Hạ Long Bay, Vietnam: Pearls, Mist and Dinner by Candlelight

Hạ Long Bay felt mystical from the moment its limestone islands came into view. I spent two nights aboard a traditional junk boat, waking to quiet water, watching floating vendors row alongside and attending an unforgettable candlelit dinner inside a cave. Romantic and visually dramatic, Hạ Long Bay is a place etched in my heart.

A traditional junk surrounded by the limestone formations of Hạ Long Bay.

We began our journey in Hanoi, where French colonial architecture, café culture and grand boulevards remain woven into the fabric of the city. Hanoi was bustling and wonderfully hectic, its streets filled with a continuous stream of motorbikes and scooters. Crossing the road felt like an act of courage, as the traffic seemed to move around you rather than stop for you. We were in Vietnam for a wedding, and after a day and evening in Hanoi, we left the following morning for Hạ Long Bay, where the celebration would unfold.

 The first impression at the harbor was far more practical than poetic. The dock was busy and somewhat chaotic, crowded with traditional junks and cruise boats. Small boats were moored in tight rows, while passengers, crew and luggage moved in every direction. It felt busy, noisy and confusing. But there was excitement in the commotion. Serenity descended as we pulled away from the dock, settling over us like a soft veil as the world opened into a vast, hushed expanse.

 

The limestone islands of Hạ Long Bay emerge through the mist.

The transition from Hanoi’s constant motion to the quiet waters of Hạ Long Bay felt all the more dramatic once we cleared the harbor. Recognized by UNESCO for its extraordinary limestone seascape, the bay gradually unfolded around us as towering formations began to rise from the water. With only twelve guests aboard, the experience felt remarkably intimate. I woke early the next morning and sat alone on deck with my morning tea as mist hovered between the limestone cliffs. During the day, young men rowed alongside offering strands of unusually large, lustrous pearls. I bought a long, opera-length strand that I still own today;one of the most treasured pieces I have ever brought home from a journey.

 The wedding ceremony took place on the deck, but the evening reception was waiting inside one of the bay’s caves. We arrived to find the cavern illuminated by candlelight, with a long table set for an elegant four-course dinner beneath the natural limestone formations. Later, a DJ transformed the cave into a dance floor, the music echoing through the chambers as we celebrated late into the evening. With friends and family gathered beneath the limestone ceiling, candles flickering across the cave walls and music echoing through the chambers, it remains a moment that time has not diminished.

An elegant cave dinner in Hạ Long Bay

Hạ Long Bay Is Calling

Hạ Long Bay invites you to slow down and experience Vietnam from the water—limestone islands emerging through the mist, quiet mornings aboard a traditional junk and evenings shaped by candlelight.

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