Friday 10 May 2013

Vietnam Adventure



From all we’d read before we left, we understood that Vietnam is rapidly going places .  The economy is developing , the people are happy and clever and the food is amazing.  We knew that before we left as we have enjoyed the food for years.  What we found was a country which is poor in parts, but not dirty or squalid, an amazingly varied landscape, friendly people and a safe environment to explore.  The country is heavily influenced by its history and its position, with Hindu  influences in the south to Chinese in the north, from its French colonial days (almost 100 years of occupation) and reminders of the American conflict everywhere.

Hanoi in the north has much French legacy, the historic old port of Hoi An has its pretty streets and buildings (UNESCO protected) and in the south, Saigon, which has become a major trading and financial hub for the region is busy and has an eclectic mix of cuisines, from baguettes sold on street corners to traditional pho (soup) and regional foods, all of it fresh and tasty.

We have much to thank Kate, at “Vietnam on Line” , a travel specialist in Adelaide, for in providing lots of information and ensuring that we got the best deals in the best hotels (excluding the big internationals).  The company puts together modules which you can mix and match, add to or not, giving a great experience with no hassle.  Their website is at:

Thursday 9 May 2013

The Mekong Delta



The ONLY way to see the Mekong Delta in its proper perspective is by small boat.  The Mekong River is some 5000km long reaching up into China, through Burma, Laos and Cambodia, but the important part of it, in a Vietnamese sense, is the first 100km or so.  The delta is vast, with hundreds of tributaries and canals, many of which are only several metres wide and others many kilometres wide and 40 to 50 metres deep.  The trip from Saigon to My Tho by bus, by itself is interesting but once you get on the canal and river system, the waterways are busy, crowded with hundreds of boats, mostly working, and thousands of homes and businesses perched on stilts on the side of the river, to avoid them flooding during the rainy season. The area is mostly rural and intensively farmed and there are areas where tourists rarely visit.

Keeping the canals clean is a major problem as ALL refuse is dumped into the water but many organisations are now working with the residents to educate them on environmental programs.  Reduced flows from dam-building up-river has also created many problems including reduction of fish numbers and disruption to breeding cycles, as well as increased salinity which could have a catastrophic effect on rice production.

Our boat tour consisted of only a dozen or so in the group, on a small boat with a captain and a tour guide – the best way to see the area.  The sight of waterside dwellings hanging over the canals, industry depending on the canals for transport and hundreds of ferries, small taxi-boats for river crossing and supermarkets on water, is a real eye-opener.  Most of the larger canals are regularly dredged to keep them from silting up and huge silt barges ply the waterways to keep them clear, the silt being used for building works on roads and levees.  Most of the boats use small diesel or petrol motors mounted on a swing-arm with a propeller attached, the arm used for steering as well as propulsion – very simple but very effective.  We spent about 7 hours travelling through the canals and waterways, including several stops to see some industries and markets along the way and a lunch break at a great little waterside restaurant.

We spent the over-night stop at Can Tho, a quite large city in one of the busiest ports along the river and loved the great street market there.  There are also several very highly regarded restaurants and the one we chose was extremely good – great food and a terrific atmosphere right on the river-front.   The following morning we set out for the huge floating market up-river from Can Tho and the experience was incredible – almost anything was available from fresh fruit and vegetables grown by small growers up and down the river, to meat, fish, crabs, poultry and other essentials available in the city market.  After our visit to the markets we bussed back to Saigon to spend a further day exploring this vibrant and exciting city.

Stilt homes along the canals
The local bus!
Strange pets in the Mekong

Bringing in the fresh produce

A barge-load of rice

Filling up the tank - a plastic jug!

Friendly kids along the canal

Taxi service

The huge suspension bridge over the Mekong at Can Tho

The floating market - many types of fresh produce

More of the floating market

Anyone for snake?

Duck's on the menu today

Floating fuel bowser - metal sides to prevent fire spreading.

You don't get fresher than this.

Simple propulsion - very effective

The local supermarket

Making sweet puffed rice

Cu Chi Tunnels

Boobytrap, covered with leaves,impossible to detect
Sharp stakes at bottom of trap to impale soldiers
Entrance to tunnel, covered with leaves, can't be seen
emerging from tunnel
Typical tunnel - less than 1 metre high
Larger work areas for cooking, bomb-making and sleeping
Entry from one level of tunnels to lower level
Making sandals from car or truck tyres
Princess ready to enter tunnel with head-lamp
Dining room
Representative dining-room to show larger tunnel area

Saigon or Ho Chi Minh City


Saigon is now officially known as Ho Chi Minh City, honouring the founder of modern unified Vietnam.  It is divided into 19 urban districts and is a city fast becoming a huge international centre for trade and commerce.  District 1, central or “Old Saigon” is a mix of old markets, traditional streets of small manufacturers, flash hotels and restaurants, alleyways and wide boulevards, tree-lined streets with cafes and shops and a busy night-club scene.  Notre Dame Cathedral, the Opera House, the Reunification Palace, Bitexco Financial Tower, the Majestic Hotel and Continental Hotel and Central Post Office are all features of this area, highlighting the changes wrought by progress of this modern, exciting city.  The Continental Hotel, for instance, was built in 1880 and was a favourite of the press corps during the French War and author Graham Greene regularly stayed in room 214 and the hotel featured in his book, “The Quiet American”.  The Bitexco Tower, a modern financial centre of 68 floors, features a “Skydeck” on the 49th floor which gives an amazing view over Saigon.
Some of the most significant memories we carried away were the Reunification Palace, the War Remnants Museum, the busy Ben Thanh Market, the Bitexco Tower and Skydeck and the open-air bar and restaurant on the top floor of the Rex Hotel where we enjoyed the fireworks over Saigon on the evening of the celebration day (April 30) – Independence Day – celebrating the reunification of North and South Vietnam in 1975.  We ate in some amazing restaurants and cafes, including Nha Hang Ngon, Lemon Grass and Huong Lai, Vietnam’s version of “15” where staff are from disadvantaged families, orphans or street-kids who receive on-the-job training, education and a place to stay and might I say, was one of the best experiences we had.
One morning we left on an excursion to the Cu Chi tunnels, only 30kms from Saigon, where up to 16,000 people hid from the Americans in the late 60s and early 70s, mostly farming families who’d been displaced by the war.  This was an area of enormous destruction, with intense fighting and bombing, but underground, a labyrinth of some 250km of tunnels were used to house families as well as the Viet Cong.  Constant harassment and surprise attacks on the Americans by the Viet Cong using the tunnels and hidden trap-doors eventually led to the Americans using their enormous fire-power to leave the district one of the “most devastated areas in the history of warfare”.  Two sections of the tunnels have been opened to tour groups (although somewhat enlarged from the original versions) and one wonders how people, even those as small as the Vietnamese, could live in such confined spaces for weeks and months at a time.


Street cafes - no permit required

Lots of motor  scooters, but wide boulevards

Garbage collection

Beautiful parks in the city

Ho Chi Minh statue

The Opera House

Hotel Continental - made famous by Graham Greene

Street market - very fresh food and amazingly, no odours

View of old Saigon from the Skydeck

Inside the Post Office - lovely old building

Washing the family dog

Mobile Patisserie

Reunification Palace

The centre of old Saigon - roundabout with market in foreground