alors voilà, je vais vous planter le décor: nous sommes des parents de 3 enfants de 8, 7 et 5 ans. ça fait 10 ans qu'on ne part plus à 2 et nous n'avons pas du tout l'habitude de voyager sac à dos. De l'Asie, nous ne connaissons que l'Indonésie (voyage de noce).
J'ai envie de partir fin octobre 1 SEMAINE, sans enfants, j'ai envie de dépaysement, de cotôyer une autre culture sans voyager sac à dos. Une semaine de visite, bon temps, etc.
Voici donc mes questions:
1. L'Asie est-elle une destination possible sur une semaine ?
2. Quel pays correspondrait mieux à nos besoin de dépaysement, visites et repos. (ATTENTION: je n'ai pas dit "far niente")?
Thaïland, Vietnam, Tibet, Qatar, Yemen, Inde ou Népal ?
Merci de me guider.... tout est si nouveau pour nous!
il est clair que tout le monde va vous dire que 8 jours...c'est vraiment trop court (12h d'avion sans escale...dans le meilleur des cas),
lorsque l'on veut se déplacer un peu, la thailande est le pays le plus "facile" et très agréable du fait de la diversité de ses paysages et de ses différents intérets...mais en 8 jours, il faudra choisir drastiquement...alors....2 jours a bangkok, puis une plage, ou bien chiang mai si vous voulez faire un petit trek....
en fait c'est vraiment la durée de votre voyage qui pose problème...
la suisse ??
blague plate .🙁.. sérieusement il est possible de se faire une échappée en thailande, bon on y reviens frustrée, mais il faut le prendre comme une entrée en matière, de toute façon ce n'est pas les avions qui manquent,
je dirais u coup sur bkk, un mini coup sur plage, et un grimpage obligatoire a dos de babar, , du cote de kanchanaburi
aller qui dit mieux ?
photo, , vite la photo...... on a un avion a prendre 🤪
« Le voyage apprend la tolérance. »
Benjamin Disraeli
-
Si tu ne pas faire autrement que 1 semaine c'est la Thaïlande qu'il te faut aller, en vol direct la Thaï-Airways ou Air-France c'est les deux seules compagnies qui font cette ligne Paris Bangkok direct, l'avantage c'est Air-France pour la bonne raison au départ de Paris c'est en soirée vers 22 heures 30 donc tu peux grignoter 1 jour le même jour que tu fini le boulot tandis que la Thai-Airways le départ c'est à 13 heures 30 . Et ensuite de Bangkok prendre directement une correspondance toujours avec la Thai Airways soit vers le Nord ou le Sud là c'est un choix à faire et à quelle période de l'année vas tu .
Les autres pays cités plus compliqué car les transports dans le pays moins desservie et plus long donc pour 1 semaine gloups .
@+ , Marco .
On aura jamais assez de temps pour tout ce qu'on veut découvrir et comprendre dans nos voyages qu'on se le dise , Amis voyageurs .
Tout dépend également du budget que vous êtes prêts à mettre pour une semaine. Honnêtement, je ne le ferais pas, mais bon... vous risquez de revenir complètement "crevés", ce qui n'est probablement pas le but de cette escapade et si vous devez reprendre le boulot au retour, décalage horaire et le reste... A bien réfléchir !!!
Lucky that we have a home/Our Home is Nha May Man/Passing rain and dry seasons/In a full-of-love atmosphere/Besides my new family/I have brothers and sisters/The sun shines over the skies/Let's stay here, with all of us,
Lucky that we have a home/Our Home is Nha May Man/Passing rain and dry seasons/In a full-of-love atmosphere/Besides my new family/I have brothers and sisters/The sun shines over the skies/Let's stay here, with all of us,
ok, je vais vite en besogne... mais j'ai pas dit qu'il n'y avait plus d'hésitation ! 😉
C'est pourquoi je suis avide de vos conseils... je ne sais pas pourquoi, mais quelque chose me dit qu'on va se retrouver en Auvergne :)
ok, je vais vite en besogne... mais j'ai pas dit qu'il n'y avait plus d'hésitation ! 😉
C'est pourquoi je suis avide de vos conseils... je ne sais pas pourquoi, mais quelque chose me dit qu'on va se retrouver en Auvergne :)
trés beau l'Auvergne, authentique et sauvage, met toi a l'Auvergnat, méthode Assimyl " l'auvergnat en 10 leçons "
Si c'est l'Asie, ça doit être la Thailande pour les raisons expliquées plus haut. C'est vrai que ça va faire court.
