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Vietnam Trip!

Budget trip to Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC), Vietnam! Me and my gal friend bought cheap tickets from Tiger Airways.

1-way ticket = S$9.90 -> return ticket = S$19.80.
Airport taxes & surcharges = S$130.
Total cost of the return ticket = S$149.80
Visa = free

Heard that now budget airlines are going to charge check-in baggages to offset the high fuel cost. This Vietnam trip could be our last budget trip.
:(

We stayed in Blue River Hotel in Ho Chi Minh City District 1. It is ranked no. 2 hotel out of 116 hotels in Ho Chi Minh City by TripAdvisor. We booked a twin room without window at USD20 nett per night, inclusive of breakfast. The hotel had prearranged a taxi to pick us at their airport at USD11.

This hotel is actually a family-owned guesthouse with not more than 20 rooms, but you will get 5-stars customer service from the counter. The girls, especially Thuy, would give you a useful city map and advise you on places to go. When we were not sure of the location where we wanted to go, she would even walk us to the road and get a cab for us. Thuy and the rest of the staff are just so hospitable; I have never received such great customer service at a small local hotel before. The staff are just like our friends even though we are of different cultural backgrounds and we only communicate with very simple English.

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Claustrophobic in the wartime Cu Chi Tunnels

Someone who has been studying Vietnam and the Vietnam War since he was a kid shared this to me at Yahoo…

“What many don’t realize about Cu Chi is it’s a mass grave for the Viet Cong and the Viets who supported the NLF. If you look around Cu Chi, you will see bomb craters everywhere. The cold hard fact that the communists don’t want the tourists to know is many thousands of Vietnam were killed in the Cu Chi tunnels from all of the bombings.

I bet you didn’t realize when you trounced around inside the tunnels that just a few feet away from you was probably someone who was crushed to death by a bomb impact. A thought like that would take all the fun away of a place like that, which is why the communists don’t want the tourists to know the truth.”

I had been worrying about the uneasiness of crawling through the Cu Chi Tunnels way before I went Vietnam. My buddy had been recounting her “sauna” experience in the tunnels – hot and stuffy, darkness, lost along the way, and lot of sweat! She repeated many times, “Do not wear jeans!”

I had read about going into the tunnels with a big group of tourists, and everyone got stuck there in an uncomfortable position due to phobia and long photo-taking session in the small, dark and stuffy enclosure… On the thought of that, I really had a second thought of crawling the Cu Chi tunnels.

Our Cu Chi group was quite big with twenty over tourists, most were big-sized Caucasians. I was the third one to enter the tunnel. When I entered, I couldn’t see anyone in front of me. My tour mate was behind me, and two other tourists followed. I was pretty lost at first, as I didn’t know which direction to proceed. Then, we realised that we just need to follow the way where there are dim yellow lightings.

Standing at 1.65m, I had to bend myself low to walk through the tunnel. After a while, I was basically crawling on four limbs, and accidentally bruised my knee. With no one in front of me to lead the way out, I felt pretty lost in the maze, and hate the feeling of being enclosed in such a small space. My tour mate brought a torch along and shone the tunnel.

There are tunnels below tunnels. We simply went down the steps to go to the lower level. The final league of our tunnel experience was to go down a tunnel that has no steps at all. Our first impression was where the hole would lead us to. Could we climb out of the hole again? With three people behind me, I knew that I Read More »

Deadly Traps!

During the US-Vietnam war, many human traps were created to fight the American army. All were deadly with many sharp pointed rods. It was really disgusting to see these traps built to kill.

Our Cu Chi guide was a Vietnamese officer in the US army. When the US army retreated from Vietnam, he insisted to stay in his homeland as his family was there. He became the Prisoner-Of-War in Vietnam for four years, going through sessions of education about communism. Now he is given a good job as a tour guide in Vietnam.

This is a dog trap that was created to trap dogs of the American troop.

Left: Folding Chair Trap. Right: Window Trap.

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Mekong Delta Day Cruise

We embarked on a full-day Mekong Delta trip from 8 a.m to 7 p.m. The tour actually ended at 3p.m but it took us three to four hours of journey back to our hotel. This one day Mekong Delta trip from My Tho to Ben Tre, including a lunch, cost USD 17 per person.

We boarded a medium-sized wooden boat to take a cruise from Saigon River to Mekong Delta. It was a long cruise for about two hours… and I had taken a number of photos along the river.

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Mekong Delta Tour

I had never hopped onto so many boats in a day before! We had a boat ride along the river. Our small “gondola” nearly capsized when my friend jumped into the boat out of panic that she might miss the boat. So, remember, don’t jump into the rocky boat. :D Also, remember to apply insect repellent. I got bitten by mosquitoes while cruising. We were given a typical Vietnamese straw hat during the cruise, and I was given one that was soaked with someone else’s sweat, yuck!

Getting ready to hop onto our “gondola” ride.

No one wanted to order this famous local cuisine in Mekong Delta – Fried Elephant Ear fish. To eat them, Read More »

HCMC (Saigon) City Tour

Can you spot three dogs here? Hope they are not for the dining table…

The traffic condition in Ho Chih Min is an eye opener for tourists; motorists come from all directions!

We made our own city tour around Ho Chi Minh City. This is the Central Post Office, which is just opposite Notre Dame Cathedral.

Right in the centre is the portrait of Ho Chi Minh, one of the most influential people in the 20th century as named by Time Magazine. He established the communist-governed Democratic Republic of Vietnam in 1945 and defeated the French Union. Then he led the North Vietnamese in the Vietnam War until his death. Six years later, the North Vietnamese won and Vietnamese unification followed. The formal capital of Saigon was then renamed as Ho Chi Minh City in his honour.

The Notre Dame Cathedral was established by the French colonists and has hundred over years of history.

The Reunification Palace, formerly known as Independence Palace, is a historic landmark in Ho Chi Minh Read More »

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