Chuyên tour du lịch Đông Tây Bắc và mọi miền đất nước Việt Nam

Du lịch S Việt Nam - Kết nối văn hóa Việt...

Dec 31, 2014

Two parallel and loving boats 

With dragon bows and phoenix sterns

Double rows of nails 

I carry five boy-lovers per boat 

And ten per pair.

 But, let you be reproved, you ingrate! 

Profiting from me, and forgetting me

What am I?

The above riddle refers to a pair of clogs, footwear imbued with symbolic meaning in Vietnam. One popular legend tells of a pair of stone clogs passed down for generations by a family in Cao Bang, high in Vietnam's northern mountains.

Cao Bang was situated in what was then known as the Vu Dinh region of Van Lang - as the nation was then called. Vu Dinh was divided into nine zones, each of which was governed by a Po, or landlord. Highly competitive, the nine Po organized a contest to determine who was the most skillful.

One Po displayed his skill at planting rice seedlings, another his prowess at building boats, another his ability to grind a ploughshare into a needle in just one day. One was proud of his poetry, another of his skill at building citadels. The last Po showed off his proficiency at carving stone clogs. This Po managed to make a massive pair of stone clogs, which later generations used to span a stream in Ban Thanh village. This unusual bridge still exists today.

Given Vietnam's hot and humid climate and their days spent wading in wet rice paddies or fishing, Vietnamese people usually went barefoot.

At the end of the 10th century, King Le Dai Hanh often wore nothing but a loin-cloth, his feet bare. A Chinese Tong dynasty official, having been snubbed by King Le Dai Hanh, made a disdainful report about the rustic ways of the Vietnamese court. In fact, up until the Tran Dynasty (1225-1400AD), most Vietnamese people went barefoot.Even in those early times, however, clogs were not unknown. Ancient Chinese books like Nam Viet Chi and Giao Chau Ky record that in the third century, the leader of a Vietnamese resistance movement, Ba Trieu, wore a pair of ivory clogs. "Lady Trieu Au with breasts three meters long never married," reports a surprising passage in Giao Chau Ky. "Walking on stilts, she used to wear a type of clogs called Kim De Kich."

Formerly, on cold days, men and women from rural areas would don clogs made from bamboo roots when attending festivals or visiting friends. At home they wrote wooden clogs with vertical straps to protect the toes.

In Phu Yen in south-central Vietnam, people generally made their own clogs. They favored thick soles with slightly turned-up tips. The traps, which attached through a hole in the front and a pair of holes on the sides, were braided from soft cloth. Because the sole was curved at the front, the knot of the front strap did not rub on the ground.

The soles of women's clogs were shaped like hour-glasses, while men's clogs -known as "sampan clogs"- had straight soles. Made of white wood, Phu Yen clogs were left unpainted, while those from the central city of Hue were often painted in black and brown with a pale colored triangle on the side of the sole. Only well-to-do men wore painted clogs. Some areas called clogs don, hence the saying "a foot with a shoe, a foot with a don" to indicate rich people who put on airs. 

Up until the 1940s, young pupils at public schools in the southern province of Ben Tre wore clogs. Before the August Revolution in 1945, clogs produced in Hue were called "capital clogs" or guoc kinh. These clogs had soles made from coconut shells or light wood, painted white and gold with embroidered straps. An advertisement from a Hanoi newspaper in the 1940s reads:

"Like finding a needle at the bottom of the sea, now, Flying Horse clogs have been discovered!"

In the 1950s and 1960s, wooden clogs produced in Dong Do village in the Thanh Tri district of Hanoi and Ke Giay in Ha Tay province were taken to 12 Hang Ga street or Bach Mai street in Hanoi to be painted and sold. As the following poem reveals,clogs were considered extremely romantic by young girls of the time: 

Clogs long unheard 
On the tree-lined streets 
And spring comes, apples fall, 
I remember your zither sounds. 

(To Huu)

By the 1970s, plastic clogs rivaled wooden clogs in popularity. Considered stylish and comfortable, clogs could offer other, more unusual, benefits. Travelers would sometimes bore holes in the wooden soles to hide gold or jewels.

While countless Vietnamese poets have waxed lyrical about the conical hat and traditional ao dai tunic, clogs have been all but ignored by the nation's bards. One exception is the following Ca Dao poem:

"A walk in clogs round the garden in the morning, 
Herons are singing and crying 
Half for fate, half for their destiny. 

