• Janette and John

Exploring Vietnam and Cambodia

The Mekong Explorer tour explores the most iconic sites, delving into deep-rooted culture and dining on delicious cuisine. It is thoroughly researched to provide a range of once-in-a-lifetime experiences. Lue lisää
  • Matkan aloitus
    22. helmikuuta 2025
  • Arrived in Hanoi

    23. helmikuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Landed right on time, 9.00 pm (1.00 am Oz time).

    Got through customs quickly and were met by our Wendy Wu person . She had a driver with a mini bus who drove us for the 45 minute trip to our hotel, the Q Hotel.

    This was our introduction to Hanoi traffic with its seeming lack of road rules. To add to the 'excitement' it was dark and raining.

    Fell into bed about 11.30 (3.30 am Oz). Didn't get down to breakfast till 8.30ish. Because we arrived a day early and hadn't been able to book into the same hotel as the tour will use, we stayed at the nearby Q Hotel. It was very nice and very comfortable. Directly across the street was a french bakery. It worked though the night and a constant stream of motor cyclists took bags of bread away to be delivered.

    After breakfast we decided to pack our cases and take them to our next hotel, the Flower Garden. The reception staff were quite happy to store our bags until our rooms were ready in the afternoon. Loc, our tour guide, happened to be there so we met him and confirmed arrangements for later that day.

    This done, they ordered us a taxi to take us to the Vietnam Museum of Ethnology.

    The taxi was a small Hyundi. Somehow we were shoehorned into it and off we went. We then experienced about thirty minutes of what thrill seekers might call extreme sport - Hanoi traffic. Janette calls it dodgem cars on steroids.
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  • Vietnam Museum of Ethnology.

    23. helmikuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    Vietnam Museum of Ethnology is a unit under Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences. Vietnam Museum of Ethnology is both a research centre and a public museum exhibiting the ethnic groups of Vietnam. The mission of the Museum is scientific research, collection, documentation, conservation, exhibition and preserving the cultural and historic patrimony of the nation's different ethnic groups. The museum also serves to guide research, conservation, and technology that are specific to the work of an ethnographic museum.

    This museum has exhibits, artifacts, and informative resources, all of which shed light on the traditions, customs, and daily routines of the nation's 54 recognized ethnic groups. There are both inside and outside exhibits.

    The museum's collection comprises more than 15,000 artifacts, 2,190 slides, 42,000 photographs, 237 audiotapes, and 373 videotapes.

    We lunched at the Truc Lam Restaurant in the museum grounds and then took another thrill filled taxi ride back to our hotel in an even smaller taxi.

    We met at six for our first briefing. The welcome dinner was about a ten minute walk away in a restaurant called Mother's Kitchen.
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  • Hanoi - Ho Chi Minh.

    24. helmikuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

    Today was about discovering some of the sights of Hanoi, with a coach picking us up at 8am.

    First was a visit to the Ho Chi Minh Quarter and a visit to Ho Chi Minh's Mausoleum. Unfortunately (?) the Mausoleum isn't open on Mondays so it was a case of stand outside and listen to Loc tell its history and all of us pose for a group photo.

    Then it was a walk to see the Presidential Palace area including Ho Chi Minh's Humble House on stilts and the One Pillar Pagoda.
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  • Hanoi - Cyclo ride and egg coffee.

    24. helmikuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

    A cyclo ride is a good way to get up close and personal with Hanoi traffic. We had a 40 minute cyclo ride, one person per cyclo, around the Old Quarter and the French Quarter.

    Then, after a short walk, we arrived at a little coffee shop for an egg coffee - most of us really enjoyed it - so much so that some of us bought a second one - just as well as it was quite a walk from there to our lunch restaurant.

    This walk took us through streets filled with market stalls, many selling flowers, all grown in Vietnam.
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  • Hanoi - Temple of Literature.

    24. helmikuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

    The Temple of Literature was Hanoi's first university.

    Students began enrolling at the Imperial Academy in 1076. Once accepted, students would study there between three to seven years. The curriculum was largely Chinese-influenced and involved reading extensively about Chinese history, as well as classical Chinese literature and poetry.

    The Academy held four major tests per year with minor tests each month. Scholars had the opportunity to sit the National Exam after completion, and if their scores were high enough, they sat the Royal Exam, administered by the Emperor himself.

