Archive for » December, 2010 «

Cable car to Cloud Lake in Vung Tau

The day trip to Cloud Lake Cultural and Eco-tourism on Big Mountain in Vung Tau City left us enjoyably confused and a bit dizzy from all the carousel rides. It is one of those places that makes you wonder? How did the South African ostriches and Caribbean Pine trees end up there? What role did the radar play in the war? All the questions have answers in the brochure about Nui Lon, Nui Nho (Big and Small Mountain) in Vung Tau.

b118f cable 200 Cable car to Cloud Lake in Vung Tau

The cable car up to Cloud Lake is European designed

As you approach Vung Tau via hydrofoil (VND200,000 one way) or mini bus (VND60,000 with TV entertainment) from Saigon you will notice the cable car ride up Big Mountain. The European designed cable cars offer a smooth ride and their colorful lights can be seen at night from all over Vung Tau. It is the most convenient way to access one of Vung Tau’s main attractions for VND100,000 return including a car tour around the mountain and a brief introduction.

It is difficult to categorize Cloud Lake because it has a bit of everything but not much of anything. It is not a theme park because there are only a few rides including a Rocking Boat and a traditional merry-go-around for VND10,000 a ticket. It is not a zoo because it’s only got ostriches and monkeys. Neither is it a natural reserve as the forest is small and the lake and waterfall are artificial. But it does have a few coffee places, outdoor festival area and bar and restaurant.

Cloud Lake is suitable for a half-day trip in the morning or the evening to avoid the hot sun. The staff are friendly, and the car cable ride was brief but enjoyable as we got a great view of the coastal city. The only disappointment was the coffee places that looked more like canteens than to the amazing cafes that Vietnam usually offers.

You can walk up the mountain by road. It’s a 1.5 hour climb and you will meet many locals on their daily exercise routine. There is a resting place halfway for a healthy fruit juice or lunch before carrying on to the top. From the top there’s an amazing view of Vung Tau including Cloud Lake. However, Cloud Lake is only accessible by the cable car.

Vung Tau is pretty famous among foreign tourists for its beautiful sandy beaches and amazing natural beauty. After settling in a Vung Tau hotel, you are free to enjoy bathing in the sunlight and the blueness of the ocean as well as discovering the lake and mountains here. From the city, you can also go to the Con Dao island – a very famous island during the Vietnamese war with the French colonial and the US.

(Collected by Hotels in Vietnam network)

Surf’s up on Malibu Beach in Mui Ne

I had two of my best surfs so far in Vietnam over Christmas on the back beach at Mui Ne also known as Malibu Beach.

77adf surfs up2 200 Surf’s up on Malibu Beach in Mui Ne

A longboarder surfs at Mui Ne’s Malibu Beach also known by Vietnam locals as Ghan Beach

The surf on Christmas Day and Christmas Eve had three foot sets with some good rides, both lefts and rights. It was slightly bigger down the south end of Malibu Beach near the No Mad kitesurfing camp, but it was glassier down further near the resorts, which was particularly good. Boxing Day was reportedly excellent as well.

December has swung the wind from the South to the North bringing the wind-swell onto the east-facing Malibu beach. The front beach at Mui Ne has very little surf this time of year. The website, forecasts.swellwatch.com, demonstrates really well where the wind and swell are coming from. For another tip to find secret spots to surf in Vietnam  look at Google Earth.

It’s best to go around sunrise before the wind picks up at 10am when it starts to get blown out.

I got my hands on a motorbike with a board rack, which was a great score, so I could cruise along the beach and choose the best peak. Otherwise I recommend you get a taxi or a xe om (motorbike taxi) and hold your board under your arm. If you get in and out of Malibu Beach before 10 in the morning the wind is not going to be too much of a problem for carrying the board on the bike.

To get to Malibu Beach from the main resort strip, just head up to the fishing port and turn left at the roundabout at Mui Ne Town, then follow your nose.

