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Northwest
of Hanoi toward the Chinese border lies the Hoang Lien Son
Range, with Mount Fansipan, the highest peak of Vietnam
(3,143m). This range was christened the Tonkinese Alps by
the French, who took a liking to the cool climate. Limestone
largely comprises this Northwest frontier where dramatic
hills rise from the plains. From Hanoi to the Northwest
several routes will get you there, the most spectacular via
Dien Bien Phu to Sapa.
At Lao Cai, close by, you can cross into China and continue
by rail to Kunming.
The
Northwest offers captivating mountain scenery; you can hike
or trek into valleys around key towns. The hill tribes
inhabiting the valleys here include Thai, H'mong, Zao and
Muong groups. Some live in raised long houses. May still
dress in traditional garb; intricate hand-embroidered
clothing and silver jewelry are worn by the women. The best
time to see minority people is on market day in the towns,
when the mountain people hike in for days from surrounding
areas. The big day is usually Sunday. Key destinations in
the Northwest include Dien Bien Phu
and Sapa. Dien
Bien Phu, toward the Lao border, is a small town that
was the site of the Vietnamese communists' victory over the
French in 1954, ending the Indochinese War I. The village of
Sapa remains the jewel of the northwest, a former French
hill resort with splendid mountain scenery, a market
thronged with people, and excellent hiking opportunities.
For a more limited time Hoa Binh and Mai
Chau offer good one-day or two-day trips with light
trekking.
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Hoa
Binh
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Nearly
70km to the Southwest of Hanoi, Hoa Binh is easy to
reach by the Highway No. 6 which have much less
traffic compared with other national ways crossing
by the capital, and have more poetic landscape. Hoa
Binh is the name of a mountainous province, the name
of its chief town, and of the biggest Hydropower
Station of Vietnam run by the water power of the
Reservoir built on the "Da" River (the
Black River). For those who love ecotours, Hoa Binh
is a good stopover for meals or refresh before
delving into the hill tribal daily life in the Muong,
Zao and Thai villages close by or continue the
mountain way to reach Mai Chau.
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See
also |
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Hanoi
& surroundings
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Halong & Catba island
The Northeast |
Sapa & the Northwest|
DMZ |
Hue |
Hoian - Danang
Coastline and Central Highlands
|
Saigon & the Mekong Delta
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Mai
Chau
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This
small village is not marked on many maps, but if you
are heading from Hoa Binh to Moc Chau it is
impossible to miss. Mai Chau is set about 2.5 hours
North of Hoa Binh and is approached as you go down
the side of a very steep valley. From Hoa Binh to
Mai Chau you will pass by Man Duc crossroad, which
is an hour driving from Hoa Binh and backed by karst
peaks, with an interesting market. Another hour
from Man Duc is the stop for a spectacular view over
Mai Chau valley to the south. The village, nestled
between two steep cliffs and surrounded by emerald
green paddies, is enchanting to look at as you wind
down the mountainside.
"Thai"
ethnic people have inhabited in Mai Chau for
centuries and are highlighted from other hill tribes
for their cleaness, intricate weaving decoration
made by dexterous women's hands and hospitable
customs. Many evidences show that they are
homogenous with the Thai groups living in South of
China and in Thailand now. An overnight visit to Lac
village or Poong Com village in Mai Chau can be
easily combined with trekking or hiking in the
surrounding mountain area or with
a longer visit to the far Northwest.
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See
also |
|
Hanoi
& surroundings
|
Halong & Catba island
The Northeast |
Sapa & the Northwest|
DMZ |
Hue |
Hoian - Danang
Coastline and Central Highlands
|
Saigon & the Mekong Delta
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Son
La
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Located
320km northwest of Hanoi, Son La town is often used
as a half-way overnight stop on the way to Dien Bien
Phu. There is not much to remark the town except a
prison built in 1908 by the French colonialists to
incarcerate the Vietnamese political criminals.
However, from Son La to Dien Bien Phu you will see
lots of minority villages – Black Thai, white
Thai, H'mong, and Muong – some close to the road.
Black Thai women wear black sarongs, and
tightfitting blouses with rows of silver or metal
buttons down the front attached tightly to the neck.
The blouses are usually bright green, blue, or
purple. A woman coils her hair in a topknot,
covering it with a black turban embroidered with
multicolored thread. After marriage, Black Thai
women wear a silver hairpin. Some 800,000 Black Thai
and White Thai (white-bloused Thai people) live in
the Northwest.
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See
also |
|
Hanoi
& surroundings
|
Halong & Catba island
The Northeast |
Sapa & the Northwest|
DMZ |
Hue |
Hoian - Danang
Coastline and Central Highlands
|
Saigon & the Mekong Delta
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Dien
Bien Phu
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This
was the scene of the siege in 1954 that finally
broke the back of the French war effort in Vietnam.
In an attempt to halt Viet Minh (Vietnam
Independence Association) incursions into Laos, the
French commander, Navarre, decided to establish a
"super garrison" at the top end of a
valley called Dien Bien. This was to police the
strategic cross-roads between Laos to the West, Son
La to the South and Lai Chau to the North. He
believed that with this base firmly established in
the Far Northwest, he would be able to launch
sorties against the Viet Minh, and greatly reduce
their strength in the area. He was to be proved
terribly wrong.
