REVIEW · HOI AN
Hoi An Countryside biking with basket boat and cooking class
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Viet Nam Local Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Cycling beyond Hoi An is surprisingly easy. This half-day route threads through quiet village lanes, farmland, and fishery areas, then swaps the bike for a relaxing basket boat on the river, all with a private guide and quiet country roads energy.
Two things I really like: the mix of working rural stops (you’ll see farms up close and get a hands-on feel) and the straightforward comfort of a private, no-sharing experience. One thing to think about first: this is more of a food-focused village lesson plus a set lunch than a full-on cooking workshop where you’ll cook everything yourself.
In This Review
- Key highlights you’ll feel on the day
- Why Hoi An’s countryside feels different from the old-town buzz
- The bike start: getting comfortable before the quiet roads
- Bean sprouts at a local home: the hands-on food lesson that actually teaches
- Tra Que vegetable village: herbs, gardens, and farm work you can join
- Past duck farms, cows, shrimp, and rice paddies: seeing the whole farming ecosystem
- Cam Thanh basket boats: a relaxing river break with crab-catching added
- Lunch in a nice restaurant: why the 5-dish meal is part of the deal
- Private guide quality and the meaning of no sharing
- Price and value: is $63 a fair deal for this mix?
- Who this tour suits best (and who should be cautious)
- Should you book this Hoi An countryside bike, basket boat, and food day?
- FAQ
- What time does the tour start?
- How long is the tour?
- Is lunch included, and what does it include?
- Is this a shared group tour?
- What languages are the guides available in?
- Are bicycles and entrance tickets included?
- How much do children pay?
- What is the cancellation and payment flexibility like?
Key highlights you’ll feel on the day

- Private, no sharing means you keep the pace that fits your group
- Bicycle + basket boat combo keeps the morning varied without feeling rushed
- Bean sprout process at a local home gives you real food context, not just photos
- Tra Que vegetable village gardens are a sensory break, with herb smells and garden time
- Crab-catching fun on the river turns the basket boat ride into an activity
- 5-dish Vietnamese meal is part of the experience, not an afterthought
Why Hoi An’s countryside feels different from the old-town buzz

Hoi An can pull you into its lantern-lit rhythm fast. This tour breaks that spell in a good way. You leave the center and ride into rural lanes where daily life moves at a slower tempo: ducks and cows nearby, vegetable work in the gardens, and water-based scenes that make sense once you’ve actually seen them.
What makes it special is how the day connects food, farming, and water. You’re not only traveling through places; you’re watching how people grow, tend, and harvest. Then you get that payoff: a basket boat ride through the Cam Thanh water coconut forest area, with a chance to catch river crabs using a fishing rod. It’s playful, but it’s also rooted in local routines.
You also get a guide who can keep it understandable and personal. The tour runs with a live guide in French or English, and the vibe stays friendly rather than lecture-heavy. In the feedback I saw, French-speaking guides named Tan and Kim An stood out for clear communication and smooth pre-activity contact.
You can also read our reviews of more boat tours in Hoi An
The bike start: getting comfortable before the quiet roads
You meet at the pickup point in Hội An, and you’ll be collected in the morning for either an 8:00 or 8:30 start. Before you head out, there’s a short period to get used to biking. That matters more than it sounds. Rural Vietnam biking is not the same as a flat bike path at home, and this quick warm-up helps you settle into the rhythm so the rest of the ride feels calm.
The route is designed around quiet country roads, so you’re not spending the morning dodging traffic. Instead, you’re riding between farmland and village edges, which keeps your attention on what’s around you: rice paddies, shrimp farms, and small stretches of water life. You also have bottled water included, which is a practical little detail that helps you stay focused on the sights rather than logistics.
Because it’s a private group, the pace can flex. If your group needs extra time at a stop, you don’t lose it to a larger crowd’s schedule. And if you’re traveling with kids, that private setup is a big advantage. The tour is described as suitable for all ages, and the whole point of the early biking practice is to make sure the experience stays manageable.