I took my own board (borrowed actually) from Saigon on a Phuong Trang bus from De Tham Street. It’s an eight footer and truly if it was another inch longer it wouldn’t have fitted in the luggage compartment, so be mindful of that if you’ve got a longer board – you might need a bus with roof racks on top. It can be handy to have some octopus straps as well.

Surfing at Malibu Beach is nothing like Uluwatu in Bali or Nias in Sumatra or other legendary surf spots. It’s just a beach break but it’s much better than Vung Tau and I suspect more consistent this time of year. But it hasn’t been a good season for wind so far – leaving all the kite surfing schools in Mui Ne feeling a bit down.

It may not be Uluwatu but it’s definitely frontier Asia surfing with waves, coconut palm trees and fishermen in basket boats just beyond the break, which makes for an epic adventure.

It takes around US$100 for half day surfing safaris around Mui Ne. Just ask the reception at any Mui Ne resort you’re staying in, and they will show you where to hire a board and some local spots.

(Collected by Vietnam Hotel)

Sapa simmers with beauty in freezing weather

Cold is sweeping through Sapa in northern Lao Cai Province but this famous tourist destination is still very lively and full of colour despite the dropping temperatures.

The latest cold current broke into this small town the night of December 25 and morning of December 26. Temperatures dropped by 3.7 degrees Celsius. These are some of the coldest days since winter arrived in Sapa.

Visitors to Sapa can see people covered with thick winter garments, scarves and plenty of layers to keep warm.

A local woman, Hoang Thi Vinh, who sells baked eggs and sweet-potatoes on O Quy Ho Hill is predicting that there will be snow like the winter of 2000.

In that chilli weather however, life in Sapa is still very exciting. The farmers are still seen collecting roses to transport to Hanoi city and other big cities., young men driving motorbikes to seek grass for their cattle, women flocking to a Sunday market and all the other daily activities one would expect. Around the lake and church in the town’s centre, tourists are still strolling and soaking in the sight and culture.

This time in year it’s very touristy in Sapa, so it wouldn’t be easy to find a Sapa hotel as most of them are always full. So if you plan on visiting this foggy town, it’s better to book a hotel room when you are still in your Hanoi hotel to avoid possible problems in your trip.

Below are some photos of winter life in Sapa on December 26.

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Exciting sight outside the church in Sapa’s centre

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A young couple from ethnic Mong people taking their buffalo to lower area to avoid the cold

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Carrying goods to markets

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Taking firewood home

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Mother trying to keep children warm

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Seeking leaf in forest to wrap cakes

sp720101227151541 Sapa simmers with beauty in freezing weather

Seeking grass for cattle

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Gathering around a fire by a road

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Misty Sapa

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A foreign visitor showing his photos

(Collected by Vietnam hotels network)

Ha Noi plans for more tourists

The capital should tap into its natural resources and cultural and historical heritage, and diversify its unique tourism products and services, said the municipal Culture, Sports and Tourism Department’s deputy director Mai Tien Dung at a workshop titled “Tourism Investment Promotion in Ha Noi city“.

hanoi big 07 300x204 Ha Noi plans for more tourists “The city has the infrastructure and ability to further develop tourism,” he added.

Dung said the city accounted for 30 per cent of the country’s total foreign tourists with over 1 million arrivals last year and a projected 1.2 million this year.

Most tourists were from mainland China, South Korea, the US, Japan and European countries.

The capital received 9.2 million arrivals last year while this year, the number is expected to reach 10.6 million, an increase of 11 per cent.

Dung said Ha Noi had improved infrastructure and services for tourism development including accommodation, restaurants, shopping centres, entertainment areas and new products.

Statistics from the department showed that the number of accommodation facilities in the city was up to 800 with 17,500 rooms to just 351 facilities with 10,000 rooms in 2002.

Restaurants, bars and cafes had also mushroomed.

“However, many of them are small and don’t have parking lots. Hygiene and food safety are also matters of concern at some outlets,” he said.