Sinon il doit y avoir des destinations plus proches mais plus dépaysantes que l'Auverggne (aves tout le repect queje dois à l'Auvergne!) : les îles grecques, ou la Cappadoce (Turquie), ou encore la Jordanie...
les îles grecques, ou la Cappadoce (Turquie), ou encore la Jordanie...
Bonjour Val,
Je te rejoins à 100%... pour une semaine, je ne me risquerais pas non plus à autant d'heures de vol. La Cappadoce est "in" en ce moment, je ne connais pas, mais j'ai vu plein de circuits super intéressants là-bas. A voir à mon avis !
quelque chose me dit qu'on va se retrouver en Auvergne :)
bah, vu qu'on vous a dit que 8 jours c'est trop court... l'Auvergne est plus indiqué.
Personnellement, je pense que les enfants s'adaptent beaucoup mieux au décalage horaire que les adultes (et les adultes fatigués ont tendance à voir ce défaut chez les enfants).
Ce pourquoi, je pense qu'une semaine dans un pays de l'Asie du Sud Est peut être un bon choix.
Par contre, ne courrez pas partout.... Une semaine à courir avec des enfants, ce n'est pas idéal.
Je vous donne ma suggestion toujours impartiale sur VF comme tout le monde s'en doute déjà🙂. Partez au Cambodge et passez une bonne semaine à Siem Reap: faire découvrir à vos enfants une civilisation inconnue est tout à fait bénéfique et au retour, ils auront envie de connaitre un peu le sort des enfants cambodgiens, et là c'est gagné pour leur avenir.
Fin Octobre, c'est la fin de la mousson ... un critère à prendre en compte
Lucky that we have a home/Our Home is Nha May Man/Passing rain and dry seasons/In a full-of-love atmosphere/Besides my new family/I have brothers and sisters/The sun shines over the skies/Let's stay here, with all of us,
Sans les enfants, toutes les destinations sont possibles .... sauf peut-être les Philippines avec le problème des typhoons et ces typhoons arrivent au VN une fois sur 5! mais dans des régions différentes d'une année à l'autre avec une tendance vers le Centre du Pays.
L'année dernière du 17 Octobre au 4 Novembre, j'ai fait tout le Sud du VietNam jusqu'à Nha Trang, y compris l'Archipel de Con Dao, j'avais 18 jours de ciel bleu!
Lucky that we have a home/Our Home is Nha May Man/Passing rain and dry seasons/In a full-of-love atmosphere/Besides my new family/I have brothers and sisters/The sun shines over the skies/Let's stay here, with all of us,
Nous on partirait depuis Genève.
Mais effectivement, la thaïlande semble se présenter de + en + comme la destination.
Comment est le nord ?
Le Nord c'est bien pas mal de choses à voir à Chiang-Maï et ses proches environs comme tu as bien préciser pas de farniente je pense que le Nord est le plus approprié, il y a quelques années je suis parti aussi 1 semaines 9 jours exactement pouvait pas faire autrement boulot oblige, et cela m'a fait grand bien quand même, tu serais étonner le nombre de gens qu'ils ne partent que 1 semaine, perso la Thaïlande en si peut de temps est le mieux approprié pour ce trip court .
@+ , Marco .
On aura jamais assez de temps pour tout ce qu'on veut découvrir et comprendre dans nos voyages qu'on se le dise , Amis voyageurs .
Lucky that we have a home/Our Home is Nha May Man/Passing rain and dry seasons/In a full-of-love atmosphere/Besides my new family/I have brothers and sisters/The sun shines over the skies/Let's stay here, with all of us,
Je suis une passionnée de l'Asie, mon travail ne me permets pas de partir plus de 15 jours à la suite. Notre dernier voyage au Cambodge me fait dire une nouvelle fois, c'est trop court. Donc 8 jours, franchement... je vous le déconseille. Il n'y a pas besoin d'aller si loin pour trouver une autre culture.. et le dépaysement. Je pense à certains endroits en Grèce, en Turquie ou Malte ???
Tout dépend de vos centres d'intérêt.
Bonne recherche et tenez nous informés de votre décision et ensuite de vos impressions...
