Vietnam Visa Information
Vietnam Tours
Information
Vietnam Overview
Few countries
have changed so much over such a short time as Vietnam. Only thirty-odd years
after the savagery and slaughter of the American War, this resilient nation is
buoyant with hope. It is a country on the move: access is now easier than ever,
roads are being upgraded, hotels are springing up and Vietnam's raucous
entrepreneurial spirit is once again alive and well as the old-style Communist
system gives way to a socialist market economy. As the number of tourists
finding their way here soars, the word is out that this is a land not of bomb
craters and army ordnance but of shimmering paddy fields and sugar-white
beaches, full-tilt cities and venerable pagodas – often overwhelming in its
sheer beauty. Many visitors find more than enough to intrigue and excite them
in Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City and the other major centers; but despite the cities'
allure, it's the country's striking landscape that most impresses. Vietnam
occupies a narrow strip of land that hugs the eastern borders of Cambodia and
Laos, hemmed in by rugged mountains to the west, and by the South China Sea – or
the East Sea, as the Vietnamese call it. To the north and south of its narrow
waist, it fantails out into the splendid deltas of the Red River and the Mekong,
and it's in these regions that you'll encounter the paddy fields, dragonflies,
buffaloes and conical-hatted farmers that constitute the classic image of
Vietnam. In stark contrast to the pancake-flat rice-land of the deltas, Halong
Bay's labyrinthine network of limestone outcrops loom dramatically out of the
Gulf of Tonkin – a magical spectacle in the early morning mist. Any trip to the
remote upland regions of central and northern Vietnam is likely to focus upon
the ethnic minorities who reside there. Elaborate tribal costumes, age-old
customs and communal longhouses await those visitors game enough to trek into
the sticks. As for wildlife, the discovery in recent years of several previously
unknown species of plants, birds and animals speaks volumes for the wealth of
Vietnam's biodiversity and makes the improving access to the country's several
national parks all the more gratifying.
Source: Rough
Guides
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