In addition, the capital had 10 big commercial centres, 84 supermarkets and several hundred shops that sold a diverse range of goods.

“Careful studies have led to a large amount of culturally orientated construction,” Dung said.

“Ha Noi has been the destination of choice for many events and the city needs more investment to improve infrastructure to promote that strength.”

He said the city had successfully organised large international and regional events, adding that Ha Noi had huge potential in the meetings, incentives, conventions and exhibitions (MICE) industry. With the rapidly growing number of hotels in Hanoi and high standard facilities, it is believed that the MICE industry in Hanoi will be developing to international level in the future.

Nguyen Thanh Tinh, deputy director of the municipal Planning and Investment Department, said the city had a large market with a population of 6.45 million people.

“It has the investment advantage of a young and abundant labour force. 53 per cent of workers in the tourism sector are trained and labour costs are low,” Tinh said.

Ha Noi has been voted as one of the five most attractive cities for tourism in Asia by Travel and Leisure magazine since 2002.

“The city wants to develop tourism into a key economic sector, becoming a national and regional tourism hub, connecting Vietnamese tourism with ASEAN countries and China,” Tinh said.

Tourism businesses agreed that Ha Noi had a lot of potential, but lacked a complete tourism package.

Doan Thi Thanh Tra, head of the Sai Gon Tourist Company’s marketing department, said the city had not offered products customers were interested in.

“No surveys have been held to find out what tourists actually want to experience in the capital,” Tra said.

She added that Ha Noi had the advantage of being able to link tourism sites with neighbouring provinces as well as unique trade villages and pagodas.

Tra argued that the city had not advertised or marketed tour packages well, leaving tourists to plan their own trips.

“Poor quality services and a shortage of hotels, as well as a lack of tourist information have also contributed to the slow development of the sector.” She suggested that the city should overcome its shortcomings by carefully studying visitors’ demands to provide unique products.

“Travelling is an experience and visitors want to make new discoveries.”

Nguyen Thu Xinh, general director of the Ha Noi-based Dai Hoa Tourism and Commerce Company, added that people had not acknowledged the sector’s importance to the country’s development.

“Poor infrastructure and human resources combined with pricing issues are the main reasons for the problem,” Xinh said.

Department deputy director Mai Tien Dung said the city should promote investment in infrastructure and building unique and attractive tourism services.

Advertising and promotional campaigns should also be enhanced and more professional, he said, adding that the city should accelerate tourism planning by 2020 with a vision to 2050 with details of tourism sites.

“Tourism development and environmental protection should always come together in combination with the improvement of human resources in the sector,” he said, adding that the city had made investment policies to attract investors with assistance services, the one-door mechanism and simplified licensing procedures.

Head representative of the Indian Clark Group Ravi Kumar said the country should open direct flights between India and Viet Nam to promote investment in the two countries’ tourism industries.

“India has been paying attention to new tourism destinations in Viet Nam, Laos and Cambodia,” Dung said.

The municipal Culture, Sports and Tourism Department is going to focus on developing ecological tours using green travel with 12 electric cars in the Old Quarter and around Hoan Kiem Lake.

In addition, tours on the Red River, ecotourism in Ba Vi and community-based tours will also be enhanced.

(Collected by Vietnam Hotels)

Charming roads in winter at Vietnam Central Highlands

The mild winter is pervading all roads and houses in the Central and Central Highlands regions with cold breezes and scenic landscapes of old, bare trees enveloped in the misty fog.

20101224181430 road NTr DLat Charming roads in winter at Vietnam Central Highlands

A winding section of the road from Nha Trang to Dalat.

The romantic scenes welcome both locals and visitors along the roads in Lam Dong and other provinces in the regions. Anyone can feel and experience poetic sights when traveling on National Highway 28 and the road connecting Dalat and Nha Trang City in the central coastal province of Khanh Hoa.

