The sleeping bus to Hue was fine and Carol managed to sleep most of the way, though Jon maintains he got no sleep as usual.
We found a lovely hotel in Hue which cost us the princely sum of $10 for the room, including A/C, breakfast and internet - not bad! Across from the hotel was a cafe recommended by the Lonely Planet which was really good - one evening we had 2 meals, 2 drinks, 2 coffees and 1 dessert for the equivalent of 3GBP!
We checked out the citadel in Hue on the afternoon we arrived which was huge, interesting and hot! The next day we went on a day trip along the Perfume River visiting the inevitable temples along the way and also the tombs of various kings of Vietnam. We also saw conical hats and incense sticks being made which was fascinating.
Hoi An was only a short bus trip (4 hours) from Hue and proved to be a lovely historical town with lots of very old buildings. It's another World Heritage Site.
The riverfront comes alive after dark with lots of street entertainment and cheap beer - 12p for 0.5pint! The hotel had a swimming pool so we were well set!
We hired bikes one day and cycled the 4kms to the beach which proved to be really lovely with crystal clear water. The only downside was the black clouds that rolled in at 2pm but by then we'd had plenty of sun anyway so we headed back and arrived just in time before the heavens opened.
From Hoi An we'd decided to give Nha Trang a miss as we'd met a Spanish couple who described it like Benidorm. Instead we decided to go up into the hills again to Dalat. That was a mistake! It's a place where Vietnamese go for their holidays and there was very little, if anything to do. We went on a day tour which turned out to be very contrived and took us to a couple of waterfalls and a couple of Vietnamese 'theme parks' full of concrete animals and not much else! Never mind, the hotel was OK with a very good buffet breakfast!
On 15 June we caught the bus for the last leg of the Open Tour to Saigon - known officially as Ho Chi Minh City, but the southern Vietnamese call it Saigon still.
We visited the War Remnants Museum (interesting but full of propaganda) and the Reunification Palace and did a half day tour to the Cu Chi tunnels. This is where the Viet Cong dug tunnels (250kms worth) to live in and hide from the Americans. A section of the tunnels has been made safe (and widened) so tourists can crawl through to see what it was like. Very interesting and scary!
That evening we ate in a restaurant called Pho 2000. It serves Pho which is a very tasty noodle soup and is famous because Bill Clinton and his entourage stopped there for lunch in 2000. There are photos of him all over the walls.
Here's a photo of a typical traffic scene in Saigon.
To cross the road, you have to wade out in front of the huge mass of motorbikes.
On Saturday 18 June we joined a 3 day/2night tour to the Mekong Delta.
This was a really good trip which took us in various boats on the Delta to visit a floating market, a fish farm, a coconut candy family business and a fruit farm.
The trip included bed and breakfast (x 2), a lunch, a couple of lots of tropical fruit, a local folk group, transport in rowing boats and motor boats and a trip on a motor bike cart. It was good to let someone else do the organisation while we sat back to enjoy the passing scenery.
The tour took us through the border in to Cambodia and finished in Phnom Penh on Monday 20 June.
Throughout our travels in south east Asia we have come across many hotels and cafes with 'Merry Christmas' and 'Happy New Year' banners and even the odd Christmas tree. In southern Vietnam we were in 2 different hotels where they were even playing English Christmas Carols while we ate (complete with words). Very bizarre for a country that is mainly Buddhist!
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