Aug 16, 2010
Twenty Five: Vietnam Day 6. Lao Cai + TaVan Village
Another day of trekking! This time further then the rest. *excited* Did I mention I like trekking? Yep! Lao Cai is perhaps the biggest village near Sapa Town. It’s 12km if you take the roads but since we choose the scenic route (and also more difficult), that adds another 5km to the journey. We’ll be trekking the 17km to the village but will take a car ride back.
Along the way, two Black H’mong women followed us. That’s what the villagers do. They will accompany the tourists on the walk back to their village, weaving little trinkets from the plants along the way. Once at the village, they will then pester the tourist to buy something from them! Therefore, if you do not intend to buy anything, a firm “No” to them when they follow you will suffice.
I’m pretty thankful these two women came along with us because they really helped alot when I fumbled along the paths beside the padi fields, up and down the uneven terrain. They were wonderful company too. Their english is so much better than most of the Vietnamese I came across in Hanoi. Chatting to them, I learnt alot about her family as well as their lifestyle. She’s 35 this year and has two children, a girl 15 and a boy 12. Both of them are in school which starts at around 7am to 12pm. Most of the H’mong girls get married from 16 to 20 years of age. On days that she does not travel to Sapa Town selling her crafts, she tends to the crop fields her family owns. Little children are left to play on their own freely around town at the age of 3.
Along the trek, we keep hearing shrieks and screams behind us. Thats what happens when tourists slip and get themselves smashed. The H’mong women just laughed at our clumsiness. I was going on quite ok till I came to the stream where I took a wrong step. Aww. The H’mong lady laughed, pointed and said “No step here! Here no good.” Aw woman, I know ‘cos I just stepped there ok? haha
Its a huge sense of satisfaction when we completed the trek. Its strangely apt that the path less taken is the more beautiful one. Today’s lunch is cooked by our guide and it could be, the best meal I had in the whole Vietnam trip. In fact, it looked so good, we overheard other tourists asking their guide if they could order it from the menu.
We met our Japanese Train-cabin mate again during lunch! After a wonderful meal, we took a stroll into Lao Cai Village and TaVan village. We came to the primary school where lessons are still being conducted. H’mong children do not speak Vietnamese traditionally. Here in school, they learn how. The vocab phrase of the day is “Kem” (Ice-cream). School materials are sponsored by Unicef. The little children that do not have classes at the moment roam freely around the classrooms.
We went back to Sapa Town after the trek and village tour. Bought slippers to wear instead because our shoes are so very smashed with mud. We’re taking the 730pm night train back to Hanoi and straight to a 2D1N adventure in Halong Bay.




