Vietnam 2007
A few quick things about
Day 1 – Saturday August 4
After a good flight with Jetstar we arrived in
Tom had his motorbike, and we hired a second driver and took a tour around the city. Sarah rode with Tom and I went with the other chap. It was really great riding around seeing the city for half an hour, a nice way to get introduced to
Day 2 – Sunday August 5
Up at 7am and out by 8. We took a cab to a tailor that was recommended to me - it was very nice and the quality looked great, but it was a bit too fancy (expensive) for what I was after. We went for a walk and grabbed our first bowl of Pho (Vietnamese noodle soup). We both got Pho Ba, with sliced beef. It was at a fairly dodgy roadside joint, very cheap and delicious.
We walked around and checked out the Notre Dame Cathedral that the French built there – a much smaller and simpler version to the real one in
Next we headed to the
We headed to Ngon for our lunch, which is a really nice and cheap place that was recommended to us by friends. There was a long queue but we were lucky to get a table in only 5 minutes. The air conditioning system there was very interesting, and actually quite common in
It started raining over lunch so we caught a cab to
We walked home via a couple of markets – they were fun but too crowded and hot.
We went looking for tailors again around our hostel, after looking at several we chose a family owned one where the staff were very friendly and we got to chat with the tailor himself. I ordered 1 suit and three shirts that he was going to make copies from my favourite from home.
We went back to the travel agent to book travel to and from Nha Trang. We went to Pho 24 for dinner, was nice but really mainstream.
Day 3 – Monday August 6
Up early again to the travel agent by 8 to Chu Chi tunnels. It was a LONG bus ride; we stopped on the way at the
We stopped at a roadside diner for lunch. I had self rolled rice rolls – strangely they use cold water to make then, and they keep the papers a bit crunchy compared to what I was used to – took some adjustment, but I grew to love it.
Next to the Chu Chi tunnels - it was really interesting to see it. The different traps and weaponry was really amazing, as was the complicated network of tiny tunnels the army used in the south. We went into the tunnel, but it was not the original. They remade a section for tourist that was 20cms wider and higher than the original, but I was still rubbing against the walls and had to crawl through sections. You can see how tiny some it was – in the picture below the guide is kneeling beside one of the original entrances to the tunnel – so small a child could barely get through.
After more bus travel home we went to a casual dinner near the hostel. It was nice but all the street sellers were coming in to hassle us to buy books and chewing gum. Sarah got a massage from one of the guys riding around on push bikes that shake a string of bottle tops to indicate they are masseuses.
We went back to the travel agent to check on our trains to Nha Trang and found one was in the 6 bed room which we heard was insufferable, so we changed to flying home on the Friday with Air
Day 4 – Tuesday August 7
Up early and checked out at 7am. We got the bus heading towards the Mekong Delta – another long and sweaty day on the bus. We caught a 20 person boat to
Was fun; then to another island to a coconut candy factory – really delicious. Then to lunch – not delicious at all. We wandered around the island then caught the speed boat back to
We caught the train around 10pm, sharing a 4 person sleeper room with a mother and daughter.
Day 5 – Wednesday August 8
We slept reasonably well, and arrived around 5.30am. We were overrun with people trying to get us into their hotels and cabs… it was really overwhelming. The city (Nha Trang) was really beautiful though. We ended up choosing a hotel just because we were trying to dodge one very pushy guy.
We hired two motorbike drivers to take us around for the day. We visited an extraordinarily weird oceanographic museum, which featured rotting carcasses of actual sea life, and a huge room of preserved specimens. Bizarre.
Next to a huge Buddha statue, a Hindu temple and I got a cut throat razer shave and we both got ear cleans – with dirty rusty instruments… luckily no ear infections.
That night we realised we were very sunburnt. So we sought solace in a delicious seafood dinner. We picked the items from tanks – four enormous prawns and a lobster to share. The 1kg lobster cost around $40 and the prawns around $9.
Day 6 – Thursday August 9
We arranged to take an island hopping boat tour off the coast of
Next up was an even dodgy-er aquarium – so crappy we didn’t bother going through the main hall. We did get a lovely shot in the fake clamshell though.
That evening we took Cyclo (bush bike with a carriage seat at the front) rides along the water front, and out to a recommended restaurant. We went there as the hotel recommended it as a place to try Snake meat. Unfortunately they did not have it that day, so we had a big steamed fish to share. After I was still hungry, so I got a plate of steamed baby abalone from the markets for about AUD$3.5!!
Day 7 – Friday August 10
We had a relaxing day planned – I mean snorkelling and shopping really takes it out of you! J
We went to the large local market and we both bought some presents. Afterwards we both went for a manicure and pedicure. It was my first time – and it was fairly nice, but I made quite a spectacle as evidently they do not get many men in that place. Also, I guess, because I asked them to paint some pretty flowers on my toe nails – not bad seeing we had major language barriers. I mean Sarah got her nails all painted and buffed in the price – it seemed fair to get to of mine prettied up! J
We had a really rushed lunch at a fancy local place, I had another lobster and Sarah had beef noodles (and entrée of rice rolls to share).
That ended up being a scary day. Sarah had a red rash on her neck since Thursday night, and started to feel unwell on the plane back to
She picked herself up to meet some friends at the famous
Day 8 – Saturday August 11
Luckily that was not the case, and by morning Sarah was feeling marginally better. She still couldn’t really eat, but she could drink again. After a wander in the morning whilst she rested, we set off to
I was so happy to find a HUGE array of meats on the menu, and all at bargain prices. They had everything from deep fried scorpions (80c a piece), 5 spiced medicinal cow and goat penis, kangaroo, crocodile, ostrich, deer, etc. I opted for a simpler set – and managed to squeeze in three types of meat I had never tried before. (See below)
On the left below is grilled dove – turtle dove to be precise. It was fine – like a quail or spitchcock, but a gamier taste. It came with a chilli salt for dipping. It was nice. On the right… actually – I will save that for last.
Below is Snake Hotpot. I was disappointed with snake – this one was very rubbery, and only a skerrick of meat on it – all cartilage and skin. The soup was nice, and it was interesting – and the meat was tasty for what there was, but the texture made it unsatisfying for me. Now back to the item above right – which was an absolute stand out. It is grilled field rat; and it was fantastic. The meat tasted like pork, it was soft, juicy and really flavoursome – aided by the excellent spices they grilled it with. Honestly, it was fantastic. And best of all, for all of that, plus several drinks each and rice, it was about AUD$15 for the lot.
We wrapped up the day with hair washes in
That’s the trip! I will wrap it up in lucky 13 pages. Sorry the photos are low quality, I really compressed them to keep the document small – you can always contact me for a high resolution version, copies are available for purchase from the office. J Cheers and happy travels!
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