Its  growing popularity and developing hospitality might make it a  runaway  success, which at least one visitor hopes won't spoil its  tropical  perfection and laid-back atmosphere.

Reporting  from Phu Quoc, Vietnam —
During  the four years I lived in Hanoi,  where I was The Times' bureau chief in  the late 1990s, I did a pretty  good job of getting around Vietnam and  exploring new places, from Can  Tho in the southern Mekong Delta to Sapa  on the northern border with  China. But I missed Phu Quoc,  Vietnam's largest island. So did most  people. Unless you were a  backpacker looking for a cheap beach hotel,  there wasn't much reason to  go.
Fast forward to 2010. Phu Quoc,  once known mainly for its  pungent fish sauce and wartime history, is  the hottest new tourist  destination in Vietnam, a slice of tropical  perfection with mile after  mile of wide, uncrowded beaches, dense  jungle, virgin rain forests and a  lazy, laid-back atmosphere that  reminds a visitor of what Phuket,  Thailand, was like a generation ago.
Chuck  Searcy, a former U.S.  serviceman who lives in Vietnam and runs  humanitarian programs,  remembers his only visit to Phu Quoc about a  dozen years ago. His plane  circled the airport three times to scare  cows off the runway, and the  island had only three hotels, "all  decidedly 'no star,' to put it  kindly." Said Searcy: "I'm sure I  wouldn't recognize the place today."
A  few weeks ago, my wife,  Sandy, and I hopped onto one of the nine daily  turboprop flights  Vietnam Airlines runs from Ho Chi Minh City (formerly  Saigon) to Phu  Quoc. No cows impeded our arrival. Our taxi took us  through the dusty  town of Duong Dong and down a dirt road lined with  little patio  restaurants; a cemetery, crammed between two bars; and a  bamboo hut  that served as a laundry. Although I had a moment of doubt,  our driver  insisted that just ahead lay La Veranda, Phu Quoc's first  five-star  resort.
The jungle parted, and we caught a glimpse  of the  Gulf of Thailand and Long Beach, which stretches for 12 miles.  And in a  waterside clearing lush with flowers and foliage stood La  Veranda, a  48-room boutique hotel and spa with two restaurants. It  seemed as  though we had stumbled onto a French colonial plantation, its  large  louvered windows open to the sea, its deep balconies, high  ceilings and  overhead fans reminiscent of a bygone era.
That, in  fact, is  exactly what the owner, Catherine Gerbet, had in mind when she  designed  the hotel, now 4 years old. A French Vietnamese, she was born  in  Cambodia, raised in Hong Kong and lived in Saigon. Her goal was to   build something that captured her childhood memories of Asia, and she   didn't miss a touch. I wouldn't have blinked had I seen Graham Greene   sipping a martini while sitting in one of the bar's wicker chairs.
I   asked La Veranda's Swiss general manager, Nicolas Josi, what attracted   foreigners to Phu Quoc and what they did when they got here.
"First,   the island is just being discovered. It still feels authentic," Josi   said. "You won't, for instance, find a building over two stories. A lot   of our guests are tourists who have been hurrying about in Ho Chi Minh   City and Hue and Hanoi. They take a break here to recharge their   batteries. What they like to do here is often nothing, just relax."
Phu  Quoc,  a triangle-shaped island just 30 miles long, is closer to  Cambodia than  to the Vietnamese mainland. Settled in the 17th century  by Vietnamese  and Chinese farmers and fishermen, it was occupied in  1869 by French  colonialists who built rubber and coconut plantations.  The island was so  remote for so long that when Saigon fell to Communist  troops in April  1975, Phu Quoc's 10,000 people hardly seemed to notice  and went quietly  about their daily business, catching squid and  tending their pepper  vines.
But the island's isolation did not  shelter it from war.  Vietnam's largest prisoner-of-war camp was here,  near the U.S. naval  base at An Thoi on the southern tip of the island.  Pol Pot's murderous  Khmer Rouge guerrillas invaded and briefly occupied  the island after  Saigon's fall, and some of the non-Communist South  Vietnamese forced out  of the cities by Vietnam's harsh, new rulers were  resettled here and  told to become farmers.