Une semaine c'est 7 ou 9 jours? Je ne plaisante pas, la différence est capitale. 9 jours, c'est en fait une semaine de travail plus le week end d'avant et celui d'après. Si on peut trouver un avion de départ qui part le soir et un de retour qui arrive tôt le matin, on peut encore gratter du temps de vacances, et le mini-voyage devient alors quelque chose d'un peu plus long. Je me suis fait une spécialité de faire des parcours du genre:
maison - journée de travail au bureau - aéroport - bout du monde - aéroport - journée de travail au bureau - maison.
Et en fait, une fois qu'on est à l'aéroport, que l'on passe 4 heures ou 10 heures dans l'avion, ce n'est pas une différence fondamentale.
Ceci dit, pour une durée courte, je privilégierais aussi une destination pas trop éloignée, en raison du décalage horaire notamment. Et pour éviter le décalage horaire, on peut tracer plein sud plutôt que vers l'est ou l'ouest. Plein sud, de la Suisse, ça nous amène quelque part en Afrique... ou en Sicile. 🙂
Mais le critère que je retiendrais avant tout, c'est la quantité de choses à faire ou à voir là où on se rend. Et savoir si on compte y retourner ou pas. Partir une semaine au Qatar, c'est sûrement beaucoup trop. En Inde en revanche, c'est ridiculement court.
Je pense que dans ce contexte, un petit bout de Turquie serait effectivement une bonne idée. Entre autres...
1 semaine sans trop courir c'est mieux que rien et si vous avez envie d'Asie pourquoi pas... (même si avec 1 semaine on rentre +/- frustrés, c'est toujours mieux que rien).
donc perso, je trouve que tout est possible:
Bali (tiens ça n'a pas encore été évoqué?),
Thaïlande (1 semaine entre Bangkok et Chiang Mai)
Vietnam ce sera bien trop court, ça mérite plus
Cambodge entre Phnôm Pênh et Angkor
Pourquoi pas Oman... (faire une recherche sur vf sur ce sujet, les avis sont assez unanimes)
Par contre au départ de Genève, je crois qu'il n'y a pas trop de vols directs ou je me trompe?
Pour sortir un peu du sentier battu, Paris - KL par Malaysia et KL - Padang tjrs avec la MAS (1h de vol). 1 Semaine au pays de Femme Roi, heh hhe oui ca existe! là où les femmes qui tiennent le cordon de la bourse, c'est le pays Minang. Allez y jettez un oeil sur ce site : www.west-sumatra.com, ca vous donnerai certainement envie. En plus, si vous voulez eviter les compagnies aeriennes indonesiennes, c'est le plus plausible et ne pas faire comme tout le monde. :-) . Vous me direz apres avoir vu le site. Bonne vacance! Minang
Quelques sites à voir avant de partir :
www.amb-indonesie.fr , www.west-sumatra.com, www.lagazettedebali.info
Et Hong Kong? Même pas besoin de visa. En une semaine c'est gérable, et peut-être même suffisant pour aller faire un tour à Macao. Ca fait beaucoup d'avion (et un gros décalage horaire) mais la Thailande est envisagée, or HK n'est pas beaucoup plus loin que BK.
Je suis nouvelle ici.. (c'est pour dire, sa ma pris une demi-heure pour trouver comment crée une nouvelle discussion --') Voila je me présente, je m'appel…
Je cherhce des retours d'expériences de personnes ayant envoyé un colissimo vers des pays à la poste peu fiable? arrivée uu non du colis? colis vide? un…
Www.rtbf.be/... Les touristes sont systématiquement lésés au célèbre marché aux fleurs d'Amsterdam, où seulement 1% des bulbes de tulipes vendus fleurissent,…
J ai une demande peu banale. Voila, ayant pris la compagnie emirates pour faire dubai shangai, une ravissante hotesse ma donne son numero. Celui ci est le…
Many of us have noticed that bugs have been making it difficult to navigate the forum lately.
I’ll let Kate and Ticapi explain the issue:
I went to your profile to check out the Thailand travel journal, and when I clicked on it, it brought me back here again. All week, I’ve been dealing with bugs like this—it’s really discouraging from continuing on VF.🙁
I had the same thing happen, and multiple times. For me, it was Montagnard’s latest journal that kept coming up no matter which discussion I clicked on.
