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Travel and Fuji X Photography by Sigurd N. Kristiansen

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Vietnam part II - Hue to Hanoi by motorbike

It's been almost a year since I wrote the last post. Image-heavy blogging from my first generation iPad Air was a bit too slow and cumbersome to keep up, especially with what turned out to be very long days on a motorbike as I ended up taking the very, very scenic route to Hanoi from Hue. 

I will post about each leg of the ten-day journey here, as well as my days in Hanoi and my visit to tourist magnet Ha Long Bay.

In Hue I asked in my very simple but nice guesthouse Sunny Fine if they could recommend a driver to take me around to the different crypts in the area. The manager asked if I wanted someone who just could drive or someone who spoke English and could tell me a bit about the history, for a slightly higher but very reasonable price. The morning after I was picked up by motorcycle driver and cultural history graduate Thuận Nguyễn.

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Hiring Thuận was a much better choice than I expected. He was funny and easy to get along with, very knowledgeable and a safe driver. In between the crypts and sights we stopped by his parents house as we were nearby, his mother made us a great lunch.  

He told me he had made a trip to northern Vietnam along the Ho Chi Minh trail to Sapa and the more remote areas close to China the year before with a friend, and that he wanted to do trips like that with tourists. My original plan was to continue from Hue to Hanoi by bus and then go to Sapa and Ninh Bình and maybe Halong Bay, but after a day with on the bike with Thuận we agreed to drive through the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) and stop over in Khe Sanh, then continue north through the mountains along the border with Laos to Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park and the caves there as a trial run.

If it felt safe and comfortable being two on the bike 8 to 10 hours a day we would continue to Hanoi, the very long and scenic route.

If you find yourself in Hue, I highly recommend seeing the area on motorbike with Thuận Nguyễn - Hue Touring

Thuan and his family. 

Thuan and his family. 

The great lunch Thuans mother made us. 

The great lunch Thuans mother made us. 

Bunker Hill (Vong Canh Hill) with old bunkers overlooking panorama vistas of the Perfume river.

Bunker Hill (Vong Canh Hill) with old bunkers overlooking panorama vistas of the Perfume river.

Just before Bunker Hill there is an area where they make fragrant and colorful incense. 

Just before Bunker Hill there is an area where they make fragrant and colorful incense. 

Khai Dinh Tomb

Khai Dinh Tomb

Newlyweds taking shelter from the sun on a bridge in a small village outside of Hue. 

Newlyweds taking shelter from the sun on a bridge in a small village outside of Hue. 

The Meridian Gate of the Imperial City in the Hue Citadel. 

The Meridian Gate of the Imperial City in the Hue Citadel. 

A tour guide with a portable speaker at the grounds of the Tu Duc crypt.

A tour guide with a portable speaker at the grounds of the Tu Duc crypt.

Putting on a show for the tourists. 

Putting on a show for the tourists. 

Sunset over the Perfume River. 

Sunset over the Perfume River. 

tags: Vietnam, Hue, Fuji X-Pro2, temples, Temple, Travel
categories: news
Thursday 07.20.17
Posted by Sigurd Kristiansen
 

The Mountain of Water, Marble Mountains

The Marble Mountains area near Danang is famous for stone sculpture and stone cutting crafts, there is a myriad of workshops and shops along the roads.

Marble Mountains consists of five mountains named to represent the five elements - Metal, Water, Wood, Fire and Earth. There are several Buddhist sanctuaries on and inside these mountains. Until recently stone from the mountains were used in the plentiful stone workshops of the area, realising they would end up without any mountains to attract tourists and pilgrims if they continued, the government put a stop to the use of stone from the area.

The Mountain of Water is the largest and most famous of the mountains, and is very popular with tourists. There is even an elevator to avoid a few of the first steps, though from the top of the elevator the rest of the mountain is hardly wheelchair-accessible. 

Danang and what the US soldiers called China Beach - the 30 km beach stretching from Danang to Hoi An - can be seen from the mountain. The Vietcong had a base and field hospital in the caves in these mountains, with great views of the Americans and their R&R activities.

Taking a nap in one of the first temples one reaches.

Taking a nap in one of the first temples one reaches.

Some altars have been modernised with glowing lights.

Lighting the shrines in the largest cave, Am Phu.

Selling and helping place incense.

Some daylight coming in through the ceiling of the Am Phu cave.

Some daylight coming in through the ceiling of the Am Phu cave.

Donations.

Inscriptions by the entrance to a cave temple.

Detail from a shrine in one of the grottoes.

tags: Vietnam, Danang, Travel, Fuji X-Pro2, Marble mountains, temples
categories: news
Sunday 08.07.16
Posted by Sigurd Kristiansen
 

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