- Overview
- Activities
- Events and Festivals
- Sightseeing
- Transport
- Travel Tips
The Mekong Delta (Vietnamese: đồng bằng sông Cửu Long “Nine Dragon river delta”) is in southwestern Vietnam where the Mekong River approaches and empties into the sea through a network of distributaries. The Mekong delta region encompasses a large portion of southeastern Vietnam of 39,000 square kilometres (15,000sqmi). The size of the area covered by water depends on the season.
The Mekong Delta, as a region, lies immediately to the west of Ho Chi Minh City, roughly forming a triangle stretching from Mỹ Tho in the east to Châu Đốc and Hà Tiên in the northwest, down to Cà Mau and the South China Sea at the southernmost tip of Vietnam, and including the island of Phú Quốc.
As all deltas, it receives the bounty of the siltation from the upper Mekong, and as such is a very rich and lush area, covered with rice fields. It produces about half of the total of Vietnam's agricultural output (in fact the delta produces more rice than Korea and Japan altogether), and is the place for timeless sceneries of farmers planting or harvesting rice.
The Mekong splits in Cambodia into two main rivers, the Bassac (Hậu Giang) and the First river (Tiền Giang), then in Vietnam into a more complex system, creating a maze of small canals, rivers and arroyos interspersed with villages and floating markets. Life in the Mekong Delta revolves much around the river, and all the villages are often accessible by river rather than by road.
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Highlights of journeys to Mekong Delta are boat trips through canals, floating markets, exploring the local daily life by staying overnight on islands and visiting family run factories; not less interesting, tasting local specialities. The most renowned places in the Mekong Delta are My Tho, Vinh Long, Can Tho and Chau Doc. This is also a natural passageway from southern Vietnam to Cambodia either by road or by river. It is possible for a day trip to Ben Tre from Saigon . In Ben Tre, boat trips to island are highlights beside other activities including visit orchards, bee - keeping farm, enjoy traditional music and see coconut candy production process at a local factory.
Cai rang And Cai be Floating market
Visiting Cai Be and Cai Rang Market, you will have a great photographic opportunities as all manner of produce is traded from boats, communicate with the local, take sampans along canals to visit local houses and enjoy fresh fruits.
If you're in Rach Gia, you're most likely headed to the offshore Phu Quoc Island or westward to Hon Chong and Ha Tien. If you're off to Phu Quoc, you may find yourself needing an overnight stay here if you miss the last boat to the island. Missing a boat and having to overnight in Rach Gia isn't a bad thing - the town has a couple of minor points of interest, including a small museum, and we found the locals here to be particularly friendly. There's no shortage of good hotels, a handful of good places to chow down at and the scenic fishing boats round out a good overall package.
In wet season, the boat timetables can be haphazard due to bad weather and the boats often do not run. Because of this people often fly either from Saigon or Rach Gia, but even though there are multiple daily flights, the flights fill up quickly, so if you arrive in Rach Gia and the weather is foul, book yourself on a flight quicksmart. Likewise, leaving Phu Quoc by boat can be a little erratic in the wet season but according to locals the flights almost always run, so if you're tight on time, wedging Phu Quoc into the last few days of a Vietnam trip, consider flying back to Saigon to be sure of not missing onwards connections out of the country. One more word on the boats in bad weather fishing boats may still make the run to Phu Quoc from Ha Tien, we strongly suggest you skip this option - the run is dangerous and the boats do sink. Be patient and wait for a ferry from Rach Gia, or fly - do not take a boat from Ha Tien.
Phu Quoc is also called the Emerald Island because of its natural treasures and infinite tourism potential. There's plenty of strips of sand worth exploring -- Bai Thom on the northeast and Bai Dai on the northwest are both fine beaches and clear blue sea with Long Beach, Bai Sao, Beach Bai Vong; all is ideal for picnics, paddling, snorkeling or fishing.
