I’ve been sleeping with the Lonely Planet Guide to Vietnam next to my pillow for a few weeks now, and in the last week I’d pretty much given up hope that the trip was going to be possible. Yesterday I decided to just MAKE it happen, and hopefully the consequences won’t be awful, and the trip will be wonderful, exciting, scintillating, jaw dropping, awesome, super, perfect, and just good fun.
When Mark and I got married, my grandfathers gift to us was to arrange for Roger Scott to photograph the wedding (he said he didn’t do weddings – but I loved his work so much, I pleaded with him and promised that it would be fun to photograph), and he also gave us some money so that we could go on a honeymoon.
We banked the cheque, but life kind of got in the way – first Mark was studying, then doing exams, then trying to find work, and then teaching his first class of pre-pubescent miscreants, and trying to keep breathing, keep turning up to school to face the little horrors, and hopefully to learn them something.
Now my fabulous parents have stepped in with a very generous, extremely thoughtful gift, and I feel like we’ve been thrown a lifeline. This trip is something we both desperately need, and the thought of not being able to go until next year was heartbreaking, and yesterday was like the sun peeking through the storm clouds. The storm clouds are still well and truly there, and rumbling ominously, but there is hope.
We’ll fly out of Sydney on December 30th, spend the night and the next morning in Bankok, and the arrive in Hanoi at 7.30pm on New Years Eve. I’d like to have a nice-ish hotel booked, I am accustomed to budget travel, but the thought of spending NYE in a hovel, in a new country where I don’t know the language, have any friends, or even know how to get to a good vegetarian restaurant is a little less than appealing. I’m not thinking five star, but something with electricity and running water would be good.
Anyone know of a good place to spend New Years Eve in Hanoi ?

Picture from here. Worth a read.
From Hanoi we’ll go to Halong Bay, which everyone has seen on postcards of Vietnam. Apparently it’s a magical place, if a bit of a tourist trap.
After Halong Bay, the plan isn’t fully mature. We’ll spend about a week going down the coast to Nha Trang, where we’ll be picked up by the people from the Whale Island “resort”, for a week on the island. Although it’s called a resort, I believe the accommodation is more bamboo hut than Club Med (which is totally fine by me !). The island has a wildlife sanctuary within walking distance, and I think I’ll try and buy the waterproof housing for my Olympus that I’ve wanted for ages so that I can photograph my snorkelling adventures. On the island I imagine we won’t have a lot to do, just relaxing, and snorkelling, and photographing creatures, and hopefully eating yummy food (they say they cater to vegetarians).
We’ll leave the island on the 19th, and head south to Ho Chi Minh City. We fly out on the 23rd, so we’ll have a couple of days to wander around the Mekong Delta.
I’ve created an account on the Lonely Planet Thorn Tree messageboard, and will be doing loads of research in the next few weeks.
If you’ve been to Vietnam, and have a story to tell, some advice, a must see spot, whatever, I’d love to hear from you!

Thanks for that link – I’ll be using it a lot for our May trip.
How about the Zephyr Hotel;
http://www.hotels-in-vietnam.com/hotels/hanoi/zephyr_hotel.html
or the Sunny Hotel, http://sunnyhotelhanoi.com/ in Hanoi. We were going to stay there before our travel plans were changed. I will await your reports back with bated breath,
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Curse these non-responsive comment forms – 2nd try!
Your itenerary sounds exactly like our postponed trip so I’ll be looking forward to hearing from you when you return. I have my copy of LPG beside me and I’ll be checking out that link as well.
Hanoi hotels:
Sunny Hotel http://www.oldquarterhotel.com
Zephry Hotel http://www.vietnamstay.com/hotel/zephyr/
You sounded great on the Podcast BTW 🙂
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