hkitalk.net 香港交通資訊網

 找回密碼
 會員申請加入


(B0)香港巴士車務及車廂設備 (B1)香港巴士廣告消息/廣告車行踪 (B2)香港巴士討論 [熱門] [精華] (B3)巴士攝影作品貼圖區 [熱門] [精華] (B3i)即拍即貼 -手機相&翻拍Mon相 (B4)兩岸三地巴士討論 [精華] (B5)外地巴士討論 [精華]

Advertisement


(B6)旅遊巴士及過境巴士 [精華] (B7)巴士特別所見 (B11)巴士精華區 (B22)巴士迷吹水區   (V)私家車,商用車,政府及特種車輛 [精華]
(A6)相片及短片分享/攝影技術 (A10)香港地方討論 [精華] (A11)消費著數及飲食資訊 (A16)建築物機電裝置及設備 (A19)問路專區 (N)其他討論題目  
(F1)交通路線建議 (C2)航空 [精華] (C3)海上交通及船隻 [精華] (D1)公共交通有關商品 [精華]   (Y)hkitalk.net會員福利部 (Z)站務資源中心
(R1)香港鐵路 [精華] (R2)香港電車 [精華] (R3)港外鐵路 [精華]   (O1)omsi討論區 (O2)omsi下載區 (O3)omsi教學及求助區
(M1)小型巴士綜合討論 (M2)小型巴士多媒體分享區 (M3)香港小型巴士字軌表        
 

Advertisement

 

hkitalk.net 香港交通資訊網»論壇 (C) Transport 交通討論區 航空(C2) [Flight Report] UO 566 HK - Nha Trang
開啟左側

[飛行報告] [Flight Report] UO 566 HK - Nha Trang

[複製鏈接]
hkskyline 發表於 2024-1-8 18:29 | 顯示全部樓層 |閱讀模式

                                    Advertisement



31 August 2023

Vietnam is supposedly closer to Hong Kong than Thailand, but we've been programmed to head to Thailand when we look for a tropical paradise. A big reason is because we can enter Thailand visa-free, but Vietnam requires an onerous visit to the dingy consulate in Wanchai's back streets, paying a fortune, and returning a few days later to get my passport back with the visa.

Hence, while I can fly to Thailand at the last minute for a weekend enjoying good food, a spa, and more, I can't do the same for Vietnam. Even now, 9 years after my last visit, despite being able to apply online for an e-visa, it still takes a few business days to process. Vietnam is clearly an outlier compared to other popular Southeast Asian countries for tourists. Cambodia allows on-arrival visa, while Malaysia and Singapore are visa-free for us.

Hong Kong Express has been offering very good specials in recent months. Each time, they pick a few cities to offer rock-bottom fares, so when Nha Trang came up, it was too good to be true. A roundtrip including taxes costed only HKD $913 (USD $115). They're at the tail end of dry season so I was confident I won't be caught up in a whole weekend of rain. Booking almost a full month before departure, it gave me plenty of time to apply for the e-visa, and never visit that dingy consulate again.

I was able to online check-in but it spat out a message at the end to pick up my boarding pass at the airport. I presume they need to check my visa paperwork is in order. So I arrived at the airport more than 90 minutes early to find the check-in line extremely short.

The agent checked my visa print-out in detail and weighed my hand-carry before affixing the cabin-approved label on it. It was slightly overweight but he wasn't so interested in my offer to move some of the weight to my backpack. So off I go!



Security took a bit of time with huge crowds and a more normalized departure schedule compared to before the pandemic. I emerged air-side seeing far more people and almost all shops open again.











With my gate across the Sky Bridge and plenty of time on hand, I did some plane spotting and noticed a special livery Cathay jet!





Last time I came through a few months ago in the evening, the unmanned store was closed. Not today, but defeating the purpose of having an unmanned store is a staff outside watching over the store and helping curious customers on how it works.