(Ca dao poem from south-central Vietnam)

On the other hand, clogs are often the subject of riddles:Two females in colored dresses. Each carrying five males on their backs On the way, talk and chat, And left alone at home: fed up! What is this?

From Ba Trieu's ivory clogs to clogs made of bamboo, wood and plastic, this humble footwear has covered a lot of ground on Vietnam.

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Phuoc Tich Village in Thua Thien-Hue Province has retained the features of a 500-year old Vietnamese village, being home to banyan trees, wells and temples.

The village is some 40km north of Hue City. Phuoc Tich was established in 1470 under King Le Thanh Tong. The village is located in the bend of the O Lau River, making the village resemble an island. The village has 12 river wharves symbolizing the 12 animals of the lunar zodiac.

A centuries old tree marks the village gate along with a temple. The village is also home to several old houses. The houses are surrounded by large gardens fenced by Chinese tea tree plants.
The homes hold old wooden furniture, horizontal lacquered boards, altars and chests with sophisticated carvings. Phuoc Tich also has dozens of pagodas and temples.

Hanoian tourist Nguyen Thi Pham was surprised by the village’s natural scenery. “I and my friends have visited several old villages, such as Duong Lam in Hanoi and Tuy Loan in Danang, but, only Phuoc Tich retains so many wooden built houses,” she said.

Phuoc Tich is also well-known for its 500-year old pottery industry. The industry was revised in 2006 when Hue Festival was launched. Local residents built a temple to worship Confucius hundreds of years ago to honour their thirst for knowledge.

Phuoc Tich is currently home to 117 households and more than 30 wooden houses which are left in the hands of the older generation to maintain. Over the past 10 years, only 99-year old Luong Thi Hen has cared for her family’s ancient wooden house. She said , “My children are away earning a living. The 100-year old house has deteriorated, and I can’t preserve it alone.”

Truong Thi Thu, 84, now lives alone in a wooden house. Every day, she cleans the house to welcome tourists. She has asked her children to return the village to help preserve the house on many occasions, but they are afraid that they wouldn’t be able to find employment if they returned.

Phong Dien District officials said the local authorities had been promoting Phuoc Tich to both local residents and visitors. The district would focus on repairing some wooden houses and also call for investment in the local pottery industry.

Phuoc Tich was recognised as a national relic in 2009 by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, following Duong Lam village in Son Tay, Hanoi

The village is a complex of ancient “nha ruong”. Nha ruong are hand-made traditional wooden houses with 48 columns for the cult of the ancestors and Buddha. Each nha ruong is built with many beams (ruong) and pillars (cot), and its name derives from this very characteristic. But the most distinctive feature is that all beams and pillars are joined by mortise and tenon, not nails. Roofed with brick tiles, nha ruong has all beams and pillars made of precious and solid wood, such as lim (iron wood), gu (sindora) or thong xanh (teranthera pine). The whole house stands on big pillars placed on a round or square stone base. All nha ruong houses have a front garden.
There are more than 100 nha ruong in the village, including 37 houses of over 100 years, and intact temples. There are 12 extremely rare nha ruong, of 150-200 years old, with sophisticated carved columns and horizontal lacquered boards.
Visitors will see a quiet space, flooded by the green color of ancient trees. It is very clean everywhere, from the road to the gardens, alleys to temples. Visitors will also see ancient pottery items or experience as "potters" in the village.

Other ancient villages in Vietnam: 

  • The ancient village of Duong Lam, Hanoi
  • Long Tuyen ancient village, Can Tho
  • Tuy Loan ancient village, Da Nang
  • The ancient village of Phong Nam, Da Nang

Some photos:

Horizontal lacquer board of Duy Tan King (1909-1916) at Ho Dinh Lan’s house

Most of wooden houses are taken care of by old people



A screen before an old house




All wooden houses in Phuoc Tich were made by artisans from My Xuyen carpentry
 village which is located south of Phuoc Tich


