Lac de Thac Ba (nord Vietnam)
by JMPe
This discussion is in French, the community’s main language.
Original post
Bonjour,
J'envisage de faire un tour au départ de Hanoi pour découvrir le lac Ba Be et les environs de Cao Bang (en mai 2014).
Pensez-vous qu'il peut-être intéressant de faire une halte au lac de Thac Ba ?
Si oui avez-vous quelques conseils : à quel endroit ? où loger ? que faire sur place ?
Merci beaucoup de votre aide.
Jean Michel.
http://mjm-nosvoyages.blogspot.fr/
http://surlarouteasiatique.blogspot.fr/ : périple de 5 mois en Asie et 3 mois dans l'ouest Américain
Bonjour Jean,
Ca vaut vraiment de la peine de rester 2 nuits à Thac Ba, c'est un endroit magnifique et les locaux sont très sympa. Mais il faut faire comme ceci:
1ère suggestion.
1) Ha Noi-Ba Be 2) Ba Be - Royaume des orchidées (2 nuits chez l'habitant à Ba Be et si vous avez le temps même 3 nuits, excursion en bateau, randonnée en montagne, visite village et l'école). 3) Ba Be-Cao Bang (Nuit chez l'habitant). 4) Cao Bang-Chutes de Ban gioc-Grotte de Nguom Ngao. 5) Cao Bang - Bao Lac (Nuit chez les lolo à Khuoi Khon ou à Coc Xa). 6) Bao Lac - Meo Vac -Dong Van en passant par le col Ma Pi Leng sur la Route du bonheur (vous pouvez également rester 2 nuits, le coin est magnifique). 7) Dong Van - Ha Giang - Thac Ba.
2 è suggestion c'est de faire à l'envers.
3 è suggestion.
Continuer de Ha Giang à Bac Ha ou Sapa.
et ensuite depuis Sapa à Thac Ba come ceci:
http://voyageforum.com/forum/deux_semaines_au_nord_au_centre_vietnam_D6013723-3/
Cordialement et bon voyage.
Ca vaut vraiment de la peine de rester 2 nuits à Thac Ba, c'est un endroit magnifique et les locaux sont très sympa. Mais il faut faire comme ceci:
1ère suggestion.
1) Ha Noi-Ba Be 2) Ba Be - Royaume des orchidées (2 nuits chez l'habitant à Ba Be et si vous avez le temps même 3 nuits, excursion en bateau, randonnée en montagne, visite village et l'école). 3) Ba Be-Cao Bang (Nuit chez l'habitant). 4) Cao Bang-Chutes de Ban gioc-Grotte de Nguom Ngao. 5) Cao Bang - Bao Lac (Nuit chez les lolo à Khuoi Khon ou à Coc Xa). 6) Bao Lac - Meo Vac -Dong Van en passant par le col Ma Pi Leng sur la Route du bonheur (vous pouvez également rester 2 nuits, le coin est magnifique). 7) Dong Van - Ha Giang - Thac Ba.
2 è suggestion c'est de faire à l'envers.
3 è suggestion.
Continuer de Ha Giang à Bac Ha ou Sapa.
et ensuite depuis Sapa à Thac Ba come ceci:
http://voyageforum.com/forum/deux_semaines_au_nord_au_centre_vietnam_D6013723-3/
Cordialement et bon voyage.
Merci beaucoup pour votre réponse.
Je n'aais pas vu le post en cours qui parle de Thac Ba.
Bonne journée.
Jean Michel.
http://mjm-nosvoyages.blogspot.fr/
http://surlarouteasiatique.blogspot.fr/ : périple de 5 mois en Asie et 3 mois dans l'ouest Américain
Merci beaucoup pour votre réponse.
Je n'aais pas vu le post en cours qui parle de Thac Ba.
Bonne journée.
Jean Michel.
Bonjour Jean,
C'est tout à fait possible d'aller depuis Sapa à Thac Ba avec le bus mais ca prend du temps Le plus facile est de prendre le bus Sao Viet en couchettes molles qui part de Sapa en direction de Ha Noi via Yen Bai (203 km) pour 5h de route au minimum sans compter le repos en route. Ces bus s'arrêtent en générale à Yen Bai pour un petit repos, toilettes ou pour manger quand c'est l'heure du repas. De Yen Bai il y a 2 solutions pour aller à Thac Ba.
