Voila presque 10 jours que je suis arrive en Inde, dans la region du tamil nadu. Ayant deja voyage dans dautres pays auparavant, linde reste cependant un pays unique.
Deja 10 jours et jai croiser 3 cadavres gisants sur le sol. Cetait horrible a voir. Ils etaient tous raidis, toujours dans la meme position (allonge sur le dos, la tete bien droite, regardants vers les cieux).
Jen ai meme vu un qui na pas ete recouvert par un drap. Depuis que jai vu ca, il y a toujours ces images qui me reviennent constamment en tete. La pauvrete, ok je peux my faire, mais des cadavres etendus sur les trotoirs pendant que tout ces gens saferent a leur train train quotidien sans se soucier du fait quil y a quelqu un de mort ou en train d agoniser juste a cote d eux, ca me degoutte.
Jaimerais trouver quelqu un qui a vecu la meme experience en Inde.
Nous sommes toutes et tous déjà avertis de ce que nous allons rencontrer au quotidien.
Tous les guides et voyageurs narrent en effet, ces scènes que tu rencontres, et qui sont le quotidien de l'Inde.
Il est vrai que la première fois, lorsqu'on arrive, c'est un choc, on en prend plein les yeux, les narines, on se demande ce que l'on est venu faire dans ce pays que l'on croit désorganisé.
En fait, c'est un bazar trés bien organisé, rien qu'à voir comment on arrive à traverser les grandes avenues sans se faire renverser par les "occupants "des lieux... Tentez de traverser un boulevard à Paris et vous comprendrez mieux comment il est plus sécurisant d'avoir à faire aux Indiens...
La mort ? Il n'y a que dans nos sociétés occidentales que nous avons un rapport avec la mort si particulier.
Quand vous arriverez à Bénares, Varanasi, que vous croiserez aussi bien des cadavres, que vous passerez voir les crémations, vous aurez sans doute aussi le même état d'ame, mais en contrepartie, vous comprendrez mieux comment cette mort omniprésente est percue par ce peuple.
Tentez de pousser un peu plus loin, vers Calcutta, KolKata pour les Indiens, et la mort sera toute aussi présente, mais avec en plus, cette moiteur, un rythme pas possible, un cafarnahum, une véritable "machine à laver" qui vous remue en tout sens....
Et si cela ne suffit pas à votre peine, prolongez votre route vers Dhaka, le bangladesh, la vieille ville, là ou le sang coule dans la souffrance du travail, ou la mort est toute aussi présente, mais bien banale aux communs des mortels locaux. Tout aussi difficile de voir ces gamins de moins de 10 ans qui fabriquent des jeans pour "Auchan", comme j'ai pu le voir et le photographier il y a peu...
Ames sensibles, alors s'abstenir de fouler ces lieux pourtant si envoutants, mais si la vue de la mort peut vous choquer au premier abord et que vous arrivez à en surmonter la cicatrice, vous serez alors "récompensé" d'avoir choisi ce merveilleux pays qui est l'Inde .
J'ai enfin compris pourquoi, alors qu'il m'arrivait de pester au quotidien contre les difficultés d'occidentaux et mon désir ne plus y remettre les pieds, j'ai été et suis toujours attiré à y revenir, ce fut mon troisième bail à l'automne dernier...
C'est vrai on sait tout ça, on sait que l'Inde n'est pas un voyage facile.....
Mais il me semble qu'il y a une différence entre voir des gens morts, (ou mourir) sur un trottoir, en se baladant par hasard, et assister à une crémation à Varanasi par exemple....
La crémation est quelque chose d'organisé, qui fait partie de leurs croyances, de leurs traditions.
On peut essayer de comprendre le cycle des réincarnations, sans être choqués par une telle cérémonie que l'on observe de loin.
Mais croiser des cadavres sur un trottoir, me semble beaucoup plus terrible....(le mot est faible)
Cela dépasse la simple vision de la mort, cela renvoit à la souffrance, à la solitude, crever tout seul dans l'indifférence.....
Il faut vraiment être très philosophes, ou complètement "blindés", pour arriver à regarder cette mort là en face, même si elle est naturelle pour un indien....
Je ne sais pas s'il est si courant que ça de croiser cette mort là pour de simples touristes, pour répondre à Bombacool, je ne l'ai jamais rencontrée....
Tu t'es trompé de destination, il ne fallait pas visiter l'Inde.
En occident, peuple sois-disant civilisé, lors d'un match de boxe, il n'y a aucune pitié.
Toujours en occident, certaines personnes paieraient très chers pour regarder dans une arène, un homme se faire dévorer par des fauves comme à l'époque des gladiateurs.
J'ai vu comme toi, en Inde, une personne décédée le long d'une voie ferrée, j'ai tout d'abord pensé que cette personne dormait et m'en m'approchant de cet être humain, je n'ai pu que constater la mort.
