Vietnam
Trà Lĩnh District

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    • Day 6

      Quang Uyen

      April 14, 2023 in Vietnam

      Après une nuit très particulière : odeurs plus ou moins agréables de la campagne...les coqs à partir de 3h le matin,on voulait du local nous avons été servi !! Elle fût loin d'être réparatrice. Côté positif nous entré directement dans leur mode de vie.
      Après cette immersion nous ne pouvons rester insensible.
      Nous avons fait une rando de 11 kms au milieu de nulle part en pleine montagne, pour arriver à notre chambre d'hôte (confort 5 étoiles par rapport à hier soir).
      Nous sommes dans un village où il fabrique des bâtonnets d'encens.
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    • Day 33

      Cao Bang c’est la fin

      April 2 in Vietnam ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

      Après 10h de route hier pour arriver à Cao Bang en bus, aujourd’hui j’ai loué un scooter pour aller voir les chutes de Ban Gioc (160km AR) j’adore rouler 😜 J’ai également visité un temple et la grotte du Tigre. J’ai rencontré un français que j’ai perdu en cours de route 🧐
      Demain à nouveau bus (6h) pour Hanoï et après-demain avion pour la France
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    • Day 74

      Day 74

      April 19 in Vietnam ⋅ ☁️ 31 °C

      Cao Bang Loop Day 2

      I'm about a week behind writing these so my recollection may not be all there.

      After a terrible night sleep from being woken up by the roosters (which I didn't mind) then being kept awake by the rattling of footsteps through the thinly constructed walls and floor (which I did mind) I mustered myself out of bed not super ready to attack the day. Although, being able to open the shutters in my room and look out at the fields was quite nice. I had a quick breakfast of pancakes and fruit then checked out and headed towards the cave.

      The cave was right by the waterfall but I had to kill some time before the dam at the waterfall opened at 11. The cave was okay. It was pretty decently sized but honestly I've been in quite a few caves now and I'm a little bit over them. After a brief run through I headed towards the waterfall, stopping at the Stone Village where all the houses felt very small European village. After a quick drink and a walk around I finally headed to the Ban Gioc waterfalls.

      I parked up at a considerably more busy carpark than yesterday, paid for my entry and wandered in. Apparently it's the 4th biggest waterfall on an international border which is a very specific but nonetheless cool fact. It was also a big tourist hot spot as the waterfall is only "good" between 11 and 2 so everyone comes in those times. People were selling pictures riding horses whilst wearing cowboy hats. Definitely not my vibe but when I got to the waterfall I found a bench and sat for a while, watching the boats do circles in the water. When the dam opened it revealed even more to the waterfall around to the side too. Eventually I felt I had taken in the waterfall and got ready to do a bit of walking around when I saw a half fenced off pathway leading up towards the waterfall, and then a minute later I see a couple people making their way down. I asked them what's up there and they say that after about 15 minutes and a bit of a climb there's a nice little view away from the people and the boats. Perfect.

      I made my way around the fence and in about 5 minutes I reached a bit of a dead end with not a super view and not the walk through the field that the couple said there was. A bit confused I turned around and found my way onto the path they were talking about. They warned me to remember my way back which was good advice as the path was pretty feint and quite diverging. Eventually I got to where I assume they were talking about and scurried a bit too close to the massive drop and waterfall below me but got a nice view out of it. Not wanting to forget the way I came (plus very hungry) I made my way back only getting a little lost and headed out.

      I got some Pho across the road from the entrance and followed it with some ice cream before getting on my way as I had some kilometers to cover and it was well past lunch time. Something about the roads on the loop is that generally they were in really good condition but there were so many animals in the road. Whether that was dogs, chickens, buffalo, cows, or goats something was always laying in the street or ready to jump out and it made it quite a challenge to dodge anything with a death wish. Luckily there isn't much traffic except for the fairly frequent farmer walking a small herd of buffalo down the road (which I honestly couldn't tell you why).

