44submissions
Finished
Hey Pandas, What Was Your Biggest Disappointment When You Visited A Foreign Country?
Let's say you had high expectations of visiting a foreign country on vacation. So what disappointed you the most?
This post may include affiliate links.
Paris. Touted as the romantic capital of the world. Probably one of the dirtiest cities I've ever visited with the rudest people. The mugger grannies on the metro were also pretty scary!
Paris is overrated. Any other city is better. Metz is beautiful. Bordeaux was a lovely surprise ...
Troyes, Orléans, Lyon, La Rochelle, Cognac, Reims... Yeah, any place but Paris.
Load More Replies...I enjoyed Paris. Was there for a couple weeks and the only rude person was a kebab guy who apparently hated Americans. Getting on a train at Bir-Hakeim, two younger (20ish) Romani tried picking my front pocket but were unsuccessful. Other than that, everyone was friendly and I thoroughly enjoyed it. We saw a rat in a construction area on Champ de Mars and that put my wife off... but we are going back this summer! I would never call Paris clean, but I have seen worse capital cities...
Paris has its pitfalls, but I'm glad you were more educated on how to be a tourist without looking like one. Please come back! And be a little more adventurous and visit some of the cities outside Paris. Chartres and Étampes are on the RER line and within an hour of Paris. Famous cathedral, and lovely forest. Many wonderful cities are accessible by train from Paris. I won't suggest driving in Paris - not even true French will do that!
Load More Replies...We have an Atlantic coastline-la Rochelle is vibrant!!
Load More Replies...I guess there is a reason a lot of French actually differentiate between French and Parisians
Parisiennes are not like the rest of France at all. Seriously. When I say that the French are really polite and the nicest people you can ever meet - I'm not selling you. My first few years living in France, my French was really limited to the basics of hello, thank you, sorry and goodbye, and the French were so patient and polite, even suggested better ways to me of expressing these phrases to be more French. When you make the effort to speak the language, even when you f#ck up pronunciation, it's really appreciated. But be humble about it-don't assume you're pronouncing anything correctly. I think it's the same in any language.
Load More Replies...Visiting Paris is like visiting NYC- it's just not for wide-eyed tourists. I'm very familiar with Paris and NYC, and I'll choose Paris over NYC any day!
Turning that city into the shithole that it is now is a crime against humanity...
India. Walking wallet as soon I touched down. Fleeced at every opportunity by anyone. I was young and naive. Got to see the Taj Mahal and Agra Fort though and other beautiful sights. But was it worth being robbed continually? Nah.
Got the same feeling at the Angkor Wat site in Cambodja. Didn't get robbed, but the hassling is constant. I know it's a very touristic place, and I knew I was going to be hassled. I also understand people there are just trying to make a living. But my god... First you try to negotiate or excuse yourself ("i'll buy later/after visiting the temple"). Then you become a little bit more abrupt ("NO!"). Finally the only solution - and it's not easy to do when you've been educated to be polite - is to just ignore every kid, woman or man that try to sell you something. Just straight avoid eye contact, act as if they're not there.
Yeah, had this in Bali. Made me feel like a sh!t for not buying. I did buy from kids tho 'cause I'm an Auntie :)
Load More Replies...Yep. India has this issue. But recently I have been noticing it is getting better. When did you visit?
We often forget that, though we may have saved up for our trip, in many of the countries we visit, we're considered "wealthy", and can you blame anyone for trying to take advantage of us? Because of the problems in the Ukraine, I couldn't afford to buy fuel to heat my house or have hot water for 5 months. I just bought 500liters so I can have a hot shower, but I've had to make a contract to pay for it over 3 months, which is when I'll need to buy fuel again. It's cut into my budget severely. And I feel lucky that this is the worst of my problems. At least I've had clean water and food all this time, and access to medicine and my kids go to school. A cold shower hasn't killed me yet.
having traveled to a few nations i can say the biggest disappointment for me is being an american in a foreign country. some of my fellow americans make me embarrassed for being an american because i have witnessed people complain that people don't speak english or don't use imperial measurements, etc. c'mon, people! when you travel don't expect people to cater to you because you come from the u.s. we are not special. just go and expand your life with the experience of being in a different nation and culture. maybe their streets aren't as clean as you expect or something like that is really miniscule. if you just accept the people and the land you will find yourself having a great time. also, take the time to find out if there are cultural things that you need to be aware of so you don't offend or put yourself in a position of being harassed. it's one of the reasons i like to travel independently rather that in group tours because you can't control other badly behaving americans.
no, i don't. i know it is a film but i haven't seen it. will have to see if i can find it and check it out. i love films so it will just be another one to put on my list.
