After our time in Hoi An, Vietnam we night-bused it up to Hanoi. Trying to remember the difference between Hoi An and Hanoi was a very trying experience that took about 5 days into the Hoi An stay to master. Eventually, Val said, "Hoi An is smaller. Think of Ann, the annoying little girl trying to sell us postcards. " Henceforth, no problem.
Originally, we were to stay two nights during our Northern transit in Nihn Bihn and have a good day biking through the ubiquitous and becoming slightly overrated rice fields, to a meandering river through what was said to be Ha Long Bay on land. Evidently, the area wasn't flooded during the dragon sweep that undertook the UNESCO Ha Long region, which we'd be visiting a few days hence.
The night bus was a standard affair of locals and as I arose at 5:30 we were just leaving the city limits of Nihn Bihn. Still groggy, I got up, wiped the lagania from my eyes and tapped the driver on the shoulder. I pointed to myself and said, "Nihn Bihn."
He slapped his head, pointed to me and said, "Hanoi." Again, I said, "Nihn Bihn" and he rebutted, "Hanoi." End of conversation. We loose.
So, we were predisposed to not wanting to be in Hanoi and dubbed it Hanoing, without even setting foot in the town. We arrived in a downpour amid a flock of hotel touts who Literally woke us up from out slumber on the bus.
Tap Tap Tap, Shake....Groggy Groggy Groggy, "Hello," yells a mid 20's Vietnamese man in a rush, "you are in Hanoi, you need Hotel." More of a statement then a question.
Mind you, we were still on the bus. I was curled up in a ball of my t-shirt, hat and backpack, it was 7:30AM and the bus was still idling. This guy was already on the bus shaking me awake to make sure that I saw his hotel flier first.
It was brash and brazen and total uncalled for. It was so (H)anno(i)ying and rude that instead of telling him off, I kind of appreciated it and respected him and all of his audacity. So, yeah, we got in his Taxi and went to his hotel and got the room - 5th floor view with huge balcony and two matching sofas outside on the veranda. Cable TV with the NBA Finals Game One Live on the Boob Tube and a hot shower with free coffee and breakfast were awaiting us.
Turns out this guy really was giving us the straight scoop. Everything was as advertised except for the foot long cockroach in the bathroom and gecko who stumbled out of the sink faucet. But, those are now to be expected and are kind of welcome additions and friends to the rooms we encounter. Even the nice ones.
With the room being all that is was, of course, we ironically and typically never really hung out in it and on that remarkable balcony, instead opting for walking around and looking around the city.
Really, anyone that has been traveling, say, anywhere in the world knows that basically what you do in a new place. You go there. You walk around and you look around. You eat some weird food and after eating the local fare for 5 or 6 meals you go through the "the is the best food I've ever had" phase, then on to the "really, this food is great," portion of the city. Next its the "ok, seriously, more curry," phase. At that point you buy french fries.
You drink bottled water, say no to taxi drivers and tour guys and go around looking at tourist destinations, food markets, the town square, POIs, backpacker land, the city park and those little spots that your friends tell you about. You talk about going to the museums, but realize that you get more culture from the food stall guy selling the Samosas and the pinapple vendor and the kids playing with kites in the park and the coffee shop kid thats going to Uni.
So, that is what we intended to do in Hanoi, per usual and per awesome. But, as I said, we were amid a 24 hour downpour and were relagated to coffeeshops. Which, wasn't bad because we found some decent coffee, AC and music as a handful of spots within a block of each other. After a few hours we became increasingly stir-crazy and booked a ticket on a boat to Ha Long Bay. We were off the next morning. One of the 7 Natural Wonders of the World. And if you didn't know about that yet, you'd sure find out upon reaching the dock the next day.
Ha Long Bay was simply awesome. We had heard rumours and rumblings from numourous people that is was overrated and missable. That you could bypass the overnight and take a day trip. That staying on the junk was unneccessary. Regardless, we went with our intuition and hooked up a 2 day 1 night stay on a nice size junk boat w/ queen size bed and private balcony. The price was good and we were just hoping for a good crew of travellers to accompany us on the trip for the 2 days.
We opted for the non-booze cruise trip and picked a tour company that looked organized and clean. And that offered us free Internet. In turn, we were rewarded with a smattering of personalitys and peoples from across the globe. The trip was all class and what beautiful scenery. Totally, literally unmissable and lamentable if you go to Vietnam and don't go to Ha Long Bay.
Within the Ha Long Bay tour we had a couple of treks, a great 2 hour kayaking stint throughout the bay, 3 amazing seafood buffetts, swimming at our leisure off the deck and wonderful panorama views with breathtaking sunsets. All in all a great stay. We even took an extra day staying on Cat Ba Island and treking through a National Park to a wicked high vantage point amid the jungle. We stayed the night at a guest house overlooking the harbor slightly reminiscent of a Cinque Terra city that I can't quite put my finger on. All in all, great time was had.
Back to the mainland and back to Hanoing. But, wait a second, the sun is out, birds are chirping, people are abuzz and we run into two of our English friends fron Saigon and Hoi An. Things are looking up. We lingered with the two of them, plus a couple from out Ha Long trip and enjoyed outselved thoroughly at a very local, turned backpacker bar that was offering 3 year old plastic stools for chairs and beer for $0.17 a pint. Draft beer, 5 for $1.00. Unreal. And it was good. Hanoi had saved itself and we were fortuitous enough to reconnect with some good friends. A little positive attitude, good weather and good people can really go along was. Regardless, we were off the next day, opting against Nihn Bihn and a hightribe trek in Sa Pa. We were off to Bangkok and the Thai Island for some guaranteed fun and sun.