Vietnam Heritage Travel
Company would like to recommend new 5 places not to miss for Vietnamese nature
and culture.
1. Tam Dao Hill Station - cool
climate and tranquil trekking trails
Only 80km away from Hanoi, Tam
Dao Hill Station is a rather popular escape from the heat of the Red River
Delta area. Hanoians come to Tam Dao every weekend and holiday, especially in
summer when the temperature in the plain may be as high as 40oC. Thanks to the
elevation of more than 1200m, the climate in Tam Dao is purely cool with
average temperature of 18oC in summer and 10oC in winter, which could be ideal
for tourists who are not familiar with the tropical heat and want to find a
place as cool as Sapa. Once the vacation resort of the French, Tam Dao
comprised of numerous grand colonial villas. However, most of them are
destroyed during the war time in the 1950s and what one can see today is a
newly constructed mountain town that serves tourists' holiday. There are now a
wide range of hostels, hotels and resorts; and plentiful local specialties for
visitors to try out.
In addition to the cool
climate, this region provides full opportunity for physical activities such as
mountain sight-seeing, serious trekking and even bird-watching that Sapa has to
compare. Nature lovers who are fascinated about Sapa’s wild surrounding can
also visit Tam Dao National Park with eight kinds of forest types distributed
in different topographic and climatic areas, more than 2000 plants and 904
species.
2. Mai Chau - inhale the
ethnic culture
It will be a 135km trip from
Hanoi, or 60km trip from Hoa Binh City to reach Mai Chau, the green valley. If
you love to discover more about the daily life of ethnic minority groups, especially
Thai people, Mai Chau is surely a great choice. Stilt houses with exclusive
Thai architecture line up on both sides of the road in the valley. Tourists can
visit those houses or even try cooking and making clothes in Thai style.
Homestay programs are available, and everybody will have great time watching
traditional dancing and music instrument performances, while enjoying local
specialties such as rice cooked in bamboo tubes and grilled meat on skewers.
There is a local market every
Sunday with the participation of people from different minorities living in the
surrounding areas. This is a good chance for tourists to feel the mixed
culture, as in Hoa Binh Province, there are about six different minorities with
distinctive languages, traditions and festivals.
From Mai Chau, one can also
join one of the trekking tours to remote villages. Although Mai Chau's weather
is not as cool as in Sapa, it has otherwise many things else to offer: the
landscape, the people, the food, and the air. Currently, there are some
agencies providing tours of Hanoi- Mai Chau-Sapa, in which tourists will travel
to Hoa Binh and stay at Mai Chau, then passing Son La province and Dien Bien
Phu Loop before reaching Sapa.
3. Lai Chau - panoramic
landscape and untouched local culture
Located in the northwest
region, Lai Chau is 450km northwestern from Hanoi. To reach this province, you
can choose Highway 12 (from Dien Bien Phu Loop) or Road 4D (from Sapa, catching
local bus which is available daily in Sapa terminal). Lai Chau has several
highland villages such as Sin Ho, Ta Phin, Dao San, most of which are at the
altitude of more than 1500m. The high altitude makes the weather here much like
Sapa, cool and foggy with the average temperature of nearly 20oC and two
seasons: dry and rainy. The completely pure air is something that Sapa rea;;y
has to envy.
Besides the high mountain
ranges surrounding the province, Lai Chau is well-known for narrow valleys,
waterfalls, and the three large rivers: Da, Nam Na, and Nam Mu; which create
the stunningly picturesque sceneries. Visiting Lai Chau, tourists can not only
go mountain trekking but also sail along Da River, discover primitive caves or
bathe in natural hot springs.
Especially, Lai Chau is home
to nearly 20 ethnic minority groups, including H’Mong, Thai, Dao, Ha Nhi, Mang
and La Hu. Tourists will have an opportunity to witness the special
multi-cultural society through the original local market taken place every
Thursday and Sunday morning or minorities’ authentic festival such as Thai’s “Hoa
Ban Festival” in the second lunar month or H’Mong’s “Gau Tao Festival” in
spring.
There are buses to Sapa
departing from Lai Chau terminal every hour, starting from 5 in the morning. It
will be a 2-3 hour trip for the route of 175km.
4. Phia Den-Phia Oac - wild
nature
Visiting Phia Den-Phia Oac (or
Phia Dac), tourists will be amazed at the gorgeously wild panorama of mighty
mountain ranges, rivers, caves and huge areas of original forests. Belong to
Nguyen Binh- a remote district of Cao Bang Province, 240km far from Hanoi, Phia
Den-Phia Vac is a potential ecotourism spot in Vietnam’s northwest region.
The 1500m average elevation
with the highest peak up to 1931m makes Phia Den- Phia Vac covered in mist all
the time, which is similar to Sapa’s climate. In the past, the area shared the
same historic background with Sapa, as it was controlled by the French
colonialists for exploiting aromatic wood and other precious minerals.
Consequently, there are several French villas and military posts like Tai Soong,
Tatsloom still remained here. For culture discovering purpose, tourists can
meet a lot of Dao minority people living scattered throughout the area.
Cao Bang is 272km north of
Hanoi following National Highway No.3. There are direct buses departing from
Cao Bang terminal to Lao Cai terminal and vice versa, so reaching Sapa from
here is pretty convenient.
5. Mu Cang Chai - unparalleled
for photographs
Lying quietly between two
mountain sides in Yen Bai Province, Mu Cang Chai, one of Vietnam’s poorest
regions, possesses many terraced fields which have been regarded as a national
level heritage and Asia’s most beautiful ones. If you have ever fallen in love
with the terraced fields in Sapa, Mu Cang Chai will definitely take your breath
away. The little town is 300km far from Hanoi, and can be reached only from Yen
Bai City or Lao Cai via rough roads with continuous slopes and passes. Remote
as it is, Mu Cang Chai can still reserve the wildly primitive beauty.
Everything, both nature and human, is pure and untouched, and perfect for both
trekking and sightseeing.
About the cultural discovery
aspect, 90% of residents here are Hmong people, and Thai people cover only 8%.
While Thai people build houses and live in lower area, Hmong people populate
and cultivate on high hills. They are the creator of breathtaking view of
terraced fields sloped gently along the mountainsides. Mu Cang Chai gives us a
chance to live slowly, to embrace the peacefully natural beauty and be moved by
the honest and innocent local ethnic people. Mu Cang Chai is only 170km far
from Sapa, however, you are advised reach Mu Cang Chai by renting a car with
local driver. Another option is to get back from Mu Cang Chai to Tu Le or Than
Tuyen to take local bus to Sapa in the direction of Lao Cai.
This article is written by Ha
Nguyen from Vietnam Heritage Travel Company for original article and more
pictures, please visit
http://touroperatorvietnam.com/vietnam-news/travel-news/top-5-places-in-vietnam-not-to-miss-for-nature-and-culture.html
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