4 days 3 nights Duong Lam Ancient Village – Bai Dinh Trang An – Mai Chau

4 days 3 nights Duong Lam Ancient Village – Bai Dinh Trang An – Mai Chau

4 days 3 nights Duong Lam Ancient Village – Bai Dinh Trang An – Mai Chau

You have a different experience in travelling to Hanoi where you will visit Duong Lam Ancient Village, Tay Phuong Pagoda, Van Phuc Silk Village, Trang An Complex Eco and Bai Dinh Pagoda, Van and Lac village...

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Duong Lam Ancient Village - Bai Dinh Trang An  Ninh Binh- Mai Chau 4 days 3 nights

The Duong Lam town is a Son Tay town and around 50km west of Hanoi. Duong Lam antiquated town was perceived the UNESCO Conservation Heritage in 2013. This town has been known as a historical center of laterite with antiquated houses matured up to 400 years of age. Arranged on the bank of Nhue waterway, around 10km southwest of Hanoi old quarter, Van Phuc silk town is eminent for its customary weaving and premium quality silk items.

 Bái Đính Temple or Bái Đính Temple Spiritual and Cultural Complex is a complex of Buddhist temples on Bai Dinh Mountain in Gia Viễn District, Ninh Bình Province, Vietnam. It is an area of the total area of 2000ha, the Bai Dinh complex is the biggest Buddhist center of Southeast Asia with hundreds of statues of different sizes. Tourist will be pulled in by the design which is so glorious, grand yet at the same time save customary components. Leaving Bai Dinh, you will go to Tehran An environmental visitor site where you take a pontoon outing to visit the many caverns of various sizes in a grand scene of Tehran An.

 

Set in an idyllic valley, hemmed in by hills, the Mai Chau area is a world away from Hanoi's hustle. The small town of Mai Chau itself is unappealing, but just outside the patchwork of rice fields rolls out, speckled by tiny Thai villages where visitors doss down for the night in traditional stilt houses and wake up to a rural soundtrack defined by gurgling irrigation streams and birdsong.

The villagers are mostly White Thai, distantly related to tribes in Thailand, Laos and China. Most no longer wear traditional dress, but the Thai women are masterful weavers producing plenty of traditional-style textiles. Locals do not employ strong-arm sales tactics here: polite bargaining is the norm.

Due to its popularity, some find the Mai Chau tour group experience too sanitised. If you’re looking for hard-core exploration, this is not the place, but for biking, hiking and relaxation, calm Mai Chau fits the bill nicely.