Aside from its beaches, Phu Quoc is known for two things -- its fish sauce factories (dotted through Duong Dong town) and Suoi Tranh waterfall (10km southeast of Duong Dong in the centre of the island), and more of a river over rocks than a waterfall. Phu Quoc Island has many harbors such as An Thoi and Hon Thom where international and domestic ships anchor. Also, there are several historical sites on the island: National Hero Nguyen Trung Truc's military base, King Gia Long relics from the time he spent on the island, and Phu Quoc prison.
The most interesting thing to do in Can Tho is take a boat ride through canals and visit Cai Rang Floating Market. Outside of the town is the stork garden at Thot Not where hundreds of egrets, herons and cormorants gather in the treetops to roost late in the afternoon. Can Tho is usually combined with the trip to Chau Doc , a little town near Cambodian border.
A highlight of a visit to Chau Doc is a boat trip on one of the small paddle boats that collect near the western end of the park to many floating raft houses and fish farms. A second attraction, just outside Chau Doc, is Sam Mountain -- more of a hillock in fact -- which has reasonable views over the surrounds. The views are pretty rather than spectacular, though when combined with a visit to the pagodas around the hill's base, this makes a worthwhile afternoon jaunt. Chau Doc is also the closest large town to the Vietnamese/Cambodian river border crossing. Boat trips are the highlight of a visit to Mytho. Usually, destinations include a coconut workshop, a honey bee farm and orchard gardens. If time allowed, should not miss Vinh Trang Pagoda, a beautiful and well maintained sanctuary and Dong Tam snake farm, a center for breeding snakes producing venom for exportation.
Vinh Long has many pagodas, communal houses such as Van Thanh Temple, Long Thanh Communal House, Tinh Xa Ngoc Vien, Phuoc Hau, Tien Chau, Saghamangala pagodas... visitors can visit tropical fruit gardens and boating along canals to islands. Popular places are Mr. Sau Giao's Flower Garden, Mr. Muoi Day's Stilt-House, and Mr. Hai Hoang's Old House. Homestay and join daily activities with the local people are also highlights of the trips
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By late afternoon, an eerie light drifts across Ha Long, the Bay of a Thousand Islands. It clings to the jungle-clad rocks bristling from the sea, the cliffs dotted with caves, the secret lagoons and islets sprinkled like stardust in jade green waters. Fishermen speak of the 100 foot long dragon lurking in the deep and the sailors who lost their way in this watery maze, haunting it to this day under the gaze of a virgin bride turned into stone. Nothing disturbs the peace but cormorants landing on the fish traps and the occasional chugging of a passing boat.
We dropped anchor in a deserted creek, dived in surprisingly dark waters then as a monsoon storm whipped up the waves, made haste for the safe haven of Cat Ba island.
Lapped by the South China Sea, 50 miles from the coast of north-east Vietnam, Cat Ba greets you with a floating village where coracles and sampans weave around houseboats draped with washing and squid. Sometimes a batwing junk glides in for the night, coppery red in the setting sun. As the air begins to cool, the harbour glows with flickering lamps while on the shore boys play football with shuttlecocks and old men bring out their mats to sleep under the trees. The sound of cicadas echoes like magic across the island.
If you head into the hills beyond the paddies, you come to the mysterious forests of the National Park, their hot springs, lakes and swamps creeping with submerged vegetation. You might spot wild cats and gibbons, monkeys, hornbills and black and gold spiders weaving their webs across the trail. Human remains from the Stone Age still lie in the caves but few locals will venture there for fear of disturbing the dead.
Every day, Cat Ba wakes to the strident call of the waterbus, eager to ferry another human cargo through swirling mist to the port of Hai Phong on the mainland.
It’s barely dawn but already children ride on mud-caked buffaloes, in scenes from another age, and women in conical hats walk to market, balancing their wares on shoulder poles. They sell green oranges and custard apples, crabs, live chickens and eels and herbs and plants to cure any ailment or boost your energy flow.
