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Vietnam Overview:
Welcome to another world, a world where the
colours are more vivid, the culture is richer, and the
history more compelling. This is the world of Vietnam,
the latest Asian dragon to awake from its slumber.
Nature has blessed Vietnam with a bountiful harvest.
With soaring peaks like Hoang Lien mountains and a
killer coastline, with beaches like Quy Nhon and Nha
Trang, Vietnam is simply stunning. Blanketed from head
to toe with a patchwork of emerald-green rice paddies,
timelessly tended by peasant women in conical hats, this
time the brochures don't lie.
The rumble of a million motorbikes, the cries of hawkers
and the buzz of business transactions are as
ever-present as the tinkle of the past in the pagodas,
and the swish of the scythe. Modern Asia meets medieval
Asia and, in the Old Quarter of Hanoi, the two become
one. For culinary adventurers, Vietnam is a treasure
trove of more than 500 different dishes. It's a
wonderful world of pungent herbs and secret spices. Dip
delicate spring rolls in nuoc mam, a fish sauce that is
as compulsory as ketchup for the Vietnamese. Or play
'down-in-one' with xeo (rice wine), the whisky of the
mountains. | |
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Cruising in
Halong Bay & Mekong Delta: Majestic and
mysterious, inspiring and imperious: words alone cannot
do justice to the natural wonder that is Halong
Bay.
Imagine 3000 or more incredible islands rising from the
emerald waters of the Gulf of Tonkin and you have a
vision of breathtaking beauty. Halong Bay is pure art, a
priceless collection of unfinished sculptures hewn from
the hand of nature. In 1994 it was designated a World
Heritage site. Visitors can’t help but compare the
magical, mystical landscape of limestone islets to
Guilin in China and Krabi in southern Thailand, but in
reality Halong Bay is more spectacular. These tiny
islands are dotted with beaches and grottoes created by
wind and waves, and have sparsely forested slopes
ringing with birdsong. In the meanwhile, Vietnam’s
‘rice basket’, the Mekong Delta is a watery
landscape of green fields and sleepy villages,
everywhere crisscrossed by the brown canals and rivulets
fed by the mighty Mekong River. Its inhabitants –
stereotyped as friendly and easygoing – have long
toiled on the life-sustaining river, with their labours
marked by the same cycles governing the waterways. The delta, which yields enough rice to feed the country
with a sizable surplus, was formed by sediment deposited
by the Mekong. The process continues today, with silt
deposits extending the shoreline by as much as 80m per
year. The river is so large that it has two daily tides.
Lush with rice paddies and fish farms, this delta plain
also nourishes the cultivation of sugarcane, fruit,
coconut and shrimp. Although the area is primarily
rural, it is one of the most densely populated regions
in Vietnam and nearly every hectare is intensively
farmed. | |
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