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Restaurants serving Vietnamese food fall into two broad categories: fluorescent-lit canteens with plastic chairs and minimal decoration, and dining rooms with tablecloths and incandescent lighting, often set in restored French villas with an Indochine aura. In years past it was hard to find great Vietnamese cuisine at upscale establishments. But lately, a new breed of restaurant—one that brings together tasteful interiors, smooth service, and exceptional cooking—is catering to the country's growing middle class.
Wild Rice restaurant
Wild Rice, which opened last year in Hanoi, breaks the colonial-villa mold with its spare, modern interior, spotlighted rock gardens, and contemporary art. And the yogurt-marinated roast chicken and papaya salad with prawns are as authentic as any local kitchen's. In Ho Chi Minh City, similar culinary prowess can be found at the 10-month-old Nam Phan, housed in a gorgeous beige-and-sand-toned mansion. Tropical gardens and a cool Californian vibe make it popular with well-heeled saigonnais. When I dropped in at 9 p.m. on a Tuesday, I was asked whether I had a reservation. A reservation? Two years ago the word didn't exist here.

Quan Com Ngon opened last December and has quickly become H.C.M.C.'s top Vietnamese kitchen. Its menu goes far beyond the usual chicken-with-lemongrass, offering pickled pig's ear and stewed pork topped with duck eggs. The airy, four-level space is stunning: ocher and tomato-red walls, mulberry-paper lamps, garlands of jasmine. The young Vietnamese clientele—media types, models, ad execs—is just as attractive.
Quan Com Ngon Restaurant
Quan Ta, tucked into one of H.C.M.C.'s crowded "food streets," is well off the tourist trail, but clay-tile floors, beamed ceilings, teak tables, and warm lighting lend it an air of refinient. The food is extraordinary: perfectly seasoned pumpkin blossoms fried in garlic and oil; smoky grilled eggplant that's so tender it can be cut with chopsticks.

Chic restaurants are popping up outside the cities as well. The newest arrival in Hoi An, Song Hoai, found a prime location in a two-story riverfront villa. Its kitchen does a marvelous job with Hoi An specialties such as mi quang (thick, al dente noodles in a basil-spiked broth with pork and baby prawns) and banh bao banh vat (a.k.a. "white rose," a delicious flower-shaped steamed dumpling).

At some point in your journey, though, you'll want to forgo celadon tableware and simply eat fantastic food. That's when you head for Quan Hué, the best restaurant in Hanoi. This family-run joint is all Formica tabletops and flimsy plastic chairs. It's the best place to try the comfort cuisine of Hué, particularly banh khoai (crisp rice-flour pancakes folded fajita-style around a variety of fillings: pork; shrimp; verbena, basil, and mint leaves; tangy star fruit) and cua xao mien (stir-fried vermicelli with crabmeat, ear mushrooms, scallions, and fragrant dill sprigs).

Of course, in both Ho Chi Minh and Hanoi, you can also find countless trattorias, tandoori joints, tapas bars, and teriyaki dens, along with hundreds of French bistros (whose cuisine hardly qualifies as foreign in Vietnam). A rice-weary expat could live for months on great international food—and some do. H.C.M.C.'s La Fourchette, catering to the homesick French since 1994, is the grand-père of Gallic haunts—it's even suffused with the rich aroma of butter-drenched escargots. Up market Italian cuisine draws a crowd at H.C.M.C.'s new hot spot Qucina, owned by the team behind the neighboring Q Bar. On a sexy, palm-fringed terrace in H.C.M.C., Club Camargue serves mesclun-and-goat cheese salads (the imported greens are safe to eat) and squid-filled ravioli in saffron cream sauce. At Saigon's new Designed, a hypermodern restaurant-showroom run by two Frenchmen—an architect and an engineer—an arty clientele dines on foie gras, graylag, and roulettes of rabbit. Up in Hanoi, the Press Club, an expat haunt, offers the capital's best wine list, strip steaks from Pennsylvania, Caesar salads, and some good (and laughably cheap) caviar from—no joke—China.

Even more impressive than the formal dining rooms are the cafés, patisseries, and sandwich shops that set to have been airlifted from Marseilles and San Francisco. Frenchman Stéphane Calvet has opened Maison Vanille, a bakery and salon de the that makes the prier croissants in Hanoi. In Hoi An, great pastries and rich Vietnamese coffee (with condensed milk, of course) are all the rage at the Hoi An Pâtisserie, on the river.



The Vietnamese have elevated the humble sandwich to an art form. Banh mi thit is the local take on a hero: pork sausage, pâté, ham, pickled carrots and radishes, and dried fish flakes on a warm baguette. The fast-food bakery chain Bon Banh Mi sells superb banh mi thit in locations around H.C.M.C. Two Western-style sandwiches shops—No Noodles in Hanoi and Sama Café in Ho Chi Minh—combine the best imported meats and cheeses, crustiest baguettes, freshest greens, and zestiest toppings to create the ultimate five-minute lunch.