BOLIVIA: THE COUNTRY ON THE BRINK (What's Really Happening)
A dramatic saga is unfolding before our eyes in the Andes. Between suffocating blockades, clashes, an international airlift, and historic political decisions, Bolivia has just experienced 48 hours of rare intensity.
Here’s the full breakdown (economic, social, and political) of the last 48 hours:
For travelers and tourists: the article also includes an important note about the upcoming publication (starting tomorrow) of the precise status of roadblocks, route by route.
I’ll post the full update here on Voyage Forum!
Don’t miss this in-depth analysis. History is being written before our eyes! https://www.petitherge.com/bolivie-paralysie-et-ultimatum
I just discovered a great show on Arte.
It's called "7 en route": seven young European journalists travel around Europe in a fully converted bus, making reports on every city they visit. It's amazing! 🙂
Yesterday, for example, they were in Rome, Italy, and the reports included things like the world's smallest restaurant—a super romantic spot for two. There was also a report on the king of paparazzi in Italy.
They have to pick topics that let us discover the little quirks of each country. And at the end of each episode, we get to see the finished report.
It's such a great show, mixing journalism, travel, and discovery—basically, a must-watch!
It airs in the evening starting at 6:50 PM (I think), and it started this past Monday, July 14th.
If you watch it, let me know—we can chat about it!
I left my heart’s country eight days ago and returned to my adopted one—or was it the other way around? Scotland-Morvan, Morvan-Scotland, I’m not quite sure anymore.
After a quarter without dragging my slippers around here, even though I’d loudly declared I had no interest left in this site, here I am again!
My imagination never stays fallow for long. Just enough time for my inner land to rest. It gets overgrown with fresh nettles, the kind you can pick without getting stung. Then, it’s time to till the fragrant earth and let the story grow.
I hesitated over where to set this story.
Maybe the Highlands, maybe the Hebrides, maybe the Orkney Islands, maybe the Shetland Islands. All of Scotland is myth—easy to embroider.
But in the end, no. I’d almost be too afraid to bare my soul.
The story will take place at home. Simple, practical.
1)
This morning, I was up well before dawn, feeling a bit grumpy, but nothing a bowl of coffee won’t fix. I love my bowl, and no one dares take it. It’s porcelain, edged with intertwined blue flowers. On the bottom, it says "Revol." The factory has existed long before the Revolution. It was my great-grandmother’s bowl. She drank roasted barley from it during the war, then her Leroux chicory.
Last year, a little guy dropped it. My bowl broke into three pieces. A black anger vibrated deep inside me. The little boy was so upset, on the verge of tears. How could I scold him!
I picked up the three pieces and took Little Boy in my arms. His hair smelled of the light, sweet sweat of toddlers. A gentle hug that healed—his budding sorrow and my anger—everything vanished, and time carried on.
Today, my bowl is even prettier. Man fixed it using the traditional kintsugi technique, except he didn’t use gold powder or lacquer but superglue, and he delicately painted the cracks with woad blue. And my bowl is even more beautiful now.
I’m lingering, I can tell—it’s just that a story wraps itself in life, and life can’t be told in the snap of a finger. Life is long. Like in architecture, you start with a rough sketch, called a "sous-cul" (the initial pencil drawing), then you make a tracing, which is the work itself, the one you later carefully roll up in a wooden tube.
Life is like that: you erase, you start over, you use the nub of the pencil until it’s tiny, but you keep going—dreaming, loving.
"Living is a full-time occupation, a unique adventure. Always a surprise and a wonder, which sometimes turns into astonishment. And, from time to time, happiness."*
Alright, enough digressing—this introduction is definitely too long.
Tomorrow, I’ll get to the heart of the matter.
(I hate that expression; it feels like I’m cutting into someone’s skin.)
I’m Yann, a 28-year-old TikToker who loves traveling!
Since I’ve been to several destinations, I’d love to get a flag from each one as a sort of trophy. But from what I’ve seen online, a lot of sites sell them with what looks like really poor quality...
So I’m reaching out to you all to share a site you usually use—help me start my collection! :)
hi there
I’d love to get some opinions—I’ve never used Airbnb before.
They’re offering a key handover via lockbox.
Any tips or advice?
Is it reliable?
Best,
Hi there, I’m Laura, and I’m looking for a few people to answer some questions so I can understand your travel wishes and challenges. It won’t take long—I can chat here, by email, or by phone. Don’t worry, I’m not selling anything! 😊
On this forum, we talk a lot about trekking in the Himalayas, but I’d love to share another side of Nepal: its spiritual, cultural, and religious atmosphere, especially in Kathmandu.
