Vietnam Holidays
Vietnam, a name too long associated with the horrors of war, has finally won its
last battle to capture the imagination of the travelling public. Elegant Hanoi now
vies with its dynamic sister, Ho Chi Minh City (still fondly called Saigon by the
locals), for the attention of visitors drawn by the eclectic mix of old and new.
Elsewhere, the scenes are timeless. Early morning on the Mekong Delta brings the
daily floating markets where fruit and vegetables are peddled. Everywhere the green
patchwork of rice paddies stretches into the distance, broken only by the silhouette
of water buffalo and conical-hatted peasants bending down to tend the young plants.
The soaring mountains in the north of the country tower over tiny villages where
life continues much as it has done for centuries, with traditional costumes still
proudly worn. Old French hill stations survive throughout the country offering welcome
respite from the heat of the plains below. And, in the South China Sea, the 3000
chalk islands in Ha Long Bay are not to be missed.
The ancient former imperial capital,
Hue, takes you back to a time of concubines and eunuchs. In every town, young women
wearing the simple but feminine national dress, the Ao Dai, weave their way through
the traffic at the controls of a motorbike. Only in Vietnam could the past and the
present be encapsulated so perfectly.