Bohemian cafés are everywhere. Hanoi's Café Puku, run by three New Zealanders, has an East Village feel, with Beck playing on the stereo and a cappuccino machine hissing on the counter. At I-Box in Ho Chi Minh, the furnishings (velvet sofas, Kashmiri pillows, Javanese tables) are as eclectic as the playlist (Edith Piaf, bluegrass, and electro-funk) and the drinks (orange juice with milk; sour sop smoothies).


According to Peter Lindber


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If you enjoy the purity of nature and to explore new things, adore the pristine beauty of birds flying with white wings before the blue sky or pushing their beaks into the wide soil to find found and love the sunsets going up over the water that glitters and sprinkles like pure gold, then Xuan Thuy National Park is a destination you should not ignore.

About 160 km far away from Hanoi, Xuan Thuy National Park in Giao Thuy District, Nam Dinh Province whose 12,000 hectars are lying in the area of the Red River mouth promises to become one of the preferred eco-tourism areas if you wish to do a short trip over the weekend.

Being Southeastasias first Ramsar site, it has immense rivers, a rich flora and many species of rare animals – in other words, it is the ideal destinations for those who have the desire to leave the hustle and bustle of the urban centers to come to a rest in a place appearing like heaven on earth with its gentle peace.
The peaceful beauty of Xuan Thuy National Park

One of the remarkabilities of the National Park is the fact that it is quite far away from the industrial and crowded areas. So the first impression of any visitor might be the one of purity since there are also hardly any streets disturbing your mind.

Not only that, you will honestly be overwhelmed when introduced to the rich nature surrounding the guest houses: there are 120 species of vascular plants, 107 fishes, 500 aquatic species, 220 bird species, over ten mammals (dolphins, otters) and many species of reptiles, insects and amphibians.    
It is home to many special birds
While traveling to this Ramsar site, you cannot only observe many endangered species to be found in the Red List such as the Black-faced Spoonbill, Spot-billed Pelican, Saunders's Gull and Spoon-billed Sandpiper, you can also enjoy the immense space of the sea with vast mangrove forests covering the coastline and uncountable greens and purple blooming flowers deepening the impression of the simplicity of the countryside life in Giao Thuy.

Unless other top eco-tourism destinations of interest, Xuan Thuy National Park respects the slogan ‘creating a harmonious coexistence between man and nature’, always taking care of environmental protection of the ‘platform for all birds’. You can enjoy the poetic moments of this place withouth worrying about the costs or the phenomenon of faked touristic services which can be seen in many other places.

From Ha Noi: It is about 160 kilometers, so it takes about 4 to 5 hours to get here by motobike, car, or bus. You pay $5.00/person for park admission. 

How to get here?

By bus: The cheapest! It costs around 80.000 VND/person/way
You can take a bus from Giap Bat station or My Dinh station (Giap Bat is closer!).You can choose any bus to one of the communes in the buffer zone of the park: Giao Thien (this is the closest commune to the National Park office), Giao An, Giao Thanh, or Giao Huong.
  • When you arrive in Giao Thien, just contact us! We can arrange to pick you up - free of charge!
  • When you arrive in other communes, you can ask us to pick you up, or you can rent a “xe om”(a motorbike-taxi) by yourself. The cost is around 40.000 VND/person/trip.
From Xuan Thuy national park, you can easily catch a bus to come back Ha Noi, or transit to other close-by destinations like Cuc Phuong national park.

Find more information at Xuan Thuy National Park: http://vuonquocgiaxuanthuy.org.vn/

OTHER ATTRACTION IN NAM DINH PROVINCE:

  • Co le pagoda - ancient pagoda with Ly Dynasty architecture.
  • Pho Minh pagoda - unique and ancient pagoda in Nam Dinh city.
  • Taking Part in Crowded Atmosphere of Vieng Market Festival after Tet holiday in the the 8 dy of the first month lunar calendar.
  • Phu Giay festival in the the 7 day of the third month lunar calendar.
  • Dong Que museum (Bảo tàng Đồng Quê): display objects about Vietnamese people especially farmer, their daily life.
Dong Que museum

Cat Dang lacquer village in Nam Dinh

A 7-tonne cauldron in Pho Minh pagoda 

Co Le ancient pagoda

Let's discover Vietnam with us:

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Dec 30, 2014

With natural stones, strangely structured rocks, columns or obliques of frozen mineral flows, Ghenh Da Dia (Rapids of Stone Plates) is considered as a masterpiece of stone gifted by the nature.


