| Sights
Around Hue |
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| Fisherman under a
bridge in Hue. This photo looks better up close. |
Fisherman's boat
on the river. Notice the little hut in the center; that's where he
and his family sleep. |
A restaurant we ate
at. Very slow service, but the food is great. The owner is a deaf-mute,
but great with gestures. |
Me and Mr. Coin,
who is a 34-year-old man, but with the body and voice of a child.
(I thought he might have been a victim of Agent Orange, but he's too
old, I think.) |
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| Flower growing on
a tomb near Hue. Unfortunately, my camera ran out of battery power
immediately after, or I would have taken more photos...it was an amazing
place. |
Our dragonboat, for
touring the river. |
Girl in a minority
village, pounding grain. Notice her traditional handwoven skirt! |
...and all the family
livestock... |
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| Piglets. Very cute.
:-) |
An old woman in the
villages. You can't see it very well, but her teeth are stained black
from betel nut, and she's got an opium pipe in her mouth. |
Regulations outside
one of the tombs. They're alternately alarming and amusing... |
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| Soldier outside a
memorial to the Viet Cong dead |
A water buffalo cow
eyed me suspiciously as her calf grazed nearby. |
A farmworker by the
river |
Spiderweb outside
a bunker at Khe Sanh. Most of the former U.S. base has been converted
into coffee plantation, but a small museum area has been preserved. |
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| A bombed-out church. |
A rusty tank by the
side of the road--all that's left of one of the U.S. army bases in
Vietnam. Everything else has been scavenged. |
On the right is a
small fragment of the Ho Chi Minh Trail; the rest has largely reverted
to jungle. This is where they forded the river. Marvelous scenery,
though... |
I laughed my head off on seeing this. This stop was labeled "Pile
of Rocks" on our itinerary, which was funny enough in itself--hey,
we're going to see a pile of rocks!--but it turns out there isn't
even a pile of rocks!
In general, there isn't much left to see in the DMZ, but this was
particularly funny. (The pile of rocks, by the way, was used by
the U.S. as a lookout point during the war.)
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| The Vinh Moc tunnels
were built to house the civilian population during the war. 300 people
lived in the very claustrophobic tunnels (I was the only one of the
party who could stand up at all, and it was a tight squeeze even for
me), and 17 babies were born here. |
Vinh Moc before bombing |
Vinh Moc after bombing.
The American bombs were designed to collapse tunnels as deep as 12
meters under the surface, but the Vinh Moc tunnels went down to 30m
(I think). |
One of the hidden
exits from the Vinh Moc tunnels. In the photo at left is our guide.E |