On March 19, we arrived in Ho Chi Minh City  (Saigon), Vietnam Saigon .  We stopped for lunch, where I learned that Vietnamese food was a lot of seafood.  I tried it all, but I was not too impressed.  I’ve never been a seafood person, but I tried everything with an open mind.  The tunnels are a system of underground tunnels built by the Vietnamese in 1920.  They took twenty years to complete, but they served as a secret network for the army during their wars with France 
            The next morning, I got up early to fly out to Hanoi , the capital of Vietnam , though Saigon  is the biggest city.  I went with a tour company advertised on FaceBook so everything was all arranged for us already.  Once we got to the city, we went out for lunch, which again hard because of the language barrier, and arrived at the Friendship village, a community for those affected by Agent Orange.  Our group arrived late and the other group of Semester at Sea students were already playing games and singing songs with the kids.  We toured the classrooms, where volunteers tried to teach the kids basic life skills, like washing their hands.  The kids all have severe mental and physical disabilities so teaching them how to wash their hands can take up to five months.  However, they have learned how to make beautiful crafts, where all the proceeds went to the village.  After touring the classrooms, we went to a conference room where someone was supposed to talk to us about Agent Orange.  However, his translator was horrible and no one could understand what she said.  The village was excited that we came and had reporters from local news channels there so some SAS students may be on Vietnamese TV.  I wasn’t interviewed, but I may be in some group shots.  After leaving the village, we checked into our hotels and had the night free.  I went to dinner with Russ and his roommate, David, took a rickshaw to a night market, and came back to the hotel to chill out for the night.  Our hotel had free internet so I just used its computers to research classes for next semester, not very exciting.
             The next morning, I got up early for a three hour drive to Ha Long Bay, one of the natural wonders of the world.  The drive there was kind of rough, a good number of the people in the back were more concerned with getting drunk at 9 in the morning while the rest of us were really annoyed with them.  The tour company we booked with was also kind of disorganized; they wouldn’t let us pick our groups for the hotels and they wouldn’t let us pick who we wanted on our boats for the cruise along Ha Long Bay.  All that aside, once we reached the town of Ha Long 
            The next day, we ate breakfast, and saw some more sites along the bay, including a floating school.  The bay was beautiful in the daylight.  With all the fog surrounding he rock islands, it reminded people of the planet in Avatar, but I don’t remember why.  Around 11, we left Ha Long Bay, went for another seafood lunch, and drove back to Hanoi  for our flight back to Saigon .  I hung out with Russ, David, and Allie in the airport, where we ate some “instant noodles” that turned out to be Ramen with sketchy pikes of meat.  Our flight was delayed, which was bad because the same bunch of people that had been annoying everyone all trip by being loud and drunk were worse on the plane.  They bought so much alcohol on the plane, they were horrible.  They were loud and disrespectful to everyone.  I ended up switching seats with someone because I couldn’t sit near them anymore.  I have no idea how they didn’t get kicked off the plane.  Allie says flying is still considered pretty luxurious in some countries, and their actions were just disrespectful and probably freaked some passengers out.  If those people acted like that in the US 
            The next morning, I went out to the market with Russ and David for souvenir shopping.  I think my bargaining skills have gotten pretty sharp on this voyage; bargaining is really fun for me and I wish we could do it more in the US Vietnam Cuba  supported Vietnam Saigon  before going back to the ship.
Now we only have two days at sea until china.  I can’t believe how fast this whole semester is going.  I do not want this to end.
