Thursday, February 27, 2020

Hanoi Scenes, 2

Just walking around...
In the sharp things district...knives, scissors, shears, wire-cutters...a dozen shops like
this all in a row

Paint district

The old-fashioned way, measuring tint powder

Gallery district

Up-scale district: bird's nest soup!

Sewing machine district

One of the few new/interesting buildings we saw in the old city

Practicing on his bong

A thing in Hanoi, among tourists anyway, is the people who live along the urban
railroad...

Thus





























































































































































































And thus, the real thing; tourists are no longer permitted to wander along the
tracks, due to several selfie-inflicted injuries


















Another thin building

And another tree that has seen so much

Monument to king Le Thai Do, who kicked the invading Chinese out way back in
the day; or possibly someone else; the white pigeons really like this place

Fancy-schmancy restaurant

Power parking

We skipped the Hanoi water puppet show, knowing we'd be forced to watch
another one en route to Ha Long; OK, this is not the only reason we skipped it

90 years...

Moving mannequins selling appliances Uncle Ho could never have imagined

And there he is

Just across from the Trang Tien Plaza, with its Ferragamo, Gucci, Louis Vuitton,
Dior, etc.; one wonders what the old-style Stalinist would have made of all this;
actually, not



















































































































































Not to mention the nice Morgan and its owner

Hanoi Scenes, 1

We were in Hanoi for the better part of five days, taking walks nearly every day, sometimes to specific sights, sometimes not. The old city, where we were (as well as most of the sights), is a dense and intense place, full of curiosities and wonders. (And motor-cycles, -scooters, and -bikes; whatever moves in Hanoi is generally on the back of a moto.) I took perhaps a thousand pix, and it will take some time to work through them, much less draft blog posts. Then there's Halong Bay and then trekking in Sapa. Somehow, neither Vicki nor I have ever been into "relaxation" travel.
Welcome to Hanoi International Airport; a 45 minute flight from Luang Prabang
that left early (as in China 12 years ago, the plane leaves when everyone's there,
not at the scheduled time--an important lesson to remember if traveling in these
parts)

Glitzy bridge over the Red River; yes, it turns pink, then yellow, then purple...

Business Hanoi, which we never saw

Our first glimpse of the moto culture; carrying flowers to the market
















































































Our next (boutique) hotel, O'Gallery Premier; at first I
thought it was Irish; no, an Oriental Hospitality Group
property; Hang Bong Street

Ample and very nice


Down the street (which included several more boutique
hotels and then stores and shoppes of every description) was
this electrics shop; at first I thought maybe they were
extracting copper or something else from all these dead
appliances; nope, they're repairing them! right out on the
sidewalk

Most properties, I would guess, are no more than about
thirty feet wide; so, as in the case of this hotel, you build up

Every nook and cranny, sometimes maybe only six feet
wide, has a shop of some sort

When the French left in 1954, our food tour guide said, they left behind just two
good things: baguettes and coffee; nearly every block has a cafe of some sort as
well as a shop like this that sells an incredible variety of beans and grounds

Hat shop on wheels

Tiny alleys, sometime wide enough just to get a moto
inside, along every street

Grandfather doing what grandfathers do; there are roosters all over, seeming
pets; and quite loud

A tree that has seen some grim history; but lived to see
perhaps the best years Vietnam has yet had

Our first walk was to and around nearby Hoan Kiem Lake

Thus, with one of its two ancient temples

Need a new North Face backpack? There are hundreds of shops such as this
selling them; counterfeit? you ask...maybe...but probably made at the same factory
that makes the real ones

Still processing...

In the pretty park surrounding the lake

Entrance to one of the temples; we demurred

War monument of note

Temple in the lake

Other, much older temple, 10th century

Leader of note we'll meet later

Convoy of "cyclos" carrying tourists

Street scene...a big street for the old city

Sunday, February 23, 2020

Interim Update From Sapa

February 24th. So we have done four or five days in Hanoi, our three day cruise on Halong Bay, and are now beginning our second day of trekking in Sapa, in far north Vietnam. Tomorrow we'll go back to Hanoi and then fly to Hue, where we'll spend five days...resting, sightseeing, and maybe catching up on the blog.
Hanoi; we've heard the traffic is even crazier in Ho Chi Minh City

On Halong Bay

Light trekking near Sapa, overlooking Cat Cat village