1) Au km 13 après Yen Bai (216km de Sapa), le début du district Yen Binh de la province Yen Bai, vous descendez du bus au carrefour, de l'autre côté du carrefour vous avez une route à gauche qui vous mène vers l'embarcadère de Huong Ly où vous allez prendre le bateau à moteur pour traverser le lac afin de joindre le barrage Electrique de Thac Ba, le premier construit au Viet nam et par les Soviétiques. Ils ont commencé les travaux en 1956 et terminé seulement en 1970. Après 45min en bateau à moteur vous arrivez à l'embarcadère du barrage. Pour les motos taxi, en haut de l'embarcadère il y a un petit bistrot que le mari de la patronne peut vous rendre service afin de vous emmener au Bourd de Thac Ba qui se trouve à 2km du barrage et à 12 km du village Ngoi Tu des Dzao à Pantalon blanc. Le meilleur à faire c'est de lui demander de vous rendre service d'appeler un taxi. Il m'a arrivé de faire ceci. Voilà la première solution.
2) La 2e est allé jusqu'au km 30 après Yen Bai, 10 km avant le district Doan Hung de la province Phu Tho, région rendus célèbre par ces bons pamplemousses. A 30 km de Yen Bai, vous descendez du bus au carrefour Cat Lem, où il y a un grand triangle (233km de SA PA), demandez à un taxi moto de vous emmener au village Ngoi Tu de la commune de Vu Linh qui se trouve à 25km de là (Si vous êtes en moto, prenez la route à gauche, celle de droite est la direction d'Ha Noi).
C'est par cette route qu'on vient dans ce village en voiture depuis Sapa. Ou encore de Sapa-Lao Cai en passant par Luc Yen, district de la province Yen Bai connu pour ces pierres précieuses. Souvent les gens passent par la RN70, mais je vous conseille de passer par Luc Yen, la route est plus longue, plus fatiguant mais le paysage est magnifique, d'ailleurs il y a des homestays à Luc Yen si quelqu'un veut passer une nuit là bas, par contre il ne faut pas s'aventurier dans la forêt de Luc Yen, car, récemment, il pareille qu'ils ont trouvé des traces de pattes des tigres là bas, certains les ont même vu et l'ont entendu.
Aller à Thac Ba de Ha Noi.
Prenez le bus direction de Yen Bai à la station de My Dinh qui se trouve au Sud de la ville de Ha Noi. Descendez au carrefour de Cat Lem. Prenez le bus qui va jusqu'au village Ngoi Tu des Dzao Quan Trang. A l'arrivée demandez M. Thanh.
En moto. Prenez la RN32 jusqu'à Son Tay puis traverser le pont de Trung Ha, arrivée de l'autre côté du pont, prenez la digue à gauche, continuer jusqu'à la bourgade de Phong Chau. Traverser son pont et prenez à gauche pour la direction de Phu Tho, de Phu Tho, rejoignez la RN2 en direction de Doan Hung. Au carrefour de Doan Hung, prenez la route à gauche jusqu'au carrefour de Cat Lem ou il y a un grand triangle et un grand arbre à droite. Prenez celle de droite pour aller à la commune de Vu Linh. En partant de Ha Noi plusieurs fois en moto, j'ai fait une fois 3h30, une fois en 6h...et sinon 4h30. Voilà c'est la route la plus courte et qui évite les villes.
De Ha Giang à Thac Ba. De Ba Be à Thac Ba ce soit quand je fini ce que j'ai à faire je vous explique tout en détaille.
Cordialement.
Bonjour Jean,
C'est tout à fait possible d'aller depuis Sapa à Thac Ba avec le bus mais ca prend du temps Le plus facile est de prendre le bus Sao Viet en couchettes molles qui part de Sapa en direction de Ha Noi via Yen Bai (203 km) pour 5h de route au minimum sans compter le repos en route. Ces bus s'arrêtent en générale à Yen Bai pour un petit repos, toilettes ou pour manger quand c'est l'heure du repas. De Yen Bai il y a 2 solutions pour aller à Thac Ba.
