless species of bird & marine life.
But, as is sadly so often the case in Vietnam & other developing countries, the rush to make money out of Halong Bay’s charms is having a negative effect on its appeal to visitors, and too many tourists are coming away disappointed with their experience there. I recently spent a weekend in Halong (my second trip there) checking out various new boat products and enjoying (mostly) a luxury overnight cruise. Here are some suggestions for how the Halong Bay visitor experience can be improved…
1. Make it easier to get there
Most visitors to Halong start their journey in Hanoi, from whence there are 2 ways to make the trip – either charter a helicopter, which is quick & private but which costs over $6000 each way, or go by road. The road isn’t a highway or motorway, it’s just a normal Vietnamese main road and thus blighted by suicidal motorbikes and homicidal bus & truck drivers, passing through some of the most hideously ugly towns (Uong Bi, take a bow) the country has to offer, and taking nearly 4 hours. The Trung Luong highway has dramatically cut journey times between HCMC & the Mekong Delta, so a similar development would be a real boost to Halong Bay tourism and would make day tours a lot more feasible, as would a direct rail link from Hanoi.
2. Make it easier to book
Try Googling “halong bay cruise”. Any the wiser? All you’re looking at is 100s of dodgy cruise consolidators, all trying to undercut each other, many of them “selling” space they don’t even have before bumping their unfortunate clients onto inferior cruises.
Implementing a licenced seller programme would be easy & cost virtually nothing, & would give tourists confidence that the agency they’re booking with is legit.
3. Implement a star rating system
When I want to book a hotel in Vietnam (or anywhere), I usually base my decision on the star rating. This way I generally know what I’m going to get. With Halong Bay cruise boats, this isn’t the case – there is no star rating system to boat operators are free to market themselves as they wish. This means it’s often impossible for the client to distinguish between a genuine luxury boat (eg Au Co or Violet) and the many charlatans still operating in Halong. Implementing a hotel-style rating system would add clarity & transparency to the booking experience and help prevent the overselling & underdelivering that currently disappoint so many visitors.
4. Clean up the town
Halong City could be a beautiful place. Nestled on spectacular cliffsides alongside a wide beach and overlooking one of the most amazing natural landscapes on the planet, it should be a destination in itself. But thanks to the usual Vietnamese slapdash approach to urban planning, a contempt for historic architecture and a complete indifference to aesthetics, it’s an ugly mish-mash of  a place, the shoreline skirted by brutalist 1970s architecture & hotels that noone in their right mind would want to spend a night in. Factor in the ubiquitous garbage (the beach was an absolute eyesore last week) and scores of motorbike touts hassling wandering tourists, and you have a place that people just want to get out of as quickly as possible.
It’s shame that hundreds of thousands of visitors to Halong Bay spend at most half an hour in the town waiting for their boats – encouraging these tourists to stay a while longer, even for a night, would boost the town’s economy no end and make the destination more attractive.
5. Clean up the water
On my first visit to Halong, I was too awestruck by the scenery to notice the garbage that many people had warned me about. This time, it was all too noticeable. Plastic bags, beer cans, food containers, you name it. And during 2 whole days on the water, I only saw one garbage cleanup boat containing one hardy man armed with a net, battling Canute-like against a tide of rubbish. I’m told much of it comes from the floating fishing villages, many of which ironically rely on tourism for extra income. It would cost very little for the authorities to install floating rubbish skips in each village & have these collected every day, & would improve conditions in the bay virtually overnight.
6. Educate the local population
This doesn’t apply just to Halong, but to most places in Vietnam. It seems that in tourist spots you’re either hassled to the point where even the Dalai Lama would be reaching for a baseball bat, or you’re completely ignored. Halong is a case in point – one minute you’re being hassled to buy stuff by a floating shop, the next you’re wandering around a floating fishing village where there’s noone to introduce you to the place, tell you about its history or explain to you how the locals live, or to sell you that can of beer or soda you’re craving.
Treating tourists nicely gives them good memories, generates WOM advertising, and creates more income in the medium to long term.
7. Varied itineraries
Halong Bay has a similar problem to Angkor Wat, in that every tour group seems to visit the same spot at the same time. When we visited Surprising Cave last week, we did so at the same time as seemingly every other boat. Why? Can’t the authorities insist on separate visit slots for each boat, to avoid overcrowding? What about repeat visitors who don’t want to see the cave or floating village again? How do you sell a second tour to them? And what about activities on board? Why does every boat operator want to send me off kayaking, or teach me how to cook spring rolls?
The only way to get a unique itinerary at present is to charter a private boat, but the cost of this is beyond the reach of most visitors. What’s needed is a bit of originality & creativity from boat operators, instead of just going with the flow & offering the same product as their competitors.
8. Be more informative
Junk cruises are generally well staffed with crew, waiters, cruise managers etc. But one thing missing is informative guides who can really bring the tour to life. I’m sure my boat passed by some interesting rock formations & villages, but there was noone there to tell me anything about them, and whilst I fully appreciated the majesty of Halong Bay, I came away knowing nothing more about it than I did when I arrived. The lack of information about the destination on most junk cruises is pretty embarrassing.
9. Ditch the white paint
It was a stupid idea when it was first mentioned, and now it’s been put into practice, it looks even more stupid. Wooden junks are traditional and fit the atmosphere of the bay perfectly. Painting them white looks dirty, is a waste of time, a waste of money (one boat operator told me he has to repaint each boat every 10-14 days at a cost of US$1000 per boat), and will result in increased prices. Back to brown please.
10. Privatise the Bay
I’m a lifelong socialist and generally opposed to privatisation, but in some cases, particularly those in which the state authorities have no clue what they’re doing, it’s essential. Look at Angkor Wat, a fine example of how allowing a private firm to run a national monument can improve infrastructure, efficiency and the general visitor experience. Allowing a similar arrangement for Halong Bay would be a win-win situation for customers, boat operators and local people alike.