The Dalat-Nha Trang road offers a breathtaking view of picturesque but safe-to-drive sections, where the road winds its way through pine-clad hills and mountains. Running waters of clean streams and clouds of mist suddenly come and disappear, giving travelers a feeling of being on the way to a fairy world.

National Highway 28 linking Di Linh District of Lam Dong Province and Phan Thiet City in Binh Thuan Province offers travelers different experiences when they pass roadside old and beautiful-shape trees and farms of coffee trees with pleasant-to-smell blossoms at the moment.

The two roads are situated in different locations and terrains, but present imposing and beautiful natural scenes, enriched by mist, and many trees with yellow and brown red leaves. Various wild flowers dot greenery and rock hills by the route.

National Highway 20 between Dalat City and Di Linh District also cuts through many areas which are beautified by wild sunflowers waving in tune with gentle winds and the evergreen tea trees stretching ranges of hills until the horizon.

So, if you have much time driving and traveling around, the journey from Nha Trang up the mist-covered road to Dalat and down to national highways 20 and 28 is the right choice. Just ask locals to make sure that you travel on the right roads when you are in Nha Trang and Dalat cities.

(Colleted by Vietnam Hotels Network)

Local tour guides provide an insight into the real Sa Pa

It’s a strange land that leaves me with different feelings whenever I come to rediscover it.

Sapa town is an incredibly picturesque town in the Hoang Lien Son Mountain Range near the Chinese border in northwestern Viet Nam, 350km from Ha Noi.

It can be explored almost year-round from March to early December. Vietnamese most like to visit during June and July to escape the summer heat in other parts of the country. Sa Pa is 1,500m above sea level so the weather is quite mild, and cold at night.

 Local tour guides provide an insight into the real Sa Pa

Steps to heaven: The familiar terraced fields in Sa Pa attract many domestic and foreign visitors.

The best time to go to Sa Pa is on a weekday, as weekenders tend to flock here. However, the famed “love market” only takes place on Saturday nights, so visitors often extend their tour to Saturday to experience it.

Tourists can see many hill tribe people, their villages and rice terraces. The ethnic minority groups generally retain their lifestyles and traditional costumes.

The area’s high mountains, deep ravines and lush vegetation rise to the peak of Mt Fansipan – the highest point in Indochina. The combination of fresh mountain air, relaxed ambience, sweeping panoramas and fascinating hill tribes make Sa Pa a must-see destination.

A trek took us deep into a hill tribe region where tourists are still something of a novelty. Staying in village homes allowed us to experience firsthand a lifestyle that has been little touched by the modern world and a curiosity from our hosts just as great as our own. The trekking is fairly strenuous at times but the spectacular scenery and sense of adventure make it worth the effort.

I can’t explain why all of the local tour guides are women. All are under 30 and haven’t yet married. Thao Thi Ru, a Dao ethnic woman, has guided tourists since she was 12, after starting her career as a souvenir vendor. Sometimes, to get tourists buy her hand-made souvenirs, she has offered herself as a guide for free. Gradually, she has learned English from them, learned to cook dishes to their tastes, and acquired the experience to become a professional tour guide.

 Local tour guides provide an insight into the real Sa Pa

Gracious guides: Many local women work as souvenir sellers and tour guides to lead tourists to discover their hometown's lifestyle and hidden charm.

“Being local, we have an advantage over tour companies,” Ru said. “Foreign tourists prefer us to guide them because we know the ways and easily lead them to villages and local houses. They love to understand the local customs as told by locals like us.”

Under Ru’s direction, we visit Ta Van, Ta Phin and Ban Ho communes and get a greater understanding of the Mong and Dao people’s stone-carving, weaving, jewelry-making, metalwork and embroidery crafts.

Ta Phin Cave, at the far end of Ta Phin village, is an attractive destination which tourists often bypass without a local guide’s suggestion.

The cave requires a guide with a flashlight, and the guide will shine the torch on a variety of stalactites.