1) Au km 13 après Yen Bai (216km de Sapa), le début du district Yen Binh de la province Yen Bai, vous descendez du bus au carrefour, de l'autre côté du carrefour vous avez une route à gauche qui vous mène vers l'embarcadère de Huong Ly où vous allez prendre le bateau à moteur pour traverser le lac afin de joindre le barrage Electrique de Thac Ba, le premier construit au Viet nam et par les Soviétiques. Ils ont commencé les travaux en 1956 et terminé seulement en 1970. Après 45min en bateau à moteur vous arrivez à l'embarcadère du barrage. Pour les motos taxi, en haut de l'embarcadère il y a un petit bistrot que le mari de la patronne peut vous rendre service afin de vous emmener au Bourd de Thac Ba qui se trouve à 2km du barrage et à 12 km du village Ngoi Tu des Dzao à Pantalon blanc. Le meilleur à faire c'est de lui demander de vous rendre service d'appeler un taxi. Il m'a arrivé de faire ceci. Voilà la première solution.
2) La 2e est allé jusqu'au km 30 après Yen Bai, 10 km avant le district Doan Hung de la province Phu Tho, région rendus célèbre par ces bons pamplemousses. A 30 km de Yen Bai, vous descendez du bus au carrefour Cat Lem, où il y a un grand triangle (233km de SA PA), demandez à un taxi moto de vous emmener au village Ngoi Tu de la commune de Vu Linh qui se trouve à 25km de là (Si vous êtes en moto, prenez la route à gauche, celle de droite est la direction d'Ha Noi).
C'est par cette route qu'on vient dans ce village en voiture depuis Sapa. Ou encore de Sapa-Lao Cai en passant par Luc Yen, district de la province Yen Bai connu pour ces pierres précieuses. Souvent les gens passent par la RN70, mais je vous conseille de passer par Luc Yen, la route est plus longue, plus fatiguant mais le paysage est magnifique, d'ailleurs il y a des homestays à Luc Yen si quelqu'un veut passer une nuit là bas, par contre il ne faut pas s'aventurier dans la forêt de Luc Yen, car, récemment, il pareille qu'ils ont trouvé des traces de pattes des tigres là bas, certains les ont même vu et l'ont entendu.
Aller à Thac Ba de Ha Noi.
Prenez le bus direction de Yen Bai à la station de My Dinh qui se trouve au Sud de la ville de Ha Noi. Descendez au carrefour de Cat Lem. Prenez le bus qui va jusqu'au village Ngoi Tu des Dzao Quan Trang. A l'arrivée demandez M. Thanh.
En moto. Prenez la RN32 jusqu'à Son Tay puis traverser le pont de Trung Ha, arrivée de l'autre côté du pont, prenez la digue à gauche, continuer jusqu'à la bourgade de Phong Chau. Traverser son pont et prenez à gauche pour la direction de Phu Tho, de Phu Tho, rejoignez la RN2 en direction de Doan Hung. Au carrefour de Doan Hung, prenez la route à gauche jusqu'au carrefour de Cat Lem ou il y a un grand triangle et un grand arbre à droite. Prenez celle de droite pour aller à la commune de Vu Linh. En partant de Ha Noi plusieurs fois en moto, j'ai fait une fois 3h30, une fois en 6h...et sinon 4h30. Voilà c'est la route la plus courte et qui évite les villes.
De Ha Giang à Thac Ba. De Ba Be à Thac Ba ce soit quand je fini ce que j'ai à faire je vous explique tout en détaille.
Cordialement.
Merci beaucoup pour toutes ces infos.
Je crois que nous viendrons de Hanoi.
Pouvez-vous me dire ce qu'il y à faire sur place pour 1 journée.
Est-il facile d'organiser une mini-croisière sur le lac ? Est-ce intéressant ?
Merci pour tout.
Jean Michel.
http://mjm-nosvoyages.blogspot.fr/
http://surlarouteasiatique.blogspot.fr/ : périple de 5 mois en Asie et 3 mois dans l'ouest Américain
Bonjour Jean,
Le plus simple pour aller à Thac Ba c'est depuis Ha Noi, suivez bien mes conseils. Au sujet de la croisière et des visites dans le coin. C'est facile, il suffit de demander à la famille chez qui vous logez. 5min après, le mec revient avec un bidon de mazout et départ. Tandis pour les visites autour c'est plutôt la découverte de la vie en campagne des ethnies comme les Dzao, Tay et Cao Lan (ou San Chay à 5km), rando, marche, non loin de la il y a le premier barrage construit au Viet Nam et par les Soviétiques (12km). Juste à côté de ce village Ngoi Tu, il y a La vie de Vu Linh qui appartient à un métisse franco-vietnamien *Fredo Binh* que je suis allé plusieurs fois aussi, mais c'est bien pour aller boire un verre.