      After a while I made my way to a walking track that was meant to give a good view at the top. I parked up and had to walk behind this dudes house in this tiny village but then I got to the path that lead up. Feeling springy I jogged up this one till I got to a nice rock with a perfect seat for the view down the valley. Thinking that was it, I sat for a bit admiring the view before realising that the path continued and I was curious where it took me as I thought I was already at the "spot". Have you ever heard the phrase "Curiosity killed the cat"? Well I certainly felt like the cat. As I wandered up the path it was becoming clearer and clearer that this was becoming less and less trodden (but still fairly obvious) as people assumedly turned back. Unfortunately, my curiosity wouldn't let me stop going and I just *HAD* to see where the path lead. I kept venturing for maybe 30 minutes deeper into the jungle, with seemingly no end to this path. I then realised I had no phone signal and no one knew where I was if something were to happen, so being quite sweaty and dirty from battling through the jungle I turned back and followed the path back. Unfortunately, the path had split in 2 directions and I wasn't super sure the way I came as most things looked like trees and there wasn't many markers. Knowing I wasn't lost but just a bit confused, I made my way up one of the tracks to see if it led to anywhere recognisable. I ran into a disappearing track and small herd of cattle blocking the way so I decided to head back the other route. Eventually it led back to where I recognised and even though I was never off the track, I still got a bit panicked I'd end up lost so you can say I learnt my lesson. I got back down completely sweaty and headed out.

      After no more official stops, I made it to where my homestay would be that night. I had to ride down this bumpy dirt and gravel track which required some good evasive techniques but eventually I ended up at 1 last stop a minute from my homestay. The stunning "Angel Eye Mountain" is a limestone karst with a cave going all the way through meaning you can see the sky through it. Plus it stands tall in a wonderful lush green plains below it. I got there just at sunset as well which meant 2 great sunsets 2 days in a row, lucky lucky me!

      I checked in to a relatively expensive but super nice homestay and got ready to chill for the evening. They had about 5 or 6 dogs that were very excitable and great to play with, running around like crazy. It wasn't until I met a small curly hair little dude that my heart melted as all he wanted was to cuddle up to me. Turns out his name was Sam! It was really meant to be. I had some dinner, with little Sam sleeping on my lap then went for a shower before cuddling up to Sam again whilst I watched some Netflix (Castaway is a pretty good movie). Overall it was a really nice evening except for the stupidly low wooden beam in the bedroom which I hit my head against not once but twice, sending me to the floor on the 2nd time and leaving behind a bump right on top of my head.
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    • Day 246

      Province de Cao Bang

      May 16, 2023 in Vietnam ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

      5 jours en moto dans une province mi-montagneuse du Nord
      Paysages splendides, maisons d'hôtes isolées, rivières bleux, beaucoup de maïs peu de riz, une chute pour mes collègues
      C'était incroyable, je vous laisse découvrir en images!Read more

    • Day 61

      Peaceful lake day

      May 31, 2022 in Vietnam ⋅ ☁️ 24 °C

      Northern Vietnam consists mainly of mountains. Cute looking karst mountains covered in trees and other greens. They kinda look fluffy. Between the mountains there are valleys. Even more fluffy. Green and lush valleys where people grow rice, corn, bananas, indian shot, and some kind of reed or grass we didn't know but we think it's used for feeding animals.

      Driving through northern Vietnam feels like this: up the mountain (use lower gear, steep curvy road) - down the mountain (use brakes, steep curvy road) - through the valley and the village (drive slowly, there's so much to see, sometimes animals are blocking the road) - and up the mountain again. ☺️

      We spent a chill day at Thang Hen lake and went to Angel Eye Mountain, where we saw two buffalos wallow in the mud. It's super peaceful in those little villages. Fun fact: strawberries grow here! Real forest strawberries, just like back home! 😃
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    • Day 97

      Camping in Thác Nâm Tra (bike trip🏍️)

      May 28, 2022 in Vietnam ⋅ 🌧 22 °C

      Drove around the frontier with China for the day and enjoyed the immensity of the mountains. It felt so cool to be so close to such a powerful country! After that decided to go to sleep to a lake, but because it was to rainy for the hammock, rented a tent from a man we found on the internet and camped on a super priviledged spot with the best views ever! Made a beautiful fire (that disn't last for long because we had to hide from the rain), suffered some wine rice (what a bad taste!), Got mud everywhere, swam a little bit and woke up literaly insise the lake!