This is lucky for you will need plenty of energy to explore the capital waiting to cast its spell on the Red River bank. Hanoi is chaotic, a mix of pavement bazaars and colonial villas, spluttering traffic, French baguettes and noodle soup, but it’s also a city of trees and lakes where Tai’Chi adepts unwind in slow motion at the water’s edge and in the gilded pagodas, bells chime crystal clear and the chanting of monks mingles with bird song. Every lake claims a legend from the Dragon King who created West Lake to the Divine Tortoise with the victorious sword seen peeping out of the water, they say, at the change of seasons. On the 15th day of the lunar month, pilgrims head for the Phu Tay Ho pagoda on the West Lake, an auspicious spot to pray for a good husband or wife.
With lakes, river and flooded paddies on the doorstep, Hanoi is a great place for water puppets. Today shows are staged indoors but puppeteers still stand waist deep in water, moving dragons and buffaloes at the end of long bamboo poles, to depict village life and ancient legends.
Here, the spirits never die and the crowds who file past the embalmed remains of Ho Chi Minh know it well. They reflect in silence on the awesome destiny of the man from the hills who led the struggle for independence. Clouds of dragonflies hover in the haze and it seems ‘Uncle Ho’ never left the wooden house by the lake or the orchard he used to tend, having laid bare every facet of his life in the nearby museum.
We left Hanoi for the Mai Chau district and a lush highland valley framed by dramatic peaks near the Laos border. This is the home of the White Thai, one of 54 minorities. They live in bamboo houses built on stilts, to keep away marauding animals and evil spirits, grow rice and revere the forest where they bury their dead. The women weave colourful rugs and waistcoats with chiselled silver buttons. In the long house of an extended family, we joined in tribal dancing, sipped rice wine from the communal pot, through three foot long bamboo straws, then slept blissfully on the floor, under mosquito nets, dreaming of the friendly spirits who dwell in the forest.
As you travel south across Vietnam, you cannot avoid the poignant reminders of the war but in this narrow strip of land squeezed between mountains and sea, history goes back thousands of years, born of the Dragon Lord of the Mighty Seas and the Princess of the Mountains whose union of yang and yin brought forth 100 sons.
Much later in the 17th century, the Nguyen dynasty settled in Hué in central Vietnam, a location chosen for its free flowing energy according to geomantic principles. Visitors wander around the Purple Forbidden City and the Royal Tombs scattered under the pines on the edge of town. On the Perfume River, scented by the flowers growing at its source, dragon boats punt their way to Thien Mu, the lofty pagoda with seven tiers, one for each of the Buddha’s reincarnations. A service is held in the afternoon when child monks with half their hair shaved off daydream behind the pillars.
Hué moves at a gentle pace and as you stroll among frangipani and bougainvillea or sip jasmine tea at the riverside, it’s easy to connect with the past.
Beyond the city, the road climbs up and down mountains with spectacular views over the hinterland and endless beaches of white deserted sands. The fabled Marble Mountains loom in the distance, representing metal, water, wood, fire and earth. They were islands long ago and remain a mystical place where Buddha and local deities are worshipped in the caves.
If the spirits ever get confused, it must be in Hoi An, a lovely old city restored by UNESCO. Once an important port, it attracted waves of settlers who left their mark on the banks of the Thu Bon river.You find Chinese temples and clan houses, dwellings built of precious wood, all carved doors and stucco work, a square well, a pond with a moon-catching carp and a covered Japanese bridge stretching dragon-like across the water.
The fish market takes place at dawn when in the estuary, islands drift out of the shadows and the people greet their gods and light joss sticks for their ancestors.
Ancestor worship is a family duty all over Vietnam and many homes set up a special shrine to ensure the well being of the deceased in the after life. Tet, the greatest of the festivals, celebrates the start of the Lunar Year when in the course of the festivities, ancestors briefly return to earth and are welcome with food offerings and the fragrance of white blossom and sandalwood. Families pray for an auspicious year and read their horoscopes.
