I hope Ken and Faith won’t mind sharing their NYC guide form their wedding website. I am sure it is a good guide which all of us can use 🙂 ( Click on photo to go to actual file since this might be too small )
Category Archives: Travel
Amazed at this scene upon landing in Ho Chi Minh
Approaching Ho Chi Minh from Da Nang. Heading back home. This is a better photo which is more representative of Vietnam. “Today Vietnam’s $4 billion in rice exports accounts for more than a fifth of the global total. (Source: The Economist Jan 2014)
Motorcycles everywhere in Vietnam – Be careful when crossing the road- just keep walking and do not move back – they know how to avoid you but just never step back or move back or you will get hit 
I thought these were handmade but maybe they are not. But they are still beautiful cards at approx US$ 1.00 each
Notre Dame Cathedral and Post office
A beautiful home spotted while driving
Couples taking photos by the cathedral – many of them at different times of the day
Pictorial by the Cathedral ( not necessarily wedded couples )
They say this is the #1 coffee place in Vietnam 
Yes this is a very popular tshirt
Tall trees in several parks in the city
Nice manicured plants/bonsai at the Reunification palace and around the city
Love this store on the way to the Opera House. The chandelier was almost touching the floor
Jollibee!! There are around 30 Jollibees in Vietnam. Tan Caking also bought Pho24 and Highlands coffee
Of course we visited Starbucks! Which is actually the number 1! 😉
Most of the places in Ho Chi Minh are ware related. To be honest it is a bit depressing but it is a good experience for everyone as a reminder not to ever have WAR! 🙂
Our cute tourguide – I love her hat with the pink satin ribbon 🙂
There are several parks in the city
Reunification Palace / Independence Palace

List from a Filipino friend living in Ho Chi Minh
Suggested Restaurants
1. Hoa Tuc
74 Hai Ba Trung Street, Ben Nghe Ward, District 1, Ho Chi Minh City
2. Ngon Restaurant (Quan An Ngon), Saigon
160 Pasteur St, Dist 1, Ho Chi Minh City
3. Cuc Gach Quan
9, 10 Dang Tat | Ward Tan Dinh, Ho Chi Minh City District 1, Vietnam
92B Thach Thi Thanh St, Tan Dinh, District 1, Ho Ch
http://www.cucgachquan.com.vn/
4. The Deck
38 Nguyen U Di | Thao Dien, Ho Chi Minh City District 2, Vietnam
http://thedecksaigon.com/intro_flash.html
5. Temple Club
29 Tôn Th?t Thi?p, B?n Nghé, District Ho Chi Minh City
6. Marina
172 Ð Nguyen Dinh Chieu, P.6, Dist 3, HCMC
http://ngocsuong.com.vn/vietnamese/marinandc.html
7. La Bouchon Saigon
http://www.lebouchondesaigon.com/home.php
40 Thai Van Lung, District 1, HCMC 848-38299263
8. Trois Gourmand
http://3gourmandsaigon.com/
Address: 39 Tran Ngoc Dien Street, Thao Dien Ward, District 2, HCM City, Viet Nam
Phone number: (08) 37444585 – Fax: (08) 35194513
Email: gils_phuong@yahoo.com
9. La Villa French Restaurant
14 Ngo Quang Huy | Thao Dien Ward, District 2, Ho Chi Minh City 0084, Vietnam
http://lavilla-restaurant.com.vn/
10. Pizza 4Ps
8/15 Le Thanh Ton Street | District1, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
11. Vietnam House Restaurant
(93-95 Dong Khoi Street District 1, HCMC)
http://www.saigontourist.hochiminhcity.gov.vn/en/restaurants/bongsen.htm
12. Bistro Song Vie at Villa Song Saigon
http://www.villasong.com/
Some things to do
1. AO Show Saigon
A: Opera House, Lam Son Square, Saigon
W: www.aoshowsaigon.com/
Price: Seats with full view from 890,000VND check for specials
http://www.rustycompass.com/vietnam-travel-guide-233/ho-chi-minh-city-4/see-and-do-14/ao-show-saigon-922#.Uzvp7lP87IY
2. Saigon Cooking Class
http://www.saigoncookingclass.com/
74/7 Hai Bà Tr?ng, B?n Nghé, District 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
+84 8 3825 8485
3. Antique Stree
Le Cong Kieu St. District 1, Ho Chi Minh City
http://www.rustycompass.com/uploads/destinations/le-cong-kieu-st-16×9-0711-5_13860642637.jpg
4. Vietnam Vespa Adventures
http://vespaadventures.com/