    It was a high honour to attend such a prestigious academy and it graduated some of the most brilliant minds in Vietnamese history.

    The Temple of Literature is divided into five courtyards. The first two courtyards are where scholars would relax amidst the large trees and manicured lawns. The second courtyard is easily recognisable by the Khue Van Cac – a wooden, red pavilion built on four white stone columns and has an elaborate roof with two circular windows and a brass bell. The bell is only rung on auspicious occasions.

    The remaining three courtyards are also of great significance. The third courtyard hosts the Thien Quang well, with two large halls on either side that house the treasured Stelae of Doctors. The Stelae are turtle statues – carved out of bluestone – with the names and birthplaces of all 1307 graduates from 82 separate Royal examinations. It used to be good luck for students to rub the heads of the turtles before their exams, but in order to preserve the turtles, students – and everyone else – are now forbidden to touch them.

    The fourth courtyard is where you find altars to Confucius and his disciples.

    The fifth courtyard, where the actual academy was, was not added until 1076 when Emperor Ly Nhan Tong ordered the construction of the Imperial Academy. Today, there are several exhibits here with a statue of Chu Van An, one of the Academy’s rectors and a beloved figure in Vietnamese history for his dedication to teaching. There are also numerous cultural events held at the hall in this courtyard, as well as displays of old uniforms that the scholars wore while studying there.

    The bells at the Temple of Literature, similar to others across Vietnam, were only permitted to be touched by monks.
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  • Hanoi to Halong Bay.

    25. helmikuuta, Gulf of Tonkin ⋅ 🌧 15 °C

    Had a three hour drive from Hanoi to Halong Bay today.

    On the way we had a pit stop to use the happy room at Star Gems Vietnam. This is a combination workshop and retail outlet. The people working there are all handicapped. Star Gems gives them employment and all the benefits and self esteem that go with that.

    The merchandise is absolutely stunning. There are pictures embroidered in a variety of materials. Visitors can watch the artists at work. At the gem cutting area we watched star gems being cut, polished and set.

    We bought a picture which to us 'says Vietnam' and were able to meet the lady who made it. It is made with silk embroidery and probably took a month to make. She will receive 65% of the sale price.

    Next, on to Halong for our overnight on Halong Bay.
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  • Halong Bay fishing village.

    25. helmikuuta, Gulf of Tonkin ⋅ 🌧 16 °C

    This afternoon the boys elected to rest up in the warm comfort of our cruise ship whilst Trish and Janette took the option to take a bamboo boat ride to a small fishing village in Ha Long Bay - despite the fairly heavy rain.

    Ha Long Bay’s outstanding landscape comes from the formation of geological limestone formations which rise from the ocean. It stretches over 1,550km square in area and includes 1,969 islets. It is an area of high biodiversity and holds important cultural and historical value to the people. It was recognised as a New Natural Wonder of the World in 2011.

    It was with some trepidation we boarded the small boat which held six passengers and was captained by a local Vietnamese woman who manoeuvred and rowed us to our destination - a journey of around 25 minutes. We passed amazing little homesteads on basic barge type foundations (great recycling for blue plastic olive barrels!). The locals must have such a peaceful existence in this beautiful environment. Their supplies are all shipped in and many work at the community centre.

    Once at the Community Centre the boats moored at the end of a pier along which were separate pools containing some quite large fish. They grow the fish here for food and for sale. Once the fish are heavily pregnant they are released to breed in the bay before the process starts again. They also farm oysters, scallops and mussels.

    We were guided through what was once a home and which housed relics of years gone by - mainly implements for fishing, building etc plus quite a lot of ceramics. From there we were given a talk/demonstration of pearl harvesting. This was most interesting - particularly the differences in pearl colour, quality and value. We then took a quick glance at the showroom of lovely, expensive jewellery (the sales assistants here are so persistent). They had a gallery of pictures of Ha Long Bay over the years which we viewed and then it was back on our little bamboo boat for the journey back to the cruise ship.

    The pictures show how amazing the formations are. The ladies who handled the boats were amazing. It was raining, we were all cold and wet despite our colourful plastic ponchos. However, Loc serenaded us all the way back with happy songs about either boats or rain. Glad we braved the elements - and our fears of negotiating boarding and alighting the small bamboo boats.
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  • A funny 'not much' day.

