Returning to Hanoi after our trip to Halong Bay, we were both slightly amazed that all of sudden the city seemed less overwhelming, more manageable and easier to deal with. It’s still unavoidable getting a bit lost in the maze of streets in the Old Quarter, but it’s not at all disconcerting now.
The fish in a clay pot that we had for dinner last bowled Tom over. The grilled duck “Hanoi” style was very good and the meat was much gamier than we’re used to owing to the fact it’s wild meat. The papaya and beef salad was pretty good, tame compared to the som tum in Thailand. We went to a place called the 69 Bar-Restaurant, another one of the Lonely Planet guidebook’s picks. (It’s very strange: just about every tourist wherever we go is clutching one of those guidebooks to their chest, worriedly checking to make sure they get everything on the list. Not us…I scanned the pages before we left and we look at them on my tiny computer when we need to.)
The city was in a very festive mood last night. Lots of shops closed up early, young people were thronging the clubs and there was a big extravaganza by Hoan Kiem Lake starting the countdown to Hanoi’s 1000th anniversary in 2 years. (Everything is also gearing up for Tet, the Vietnamese New Year in a few weeks.)
| We thought it might happen and it did: the weather turned cold and wet today. So we started the day right by finding a pho place on the street and settling into a steaming bowl of noodles and broth. It’s really a great way to start the day and sticks with you. I’ve noticed that the chilis here in the north are very different than southern ones: the southern ones slap you in the face and fade quickly, while Hanoi’s start off slowly and linger for a while. |
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The Old Quarter is organized by the guild streets. There’s a funeral monument street, tin street, toy street, shoe street and so on. Today we ran across musical instrument where we found 4-string banjos and violins in addition to all the traditional instruments. |
| We spent the morning wandering around Hoan Kiem Lake, the heart of Hanoi. Here’s the turtle pagoda…there’s a creation myth about Hanoi involving an Arthurian sword, the King and a turtle. |
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And here’s the bridge leading to the Temple of Jade. |
| Then some time wandering the streets just soaking it all up. |
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Tonight, we went to see the Vietnam National Symphony perform in the formerly grand Opera House. It was interesting to see another house based on the Opera in Paris (we’d seen one in Rio de Janeiro as well). A Lalo/Rimsky-Korsakov program, I can’t say that the orchestra pretended to be anything other than what it is. The feeling came back, however, of the time I spent in the Hong Kong Philharmonic, where music was lived in such a vacuum. Also the brass section sounded a lot like the traffic horns just outside.
Before that for our last dinner in Hanoi at we had bun cha, another participatory dish with sizzling beef, a cold broth made of fish sauce, lime juice and chili, rice noodles and a wonderful assortment of herby greens, many unfamiliar.
So we leave Vietnam. Incredibly glad to have been here, pleased to be leaving now. I wish I could have gotten more of a sense how well the Communist government does by its people, but beyond the oppressive Soviet-era architecture and the Orwellian speaker announcements, people seemed to be the same as anywhere: more good than bad, pleasant to talk with, interesting to watch.