Hai Van Pass is one of the most
scenic hillside roads in Vietnam. When braving the steep winding roads of a
paved mountain pass, you will have a chance to discover peace, quiet and
history along the way...
On the north – south nation highway, Hai Van Pass is an impressive landscape. It is like a giant dragon, lying on Highway 1 on the border between Thua Thien-Hue Province and Danang City.This is the highest pass in Vietnam (500m above sea level). This rugged pass is the final section of the Truong Son Range stretching to the sea. Hai Van means "Sea Clouds", since the peak of the mountain is in the clouds while its foot is close to the sea. In the past, Hai Van Pass was known as the Thuan Hoa and Quang Nam frontier. In the early 14th century (11306), Che Man, a king from Cham Pa, offered two mountainous administrative units of O and Ri as engagement gifts to Princess Huyen Tran, daughter of King Tran Nhan Tong. On his way to see off the Princess in the Quang area in a Summer sunny noon, the King and his entourage were on horse back for almost half a day but could not reach the top of the pass. Facing upwards, the King saw a rampart of mountains in dim clouds, and at the foot of the pass, an immense ocean, of waves. Though sorry for his daughter's difficult journey, the king was comforted by the closer ties between the two nations.
Whenever one goes through Hai Van
Pass, two feelings are experienced: amazement at passing through the clouds and
fear when seeing the dangerous bends of the road. After climbing through
several hair-pin curves for close to an hour, you reach the crest of the Hai
Van Pass. Here, if the weather affords it (which it often doesn't), there are
views to both the North and the South. The pass forms an obvious boundary
between North and South Vietnam, and if proof were needed, you need look no
further than the fortifications built by the French and then later used by the
South Vietnamese and the Americans. You will of course want to stop here if you
make this trip, but be warned that you will have to fight off a large band of
souvenir and snack sellers who are among the most aggressive I encountered
during the whole trip.
With sudden curves and blind
corners, Hai Van Pass is likened to an arrogant but beautiful girl challenging
drivers' skills. Hai Van is considered to be the largest frontier post in
Vietnam. The name “De Nhat Hung Quan”, meaning the most colossal frontier post,
is engraved on an incense burner in Thai Temple.
On a journey through the land,
Hai Van is always an attractive landscape, full of perilous obstacles and is
the last spur of the Truong Son Range reaching to the sea. On the top of the
pass are the vestiges of long ago, a fortified gateway. The gate facing to Thua
Thien-Hue Province is inscribed with the three words “Hai Van Quan” and the
other gate looking down on Quang Nam province is engraved “the most grandiose
gateway in the world”. The entrance to Hai Van Quan looks like the entrance to
an old citadel with its stone structures. Time, war, and neglect has taken its
toll on Hai Van Quan, as it sits today in near ruins. The old story is only a
memory, old vestiges covered with green moss, among vast spaces vast of plants and
trees, tourists are filled with the emotions of the past.
The most impressive about the
journey is the sense of isolation you feel as you move further along. There is
a strange delight about the desolate conditions, a seemingly unbroken asphalt
road that cuts through a mass of forest. Below you, the green trees contrast
with the breaking waves in the blue sea. And herein lies the beauty of Hai Van.
While many rave about the charm of the Bao Loc mountain pass, the road is
crowded with people and villages nestled along the way. But just as
civilisation characterises the allure of Bao Loc, Hai Van’s beauty is closely
connected to nature and its lack of population.
Lining the peak of the mountain
is the immense abyss dotted with the light and dark green colours of the trees.
The scene is capped off with fanciful clouds flying across the sky. The area is
a perfect place to have a cup of coffee and contemplate the scene, looking over
Hai Van as if from the heavens as the trees blow with the wind.
Hai Van is well know for its
dangerous roads, and accident warning boards carefully appear regularly along
the side. It’s a surprising sight to see the animation and modernity at the
peak as foreign visitors buzzed about buying souvenirs. Those who do not make
it to the peak would have a hard time believing there was such a busy trading
and modern scene, as foreign women made their way up the rough staircase at the
Hai Van Quan ancient vestige to take photos.
Whatever endowed by nature, time
by time and by hands of man will be something of humanitarian values. Coming to
Hai Van is to come to the sanction of two land, to satisfy the peak-conquering
philosophy, to mix ourselves in to echo of heroic songs of Vietnamese ancients
when they went to find new lands to be emotional to prolong past of the Center
region where suffering a lot of losses in the course of finding and protecting
the nation.
Hai Van Pass will satisfy your
desire to conquer high peaks and remind
you of the glorious past of the Viet people. Moreover, from the pass, on nice
days, visitors can enjoy the whole vista of Danang, the Tien Sa seaport, Son
Tra Peninsula, Cu Lao Cham Island and long sandy beaches.
The 21km that stretch over the
Hai Van mountain pass may sound like a challenging journey, but after having
done, it is certainly that you will find it is one worth taking.
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