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Sapa mountains
Despite its commercialization
during the last seven years, Sapa is still a must-see on any northern
Vietnam itinerary. On a clear day you will treated to views of steeply
terraced rice fields, towering verdant ridgelines, primitive
mud-thatched villages, raging rivers and astounding waterfalls.
Nestled
high in the Tonkinese Alps near the Chinese border, Sapa was built as a
hill station during French colonial days, to serve as a respite from
stifling Hanoi summers. These days, weekends are still the biggest draw
in this crumbling hill-tribe center. Visitors from the capital flock to
Sapa for a glimpse of the famed "Love Market," a trek to local hill
tribe villages, or an ascent of Vietnam's highest peak, Fan Si Pan.
Some
eight ethnic groups inhabit Lao Cai province: Hmong, Dao, White Thai,
Giay, Tay, Muong, Hao and Xa Pho. The most prominent in town are the Red
Dao, easily identified by the coin-dangling red headdresses and
intricately embroidered waistcoats worn by the women, and the Hmong,
distinguished by their somewhat less elaborately embroidered royal blue
attire. Groups of ethnic Hmong youngsters and women can be seen hauling
impossibly heavy, awkward baskets of wood, stakes, bamboo, bricks, mud
and produce. Deep in the valleys surrounding Sapa, the Muong Hoa River
sluices a wild, jagged course among Giay, Red Dao and White Thai
settlements, their tiny dwellings poking out of the neon rice fields
like diamonds on a putting green. One- to four-day treks are offered by
a handful of outfitters. Guests sleep in tents or in the homes of
villagers, their gear hauled by Hmong porters. Be warned: Despite what
the local innkeepers will tell you, both the Hmong and the Dao really do
not enjoy having their photographs taken unless they're paid for it.
It's a certainty that any brochure you see of smiling, care-free ethnic
hill people was shot under a Screen Actors Guild contract.
Sapa
is famed for its "Love Market" – sort of a cross between a peacock
mating ritual, a Middle Eastern arms bazaar, an Amish square dance, a
bad Pavarotti concert and Bangkok's Patpong (except here the people wear
clothes). On Saturday nights, Red Dao hill tribe youths of both sexes
congregate in a weekly courting rite, singing tribal versions of Loretta
Lynn love songs to woo the opposite sex. The songs are highly
personalized and boast of the composer's physical attributes, domestic
abilities and strong work ethic. While Dao women are indeed highly
industrious, the men, it seems, prefer to spend most of their time
drinking, smoking opium or sleeping, only occasionally slapping the rump
of a lethargic bovine moving more slowly than they are. Few of their
songs, though, are about drinking, smoking opium, sleeping or slapping
rumps.
Topping
out at 3,143 meters, Fan Si Pan has become the Mount Everest of Vietnam,
with queues of yuppie trekkers in their latest Travel Smith
"totally-pack able" rainwear forming mountaineering traffic jams at base
camps. Eco Travel can arrange guided ascents.
Sapa
itself is a somewhat bedraggled village meshing crumbling, mildewed
French colonial architecture with the pencil-thin, brick-and-concrete
mini-hotels that have become so ubiquitous in recent years all across
Vietnam. This neglected, cultural mishmash would be an eyesore in any
place less spectacularly scenic than Sapa. Because of its
Shangri-la-like setting, Sapa actually seems quaint – a tranquil,
restful village. Which is, of course, what the French originally
intended the place to be. Amenities are limited unless you choose to
stay at the Four Star Victoria Sapa, a sprawling alpine campus nestled
discreetly into a hillside in the center of town.
The
best times of the year to visit Sapa are in the spring and fall. Summers
tend to be rainy and muddy, while winter temperatures can drop to the
freezing mark (Sapa ushered in 2000 with snow!). Weather really does
make a difference here, because the spectacular scenery is all but
blotted out when there is cloud cover and rain. Ignore the other
Nikon-toting tourists in the villages and get out into the countryside,
where you just may still catch a glimpse into hill-tribe life of a
couple of centuries ago.
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