Bien oui c'est courant , les morts les malades livrés a eux même,
J'ai moi même eux un grave accident de moto dans le sud de l'Inde,
je me suis réveillé sortit de l'inconscience après le choc, et là une foule de badauds tout autour qui regardaient,
personne ne bouge, je me suis rendu compte que si je ne jouait pas mon rôle a fond en y mettant plus de conviction ,
je risquait de rester là livre a moi meme , mon copain ejecté quelques 100 metres plus loin inconscient, et moi les os du tibia qui ressortait de la cheville, et le fémur cassé en deux....
j'ai commencer a gémir et demander de l'aide, a chaque fois que je revenait a moi , finalement c'est un homme de religion Bouddhiste qui a organisé de me conduire dans un hopital, qu''un Bouddhiste soit sur place m'a certainement bien aidé, car ils sont plus sur les resultats de leurs actions pour avoir un bon Karma , alors que les Hindus se disent que finalement chacun a son karma et donc tout ce qui vous arrivent c'est que vous l'avez mérité.
La réflexion sur ce qui m'est arrivé , me fait croire que cela explique l'indifférence
J'ai vécu 13 années en Inde, Pays magique , mystérieux, et tellement attachant.
Cherche Indien vivant en Belgique
oui c'est vrai , tu m'y fait penser , merci les Anges !
tout ça était comme une experience mystique ou spirituelle , car j'ai completement lâché prise sur tout ce qui pouvait m'arriver suite a l'incertitude de l'opération, il y a 10 ans les hôpitaux avaient mauvaise réputation , finalement j'etais pres a y laissé ma jambe , c'est fou ce que nous avons comme recources a partir du moment ou ont accepte les choses et les évènements,
Merci pour ton écoute :-)
Bon chemin
J'ai vécu 13 années en Inde, Pays magique , mystérieux, et tellement attachant.
Cherche Indien vivant en Belgique
J'ai retrouvé un livre que j'ai lu il n'y a pas longtemps : ("Raiway bazaar" de Paul Theroux).
Voici une citation, l'auteur cite Mark Twain qui dit au sujet des indiens :
"C'est un peuple curieux. Avec eux toute vie semble sacrée, sauf la vie humaine"......
Cette "pseudo indifférence"(?), est sans doute liée au fait que tout hindou croit en la réincarnation, cela signifie peut-être que la vie sur terre n'a pas vraiment d'importance pour eux....
Merci pour l'info je vais essayer de trouver ce bouquin,
Il y a un autre aspect également qui je crois intervient dans cette attitude des Indiens;
dés que les gens sont pris a témoins par la police concernant un fait divers ou un accident , la police mettent tellement de pression sur les gens que c'est presque du harcèlement, ils abusent de la situation et les gens sont pris dans une vrai galère, ils doivent aller faire une déposition et cela en effraye plus d'un , ils peuvent même être convoquer pour une déposition ultérieure dans un tribunal .
Pour c'est raisons dés que la police arrive tout le monde a disparu....
Bonne soirée
John
J'ai vécu 13 années en Inde, Pays magique , mystérieux, et tellement attachant.
Cherche Indien vivant en Belgique
Ce n'est pas un livre sur l'Inde uniquement....
C'est un livre sur des rencontres en train, d'Istanbul à Delhi et de Saïgon à Osaka.
Les chapitres sur l'Inde sont très intéressants. (Entre autres !)
Ce que raconte bombacool est l'un des aspects caractéristiques de l'Inde... avec beaucoup d'autres, pas forcément plus agréables (saleté extrême notamment).
Après trois voyages dans ce pays, déprimant, plus sale que n'importe quel autre pays, pauvre à l'extrême, anormalement bruyant (mais avec certes des gens gentils et -parfois- de belles choses à voir), je n'ai personnellement toujours pas compris comment certains pouvaient "s'y retrouver" ou "s'y découvrir"... C'est du mysticisme mal placé à mon avis...
je voudrait juste te faire remarquer que tu pose un jugement,
qui est le résultat de ce que tu comprend et que tu crois juste pour toi même,
ça t'appartient et je le respecte,
Bon chemin!
J'ai vécu 13 années en Inde, Pays magique , mystérieux, et tellement attachant.
Cherche Indien vivant en Belgique
Je ne connais pas encore l'Inde et m'apprête à la découvrir.
Cette conversation m'interpelle, car bien que confrontée quelque fois à la mort de proches et un peu "blindée" face à elle, je reste assez sensible à la vue du sang ou d'un corp inerte et du coup il est pas impossible que je tombe dans les vappes...
Si j'essaye ainsi de me mettre en situation, quelles seront mes réactions. Ici, en France, si je vois un SDF allongé par terre, je crois qu'il dort sans aller vérifier s'il est encore en vie. J'en suis pas fière hein, mais je pense que l'indifférence est fréquente un peu partout dans le Monde... Si je constate sa mort alors évidemment j'appelle les autorités_ réaction logique, simple et efficace ici_ ...
Comment réagir en Inde? Qui est le croc-mort à prévenir pour organiser la crémation ou l'enterrement? Je ne sais pas encore à quoi m'attendre (si je reste moi-même consciente) mais j'aurais du mal à laisser un Homme mort à ma vue.
je comprend votre appréhension, en fait ce pays nous demande d'être bien encré dans la réalité de la vie,
et pour les Âmes sensible cela est un vrai chamboulement.
