For how astonishing it is, Vietnam’s Son Doong Cave has flown under the radar. Just discovered in 2009, this enormous cave meaning “Mountain River Cave” was stumbled upon by a farmer in the deep jungle of central Vietnam. It has depth and scale that will drop your jaw, and some spectacular natural wonders inside, including waterfalls, 10-story stalagmites, enormous ‘cave pearls’ and dense patches of jungle in places where the cave roof has collapsed.

The Permian limestone cave is so large a 747 jumbo jet could fly through most parts of it. An entire New York City block could also occupy the interior, skyscrapers included.

Commercial tours are limited to a few hundred explorers per season, with each explorer spending several thousands of dollars to get a chance to visit this amazing natural wonder.

The trips include trekking, traversing underground rainforests, paddling down otherworldly cave rivers, and scaling ‘The Great Wall of Vietnam’, a 90 meter climb.  All this while experiencing once-in-a-lifetime camping, ⛺️ with meals provided.

If you’ve been looking for a bucket list trip, this could just be it.  Via National Geographic:

“The cave is so large a 747 jumbo jet could fly through most parts of it.

Additionally, an entire New York City block could also occupy the interior, skyscrapers included. “


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6 Comments

  1. Pingback: Bear Markets, Crypto Crash, Top Festivals, Putin Ruined Russia - TravelBloggerBuzz

  2. Allison Howell

    I agree with Tom Shewbridge…. Here’s what I found online about it: “Son Doong cave is the world’s largest cave, located in Quang Binh province, Vietnam. It is found by a local man named Ho Khanh in 1991 and was recently discovered in 2009 by British cavers, led by Howard Limbert.”

  3. There is a link to Oxalis who does the tours. They start at $3000 per person, not including airfare to Vietnam.

  4. Gary Pinnell

    What hollowed out a cave of this size, and when?

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