    26. helmikuuta, Gulf of Tonkin ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

    Today was really about getting from Halong Bay to Hue (pronounced hway) via Hanoi to pick up our main suitcases that we left at the Flower Garden Hotel.

    We had to catch a plane from Hanoi to Hue at 7.25, so everything today revolved around being at the airport in plenty of time. Breakfast was 6.30-7.30, Brunch was 9.30 and we had an early 'dinner' on the way to the airport.

    After breakfast there was one activity today for those who wanted to and felt they could climb the ninety steps to a cave halfway up one of the islands. We went over and I climbed up and went in the cave with a lot of our group. At sea level is a little sandy beach.
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  • Hue

    27. helmikuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

    First today, a visit to The Imperial Citadel in Hue. The Citadel is a walled fortress surrounded by a moat for protection. Inside the Citadel are numerous gates, courtyards and the Forbidden Purple City.

    The Forbidden Purple City was constructed for the personal use of the Imperial Family, their concubines and eunuchs. It is being restored after many years of bombing by the Americans during the Vietnam War.

    Next, a visit to a Traditional Garden House for what will surely turn out to be a highlight of this holiday.

    We were welcomed by the resident of this property, Mr. Vinh Tu. An architect, he told us his family history and explained the design principle of the house. Garden houses are designed on feng shui principles including house orientation and water in the garden keeping the house cool in summer and warm in winter.

    Part of the house tour included morning tea comprising tea, cakes and fresh fruit. We finished with a walk in the garden.

    A little further along the road was our next stop - the ThienMu Pagoda. Dating back to 1601, it is Hue's oldest and most beautiful pagoda. It is considered the unofficial symbol of the city.

    Across from the pagoda is a berth for dragon boats. We took one of these for a trip up the Perfume River back to the centre of town and lunch.
    Lunch was Italian in a restaurant, Little Italy, next to our hotel.

    We elected to stay at the hotel in the afternoon to do some sorting out.
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  • Pit stop at Da Nang.

    28. helmikuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

    Today we travelled to the Golden Bridge via Da Nang. This is approximately a four hour drive so a pit stop is very necessary so people can go to the happy room.

    This was a very picturesque place to break the journey. There were lots of photo opportunities in this coastal fishing area.

    It was then back on the road.
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  • The Golden Bridge.

    28. helmikuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    The Golden Bridge is actually the entrance to a Disney type amusement park.

    The bridge is spectacular and has a 150 metre span. It is supported by two giant hands. Loc, our guide, refers to them as the hands of Buddha.

    To access the bridge requires people take a five kilometre cable car journey.

    From there it was back to the bus and on to Hoi An via Da Nang. This afternoon's pit stop was at a marble carving workshop and retailer. Marble statues and artworks seem to be the main industry here with seemingly every second building selling them.

    Our hotel in Hoi An is Little Residence - a boutique hotel and spa - it is very, very nice.
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  • A walk around Hoi An

    1. maaliskuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    This morning, a walk around the streets of Hoi An before it got 'too busy'.

    Hoi An is well known for its silk industry so our first stop was at Thong Loi, a fine arts and handicraft manufacturer. We toured the silkworm breeding area, watched silk thread being spun from the cocoons and watched a silk weaving loom in action. One silk cocoon can give up to 1,000 metres of silk.

    The woven fabric is used to make clothing and accessories. The art works are created by very delicate embroidery.

    Once this process had been explained we were invited to peruse the framed finished products on the walls surrounding us. This entire process was gradually moving us into the main shop where we could have a shirt, dress, suit, etc made to measure by this afternoon…

    The exit leads into a wood carving and lantern making area…

    Morning tea was at the Reaching Out teahouse, an establishment employing handicapped people.

    The Japanese Bridge was constructed in the 1590s to link the Japanese and Chinese quarters. Once over this bridge , we visited a Chinese Temple.

    Lunch was at a local community farming project just outside Hoi An - the Tra Que Village, where the community has come together to create a large vegetable farm. Here we had a walk round the vegetable plots before having the opportunity to see how the farmers here work the land.

