Ta Dung Lake: The Highland Reservoir That Actually Lives Up to the Halong Comparison
Ta Dung Lake in Dak Nong province is a sprawling reservoir dotted with 36 forested islands — quieter than Ha Long Bay and far easier on your wallet.
24 guides tagged homestays — sort or switch view to find what fits.
Ta Dung Lake in Dak Nong province is a sprawling reservoir dotted with 36 forested islands — quieter than Ha Long Bay and far easier on your wallet.
Nam Du is a chain of 21 islands off Kien Giang province with clear water, fishing-village homestays, and almost zero tourist infrastructure — the way Phu Quoc looked two decades ago.
Nam Du is a 21-island chain off Kien Giang province where the water runs clear, the guesthouses are family-run, and the ferries still carry more fish than tourists.
Three valleys, all within a long day's drive of Hanoi, but very different in crowd level, scenery, and what you actually do there. Here's how to choose.
An Giang sits at the edge of the Mekong Delta where Vietnam meets Cambodia. It's quieter than the tourist trail, but packed with floating villages, temples, and the kind of watery landscape that defines the Delta.
Binh Hung Island sits off the southern coast of Khanh Hoa province — small, unhurried, and largely unchanged by mass tourism. Here's what to actually expect.
Con Au is a slender river island in Can Tho where fruit orchards, fish farms, and homestays give you the Mekong Delta without the tourist-bus crowds.
Dak Nong is a quiet highland province in central Vietnam. Red soil, waterfalls, minority villages, and zero crowds. Here's what's worth your time.
Ho Thac Ba is a massive reservoir in the northern highlands that most foreign visitors have never heard of — here's how to actually get there and what to do.
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