But actually, it was cold the first few days in northern Vietnam. Here we are crossing the border. I was sort of sad to leave China (I might not come back again!) but ironically, at the end I didn't want to return . This place was all very new, by the way, as China tore down everything in its eagerness to attack Vietnam some 30 years ago. Boo, China. Now it's called the Friendship Pass.

Our first meal in Vietnam was the first, and possibly the best, of many bowls of pho. I began with a plan to take pictures of all the pho, but the number grew out of control. Sometimes we had pho for dinner, then breakfast the next day, then lunch; by dinnertime again I’d insist on absolutely no pho.
After this meal, we had some beer with a few guys, who were really interested in our marital status. They turned out, in fact, to be older than we. They also really wanted Cliff's phone number.
Vietnamese people clearly love da bai cai just as much as I do. This is in Cao Bang, an awesome northern city in which we were the only tourists. We spent a lot of time looking for food here (no restaurants) and bargaining for motorbike rides out into the beautiful countryside. To quote the Go: "Cao Bang is magical." And so it was.
The saga of pho continues! This is our third bowl, served up lovingly by a shop near the bus station of Cao Bang. Not the best, I think, but doesn't that plate of fresh lettuce look so tantalizing? And those limes? And the chilis??
Our first self-piloted motorbike ride down the highway of Ninh Binh—by the way, most highways in Vietnam are just two lane roads, with no divider and no lane markings, because lanes are interepreted very loosely, and the two directions of traffic exchange sides pretty fluidly.
Sadly, this one of the few action shots I have, because pretty soon Cliff forbade me to take photographs while on a motorbike, or do anything else involving movement and not holding on.

On one particularly lazy day in Ha Noi (well, there were several), we went to 3 or 4 cafes in one day. But this was the first that we went to in all of Vietnam, the first place where we discovered the wonder of Vietnamese coffee. The NYTimes recommended the French pastries here, and the coffee was probably the best.


We paid 2000 dong to cross this thing. I'm glad someone's maintaining this bridge though! It wouldn't do to let it fall into ruin. We had to push the motorbike across.


Our ridiculous seafood feast. Ridiculous in how cheap it was, and how delicious it was, and how much devastation we caused.


We gave away all our candy here to these fishermen's children in Mui Ne fishing village. Even though they fought over the candy (we had a limited supply, and somehow the children multiplied when the chocolate came out), they were pretty sweet and cute, especially compared to the children who came later....

The pirate children of the sands! They look very sweet, cajole you to ride down a slide down a sand dune, and then when you're down immediately ask you for 100,000 dong. Also, if you slide down with one person, you're somehow expected to pay all 8 of them around you. Here they are mobbing someone else. Really, they were vicious. It was awkward, and Cliff thinks I would have really given them 100,000 dong if he hadn't been there. (They were so cute at first.)

I enjoy this picture. Dog investigates.



And because I'm a fan of full circles, endings that follow their beginnings, here is a photo to echo the first one.

2 comments:
You ate pineapple!!
Amazing.
I really enjoyed all the photos. I still think you guys were nuts to drive a motorbike... :)
shelley-a. just saying hi. i'm going to write back :)
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