Located in An Ninh Dong Commune , Tuy An District, Phu Yen Province, Ghenh Da Dia is strangely structured rocks include large upright stones equally arranged in a star pattern. Being a riddle of nature, like a giant jigsaw, the rapids is irritatingly made of the same shaped pieces, and forms a solidified structure that has proved more than just a curiosity for thousands.

A strange geological phenomenon

Millions of years ago, during volcano eruption, mineral flows melting will be frozen when they encounter water and then the solid breaks into columns or obliques. That created the beautiful landscape of Ghenh Da Dia for the present time. Time over time, the landscape is rearranged as an artistic work by the hand of nature. Ghenh Da Dia is about 1km2 large, half in the sea and half above sea level.

Looking down on it, visitors often liken it to a gigantic beehive, others as a pile of stone plates. For despite a lengthy series of historical, archeological and scientific probes of the cliff’s square kilometer, its formation remains a mystery.

The stones in Ghenh Da Dia are bazan stones of dark black and light yellow. There exists large stones of tons and small stones with different shapes: round, pentagon, polygon and so on. The stones take the right column or a settlement close to each other like disks arranged on couples together. Even counting the stone columns has failed to yield an exact figure as exhausted researchers usually call a halt at around 35,000. The stones are 60-80cm in visible height and 20-30cm across and cluster round a small fresh water pond that is fed by underground rivers and never dries up.

and a wild beauty...

In Ghenh Da Dia, there only remains the unique scenery of the sea and stones, so everything is still primary, environment is so pure, air is fresh and comfortable.

Besides Ghenh Da Dia is Bang beach, with rocks “lie” quiet under the shadow of trees. This is quite ideal for relaxation, camping and extra activities. Ghenh Da Dia and the beach are closed with a famous tourist attraction which is "Hòn đá lực lượng" - a deep and wide grotto that saves the legendary people in a war period. In the war, our main force sheltered in the cave at night, waiting to the day to go on a sortie and dealt enemy thunderstruck blows.

Visiting Ghenh Da Dia, you have a chance to view many species of marine creatures, especially “Mứt” seaweed - a type of kelp which is salty and sticks to the stones, looking like a network.

Have been listed as a National Heritage Site by the Ministry of Culture and Information, Ghenh Da Dia is a potential tourist attraction to both domestic and foreign visitors. And a visit to the rapids, you will be certainly worth it...


Not surprisingly researchers find intriguing - and perhaps frustrating - comparison between Ganh Da Dia and half a world away in Northern Ireland and its Giant's Causeway, one of UNESCO's Natural Heritage Sites. There, its regularity-sided pillars form a coastal three-mile long carpet stretching out to sea and, some, think, as far as Scotland - 50 miles away.

Local legend, and the Irish are as keen on them as the Vietnamese, has it that it is the legacy of two giants who competed to connect the two main lands.


Less romantically-minded scientists, some of whom have inspected both, say the true reason for their being is slightly more down to earth - but no less dramatic: a volcanic eruption, several million years ago. That, they say, pushed molten basalt rock up from the earth's crust where it solidified into the regular forms of both structures.  Either way both have stood the test of uncertain Time, standing firm against the relentless force of often-harsh seas.


Attractions in Phu Yen

Long Thuy Beach: 

This is a beautiful swimming beach 12 kilometers from the town. The white sand beach is famous for its clear-cut blue water.

Mui Dien (Dien Cape)

Mui Dien (Dien Cape), also called Dai Lanh cape, is an attractive tourist destination. This spot contains a great value of natural landscape, history and culture. Mui Dien (Dien Cape) makes a wonderful landscape where the dawn is first seen daily, ideal for discovery.

Vung Ro: 

This is a regionally reputed tourist centre 25 kilometers south of the town. The place is famous for the several several nearby beautiful off-shore islands.

Chua Da Trang (White stone Pagoda): 

The pagoda, 20 kilometers north of the town, perches on a mountain slope. The place offers an unobtrusive view of the poetic landscape below.

