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Hoi An, a trip into the past
In all of my travels, few places have inspired as much inner peace as Hoi An,
Viet Nam.
Wanting to escape the working grind in Ha Noi with my girlfriend, Julia, I
decided to follow a friend’s suggestion and buy two tickets for a week in the
old central Vietnamese trading centre.
The small town sits on the central coast, only about an hour by car from Da Nang.
The road to Hoi An is full of developing construction projects, but the glorious
green rice-fields still stretch for miles around.
Coming into Hoi An, Julia and I were treated to a short ride through the town on
the way to Vinh Hung Resort by the riverside. Ancient stone and wooden houses
interspersed with modern bars, restaurants, souvenir and clothing shops lined
the narrow Hoi An streets in every direction.
Hoi An attracts thousands of tourists every year from Viet Nam and abroad. They
love preserved cultural and ethnic identity and massive textile and tailoring
traditions. Being close to a beautiful beach doesn’t hurt either.
Julia and I arrived, checked in, and dumped our bags in our room before going
out for some dinner. Restaurants in the city have taken to tourist options and
offer all kinds of dishes – Western, Vietnamese, Indian, and even some ethnic
and local seafood dishes.
Hoi An by day is a place of fun and sunshine; we rented a couple of bicycles
from the house across the street and cycled out of the town to the beach. We
barely had time to stop and breathe before our bikes were chained to a tree and
we were shooed over to a plastic table where two cracked coconuts were waiting
below palm trees near the surf.
Hoi An is one of the few tourist-loved towns in Viet Nam where development has
been careful to spare the town’s identity, and rare sights such as the Chinese
meeting houses and old Japanese bridge stand out to express Hoi An’s proud
multicultural history. The narrow streets and pavement in the Old Town showed
dozens of quaint houses, modern and old-fashioned, with their doors open to
welcome customers.
The main attraction is, of course, the textile industry. Tailors, clothiers, and
even a silkworm house await the shopaholic in the Old Town streets. Made-to-fit
clothes can be ordered and designed in a tailor shop and picked up in the next
couple of days for less than half of the price back home. Souvenirs are also
cheap and plentiful for a trip home with a customs officer’s nightmare.
By night, this little town really comes alive. Hoi An has many bars and
night-time markets.
The night life is quite spectacular for such a small town, as bars are typically
filled to the brim with party-goers in the holiday season. And of course,
there’s always the local bia hoi, the cheap Vietnamese beer hall.
This town has something to appeal to every traveller, and Hoi An is definitely
where a few good memories can be made, especially for younger travellers.
How to get there:
A trip to Hoi An can typically be arranged from any city through a local
travel agency. A hire car ride from Da Nang and accommodation can usually be
arranged in advance also. Domestic flights to Da Nang take less than two hours.
Buses [very cheap] and taxis are available, but not recommended.
Travel costs:
Return flight to Da Nang: about US$120 per ticket.
Airport chauffeur: about $30 per trip.
Traveller’s tips:
Make sure to take a lot of cash with you. Credit cards can be inconvenient. If
you need to change foreign currency, do it in a hotel or at the airport. Your
hotel room or reception should have a safe where you can keep money and
passports.
Bicycles and motorbikes are available for rent on many streets. Taxis can take a
while.
Avoid eating at roadside kiosks and beware of raw salad.
Remember to bargain. Merchants will typically offer a foreigner higher prices.
Scuba diving, snorkelling, and jet-skiing are available in Hoi An if you are
seeking water sports.
Source: VNS |
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