Nepal, much like Tibet and Bhutan, is deeply connected to the Himalayas—the ultimate sacred mountain range. This small country exudes a calming vibe, shaped by a strong spiritual dimension. What I loved most was the unique sensory experience you get there. Walking around temples and tantric monasteries, a distinct scent fills the air—aromatic plants used for ritual fumigation. Locals mainly burn Himalayan juniper, cedar, sandalwood, and other local essences. This fragrant smoke is a way to purify the space and reach the deities, and you’re constantly enveloped in these aromas.
Another striking aspect is the sound. As soon as you step outside, you hear bells ringing in front of temples. People ring them three times before praying to announce their presence to the deities. Nepal is also the birthplace of singing bowls and sound meditation practices. In Kathmandu, you can easily find meditation sessions or "sound baths."
The spiritual dimension is everywhere: a Hindu sadhu practicing asceticism, a lama in deep red robes with his mala, turning a prayer wheel while murmuring "Om mani padme hum." Newar Buddhism, Tantrism, and Hinduism coexist harmoniously in daily life.
For those who love exploring a destination through its culture and spirituality, Nepal is an unforgettable place. What was your spiritual experience in Nepal like?
Hi,
I’m landing in Quebec and then heading to New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. I’d like to rent a pick-up. My question is: does this vehicle come with a cover and is it secure enough to store luggage in? I’ve heard two conflicting opinions. Thanks
I just installed the Maps.Me app on my phone. I only recently found out about this app. I’m traveling in 2 weeks and a few days, and I’m a bit stuck on how to use it.
I’m from the Montreal (Quebec) area, and I’d love to know if there’s a kind soul out there who could help me get started and use the app at least minimally.
If there are private lessons available, I’d be interested in those too.
Like many others, I’m overjoyed to hear that VoyageForum is reopening! I’ve been waiting hopefully for this, and it’s wonderful that it’s finally happening!
I just couldn’t bring myself to actively participate in other French-language travel forums—their format and way of doing things never appealed to me as much. I really hope that VF’s structure, categories, and interface won’t change too much despite the handover, because I’m very attached to them. Through thick and thin, the site has held strong—it’s amazing!
In a previous message, François mentioned that there were positions to fill ahead of the reopening, including moderators...
I’ve been eagerly waiting for this and hoping to send in my CV.
Now, after reading the latest message, it seems like the team is already fully formed. But are there still a few spots left to fill?
I’ve been a VF member for 20 years (since 2004). I’d love to contribute to this wonderful adventure as a moderator if VF would trust me with the role. If the team is open to reviewing it, I’m ready to send my CV. Could you let me know the next steps?
I’m planning a 3-week trip to Japan in May with Voyage Privé. The package includes a 5 GB eSIM, but my phone isn’t new enough to support it. VP told me I could buy a SIM card when I arrive at the airport.
Sure enough, I’ve seen online that this is possible with different providers.
I only need it for checking routes, looking up addresses, train schedules, etc.—basically using Google Maps, TripAdvisor, and similar apps. No heavy downloads or major internet use. All hotels should provide free Wi-Fi for that, right?
Has anyone got any tips for me on this? What have you tried, and how much did it cost?
Thanks for your help!
I’d like to know if you can buy reef-safe sunscreen sprays at 7-Eleven. If so, how much do they cost? We’re traveling with backpacks, so we’ll either buy 100ml here or in Thailand.
I wanted to share a really unpleasant experience from our last trip booked with Promoséjours and organized by FTI.
We booked an 8-day/7-night stay in Egypt, from June 8 to 15.
The flight initially scheduled was changed a week before departure to take off at 10 PM from Paris CDG.
In the end, it took off with a 1-hour delay and included an unmentioned stopover in Marsa Alam.
We landed in Hurghada at 4 AM and arrived at the hotel at 6 AM.
So, we spent our first night on the plane.
For the return trip, surprise—the flight was moved up. We left the hotel at 10:30 PM on Friday the 14th to take off at 2 AM and land at 7 AM at Paris CDG.
So, we spent our last night on the plane too.
After sending a complaint letter to Promoséjours / FTI, they replied that the first and last days can be dedicated to transport (which I already knew) and that no matter how many nights you book, you’re not guaranteed to spend them in the hotel—it could just as well be on the plane.