Load More Replies...Mexico. I love the amazing weather, people, and amenities, but the food I had gave me food poisoning and the ATM stole my mother’s credit card and the bank wouldn’t let us have it back. I would suggest withdrawing money directly from inside a bank to avoid this issue.
i used to live in southern california so visited mexico many times. i loved the people - so warm and friendly. even the shop keepers whose job is to sell you things were great as i soon discovered that they really did like negotiating prices, especially if good natured exchanges happened. as for the food, i get it. the first time i went to mexico i made sure that i drank only bottled water/drinks and no ice in glasses. not that it was so unsanitary but we (foreigners in their country) was not used to it. however, i would not recommend eating any street food with any form of veg or fruit that was washed because....the water. made that mistake of chowing down on some delicious goodies that had shredded cabbage and veg only to bring back a souvenir i didn't want - a parasite. the dr had asked if i drank the water or ice-no. then, asked about produce. yup - that was it. other than that, mexico is still somewhere that i love.
Yep. I think the biggest reason why I got it was because I am vegetarian
Load More Replies...And about the food, my mother had a paella and I had some sandwich thing. Not sure how it could’ve happened since they are on 2 different sides of the food spectrum, but me and my mom got food poisoning 😅
Could have been the water, or ice, or even poorly washed dishes.
Load More Replies...Food poisoning, really? This person never heard of Montezuma's revenge? More likely this kid had a soda with ice cubes made from non-potable water. It happens all the time.
Times Square, I don't need to elaborate
No, you don't need to elaborate. But, lol, my French friends visiting NYC really liked that hotdog and wanted more. Need I say more about the French palate??
I used to work on 48th and Broadway. Some days I'd take a break from work and go outside to play, "Tourist or Native?" Tourists walk slowly in packs of 10 and look up and take that photograph that nobody has ever taken of the crossover of Broadway and 7th Ave. But, I did get many opportunities to recommend places to eat and go so there's that.
I'd have enjoyed playing that game with you.😊
Load More Replies...Perhaps try looking a a photograph of a place before you visit that location. What would you expect to see in Times Square? Krakatoa erupting? Herds of wildebeest sweeping majestically across the Serengeti Plains?
England, specifically Manchester. Here me out, I love the city more than my own, for the most part. I was with people who live there and getting familiar with the culture. The people I was staying with are really nice and accommodating. It was my first international, overseas trip, so I didn't know what to expect other than what I've been exposed to in media and interactions with my British friends. There were just a few things that were starkly disappointing. The amount of litter was astonishing, for one. I kept getting the urge to hold a community clean up group. This is probably just my take, I didn't find the pub fun at all. On a normal circumstance I have some difficulty understanding Mancunian accents, despite speaking the same language. But when mixed with overly loud music I could hold a small conversation with anyone. There was a dance floor but no one was dancing. Wasn't sure if it would be allowed. I was too nervous to ask. Not sure what I was expecting, really. Could have just been the one pub. Maybe others are better? Other than that, I enjoyed my visit and found many things that were far better than where I'm from. Wouldn't mind moving there.
I only had a 6 hour layover visit to England - my friend brought me to Runnymede for the history of the Magna Carta, and the JFK memorial, then to Windsor Castle to annoy the royal guard (lots of great pics with the beaver hats) and then hitting a pub for bangers and mash and a pint, because I didn't travel all that distance to eat a sandwich, dammit. I'd do the UK again, but want to see the breadth and width.
I want to go back, too. There's a ton of places I want to see I didn't get a chance to go before. I did enjoy my time. On the other question post asking people's favourite places they visited I did put a longer post of all the good things I liked.
Load More Replies...Litter never used to be as bad as it is now. I'm near Brighton and the road sides alone are just awful and embarrassing. Manc is not the only one, sadly. No comment re the lack of dancing lol...I'm a very happy wallflower.
Should have gone to Newcastle and seen how bad it can really get .... Seriously though, anywhere except Manchester, Liverpool, London, Birmingham and Ipswich is going to be a vast improvement ....
I've heard stories. That's one thing I was happy about. I think this was a non-smoking pub. Otherwise, I wouldn't have been able to go at all. It was an experience. Next time I go there I do want to go that really old, Tudor style one in city centre. Canada doesn't have much architecture spanning more than 150 years ago.
Load More Replies...So, apart from a bit of litter, the huge disappointment had to do with no one dancing on the dance floor? Seems to be a capricious and trivial complaint.
Don't get it twisted. I'm not slamming my fist on a table over it like it's this "huge" deal.
