Top Attractions and Things to do in Halong Bay
Halong Bay is a surreal landscape of limestone karsts
erupting from the ocean like tidal waves made solid by
magic and time. Declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in
1994, this natural wonder of the world has since become
the single most popular tourist attraction in all of
Vietnam. The 1500km2 bay is cupped by the Vietnam
coastline just south of the Chinese border and dotted
with thousands of uninhabited islands, floating fishing
villages, and labyrinthine cave systems teeming with
fossils, rock formations, myths, and mysteries.
Snorkel and Dive to Explore Coral Reefs
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Though many travel guides focus on the landscape above
the water, there’s a whole universe thriving below the
surface. Halong Bay is home to more than 140 different
species of coral, including rare varieties. These coral
reefs cover up to 30 and even 60 percent of the area
around islands like Cong Do, where legal restrictions,
as well as geographic isolation, protect marine life
from boat traffic, pollution, and human interference.
Take a dive trip to the coral reefs and watch marine
creatures like starfish, sea horses, and sea turtles
through the clear water. You can also explore the
underwater grottos and intricate cave systems that
shelter entire ecosystems. New and experienced divers
can head out with a diving school or, as an alternative,
you can take a boat into deeper water and snorkel
around.
Explore Halong by Cruise Boat
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Halong Bay is best explored from a boat. Some companies
offer half-day cruises on traditional junk boats that
allow you to experience the bay with sails and slow
speeds. Others offer faster yachts that can quickly
shuttle passengers between different islands and back.
It is possible to take a quick half-day or full-day
cruise through Halong Bay, but a longer trip is ideal.
Book for two or three days with a ship that can plan for
food, beverages, cocktails, and sightseeing so that you
can just relax and enjoy the trip.
Spend a few days on a yacht, cruising around the bay by
day and sleeping on the boat by night. It's truly
luxurious to be rocked to sleep by currents, and
stargazing from the deck lounge of a boat anchored in
the open ocean is a radically different experience from
what can be seen by land. Such cruises offer buffet
meals, cooking classes, or guided tours to private
beaches and fishing villages. Combine different
experiences for the perfect trip: plan for a relaxing
“spa cruise” with deep tissue massages and yoga by
sunrise, or embark on a true adventure complete with the
deep-sea diving and squid fishing at moonlight.
Whatever your travel style, be sure to hop off the
cruise for an afternoon to kayak around the karsts. A
kayak is the best way to get up close to the limestone
formations, and their small size allows for the most
autonomy and adventure. The bay water is calm and still,
making it safe, easy, and enjoyable to paddle between a
selection of islands and karsts, through caves, and
around floating villages. Hop into the clear water at
intervals for a swim before heading back to the yacht
for sunset cocktails and dining.
Hike to Hidden Caves on Cat Ba Island
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Cat Ba Island, the largest in the Cat Ba archipelago, is
almost entirely blanketed by rainforest. In addition to
other native mammal species, the national park protects
white-headed langur monkeys, which are the world’s most
endangered primates. There are excellent hiking trails
through the parks, and it’s possible (and suggested) to
go with a guide to learn about the plants, animals, and
history of the island.
Some of the hiking trails go skywards towards the peaks
of mountains, others terminate on pristine sand beaches,
and still, others meander into hidden caves and
grottoes. Hoa Cuong Cave is comparatively small but
shines like diamonds in the light. Others, like Thien
Long and Trung Trang, are full of stalactites and
stalagmites bent and twisted into weird shapes over
millions of years. It’s a strange and powerful feeling
to be inside an underground world formed
incomprehensibly long ago.
Perhaps the most interesting cave on Cat Ba is Hospital
Cave, where soldiers were sheltered during the American
War. Now it’s a tourist attraction, but its medical
rooms have been kept fully intact, complete with
equipment.
Spelunking in Sung Sot, Me Cung, and Thien Cung Caves
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Outside of Cat Ba, Halong Bay hosts dozens of caves of
varying sizes, each one a unique archeological remnant
of Halong’s millions of years in development. Among
these, Sung Sot, Me Cung, and Thien Cung are three of
the region’s most interesting.
Sung Sot Cave is famous for its absolutely massive size
and for its inner cavern populated by strangely-shaped
stalactites and stalagmites. The 10,000 square meter
cave system can only be reached by hiking up a steep
path, but the trek is worth it. Pass through the first
cavern to enter the second chamber, where penetrating
light lingers and flickers on the shapely formations,
bringing elephants, mammoths, horses, and military
formations to life.
Sung Sot is Halong Bay’s largest and most famous cave,
and Me Cung Cave is its oldest and narrowest.
Archaeological evidence indicates that the periwinkle
fossils which can still be found at the cave’s mouth are
more than 10,000 years old. Squeeze through the cave’s
narrow entrance to explore its complex system of
chambers and tunnels, scattered with fossils and
sculptured with stalactites and stalagmites.
After the largest and the oldest, Thien Cung Cave
completes the triad as the prettiest. As legend has it,
Thien Cung was the home of the Dragon King and his wife
May. The pair wed in the center of the cave with an
attending audience of fairies, gods, and dragons. The
cave is now illuminated by soft colored lights that cast
strange shadows and lend dramatic believability to the
mythical stories, while openings in the ceiling are
pierced by heavenly beams of light. Exit the cave to a
panoramic display of Halong Bay -- a view fit for a
Dragon King indeed.
Visit Monkey Island
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Monkey Island is just 1 short kilometer from Cat Ba town
but it can only be reached by boat. The isolated island
was once called Cat Dua Island, or Pineapple Island,
because of the pineapples growing wild along its shores.
It’s better known today as Monkey Island in honor of its
playful resident monkeys who frequent the beaches to
frolic with tourists.
Monkey Island’s scenic shoreline is perfect for
sunbathers and adventurers alike. Lounge on the white
sand and swim or snorkel in the clear water for a
relaxing afternoon, or discover nature by sea or by
land, via kayak, or on one of a number of trekking
routes.
Check out Hon Ga Choi (Fighting Cock Islet)
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In the center of Halong Bay, two jagged rock formations
jut out more than 12 meters over the water’s surface,
leaning in towards one another for a fight or for a
kiss, depending on who you ask. Whether you call it
Fighting Cocks Island or Cock and Hen Island (Hon Ga
Choi or Hon Trong Mai), it’s one of the region’s
best-known landmarks. The scale and precariousness of
the formations are striking on their own, but the rocks
are at their best at sunrise and sunset when the sky
casts the improbable characters into stark silhouettes.
All the rock formations of Halong Bay have been shifting
and evolving over hundreds of millions of years, engaged
in a full-contact dance with the dynamic power of the
ocean’s shaping waves. This history helps us remember
that time and water are sculptors, too. Perhaps that’s
why so many artists have followed suit and taken decades
of creative inspiration from what nature has carved out
in Halong Bay.
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