I’m really questioning this.
Isn’t there a law that protects customers in cases like this?
Because when I do the math, the first and part of the second day were spent on transport, same for the second-to-last and last day. And I paid for 7 nights for a stay that only lasted 5.
Anyway, I just want to say thanks to them—thanks to their two sleepless nights in transit, I’m coming back even more exhausted from a trip that was supposed to be restful!
I also want to warn anyone booking through this agency about visas for Egypt.
At booking, they told me the visa was included in the price, then they sent me an email saying I’d have to pay for it on-site at 25 €.
Once there, we were directed to a special line for FTI customers, and guess what? They charged us 30 €!
Basically, they’re great at making sure you *enjoy* your vacation—mostly by enjoying your wallet!
If anyone has dealt with this kind of situation and won their case, I’m all ears.
Hi there!
I’m heading to Thailand for two months.
So I thought I’d get a Thai SIM card to use Google Maps for getting around cities, mostly.
Here’s my question: will this SIM affect my apps? Or will they work the same as with my Orange SIM?
Is there any setup I need to do, or can I just pop in the Thai SIM?
I’d also like to switch back to my Orange SIM now and then while I’m in Thailand—on the same phone. Will I need to reset the phone, or will it reconnect without any issues?
Thanks in advance for your tips!
Best,
Huiclos
Hi, I’d like to know where we can buy beer or wine in Chefchaouen and around Merzouga. We’ll be doing a circuit and staying at the Parador Hotel in Chefchaouen and in a bivouac in Merzouga.
Thanks for any info you can share!
Hello everyone,
I’m reaching out to all travelers and globe-trotters on this forum. I’m a teacher in Creuse working in a ULIS program (which welcomes children aged 6 to 12 with disabilities into a mainstream school). This year, I’m launching a school journal project that will involve the kids in many different topics. A big part of this journal will focus on opening up to the world, embracing differences, travel, global cultures, and more.
I’m putting out a call to invite as many of you as possible to send us a postcard (from France or anywhere in the world)! The goal is to help us "travel" and discover new places, countries, and horizons in a way that’s much more fun and exciting than a geography textbook. One section of our journal could be called "We received a letter from ," where we’d research the location and share what we learn with our readers—a really enriching activity for the classroom.
The project starts in September 2025 but doesn’t have a strict end date, since this journal and world-discovery initiative will span several school years (the kids stay in the ULIS program for multiple years). Postcards can be sent anytime—throughout the year, across seasons, even during holidays! The kids will find them when they return.
I hope this idea appeals to as many of you as possible, and that you’ll spread the word to your fellow travelers. Help us dream and explore!
For those who’d like to write to us in a language other than French, no problem—quite the opposite!
Thank you in advance for your participation! Below is our address. If you’d like us to write back, feel free to leave your address on a corner of the postcard! 😊
ULIS program students
Bonnat Elementary School
12 rue Georges Sand
23220 BONNAT
Thank you, and I hope to hear from you soon! 😊
Julien
🙂
Hi there! I have to leave Ivato/Antananarivo on December 16th. I have a lot of ariary that I’d like to exchange for euros since I might not be coming back to Madagascar (after this 21st trip). I think the exchange office at Ivato also buys ariary back. If any of you have seen the rate for this buyback in advance, thanks a million!
Hi everyone,
I’m looking for a website that would let me plot my travel route in advance so I can print it out. The idea is to create a map with a little “me” on a bike that my parents can move along as I progress, since I’m planning to cycle all the way to Nepal.
If any of you have done something similar or know of a good tool, I’d love to hear your tips!
Thanks in advance! 😊
I'm looking to buy an ultra-lightweight 50/55L travel backpack with a suitcase or front opening.
Does anyone have any brand and/or model recommendations?
Thanks,
Emma
Hello. We’re a retired couple heading to Sri Lanka from January to March. After the November floods, I’d like to know if we can offer hands-on help to the locals, maybe pack some clothes or other items people might need in our luggage, and who we could give them to. Thanks for any info from those on the ground.
Be careful when sailing between Somalia and northern Madagascar.
It appears to be Somali pirates who have widened their search in the Mozambique Channel, far from their usual attack zone, since, to my knowledge, there are no Malagasy pirates.
Not sure if this is the right section, but just wanted to warn future travelers...
Where’s Cape Vidal?