Some of the locals invite visitors to go to their homes to show how they live and what they have, and tell them about their families. On following them to their houses, tourists find out how simply they live. The tour guides suggest you to buy the merchandise you like from them as repayment for what they have shown for you.

Local tour guides also lead the trips to the forests and mountains because they know thoroughly the terrain.

Before starting a tour, the guides remind tourists to bring food, shoes, sleeping bags and other necessities, said Giang Thi Co, a Mong woman.

“I have learned from the elders folk medicines to treat stomach aches, muscle pains and snake bite,” Co said. “Once, a Western woman couldn’t walk anymore because her legs were sore, so I picked some leaves to apply to her swollen calves. She felt better and said ‘good, good!’ to me.”

 Local tour guides provide an insight into the real Sa Pa

Bridging the divide: A foreign tourist tries to cross the May (Rattan or Cloud) Bridge in Sa Pa, a destination for adventurous tourists.

City lovers may find Sa Pa is not the place for them as its rich ethnic lifestyle is far removed from modern life. If you expect to go shopping in malls, Sa Pa has nothing to offer. The only way to go shopping is to go to the local market where you can find unique handicrafts, jewelry and fabrics with colourful embroidery. While tourists don’t know how to bargain or choose the best items, the local guides are ready to help.

Sa Pa is famous for its “love market” where local young people go to show off and find partners. It is held every Saturday night and provides a unique and unforgettable experience.

The love market is a tradition in the culture of the Mong, Tay and Dao. All the people around Sa Pa live in isolated villages and can only get together once a week during the Sunday morning market. The night before, young men and women from all around come to the love market to meet and express their emotions through playing the khen (pan pipe) and singing according to traditional customs of their people.

The experience of Sa Pa trip is not something that everyone can buy, but adventurous people and those who seek to know the hidden charm of Vietnamese hill tribes living in their old traditional mountain villages cannot miss this place.

When visiting Sapa, you can either stay at Sapa hotels or arrange homestay for the trip. However, if you want to homestay, you probably need a travel agent to make arrangement for you.

(Collected by Vietnamhotels.net)

Searching Saigon for Boutique Comfort

FOR more than 12 years now, I’ve been visiting Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, and I’ve watched as it’s grown bigger and richer, faster and hipper, more cosmopolitan and more connected. Saigon, as it’s still known to most, has an anything-can-happen energy that embraces me the moment I step off the plane, and I feel more at home there than perhaps anywhere else in the world.
And yet after all these years, I have yet to claim a local Saigon hotel as my favorite — a refuge to offer relief and comfort. I’ve stayed in numerous mini-hotels, the skinny, multistory accommodations favored by backpackers (generally $5 to $25 a night). I’ve stayed in the grand hotels that date back to the French colonial era — the Majestic and the hotel Continental saigon (from about $150). I’ve stayed in the ultramodern Sheraton tower ($225 and up for a deluxe room).

But none of these places have seduced me with that magical combination of décor, service, convenience, location, character and price to make me ever really want to return. Simply put, in my experience, Saigon had no exceptional, reasonably priced hotels.

During my most recent visit, in February — to see friends and attend a wedding — I was more hopeful. A friend had told me about the Ordinary Hotel (25 Dong Du Street), right in the middle of Saigon’s central downtown District 1. “Very boutique, very funky,” she wrote in an e-mail message. And affordable too: around $50 a night for a deluxe room.

Booking proved to be a challenge. The hotel’s Web site and e-mail address didn’t work, nor, for a while, did its phones. I had to ask another friend actually to go to the hotel and reserve a room. When I got there, however, the desk clerk had no record of it. Luckily, a fourth-floor room was available. Unluckily, an elevator wasn’t.

The room itself had a sheen of cool: it was spacious, with antique wooden furniture and a wide white divan under a broad bank of windows. The walls were a neat mix of magenta and pea-soup green. Wi-Fi signals flowed freely into my laptop.

