About Cat Ba Island
Cat Ba is an island of approximately 140 sq.km in Halong Bay, northern Vietnam.
It is the largest island in the bay and approximately half of its area is covered by a National Park, which is home to the highly endangered Cat Ba langur.
This golden-headed langur is rarely seen, as fewer than 100 specimens are thought to survive in the wild, although it is the subject of a well-organised conservation programme.
The Park covers both land and marine areas and has a high biodiversity, although it is at risk from too rapid an increase in tourism. Other mammals in the Park include civet cats and oriental giant squirrels.
The island is a national park of Vietnam and was recognized by UNESCO in December 2004 as a Biosphere reserve of the world.
Cat Ba town is attractively situated around a bay teeming with small boats, many of which belong to pearl or shrimp farmers.
The promenade has illuminations and a large fountain which only plays after dark; it is backed by a strip of inexpensive hotels and bars, and is dominated by the wooded limestone hills behind.
It is commonly used as an overnight hotel stop on inexpensive package tours to Halong Bay run by travel agents from Hanoi and can become very busy at weekends and during public holidays.
Many tour operators include an option of trekking in the National Park or canoeing on three-day tours. Shorter tours generally only stay overnight in the small town of Cat Ba (population about 8,000) or on boats moored in Cai Beo bay, about 2km away from Cat Ba town.
Source: Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat_Ba
Other useful websites:
- Catbaadventures.com: www.catbaventures.com
- Cat Ba Langur Conservation Project: www.catbalangur.org/Island.htm
2 Comments:
We loved easting at your restaurant this Christmas. The food was outstanding and kept on coming!
Thank!
Ben Winter
There are only 65 Cat Ba langurs left in the entire world and these are found only in Cat Ba.
To help conserve the animals, please do not purchase anything wild that would have been poached from the forest. Refuse items on menus that have bush meat, which will otherwise fuel poaching.
DO NOT join Cat Ba langur tours. The population, at 65 individuals, is TOO fragile to support tourism and there is currently no structure in place to train or certify guides. If you wish to know more about the langurs, please refer to the conservation center at catbalangur.org
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