The cruise ship Dragon’s Pearl, foreground, is docked in northern Vietnam’s Ha Long Bay, which leads to the open waters of the Gulf of Tonkin. The often mist-shrouded limestone cliffs frame the bay. A side trip on a Vietnam tour, the bay cruise consisted of three days of swimming, kayaking and just chilling on the deck of the ship, an ironwood-tooled vessel fashioned to look like a junk. Passengers were seeking respite from the motocross traffic, swarming pineapple vendors and ceaseless capitalist hustle of nearby Hanoi, Vietnam’s second-largest city. (Molly Selvin/Los Angeles Times)
A floating snack vendor attracts customers on the beach at Ha Long Bay. (Molly Selvin/Los Angeles Times)
Tran Van Bien, 27, the cruise’s English-speaking tour guide, on board the Dragon’s Pearl, whose 18 small rooms are packed with amenities, including air conditioning, a tiny bathroom, a king-size bed, terry bathrobes and rubber flip-flops. (Molly Selvin/Los Angeles Times)
It’s lunchtime on the bay, following a session of kayaking in and around cliffs and grottos. The white-tablecloth meal featured barbecued fish and dragonfruit. Multi-course lunches and dinners typically consisted of locally caught prawns and fish, chicken, stir-fried vegetables and tofu dishes. For breakfast, a buffet of fresh fruit and baked goods was served outdoors on the ship’s middle deck. (Molly Selvin/Los Angeles Times)
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The cruise passes a fishing village nestled into the craggy shoreline of Ha Long Bay. (Molly Selvin/Los Angeles Times,)