A fishing boat with nets.
This is just one of the many pagodas we saw all over Saigon.
This woman came up to our boat to sell us coffee. There are many small boats that are floating kitchens, selling everything from coffee to pho.
You can buy lunch straight from the smaller boats. No need to go ashore.
Some boats were selling more than one type of produce.
The man on the smaller boat is selling pineapples to the people on the larger boat.
We watched as this man tossed watermelons through portholes into the hold of the boat.
A small floating convenience market on this woman's boat.
The blue building is a floating cafe and store where we later stopped for drinks.
Notice the produce tied to the pole, advertising what this boat has to sell.
After the floating market we got boated down river and visited a noodle factory. Here you see the rice wrappers drying in the sun.
Just like in the other village, the rice husks are burned as fuel and the rice and water mixture is spread over hot surfaces to cook.
After a demonstration on how to pick up the rice paper and lay it out to dry I am given a chance to try it.
I didn't do too badly for a first try.
The dried rice paper is put through a machine that looks like a paper shredder to make noodles. The width can be changed by changing the blades.
My turn on the monkey bridge.
That's Alex on the bridge.
And that's me.
There was a little cafe where we dropped off the bikes. Let's see what's on the menu -
Grilled rats and snails. Amar bought some rat. I tried it, tasted like pork.
We boated back to Can Tho and then it was a 4 hour van ride back to Saigon.
Petrol station and convenience store on the water.
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