Bean sprouts at a local home: the hands-on food lesson that actually teaches
One of the most memorable parts of the day is the stop where you visit a local home and learn the process of making bean sprouts. This is where the tour gets real in a way that a food tasting can’t. You’re not just being handed something to try. You’re seeing the steps and hearing the logic behind how it’s done.
That kind of food insight changes how you look at the rest of the route. When later you’re near vegetable areas and garden work, it makes more sense. You start thinking in terms of growing cycles, inputs, and daily routines, not just scenery.
This is also where you’ll appreciate the private guide format. You can ask questions at your speed, and you’re not stuck waiting your turn while everyone else catches up. And because the guide is French or English speaking, you’ll get context that turns the stop from a photo-op into a small story you can repeat later.
Tra Que vegetable village: herbs, gardens, and farm work you can join
After the early village and farming scenes, the tour heads to Tra Que vegetable village. This is a dedicated stop built around vegetable growing. You’ll walk in scenic gardens where you can smell herbs, and you’ll get a chance to help with simple farm tasks like working the soil, planting, and watering vegetables.
This is the part many people love because it turns you from spectator into participant. You don’t need special skills. You just need a willingness to get your hands involved for a short time and follow the guide’s lead. It’s a good reminder that agriculture is not a museum display. It’s labor, repetition, and care.
One practical note: you may want to go prepared to get a little messy, even if the tasks are light. Also, if you’re the kind of traveler who likes structured activities, you’ll probably enjoy this stop because it has clear “do this, then that” moments. The tour keeps it moving, but it doesn’t feel like you’re just being herded through.
Past duck farms, cows, shrimp, and rice paddies: seeing the whole farming ecosystem
The countryside riding portion ties everything together. You’ll ride past duck farms and cow herds, and you’ll also pass shrimp farms and rice paddies. Along the way, you may have moments where buffalo herds show up and you can take pictures.
The value here isn’t that every single view is postcard-perfect. It’s that you’re seeing how different types of farm life coexist. Ducks, cattle, rice, and shrimp all point to a rural economy shaped by water and land management. That context can be hard to grasp from inside the city.
And because you’re moving by bicycle, you cover distance without losing the sense of being present. You’re not stuck at a single stop for hours. You’re traveling through the living space of the countryside, with frequent “pause points” where the guide can explain what you’re seeing.
If you’re sensitive to rough road conditions or you want strictly effortless sightseeing, this is the one moment to set expectations. You are on a bike for a significant chunk of the half day. That said, the tour is positioned as doable for all ages, and the early practice time is designed to reduce stress.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Hoi An
Cam Thanh basket boats: a relaxing river break with crab-catching added
Then comes the switch from bike to water. You’ll visit Cam Thanh water coconut forest and hop into basket boats for a relaxing ride along the river. This part feels like a deep breath after the pedal time. The water makes the pace gentler, and you can look around without thinking about balance or speed.
The fun twist is the fishing activity. A local boat driver helps you use a fishing rod to catch river crabs. It’s meant to be playful, not intense. Even if catching a crab doesn’t happen instantly, the whole process is part of the entertainment and the learning.
This basket boat segment also helps you understand the water-side side of rural life. Before you ride, you’ve seen farmland. After you’re on the river, the picture becomes more complete: transport, fishing, and daily water access all matter.
In short: it’s not just “a boat ride.” It’s a boat ride with a small interactive task that makes you part of the moment.
Lunch in a nice restaurant: why the 5-dish meal is part of the deal
By the time lunch arrives, you’re usually ready for more than just a snack. The tour includes a tasty Vietnamese meal with 5 dishes in a nice restaurant. If you choose the option that includes the meal, the full experience runs about 5 hours. There’s also a without-meal option that trims it to about 4 hours.
I like this setup because it makes the day feel complete. The earlier stops focus on farming and food context. Then lunch lets you taste the results. You’re not being asked to figure out where to eat afterward, and you don’t have to squeeze in another booking before or after.