5. Russian Market
http://www.citypassguide.com/en/destination/ho-chi-minh-city/attractions/markets/russian-market
328 Vo Van Kiet, District 1, Vietnam
6. Sophie’s Art Tour
http://sophiesarttour.com/
7. Phuc Long Coffee and Tea
Vietnamese Coffee and Tea
http://www.phuclong.com.vn/
http://www.phuclong.com.vn/tin-tuc/Phuc-Long-Shops-50.html
8. Highlands Coffee
http://highlandscoffee.com.vn/vn/index.html
9. Ben Thanh Market – Saigon
10. Ben Thanh Art and Frame
7 Nguyen Thiep st, Dist 1, HCMC – Vietnam
http://www.benthanhart.com/
11. Mekong Quilts – Mekong Creations
68 Le Loi, D.1 | 1st floor, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
12. Cu Chi Tunnel (via Saigon River Express)
http://www.saigonriverexpress.com/
13. Thanh Sanctuary Spa
111 Nguyen Du Street
District 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Telephone: 848-3822-0788
http://ndparkvillas.com/thann-sanctuary-spa#about
14. Fine Arts Museum
97A D Pho Duc Chinh, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
15. Vietnam History Museum
2 Nguyen Binh Khiem St, District 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
16. Reunification Palace
106 Nguyen Du St | District 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
17. Dong Khoi Street in District 1
http://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g293925-d1784754-Reviews-Dong_Khoi_Street-Ho_Chi_Minh_City.html
18. Nga Art and Craft (Lacquer)
http://www.citypassguide.com/destination/ho-chi-minh/shopping/nga-art-and-craft
Nhu Y Lacquerware
http://www.nhuylacquer.com/
22 Ho Huan Nghiep St., Dist. 1 Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Tel: +84.8 3 8 296 138
+84.8 3 8 292 942
8 Nguyen Thiep St., Dist. 1 Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Tel: +84.8 3 8 230 807
Fax: +84.8 3 8 235 121
Mobile: +84 913 606 525
19. Souvenirs
http://www.citypassguide.com/destination/ho-chi-minh/shopping#attraction_map
20. City Pass Guide
Please also check the following link for other interesting information of things to do in Ho Chi Minh City
Travel to Vietnam with CityPassGuide
There is a Japanese area in Ho Chi Minh
A friend that lives in Ho Chi Minh recommended this restaurant – Japanese Italian restaurant – and we all know Japanese love Italian food 🙂 We enjoyed it very much!
Where they make the pizza with a brick oven
This guy can speak a bit of Tagalog because he lived in the Philippines for some time
They make their own burrata!!! So you can imagine their dishes with burrata
They make other cheeses as well and they are freshly made daily
Bolognese Spaghetti with house made smoked cheese
Clam and Basil Sauce spaghetti
Salmon Cream and Seafood spicy tomato
Click below to go to their website for more information
We were so happy with our breakfast for a few days
Previous entry: Breakfast at Intercontinental Asiana May 25, 2015
When we decided to try the breakfast on the lobby level at Market 39 and realized how complicated life was with so many choices!! haha!!
On your table, you have these tags which are provided so you can hand them to the stations and they can bring your food to your table when ready 🙂 COOL!!!
Niu by Vikings should have this because they deliver food as well from their buffet stations 🙂 Previous entry: Niu by Vikings April 21, 2015
It is a bigger and extended version of what we had upstairs!
Love these arrangements using peppers and vegetables 🙂
This was not in the itinerary but we decided to do it despite what people say that it’s depressing or it is not really worth it. It’s just a different feeling to actually be there to imagine what the Vietnamese people went through during the war. Yes it was depressing and yes it was hard to accept – but then you realise and appreciate what you have and that even our hardships are nothing compared to what they went through and the life they lived – What life? 🙁
We went full force and brought our vietnamese hats 🙂 You really need this when walking in the heat!
