The main reason for our trip to Vietnam this year was to visit the Mekong Delta in the south of the country, the part that we didn’t do in 2023, as well as acting as a pit stop between Europe and Asia. Basing ourselves in Ho Chi Minh (Saigon), we stayed there for a couple of nights, had one night in between part one and part two and then again for a couple of nights before departing.
Saigon was great, given that we had done the sight seeing
last year, we literally just spent time soaking up the atmosphere, having time
to run, and visit our favourite places – namely the Ben Nghe Street Food
court, and for breakfast smoothies at Bến Thành market. It also gave us time to work out the
itinerary for the south, the Mekong Delta, which roughly follows part of the path Gary
completed in 1990.
Part One
Mostly catching buses to get from A to B, our first stop
was Chau Doc. Getting there we drove mostly through countryside that was very
green with lots of agriculture. Not so
much English here however and our priority (apart from finding an ATM) was to
book a tour for the following day and find dinner. We found Ms San, a local tour guide, and
messaged her hoping she would reply (it was Friday evening by this time). She did, and our trip with her was wonderful,
although we didn’t find anywhere for dinner and opted for noodles in.
Our first stop was at Sam Mountain, the highest
'mountain' in the Mekong Delta at 230m. Close by we saw an impressive half built meditating Buddha being carved into the
rock, which will be amazing when finished, but this visit was
centred around Hang Pagoda. It was
originally a small temple (built 1840-50), here we did a lot of climbing to the
different levels, some through existing cave tunnels. At the top we saw the reclining Nirvana
Buddha 'signifying balance', and we got great views of the countryside and the
border with Cambodia, which is very close.
There is something about Buddhism which focuses on self control of your
own decisions, peace and harmony, that many could learn from.
Next stop was Tra Su Cajuput Nature Park. We walked through beautiful orchid and flower
gardens and then boarded a long tail motorboat that took us further into the
forest. Initially there were birds
everywhere, but as we go deeper it went quiet.
We were dropped off and walked for a while to see the local beehives and
watched as they staff worked with them.
After a pit stop for fruit and coconut juice, we climbed the viewing
tower for more impressive views, including back to Sam Mountain.
Before we knew it, we were heading back to the starting
point and into the cacophony of birds.
After boarding a smaller paddle boat, we ventured into the inner circle
amongst the Lotus lilies and river weeds and so many birds.
Of note - Blue Heron, Flower Heron, Great Egret, Water
hen and Cormorants.
The trip was finished off with another short walk at the
quiet end of the reserve, a space I don’t think we would have been allowed into
without Ms San, who was fantastic. Lots
of information, no rushing and she took so many lovely photos of the two of us
which was special and appreciated.
That evening we managed to find a restaurant with an
English menu so were set for the remainder of our time in Chau Doc. On the way we walked the waterfront, and back
through the square close to home to watch the world go by.
The other spot we visited whilst in Chau Doc was the wet
market (that was here 30 years ago when Gary visited the first time). The rain made taking photos a little
difficult, but it was great to walk amongst the mayhem that is a local’s market
in Vietnam.
Next stop was Ha Tien and Ms San came to see us off with offerings of water and cashews. The trip was quick at under two hours (private driver), and we followed the river almost all the way. The scenery included plenty of river houses and rice fields, the latter interestingly at this time of year are flooded with river water and fished.
Gary was also here 34 years ago, and his initial views
were that Ha Tien has changed considerably, given back in 1990, the children
hadn’t seen white skin before. Our
exploratory walk had us happening across another vibrant local’s market, before making our way to the new bridge
(the old pontoon bridge from 1990 now gone).
Our restaurant here ended up being Hai San Bo Ke by default given the evening downpour and it was so cheap. Being there longer than we intended (due to
the rain) we had two meals and a side, plus eight beers, which only came to VND308,154 or NZ $19.90). They have
really cute brightly coloured people carriers in this town too, especially busy
when it rains.
Our excursion here was to first visit Thach Dong
Mountain, a cave pagoda.
The mountain is beside the south-west border of Vietnam
and Cambodia and the pagoda inside is called Tien Son Pagoda (built in
1790). We climbed the various levels
getting views of the sun playing through cave holes as well as views out. The site is on Ha Tien’s must see list and is nice,
but not sensational.
Second site was another limestone mountain, Da Dung
Mountain. This one is full of cave
systems, 14 in total, each with its own name and myth that goes with it. We walked and climbed and walked and climbed
and just over an hour later made it back to the car. Only in Vietnam are caves hot!
The final stop was Mui Nai beach. Rated as one of the best beaches in the
region but certainly not looking that way today. Although hot and tired we were not enticed to
swim, although we walked the length of the beach taking a few photos and
enjoying the shade and breeze.
