Halong Bay is the most beautiful place I’ve ever been.. That may seem like a bold call, but it puts the previous holder of the title (the Amalfi Coast, Italy) to shame!
Halong Bay is made up of hundereds of vegetation clad limestone formations that dramatically rise out of the South China Sea. Halong Bay was named by the French and means “Land of the Dragon” as the formations represent the body of a dragon.
After hours of deliberation in Hanoi the day before, we opted to indulge in a bit of luxury and splashed out for a high-end 3 day tour – one night on the Pinter Cruiser and one night at a 5* resort on Cat Ba Island (Flashpacking Gone Nuts). Well worth it!
Having just got off the over night train from Sapa we camped out in a cafe for a few hours before being picked up by our mini-bus. We were both knackered after very little sleep, a string of early starts and the trekking.
We got to the harbour at noonish and boarded the Pinter, a lovely traditional style junk boat. We were greeted with a fresh watermelon smoothy
We cruised out into the bay and after a while anchored for lunch. We shared a table with Kelvin, an old-timer American who was hard of hearing. Laura’s normally loud voice got louder!! We learnt on this first sitting the need to pace ourselves as the excellent food just kept on coming, wave after wave … it was an onslaught!
After lunch we, and seemingly every other boat in the vacinity headed to the grandly named Amazing cave, which lived up to it’s billing.
We then headed to a secluded spot in the bay, away from the plebs
, where we anchored for the night. It was a full moon and the views were breathtaking. We got talking to a brother and sister (Mike and Kate) from New England who were in their early twenties – spent a lot of time talking music; I felt old after catching myself saying tossy things like “back in the mid-90′s I was living in Manchester when the whole britpop scene exploded”. Jebus!
We were up early to watch the sunrise (I’ll link to some pics once they’re uploaded), which was even more breathtaking than the rising full moon. Totally stunning. Ethereal.
After breakfast we took to the water in kayaks and bossed around for a few hours. We ended by paddling through a floating village, equiped with a school, electricity and dogs!
After re-boarding the Pinter Cruiser we packed up and were decanted onto a smaller boat to get us to Cat Ba Island, the main island in Cat Ba National Park.
We weren’t to know it then, but that was the last time we were to see the Pinter!
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[...] our trips to Sapa and Halong Bay we had one final night in Hanoi, before an early flight to Hue the next [...]
Pingback by Hanoi « Nathan’s Blog February 15, 2009 @ 10:30 am[...] looking for a hotel we bumped into Mike and Kate who we’d met on our Halong Bay trip. The loose plan was to meet up with them for beers when we bumped into each other later, but [...]
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