    Lunch meant we each had to cook a Vietnamese Pancake and that was our first course - heat soy oil in frying pan, add chicken / pork / beef, add rice flour and water mix and herbs, add bean shoots, cover for ninety seconds then toss. Turn out onto rice paper, add mixed vegetable and roll. Very tasty.

    We had a couple of hours free before heading off to walk to a show and dinner tonight. We had left washing with a local lady this morning. It was back at the hotel at 4.30 washed and dried. We headed off again at 5.00.
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  • Teh Dar - Bamboo Circus.

    1. maaliskuuta, Vietnam ⋅ 🌙 24 °C

    Tonight we're booked in to see a show - Teh Dar.

    “At Hoi An Lune Center's Bamboo Theatre, audiences will experience dramatic stories drawn from daily life in different regions in Vietnam, told through the electrifying medium of Vietnamese Bamboo Circus. Using the art of storytelling circus together with bamboo props and live music, the Vietnamese Bamboo Circus vividly represents traditional cultures. Travelers who want to transcend time and space for a front-row immersion in the artistic and emotional life of Vietnam should come here first”.

    We walked along the river to the Lune Theatre and saw the show. The performers are very acrobatic and the show was very entertaining.

    After the show we walked back down the river to a footbridge, crossed and went back on the other side to get to our dinner restaurant. By now it was darker so the lights of the lanterns were bright. There were thousands of people and street stalls selling everything from food to cheap toys.

    This was very much how we had imagined Hoi An to be.

    Yesterday we drove for four hours - today we walked for well over five hours - 10 1/2 kms - 🥱
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  • Off to Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon).

    2. maaliskuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    Another travel day, this time to fly to Ho Chi Min City aka Saigon.

    The airport for the flight was Da Nang so we left Hoi An by coach about 10.00am to head there for our 1.45pm flight.

    Lunch today was a lunch pack containing a club sandwich and a banana which we picked up at a pit stop at Da Nang beach. We took them through airport check-in and 'dined' while waiting for our flight..

    After a 1 -1/4 hour flight we arrived in Saigon, walked to our coach and headed into the traffic. Loc reassured us that because it's Sunday, the traffic is light. If that's light, I'm keen to see what tomorrow’s traffic is like…
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  • A look at Saigon.

    3. maaliskuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ⛅ 33 °C

    The Vietnam War ended when a North Vietnamese tank smashed open the gates of Norodom Palace. The tank commander then took what is now the Vietnamese Flag and flew it from the Palace flagpole.

    The gates are repaired and the Palace is now called the Reunification Palace.

    Next stop was the War Remnants Museum. This museum displays military equipment, photographs and artefacts relating to the Vietnam War (1961-1975). It contained many photos taken by Photo-Journalists during those years. It was also confronting and graphic - particularly the visual displays of the impacts of Agent Orange and other chemicals used by the Americans.

    Like war museums around the world, this one shows the horrors of war in the hope that wars may cease.

    The Central Post Office was constructed in the late 19th century. It has Gothic, Renaissance and French influences. It was designed by Auguste Henri Vildieu and Alfred Foulhoux but is often wrongly credited as being the work of Gustave Eiffel. (Similarly, a bridge in Hue is often wrongly credited to Eiffel). After the war many Vietnamese found the need to write to family members around the world having fled such devastation. One gentleman set up in the Post Office to assist locals with translations. He did this until he was in his 90’s.

    On the walk to meet up with our bus, we passed what had been the CIA building during the war. As Saigon fell, the Americans tried to helicopter as many people out as possible. Many escaped from the Palace. Many more escaped from the tiny helipad on the roof of the building.

    We also stopped at a workshop making pictures and decorated furniture with eggshells and lacquer.

    After lunch at the Star Anise Restaurant, the bus took us back to the hotel for a couple of hours free time before meeting to go to dinner.
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  • Cu Chi tunnels.

    4. maaliskuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ☀️ 32 °C

    On the way to see the Cu Chi tunnels, we stopped at a bamboo products showroom. We were shown a large range of products from toothpaste to underwear to clothing to bed blankets. It was all really nice and high quality. The showroom was huge and we ran the gauntlet of eager sales staff in an effort to get to the other end and the exit. Several people did buy things.

    Then it was on to the Cu Chi Tunnels.

