Travel News
Vietnam’s railway renaissance: The Ho Chi Minh City – Cần Giờ high‑speed link (350km/h) cleared its final environmental assessment, moving the 2028 groundbreaking closer. For travellers, this means a future 20‑minute journey from the city centre to the UNESCO Biosphere Reserve’s mangroves—a seamless urban‑to‑wilderness transition.
Laos electric bus expansion: Vientiane added 15 new electric buses to its fleet, connecting Wattay Airport to the city’s heritage core with zero emissions. The service now operates every 20 minutes, a quiet step toward sustainable luxury travel.
Cambodia’s aviation update: Siem Reap–Angkor International Airport recorded a 23% increase in premium cabin arrivals this month, signalling a renewed interest in high‑end exploration beyond Angkor Wat.
Destinations
Ha Giang’s golden hour: The terraced rice fields have reached peak amber, with local guides reporting optimal light for photography between 4:30 and 5:45 PM. For those seeking solitude, the lesser‑visited terraces of Hoàng Su Phì offer the same grandeur without the crowds.
Luang Prabang’s alms route: A new respectful viewing corridor has been inaugurated, allowing travellers to observe the Tak Bat ceremony without disrupting the monastic path. The initiative balances cultural preservation with the desire for authentic encounters.
Saigon’s hidden wards: Thủ Đức City’s new administrative wards—Linh Trung, Hiệp Phú, and Trường Thọ—are emerging as enclaves of modernist architecture and local culinary revival, perfect for the traveller seeking Saigon’s quieter evolution.
Promotions
Exclusive Mekong villa offer: A 48‑hour flash promotion from a private luxury cruise operator grants early‑booking travellers a two‑night extension in a Mekong riverside suite at no additional cost for departures in May 2026. Limited to five cabins.
Heritage railway journey: The reopening of the Đà Lạt–Trại Mát cog railway includes a curated “Golden Hour” package with vintage carriage, champagne picnic, and private photography guide—available for bookings made before April 5.
Human Stories
This week, we spent an afternoon with Mme. Hương Nguyễn, a fourth‑generation silk weaver in Hội An whose family has supplied fabric to the city’s oldest tailor shops. Her workshop, tucked behind a garden wall, now opens to travellers by appointment—an intimate glimpse into a craft that defined Indochina’s elegance. “Silk remembers,” she told us. “It carries the hands that touched it.”
Cultural Moments
In Hanoi, the “Lacquer & Light” exhibition at the Vietnam National Museum of Fine Arts closes this weekend, showcasing contemporary takes on traditional sơn mài. Curators note a resurgence of interest in this centuries‑old technique among younger Vietnamese artists—a cultural dialogue between past and future.
Meanwhile, Cambodia’s Krama weaving villages around Phnom Penh report increased orders for hand‑dyed natural indigo textiles, as a new generation revives the craft with sustainable practices.
Reflections from the Road
“There is a moment, just before dusk in the Mekong delta, when the river turns to mercury and the boats become silhouettes. I have photographed it a hundred times, yet it never repeats. That is the gift of this land: it invites you to witness, never to possess.” — Andy Nguyen, from the road in Cần Thơ