It’s in iSimangaliso, an independent park in KZN Wildlife, stunning and just a stone’s throw from St Lucia (KwaZulu-Natal, Maputaland).
It’s the beach spot at the end of the Eastern Shores road. You can swim, fish... but watch out for waves, currents, and sharks...
There’s a really nice game drive where you can get out of your car at certain points, especially at Cape Vidal.
That’s where the camp with bungalows and campsites is.
The vervets and samango monkeys (endemic to the area, and the males are pretty big) can be a bit of a nuisance if you’re trying to braai...
They’re super persistent and not shy at all—don’t let them intimidate you, and stay alert because their speed at snatching food is impressive.
Anyway...
I’m reporting two recent attacks by these hyenas... who were *not* in a playful mood...
The first one happened at night—a hyena tried to bite a camper’s nose off in their tent... and succeeded.
The other night, a camper returning to their tent in the early hours was violently attacked by two hyenas... and they had a close call!
So, if you’re camping there, be careful...
Measures are being taken, but for now, it’s a bit risky.
A white rental Toyota Land Cruiser 4x4 carrying foreign tourists was attacked at the entrance of Tsingy de Bemaraha National Park in the village of Bekopaka, western Madagascar, yesterday. So far, there’s been no response from the central government to curb these repeated armed attacks—usually between Malagasy people, but this time targeting foreign tourists.
After an engine failure in mid-2016 on a long-haul flight from BRISBANE to LYON, I developed a persistent aviophobia that I’m struggling to shake off. It’s becoming more and more of a hindrance.
Up until now, I’ve been using an avoidance strategy (for example, avoiding destinations that would require any other mode of transport than a car or train), but lately, it’s become really limiting.
I’m looking for a therapist—either in-person or via video call—who could help me get past this hurdle.
First and foremost, I hope this topic won’t just focus on my region—the South of France—and that those of you who enjoy exchanging ideas will share what makes your own regions special.
Personally, I’ve often wanted to push back when people call us vulgar (though I’ll admit I sometimes play it up). At heart, we pure-blooded Southerners just have our own way of expressing ourselves, which differs from other regions. We also get heated in conversations pretty easily (some researchers say it’s the influence of the sun and climate in general).
What some perceive as vulgar, we don’t see that way at all.
Do you want a uniform world with no differences? If so, how do you handle traveling to places with cultures completely different from your own?
In the travel community, the word "authenticity" comes up a lot, and it often takes priority in people’s searches.
In my specific case, speaking a purely regional language without having gone to school for it doesn’t help with understanding on this forum. That’s what creates what you call controversies—and what I call passionate exchanges.
It left me speechless and ended the conversation because, for him, that’s just how he sees things, and he refuses to debate it, sticking to his position. I’ll quote him, hoping he won’t hold it against me:
"For me, things like bullfighting, boxing, football, and MMA are just tangible proof that human evolution is still at a primitive stage."
For him, our Latin-origin bullfights are barbaric customs. For us *taurins*, we need to see men face wild beasts (bulls and *toros*) at the risk of their lives every day. Does that make us barbarians?
We’ve always had this need to confront death—it’s in our genes.
Take the example he gave about football: fans of the sport would be considered mentally underdeveloped. But what about a kid who’s passionate about the game and has that drive to be a winner, just like a boxer or athletes in other violent sports?
As a traveler myself, passionate about old stones and beautiful historic buildings, I’ve visited Rome but couldn’t fully appreciate it. Religion is everywhere, and I felt like I had a lead weight on my head realizing that millions of people worldwide have believed in a god for millennia.
I’ve also judged believers for basing their faith on archaic texts that don’t prove a god (or gods) ever existed—I still think that, but I’m open to being proven wrong so I can say, "You’ve convinced me I was mistaken."
- If everyone clings to their own ideas and positions, no discussion is possible, and that’s a shame.
I’ll take away two things from my forum interactions: some accuse me of being omnipresent when I just love exchanging ideas. My way of speaking is misunderstood (regional differences), even if I’ll admit I sometimes turn up the heat—or rather, the *aïoli* —which for me is just lively debates 🔥 (a regional specialty).
And my "mocking" side, which I really need to work on.
This topic isn’t just about me—I hope other forum members will share their own regional "specialties" . For example, in Alsace, some older folks switch to their local language when they don’t want outsiders to understand, and I still don’t know if it’s German or something else.