"My parents were  teachers. They didn't  know how to grow turnips. We nearly starved,"  said Hoi Trinh, a  Vietnamese Australian lawyer, who arrived here with  his family in 1977  as a 7-year-old. To help support his family he sold  watermelon seeds on  Long Beach, not far from where La Veranda now  stands. When he and his  father were caught trying to flee by boat to  Malaysia, young Trinh was  sentenced to a month in Prison No. 7.
It  was a full day before my  wife and I emerged from La Veranda. We were  massaged, fed, pampered at  the swimming pool and on the beach by a  locally recruited and trained  staff whose eagerness to please and  unfailing politeness more than  compensated for its struggle with  foreign languages. We checked out a  trip to Ganh Dau on the northwest  coast: Scuba diving, including  transportation, lunch and equipment, was  $80 for the day; snorkeling,  $25. The water, we were told, was 88  degrees with a visibility of 30  feet. Instead we hired a taxi with a  driver who spoke some English and  set out to explore the island. The  cost for three hours would be $30.
Scores  of beachside  bungalow-style hotels with open-air bars and restaurants  were tucked  unobtrusively among clusters of palms on the coastal road  south. Some  charged as little as $25 a night. French road markers along  the way  showed the distance to the next village. Hammocks, often  occupied, hung  in tree-shaded front yards. Peppercorns lay drying on  faded blue  tarpaulins, a reminder that Vietnam is among the world's  largest  exporters of pepper. Sometimes we caught a whiff of nuoc mam  fish  sauce, which the Vietnamese use to flavor almost every dish. We  stopped  at one of the many pearl farms, where a clerk showed us a $9,000   necklace. Happily, Sandy settled on a pair of $70 earrings.
The   fishing boats had long since pulled out of An Thoi and other little   ports, having left at dawn not to return until sunset, by the time we   reached Coconut Prison. It was built by the colonialists in 1953, a year   before Vietnam defeated France at Dien Bien Phu. The Americans and   their South Vietnamese allies took over the 1,000-acre site in 1967, and   for a time it held 40,000 North Vietnamese prisoners of war. More than   4,000 were said to have died there.
Guard towers still loom  over  rows of windowless tin POW barracks that are surrounded by coils  of  concertina wire. Except for an occasional tourist, the place was  silent  and empty. The small nearby museum (admission is 3,000 dong,  about 16  cents) is not for the faint-hearted, with its scenes of  torture depicted  by chillingly real life-size mannequins.
The  grimness of the  place seemed incompatible with the tranquility of Phu  Quoc, and leaves  one thankful that Vietnam has known 35 years of peace.  And what changes  that peace has wrought. Less than three decades ago  Vietnam had no  tourist industry, and Vietnamese were forbidden to speak  or socialize  with foreigners.
Today, Vietnam attracts nearly 4  million  tourists a year and luxury resorts — which numbered one when  the  five-star Furama opened on Da Nang's China Beach in the mid-1990s —   reach up the coastline from Vung Tau, south of Ho Chi Minh City, to   Thanh Hoa, near the former demilitarized zone.
With tourism   creating jobs and spreading wealth, Phu Quoc's population has surged to   70,000, even though the northern part of the island, home to a large   national park, is mostly uninhabited. Phu Quoc absorbs well the   50,000-plus visitors it draws annually, but changes are afoot.
The  government has a master plan to develop Phu Quoc  into a high-quality  eco-tourism destination by 2020, when it aims to  attract 2.3 million  visitors a year. An international airport is  scheduled to open in two  years to accommodate nonstop flights from  Japan, Thailand, Singapore  and Hong Kong. Roads and bridges are being  rebuilt and a deep-water  port is being dug at An Thoi. Life may never be  the same for an island  that now uses generators to produce much of its  electricity and gets  its water from wells.
Driving north from An  Thoi at sunset,  watching the fishing boats return to port, we passed  Duong Dong's night  market, where $2 gets you a fresh seafood dinner, and  got out of the  taxi to walk on a deserted beach the last mile to La  Veranda. Phu Quoc,   I hoped that warm, star-lit night, would not lose its character in the   tidal wave of coming development, because even by the toughest of   standards, it's just about perfect as it is.
Source: Chicago  Tribune
Nhãn: Asia Travel
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