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- Dia 47
- sábado, 23 de março de 2024
- ☀️ 34 °C
- Altitude: 7 m
VietnãQuận Ba10°46’3” N 106°41’29” E
Day 47

Ho Chi Minh
After waking up in our crack den apartment, realising it wasn't some nightmare, I got up off the floor and we packed our bags. Before "checking out" we decided to head towards the Café Appartments - a big block of very cute cafés and other similar shops. We climbed some stairs and picked one of the first cafés we saw. This café was nice but pretty much only served sweet treats meaning my breakfast consisted of a lemon curd doughnut, a fancy matcha thing, and a chocolate cheesecake-esque thing. It was safe to say I let my stomach do the buying and by the end I was stuffed. It was all super yummy though - I don't think I could ever give up sugar to he honest it's too addictive.
After that we headed back to Crack Den Accommodation™ to pick our bags up before getting out of there and walking 15. minutes to our new hostel. It was too early to check-in but we could drop our bags. Our first stop was the War Remenants Museum which we lazily got a grab to to save on a 30 minute walk but for 50p each we couldn't really complain. The Museum was about the Vietnam war which was pretty cool to see but there was alot of reading and alot of photos. When you first enter they have loads of American tanks, planes, helicopters, artillery, and bombs to walk around and have a look at. After that I went to have a look at the Tiger Cage exhibition. Honestly, I knew very little about the Vietnam war but hearing about what the Americans did was pretty horrifying. After reading, I got to walk around the mock prisoner of war camps and saw the conditions that they kept them in, often putting them through torture and being fed drabs of rotten fish and rice - stuffing them in small barbed wire cages. All of this permitted by the US - absolutely insane.
Inside the main building was - as I said - alot of photos and information. I didn't read everything but there were 2 main rooms that I spent most of my time in. The first was the exhibition about the use and effects of Agent Orange - a chemical weapon that the US used in mass (over 20 million gallons) all over Vietnam who's effects will still be seen for another 100 years. Another room was dedicated to the pictures and evidence of the war crimes committed by US soldiers - slaughtering many many innocent people - burning villages to the ground along the way. Eventually I decided I had enough of reading as my head was getting frazzled so I met Alfie and Daisy outside at a Banh Mi place nearby. Banh Mi is a classic Vietnamese sandwich baguette thing. All I know is I've missed having bread - especially for lunch - and I liked it so much I ordered 2. Well okay I ordered 2 because I was hungry and they're not super big.
Afterwards we decided to check out the Notre Dame and the Post Office. I know what you're thinking... Sam surely they don't have post in Vietnam. Oh you were actually wandering why there's a Notre Dame in Vietnam. Yeah that makes alot more sense. Well basically Saigon (the previous name for Ho Chi Minh) used to be a French colony and the French love the Notre Dame so they built another. This one was just like the original - in the sense that it was covered in scaffolding so who could even tell anyways. The Post Office was a fairly uninteresting building where I think the main attraction is the European style architecture but for us it wasn't anything new.
We wandered down Book Street which had a really nice vibe of loads of stores selling new and used books from all sorts of languages. If I hadn't brought Lord of the Rings and still not read a single page I would have been tempted to get something but I know how bad I am at actually reading any book I buy. I do see some funny cat notebooks made from local handmade paper which were really cool but I knew it'd be wasted on me as I wouldn't know where to start with a notebook. Afterwards we thought we'd wander over to the night market and do some planning. This night market was pretty sweet. Stalls with cuisine from all over the world, a live band playing awesome songs, and hilarious stickers in the toilets (see pictures). I wasn't hungry straight away as I had brought and ate a whole packet of passion fruit sweets. Eventually when my appetite came back I went for another classic Vietnamese dish - Banh Xeo - a crispy stuffed rice pancake served with way too much salad that I didn't bother touching. For dessert I finally had some STICKY MANGO RICE again. It wasn't as good as it was in Thailand but I'm still glad I had it.
We head back to our hostel - walking through what felt like Vietnamese Time Square. When we get back we actually check in and I'm shown to my dorm whilst they're shown to their private room. I end up chatting with some British guys who were preing with a bottle of vodka and coke. They offered me some but as I'm officially in my old man phase of life I said no, opting for a shower and sleep instead.Leia mais