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Vietnam has five destinations in Southeast Asia’s top tourist attractions

Friday, March 28th, 2014 - 4:04 AM

Mui Ne sand dunes, Sapa, the Mekong Delta, Phu Quoc Island and the Cu Chi tunnels are in list among the 19 destinations in Southeast Asia. 

Second place in the list belong Phu Quoc Island, Mui Ne sand dunes come fourth, the Mekong Delta at the 8th position, followed by Sapa at the 9th place and Cu Chi tunnels at the 18th position.

Pai, Mae Sot, White Temple, Ko Lanta, Chiang Dao (Thailand), Bagan, Ngwe Saung Beach, Inle Lake, Mergui Archipelago (Myanmar), Cameron Highlands (Malaysia), Marina Bay Sands (Singapore), Luang Prabang (Laos), Kep and Angkor Wat (Cambodia) are in this list.

Almost everybody agrees that Phu Quoc becomes Vietnam's next hot destination, but luckily, the perfect beaches are still quiet empty. Visitors can rent a motorbike (no license needed) and go around the red dirt roads of this island paradise. Then, take a snorkeling or scuba dip in blue sea.

It takes about 220 km from Saigon, not far but these sand dunes seem like they belong on another continent entirely. You can easy to sled, bike, or just freely frolic down both white and red mountains of bliss. Be sure to find the Fairy Stream, a magical river with a soft, sandy bottom that flows between dry rocks.

The Mekong River is regarded as a rich marshland with responsible for the big of Vietnam's rice crops. There are a lot of tiny villages and floating markets to visit, with kindly locals who will gladly let you sample their fruit or teach you to bird watching. Taking a biking the Delta tour- that way, you can see the impressive rice paddies and stop off at destinations on your own.

Terraced fields, which tiers on tiers of bright-green rice fields are dotted with the colorful clothes of ethnic minority and roofs of French colonial villas are some of special at SaPa. As the sun sets, the view is not clear by cover cloud; it's wonderful to enjoy grill foods

Viet Cong soldiers used these narrow tunnels as hiding places during the Vietnam War. The tunnel doors in the jungle led down into the underground network, where soldiers spend all time to work and fight in Vietnam War. Try crept through the tunnel to experience during a modern-day tour.