From Hoi An, the long drive south is best done in stages, stopping perhaps in the pretty bay of Nha Trang to see the remains of the ancient Cham civilization, or spending a night in the cool hill resort of Dalat where among lakes and waterfalls, Vietnam’s last emperor built his summer residence. Now the town is a favourite for honeymooners who come for peace, scenery and fresh air.
Fresh air is in short supply when you finally reach Saigon, the former capital renamed, officially at least, Ho Chi Minh City. The country’s largest city and river port lives to the rhythm of ‘four people motorbikes’ and mud-churning waters rushing down to the sea, 50 miles away. Wartime memories abound, businesses flourish, alongside poverty, and Christian churches mingle with pagodas and temples. On the outskirts of Chinatown, mothers burn paper offerings to protect their newborn babies while in the peaceful gardens of the Jade Emperor, incense smoke attempts to appease the demons in the Hall of Ten Hells.
In Tay Ninh , a fair drive north west of the city, the spirits are kinder. During a seance in 1919, a Vietnamese, named Ngo Van Chieu, claimed to make contact with a superior spirit who advised him to find ‘The Way’. Later, Cao Dai, the ‘Supreme Being’, introduced himself to him as the only creator, uniting all religions and faiths.
Cream and pastel blue, the Cao Dai church looks like a fairy cake waiting for a birthday party. There are quaint turrets and archways and a vast empty square where the spirits are invited to gather. Tourists arriving for the midday service are ushered up to the gallery and in the gaily painted nave, chanting begins under the all-seeing eye of the Supreme Being.
Led by a pope, the sect relies on mediums who receive messages from the other world, sometimes from illustrious visitors such as Joan of Arc or Winston Churchill.
Meanwhile Mount Ba Den, the Black Lady Mountain, looks down on the town, with its own temples and a crystalline spring gurgling in a grotto. Over 1500 steps take you to the top, an arduous climb in the heat but worth the effort for the stunning views over the Mekong Delta.
Born on the Tibetan plateau, flowing 2800 miles across five countries, the Mekong has an almost mystical aura. To the Vietnamese, this river with nine mouths is Cuu Long, the Nine Dragons who pour millions of gallons of water into the sea and turn the Delta into the rice bowl of Vietnam. This is a land of exotic orchards and rice fields, rivers, canals, lakes and lotus ponds. The people are a melting pot of race and religion but all live at the mercy of the mighty river and its tributaries. Excavations have revealed ancient cities buried or drowned for hundreds of years.
We took a boat on the My Tho river, a northern branch of the Mekong, and sailed through mud-coloured water along banks thick with palms and around islands where children slept in palm leaf hammocks and men chewed betel nut in the shade. Villages came right down to the water and boats carried all sorts of goods, with eyes painted on their prow to ward off evil and see in the dark.
But we found no evil in the Delta and when dusk came that night and coconut fronds rustled in the breeze, our guide made a wish, ‘nahn’. All he was asking was to ‘gaze at the moonlight through the window’ and in this land so close to its roots, we knew the spirits would approve.
By: travelintelligence
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GET IN
The Mekong delta is near Ho Chi Minh City, and Can Tho is merely 4 hours' drive away, so it is easy to access by road, although there is only one main road, and as such it is rather crowded. There are some flights between Ho Chi Minh City and Rach Gia, and also between Ho Chi Minh City and the island of Phu Quoc. Rach Gia can also be reached by boat or plane from Phu Quoc.
There used to be hydrofoil connections from Ho Chi Minh City to My Tho then to Can Tho in about 4 hours, but the option does not exist any more. Alternatives are speed boat transfers, or for those who would enjoy unspoilt nature, cruises from Cai Be to Can Tho or back. The Mekong delta is also a natural passageway from southern Vietnam to Cambodia, which can be entered overland or by river. Visas on entry to Cambodia are possible at some (but not all) entry points, however visas for Vietnam must be obtained in advance. You can travel from Phnom Penh, Cambodia's capital, to Chau Doc on a boat-bus journey. You can also enter at the border crossing on the way from Kampot in southern Cambodia to Ha Tien. Bus connections are also now available between Phnom Penh and Can Tho.