Load More Replies...15 years ago, yes. Smoking ban has been in since 2007
Load More Replies...Cape Verde. From the moment you step outside your hotel multiple people coming running to you asking you to come visit their stall or shop or shoving merchandise in your face. Once you start walking, about every 10 meters there's another guy who starts talking to you to try and sell you something. You try to just say 'no thank you' and keep walking but after one day and hundreds of people harrassing you you just start ignoring them. Once I was taking a photo of my wife (she's at a distance of like 5 meters from me) and a man just steps in between her and me and starts doing his usual spiel, 'hello my friend', 'beautiful family', 'where you from',... etc. We ignore him so he sticks out his hand and tries to shake mine, i still keep ignoring him. So he starts the 'why don't you want to shake my hand, are you racist'? I'm not racist, you're just literally the 1000th guy that started talking to me without invitation and expects me to come to your shop where you sell the exact same stuff that all other shops have and expect me to pay you 50 euros for some trinkets that can be found in little supermarkets on the island for 10euros.
It's sad to visit these economically poor countries that have wonderful history when, as a tourist, you're being bombarded by locals who think just because you can afford the plane fare, you have money to burn on their wares. In a way, you can't blame the people for trying to make money, but yeah, it is a real turn-off to be bombarded by locals who harass you because they think you're a "rich" tourist.
If you go where tourists go, you have to expect to be treated like a tourist, n'est-ce pas?
You can't blame them. What do you expect after centuries of exploitation? They can be very irritating, but there are mitigating circumstances.
That's an easy answer - but who is living their ancestor's lives? It gives them no excuse to exploit others!
Load More Replies...Italy. But hear me out pls! I live close to Italy and it's the go-to place for short holidays (road trip style). But the food/restaurants. There are VERY GOOD restaurants in Italy, like really top tier. But the issue for people like me and my friends who like to adventure and to do road trips; there are absolutely garbage restaurants everywhere, especially at the sea. You really need to check carefully beforehand, and unfortunately the best top quality restaurants you only find if you ask locals. The kind of "most welcoming ones" outside of big cities like Milan are far from original authentic Italian cuisine.
This is true for most countries. Many restaurants are just tourist traps with bad food.
It's true, but somehow Italy stands out here, especially with locations which are not yet fully taken over by tourists.
Load More Replies...I *liked* Italy and Sicily for the food (we didn't eat in tourist traps) and the history, but I was totally appalled by the trash (this was in 2002) everywhere and the xenophobia. I was visiting with my Sicilian friend who changed their accent in Italian from Sicilian to Roman because the Italians are very prejudiced against foreigners, but especially Sicilians. That shocked me.
Always ask a local where they would go to eat (obvs not someone who works in a restaurant !!)
So, I visited Italy, mostly Sicily in 2002. Just so much to love, but... There was a garbage strike so there was trash everywhere, which was disappointing. I was fortunate to not do any of the tourist things outside of Rome (one must visit the Colessium,) and had some great food outside of the tourist areas. And when I forgot Italian, the locals still seemed to understand my high school Latin (dead language my heiney). It's true, especially in Italy, that you gotta go outside all the touristy parts to find the best restaurants.
I visited Ireland in April. It was the greatest place I've ever been. It was so gorgeous and the people were so welcoming. My one disappointment, and this may just be me, and it may just be because it was my first time travelling outside the US and I was so fried on the plane that I barely even realized we left Boston. But, it just didn't feel all that foreign to me. Especially Dublin. I know a lot of where I live and what I'm used in New England was built or developed by Irish immigrants. But everything from the food, to the people, to the architecture, felt like home. No complaints though, it was an incredible trip, and the pareidolia wore off as we headed west.
You and I are both New England Yankees, and yeah, it's weird how similar and yet different visiting Ireland is. Or the UK. And for me, Poland, because my family is of Polish Russian immigrants and we lived in a predominantly Pologne-Rus community in Connecticut. The food was the biggest connection because I never learned more than kindergarten level of Polish.
You describe it well. The accents and food were the most familiar, as it reminded me of family gatherings.
Load More Replies...Pareidolia is the tendency of humans to see familiar images in random things, like a dragon shape in a cloud. Not sure it works in the context of the last sentence.
I was using it loosely. I was seeing familiarity in a foreign land. It looked like home, even though I knew in the back of my mind it wasn't.
Load More Replies...Mexico. It is beautiful to visit but the employees/locals/ do not like tourists. I get it, many tourists are incredibly rude, cheap and destroy the landscape; but, not all are the same. I speak Spanish but am not Hispanic and I couldn't tell you how many people told me to go f myself in espanol while smiling at me to make me think I am being told something kind. I have never felt more unsafe and unwanted than I did in Mexico. I wish it was different, but I know that many people who do travel there, treat staff and locals like garbage so I can't blame them. I try to treat everyone with respect so it's hard to be mf'ed for no reason as the person smiles at me. Makes a person feel a bit unwanted.
I'd love to visit Mexico, but I've heard a lot of tourists say the same things you have.