Le plus simple pour aller à Thac Ba c'est depuis Ha Noi, suivez bien mes conseils. Au sujet de la croisière et des visites dans le coin. C'est facile, il suffit de demander à la famille chez qui vous logez. 5min après, le mec revient avec un bidon de mazout et départ. Tandis pour les visites autour c'est plutôt la découverte de la vie en campagne des ethnies comme les Dzao, Tay et Cao Lan (ou San Chay à 5km), rando, marche, non loin de la il y a le premier barrage construit au Viet Nam et par les Soviétiques (12km). Juste à côté de ce village Ngoi Tu, il y a La vie de Vu Linh qui appartient à un métisse franco-vietnamien *Fredo Binh* que je suis allé plusieurs fois aussi, mais c'est bien pour aller boire un verre.
Bonjour,
Combien de temps en bus : Hanoi - Thac Ba - Ba Be - Vu Linh ?
Nous avons 10 jours , arrivée hanoi le 29 avril et départ le 8 mai . sachant que nous voulons 2 jours baie d'halong et 1/2jours hanoi ?
merci de vos infos,
Audrey
Combien de temps en bus : Hanoi - Thac Ba - Ba Be - Vu Linh ?
Nous avons 10 jours , arrivée hanoi le 29 avril et départ le 8 mai . sachant que nous voulons 2 jours baie d'halong et 1/2jours hanoi ?
merci de vos infos,
Audrey
Ca vaut vraiment de la peine de rester 2 nuits à Thac Ba, c'est un endroit magnifique et les locaux sont très sympa.
Je suis ravie 😏😏de lire çà, j'ai inclu à mon circuit une halte de 2 jours à Tac Ba!
Je suis ravie 😏😏de lire çà, j'ai inclu à mon circuit une halte de 2 jours à Tac Ba!
Pour bien aimer un pays il faut le manger, le boire et l’entendre chanter. (Michel Déon)
Nous y sommes passé la semaine dernière!
Beau lac sur lequel nous avons fait de la barque.
Pour le logement , préférer les chambres chez l'habitant à l'horrible soit dit écologe La Vie Viu Linh. Tout y est laissé à vau-l'eau, les tarifs sont exorbitants, le site est sale, très sale et le service inexistant le tout pour 40 dollars la nuit😕.
Pour le logement , préférer les chambres chez l'habitant à l'horrible soit dit écologe La Vie Viu Linh. Tout y est laissé à vau-l'eau, les tarifs sont exorbitants, le site est sale, très sale et le service inexistant le tout pour 40 dollars la nuit😕.
Pour bien aimer un pays il faut le manger, le boire et l’entendre chanter. (Michel Déon)
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hi
I’ll be on a cruise on January 11, 2027. We’re stopping in Ho Chi Minh City (Phu My).
I’d love to see something other than the city—anyone have recommendations or a guide for 6-8 people with pickup at the port?
I’d really like to visit some rice paddies.
I’ll be on a cruise on January 11, 2027. We’re stopping in Ho Chi Minh City (Phu My).
I’d love to see something other than the city—anyone have recommendations or a guide for 6-8 people with pickup at the port?
I’d really like to visit some rice paddies.
Hi there,
I’m spending 4 days in Kuala Lumpur.
Could you let me know what’s absolutely worth visiting and what’s not really worth the effort?
Any suggested itinerary?
Apart from Batu Caves, I don’t have many ideas...
I’m traveling with my partner and our 16-year-old son.
Thanks in advance for your feedback.
I’m spending 4 days in Kuala Lumpur.
Could you let me know what’s absolutely worth visiting and what’s not really worth the effort?
Any suggested itinerary?
Apart from Batu Caves, I don’t have many ideas...
I’m traveling with my partner and our 16-year-old son.
Thanks in advance for your feedback.
Hi,
After our trip to China, we want to spend a week in the Philippines for some beach time and snorkeling.
We're looking for the best spot to settle in—nice beaches, great marine life, and short transfer times.
Thanks for your suggestions!
Hi there,
Does anyone know of a private transfer or taxi company that organizes transfers from the Sukhothai area to Chiang Mai? Our routes are Sukhothai-Lampang, Lampang-Chom Thong, and Chom Thong-Chiang Mai. My searches on Google Maps, 12Go, and others haven’t turned up much...