GET AROUND
Phu Quoc
Air: You can fly from Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon) on one of four or five daily Vietnam Airlines flights or from Rach Gia which has two flights per day.
Waterway: Alternatively there are ferries to Phu Quoc from Rach Gia and Ha Tien. There are also fast boats from Rach Gia that take approximately 2.5 hours and leave in the morning or the afternoon (last boat is around 1 PM). You may be told by tour agents that the fast boats are full, but if you go to the dock where the boats depart you may have the opportunity to buy tickets from street sellers. Do not expect to find taxis on arrival in Phu Quoc, though there will likely be a few motos. Minibus ply to the two main towns, but tickets are sold on the boat and sell out before arrival. Transfer can also be arranged through your hotel.
Ca Mau
Road: Camau is 114km from Bac Lieu, 130km from Rach Gia, 180km from Cantho, and 380km from Ho Chi Minh City. National Highways No. 1A, 63 connect Ca Mau to Bac Lieu and Kien Giang provinces. Waterway: The boats run from Ca Mau to Ho Chi Minh City, Rach Gia. Tourist can visit U Minh and Ngoc Hien by ferry.
Soc Trang
Soc Trang is 231km from Ho Chi Minh City, 60km from Can Tho. National Highways No.1A links the province and Can Tho, Bac Lieu.
Long An
Long An has National Highways No.1A crossing Tan An Town, National Highway No.62 linking to Binh Hiep Border Gate to Cambodia, National Highway No.50 from Mytho (Tien Giang) to Ho Chi Minh City via Can Duoc Townlet. Long An is 47km from Ho Chi Minh City.
Tien Giang (My Tho)
Mytho City is 70km from Vinh Long, 70km from Ho Chi Minh City, 103km from Can Tho City, 179km from Chau Doc, 182km from Rach Gia.
Road: There are bus connections with Vinh Long, Chau Doc, Ca Mau, and other destinations in the Mekong Delta. Water: A high-speed boat leaves from Ho Chi Minh City daily to Mytho and Can Tho. There is also boat tours around Mytho.
Kien Giang (Ha Tien)
Road: Rach Gia is 92km from Ha Tien, 116km from Cantho, 182km from My Tho, and 250km from Ho Chi Minh City.
Air: The province owns 3 airports: Rach Gia, Phu Quoc, and Ha Tien. From Ho Chi Minh City, there are daily flights connecting to Rach Gia, and 28 flights a week linking to Phu Quoc. Hydrofoil boats daily connects Rach Gia and Phu Quoc and vice versa.
Vinh Long
Vinh Long is 70km from Mytho, 34km from Can Tho and 136km from Ho Chi Minh City. The inter-province bus station is 5km from the centre of Vinh Long. There are buses between Vinh Long and Ho Chi Minh City, Can Tho, Mytho, Long Xuyen, Sa Dec, Rach Gia, and other Mekong Delta destinations. National Highway No.1A and No.53 also runs through the province.
Dong Thap (Sa Dec)
Cao Lanh City is 162km from Ho Chi Minh City. There are direct buses from Ho Chi Minh City, Mytho, Can Tho, Vinh Long, and Long Xuyen. Sa Dec Town is 143km from Ho Chi Minh City, midway between Vinh Long and Long Xuyen.
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- Allow 2 – 3 days to get a flavor of what Delta life is about. For most people don’t have enough necessary time to travel independently and so opt for a tour so choose carefully or tailor make your own for what will be a rewarding experience.
- Have a meal with your homestay host is always a great way to relax and enjoy.
- Wherever you go in the delta (except for My Tho), be prepared for ferry crossings which may take you few hours.
- Almost floating markets start in the very early morning (from 5am) and finish before noon. Thus, to catch the liveliest and busiest scenery, you need to stay one night in Can Tho and Vinh Long.
- Bring along camera, hat, sunscreen and insect repellant.
- Should keep your camera in a plastic bag when it is not in use as it is easy to get splashed by the wake of motorized boats.
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