The further from the usual tourist destinations, the better it usually is, in my experience.
Not sure what the OP means by "employees/locals". You mean Mexicans who work in Mexico? I've traveled to fifteen states in Mexico and they are all unique, as different from each another as can possibly be imagined, each with their own treasures. Maybe the OP should branch out and explore away from the resorts.
I have found it to be exactly the opposite. I enjoyed Progeso and Merida enough I would consider buying a home there. I even had a restaurant owner offer to show me around next time I came back. Sure, one or two people have had too much abuse from ignorant tourists but most were pleasant.
Southern Spain was a huge disappointment. The people were cold and didn't even look at me when serving me. There were endless miles of British " enclaves" Maybe the reason for the coldness of the natives. The groups of feral cats everywhere were just heartbreaking.
As with everywhere, get away from the touristy bits - all of the times we have visited my Sister in Law in Southern Spain (small village, in the mountains, close to a medium sized, historically important but not very pretty town), we have been welcomed warmly, even allowing for the fact that neither my Wife or I speak Spanish - we try, but end up using the translator!! Thankfully a good mix of Europeans live there and most speak Spanish to some degree.
I've never been to Spain. I'd like to visit. I wonder if the places tourists are funneled in to visiting hurts the culture as much as it helps the economy.
She's talking about the south where a lot of expat Brits have moved to because the pound stretches further. I'm sure some are lovely but they gets the reputation for being whingy and refusing to speak/learn Spanish. Barcelona, Madrid, San Sebastian and Valencia are not in the Southern Spain and I can recommend them wholeheartedly although Madrid is a little underwhelming ;) just don't tell any Madrileños that!
Load More Replies...I went to Wales. It turns out it is a lot like England.
I was in Wales in 1991. My boyfriend’s little brother is blond haired and blue eyed. We were in a pub, and someone made a rude comment to him. I about peed myself when the bartender said “Leave the boy alone, he’s not British, he’s from the colonies.”.
Wales had smog so thick I got asthma. Our BnB was disgusting, never again
i went to paris, the cooking wasnt really as impressive as everyone thinks "french food is the best" my a$$
The shopping in Brussels put NYC to shame. LOVED Brussels!!
Load More Replies...THANK YOU! So, I started this whole thread because I found French food lacking in any of the interesting bits that supposedly makes France a Mecca for cuisine. And was stating my disappointment in the food found in supermarkets, but was called a "troll" and someone at Bored Panda decided to hide my original post. I wasn't very impressed by the restaurants, either. So, thank you for agreeing with me.
Exactly! My orignal reason for making this! And I live in France! And attended classes at Le Cordon Bleu. French cuisine has been the biggest disappointment of my life. I feel like I've been lied to by every single chef that gushes over French food.
The only bad meal I had in Paris was at Hard Rock - we went to one time we went to a new place. My own fault for eating "American" food. Everywhere else was fantastic, just avoided touristy places. Though the best thing I ever ate was a steak with foie gras sauce in Amboise. Going back just to eat it again... and get more Loire wines!
Reading between the lines (if that's possible to do in a single sentence), I intuitively deduce the OP's culinary expertise might be even less formidable than their punctuation, grammar, and earthy vernacular..
I beg your pardon my good sir, however, I must admit I was using my cellular device and therefore could not lengthen my comment to the required Shakespearean length, which I assume would have been more preferred by your fine standards.
Load More Replies...Went to Canada. Visited some parks and forest and never saw a single beaver. So, just for the fun of the cliché, I went to a zoo that kept beavers, but that very day they were away on their medical check-up 🙃
Haha, as a Canadian I loved your post. If it is any consolation, I have lived in northern Canada for more than 20 years and the only beaver I have ever seen is the one in our local science centre.
Ohh, then I'll try that next time I visit Canada. Greeting from Mexico, I absolutely love your country! 🍁♥️
Load More Replies...Ever so concerned with modesty, Canadians keep their beavers away from prying eyes.
Lol, come to my ex-town in Connecticut - we have a lot of beaver there, to the point that, though they were on the endangered species list, their presence has "harmed" the human population, and now beavers are being relocated to save human infrastructure. It's really sad.
There are a lot of strip clubs in Canada where you can see a different kind of beaver.
in every country I´ve been to, it was the other tourists that bothered me most. entitled. rude, arrogant "guests" complaining about everything that´s different from home - why do those people even travel? and then they wonder why they are not really welcomed by local people ...
I'm Danish American, but I've been practicing my Spanish for 25 years. I went to a McDonalds in Spain when I was there and found myself apologizing for an obnoxious "Karen" with three kids complaining about her dipping sauces costing .5€ each and her frostie cone or whatever not being completely up to the top, when that was how the machine dispensed it. Didn't speak a word of Spanish, but I did, so I basically told the staff within earshot of her that I also work in a restaurant and not all of us Americans are rude like her. They had a good laugh.