Il faut bien ce dire qu'il est impossible de prendre toute la souffrance de l'humanité pour sois, et que quelque fois il est impossible d'intervenir dans le processus de la vie et de la mort, c'est simplement un fait qu'il faut accepter comme etant un processus d'évolution choisie par L'Âme incarnée,
le piège est de ne pas tombe dans la facilite de-culpabilisante de ce dire "c'est son karma je n'y peut rien" il faut du discernement, et intervenir et faire du mieux possible jusque ou cela s'arrête, et accepter ce qui est .
bien Cordialement
John
J'ai vécu 13 années en Inde, Pays magique , mystérieux, et tellement attachant.
Cherche Indien vivant en Belgique
J'ai égalemment croisé plusieurs cadavres pendant mon séjour dont plusieurs dûs à des accidents de la route.
Il est certain que la vie n'a pas la même valeur que chez nous.
Je pense justement que le bouleversement dont certains peuvent être pris dans ce pays peut déclencher des reflexions, des remises en question de la vie, de la société qui peuvent les amener à voir la vie autrement et donc à se découvrir.
Comme quelqu'un l'a dit plus haut, avant de partir, quand on s'est sérieusement documenté, on doit s'attendre à voir la mort en face 😠, mais aussi la saleté, le bruit, les odeurs de toutes natures, etc.
Donc soit on se sent assez fort psychologiquement pour affronter cela, soit on choisi une autre destination. Je précise que cela ne signifie pas que l'on est insensible, mais seulement que l'on a une carapace assez dure pour nous protéger. Et je comprends parfaitement que certains soient plus sensibles que d'autres, donc ce n'est pas un reproche que de le dire.
Il y a tant de beaux pays à visiter 🙂, pourquoi en choisir un d'où l'on reviendra traumatisé !
....Parcequ'il a des choses qui choquent, d'autres qui éveillent et sans doute certaines qui émerveillent...
Beaucoup de beaux pays à découvrir mais beaucoup de pays du tiers monde par là même, mais toujours des cultures différentes.
J'ai un peu parcouru l'Europe mais ça m'embête de limiter mes voyages à ma façon de vivre habituelle.
C'est tout à votre honneur de vouloir découvrir d'autres horizons 🙂 N'est-ce pas le propre du voyageur ?
Je voulais simplement souligner que l'on a toujours le choix, que l'on doit avoir conscience de ses limites, et que nos décisions comportent toujours des conséquences.
Donc soit on se sent assez fort psychologiquement pour affronter cela, soit on choisi une autre destination.
Il y a tant de beaux pays à visiter 🙂, pourquoi en choisir un d'où l'on reviendra traumatisé !
On dit tous en effet qu'il faut se sentir prêts, et peut-être que certains devraient se poser la question de savoir s'ils se sentent "capables" d'affronter ce pays ou non...
Mais ce n'est pas si simple !!! 🤪
Il est difficile de savoir à l'avance qu'elles sont réellement nos limites, savoir comment on va réagir, quel va être notre état d'esprit une fois là bas, comment va se dérouler notre voyage, etc...
Le hasard des rencontres, notre façon de voyager, les endroits visités, beaucoup de facteurs rentrent en compte sur la réussite d'un voyage.
Le fait de se savoir particulièrement "sensibles", ne devrait pas être considéré uniquement comme un frein......
Ce n'est pas pour ça qu'on n'aimera pas l'Inde, qu'on ne sera pas capables de dépasser notre crainte.
L'Inde ne se limite heureusement pas à la misère, à la saleté, les moments d'émerveillement sont tout aussi nombreux et font "oublier" la fatigue, l'énervement parfois, tous ces côtés "négatifs" qui nous vident et dont on n'a pas l'habitude.
L'inde donne aussi beaucoup d'énergie.
Je crois qu'il faut être conscients que ce ne sera pas un voyage "facile", mais il ne faut pas avoir peur à l'avance, (et faire peur aux autres), on est parfois plus fort psychologiquement que l'on ne croit, et inversement.
Il est certain que la vie n'a pas la même valeur que chez nous.[/citation]
Vous dites ça par rapport à un cadavre. Vous vouliez sans doute dire que les asiatiques n'ont pas le même rapport à la mort que nous.
Cela m'avait frappé lorsque je suis arrivé après un accident, en Thaïlande.
http://voyageforum.com/...0nouveau%20carrefour;
Bien sûr que l'Inde est un voyage mental. Ce voyage ne souffre pas de demi mesures. On dit oui ou non à L'Inde. Je n'ai jamais vu de gens aussi heureux de vivre qu'en Inde. Sans doute savent-ils mieux que nous le prix d'une seconde vécue.
Et l'Inde, c'est aussi ça :
http://voyageforum.com/...e_indienne_D3530790/
Pour réussir un voyage en Inde, il faut y aller sans rien attendre en retour, sans espérer quelque chose.
