Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Going International- Hello Saigon!

Whether you want the finest hotels or the cheapest guesthouses, the classiest restaurants or the most humble street stalls, the designer boutiques or the scrum of the markets, Saigon has it all.

 -Lonely Planet- Ho Chi Minh City Review

It has almost been two weeks since Max and I landed in Ho Chi Minh aka the Motorbike City. With the help of our friends and our 4-story western built home (with a maid!) we have made a smooth transition in to our new Expat lifestyle.

Getting Here
1 of 3 great meals
International flights are the way to go-Asiana Airlines treated us well on our 12-hour Seattle to Seoul flight (2 meals+bottomless water/soda+movies/games/music) and on our 5-hour flight from Seoul to HCM (1 meal+movie). Bonus: The long flight provided slippers and toothbrush/toothpaste in the restroom. 

After a long day of traveling and a lot of sleeping on the plane we reached our HCM destination. 

NOTE on Time Change:  For those of you back home wondering what time it is here we are 14 hours ahead of our WA friends/family.

The City

There is an energy in this city unlike anything I have ever experienced before. Much like the Lonely Planet review above describes there is an enormous amount of variety here.

Some places we have been so far:
  • Reunification Building: Formerly South Vietnam's Presidential Palace, this is a restored five-floor time warp to the Sixties left largely untouched since the day before Saigon fell to the North. 
  • Notre Dame Cathedral: A French-built Catholic cathedral in the city centre next to the Post Office.  
  • Saigon Square: A very popular for shopping mall for hip, young people looking for cheap watches, DVDs, T-shirts, jeans, shorts, slippers, etc.
  • War Remnants Museum: Formerly known as the Exhibition House of American War Crimes. This disturbing display of man's cruelty during the Vietnam (American) War includes halls full of gruesome photographs, a real guillotine, a simulated "tiger cage" prison and jars of deformed fetuses blamed on Agent Orange.  
  • Ben Thanh Market: Located in District 1 this is probably the largest, most popular market in HCM. A shopper can find everything here from designer bags to live ducks. Popular with tourists, so prepare to haggle. 
Backpackers District
Park in District 1


Park in District 1
Notre Dame Cathedral


War Museum
War Museum

Transportation

Taxi View
The transportation mode of choice is a motor bike hence the city's nickname. For now Max and I have opted for the reasonably priced Taxi rides (10,000 VND/km or 50 cents USD/km). The way traffic moves out here reminds me of a school of fish.  One way streets and roundabouts make it possible for cars and motorbikes to glide through the city.  Cars tend to stick on the left side of the road allowing motorbikes to stay on the right (well, most of the time) the bikes pretty much weave wherever they like.

NOTE Money Exchange Rate: 19,000 VND per 1 USD

Cuisine

With over 500 Vietnamese dishes, there is plenty of food to try.

However, if you are not in the mood for noodles and rice it is not difficult to find Italian, French, Indian, Thai, Mexican and American food.

American Chains here include Carl's Jr., KFC, Hard Rock Cafe and Pizza Hut. They, also, have a fast food chain called Lotteria which to me is similar to the American version of a McDonald's. 

For all you coffee drinkers out there you will love Vietnamese coffee aka Cafe Su Da.  

Step 2 All Stirred Up
Step 1 Coffee & Condensed Milk














NOTE on grocery shopping: The City Plaza, a store which is a combination of  Uwajimaya and Fred Meyer has everything they even sell peanut butter and Cocoa Krispies/ Fruity Pebbles (for Max). 







1 comment:

Lani Schonberg said...

Great Blog -- you are getting to know HCM quickly! The Vietnamese Coffee is very showy when served at the table that way, you know for sure that you will have a freshly made brew! :-)) Vegetation must grow tall and fast to allow the gardeners to be so creative with hedge sculptures. They looked large. How fast do the mopeds and taxis travel in HCM? The museum trip must have been an eye opener for you. In your pictures the museum looked busy with people. The pictures of the armaments, jeeps, etc. was "just like yesterday" for us. Thanks for the HCM insights.