Oh, myyyy. I understand. American here who grew up with Spanish TV, and with Mexicans, all kinds of immigrants from South America, And Puerto Ricans, and visiting Spain was was both wonderful and frustrating because of the language. I took Latin in high school and managed to get by in Italy speaking Latin when I forgot Italian. But Spanish is really special, even in Spain. Let's not mention Basque.
Load More Replies...Shibuya crossing in Tokyo. Don't get me wrong, I was still happy to see such an iconic place. But most pictures you see of Shibuya are taken with a wide angle lens, from up above. It's less impressive at street level. In fact when I first reached it, I didn't realise that was it. I kind of kept looking for it, before checking on my map and confirm that yes, it was indeed the famous Shibuya crossing.
I only was there for 12 days a few years ago, but so much to tell. This is not the best place though. Suffice to say : Shibuya was the only "disappoitement" (and like I said, I still was happy to see it). Everything else was great :-) I limited myself to the cities since I didn't have that much time (Tokyo & Kyoto with 1-day trips to Nara, Osaka and Hiroshima). The food, the atmosphere, the landscapes... a perfect trip. Don't expect to have much interactions with the people though. I was lucky to meet a group of students who could kind of speak english in a bar in Tokyo one evening, and an older guy who had travelled a lot (and thus spoke english) in an okonomiyaki restaurant, but that's it. I've always wanted to go back, maybe a little longer, to see more of the countryside, thermal villages, mountains, etc. I hope that the country will soon re-open to tourism...
Load More Replies...Yeah, it's just a big crossing with some big screens. It can have a bit of a party vibe at the right times though. Back when tourism was still a thing, it was worth visiting every now and again to snigger at the multiple tourists "Go-Pro"-ing the experience of crossing a road.
Copenhagen. It was soooo dirty, seriously, broken glass and rubbish everywhere, most eateries were closed before 10pm, and coffee was disgustingly overpriced and abysmal! I knew it was expensive before visiting but it was infuriatingly so, I mean, $27 for two McDonalds meals (which we had to eat as all the restaurants were closed!). I've travelled a lot, and for somewhere that is supposed to be the happiest place in the world to live, I've never encountered such joyless, rude, and miserable people. 1/10 would not recommend.
Dane here. I grew up in Copenhagen but left when I could. Ppl working in stores are aparantly more rude to costumers than in other parts of Denmark. And the prices are rediculous for so many things there. But I would very much like to tell you about other parts of Denmark, if that's ok. :) in general we sort of don't talk to strangers. We are reputed to be very friendly and open etc but I think that is AFTER you give us a beer or two. Lol. We are super friendly and talkative after the ice has been broken. And usually very helpful, as well. If you are looking for cheaper food (restaurants and bakeries) go west. The further west the cheaper prices, generally. Except for the tourist-towns. I know most people in Copenhagen and its suburbs seem to think that Funen is just a bump on the way to Jutland but Funen is totally worth a visit. Sorry.... could go on for ages about where to go in Denmark that is not a big city. I'm sorry that your time in Copenhagen was less than great.
Loved Denmark and its people--did not have any problems with rudeness, etc. But yes, my most memorable interactions were outside of Copenhagen outside of the city center that is a bit overcrowded and touristy in places.
"...$27 for two McDonalds meals (which we had to eat as all the restaurants were closed!)." Hmm... Here's a few open late: https://www.yelp.com/search?find_desc=Restaurants+Open+24+Hours%5C%5C%5C%5C&find_loc=Copenhagen
That's hilarious, you don't even know when the OP was there! 🤣🤣🤣
Load More Replies...Prague. I visited a few times in the 1990s as an impoverished student and it was quite pleasant (and the beer cheap), but by the 2000s it had turned into a Disneyland for masses of tourists doing the zombie shuffle and the usual rip-off joints and scammers everywhere.
Tourism is where the (particularly) $$$ are converted to €€ are. USA américains are the biggest targets. We want to experience the history and the culture, but we get targeted because we don't know the language or culture.
I enjoy Prague in itself, but go to some other cities too, they are amazing
Went to eastern Africa years back. I did a bunch of research before I went except took it for granted that spicy food was a given. Spent several weeks in Uganda and although the food was good and it was a great place to visit, I think ketchup would have been too spicy for their palate.
Wait, was Uganda a French colony? Because the French no likey the spicy, and it might be a reason. In France, (I'm an usa emmigant to France) and I just die a little bit in my soul when I eat French versions of "Mexican" or curries. I went to a Chipotle restaurant and ordered a burrito with a lot of jalepeno peppers, and the employee was all "ooh, those are very spicy!" and i had to explain that I was used to the "heat".