    “Communist forces began digging a network of tunnels under the jungle terrain of South Vietnam in the late 1940s, during their war of independence from French colonial authority. Tunnels were often dug by hand, only a short distance at a time. As the United States increasingly escalated its military presence in Vietnam in support of a non-Communist regime in South Vietnam beginning in the early 1960s, North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops (as Communist supporters in South Vietnam were known) gradually expanded the tunnels. At its peak during the Vietnam War, the network of tunnels in the Cu Chi district linked VC support bases over a distance of some 250 kilometers, from the outskirts of Saigon all the way to the Cambodian border.”

    Once at the tunnels, we watched a video of the tunnels being built and the organisation needed to support this task.

    The VC could hide in well camouflaged holes in the ground or enter a tunnel by equally well camouflaged entrances. A hole through the ground to a nearby termite mound supplied air.

    Bamboo booby traps traps were laid - these were used as animal (Tiger) traps once upon a time but were equally effective against the enemy. They were a camouflaged trapdoor with bamboo spikes sticking up from the bottom, often covered with poison.

    There were many variations but all involved a trapdoor at ground level.

    The tunnels allowed the VC to travel great distances and 'house' thousands of people. Visitors have the opportunity to enter the tunnel and crawl along to the next entrance. Probably half of our group did.

    As well as hiding places for the VC during combat, they served as communication and supply routes, hospitals, food and weapon caches and living quarters.

    Tonight we dined in the dark at Noir Restaurant. We were greeted by deaf people, asked to be seated and were given wooden puzzles to solve. Most had nine blocks of different shapes that fitted into the same shape cutout on a wooden board. Blindfolded, the task was to fit the blocks into the correct size cutout.

    For me, it was a small bowl containing uncooked rice, coffee beans and four small paper clips - I had to find the paper clips. Sounds easy…

    There were to be six us at our table which was in a room upstairs and we would be served by totally blind but hearing people. Our waitress led us upstairs, with each of us holding the shoulder of the one in front, to an absolutely pitch black room. She then guided us to our seats. It had been explained already that we would have three courses of tasting platters - four starters, four mains and three deserts. There were bowls on wooden trays and we were to start with top right, then bottom right, bottom left and finally top left for both starters and mains. Desserts we ate right to left.

    I thoroughly enjoyed the night - it was a very different experience.
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  • Missing the Cu Chi Tunnels

    4.–14. maalisk., Vietnam ⋅ ☀️ 33 °C

    After battling a sore throat and a night of coughing I elected to stay at our hotel to try to shake it off. John joined the group to the Cu Chi Tunnels.
    After a sleep-in and shower, I read up on what I was missing out on then set up in the foyer with a book and a latte to give housekeeping a chance to service the room. After a couple of hours it was still not done so I set off with my trusty translator and currency converter to find a chemist. Saigon is hot and noisy but the hotel is central so the chemist was not hard to find.
    The streets are crowded with motor bikes, scooters, cars and trucks and whilst it it a surprise to find nothing gives way to pedestrians, I think the city would become gridlocked if they did..
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  • Going cruising.

    5. maaliskuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ☀️ 34 °C

    It’s a sad day today in that it is our last day with Loc as our guide. He will take us to Can Tho, a city on the Mekong Delta, where we will board the Victoria Mekong for a four night cruise up the Mekong River and into Cambodia.

    We set off shortly after 8.00am for several hours driving, stopping for lunch at Cai Be. This meant a ride in a sampan on the river to an island where we disembarked and walked to the venue, the Sau Ca Restaurant. The main course was a delicious, spectacularly presented fish, elephant ear fish, that we peeled off the bone and used to make rice paper rolls.

    After lunch, back on the sampan and a stop at a rice processing shop. They make puffed rice, lollies and rice wine - snake wine has a cobra in the bottle.

    Back on the bus and the drive to the cruise.

    As we neared the end of the trip, Loc thanked us for being a good group. He was quite emotional.

    Once off the bus, the cruise ship crew busied themselves taking our luggage aboard and we all said our goodbyes to Loc…

    Tonight he will fly home to Hanoi and his 'honey'.
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  • On to the Victoria Mekong.

    5. maaliskuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ☀️ 33 °C

    No time was wasted in getting us on board, issuing our room numbers and getting our luggage to our cabins.