      📍Essentials: camp in Thac Nam Tra
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    • Day 80–81

      Quảng Uyên (day 12)

      February 2 in Vietnam ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

      A typical start to the day, but we decided to opt for a lighter breakfast of fresh fruit with our black coffees. The street was bustling again with vendors displaying their wares. The shop between the hotel and cafe had skinned pig heads smoking 🐷. S said it’s a delicacy, and used thinly sliced in various dishes around Lunar New Years. A spotted a vendor with deep Fried bread balls. They had a little sweet bean paste inside, chewy and delicious 😜

      We left town, destined for Khau Coc Cha Mountain pass. We were excited as the photos in the hotel lobby looked like we were in a for an epic ride. S mentioned that some tourists had issues riding the road and were injured 😵 so they were improving the road to widen the turns 😔 Sadly, the whole area was under construction repair, and very rough. Thankfully no one was working, so our ride was fairly unobstructed. The continuous mountain ridges and cascading valleys provided a number of smaller steep passes with multiple tight corners for our riding pleasure, making up for the anticlimactic initial pass…

      Our trajectory kept us close to the China-Vietnam boarder where we found ourselves on an intermittently muddy track with the occasional "Vietnam Boarder Beltline" sign we can only assume indicates the road is primarily used for patrols. We connected with the main road and veered through the Vietnam boarder town, Sóc Giang.

      Heading east for a short stint brought us to Ha Quang, where we stopped in the 24C heat for a quick lunch of the usual fare. After our break we zipped along a narrow track highway, and various single track concrete roads. S decided the ride was in need of a little more off-road action, so took us on a detour through a very rugged and rocky trail meandering through some of the local farms.

      Eventually we found ourselves in a lush green rolling field scattered with various herds grazing. We wondered why there wasn’t much farming in the valley, only to find out it floods into a shallow lake during summer. After a couple bends in the valley, we had an amazing view of a mountain with One Eye (Nui Mat Than), the eye. We waved to the group of Aussies and Brits we had met a couple days earlier, but they were going the other direction. We soon found out why. A nearly impassable short section that took all three of us to maneuver the bikes through the slippery muddy rocky path, one at a time. We were exhausted and drenched in sweat after 30 minutes of slipping, lifting, and pushing. The effort paid off as the valley continued to open up in a heavenly lost-world fashion.

      One final steep muddy slope, and we were on a flat mucky track back to the main road. We stopped briefly to hose off the mud and manure before meandering through the twisty flat valleys, and into Quảng Uyên for the night at our hotel.

      It's the first hotel with a shower stall of glass! Only half the bathroom got wet as it still leaked a bit. Amazingly the beds are not rock hard 🥳

      Dinner was scrumptious! "KFC" chicken, as S called it; very tender too! Sweet and sour mini ribs, greens with garlic, pickled cabbage and fried rice.
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    • Day 12

      En direction des chutes d'eau.

      December 7, 2019 in Vietnam ⋅ 🌙 11 °C

      Visite d'un village spécialisé dans les encens. Nous y dormirons le soir.

      Visite d'un village spécialisé dans la forge.

      Spectacle de la journée : les chutes d'eau de Ban Gioc. Elles forment la frontière avec la Chine voisine. La moitié de la rivière est chinoise , l'autre est vietnamienne. Aucun contact possible.

