I already gave it away, but we were never destined to see Hanoi in the sun. We ate breakfast at a window-side table and it was raining quite heavily at the time. In fact, during the night, I had been awoken by a huge thunderstorm with a tremendous amount of lightning. K said she didn’t hear a thing, which I envied.
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| Gray and Dreary Morning in Hanoi |
Today was our only full day in Hanoi, and primarily consisted
of a city tour. The rain had turned into
a mist by the time we all loaded into the bus, which included more sounds of sniffles
and coughs every day. I again marveled at
our driver navigating such a behemoth vehicle in and amongst the running
current of scooters. Our first stop was
the national ethnology museum, the grounds of which comprised a selection of
native homes from across Vietnam. This
was very similar to ethnology museums we’d recently visited in Romania and
Poland, and I have a particular fondness for them, for reasons I can’t easily
articulate. Rain had abated for the most
part while we made our way through a series of transplanted native buildings
from the various areas of the country.
Each was distinctly different from the other, which was both surprising
and refreshing. We often commented, too,
about the fact that the museum grounds were literally abutted by apartment
blocks on all sides, with balconies looking right over the park-like
museum. Several found it odd, whereas I
envied the people lucky enough to have those apartments. They had built-in tranquility right outside,
with guarantees for quiet neighbors. The
museum included two very nice shops, both of which sold unique handmade gifts
which we had yet to see anywhere else.
Several members of our group elected to not get off the bus,
most – we learned later – in silent protest again the idolization of Ho. We arrived soon after inside visiting hours
had ended and before most tours arrived, so again we hit the sweet spot. We had to go through security screening, but
it was quick and painless, with no one else in line. Once inside, we could walk down and see the very
formal honor guard outside, along with all the Soviet-era trapping of typical
communist idolatry. Small tourist shops
lined a promenade behind the crypt, most replete with every conceivable item
bearing Ho’s image. Again, the juxtaposition
of capitalism in the literal shadow of a communist leader was off-putting.
A light rain had started by now. The line to clear security was now quite
long, so we were glad to reboard our bus.
After a short drive, we ended up at a brewery, when Tony “treated” us to
fresh-brewed beer and some typical local snacks (fried corn kernels, rice crackers
of all sorts, etc.). It was a nice
break, and we avoided the rain while sitting and socializing.
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| President's Residence in Hanoi |
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| Ho Chi Minh's Mausoleum in Hanoi |
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| Vietnam's Parliament Building |
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| Made Me Miss Our Chippy! |
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| Suckling Pig at the Brewery |
Once again on the bus, we headed to a market area of the city, where we disembarked. Tony did an outstanding job ushering the 36 of us through a myriad of very small streets, all crammed with every kind of stall selling all kinds of goods, including lots of flowers. It was a pleasant assault on the senses, with all kinds of odors (all good) and sounds. Scooters weaved in and around us, so keeping us in toe and as “sticky rice” for street crossings was a challenge, but Tony seemed to handle it with ease. We emerged from the tight collection of streets to find ourselves across from a large lake, which Tony claimed was named “John McCain Lake.” This is where McCain’s jet crashed and from where he was taken after he completed a bombing run against a nearby power plant. I never saw a sign or even a map showing that name, so I’ll assume it’s an informal name, primarily for American tourists. In the center of the lake, on a small island, stands a beautiful little temple. We had some time here to explore and look around, which was nice, and the rain held off.
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| Duckling |
This was our last day, and we were in fact beginning our journey
home this evening. Everyone else was not
leaving until the next day, but with work and the timing of available flights,
we were on a late-night departure out of Hanoi.
There were a few more gifts we wanted to buy, and I had assumed we would
have had an opportunity during the city tour.
This did not pan out, so once we were back at the hotel, we had to
decide how to handle these last-minute “needs.”
We were all to depart for a famed Vietnamese water puppet show around
5:00pm, after which we’d travel to our farewell dinner. K and I had already told Tony that we would
have to miss the dinner, as our airport transfer was to arrive at 6:45pm. We didn’t have much time, so I asked at the
Front Desk and they identified a large indoor market about a 10-minute walk from
the hotel. We elected to head there,
though it was now raining lightly, and the walk was rather challenging, given the
traffic and (much worse) the fact that the sidewalks were mostly blocked by
parked scooters, meaning that we had to keep going in and out of the street. We were relieved to arrive at the market
hall, which was huge and absolutely packed to the gills with small stalls and
all kinds of goods, from household plastic buckets, to underwear, to souvenirs. We quickly found what we wanted and began the
reverse walk to the hotel. We had not
eaten lunch and we were missing dinner (at least until the airport), so we
ducked into a KFC (one of the very few Western fast food outlets we saw during
the entire trip). A quick bite down, we
got to the hotel and did our final suitcase pack, finishing just in time to leave
for the water puppet show.
I’d never heard of water puppetry but, evidently, it’s a centuries’
old practice of putting on elaborate puppet shows in rice paddies. It was a way to tell history, legends, and stories of
morality to illiteral rural populations. It has since evolved into a lavish indoor
practice, with elaborate puppets of all sorts.
I still do not know how they are controlled. We were in the second row, in front of a huge
indoor pool, and I never saw anyone beneath the water, controlling the puppets,
so it must be done with some kind of remote apparatus. Knowing we would have to
leave before the show was over, we said some quick goodbyes to folks on the tour
and took seats on the end of the row.
Near the end, we quietly snuck out and ordered up another Grab car. Traffic was very heavy and as I watched the
incoming car creep along on the app’s map, I was a little concerned about getting
back to the hotel on time. My standard
pre-departure angst was again unfounded as we made it back in plenty of time to
change, freshen up, and get to the lobby early.
That was all well and good, as the transfer driver arrived 15 minutes
early, which I never mind.
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| Inside the Water Puppet Theater |
We had about 90 minutes to kill in the lounge, and we got
some snacks and just detoxed from what had been a long, long day. I had a long call on WhatsApp with Anna, with whom we had only been able to text most of time, while K did some shopping. We boarded on time and even left a little
early. The rain was extreme as we taxi’d,
and I saw lightning on the horizon, which is my last memory of Vietnam, before we took off and disappeared into the low clouds.
































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