    A briefing in the lounge on level three was to be in less than an hour, at 5.30, followed by traditional entertainment and then dinner at 7.00.

    The cabins are very nice and roomy.

    The briefing was a short safety talk, what we will do tomorrow and an introduction to 'heads of departments' on board.

    Local entertainment followed with Paul trying one of the instruments.
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  • Long Xuyen Floating Market.

    6. maaliskuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

    After breakfast we boarded a sampan to visit the Long Xuyen Floating Market. This is a wholesale market and we firstly just cruised through the many floating 'shops'. Many of the boats on the river have eyes painted on the bow - this is to ward off evil spirits.

    Each boat sells one type of produce and has to be bought in large amounts eg. 10 or 20 kgs. The boats advertise what they have by displaying it on a bamboo mast eg. if it has pineapples for sale, there will be a pineapple tied to that mast. They purchase the produce from the farmers and that could be a seven hour trip away.

    Mostly the families live on the boats permanently. The government wants them to live in 'proper' housing but they prefer life on the boats. When tied up alongside each other that shows they are all members of the same family.

    We then tied up alongside some. The first sold water melon and we could go aboard to see the inside of the boat. Once back on the sampan, we were given a slice of watermelon. Next stop was to purchase pineapples and then sweet potatoes at the next one - presumably for use on our ship.

    Back on the ship at 11.00am it was time for a coconut oil making demo.

    Every part of the coconut is used - nothing is wasted. The husk can be used to make activated charcoal, the fibre for string and rope and the meat for coconut 'milk' and oil…

    Lunch at 12.00 and then a sampan ride to Tiger Island (Long Xuyen) at 2.30. We discussed whether to go or not because of the high temperature and exceedingly high humidity. We went.
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  • Long Xuyen (Tiger Island).

    6. maaliskuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ☀️ 34 °C

    We took a sampan to Tiger Island, disembarked and went for a walk through the village. For a small island, it has a large population - 21,000. I suspect it was very much like looking at the way things have looked and been done for a very long time.

    The 'main street' is about two metres wide with houses on both sides. Some appeared to be just dwellings, others are businesses - timber mill, pot maker, mechanics… it was siesta time and most people were resting in the shade.

    Everyone was very friendly and the children were often keen to high five, fist bump and say hello, hello.

    It was extremely hot and humid. We might consider carefully what we undertake in the afternoons while we have the option of staying aboard our cruise ship.
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  • Terrcotta pot making.

    7. maaliskuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    Went ashore to Phu Tan to see terracotta pot making. There are 100 families here involved in terracotta pot manufacture.

    The village runs alongside the river. The clay used is bought in from rice farms and stored under tarpaulins to keep it moist.

    Once through the manufacturing area, the main street offered a glimpse of everyday life. It was quite busy with traffic, shops and ladies with market barrows offering a variety of goods - fish, meat, eggs, veggies…

    One stall had fish, alive and dead, and also rat - not a house rat - a coconut or a rat rice rat (they are smaller). Another had eggs - quail, hen and hens eggs with 14 day old embryos in them. Fish and meat were not covered in any way…

    Nam bought some green mango to take back to the ship for us to try along with chilli salt dip. Also back at the ship we visited the captain’s bridge.

    An excellent morning though quite hot again by the finish.
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  • Fish farm visit.

    7. maaliskuuta, Vietnam ⋅ ☁️ 33 °C

    We weren't that interested in a fish farm visit but a ride on the water wouldn't be too hot.

    It's a big operation having ten farms in all. We looked at a pen 10 X 25 metres and 9 metres deep capable of holding 100 tonne of fish. We were shown the sacks of food and some was thrown in to bring the fish up for a feed.

    A couple of fish were pulled out to show us. Men in canoes were fishing near the farm as the food brings wild fish closer in.

    On the way back we were shown erosion on a bend in the river - on the opposite bank silt gets deposited. Sometimes the government subsidises the planting of coconut trees to try to stop the erosion.

    It was a short excursion - only about an hour and a half - time for a break before our briefing and entertainment - a lion dance.

    The lion dance entertainers were a troupe of Vietnamese schoolboys. They started with a performance of drumming followed by the lion dance. Next up, the dragon then a display of acrobatic tumbling.

    They were very good. Next, our last dinner in Vietnam - tomorrow morning we enter Cambodia.
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