Start by scanning your credit card to open the gate. Inside, it was like a typical 7-11 with a mix of toiletries and food, but prices are over the roof, with the frozen dim sum costing double compared to the supermarket.









If you are wondering whether you will be eating the dim sum cold, don't worry. After you check out and exit the store's gate, there is a microwave off to your right.



Hong Kong Express was sold off to Cathay Pacific before the pandemic as the Hainan Airlines group fell under hard times and could barely pay off its debts.





Although I passed the first round of weight check, I was a bit worried they will check again at the gate, Ryanair-style. Luckily, that didn't happen and I boarded with my slightly overweight hand carry but without paying any additional charges!



Seat pitch was very tight and I barely squeezed my legs into the row. Luckily, it's under 2 hours to reach Nha Trang so I hoped for the best. We pushed back a few minutes ahead of schedule at 3:22pm and taxied to the far end of the airport to take off at 3:40pm.



As we departed, the Hong Kong Observatory would imminently change the typhoon warning signal to 3 as Super Typhoon Saola approaches the city. I was a little worried whether my return flight a few days later would be cancelled.











We took off towards the east and turned south just past Disneyland and the infamous Penny's Bay quarantine camp. Even this time last year, COVID patients would be isolated in there.





The weather was actually quite decent and the flight was smooth. With an hour and 44 minutes flight time, I kept busy on my phone since there was no inflight entertainment. The crew came by selling duty-free and I saw some pockets of blue sky over the South China Sea. Hong Kong Express doesn't allow passengers to bring outside food on board so I pre-ordered a bottle of water, which the crew delivered before we took off.



At 5:02pm, we started our descent and I spotted the Vietnamese coastline, albeit with lots of clouds. I was a bit surprised given it is dry season but still hopeful the city's skyline would emerge soon.













My hopes were dashed as we descended into a huge cloud and bounced around a bit. There were walls of rain all around us and the next time I could see land, we were on final approach with the city nowhere to be seen.











We landed at 5:28pm, or an hour earlier local time. The airport looked empty and it was still raining. It took us some time to taxi into a new terminal building to end this short flight. I didn't have much planned for the rest of the day given it's already late afternoon, so I wasn't too entirely up set with the weather. Visiting the night market would be fine with or without rain.





It was only a short walk to the immigration counters after getting off the plane, where a staff held us while the previous flight's passengers were still being processed. With my e-visa printed out and sitting at the front, I was luckily stamped in shortly. Heading downstairs, a few money changers off to the left were all offering 22,000 dong for every USD and the staff were out wooing customers like a big sale. The terminal looked really nice but I hope it'll get busier soon as Vietnam hopes to attract more tourists.



All passengers need to scan their bags at customs and I exited into the open-air arrivals hall. Noticing the bus ticket counter, I headed over asking about the public bus to the city. The staff there spoke decent English and told me the city bus would come in an hour but a shared minibus can take me directly to my hotel for 100k dong.





We arrived at a fairly quiet time of the day, with barely any international arrivals. The bulk of the activity would be late at night when a number of Korean flights arrive. By now, it is only half hour after my plane landed.



The shared minibus was very nice with comfortable seats but we waited until it was full before setting off into the city. The journey was long as there are no highways connecting Cam Ranh with Nha Trang, taking some 40 minutes on a narrow but well-paved road with the rain picking up once again.

More photos on my website : https://www.globalphotos.org/uo566.htm


評分

參與人數 3aPower +8 HugeC +30 收起 理由
vilo + 1 + 10 多謝分享
DIH + 5 + 10 多謝分享
YY487 + 2 + 10 多謝分享

查看全部評分

您需要登錄後才可以回帖 登錄 | 會員申請加入

本版積分規則

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

站規|清理本站Cookies|hkitalk.net 香港交通資訊網

GMT+8, 2024-12-22 12:08

Powered by Discuz! X3.4

Copyright © 2001-2020, Tencent Cloud.

快速回復 返回頂部 返回列表