For our Bangkok-Sukhothai trips, I use a company I’ve already tried, but they don’t have a fleet available from Sukhothai and have to go through third-party companies—which, understandably, take their commission. This nearly doubles the prices...
There are four of us, and we’re not traveling light, so a minibus isn’t an option. ;-)
Thanks for your tips! DrSnuggle
Does anyone know of a private transfer or taxi company that organizes transfers from the Sukhothai area to Chiang Mai? Our routes are Sukhothai-Lampang, Lampang-Chom Thong, and Chom Thong-Chiang Mai. My searches on Google Maps, 12Go, and others haven’t turned up much...
For our Bangkok-Sukhothai trips, I use a company I’ve already tried, but they don’t have a fleet available from Sukhothai and have to go through third-party companies—which, understandably, take their commission. This nearly doubles the prices...
There are four of us, and we’re not traveling light, so a minibus isn’t an option. ;-)
Thanks for your tips! DrSnuggle
Hello,
While traveling in Thailand, I’m looking for a Buddhist kumlai reed bracelet.
Does anyone know where I can find one?
In Bangkok, I visited a few temples but didn’t see any in the nearby shops.
If you have any ideas, I’d love to hear them! Have a great day! :-)
Hi there
My trip’s coming up, and I’m having a bit of trouble with three bus/minivan routes. Usually, I find everything at this time of year, but this time—yikes!
Sandakan → Sepilok: No app for this one—you just hop on bus #14 at the local terminal (pay cash on board). But where do I catch it, and where’s the stop??
Sandakan → Semporna: From what I’ve heard, it’s the Sida Express company (great name, right? 😄). Can’t book online, but apparently, you *have* to because there’s only one bus at 8 AM. Where do I board, and where does it drop me off?
Semporna → Tawau: Found this via AI—is it legit? No online booking, as far as I can tell. Minivans leave from a stop in the Jalan Hospital area, near the Milimewa supermarket, supposedly???? And when you arrive, does it drop you at **Sabindo Square** in Tawau?????
Thanks for any tips—I’m stuck!
My trip’s coming up, and I’m having a bit of trouble with three bus/minivan routes. Usually, I find everything at this time of year, but this time—yikes!
Sandakan → Sepilok: No app for this one—you just hop on bus #14 at the local terminal (pay cash on board). But where do I catch it, and where’s the stop??
Sandakan → Semporna: From what I’ve heard, it’s the Sida Express company (great name, right? 😄). Can’t book online, but apparently, you *have* to because there’s only one bus at 8 AM. Where do I board, and where does it drop me off?
Semporna → Tawau: Found this via AI—is it legit? No online booking, as far as I can tell. Minivans leave from a stop in the Jalan Hospital area, near the Milimewa supermarket, supposedly???? And when you arrive, does it drop you at **Sabindo Square** in Tawau?????
Thanks for any tips—I’m stuck!
Hi there,
we’ll be in Mai Chau in June and we’re thinking of heading to Sapa, but first spending a few days in Bac Ha to do some hiking and explore the area.
Is this a good idea for those who’ve been there?
How do you get there?
Thanks for your feedback.
Looking forward to hearing from you.
Cédric.
Hi everyone. As I’m planning my trip for next winter, I’m looking for hotel suggestions in Camotes, Bantayan, Malapascua, Bohol, and Siquijor. The ones I had in mind seem to be fully booked (unless it’s too early?). For those familiar with the area, is it easy to find accommodations on the spot in January/February? I’m specifically looking for hotels with a pool, beachfront, air conditioning, and easy scooter rental nearby. Thanks for your tips!
Hi there,
I’m planning an itinerary and would love some feedback on whether it’s doable and if the number of days per destination is enough—or too much. I was also debating whether to add an extra night on an island or spend an extra night in Kampot to visit Kep or Battambang.
March 23: Arrival in Phnom Penh in the morning March 24: Phnom Penh March 25: Phnom Penh March 26: Depart for Kampot March 27: Kampot March 28: Depart for Battambang March 29: Battambang March 30: Tonlé SAP to Siem Reap March 31: Siem Reap April 1: Siem Reap April 2: Siem Reap April 3: Siem Reap April 4: Siem Reap April 5: Departure
Thanks for any suggestions or help!
