The
Red River Delta
Song Hong, the Red River, is northern Vietnam’s chief river.
It rises in China’s Yunnan province and flows 1,175 km southeast
through deep, narrow gorges to enter Vietnam and discharge
into the Gulf of Tonkin via a great delta. The silt it carries
is rich in iron oxide, making its water red and giving it
its name.
The Red River delta is about 120
km long and 140km wide, and is expanding an astonishing
100 metres a year. It is the economic centre of northern
Vietnam - Haiphong, Vietnam’s main port, lies on a branch
of the delta.
The
volume of water flowing down the river averages 500 million
cubic meters per second, but may increase by more than 60
times at the peak of the rainy season. The entire delta
region is no more than three metres above sea level, and
much of it is one metre or less. The area is subject to
frequent flooding: at some places the high-water mark is
fourteen metres above the surrounding countryside. Dikes
and canals protect the delta from the floodwaters.
A major highway crosses the delta
and the coastal strip beyond, an important transportation
route linking China and Vietnam.
Today, around fifteen million people
inhabit the area, one of the highest population densities
in the world. Rice is the principal crop of the delta, but
wheat, beans, rapeseed, corn, and subtropical crops are
also grown.
Historically, the delta has produced
a large number of skilled craftspeople. The annual rice-growing
cycle featured a period where farmers left the land fallow,
thus freeing them to pursue other money-making ventures.
Villages specialized
in a wide variety of crafts that ranged from the making
of conical 'non' hats to the production of lacquerware.
The tradition continues to the present day in the form of
Vietnam’s famous ‘craft villages’, mostly clustered in the
rural areas surrounding Hanoi and now major tourist attraction.