En fait, il faut y aller l'esprit libre de tous jugements ou idées déjà faites
Voyager c'est découvrir que tout le monde a tort.
Aldous Huxley
Je crois qu'il faut être conscients que ce ne sera pas un voyage "facile", mais il ne faut pas avoir peur à l'avance, (et faire peur aux autres), on est parfois plus fort psychologiquement que l'on ne croit, et inversement.
Je ne crois pas que le but de cette discussion soit de faire peur aux autres, plutôt de prévenir.🙂
Tu as raison, je ne disais pas ça pour toi, mais il faut reconnaître tout de même que le titre du post de Bombacool peut aussi paraître effrayant, voire dissuasif pour certains....🤪
J'essayais juste de faire comprendre que l'on peut Aimer un voyage en Inde, même si beaucoup de choses nous choquent.....
On est nombreux à être sensibles, il est difficile pour tous de regarder la misère en face, la maladie, la mort, mais on peut arriver à poursuivre le voyage de la façon la plus sereine et naturelle possible, et on peut vraiment trouver que ce pays est fabuleux !
L'Inde est un pays d'expériences extrêmes. Il est possible que l'on en revienne un peu secoué.C 'est même une des raisons qui nous pousse à y aller. On veut tester ses limites émotionnelles. Pour les Indiens la mort et la souffrance n'ont pas la même signification que pour nous. Personnellement mon voyage n'a modifié aucune de mes convictions profondes face à celles-ci. Cependant après quelques mois dans un pays aussi chaotique où se côtoient 1.2 milliard de personnes on apprend à relativiser bien des choses. On y apprend en quelque sorte à vivre et à laisser mourir. On se laisse porter par la vague et l'on se considère chanceux d'être ce que l'on est.
Il est bien vrai que l'Inde est le Pays des "extrêmes" et chacun de nous y met les pieds en connaissance de cause, les guides renvoient souvent les lecteurs à ce qu'ils vont rencontrer.
En ce qui me concerne, même s'il est vrai que certaines situations particulières sont toujours difficiles, à chaque fois que je reviens en Inde, je m'attend à que tout ne soit pas "rose".
Cette contrée est aussi une expérience de ce que peut être la vie et ....la mort.
Comme tu le dis si bien, chacun de nous relativise bien des choses dans sa mémoire d'occidental.
Et malgré tout cela, je me dirige vers mon quatrième séjour dans ce pays.
J'ajouterais que lorsque l'on est dans un certain état d'esprit l'expérience Indienne va bien au delà des Indiens. C'est une rencontre avec la nature humaine avec tout ce qu'elle comporte de merveilleux et d'horrible, de joie et de tristesse, d'amour et d'indifférence.
A Calcutta, le matin, a l'aube, un charette a bras parcourt la ville. Les SDF dorment sur le trottoir les uns contre les autres comme des sardines. Les employes de la charrette retournent les SDF, ceux qui sont morts dans la nuit, ils les embarquent en tas sur la charrette. Ma compagne a pleuré, nous avons quitté la ville le jour meme. Que fait le gouvernement indien ? Pas au courant ? Quelle solution ? "ailleurs", ils sont moins "visibles" ou moins " mediatiques " ?
Ando
le voyage est un bonheur, pas une destination
Je ne connais pas Calcutta, mais j'ai toujours pensé (à tort peut-être), que c'était une ville où l'extrême misère était en effet encore plus forte et visible qu'ailleurs.......
"Médiatique" ??? Sans doute....On a tous des images de cette ville véhiculées par différents médias.
Non pas des images de ses attraits, de ses monuments, mais des images effrayantes, des gens qui meurent sur les trottoirs, des "hommes chevaux", ces rickshaws tirés par la force des bras.....
On connait tous les dispensaires de Mère Térésa, ainsi que le livre et film "La cité de la joie" de Dominique Lapierre, sur les lépreux.
Calcutta est après Bombay la ville la plus peuplée.
Sa situation proche du Bangladesh fait sans doute qu'elle fait partie des endroits les plus déshérités. Les conditions climatiques, les inondations, les gens des campagnes qui affluent et espèrent trouver un travail.
A Bombay, les immenses bidonvilles s'étalent à la périphérie de la ville. Les touristes n'y pénètrent généralement pas, c'est peut-être pour ça que la misère est moins visible, (si on peut dire), on la voit mais de loin. On ne croise pas de morts en se promenant.
Enfin il me semble...
Mais pour ceux qui la connaissent, Calcutta ne se résume certainement pas à ça, la ville a sans doute de nombreux charmes. A condition d'être capables de dépasser ses peurs, ses a priori....
En effet Ming, Calcutta, Kolkata pour les Indiens, est une ville particulière, grouillante, mais ou la misère ne semble pas plus grande que dans le reste de l'Inde.
En octobre/novembre dernier, j'y ai passé une semaine entière, et je n'ai pas vu que la misère, cette ville a certainement une âme particulière, il y a de fort belles choses à voir.
Il est vrai que je revenais de Dhaka, le Bangladesh voisin, ou j'avais aussi passé une semaine bien éprouvante, c'est du reste ce qui a du me faire trouver Calcutta plus soft...
