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DAY TRIPS & EXCURSION IN SOUTH

Tour Excursion in The South

Cu Chi
Cu Chi is a rural district, approximately 30 km northwest of Ho Chi Minh City. The district, with an area of 43,000 hectares, lies between Saigon River and Vam Co Dong River. Cu Chi played an important role during the two resistance wars. It was an underground village with a network of tunnels totaling more than 200 km. The main tunnel is from 60 to 70 cm wide and from 80 to 90 cm high. The tunnels are approximately 3 to 4 m underground, under a layer of earth able to sustain the weight of 50-tone tanks, heavy artillery, as well as bombs of up to 100kg. The network is equipped with various accommodations from meeting rooms to medical clinic.

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Ho Chi Minh Classic Tours

Although only 300 years old, Ho Chi Minh City attracts approximately 70% of visitors in the whole country. The city’s resources and accommodations are attractive elements for several tourists. Several tourists sites are closely connected to ethnic minorities and revolutionary relics. Numerous steps were taken to stabilize the tourism potential of the city: historical relics and architectural works were restored may museums are expected to be upgrade; and traditional values are recovered in festivals

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Mekong and Central Highland  Vietnam Adventure Tours

To the Vietnamese, the region is known as Cuu Long, "Nine Dragons", a reference to the nine tributaries of the Mekong River which dovetail across plains fashioned by millennia of flood-borne alluvial sediment. By the time it reaches Vietnam, the Mekong has already covered more than four thousand kilometres from its source high on the Tibetan Plateau; en route it traverses southern China, skirts Burma (Myanmar), then hugs the Laos– Thailand border before cutting down through Cambodia and into Vietnam – a journey that ranks it as Asia's third-longest river, after the Yangtse and Yellow rivers. Flooding has always blighted the delta; ever since Indian traders imported their advanced methods of irrigation more than eighteen centuries ago, networks of canals have been used to channel the excess water, but the rainy season still claims lives from time to time.

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