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Fansipan is a mountain in Vietnam, the highest in Indochina, at 3 143 m. It
is located in the Lao Cai province in Northwest Vietnam. Fansipan is dubbed "the
Roof of Indochina"; it is to be approved as one of the very few e cotourist spots
of Vietnam, with about 2,024 floral varieties and 327 faunal species. The
topography of Fansipan is varied. Muong Hoa Valley, at the lowest altitude
(950-1,000m), is created by a narrow strip of land at the base on the east side
of the mountain.
Geologists say the Hoang Lien Mountain Range, with Fansipan as its highest
peak, did not emerge in the mountainous North West of Vietnam until the Neozoic
period (circ. 100 million years ago). Fansipan, a rough pronunciation of the
local name "Hua Xi Pan" means "the tottery giant rock". The French came to
Vietnam and in 1905 planted a landmark telling Fansipan's height of 3,143m and
branded it "the Roof of Indochina". Very few people climbed to the top of
Fansipan at the time. Then came the long years of war and Fansipan was left
deserted for hunting and savaging. The trail blazed by the French was quickly
overgrown by the underbrush.
It takes six or seven days to reach the 3,143m summit, the highest peak of
the Indochina Peninsula.
In 1991, Nguyen Thien Hung, an army man returned to the district town and
decided to conquer Fansipan. Only on the 13th attempt did Hung, with an H'Mong
boy as his guide, conquer the high peak by following the f ootsteps of the
mountain goats. Scaling the height was meant to satisfy his eager will and
aspiration to conquer the mountain without expecting that his name would be put
down in the travel guidebook. After that the Sapa Tourism Agency started a new
package tour there. It seemed the Fansipan Tour was meant only for those who
wished to test their muscular power.
The summit of Fansipan is accessible all year round, but the best time to
make the ascent is from mid-October to mid-November, and again in March.
Foreigners like best to book Fansipan tours between October and December, as
this period is more often than not free from the heavy rains that obstruct the
jaunt. But the Vietnamese prefer their tours to the peak of the mountain from
February to April, as it is not so cold then. However, the best time for the
trek to the mountain is from the end of February to the start of March, when the
flowers all flourish and the climbers may behold the carpets of brilliant
blossoms, violets and orchids, rhododendrons and aglaias
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