O Loan Lagoon: 

It is 15 kilometres from the town. this is an ideal place for boat trips. the best seafood available is grilled blood clam.

Let's discover Vietnam with us:

VIETMOUNTAIN TRAVEL VIETNAM
Mr: Thanh (Loc Tran) - English speaking
Mobile/viber/whatsapp: +84934552325
Telephone: +84462828811
Yahoo: loc.tran0410
Skype: loc.tran0410
E-mail: info.vntour@gmail.com
E-mail: vietmountaintravel@gmail.com
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It's really a peaceful tropical paradise with turquoise waters, untouched natural environment, relaxed atmosphere, friendly locals...

Phu Quoc is an almost unknown destination in Vietnam Tourism. International tourists and Vietnamese alike just recently discovered Phu Quoc. It is not hard to see why many travelers in Vietnam travel are boasting of the splendid natural beauty and untouched remote beaches of this spectacular tropical island.

Phu Quoc - Pearl Island -  Kien Giang province
Surrounded by more than 40 km of white beaches decorated with coconut palms, Phu Quoc, situated in the Gulf of Thailand near the Cambodian border, is Vietnam’s largest island.  It is closer to Cambodia than the closest mainland town of Ha Tien in Vietnam in the Kien Giang province, which is 46 km away. Its western coastline is sparsely populated while the interior is largely covered with jungle and mainly deserted. 

Although Phu Quoc is a new holiday destination, in the first quarter of 2007, about 50,000 visitors came to the island of which 50 per cent were foreign tourists.  According to new targets released by the Government, Phu Quoc is aiming to attract 2-3 million visitors annually by 2020, with a larger portion of foreign tourists.
Phu Quoc - Pearl Island -  Kien Giang province

Phu Quoc is blessed with favorable natural environment like the virgin forest of over 37,000 hectares, white sandy beaches, coral gardens offshore, varieties of wildlife species, so it is not hard to see why the island has great tourist potential. The government has formed a master plan to develop the island into a high quality eco-tourism destination by 2020. As investment starts to flow into Vietnam, the Island will slowly undergoing development and improved infrastructure. The Prime Minister has offered the best preferences possible for domestic and foreign investors to allow development of the Island, leading to an international standard tourist and trade center by 2010 through to 2020.
Phu Quoc - Pearl Island -  Kien Giang province

In the third quarter of 2008, officials plan to start construction on an 800 hectare international airport that can accommodate large passenger jets and link the island with major regional hubs (e.g., Singapore, Thailand, China, Japan, Hong Kong, etc).
Phu Quoc - Pearl Island -  Kien Giang province

Tourists in  Vietnam travel can start exploring the island in Duong Dong, the biggest town on the island (west of Phu Quoc), where most of hotels and resorts are located. Going south, you can drive along Bai Truong (Long Beach), which is a 20 km long, spectacular beach. You will see two pearl farms on the right, the second is worth a visit. At the end of the road turn left (you can’t miss it) and follow the signs, you will reach the fisherman village An Thoi and the An Thoi pier, the island’s southern tip. From here the An Thoi Islands, a very nice snorkelling and diving area consisting of 15 small islands and islets surrounded by coral reefs in crystal clear water, can be visited by boat.
Phu Quoc - Pearl Island -  Kien Giang province

Continuing to travel north-east, tourists in  Vietnam travel will see a sign to Bai Sao Beach (the sign is somewhat hidden, around 1 km away from the main road). Bai Sao Beach, with its marvelous white sand and green-turquoise water, is one of the most beautiful, quite untouched beaches on Phú Quốc Island. There are a number of simple, on-the-sand restaurants with tasty, fresh seafood in this area. 
Phu Quoc - Pearl Island -  Kien Giang province

Before going back to Duong Dong, there are some recommendable springs and falls: Tranh Stream and Da Ban Stream. Tranh Stream (some 10 km north of Bai Sao Beach) is a stream connecting tiny ponds at different levels through small waterfalls. Da Ban Stream (a stony surface stream, north-east of DDuong Dong) is an easily accessible white-water creek, gracefully flowing down huge granite boulders, on which you can wake; in some places there are natural pools waiting for a refreshing swim. 
Phu Quoc - Pearl Island -  Kien Giang province

A stay on Phu Quoc Island would not be complete without visiting one of the factories producing fish sauce, one of the most popular ingredients of the Vietnamese cooking as well as one of the pearl farms with panels describing the formation of pearls and shops selling pearl jewellery.
Phu Quoc - Pearl Island -  Kien Giang province

This island has a unique species of dogs, the Phu Quoc Ridgeback, which has a ridge of hair that runs along its back in the opposite direction to the rest of the coat. Much of this island’s nature is still protected. Around 70% of the island, an area of 31,422 hectares, became a national park in 2001. The rainy season on Phu Quoc is from July to November and the peak season for tourism is midwinter, when the sky is blue and the sea is calm.