Visited Halong Bay recently? Got any other suggestions? Please comment!

Bun (rice vermicelli), the origin for many Vietnamese delicious dishes!

Bun (Rice vermicelli) is made of rice flour which is turned into small, circular and white threads wrapped up into small coils called Con Bun. Vietnamese rice vermicelli is a preferable as well as a popular dish!
The best rice noodles have only two ingredients: rice or rice flour, and water. Rice vermicelli are thin, translucent noodles that are similar to cellophane noodles, with which they are often confused (rice vermicelli are made from rice; cellophane noodles are made from bean starch). There are different varieties of vermicelli depending on their shape: bun roi (stirred vermicelli), bun mam (twisted vermicelli), bun la (vermicelli paper), and bun dem tram (shreded vermicelli).
Rice vermicelli noodles are delicious and easy to prepare. Let’s see how rice vermicelli dishes are prepared step by step!
Before cooking, simply soak rice vermicelli in warm (not hot) water for just two minutes. Then, in order to have a delicious bowl of rice, you should add different kinds of ingredients and vegetables. You can choose one of various ingredients that can be served with vermicelli such as: grilled pork meat, fried rice cakes, snails, fried eggs, lean meat pie, chicken, and crab soup, etc.
Do not be so surprised if you see that each region and locality, even each restaurant, has its own vermicelli dishes with their own recipes. There are a variety of ways to enjoy rice vermicelli, each dish having its own unique taste, for example: “Bun Cha” (vermicelli and grilled chopped meat), “Bun Rieu” (vermicelli and sour crab soup), “Bun Bo” (vermicelli and beef ), “Bun Oc” (vermicelli and snails) and so on.
Let’s try the very delicious taste of Bun Cha and Bun Oc! Bun Cha (Vermicelli and grilled chopped meat) includes rice vermicelli, grilled pork and spicy, raw vegetables and well mixed fish sauce. For a dish of Bun Cha, you take a dish of rice vermicelli, a dish full of vegetables and a bowl of fish sauce combined with vinegar, sugar, hot chilly, garlic and pepper. The sauce will then contain all the essential tastes, sour, hot, salty and sweet. Grilles of well cooked pork would be opened and the contents dropped into the bowl of fish sauce. There are
two kinds of Cha (grilled pork) used, depending upon the cut of the meat. If the pork is cut into small pieces, it is called Cha Mieng (piece of grilled pork). If it is minced prior to being shaped into small cubes, it is named Cha Bam (minced grilled pork). Bun Oc (Rice vermicelli with fresh water snail) has fresh water snails as main ingredient. These snails will have been kept in clean fresh water for about ten hours before being boiled for the dish, to allow sufficient time for the snails to release any organic matter they may have in their shells. The boiled snails after being taken out of their shells would be cleaned. The soup for the dish is made from the water in which snails have been boiled in. To the soup is added tomatoes and several kinds of flavour and vinegar.
Rice vermicelli are a part of different Vietnamese cuisines.Walking along some streets and stopping at one rice vermicelli vendor in Hanoi or Sai Gon, you will have chances for tasting various dishes of rice vermicelli with unforgettable flavor!


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Fax: (++ 84-4) 3 759 2249
Email: info@vietnamtravel-online.com.vn / info@asiavisiontravel.com
Website: www.vietnamtravel-online.com.vn / www.asiavisiontravel.com

COMPANY DETAILS:
ASIA VISION TRAVEL is a registered Vietnamese company affiliated to the Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA - Vietnam Chapter), the Vietnam Tourism Association (VITA). Our registration details, license to operate, and company information are as below:
Company Name ASIA VISION TRAVEL SERVICE AND TRADING COMPANY LIMITED
Head Office No 21, Tran Phu str., Ba Dinh dist., Hanoi, Vietnam
Phone (84 - 4) 3759 2248
Fax (84 - 4) 3759 2249
Email info@asiavisiontravel.com
Website www.vietnamtravel-online.com.vn
www.asiavisiontravel.com
Business License Number 0104742278
Issuing Authority People’s Committee of Hanoi City, Department of Planning and Investment, Business Registration Office
International Tour Operator License Number  No. 01-241/2010/TCDL-GP LHQT
Issuing Authority  Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT)
Bonding Cash  84326489
At Bank  Asia Commercial Bank, Thang Long Branch