Sunday, October 12, 2008

2008-10-05 - Vietnam 2 - More Tour

On day 2 of the tour it was back into the boat and off to see local silk-weaving and fish-farming. The former is the domain of the minority Cham Muslim population, who live at the end of very narrow and rickety timber bridges, while the latter involves having a floating house, about 2 million fish under it, and a square hatch in the floor to feed them through. After that it was on a bus to Can Tho, a city of a bit under 2 million.

Floating sawmill - the big blue thing is a horizontal bandsaw

Fishing on the flooded plains

Stilt house


Clumps of this water plant floating around in the water - this stuff is everywhere


Feeding frenzy at the fish farm

Another form of transport - cyclo, Vietnam style

French-style houses in Can Tho (I think)

Restaurant boat

Street scene

A visit to the local museum was an interesting look at the government’s view on life under communism – everything from export success stories to the overthrow of the puppet government (in the south) by the communist north.

Day 3 saw a trip to Can Tho’s floating markets in the morning, and also a visit to a coconut candy factory, a rice-paper factory and a tropical fruit orchard. After that, back on the bus and off to My Tho, which is near Saigon / Ho Chi Minh City.


River that runs through Can Tho


Meow


Starfruit tree


Dragon fruit "tree" - it's actually the fruit of a cactus

In a pagoda

Out the back where the monks hang out


New suspension bridge being built over the river - lots of new bridges recently, replacing ferries

My Tho has 4 islands in the middle of the river, with various activities on each, such as a rice mill and more orchards, and they also take you for a row through the canals on the island. Also visible on these islands where a strange little fish that lives in holes in the mud on the riverbanks. It has flippers on the front, and walks across the mud with them. It also eats rice.

While wandering around My Tho, also found the hospital. There is a sign board out the front, with graphic photos of mutilated people, presumably from traffic and industrial accidents. Typically, there was a food stall set up directly behind the sign.

Ice delivery

Canals on the island in My Tho


The crazy walking fish eating the tourist's rice

Floating markets - you hang off your bamboo pole what you are selling - pumpkins here


Waterway signs

Making rice paper - putting "cooked" paper onto the drying rack

Picking up cooked rice paper with a big round banboo thingo

Bird flu express - the yellow bag contains chickens, the green ones ducks, all live

After My Tho, it was off to Saigon and the end of that tour. Plan was to try to organise a hotel etc on the fly, but instead I just followed the tour operator for the last part of the tour (Happy Tour) back to their office. They sorted the arrangements for the rest of the trip, and then had me along to their relocation party. It does cost more than booking everything yourself, but much easier and more co-ordinated. It also meant that I could get on the train to Hue and then Hanoi that very night, at 11pm.

3 comments:

John said...

We went on a Can Tho trip just like that: floating markets, coconut candy factory, rice-paper factory, and a tropical fruit orchard (with elephant fish lunch).
Did you have to wait ages for a big car ferry at one point?

Lukas said...

There were lots of similar tours doing the rounds of all the same places. Was hard to get photos without other tourists contaminating them, and this was the low season.

Car ferries: yes, but sometime after that tour I think. For some reason us tourists got out and waited in the pedestrian waiting area (which all the motos drove through as a shortcut), while the locals stayed on their busses and stared at us.

John said...

yes, we had to get out and wait in that area too, with really loud TV and lots of motorcycles riding by staring at the strange tourists (probably wondering why they'd ever want to visit)