The Vinh Moc tunnels

Sometimes in 1965 the US bombers began attacking a village located on the coast. The villagers initially built some air raid shelters but, when raids became too aggressive, they moved the whole village population (some 270 people) underground, in a network of tunnels, family rooms and common use rooms. They lived there until 1972.

The visit took us in 2 different tunnels on 2 different levels. Very hot and humid inside, despite being winter!

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“Sleeping” inside

We arrived in Hoi An tonight. After the first 1300km the bike still runs strong. I adjusted once the rear suspension to make it harder. The front feels really tight and precise, especially on bumps. The side stand broke in Hanoi just before leaving. Whatever welding I did to extend it’s length wasn’t that good.

The bar still wobbles when braking, but not as much after I retrued the disc. And today, after idling for a long time, the coolant light came on. I must check level tomorrow or probably get some mud off the radiator. On top of that, I managed to crack the right pannier along a welding by dropping the bike on the side in a gas station.

All manageable problems.

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The Phong Nha cave

It is located in the Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park. To get inside the cave, you take a boat and cruise the river for about 30 minutes. Then follow the river under a rock and from there continue through the mountain.

Even though we only went for about 1500m out of it’s total length of 7.8kms, the feeling was very unique. Just like in Tomb Rider, only for real!

The boat trip ended at an underground shore. From there we continued afoot through the corridors.

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