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Often visited as an overlong day trip
from Hanoi, the provincial capital of Ninh Binh is worth a
two- or three-day visit on its own. It is a bit off the
well-trodden tourist trail, and there the life of
contemporary Vietnam is visible without the prepackaged spin
that most resorts put on the traveler's experience.
The haunting landscapes of Tam Coc are 6 mi/9 km from Ninh
Binh. In scenery reminiscent of classic Chinese scroll
painting, tiny wooden rowboats will take you on a river
journey through brilliant green rice fields farmed by men
and women wearing the traditional Vietnamese conical straw
hats and country dress. Rising from the fields are
sheer-sided limestone karsts very similar to those found in
Halong Bay, but hung with tropical vegetation and home to
darting cliff swallows. Three of the karsts are so large
that naturally-occurring caverns pass through them, and the
effect of the vibrant landscape framed by the arched
openings of the tunnels is breathtaking.
This is no commercial conceptualization—it is the real,
rural life of Vietnam happening alongside the narrow river.
At the end of the journey, your oarsman will most probably
offer you examples of the high-quality local embroidery on
tablecloths, napkins or T-shirts—at amazingly low prices,
though as always, a certain amount of bargaining is
expected.
Cuc Phuong National Park is 28 mi/45 km from central Ninh
Binh, measures 275 sq mi/275 sq km, spans three provinces
and protects some of the oldest forests in Vietnam. An
hour's trek brings you to the Big Tree, an ancient forest
giant with roots so widespread, sixteen people must join
hands in order to circle it.
Up several steep flights of stairs is the vast Cave of
Prehistoric Man, where an estimated group of 25 protohumans
lived together at the edge of the sea. Dinh May Bach (Silver
Cloud Peak) has rugged hiking trails up its 2125 ft/648 m.
The Endangered Primate Resource Center near the entrance is
a kind of mental and physical rehabilitation center for
gibbons, several kinds of languars and lorises, all of which
have been rescued from cages or illegal traders. The
center's breeding program has been a great success, and
infant monkeys are a common site as they cling to their
mother's fur. The park has basic cabins for rent within the
grounds, where visitors can experience the vibrant, complex
life of the jungle at length. Ninh Binh is 62 mi/100 km
south of Hanoi.
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