<a href="http://footsteptravel.com/en">The Mekong Delta</a>, often
referred to as Vietnam’s rice basket, is the biggest rice-growing region in the
country, the rich alluvial soils producing three harvests a year. Despite being
a predominantly rural region, the Mekong Delta is one of the most densely
populated areas in Vietnam and most of the land is under cultivation. Other
delta products include coconut, sugar cane, fruit and fish.
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The main towns of the delta are My Tho, Vinh Long, Can Tho and Chau Doc. Driving
south from Ho Chi Minh City, My Tho is the first major <a href="http://footsteptravel.com/en">Mekong
Delta</a> town you come to. Its proximity to Ho Chi Minh City has made My Tho
the most popular destination for day-trippers to the delta looking for a taste
of authentic delta life. Here visitors can take a sampan along the waterways,
visit tropical fruit orchards and try the local delicacy, Elephant’s Ear Fish.
The other popular destination for day-trippers from Ho Chi Minh City is Vinh
Long, another 65km deeper into the delta. It is the islands in the Mekong River
rather than the town itself that is the highlight of a trip to Vinh Long. Most
of the islands are given over to fruit orchards and the narrow canals are often
straddled by flimsy-looking wooden bridges made from the trunks of coconut palms
or bamboo and known as monkey bridges. An early morning visit to near by <a href="http://footsteptravel.com/en">Cai
Be Floating Market </a> offers great photographic opportunities as all manner of
produce is traded from boats. To make shopping easier the boats suspend a sample
of what they sell from the top of a long pole. On the way back to Vinh Long it
is possible to stop off to visit small riverside workshops including
blacksmiths, rice huskers, thatchers and coffin makers!
Just over 30km and a ferry ride away from Vinh Long is Can Tho, the bustling
commercial centre of the Mekong Delta. Can Tho is one of the more attractive
delta towns but as in the rest of the <a href="http://footsteptravel.com/en">Mekong
Delta </a> the best sights are on the water. The delta’s biggest floating
market, <a href="http://footsteptravel.com/en">Cai Be Floating Market </a>, is
6km from Can Tho and well worth an early morning visit. For a memorable boat
trip the Victoria Can Tho Hotel operates sunrise and sunset cruises on the Lady
Hau, a renovated traditional rice barge. A spectacular sight outside of town is
the stork garden at Thot Not where hundreds of egrets, herons and cormorants
gather in the treetops to roost late in the afternoon.
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<a href="http://footsteptravel.com/en">Chau Doc</a>, nestling at the foot of Sam
Mountain on the Cambodian border, has a real frontier town feel to it. This busy
little riverine town has large Cham, Khmer and ethnic Chinese communities and
the distinctive architectural styles of each community can be seen in their
places of worship around the town. A boat trip on the river is the best way to
see the unusual floating fish farms, houses with wooden pens suspended
underneath where live fish are kept. <a href="http://footsteptravel.com/en">Chau
Doc’s Sam Mountain </a> is home to dozens of temples and shrines and is a
popular pilgrimage site for ethnic Chinese as well as Vietnamese.
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