But the sheen soon faded. The desk chair kept breaking. The paint on the walls was peeling. The Wi-Fi signal was strong, but the Internet connection spotty. The divan was dingy. The shower-head mount collapsed the instant I turned on the water.

Where, I wondered as I checked out after two nights, are Saigon’s true boutique hotels? The city is full of French colonial villas and Art Deco houses ripe for transformation into properties of character and class. And while real estate is expensive, labor remains cheap — and that should translate into bargains for travelers.

“As an investment, it doesn’t work,” said Jean-Marc Merlin, chairman of the Apple Tree Group, a Vietnam-based company that owns and operates hotels all over Southeast Asia. “The annoyance factor of having to complete a project is too high. If you have to turn gray over two years, you’d rather do it over 200 rooms.”

In the meantime, there’s A & Em (848-3-822-7245; www.a-emhotels.com), a chain of five small, design-savvy hotels. I checked into the newest location, at 66 Le Thanh Ton Street just a few streets away from the Ordinary in District 1. Slick and clean, this month-old A & Em branch featured tasteful, minimalist interiors — flower patterns were everywhere, from the pillowcases to the frosted-glass walls of the bathroom — and, more importantly, a reasonable level of comfort. The linens were soft, the mattress was real. The TV was a Samsung flat-screen, not some boxy knockoff. The bathtub was huge and deep, with whirlpool jets.

There were, of course, a couple of design misfires, like a toilet-paper holder wedged inaccessibly between tank and wall and no mount for the shower head. But I was willing to let those issues go, especially since the desk had given me $5 off the $50 deluxe-room rate — a sweet gesture. Even better, a shower-head mount miraculously appeared above the bathtub one morning, without my having said a thing — just the sort of attention to detail that makes boutique hotels an attractive option.

Still, one incident disturbed me, albeit briefly: One morning, on my way to breakfast, I took the stairs instead of the elevator. Halfway down, I was suddenly grabbed by an employee and bundled into the elevator, just so I wouldn’t have to step around a platter of food that was on the stairway landing. Annoyance flared, then subsided. Saigon may be changing, but it’s still Saigon: rough, intimate, improvised and surprising — all qualities that make the city my home away from home.

(From The New York Times)

Cherries blossom early in Sapa giving visitors a special treat

Visitors to the northern town of Sapa at this time will be welcomed by the enthralling sight of the cherry blossoms blooming early this year. However, due to the high number of tourists (both local and foreign) coming to Sapa this season, you might find it a little difficult to book a Sapa hotel by walking in the door and asking for a room. So the advice is to book a room in advance before you get on the train.

After some chilly days with the temperature dropping down to 5 degrees centigrade, the flowers, which came from Japan, are now sparkling under the warm sunlight. The sight has caught the eyes of visitors as well as local people to come and snap some photos.

According to chairman of the Sapa District People’s Committee, Le Duc Luan, these flower trees were a gift from the Japan-Vietnam Friendship Association on the 100th anniversary of Sapa Town in October 2003.

“The land and climate in Sapa is suitable for the trees to grow very well,” Luan said. “Some among the 100 trees grown at the gate of the People’s Committee’s headquarter have become big trees and blossom with beautiful flowers every December.”

A local photographer named Pham Gia Chien, said that the blossoms will be visible until the new year. “There are two places where visitors can admire the flowers: on Ham Rong Mountain and around the lake in Sapa Town’s centre.”

Some photos of the beautiful sight there:

ad12010122013485120101220135343 Cherries blossom early in Sapa giving visitors a special treat

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ad32010122013485220101220135344 Cherries blossom early in Sapa giving visitors a special treat

ad42010122013485320101220135345 Cherries blossom early in Sapa giving visitors a special treat

ad520101220135345 Cherries blossom early in Sapa giving visitors a special treat

ad620101220135346 Cherries blossom early in Sapa giving visitors a special treat

ad720101220135346 Cherries blossom early in Sapa giving visitors a special treat

(Collected by Vietnam Hotel Network)