Pour avoir trainé les pieds dans le bidonvilles de derrière la fantastique gare d'Howrah, je n'ai pas ressenti une grande différence avec les bidonvilles de Delhi.
Je dirai même que je n'ai pas retrouvé l'image donné par le livre de Dominique Lapierre, bien que même si du temps a passé depuis.
Je m'attendais à rencontrer une situation en rapport avec ce qui a été décrit maintes fois, j'ai pour habitude de "trainer" ou les touristes ne vont pas, et ces lieux n'ont rien de plus pauvre que partout ailleurs en Inde.
J'ai pu être en mesure de photographier sans le moindre problème, j'avancerai même que c'est dans cette contrée ou le contact a été des plus faciles, je ne pratique que la photo de type reportage.
Alors oui, je pense comme toi que dés lors que tout voyageur qui est en mesure de dépasser ses peurs et ses a prioris trouvera en Calcutta le charme que n'ont pas toutes les mégalopoles Indiennes.
De plus, Calcutta est aussi la porte pour monter plus au nord, dans des contrées toutes aussi belles et enrichissantes.
Avant de m'y rendre, je voyais aussi Calcutta comme une ville où la misère humaine serait plus visible qu'ailleurs en Inde. Peut-être est-ce à cause d'un reportage que j'ai vu jadis sur les enfants qui vivent dans la gare de Howrah? Ou encore le mythe créé autour de Mère Térésa? J'y ai séjourné une semaine pour finalement constater que la misère n'est pas plus ostentatoire qu'ailleurs en Inde, même qu'il me semble avoir vu bien pire dans l'Orissa et au Rajasthan. J'irais même jusqu'à dire que j'ai trouvé la ville agréable et intéressante. Je ne pensais même pas m'y rendre au départ, rebuté par les préjugés qui m'habitaient; c'eut été une grave erreur. Ma photo de profil illustre d'ailleurs une scène de rue calcutienne (si ça se dit!)
Maintenant, en ce qui concerne les cadavres, il ne faut pas non plus penser avant de partir qu'on en croisera nécessairement autant que l'instigateur de ce fil de discussion. Hors de Varanasi ou de cérémonies funéraires, je n'en ai vu aucun en près de cinq mois aux quatre coins du pays.
J'ai toujours été surpris en Inde, de l’accueil qui nous est réservé..que ce soit dans les commerces, les hôtels, nos déplacements, ou n'importe. Surpris…
Je reviens tout fraîchement d'Inde et je prends plaisir aujourd’hui à vous partager mon vécu et mon expérience. Certaine que d'autres topics, blogs et articles…
Avant toute chose, le contexte: j'ai effectué avec un ami entre avril et Août 2010 un stage de développement d'industries textiles dans le désert du Kutch dans…
Chitisinghpura est un village de la vallée himalayenne du Cachemire, habité par majoritairement par des sikhs. Dans la soirée du 20 mars 2000, 17 hommes en…
Hi everyone, just this once I’m not posting for a travel story, but to share a thought for Venezuela.
If you didn’t know—since it’s not making headlines—the country was hit by two 7.5-magnitude earthquakes last week. Over 2,200 people have died, more than 50,000 are missing, and some coastal towns have been completely destroyed.
Maybe when the scale of the humanitarian crisis becomes clear, our media will cover it a bit more... especially since earthquakes with this many casualties usually make the front page, but there’s been nothing in France.
So here’s a thought for this country, which, whatever you think of its politics, is a true jewel of South America, both for its landscapes and its people.
hi there
I’d like to invite you to discover my coastal province in central Vietnam: Quang Ngai.
This year, my province has really improved its infrastructure—mountains, countryside, and sea are all authentic here.
No harassers or thieves, and no Russians either.
A local lunch costs around 1 €.
A *** hotel room is about 25 €, and you can find hotels right on My Khe Beach.
We have a specialty: *banh xeo*—10 crepes for just 1.5 €.
You can rent motorbikes to explore the province and maybe visit the many ethnic minorities.
I live here—I’m not selling anything, but I can help if needed (my father-in-law is a traditional Vietnamese doctor and he’s very skilled).
Hi everyone! 😉
I’m Typhaine, 35 years old. Five years ago, I left France for a solo round-the-world trip—no planes, just a van, hitchhiking, cycling, and even a canoe in the Amazon! Today, I work as a naturalist guide in Argentine Patagonia.
Wherever I go, my compass stays the same: observing and photographing wildlife, which I deeply admire and respect.
My project: I’d love to share this experience through a sustainable, authentic, and immersive nature tourism initiative. But to build something meaningful, I need to understand how other nature enthusiasts experience their own adventures.
If you:
Are over 20 years old
Have a true passion for Nature
Have already taken at least one trip lasting more than 3 nights (in your country or abroad) in your life
Promise: I’m not selling anything, this isn’t marketing. Your answers are 100% anonymous and will only help me shape this wild project.
A huge thank you to everyone for your help and kindness! Looking forward to chatting in this thread 😛
(Dear admins, this is purely a collaborative effort for my project study, with no commercial purpose. Thank you so much for your support!)