We did a couple of photos stops on the way home, being
the Mac Mi Co Temple and then close by the Mac Family Temple. Cuu Mac (1655-1735) was basically the founder
of Ha Tien laying the groundwork after settling in 1680. Then we ventured across river to the Cuu
monument and Ha Tien welcome sign.
Home again, but before going inside we walked down to the
site of the old bridge location and where Gary stayed in 1990 (a hotel that is
now a home stay), taking some comparison photos. Things certainly have changed.
One of the first things you notice in Ha Tien is the bird
song. It’s mostly coming from speakers
not birds themselves, and we confirmed they are harvesting the nests of the
wild Swift birds in buildings turned into aviaries. The nests are considered a delicacy and have
been consumed for thousands of years (top quality nests going for $3-4,000 US dollars per kg).
Our final stop in the south was Can Tho. Travelling in the south is significantly
different to travelling north from Ho Chi Minh. The road quality is worse,
everything happens beside a river or waterway, the impoverished and simple
living standards of the general population (even more so once you get a little
rural) are very obvious and finally the rubbish; it's everywhere - in the street,
in the water ways and on the coastal shoreline.
It's actually really sad and feels a little forgotten.
The main attraction here is the Cai Rang Floating Market,
so we were up at 4.20am for a 5am collection to head out on a personal boat
trip, firstly to the floating market and then to cruise the small canals off
the main river.
Our guide, Lam, was great with good English and a
constant source of information, however unfortunately the market is dying out
given the convenience of shops, scooters and roads. It was still great to see with lots of large
produce boats parked up with their eyes painted on, and a few floating
restaurants.
We had a noodle breakfast served boiling hot from boat
to boat, before heading further upriver to the quieter life visiting an
authentic noodle house that has been in operation for five generations. We watched and participated in the noodle
making process, which we both found surprising and incredibly interesting. As always it is very manual but the process
is productively simplified. We also left
with another meal, this time fried noodles (offcuts during the process), which
was really good. Great visit and the
highlight of our excursion.
On the way back through the small canals Gary got to row
for a while, getting a pass and thumbs up from the guide and our boat
lady. We are told mostly the old people
live along these quieter rivers now, whilst their children move to towns for
work. We stopped at one of the pineapple
boats on the way back and we were home by 9.30am.
We walked a bit around Can Tho during our visit passing
the impressive Ho Chi Minh Monument and the late 19th century Ong Temple. We also found the location of the morning fish market (which was finished for the day), and an incredibly authentic,
local fresh street market that surrounded it. Not our first
market but still worthy of a few photos.
Before leaving we walked to see two other Pagoda
here. Both built in the mid 20th
century, first the Munireangsey Pagoda, and then not much further
on the Pitu Kohsa Rangsay Pagoda. Both
pagodas are beautiful and active, with monks in both,
and were worth the walk.
We have enjoyed our time in the south (the Mekong Delta), the
diversity, the people, the waterways, the Marble mountains, the
impoverished/simple living standards and the rubbish all making a lasting
impression, and for Gary the huge changes.
Part Two
A flight to Danang and transfer, and we were back in the
Golden Holiday Hotel (the same place we stayed last year). Our time here is mainly to relax and having
been here before we didn't need to rush off and do anything. This will be the end of our Vietnam trip
(other than a couple more nights in Saigon for washing and organising
ourselves), so we made a few calls home for catch up and caught up on some much
needed photo naming.
We managed 3 gym sessions, 3 swims and Gary ran twice
(and the bodies felt it after too long between ‘drinks’). Lots of chilling, walking into the old town as well as multiple dips in the pool as the temperature
maxed out at 38°.
The old town was just as special as last time. We had dinner and drinks on the river
multiple times and were super happy to see that the historic 16th century Japanese bridge, which was
under scaffolding last year, has been unveiled and looks sensational,
especially under lights. Also, it
wouldn't be Vietnam if you didn't get caught in a torrential downpour at some
point.
We used the hotels free bikes to cycle the 3.25km to An
Bang beach (on the China Beach coast).
On the way seeing the post rice harvest process of drying and burning
being carried out and on crossing the river saw a fish farm and again the
simple river life. The sand and beach is
still lovely and this time of year much quieter, as summer is effectively done
and all the schools and workers are back at it.
Vietnam is always an interesting and very cheap place to
visit. The people are generally very
friending and happy to help or want to sell you something, but without being
aggressive. It’s been a great stop for
us to regroup as we head to our next destination, and another new one, Bhutan.
Things we will remember about Vietnam 2024:
Locals’ markets – fresh and wet
Scooters and motorbikes
The Mekong Delta
Simplicity
Rice paddies
Hoi An lanterns and lights
Red, orange and green all mean GO