| Beaches
to suit all tastes
Vietnam’s nearly
three thousand five hundred kilometres of coastline
means plenty of beaches. Most are made of sand, and
face the South China Sea. In general, the best beaches
are to be found along the central coast and on the
islands, although there are exceptions.
Most Vietnamese people
do not sunbathe – unlike people in the West,
they do not consider a sun-tanned skin attractive.
Most beaches are practically deserted during the day:
those that are popular with Vietnamese people are
usually busy in the early morning and evening, when
the sun is at its weakest.
From
North to South
Around Ha Long
Bay
In the northern areas, the only beaches of note are
on the distant shale islands of Ha Long Bay. As yet,
they are entirely undeveloped and reached only by
a long boat journey. Cat Ba Island has a couple of
small, but very popular beaches. Tra Co Island, in
the far north close to the Chinese border, has a long
flat beach of hard sand, but the gradient is too shallow
to make swimming practical. The beaches in the Ha
Long Bay tourist area are artificial, made of sand
imported from Taiwan. Do Son, not far from Hai Phong,
is a faded resort that has seen better days. The beach
is unremarkable: the main attraction is one of the
few casinos in Vietnam.
The Red River
Delta to Danang
Nearly 300km south, Vinh has a couple of reasonable
beaches. Sam Son is very popular with Vietnamese people
weekending from Hanoi, but is marred by ugly hotel
development. Cua Lo, about 20km from Vinh, is better.
Two hundred kilometres further south, Quang Binh has
several sandy beaches and dunes, nearly all undeveloped.
Near Hue, Thuan An beach on an attractive lagoon on
the estuary of the Perfume River, is very popular
with Vietnamese people. Tucked away under the Hai
Van Pass, 35 km north of Danang, Lang Co beach is
a seemingly endless strip of silvery sand with a lagoon
at one end. Several resorts are now springing up,
but apart from the beach and sea, there is little
else to do there.
Danang to Nha
Trang
The good beaches begin at Da Nang, with ‘China
Beach’, made famous during the American War,
being a popular destination for foreign visitors.
It’s one of a long string of excellent beaches
scattered along the coast, most of which are little
commercialised. However, for much of the autumn the
sea can be rough in the Da Nang area, making bathing
inadvisable for all but the most powerful swimmers.
Cua Dai beach, near
Hoi An, is fringed with palms, attractive and comparatively
quiet.
Around Nha
Trang
Approaching Nha Trang, Doc Let beach is very good.
Not far away is Whale Island, a get-away- from-it-all
exclusive resort set among a number of superb beaches.
Nha Trang itself has a good public beach with plenty
of room, and a range of other attractions. Both Whale
Island and Nha Trang have diving centres.
South of Nha
Trang
Mui Ne beach, 200km from Ho Chi Minh City, is an 18km
stretch of sand with many attractive hotels and resorts.
Although commercialised, the development has been
done well and there is something for all tastes, from
exclusive luxury bungalows to backpacker resorts.
Vung Tao has some reasonable
beaches, but its proximity to Ho Chi Minh City (128km)
means it is over-commercialised, crowded and somewhat
polluted.
Some of the best beaches
in Vietnam are to be found on Pho Quoc Island, a short
flight from Ho Chi Minh City. However, the infrastructure
is undeveloped, and the level of accommodation generally
poor. Scuba diving there is excellent, and there is
a newly-opened diving centre
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