| Ha
Long Bay
Amazing
seascapes, caves, kayaking, bio-diversity and Vietnam's best
seafood
Vietnam’s most obvious
attraction is Ha Long Bay, adjacent to the Gulf of Tonkin,
and currently attracting nearly two million visitors each
year. Despite its status as one of Vietnam’s busiest tourist
centres, its enormous scale, unique geomorphology and indisputable
splendour makes a visit almost essential.
With Haivenu, you escape
the worst of the crowds. We use only high quality boats, and
recommend a night on the bay to allow time for the less visited
islands and grottoes, leaving those that have been equipped
with lights, walkways, refreshment stalls and souvenir shops
to the tourists. The exceptions are Dao Go, a large cavern
worth visiting for its grandeur, and Sung Sot, for its remarkable
stalactites and stalagmites.
Although the name Ha
Long Bay is used to describe the entire, it is only a section
of a vast archipelago of thousands of limestone pinnacles
stretching nearly a hundred kilometres from Haiphong to the
east.
This
remarkable seascape owes its existence to a complex process
of erosion referred to as ‘karst’. A massive layer of high
quality limestone was slowly dissolved by a warm wet climate
that prevailed over South East Asia through untold millions
of years. Water trickled through crevices enlarged cracks
in the limestone creating caves and caverns, and caused weaker
strata to collapse leaving the distinctive towers seen today.
Comparatively recently, seismic activity inundates the low-lying
land, creating Ha Long Bay.
The almost perpendicular
peaks conceal the remains of many caves and grottos, their
entrances exposed when part of the tower wall collapsed, but
now concealed by subsequent rock falls and dense vegetation.
Some caves were already
known, and others have been discovers recently, but expert
opinion is that they represent only a fraction of those still
hidden from view. Three large caves in the heart of the area
protected as World Heritage have been made accessible to visitors.
Many smaller caves can be visited, but often require a scramble
across rocks and through unlit passages.
In the southwest corner
of Ha Long Bay is Cat Ba, a large ‘karst’ limestone island
full of small mountains covered in verdant forest. Part of
the island is a National Park, rich in flora and fauna including
one of the most endangered species of monkey in the world.
Cat Ba also boasts two small, but pleasant, sandy beaches.
To
the east is Bai Tu Long Bay. Although not quite matching the
range of geological attributes of its illustrious neighbour,
it is equally attractive and benefits from being less visited.
Bai Tu Long, and particularly Quan Lan island, has by far
the best beaches in northern Vietnam. Most are more or less
empty, but tourism facilities are limited.
The
Bay is also a treasure house of endemic, and often endangered,
species of flora, molluscs and small invertebrates. Our company
name and logo is derived from one such plant, the yellow slipper
orchid, or ‘hai ve nu’ in Vietnamese.
At present, a long
term project is steadily transforming the entire archipelago
and its hinterland into South East Asia’s first Ecomuseum
linking all aspects of its natural, environmental and cultural
elements to provide a holistic view for visitors, and to focus
attention upon the critical importance of its conservation.
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