
After a 9 hour flight from Sydney, I arrived to Ho Chi Minh city. The customs people barely looked at my passport before stamping it and leading me to the cab area. Everything in Vietnam is negotiable and costs around 10% of prices in the USA. After 15 minutes of haggling a cab driver, I finally talked him down from 450,000 VN dong to 150,000 dong(roughly 7$ USD). Our hotel here called the Mai Vi in Pham Ngu Lau is $20 a night. We have free internet, a TV with several movie channels in English and a decent bathroom, not a hole in the ground as I was expecting. A family runs the hotel, there are 3 daughters, one son, mom/dad and grandmother who all live here and trade off shifts in the lobby. The bars here never close, in fact, they didn't even know what "close" meant when I asked the bar owner "what time does the bar close" but she understood everything else I was saying. Beers are about 1USD, shots are 1USD, Vietnamese food for lunch is about 2USD. Everything is so cheap. We just bought our bus tickets from HCMC to Phenom Phen Cambodia which is a 7hr bus ride for $10 USD. The streets are overrun by motorbikes with very few stop lights. Its not uncommon to see people standing in the middle of a 10 lane road just hanging out as motorbikes swerve around them. The rule of thumb when crossing the street is to just start walking and let the motorbikes swerve around you. There are no walk signs, no large gaps in traffic, no feeling of safety. Most of the cabs don't have seatbelts from what I've noticed. All the local people haggle you non stop to buy things like cigarettes, gum, dvds or local food. During the day it is around 90 degrees, at night it gets down to 80. Taking a cold shower does little to cool you off from the hot hot weather.
Today Morgan and I toured the Cu Chi tunnels. These are underground tunnels where the Viet Cong hid during the war. At the end our of tour, they let us walk through the tunnel which is designed for a 4.5 feet tall Viet Cong person. The tunnel is 6 meters underground and when walking through with 10 people behind you and 10 in front of you, it definitely makes you panic. The first exit for the tunnel was after crawling for 50 meters, Morgan and I both took the first exit as fast as possible. I forgot to take my camera so no pictures unfortunately. We took a boat to get to the tunnels which allowed us to see what the rivers look like (floating vegetation everywhere, shacks on the waterbank hand made from various garbage.
People here are full of smiles, very friendly. Almost all the young people speak some english and nearly everyone wants to learn English. McDonalds has not made it to Vietnam yet but there is KFC, Pizza hut and Hard Rock Cafe. These are the only American chain places I've seen which is interesting. Tomorrow we leave for Phenom Phen Cambodia, should be interesting..