Bueno, llegó la hora de irnos de Sapa, de mis amigas y del hotel (Family guesthouse) con sus preciosas vistas y su gente simpática. Por la tarde cogimos el minivan hasta Lao Cai y luego el tren de noche hasta Hanoi (en soft seat A/C = lo más baratito de lo no-cutre).
Oops, I´ve started to write in Spanish without thinking! So, we´re on the train to Hanoi… We expected that arriving in Hanoi at 5.00h in the morning would mean having to wait until at least 8.00h for the city to wake up. But no, we were wrong. Everywhere, people were starting to get out on the street, many of them in pyjamas, to do their morning exercises around the Hoan Kiem Lake or to get off to work. It seems that also the Lenin Park is full of the most sporty Hanoiers between 5h and 7h in the morning, but we never saw it for ourselves…
In the beginning, after relaxed Laos and reasonably quiet Sapa, we needed a little time to get used to the crazy traffic of Hanoi: a chaos of bicycles, motorbikes, rickshaws and taxis, where traffic lights are merely decoration and sidewalks are ideal parking lots for motorbikes. Once we knew, though, that we had to cross the street slowly and while making eyecontact with the drivers (to allow them to zigzag around us) and that blowing the horn is a normal practice when passing another vehicle, we started to love the city.
The traffic in Hanoi…

… and me confidently zigzagging through it
We made a walking tour around the old centre, visited the women´s museum (explaining the role of Vietnamese women in both wars, against the French and afterwards the Americans), the Temple of Literature, and also the Hoa Lo Prison (nicknamed the Hanoi Hilton).
Having a refreshing coconut after our museum visit:

We strolled along the numerous markets, our favourite spot in any town, because of its colourfulness and because we find it very representative for the way people live. We always look for the food stalls around the markets, where people are usually friendly and good and cheap food is served.
This is Lan, a very warm and generous woman, in whose street stall we went for a drink a few times and ate the delicious noodle soup in the stall next to hers.
Although we couldn´t talk, since her English was non-existing, we had whole chats and a few laughs with her. One of her friends even invited Lluís for a smoke. You know, men´s stuff…
There are food stalls on the street everywhere. In the morning, you see the women carry off with their stick on their shoulder, taking small steps due to the weight of the two superheavy baskets dangling on either side. They carry their whole ¨kitchen¨in there and before luchtime they have their stall set up, with plastic tables and baby stools around them.
14-17 August: Halong City-Halong Bay-Cat Ba
After a few days in Hanoi, we started looking for a way to get to Halong bay, a UNESCO patrimony we didn´t want to miss. That is when we started to be put off by Vietnam. We didn´t like to participate in any organized tour, being a part of the heard of tourists, being crapped in a bus, then lead onto a boat, and taken around Halong Bay, along with 20 more tourists on the same boat and surrounded by 50 more boats. But we found out that going by ourselves by public transport wasn´t an option, simply because it does not exist (or we didn´t find it anyway).
So, yes, in order to see Halong Bay and get to Cat Ba, we had to enter the tourist mill and join a group of other foreigners. To give you an idea of how this machinery works, I´ll only give you this example: for the exact same tour, we paid 34 USD each (2-days trip with bus, boat, lodging on the boat, lunch, dinner and breakfast included), others paid 40 USD and still others 90 USD (these did have AC ánd an hour of kayaking included). It just depends on where you buy and how you bargain. There are no fixed prices for ANYTHING in Vietnam. Even for a simple bottle of water in a shop they overcharge you if you don´t complain. It got really tiring and frustrating sometimes, having to be constantly on the watch, trying to get a fair price.
Anyway, after the tour, which wasn´t all that bad due to the fact that the impressive views made up for the commercial circus, we arrived to Cat Ba, where we planned to have a few lazy days on the beach. Unfortunately, the place had the charm of Benidorm and it was too hot to stay in the sun for more than 2 hours. What the heck? We´re flexible. We don´t like the place? We leave and head for the next destination. No problem.
Halong Bay:
A fishing farm:
Grocery shop on the water:
17-21 August: Hué
In order to get to Hué, we had to go back to Hanoi and take the bus from there. We arrived at 5h in the morning, had a kingsize breakfast for one lousy dollar and we found a guesthouse quickly. And… surprise… no bargaining necessary. Good room at a good price from the start, and a lovely landlady with a very good level of English. We immediately liked this small town with its nice atmosphere, good food, friendly people and the beautiful Citadelle, where we spent more than 3 hours enjoying its marvels. Hey, maybe we could get to appreciate Vietnam…
(Mind you, not that bargaining wasn´t necessary anymore, but I guess we´d got used to it, and started seeing it as a game… I just hope we don´t start bargaining for everything when we get back to Barcelona. Habits die hard, you know.)
Strange statues in the Citadelle:
A bit of a bummer was the tour we made (yes, we didn´t seem to learn…) to see a pagoda and three of the many tombs around Hué. It was kind of: get on boat - get off boat - quickly walk to tomb 1 - pay entrance fee - quickly walk around & take pictures – hurry back to boat (¨Who is late, will be lost¨ were the guide´s menacing words and we didn´t want thát!) – have quick lunch on boat – get off boat – pay another entrance fee – look around tomb 2 – run back – etc etc.
Come on, Sandra, think positive and go on to Hoi An…
Thien Mu Pagoda in Hué:
We were on one of those coloured boats:
This beauty was on a boat next to ours:
21-26 August: Hoi An
We loved it!! Lluís because Hoi An is incredibly photogenic and has very cheap draught beer, and I loved it because of the luxurious hotel we were in, the beautiful clothes shops, the choice of exchange book stores, the friendly people (although a little too pushy, but by now we could cope with that!) and the picturesque flair of the town.
Hey Anneke, they even have some of our conversations registered here!Let´s start with the hotel. Here an explanation is needed about the way the transport system is set up. One of the most economic ways to travel is with one of the opentour bus companies. The deal is that you pay a cheap fare, but in return you are taken to restaurants and hotels on which the companies have their commission. In this case, we were dropped off at an expensive-looking hotel a bit outside the centre. 10 to 15 USD a room. We told them we were sorry, but that was above our budget, we were looking for something for 6, maximum 8 USD a night. They said OK. So, for 8 USD we had a luxurious room (with a real bath!!) with terrace, access to swimming pool and free bicycles, as well as a cosy garden restaurant.
If this isn´t luxury…
Lluís made various photo safaris through the town, and while he photographed details of houses, the fish market, street names and dried flowers or incense against walls, I admired the different shops and learned some more Vietnamese from a nice shop girl.
We had a few bicycle rides, once to the beach and another one to some villages on the other side of the river.
We also made an excursion to My Son, a religious sight with beautiful temple ruins. Although we had to get up at 4.00h in the morning, it was worth it, first of all because of the amazing sunrise, but also because it was “relatively” cool. When we got back to Hoi An at 9.00h, the sun was already merciless.
My Son:
Yes, “connoisseurs” amongst you, I know this is not Judith Petit´s hand, but the butterfly seemed to like it…
On the last day in Hoi An, we just relaxed on the sunbeds in the garden with the occasional dive in the swimming pool, before being picked up at our hotel for a 24h-bustrip to Saigon.
To be continued...
1 comentario:
Hola chicos!
Parece todo super bonito, tengo envidia. Me encantan las fotos y las historias!
Que lo paseis muy bien alli, cual es la proxima parada?
Mi viejo email ya no functiona, pero no se donde tengo que cambiarlo es ahora jager.mariette@gmail.com
Un beso grande Mariette
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