Phu Quoc national park's activities for tourism


Phu Quoc National Park located in Kien Giang Province has become an ideal eco-tourist destination. It has special and unique biodiversity values compared to other national parks across the country.

Phu Quoc National park covers more than 50% of the island so it is definitely worth considering a visit, particularly if you would like to escape the heat of the daytime sun, a walk along a park trail or motorbike ride on one of roads in the north will give you a taste of this natural environment on Phu Quoc.
Phu Quoc - Pearl Island -  Kien Giang province

There are many available options for visitors in Vietnam travel keen to explore what is on offer.

Hiring motorbike on your own and explore the northerly parts of the island, and the best areas can be found on the road toward Ganh Dau. To get there, taking the road from Duong Dong towards Bai Thom and turn off toward Ganh Dau, the National park becomes more apparent the closer you get to Ganh Dau Village.
suoi Tranh -Phu Quoc - Pearl Island -  Kien Giang province

Walking Trails are limited, although it is a great way to experience the national park there is a good walking trail 5kms before Ganh Dau, where the going is relatively easy and trail wide enough to take in the surrounding environment. Walking is a particularly pleasant way to escape the heat, as the vegetation provides cover from the heat of the sun. Taking the same road mentioned previously towards Ganh Dau and 100m after the 5km Ganh Dau road marker on the left hand side you’ll find an opening in the national park with a clearly defined walking trail which continues for a couple of kilometers. Moreover, besides the 5km Ganh Dau marker, the actual trail is not sign posted.
suoi Tranh -Phu Quoc - Pearl Island -  Kien Giang province

Travel to Phu Quoc - Pearl Island -  Kien Giang province

Travel to Phu Quoc - Pearl Island -  Kien Giang province

If  tourists Vietnam travel like untouched nature and pre-touristic surrounding, don't hesitate traveling to Phu Quoc! 

Let's discover Vietnam with us:


VIETMOUNTAIN TRAVEL VIETNAM
Mr: Thanh (Loc Tran) - English speaking
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Support French speaking: Ms. Trang: +84906089187

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Dec 29, 2014


We have just finished program: Charitable donation "highland warm" 2014 to Ho Quang Phin commune, Dong Van district, Ha Giang province which launched the third times by Vietmountain travel, BBM community and Hong Ngoc hospital in Hanoi.
Ho Quang Phin commune, Dong Van district, Ha Giang province
Ho Quang Phin area

Ho Quang Phin commune around 600 km from Hanoi (13 driving hours ) with 27.58 square km is established in 1961, with population in 1999 is 2.280 people (population density: 85 people/ per square km) and 50% of them live in poverty.
Ho Quang Phin commune, Dong Van district, Ha Giang province

Donations for the "upland Warm" to help people in this area:
- Rice, noodles, salt, sweets.
- Clothing, clothing, shoes, glove and boots
- Stationery: Books, notebooks, bags, newspapers, books, etc. suitable for students from grade 1 to grade 9
- The leaflets on food hygiene places, disease prevention, animal husbandry, reproductive health, infectious diseases, ...

Some photos in program:

Ho Quang Phin commune, Dong Van district, Ha Giang province
Preparing in the Ho Quang Phin  commune hall 

Ho Quang Phin commune, Dong Van district, Ha Giang province
Preparing in the Ho Quang Phin  commune hall 

Ho Quang Phin commune, Dong Van district, Ha Giang province
Children are eager to get gifts

Ho Quang Phin commune, Dong Van district, Ha Giang province
People attend
Small presents for children

children happy with small presents

Ho Quang Phin commune, Dong Van district, Ha Giang province
All the member take a photo before leave from Ho Quang Phin

Ho Quang Phin commune, Dong Van district, Ha Giang province
All the member take a photo before leave from Ho Quang Phin
These roads we passed...















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