Cyprus. I hired a car and drove inland and there were a lot dogs tied to the side of the road and left to die, all over the island. It was heartbreaking and ruined my holiday. I would never go back. This was 20 years ago so hopefully is not like this anymore.
😢They are notorious for treating their cats and dogs like garbage. There are lots of videos about pitiful rescues in Cypress on Youtube ( Dodo is channel). They must be terribly cold hearted people to do some of the stuff I've seen. 🤷🏼♀️
Not sure if this counts-- and it's not anyone's fault, really-- but I've travelled a lot and one thing I notice that's a little disappointing everywhere is how little there is to do for solo travelers. I don't generally feel self-conscious and as a single person I've gotten used to a lot of things, like eating alone publicly. I have no problem with most things. But it's a different thing when travelling to areas that are known tourist spots. I feel like everything is geared toward couples or groups. And there is a sense of people looking at you like your weird for being in this place alone. For instance, I got a promotion at work and a big bonus so I decided to go to Turks and Caicos and stay in one of the overwater bungalows. I've always wanted to do that. But literally everyone was there on their honeymoon. I don't mind that, but there was no activity at all for me to do alone. It's a small island. They advertise lots of activities but you don't find out until you get there that you have to purchase a lot of things in 2s or you get a surcharge. Even if it wasn't the case, it was super awkward because every activity you did was with a bunch of couples. I was literally the only person there alone. I normally don't feel awkward by myself but in this case I really did. Also, prices are different in some places. You end up having to pay more for hotels if you book as a single. I think that's BS. It's the same room, same bed. Whyyy?
I was surprised when visiting Holland that the charming wooden windmills were actually ugly metal ones. Tons of trash and my luggage was stolen and no one seemed to care. This was 1984!
Took a train up to Amsterdam around 1975. Between getting off at the station and making it out to the street we were offered drugs, prostitutes and several invites to various "parties". I was amazed at how many young stoned americans were there.
True. That was before the clean sweep. Now it's safe, clean and no drugs or prostitutes offered.
Load More Replies...According to windmillworld.com there are over 1,150 workable windmills in the Netherlands today. While you can find them all over the country, holland.com highly recommends the windmills at Kinderdijk, Zaanse Schans and Schiedam. dutch-wind...rlands.jpg
The Netherlands was a very poor country last century until the end of it. I'm of Dutch/Danish descent (US American), and spent most of my childhood summers in Groningen and Ameland. Sadly, in modern times most large European cities are EXTREMELY filthy with litter these days compared to what you'd find in the US. Indeed, it's heartbreaking, but there are still many ridiculously gorgeous places in NL ("Holland")!
Wow! All the images I've seen of "iconic" Holland are tulips and wooden windmills! I hope you found something else to enjoy.
I (an American) expected to find America in the answers, but so far (I got here when there were only 13 answers) nobody has said America. Then I remembered ... people already have low expectations for the good old USA.
Whoops, I thought that was a comment, not a post.
America is just so big, too. We have every kind of tourist experience here, good and bad. You've got to be more specific, like the Times Square post.
I posted here about the USA as an American (a Connecticut Yankee), and I've lived in a lot of places in the USA being in the military. I wasn't disappointed by what I experienced, but how much I didn't know our culture as a country varied so much by region in language and customs. Despite the politics, I really love my fellow countrymen.
Why would someone be shot upon leaving America? Have we turned into North Korea?
Load More Replies...Amsterdam, for a city that has a Bohemian culture and is about open expression and love…I was taken aback by how utter disgusting the city was. There was litter everywhere. Trash would blow up and down almost all the streets I had been on, it was depressing.
Oh, no, sweetie, Amsterdam is not a bohemian culture, and there is no free love, or anything free there. I'm sorry you were so disillusioned.
Yeah the rest of my over-seas time was amazing I just really played up in my head some kind of beautiful, super clean, bike fueled area and that's also on me.
Load More Replies...Summer of 2000. Get lagged out of my mind, barely sleeping in a lawn chair next to a hotel at the coast after walking all over the city stoned the day before, I came back through the red light district. The pigeons were busy eating up the vomit on the streets from the night before. Not the best part of Amsterdam, I know...
Visiting my hometown, Houston, Texas, after being gone for many years was like visiting a foreign country. I am fifth generation but had to leave in 1990 when it started getting too crowded. Returning for my fortieth high school reunion was like visiting a different place. Many old homes, including my grandparents' house, are being torn down to construct multi-unit homes. I saw multi-story apartment buildings within feet of the highway barrier. And the crowding, traffic, and pollution are worse than when I left.