March 23: Arrival in Phnom Penh in the morning March 24: Phnom Penh March 25: Phnom Penh March 26: Depart for Kampot March 27: Kampot March 28: Depart for Battambang March 29: Battambang March 30: Tonlé SAP to Siem Reap March 31: Siem Reap April 1: Siem Reap April 2: Siem Reap April 3: Siem Reap April 4: Siem Reap April 5: Departure
Thanks for any suggestions or help!
Hi there,
Yesterday in the Thailand section, 100% of the new threads were just about beach destinations 😕...
So here’s the counterattack in the form of this photo thread, dedicated solely to the countryside: the locals, their livestock, fields, farms, rice paddies, small rivers, and agricultural machinery. If you’ve got any pictures that fit these categories, feel free to add them!
Comments welcome.
For each photo, I’ll (or you can) indicate the area where it was taken.
Kanchanaburi:
Kanchanaburi:
Sri Chiangmai:
Soppong:
Tha Wang Pha:
Kanchanaburi:

Kanchanaburi:

Sri Chiangmai:

Soppong:

Tha Wang Pha:

🙂 Hi everyone!
Hope you're all doing well! It's been a while since I last traveled, but I'm finally heading out again soon!
For those familiar with SOUTHEAST ASIA, I'm planning to leave in mid-June (with the trip ending at the latest in November), and I don’t have a precise idea of exact places or itineraries yet. The thing is, this period is usually the rainy season...
Any advice? I was thinking of Malaysia or Indonesia, like Sulawesi, for example (all countries and islands in Southeast Asia interest me except Bali).
Any recommendations? I’m doing my research online, but if anyone here has the time and knowledge, I’d love to hear from you.
Thanks everyone, take care and stay happy! ❤️
Hope you're all doing well! It's been a while since I last traveled, but I'm finally heading out again soon!
For those familiar with SOUTHEAST ASIA, I'm planning to leave in mid-June (with the trip ending at the latest in November), and I don’t have a precise idea of exact places or itineraries yet. The thing is, this period is usually the rainy season...
Any advice? I was thinking of Malaysia or Indonesia, like Sulawesi, for example (all countries and islands in Southeast Asia interest me except Bali).
Any recommendations? I’m doing my research online, but if anyone here has the time and knowledge, I’d love to hear from you.
Thanks everyone, take care and stay happy! ❤️
Hi there,
My partner and I are planning a trip to Indonesia in September-October 2026. It’ll be our first time in Asia, and we’re thinking of hitting the classic spots in East Java and Bali, then wrapping up with a cruise around Komodo for some snorkeling/diving. Here’s a rough draft of our itinerary—I’m wondering if it’s doable.
20/09: Flight from Jakarta to Yogyakarta, arrive around noon, afternoon/evening and overnight in Yogyakarta. 21/09: Borobudur 22/09: Prambanan 23/09: Travel to Bromo (Cemoro Lawang) 24/09: Bromo 25/09: Kawa Ijen 26/09: Travel to Bali, overnight in Pemuteran 27/09: Excursion to Pulau Melujan, overnight in Pemuteran 28/09: Travel to Munduk, overnight in Munduk 29/09: Explore Munduk and surroundings, overnight in Munduk 30/09: Explore Munduk and surroundings, overnight in Munduk 01/10: Route to Ubud (via Pura Ulu Danau Bratan, Jatiluwih?), overnight in Ubud 02/10: Explore Ubud and surroundings, overnight in Ubud 03/10: Explore Ubud and surroundings, overnight in Ubud 04/10: Travel to Denpasar, flight to Labuan Bajo, overnight in Labuan Bajo 05/10: Komodo cruise 06/10: Komodo cruise 07/10: Komodo cruise, flight to Denpasar in the late afternoon/evening or overnight in Labuan Bajo. 08/10: Flight to Denpasar (if not taken the day before), afternoon in Jimbaran, overnight near Denpasar 09/10: 10:00 AM flight Denpasar - SIN, overnight in Singapore 10/10: Flight SIN-YQB
Thanks for your thoughts—and for your time!
My partner and I are planning a trip to Indonesia in September-October 2026. It’ll be our first time in Asia, and we’re thinking of hitting the classic spots in East Java and Bali, then wrapping up with a cruise around Komodo for some snorkeling/diving. Here’s a rough draft of our itinerary—I’m wondering if it’s doable.