In order to combat better-supplied American and South Vietnamese forces during the Vietnam War, Communist guerrilla troops known as Viet Cong (VC) dug tens of thousands of miles of tunnels, including an extensive network running underneath the Cu Chi district northwest of Saigon. Soldiers used these underground routes to house troops, transport communications and supplies, lay booby traps and mount surprise attacks, after which they could disappear underground to safety. To combat these guerrilla tactics, U.S. and South Vietnamese forces trained soldiers known as “tunnel rats” to navigate the tunnels in order to detect booby traps and enemy troop presence. Now part of a Vietnam War memorial park in Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon), the Cu Chi tunnels have become a popular tourist attraction. ( source: History.com ) 
Cashew nuts is the # 2 exported agricultural product by Vietnam after rice
DIGGING THE CU CHI TUNNELS
Communist forces began digging a network of tunnels under the jungle terrain of South Vietnam in the late 1940s, during their war of independence from French colonial authority. Tunnels were often dug by hand, only a short distance at a time. As the United States increasingly escalated its military presence in Vietnam in support of a non-Communist regime in South Vietnam beginning in the early 1960s, North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops (as Communist supporters in South Vietnam were known) gradually expanded the tunnels. At its peak during the Vietnam War, the network of tunnels in the Cu Chi district linked VC support bases over a distance of some 250 kilometers, from the outskirts of Saigon all the way to the Cambodian border.
Did You Know?
“Tunnel rats,” as American soldiers who worked in the Cu Chi tunnels during the Vietnam War were known, used the evocative term “black echo” to describe the experience of being in the tunnels.
As the United States relied heavily on aerial bombing, North Vietnamese and VC troops went underground in order to survive and continue their guerrilla tactics against the much better-supplied enemy. In heavily bombed areas, people spent much of their life underground, and the Cu Chi tunnels grew to house entire underground villages, in effect, with living quarters, kitchens, ordnance factories, hospitals and bomb shelters. In some areas there were even large theaters and music halls to provide diversion for the troops (many of them peasants) and their supporters. ( Source: History.com )
They would build termite hills to camouflage the holes that gives ventilation for the tunnels 
Going inside the Cu Chi tunnel which is narrow. Technique is to hold the cover upwards to make it easier to go inside

They made a tunnel wider and a bit bigger for tourists like us 🙂 to go in and get a feel of how it is to be inside. They made a 20 meter, 40 and 60 meter exit to give you options to get out. Imagine that the Vietnamese soldiers lived here for 21 years during the war -1954 to 1975. The tunnel spans 250 kms and is self contained with a market, a hospital, living quarters etc
Several bomb craters in the area- I took this photo because I found it so pretty with the bamboo trees caving in on the area
WAR IN THE CU CHI TUNNELS
In addition to providing underground shelter, the Cu Chi tunnels served a key role during combat operations, including as a base for Communist attacks against nearby Saigon. VC soldiers lurking in the tunnels set numerous booby traps for U.S. and South Vietnamese infantrymen, planting trip wires that would set off grenades or overturn boxes of scorpions or poisonous snakes onto the heads of enemy troops. To combat these guerrilla tactics, U.S. forces would eventually train some soldiers to function as so-called “tunnel rats.” These soldiers (usually of small stature) would spend hours navigating the cramped, dark tunnels to detect booby traps and scout for enemy troops. ( source: History.com )
This guy demonstrated the different kinds of traps
I highly recommend this place especially if it is your first time to go to Vietnam. They have the basic Vietnamese dishes, at very reasonable prices and very good. They menu is extensive so I am sure you will find something for everyone. Recommended to us by several friends and Pinoys that live here. We forgot to ask what to order so we just asked the server. After ordering the food came in less than 3 minutes!!!! We were in and out in 30 minutes! The fastest meal ever! We spent 2,000,000 d or $100.00 for 10 people!
The place is very nice! It’s open air though and no air-conditioning so maybe night time will be best. But we were okay during lunch though we stayed inside
There are several cooking stalls lining the sides of the restaurant
Courtyard in the middle of the restaurant
Salad roll with shrimp and pork
Vermicelli and fried pork and crab spring rolls served with fresh herbs and fish sauce

Grilled beef with Chili Salt and served with bread
Stir fried water spinach with garlic
Banh Xeo – Vietnamese Rice Pancake
Grilled Prawn with Chili and salt
Grilled Manama covered with sticky rice and coconut milk
There is a booth there where they make this dessert- it’s like Halo Halo 🙂
Che Suong Sa Hot Luu – Tapioca in Coconut milk dessert – YUM!





















































































































































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