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The permanent beauty
of Ha Long is created by three factors: stone, water and sky. Ha
Long’s island system is multicolored with a variety of shapes and
can be regarded as a water-color, a work of art. The islands,
scattered all round, have different shapes which provoke the
imagination: Dinh Huong (Incense Burner) implies spiritual
significance, Ga Choi (Fighting Cocks) the symbol of Viet Nam
tourism, Con Coc (Toad) recalls the passage of time, waiting
thousands of years to seek justice in Heaven. There are islands that
resemble a resplendent throne, a Vietnamese mother’s curved back
carrying her child, a roof, an old man, a human head and so on.
Within the bigger
islands are great attractions. Dau Go Cave (Wooden Stakes) dazzles
the senses with many huge stalactites hanging poised in mid air and
stalagmites growing majestically upwards. Then there is Thien Cung
Grotto (Heavenly Palace) with its small, narrow entrance, but inside
looking like a marvelous palace. Bo Nau Cave (Pelican) has an
arc-shape entrance containing many stalactites. Sung Sot Cave
(Surprise Cave) lives up to its name. Within this cave are
stalactites with many marvelous shapes, such as: jungle fowl, toad,
dragon, waterfall and many others.
Other caves and grottoes such as Tam Cung (Three Palaces), Trinh Nu
(Virgin), Ba Hang (Three Tunnels), Tien Long (Fairy Dragon), each
has its own attractions and beauty.
Ha Long’s sea is
always the same, blue, smooth and still. Ha Long has its own beauty
by seasons. In Spring, buds of trees burst on limestone islands. In
Summer, it is cool and clean with many sparkling sun rays reflecting
from the sea’s surface. In Autumn, especially at night, moonlight
illuminates the mountains so they appear like gold, inlaid into the
earth. In Winter, with pervasive frost, Ha Long is glamorous as “a
floating flower basket on smooth wave” (by writer Nguyen Tuan).
Source:
Halong bay
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