20/09: Flight from Jakarta to Yogyakarta, arrive around noon, afternoon/evening and overnight in Yogyakarta. 21/09: Borobudur 22/09: Prambanan 23/09: Travel to Bromo (Cemoro Lawang) 24/09: Bromo 25/09: Kawa Ijen 26/09: Travel to Bali, overnight in Pemuteran 27/09: Excursion to Pulau Melujan, overnight in Pemuteran 28/09: Travel to Munduk, overnight in Munduk 29/09: Explore Munduk and surroundings, overnight in Munduk 30/09: Explore Munduk and surroundings, overnight in Munduk 01/10: Route to Ubud (via Pura Ulu Danau Bratan, Jatiluwih?), overnight in Ubud 02/10: Explore Ubud and surroundings, overnight in Ubud 03/10: Explore Ubud and surroundings, overnight in Ubud 04/10: Travel to Denpasar, flight to Labuan Bajo, overnight in Labuan Bajo 05/10: Komodo cruise 06/10: Komodo cruise 07/10: Komodo cruise, flight to Denpasar in the late afternoon/evening or overnight in Labuan Bajo. 08/10: Flight to Denpasar (if not taken the day before), afternoon in Jimbaran, overnight near Denpasar 09/10: 10:00 AM flight Denpasar - SIN, overnight in Singapore 10/10: Flight SIN-YQB
Thanks for your thoughts—and for your time!
Hi everyone,
My girlfriend and I booked our tickets with Saudia Airlines for a trip to Thailand this summer, from July 5th to August 3rd. Given the geopolitical situation in the Middle East, we’re keeping a close eye on the news.
I was wondering if anyone here is in the same situation as us?
• Have you heard anything about possible mass cancellations or if the airline is still maintaining its routes to Asia?
• Are there any travelers who’ve recently returned who could tell us if air corridors have been changed (longer flight times)?
The idea is to know what to expect so we can prepare as best as possible. Thanks for your replies! !
Hi everyone,
Thanks for all your contributions on the forum—they’ve really helped me plan my trip. There are four of us friends heading to Sulawesi for 20 days. Based on all your advice, I’ve put together the following itinerary:
July 30: Makassar – sightseeing July 31: Makassar – sightseeing + overnight bus to Rantepao August 1–7: Tana Toraja with a guide August 7: Tana Toraja to Tentena + visit Tentena August 8: Early departure with a private driver to Ampana, then ferry to the Togian Islands August 9–15: Togian Islands (2 different resorts) August 15: Depart Togian Islands for Luwuk August 16: Flight Luwuk to Makassar August 17: Rammang Rammang August 18: Stroll in Makassar, then return home
Overall, what do you think?
I also have a question about the connection between Tentena and the Togian Islands: Is it doable to leave early in the morning as planned and still be sure not to miss the ferry?
Thanks in advance for your feedback! :)
Thanks for all your contributions on the forum—they’ve really helped me plan my trip. There are four of us friends heading to Sulawesi for 20 days. Based on all your advice, I’ve put together the following itinerary:
July 30: Makassar – sightseeing July 31: Makassar – sightseeing + overnight bus to Rantepao August 1–7: Tana Toraja with a guide August 7: Tana Toraja to Tentena + visit Tentena August 8: Early departure with a private driver to Ampana, then ferry to the Togian Islands August 9–15: Togian Islands (2 different resorts) August 15: Depart Togian Islands for Luwuk August 16: Flight Luwuk to Makassar August 17: Rammang Rammang August 18: Stroll in Makassar, then return home
Overall, what do you think?
I also have a question about the connection between Tentena and the Togian Islands: Is it doable to leave early in the morning as planned and still be sure not to miss the ferry?
Thanks in advance for your feedback! :)
Hi everyone,
I’m currently working on a 30-day itinerary for May/June 2027.
10 days in eastern Java (Malang, Bromo, waterfalls, Meru Beriti Park, Banyuwangi, and Ijen), a short transit in Ubud for a few days, then Flores before heading back to Jakarta.
We’ll spend 15 days in Flores (the classic route: Moni, Bajawa, Riung, Ruteng, ending in Labuan Bajo).
I’d love some firsthand feedback on flights to Maumere or Ende from Bali Denpasar. I know there are no direct routes and that you have to connect through Labuan Bajo or Timor (I think), which isn’t an issue in itself.
But I’ve read here and there that flights to these destinations can be delayed—or worse, canceled—and that it’s better to fly in and out of Labuan Bajo, which isn’t exactly ideal...
Thanks for any tips or experiences you can share!