Photo: Grizzly Bear (Ursus arctos horribilis), female on the left and her cub on the right. Photo taken by me in Alaska, Denali National Park.
It’s something we often notice in this forum—and many others—this behavioral shift.
A long-time member, or even a new one, asks a question.
They get one or more answers, some brief, some detailed, and then... nothing???
Not even a simple thank you!!!
From what I’ve gathered, if the answers don’t align with what they wanted to hear, it seems natural for the asker to just disappear!! 😕
Unless—(and I fear this is the case)—basic politeness is no longer part of our society????
I spent 3 weeks in Bali last summer (+ 3 nights on Gili Meno and a day trip to Kawah Ijen in Java). So I wanted to see what ChatGPT could suggest for comparison...
Here’s the prompt I gave:
"You’re a local expert guide for Bali.
- Plan a 20-day itinerary for Bali with a side trip to Gili Meno and a day trip to Kawah Ijen in Java without staying overnight.
- I’m traveling with my wife, and I love visiting historical sites, hiking, relaxing at the beach, snorkeling, and exploring rice terraces...
- For the duration of the stay, I don’t want more than 8 places to sleep, and I’d like to stay at least 2 days at each stop to avoid unpacking too often. Except for the last night, where I’m okay with just one night near the airport.
- I prefer neighborhoods that are walkable and try to avoid typical tourist traps, though I don’t want to miss the must-see spots. So suggest a mix of iconic sites and hidden gems.
- Recommend hotels or guesthouses with a budget of 50 to 100 € per night, including breakfast. Make suggestions in areas popular with travelers, specifying the vibe (I prefer quiet), and consider safety and proximity to attractions.
- For lunch and dinner, suggest two to three restaurants that are well-rated by customers.
- Give me a day-by-day program with details on travel times, visiting times for each point of interest, and recommendations for transportation (taxi, train, bike, etc.).
Estimate the total cost of the trip, including accommodations, food, transportation, and activities, and suggest two tips for saving money in each category.
- Don’t make anything up—be realistic about travel times, take into account the opening dates and hours of sites, and give me the entry fees for places to visit.
- Ask me all the questions until you’re 95% sure you understand what’s being asked. Don’t generate your response until you’ve understood."
The AI asked for a few clarifications:
"Great request—I can build you a really optimized and enjoyable itinerary, but to be 95% sure I hit the mark, I need a few key clarifications (this will really influence the pace, areas, and accommodations)."
In the end, it proposed a program very close to what we actually did.
I’ll skip its accommodation and restaurant suggestions...
Its proposal:
"Ubud (4 nights) => we did 5 nights
Sidemen (2 nights)
Amed (3 nights) => we’d planned 2 nights
Gili Meno (3 nights) => we did Gili between Sidemen and Amed
Munduk (3 nights) => we did 2 nights before Pemuteran
Pemuteran (3 nights) with Ijen => we did 4 nights
Sanur (2 nights + 1 last night) => we chose Jatiluwih instead of Sanur
It suggested "activities" (and accommodations too):
IN UBUD:
- Walk around central Ubud (1–2h)
- Campuhan Ridge Walk
- Tegalalang Rice Terrace
- Tirta Empul
- Gunung Kawi
- Massage / market / slow café
IN SIDEMEN:
- Rice terrace hike (2–3h)
- Cooking class
IN AMED:
- Snorkeling
- Japanese Shipwreck
- Beach + relaxation
- Volcano sunset
ON GILI:
- Snorkeling at Gili Meno Turtle Point, Nest Underwater Statues
IN MUNDUK:
- Jungle & waterfall hike - Munduk Waterfall + Melanting Waterfall
- Loop: 3–4h (perfect for your level)
- Ulun Danu Bratan Temple
- Twin Lakes
IN PEMUTERAN
- Snorkeling: Menjangan Island
For Kawah Ijen, it detailed the day well:
👍 from Pemuteran = best possible option
12 PM: leave hotel (we left at 10 PM)
1 PM: ferry
3 PM: arrival in Java + transfer
11 PM: start ascent
2 AM–6 AM: volcano
Return to Bali around 11 AM–12 PM (we got back at 4 PM)
👍 still very intense, but doable with an agency
💰 ~80–120 €/person all-inclusive
IN SANUR:
- Relaxation
- Quiet beach
- Proximity to airport (30 min)"
I’ve kept the habit of blowing my nose in the sink and then washing my hands—a custom I picked up in India. Sometimes, non-travelers are shocked when they catch me in the act... 🤪
Also, when I run out of toilet paper, it doesn’t bother me—unless I’ve got company over... 🤪
Just got back from walking a friend’s dog (while they’re on vacation), wearing a djellaba and Tibetan boots... 😏😏😏 Oh, for sure, if I’d run into locals, I probably would’ve shocked them? 😏
Anyway, as long as I’m not spitting on the floor at a restaurant or squatting on the side of a highway with a water bottle in hand...
After taking a little trip around the world, I came back a few months ago with an idea in mind.