Also, bottled water is included, which means you don’t have to stop for basics mid-route. That keeps the day flowing smoothly, especially helpful if you’re traveling with kids or you’re on a tight schedule in Hoi An.
Private guide quality and the meaning of no sharing
“Private tour” can mean a lot of things. Here, it matters because the day is built around hands-on moments. Bean sprouts, garden work, and the basket boat crabbing activity all benefit from attention. A no-sharing setup gives your guide room to guide you rather than split attention across multiple groups.
The guide is available in French or English. In the feedback I saw, guides like Tan and Kim An were praised for being competent, friendly, and easy to communicate with, including French language ability. That’s not just comfort for language. It also affects how much you understand about what you’re seeing.
You’ll likely find the experience has a balanced feel. It’s active, but not chaotic. It’s rural, but not confusing. And it’s structured enough that you know what’s coming next, but flexible enough that you’re not stuck following a fast conveyor-belt routine.
Price and value: is $63 a fair deal for this mix?
At $63 per person, this tour sits in the category where value depends on what’s included. Here, you’re getting more than a bike rental. The package includes a private guide, bike use, bottled water, an entrance ticket, pickup from your hotel in Hội An with bicycles, and lunch with 5 dishes (on the meal option).
So the real question is: are you paying for transportation and food, or for the whole experience? In this case, you’re paying for the whole chain of activities tied together in one half-day: rural biking, multiple farm-village stops, basket boat riding, and an included meal.
Also, the pricing structure is family-friendly. Children ages 6 to 11 are half price, and children under 6 are free. If you’re traveling with kids, that can make the private setup much more affordable than it would be in many other areas.
My takeaway: if you want a single morning that combines biking, water-life, and food-based learning without extra tickets or separate bookings, $63 feels reasonable.
Who this tour suits best (and who should be cautious)
This tour is a strong match if you want to get out of the city and see Hoi An’s countryside through real daily activities. It’s also a good pick for families. The experience is described as suitable for all ages, with the biking practice helping kids and first-timers feel comfortable.
You’ll probably enjoy it most if you like:
- interactive stops (helping in the garden, learning the bean sprout process)
- moving between different environments (farms, gardens, river)
- a private guide who can explain in French or English
Consider caution if you’re specifically searching for a full cooking class where you do all the cooking step-by-step. The food learning included here is centered on the bean sprout process, and then you eat a set 5-dish lunch. It’s food-related, but not a hands-on restaurant-style cooking school.
Should you book this Hoi An countryside bike, basket boat, and food day?
Book it if you want an active half-day that feels local and practical, not staged. The bike-and-boat mix keeps the day interesting, and the food lesson plus 5-dish lunch makes it more than sightseeing.
I’d especially recommend it if you’re traveling as a family or as a couple who wants privacy and fewer compromises. With a private guide and no sharing, the hands-on parts feel smoother, and you can move at your group’s comfort level.
Skip or rethink if you don’t want to bike for a big chunk of the morning, or if you’re expecting a full cooking workshop rather than a bean sprout food lesson followed by lunch.
If you want one memorable countryside morning in Hội An that connects land, water, and what people actually eat, this is a solid choice.
FAQ
What time does the tour start?
Pickup in Hội An is offered at either 8:00 am or 8:30 am, depending on the selected option.
How long is the tour?
The duration is about 5.5 hours (8:30 am to 2:00 pm). If you choose the option without the meal, it’s listed as about 4 hours. With the meal, it’s about 5 hours.
Is lunch included, and what does it include?
Lunch is included and described as a Vietnamese meal with 5 dishes in a restaurant (on the tour option that includes the meal).
Is this a shared group tour?
No. It’s a private group with no sharing.
What languages are the guides available in?
The live tour guide is available in French and English.
Are bicycles and entrance tickets included?
Yes. Bike use and entrance ticket(s) are included, along with bottled water.
How much do children pay?
Children between 6 and 11 pay half price. Children under 6 are free.
What is the cancellation and payment flexibility like?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. There’s also a reserve now & pay later option.






