      On termine la journée par la visite d'une grotte d'1 km de long. Pas très impressionnant niveau couleur, mais de très jolies formes.
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    • Day 28

      Out of Hanoi, into the Wild

      October 26, 2017 in Vietnam ⋅ ☁️ 19 °C

      Glad to be leaving the capital, we got picked up by Mr Linh's Adventures. Our driver is called Long, our tour guide is also called Long. Oh, and the group consists of David and Kerry.. Yes we are having a one-to-one tour with the Longs.
      We were driven north out of Hanoi, a total of 340km to the Chinese border. We stopped at the Ethnic Minority museum where Long showed us the different typical houses of the different minorities (including one with someone asleep in it) and then let us wander round the rest of the museum on our own. Next stop was an hour an half later for lunch, a local restaurant with whole cooked chickens with heads still on. Long told us to sit down and he would order. We sat anxiously wondering what would be served. Luckily, a selection of steamed rice, bits of lemongrass chicken, pork ribs, whole shrimps and vegetables came out. All of it was pretty tasty and we washed it down with iced green tea.
      The scenery on the way up into the hills was beautiful, although it was misty. The Longs kindly stopped so we could take some pictures. We arrived at a Nung's (local minority group) village which is known for making incense. We got out the minibus and walked with Long through the centre, past water-buffalos being washed, corn being hand-harvested and the sun setting behind the huge hills around.
      Tonight we are stay at Mr Him's homestay. It is a stilted house with a downstairs kitchen/dining room/garage and outside toilets. We are sleeping upstairs on a firm (a complete understatement) mattress on the floor beneath a mosquito net and behind a curtain. We had dinner with the family just after sunset. It is customary to serve green tea and corn wine to visitors and they plied us with both. Dinner was the usual rice, chicken, pork (both BBQ and roasted) and then pig's colon. Kerry politely declined but David was braver and had a piece - it was...chewy. The rest of the food was tasty. We had a great evening chatting to Long before getting an early night. Hopefully the alcohol will help us sleep, as the mattress will not.
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    • Day 309

      In Ho Chi Mins Höhle

      November 3, 2016 in Vietnam ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

      Kurz vor 8 schaffen wir es zum Hondaservice. Das Motoröl wird schnell auf dem Gehsteig gewechselt. Andere Wartungsarbeiten wollen sie aber lieber nicht machen, sie kennen sich eher mit Rollern aus. Wir frühstücken am Markt und fahren bei blauem Himmel, Sonnenschein nach Norden an die chinesische Grenze. Dort hat Ho Chi Minh 1941 ein paar Wochen gelebt bevor er den Widerstand gegen die französische Kolonialherrschaft organisiert hat. Nach ausgiebiger Würdigung der Höhle, des Leninbachs und des Karl Marx Berges fahren wir auf einer Panoramstrecke durch Karsthügel und Reisfelder nach Westen. Mittendrin müssen wir auf Reserve schalten, da wir bei der schönen Fahrt vergessen hatten zu tanken. Glücklicherweise gibt es gleich im nächsten Ort eine einfache Zapfstelle, zur Sicherheit füllen wir 2l auf. Sobald wir wieder auf die Hauptstrecke kommen sollte es wieder Tankstellen geben.
      Unser Tagesziel erreichen wir nicht mehr - wir bleiben in dem etwas trostlosen Grenzort Tra Linh hängen. Hauptsachlich fahren hier Laster durch, Elektro und Textilien aus China, Schweine nach China.
      Beim abendlichen Bier werden wir gleich wieder eingeladen. Leider stockt die Unterhaltung ziemlich schnell. Nachdem Herkunft, Namen, Alter, Fussballinfos ausgetauscht sind (Lieblingsspieler Michael Ballack) stockt die Unterhaltung - zu mehr reicht das Englisch der Gastgeber nicht, unser Vietnamesisch nicht mal dazu. Aber ein Prost geht immer. Andrea bastelt noch ausgiebig Papierschiffchen für sich heranschleichende Kinder.
      Im der Pension bekommen wir einen interessanten Mix von vietnamischer Elektro/Dancehall und quietschenden Schweinen geboten. Glücklicherweise sind die Vietnamesen ja Frühaufsteher - um 10 wird spätestens Schluss sein.
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Huyện Trà Lĩnh, Huyen Tra Linh, Trà Lĩnh District

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