Not only famous for the poetic scenery in the movie "I see yellow flowers on green grass", Phu Yen province is also blessed by Mother Nature with the Da Dia reef, a unique landscape on the S-shaped strip of land. This rocky reef is likened by many people to a giant honeycomb by the blue ocean, surrounded by waves all year round...
Ghenh Da Dia (also known as Ganh Da Dia) is located in An Ninh Dong commune, Tuy An district, Phu Yen province. We visited Ghenh Da Dia on a day in mid-August, the weather was quite cool.
According to a colleague at Phu Yen Newspaper, this is the ideal time to explore this unique landscape.
It is known that in early 1997, Da Dia rapids, An Ninh Dong commune, Tuy An district, Phu Yen province was recognized as a national scenic spot.
By 2014, the Vietnam Record Organization ranked it as one of the 20 most anticipated destinations in our country.
No longer a spontaneous tourist destination as before, Ghenh Da Dia has now built infrastructure to serve tourists from near and far. The first impressive thing when arriving here is the yellow flower bushes right after the stone gate leading to the tourist area.
From the stone gate, turn left, then follow the trail to start exploring the Da Dia reef. Before our eyes is the vast ocean, unlike the white sand beaches on other beaches, here the coast is made of vertical rocks. The waves crashing all year round have worn away and carved these rocks into eye-catching shapes.
If you are immediately impressed by the starting point of the journey, you will have to exclaim when you encounter the "giant beehive", with hundreds of tourists surrounding it.
The scenic spot Ghenh Da Dia in An Ninh Dong commune, Tuy An district (Phu Yen province) is likened to a "giant honeycomb" - a most famous scenic spot.
This giant honeycomb is about 50 meters wide and 200 meters long. It is difficult to explain why this rock mass has the shape of prisms of the same size and is stacked neatly on top of each other. "I learned about Ghenh Da Dia through the introduction of a friend.
“Indeed, seeing it with my own eyes today, I was really impressed. I never thought that in Vietnam we would have such an amazing landscape,” said Ms. Van, a tourist from Tay Ninh.
According to scientists, this amazing landscape was formed by a volcano erupting lava into the sea, meeting cold water and freezing, combined with the phenomenon of stress causing the entire mass of lava to crack, creating the current landscape.
According to the explanation of the local people, Ghenh Da Dia was given by a god, along with a myth about a treasure that transformed into stone.
However, no matter how it is explained, Ghenh Da Dia is an extremely unique landscape, the pride of the people of Phu Yen.
Ghenh Da Dia is likened to a "giant honeycomb" in the vast ocean.
The unique beauty of Ghenh Da Dia has attracted many tourists from near and far to visit and admire. Many couples have chosen this place to take wedding photos.
Poets who set foot in this place also exclaimed: "I don't know since when/ A hundred years, a thousand years ago/ Who arranged the stones together/ To form pillars next to the blue waves/ Some pillars stand, some lean/ Like a honeycomb created by heaven/ Standing tall in the middle of nature/ Uniquely lying stone plates..." (poem by Nguyen Tien Chau).
This scenic spot is also a source of inspiration for many photographers, with many works winning major photography awards.
For example, the work "The Milky Way on Ganh Da Dia" by author Huynh Le Vien Duy (Phu Yen Literature and Arts Association) won the FIAP gold medal at the international photography award in Singapore.
Ghenh Da Dia not only impresses with its amazing landscape, but visitors can also experience many attractive services such as horseback riding and enjoying the specialties of the sea.
The feeling when first discovering this unique landscape is exactly like the verses written by poet Quang Ngu: "Da Dia is dreamy, Da Dia is mesmerizing/ Stunned when arriving, bewildered when leaving"...
Source: https://danviet.vn/vung-nao-cua-phu-yen-co-mot-khu-bo-bien-vi-nhu-to-ong-khong-lo-nguoi-ta-dang-den-xem-2025010222540614.htm
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