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About the pictures


View from Sung Sot Big Cave. Look hard enough and you'll see Bo
Nau Cave at the far end in the middle. It will take 3 hours to get here
from Bai Chay on a motorized boat. This shot was taken in January
and as evident in the picture, skies are often overcast during the winter months. Before going
to Halong, ask hotel clerk to call and check the weather. If it is bad, you will not be able to
go out to the bay and you might as well skip the trip because there isn't much to see or to
do on Bai Chay and Hon Gai in the winter. On the other hand, there are few tourists and
hotels and boats are plentiful.
Bai Chay in the summer, 6 AM. A local told us that this short strip of
sand is not a natural beach. Sand was put there a while back for the
vacationers staying in the numerous hotels lining the beach. Locals go
the beach real early and they are allgone by 7:30AM. Water is warm
and very clear in the summer. Very popular with city dwellers from Hanoi and Hai Phong
who often come on bus tours sponsored by their company.
Rocky end of Bai Chay. On a clear day, the view from Bai Chay is just
awesome, with the limestones formations surrounding the bay. Here, a
fisherman is checking his catch. Fresh seafood is excellent in restaurants
on Bai Chay but not cheap. There are many restaurants on the strip, however, the smaller
3 or 4 tables establishments out number the traditional larger places. Quan Hai ly run by
the owner and cook, located next to the Post office hotel serve a very delicious steam squid
with sauté onion and pepper dipping sauce and the owner's signature rau muong sao with rau
ngo, a vegetable. These dishes are quite unique and are the among the best samples of local
cuisine. The owner also have a brother who own a passenger boat to take tourists out to
the bay.
Rare glimpse of the disappearing fishing "junk" boat. They have been all
converted to motorized boats to satisfy the growing demand of the tourist
trade. To get on one of these boats to explore the bay, best is to go the
dock and talk directly with theboat owner. He normally only gets half
of what you would have to pay to middlemen, usually your hotel front desk or your driver.
Postcard scan of a galactite inside Dau Go Grotto.
View from inside Bo Nau cave, probably the most photographed location in
Ha Long bay. Used to be free, now they charge just for stopping by and take
a look! Worst part is the collection desk, which they put right in the middle,
making taking a shot with a clear view impossible. This picture was taken in 1992,
government started charging money in 1994.
View from inside Sung Sot cave. Allow time for a moderately steep climb for
about 10 minutes. According to our guide, the top can be reached with another
2 hours of climbing. Breathtaking view, a must see, and it is hopefully still free.
You can get here through a slippery passage in the back of Sung Sot cave.
These are Trinh Nu islets.
Postcard scan of Poem Mountain overlooking Hon Gai City, a bustling seaport.
One of the 2 ways to get to Ha Long Bay is to take a boat from Hai Phong to
Hon Gai; the other is to drive from Hanoi, going through Hai Duong, then
Hai Phong, then Bai Chay.
Postcard scan of Rice Ball Rock (Hon Oan), one of the many interesting rock
formations that your boat will pass by during the daytrip to see the caves.
Leave early in the morning and allow at least 6 hours for the trip. Buy bread
and beer before going to the dock. Merchants with lived fishes, shrimps, crabs
and squids will approach your boat. Your lunch will be a quick but delicious meal of seafood
steamed in beer. Boat captain usually provides pot, salt, pepper and lime.

                                                                                                              Source: www.vietscape.com

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