Yes. Born in Santa Barbara, CA and from a long line of natives (including Chumash). Now it is barely recognizable - my hometown now looks like a mini-Los Angeles: tourist buses clogging the streets, everything super expensive and crowded, no parking even in front of your own home, rude self-centered people, buildings takin over the foothills up into the mountains (only for the rich but ruining everyone else's view) homeless people everywhere - all chasing the dollar. No one in my family, extended or close, lives there anymore - we've been forced out as it has become utterly unaffordable.
London. I always wanted to see London. Found it overcrowded and the people very rude. I sometimes have to use a cane and even given that I got shoved out of the way on a bus and almost run over by a crowd that was exiting a train. Never will forget the look on the face of the woman in the front of the crowd coming toward me on the train platform. She looked like she would not stop or even slow down for anyone or anything. There could have been a lion on the platform in front of her and she would have just shoved it out of the way and kept on going. I stepped off into a side alcove until the mob went by. Several times, in London, I took to holding my cane horizontally in front of me to keep from getting run into.
I only was in London at the airport. I had a 6 hour layover and I asked my friend to show me London whilst I was there but he said "f**k, no" and showed me Windsor Castle and Runnymede, which is where the Magna Carta was signed, and then we hit a pub for food (bangers and mash because I was a tourist) and back to Heathrow for my flight to the USA.. I don't regret any of it.
Yeah, I love London, but you have to adopt the aggression of the natives when you're on public transport.
This was in the 90's and I was in my early 20's. Never been out of my country before. I went to Europe on a 6-month backpacking Eurorail trip. Ice in drinks was almost non-existent. I was so bummed as I don't think I had ever had a lukewarm soda before. Yep American. I am a much better world citizen now.
The "no ice" is still normal in Europe. I'm lucky because my cave is underground and maintains about 40F in summer, so, cold drinks year round!
Oh, erm, a 'cave' in France is a basement, but mine was literally cut out of the stone under my house.
Load More Replies...The big disappointment was warm soda? Mon Dieu! Only an American would cite this as a disappointment.
In the USA. This is 40 years ago, and US Americans know that there are regional differences in, well everything, from how you address people to what foods are called. This is not so much of a disappointment, but an embarrassing moment, because you would believe in the USA that we all speak the same language, but with different accents, and yet I was in Texas, at a chain restaurant, and neither my server or I could understand each other despite the menu being written in English. We were both frustrated. It was the first time I tried chicken fried steak, and you might laugh, but when I now make this in France, everyone is as confused as I was back then. And the whole "pop" thing. I still got a good meal, but it was embarrassing for me to not know more about my own country's culture, and how frustrating it was to communicate.
And I'll liken this to my French husband visiting Québec and the Canadiens just had no clue what my husband was saying in French and spoke to him in English because French and québécoise are miles apart in vocabulary
Be thankful, I have a friend who is from Newcastle, he speaks fluent French and German, and apart from the fact that no one from those countries can get through his Geordie accent to understand what he's trying to say, all is well. Also, if he has had more than 3 or 4 beers, he reverts to broad Geordie and us English speakers don't understand him either !!!
Load More Replies...Sorry Yanks, but Hershey chocolate…! Yuk…! Sorry denizens of Barcelona, I hated the architecture, especially the cathedral. Oh and no hablaís el español que yo entiendo.
I don't like chocolate at all as a candy or in a dessert, but I use it in savory dishes a lot (moles, barbecue sauce, meat rubs) and it has its merits.
My biggest disappointment was in India, Delhi. The streets were so dirty that I really wanted to pick all the litter, people urinated on streets ( we don't in my country or you'll be charged by the city), public bathrooms were sooo dirty even in big renowned hotel chains, flies everywhere (I mean everywhere), charged way above extra to foreigners, people live in the city square like mattresses and wet clothes hanged in the city garden, some people where visibly racist. Moreover, there were a lot of beggars. I don't mind giving but someone refusing what you gave them or giving you dirty looks because its not enough or its not what they wanted was a shock to me.
This makes me think of too many hamsters in a cage...gets very nasty and smelly..😬.quick.
Cairo was the worse. The people were terrible and the pyramids were a total no event as you are hassled continually. Would never go back. I have been to 23 countries in Africa but Egypt I will give a miss
Agree totally! We were ripped off at every turn - trying to get a ride to the pyramids and got dumped at an old ranch to ride in on some poor, clapped out horses. On the way back got dumped at a perfume shop. For a nation that prays so frequently through the day and night they'd take you for your last dollar and goodness knows what else being females.
Prague is beautiful, but Czech toilets are a nightmare. You 'go' onto a platform, and the waste just sits there until you flush. Which means you get to smell it until you flush.
Uh, no. Imagine stepping into a stall, but their is no toilet bowl, but a porcelain hole in the floor with 2 places you can put your feet, but it's how you place your feet that you pee or poop. And there's a flush, but, you don't want to be standing on the spots for your feet when you flush...
