-1

COMMENT 17h ago

Why would you need turn arrow on pavement thou?

2

COMMENT 23h ago

Indeed, but I also observe that the public service roads to the beach in Phu Quoc are so far apart (and obviously you can’t go across the resorts estate) that make these ‘private’ beaches are only easily accessible to people staying in the surrounding hotels.

This is still quite irritating for me who grew up near a mature tourist spot/seaside town where all hotels had to be built to the west of main road running along the beach that make it freely accessible to everyone.

5

COMMENT 1d ago

I went there only twice, 5 years apart, and it’s really a shame what the island has become. Unorganised development and weird aesthetic taste have ruined it.

1

COMMENT 1d ago

I think the resorts could only privatise half way of the access to the beach (where they put their benches and umbrellas). The part of the beach that is close to the water is still public space (but only accessible to people from nearby resorts I guess?). At least that was how I remember the beach at Intercontinental 2-3 years ago.

2

COMMENT 1d ago

Nice. Will try this later, hopefully I wont burn down anything

2

COMMENT 1d ago

Hmm, does this actually work?

1

COMMENT 3d ago

So he’s implying that certain period before Inter was shit eh?

8

COMMENT 3d ago

The noose is also reusable - a green solution

25

COMMENT 3d ago

The third nurse is laughing his/her ass out. And the true victim here is the guy on the other bed. Poor guy was sleeping soundly.

1

COMMENT 3d ago

You can use Indian roti instead of tortilla. I think Indian restaurants are more popular than Mexican in Hanoi. Both roti and spices could be found on Shopee too. Hot sauce perhaps is available at Big C.

5

COMMENT 3d ago

Having something to read and pass the time is not that bad. Having something to serve food on if you don’t have chiếu is also not that bad.

8

COMMENT 4d ago

It’s gonna piss the L/R extremists. For common folks, it’s fairly interchangeable with HCMC more likely to be used in formal setting and vice versa.

1

COMMENT 4d ago

The first Red Deed Redemption

1

COMMENT 4d ago

It’s hard to say with Delta and potential further variants. Singapore hit the 80% fully vaxxed milestone last week and still no further opening in short term at least. Vietnam has fairly large rural population so perhaps the herd immunity could be somewhat achieved when majority or urban population (35-40% of total pop?) is fully vaccinated with decent chunk of the rest getting at least 1 dose.

1

COMMENT 4d ago

Just tell them it stopped working without any reasons (if you haven’t yet)

1

COMMENT 4d ago

Someone is having a KPI to hit

2

COMMENT 4d ago

Good luck outbidding richer countries with that price range. Singapore spent about $1 billion since the development phase to have early access to about 10 mil. doses.

Not only the vaccine, being poor also means lack of investment in healthcare infrastructure (low ratio of beds, doctors and nurses to the population) which eventually lead to excessive death as we’ve seen when the system is over-strained.

2

COMMENT 5d ago

If you have any áo dài, then it would be great. Otherwise, just dress up as any other formal diner. There is no colour preference as well.

2

COMMENT 5d ago

Why the fish looks damn happy???

-5

COMMENT 5d ago

Being poor.

Edit 1: my further clarification is in the reply below

Edit 2: OP posted a link below showing Vietnam’s oil reserve to prove that … Vietnam is a wealthy country??? he locked replying so I just leave this edit here lol

3

COMMENT 5d ago

It’s more like a push to the shoulder thou

1

COMMENT 6d ago

Generally, it’s called “gỏi/nộm đu đủ” (papaya salad). Ingredients vary depending on the chef but the one above have shredded papaya+carrot and some thinly sliced omelette (?) (the base), roasted grated peanut + coriander (topping). The source is a mixture of lime, fish source and sugar to taste.

1

COMMENT 6d ago

I will dm you the link if I could find it.

Btw there are 2 songs were used in the dance, switching point is around 1:05. The second song sounds more like a Vietnamese folk song but I can’t recall the name.