From Hanoi I took a sleeper train down to the ancient town
of Hue (pronounced hway), boarding at around 7pm and arriving at 8.30am
the following morning. The sleeper train was much the same as the one I
took in China, except this time I was sharing with westerners. Overall,
though, the feel of the train was much more grimy and less modern.
Western toilets, though, so I can't complain. I ate my instant noodles
and we had a few beers in the train bar before they kicked us out at
10pm, and I went to bed. I slept pretty well, the rocking of the train
was perfect to put me to sleep, although the mattress was fairly hard so
I woke up the following morning feeling quite stiff.
We took a taxi from Hue station to the hotel, checked in
and then me and my friend Monique headed out to explore the Imperial
Citadel. It was very pretty, the citadel walls and buildings felt far
more ancient than anything I have seen so far, and a lot of them are
really more ruins than buildings, now. It was nice to see an ancient
town that hasn't been so heavily restored.
We wandered around the citadel for few hours before hunger got the better of us, and we headed out to find food. Our map was terrible, though, and we got turned around by the multiple exits to the citadel, so ended up spending over an hour trying to find somewhere to eat. There weren't many restaurants in that part of town, so we defaulted to using a guide-book recommended place. It looked pretty unappealing walking in, but we got a table on the balcony upstairs and the food was spectacular. I got crispy chicken noodles and spring rolls, and finally found some of the mesh-style coated Vietnamese spring rolls that are absolutely amazing. The meal was very cheap, too. After that we walked back to the hotel and had a little down time before dinner. We went for dinner in the back-packer part of town which is far more happening, with lots of bars and restaurants, but during dinner I started to feel a little spaced out and developed a fever, so afterwards I went straight home and to bed.
We wandered around the citadel for few hours before hunger got the better of us, and we headed out to find food. Our map was terrible, though, and we got turned around by the multiple exits to the citadel, so ended up spending over an hour trying to find somewhere to eat. There weren't many restaurants in that part of town, so we defaulted to using a guide-book recommended place. It looked pretty unappealing walking in, but we got a table on the balcony upstairs and the food was spectacular. I got crispy chicken noodles and spring rolls, and finally found some of the mesh-style coated Vietnamese spring rolls that are absolutely amazing. The meal was very cheap, too. After that we walked back to the hotel and had a little down time before dinner. We went for dinner in the back-packer part of town which is far more happening, with lots of bars and restaurants, but during dinner I started to feel a little spaced out and developed a fever, so afterwards I went straight home and to bed.
From there we drove for about 40 minutes to the tomb of Tu Duc,
where one of the longer-lived emperors was laid to rest (although his
body may or may not actually be there, as the real site of his burial
was kept secret to prevent grave-robbing). He designed and commissioned
the tomb and the surrounding buildings and gardens during his lifetime,
and actually ended up spending a great deal of time there while he was
alive as well. Much of the site is now ruined, with crumbling walls
covered in foliage. It was quite scenic, although the market stalls
selling the standard complement of tourist tat spoiled the ambiance
somewhat.
Leaving the kings tomb, we took a boat ride down the
perfume river that was utterly pointless. Sat inside a gaudy boat shaped
like a dragon, we peered out of the scratched, fingerprint-covered
plastic windows, whilst being hassled to buy more tat. We weren't
allowed to go outside of the enclosed part of the boat to enjoy the
scenery. Thankfully it was a fairly short boat ride. On the other side
of the river we stopped at a Buddhist temple called Thien Mu. It had a rather beautiful
pagoda, and statues with beards made from horse hair!
The next morning we left early to drive to Hoi An. I wasn't sorry to see Hue go, and there's definitely no Hue I'd go back!
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