Load More Replies...Lol, been there, tried to "go" there in France, at a bar. It was a shock, then I nearly peed myself laughing at how to manage. You gotta "go with the flow", so to speak 😂😂
I love France. Especially the north is breathtaking. Lots of great folks, food and landscapes. That being said, I gotta say that Paris (as other mentioned) was a bit disappointing. And it was very dirty. Also Santander in Spain is a let-down compared to other towns and villages in the north.
To be fair to Santander, it's one of the major Atlantic ports, but the actual town is quite splendid - easy to get round, lots of interesting and quaint places, good eateries, reasonably priced hotels and people who will help if asked. In my opinion better than Bilbao (again a lovely place but don't ever, ever try to understand the road system - think 3 ring roads around the centre - bloody nightmare !!)
The Victoria and Albert Museum in London. I had been longing to go for years, but when we finally got there, the nice lady said, "I'm sorry almost everything is closed for renovation. But there is a nice temporary exhibit open. An American who does glass....." "You...you don't mean Dale Chihuly, do you? " "Why yes, He is from your country, isn't he?" She must have been surprised to see our shocked and aghast faces. "Oh, no!", we cried. "6000 miles to see Dale Chihuly? We live 6 blocks from his studio in the US! (We like him just fine, but, we just see A LOT of him.) Someday, V&A, someday.
My biggest disappointment was in India, Delhi. The streets were so dirty that I really wanted to pick all the litter, people urinated on streets ( we don't in my country or you'll be charged by the city), public bathrooms were sooo dirty even in big renowned hotel chains, flies everywhere (I mean everywhere), charged way above extra to foreigners, people live in the city square like mattresses and wet clothes hanged in the city garden, some people where visibly racist like the police separated dark skinned people and white people at the airport and when we asked why they were not helping us after like an hour of standing there they outright laughed at us. Moreover, there were a lot of beggars. I don't mind giving but someone refusing what you gave them or giving you dirty looks because its not enough or its not what they wanted was a shock to me.
I live in India and unfortunately, you're right. Though the Government is taking steps to stop it now.
Paris.Definitely Paris. I saw numerous drug deals and almost got robbed on a subway three times! It’s very dirty and all the stores are overpriced tourist stops
In 1996, I took a trip across country with a friend. I would say the biggest disappointment was Mt. Rushmore. It was in the middle of nowhere (maybe it's more built up now) and you couldn't get to it from a major highway, if I recall. Then you get there and expect to swell with pride or something but it just wasn't moving to me. And the MR salt-and-pepper shakers at the gift shop didn't add any sophistication either.
My father thought the Dakotas would be a fun vacation. Took all of us kids there on a week long trip. We traveled all the way from the Virginia to Mount Rushmore. It was huge letdown. Did absolutely nothing for me and we were all bored out of our minds! Well, everyone but dad, that is. 😝
This story is of my friend's, he told me that he was utterly dissapointed by the country Thailand, he expected to see the wondorous monuments but was sorry for it as he found out that all the land was dirty, people were drinking like crazy and everyone was very rude, leave alone his guide. He saw the monuments but he was engrieved by the fact that a lot of local people just didn't respect them.
I visited the USA and discovered that the Grand Canyon is just a big hole in the ground.
The thing is that maybe you didn't realise its beauty and importance, no offense though.
1st time in Brussels and with time to spare before meeting up with friends I set out to see the famous Manneken Pis...circling the Grand Place and a-joining streets I was getting tired and irritated...the famed masterpiece was no-where to be found....finally I swallowed my pride and asked for directions....Right there Madame,behind you ! and so it was,all 30(or so)centimeter (1 foot) and I had passed it 4 times and never saw it...what a let down...impressive though, the extensive wardrobe this tiny statue has, donated from all over the world..The Lace museum is worth a visit and the hot chocolate drink I found on the Grand Place...Heaven !!
Belgium, maybe bad timing but it was really boring, lots of places were shut (ok it was a weekend in May), I was held at airport customs for hours, being questioned and they've searched everything but my bodily cavities; the few people we asked for help with directions only bothered to answer back if spoken in Flemish - luckily my friend lived in The Netherlands for a while - even though we were extremely polite and spoke English and French. Food was nice, but that was it.
I should've said that was in Brussels, probably it's different in other parts of the country!
, therefore I wasn't allowed to practice the new language I had been learning w.anted to practice their English
Tibet! Altitude sickness is a b*tch and nothing in the world can prepare you for it.
Except for the altitude sickness, was Tibet wonderful?
Load More Replies...Tibet! Altitude sickness is a b*tch and nothing in the world can prepare you for it.
Except for the altitude sickness, was Tibet wonderful?
Load More Replies...