I mostly do diving, and I love observing animals in their natural habitat without disturbing them.
During the trip, I realized it was quite complicated to know where and when to see certain species.
For example:
where to dive with sharks or manta rays
where you might get a chance to swim with whales
I even discovered thresher sharks during my trip… I didn’t even know this species existed before, even though they’re incredible to see.
We spent a ton of time searching for info all over the place, especially on social media, without ever getting a clear picture.
So I started putting all this together on my own, in the form of a map, to make it easier to visualize where to go depending on the seasons.
I recently put a first version online (it’s called Fauneya).
There are probably mistakes, inconsistencies, or things to improve, and that’s partly why I’m posting here.
I’d really love to know how you all go about planning this kind of trip.
As part of my Master’s thesis, I’m currently conducting a public survey on a topic that concerns all of us when planning a trip: artificial intelligence and the role of human contact in travel planning.
These days, we’re using more and more digital tools to find ideas, compare options, and book trips... but is the role of human advisors still essential? At what moments? And for what types of trips?
The survey is anonymous and takes about 7 minutes.
It’s aimed at anyone who travels (or has traveled) for leisure, whether you plan everything yourself or go through an agency.
While browsing the forum to gather info for my upcoming trip to Thailand, I often see the terms "traveler," "great traveler," and also "tourist"—so what’s the nuance for you?
I've traveled quite a bit in Vietnam over the past few years—from the southern delta to bustling cities and even some small islands—but what really sticks with me is the north, the high mountains.
Up there, there's something different—maybe slower, more raw. The morning markets with ethnic groups, women in traditional clothes, the colors...
The stilt houses, kids following you and laughing for no reason, the terraced rice fields—it almost feels unreal at times, so vast and quiet, yet so human and simple.
You often hear that Sapa has become too touristy, and that's partly true, especially in the center. But as soon as you move a little farther away, everything changes quickly. The landscapes open up, encounters feel more natural, and you rediscover something truly authentic.
I think it's that contrast that struck me—the difference between what you imagine before going and what you actually discover when you take the time.
And you—what memory do you hold onto from Vietnam? A particular place that touched you more than others?
Hello,
We’re finalizing the plans for our upcoming trip to China in May 2025. The second-to-last stop will be in Zhangjiajie, where we’ve planned to stay for 2 full days before heading to Shanghai.
We’re traveling solo using local transport and have arranged to stay in the city of Zhangjiajie.
We’ve seen that there’s a lot to see:
Tianmen Mountain, the Grand Canyon and the glass bridge, Zhangjiajie National Park, and that the sites are quite far apart with fairly expensive entry fees.
We’re thinking of dedicating one day to the national park and the Grand Canyon (glass bridge) and one day to Tianmen Mountain.
But we’re not sure if this plan is realistic—any thoughts would be much appreciated!
I should be serving a warming drink to the participants in the discussion about gardens and parks that provide us with beautiful photos, I could mention the delicious buttery scent wafting from bakeries in the thread about returning to France, but my heart, its powerful pulse that nourishes my entire being, is elsewhere.
Dasht-e Lut, Yazd, Esfahan, Bam, Kerman, Qeshm, Hormuz—a melody, a prayer at the heart of desire.
A dream, an unattainable fantasy? No. Not anymore.
A very serious Italian travel agency is organizing this trip for 6 people this winter. I’m signed up, I’m going, I’m living. Maybe.
"But you’re completely crazy!!!!"
I know... I know that every civilization, every society has a vital need to create scapegoats to define and justify itself, pathetically. And Iran is one of them, top of the list. I laugh or sigh, and it doesn’t bother me.
But that unchanging red, deep red and garnet, so beautiful in itself, in all the Western chancelleries repeats, whispers, shouts: don’t go, don’t go, don’t go, you’re putting yourself in danger and we can’t do anything for you. You’ll be turned into mere bargaining chips, into arguments for endless negotiations. Fear must be instilled, its power absolutely preserved, no concessions made to the enemy. The information (how many French hostages, real or fake, compared to the number of travelers?) is always lacking.
Traveling becomes a merciless confrontation between desire, the vital pulse, and anxiety, its ghosts.
Hi everyone, here’s our itinerary. Arriving on the evening of December 13th. Departing on January 7th.
Thanks in advance for your tips and valuable feedback.
Manila – 1 night
Coron – 4 nights
Coron to El Nido cruise – 2 nights
El Nido – 4 nights
Port Barton – 5 nights
Flight from Puerto Princesa to Vigan
Vigan – 2 nights
Sagada – 2 nights
Banaue – 2 nights
Bagabag – 1 night
Manila – 1 night
I’ve only booked the flight to Manila and the Manila/Coron flight so far. Is it possible to book boat trips, accommodations, and the Puerto Princesa flight last-minute?
Really disappointed with Costa Rica! Pura vida? The scam of the century!
(Costa Rica pure emptiness).
The country where animals are free and people are in cages.
3 weeks in December in this country and never again. Imagine the trailer of a movie that seems interesting, and when you go see it, you realize it’s a flop and the best moments were in the trailer.