The
Viet Minh commander, Vo Nguyen Giap, finally saw an
opportunity for an open confrontation with the
French and started working towards it. By mid 1953,
the base was completed and regarded in French
circles as virtually impregnable. With twelve
battalions of French, Morrocan and Algerian
soldiers, two airstrips, a heavily mined perimeter
and surrounded by a number of smaller defensive
positions, named Dominique, Elaine, Claudine and
Huguette. These were named, supposably, after the
four mistresses of the base commander Colonel Marie
Ferdinand de la Croix de Castries. The troops within
the compound slept fairly soundly at night! The
French even went to the extent of flying in an
entire brothel of French women to keep the soldiers
happy!!
For
Giap and his comrades, however, the struggle had
hardly begun. They embarked on an incredible
logistical feat of dragging up, in pieces, various
heavy field guns that were then hidden in caves and
dense forest cover in the hills surrounding the Dien
Bien Phu base. By early 1954, Giap had over 40,000
men in the hills, completely surrounding the base.
It was estimated that just to keep Giap’s men fed,
over 250,000 porters were used to ferry food.
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For
the French it was their ignorance amongst other
things that led to their downfall. Though they knew
the Viet Minh had some troops in the surrounding
hills, nothing was done about it, until it was too
late. On 10 March 1954, to the horror of the French,
Viet Minh shells started landing on the airstrip.
Giap possessed a comprehensive plan, first if which
was the neutralisation of the airstrips, thus
completing the siege. The French were taken
completely by supprise, and after the first day of
shelling, an assault was made on Gabrielle. By
midnight 13 March, Beatrice had fallen. The fighting
was fierce, with the Viet Minh often following up
hours of shelling with human wave tactics, incurring
shocking casualties. At times the fighting was hand
to hand and always chaotic, with the French utterly
frustrated by their inability to hit Giap’s
well-concealed guns.
Within
five days, both the airfields had been completely
destroyed and the garrison could only be re-supplied
by airdrops, an increasingly perilous pastime,
proven by the wrecked planes on the ground. As the
Viet Minh edged closer and closer in trenches, the
airdrops increasingly fell into Vietnamese hands.
The position was becoming truly desperate.
At
the start of April there was a lull in the fighting
during which Navarre parachuted in some of his crack
troops adding to his garrison now totalling about
16,000. Giap also brought in his reserves, edging
his forces up towards the 50,000 mark. The French
were desperate and they appealed to the US for
assistance, preferring bomber strikes from their
bases in the Philippines. By this stage the US was
funding 78% of the French war effort, so they hardly
had unstained hands. They came back with a proposal
for limited tactical nuclear strikes on the
Vietnamese positions along with a series of strikes
on China, fearing ‘another Korea’, all of which
would be performed on French behalf. Thankfully this
insanity was avoided by the British giving the idea
a big no and congress getting cold feet. In the end
there was nothing forthcoming from the US.
For
the French, the end was near. On 4 May following a
series of attacks, the Viet Minh attacked with a
force previously unwitnessed and by 8 May the
garrison finally surrended. By this stage the
conditions within were unimaginable, with maggots in
the wounds of the injured and an incredibly
demoralised fighting force. It was estimated that
during the battle 7,000 French and close to 20,000
Vietnamese had lost their lives. This loss finally
caused the French to withdraw from Vietnam.
Dien
Bien Phu now bears few scars except for the
occasional scattered tank to bear witness to its
horrendous past, though it is still one of the
remotest areas you could visit. The hilltribes
living around the area of Dien Bien Phu make up 70%
of the regions population, and the ethnic minority
groups include the Black Thai, Nung, Meo, Loa and
others.
|
See
also |
|
Hanoi
& surroundings
|
Halong & Catba island
The Northeast |
Sapa & the Northwest|
DMZ |
Hue |
Hoian - Danang
Coastline and Central Highlands
|
Saigon & the Mekong Delta
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Sapa
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Sapa
is the most popular place to go in the Far Northwest
amongst budget travelers and packages tourists
alike. By using Sapa as a base you can hike off to
more remote ‘traditional’ hill tribe villages
and sometimes you will be offered a bed in a village
for the night. Sapa was originally built as a hill
station in the early part of this century and, in
winter, gets bitterly cold. If you are going to be
visiting Sapa in winter do not forget the winter
woollies.
Sapa
is preparing itself for the continuing tourist boom
considerably well. Behind Sapa, towards Phong Tho is
a high pass forming part of the Hoang Lien Mountains
that were known to the French as the Tonkinese Alps.
This range includes Fansipan, the highest mountain
in Vietnam at 3,143m, which view at dawn could be
spectacular.
There
is a weekend market in Sapa during which the town
fills up with hilltribe people selling their wares.
If you want to see these tribes as they
"traditionally" live (as opposed to
flogging jackets to tourists), either go for a hike
or head over to Dien Bien Phu from Sapa. This
stretch has the most traditional people you will see
in the whole of Vietnam. It seems that most tourist
groups pile into Sapa during the weekend for the
market. However, travelers have reported that during
the week is a much better time to catch a glimpse of
the real Sapa avoiding from a big hassle of
tourists.
You
can hike in the surrounding area and visit a number
of fairly traditional predominantly Mong hilltribe
villages. Further afield is the colourful Red Zao,
Dzay, Tay and Xa Pho people. A home stay in the Tay
village would be unforgettable experience.
|
See
also |
|
Hanoi
& surroundings
|
Halong & Catba island
The Northeast |
Sapa & the Northwest|
DMZ |
Hue |
Hoian - Danang
Coastline and Central Highlands
|
Saigon & the Mekong Delta
|
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