Discover the Thrills of Vietnam’s Ha Giang Loop: A Guide to the Ultimate Motorcycle Adventure
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EBS1’s World Theme Travel launches a new journey along Vietnam’s rugged, jaw-dropping mountain roads. The four-part series Heart-Pounding Vietnam Mountain Village Trekking opens with the Ha Giang Loop — a name that sparks curiosity and promises a mix of sheer cliffs, deep gorges, remote highland villages, and the everyday lives of ethnic minority communities.

The first episode, The Devil’s Pass, Ha Giang Loop, airs on the 20th and begins in Tuyên Quang, at Vietnam’s northern edge. Famous among motorbike travelers worldwide, the Ha Giang Loop traces rough ridgelines, carved gorges and twisting mountain roads. Travel writer Lee Chan-bin rides the route to soak up northern Vietnam’s raw beauty and to peek into the mountain hamlets that many tourists otherwise just pass by.
The day starts with a simple, local breakfast. Before setting off, the crew shares bun rieu — a tangy, slightly spicy noodle soup (often made with crab and tomato) that jolts you awake. That warm bowl is more than food; it’s the first frame of local life. The show lingers on these small table moments, choosing people’s routines over instant panoramic gratification.
Next up is Ma Pi Leng Pass, the Loop’s headline stretch. Connecting Dong Van and Meo Vac, this road skirts towering karst gorges and vertigo-inducing cliffs. Riding the switchbacks, you quickly understand why global riders keep this on their bucket lists. From a café perched at 1,250 m (4,101 ft), the gorge view intensifies both the tight-focus adrenaline of the narrow road and the sudden, freeing thrill when the landscape opens wide.
The episode doesn’t stop at views. After crossing dozens of peaks, the team reaches Lang Da Chua village and meets a newlywed couple working the fields. They’re invited into a traditional blessing ritual for pregnancy and childbirth. Family members gather, perform the rite and share local rice wine — a scene that brings village culture wonderfully close. It might feel unfamiliar, but the ritual’s communal warmth —Everyone showing up to bless one life—stays with you.
In Lang Mong village, a different side of mountain life unfolds. Neighbors work the fields together, eat communal meals and shape their days around shared labor. To someone used to the city’s pace, this rhythm can seem slow or rough. But the everyday acts of working and eating side by side reveal long-standing bonds and a comforting communal order. The program slows down to watch that way of life, not just to admire a postcard landscape.
The Nho Que River, another Ha Giang highlight, also appears in the episode. The river below Ma Pi Leng Pass offers two very different moods: the view from above and the one you get on the water. A boat ride through the gorge delivers scenes so immense they almost defy description. When the engine unexpectedly runs out of fuel, the hiccup becomes part of the adventure — a reminder that unplanned moments can make a trip more vivid.
After leaving the riverbank, the crew camps by the canyon and hangs out with local young people. They share charcoal-grilled barbecue and laugh together, and strangers turn into friends. It’s a neat reminder that travel isn’t just about ticking off sights; it’s about closing the distance between people. Ending a day with a massive canyon and river in view quietly explains why the Ha Giang Loop becomes a lasting memory for so many.
Cliffside mountain roads, highland village life, unexpected customs and the people you meet along the way — World Theme Travel presents the first episode of its four-part Heart-Pounding Vietnam Mountain Village Trekking, The Devil’s Pass, Ha Giang Loop, on the 20th at 8:40 PM.











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