Well, that’s exactly how we felt with Costa Rica pure emptiness.
My wife and I have traveled quite a bit and didn’t expect to be so wrong about a place.
On the main routes, we visited:
San José
Alajuela
Limón, Cahuita, Puerto Viejo, Manzanillo (Caribbean side)
Jaco, Quepos, Manuel Antonio (Pacific side)
And a few short stops in intermediate towns.
Our dissatisfaction grew gradually like this:
When we arrived at the hotel, the taxi dropped us off on a small street in front of a white metal gate with ground-floor windows barred. We looked at it skeptically, but the sign matched.
He approached the gate, rang the bell, the buzzer sounded, and the door opened slightly. The hotel wasn’t bad for the price, a 10-minute walk from downtown, but with a "Fleury-Mérogis" vibe guaranteed.
So far, so good.
After showering and regaining our bearings, we headed downtown.
What started to unsettle us on the way was seeing houses with bars on the ground-floor windows and even on the second floor.
At first, we thought the hotel’s neighborhood wasn’t great.
Downtown San José:
It’s a generic city, not very exotic, with a pedestrian street and a small mercado where you can eat local food without frills. Very few tourists—if any—which let you blend in with the locals. We had lunch and struggled to make ourselves understood because, aside from one or two shops, English wasn’t spoken.
On the way back to the hotel, we took a different route, and while chatting and strolling, my wife pointed out a beautiful two-story white house completely barricaded like Fort Knox.
From that moment, we started noticing the facades of houses and buildings, and wow, it was creepy—most looked like prisons, some even with barbed wire.
Though put off, we told ourselves it was probably a big-city thing and the rest of the country couldn’t be like this.
So far, so good.
We relaxed at the hotel and had a drink at the bar. Night falls early, around 5:30 PM. By 7:30 PM, we headed back downtown for dinner. A bit unsettling for a capital—downtown was almost deserted, and aside from fast-food chains, very few restaurants were open, with hardly anyone on the streets.
Bars with security guards out front.
I won’t say we felt unsafe that night, but once it got dark, we realized the bars on the windows weren’t for nothing. First day in, and our impression was already mixed.
The next day, we explored the city and surroundings, and our feelings didn’t change.
So far, so good.
Off to Cahuita by bus—4 hours of travel.
The landscapes are very green but quickly become monotonous. The road runs alongside the forest and passes through a few towns and villages, and even in the countryside, there were just as many prison-like houses.
The bus dropped us off at Cahuita’s terminal station—only four of us got off. It’s a village, or rather, a small town. Cahuita is basically one straight road and a perpendicular one, and honestly, doubt started to creep in.
A few restaurants that add 13% tax and 10% service charge—so 23% extra. We dropped our stuff at the hotel and went to explore. In 20 minutes, we’d seen it all. We had lunch and planned to check out the famous park.
Entry is by donation—well, the "entry" is a joke. There’s a path along the forest by the sea, and that’s it.
Nothing’s going right anymore.
We thought it was a total scam, but since we hadn’t gone far, we decided to come back the next day to explore further.
We returned to the hotel, relaxed, and around 8:00 PM, we went out for dinner. Only two restaurants were open, and the streets were deserted.
Creepy!
The next day, we explored the so-called park more thoroughly and really got it.
A path along the forest by the sea—2 hours there and 2 hours back, where you see animals that feel like showing their faces.
A total joke—"all that for this?"
The beach was full of wood debris and coconut husks. We wondered if the photos online were edited because the sea, very rough, wasn’t the azure blue we’d seen in pictures.
But calling this a park is a joke—it’s like a new concept.
When we thought about the reviews online, we started to suspect that professionals with interests in the country were monitoring and countering any negative feedback that could harm their business.
Too bad we didn’t check the negative reviews beforehand—we did while we were there, and it helped. We wondered if we’d become too demanding after all our travels, but no—when something’s bad, it’s bad.
Manuel Antonio’s park is even more ridiculous—there’s a short path along the sea for about 500 meters, and then nothing. You have to climb through mud and hack your way through the forest. We ended up barefoot because the mud was up to our calves. All that to see a raccoon and a few parrots flying overhead.
We didn’t expect Noah’s Ark, but we’ve seen more animals in Bali, Mexico, and Thailand while visiting temples or just walking around than in these so-called parks!
Puerto Viejo, not far from Cahuita and supposedly livelier—well, it couldn’t be worse!
According to Lonely Planet, it had a Caribbean vibe and wild nights, but maybe that was a long time ago. The good reggae music playing everywhere isn’t enough.
In the evening, Puerto Viejo was a bit livelier than Cahuita, but that’s not saying much. Very few tourists—if any—no night market, just two or three shops open selling $20 T-shirts. Same vibe as San José.
No big deal—we enjoyed the beach and the sun, which was reliable.
Our itinerary was supposed to include Tortuguero Park, but after talking to other travelers who’d just been, we changed our minds, knowing we’d be visiting Manuel Antonio Park on the Pacific side.
To get back to the Pacific side, you have to take the bus and go through San José again—5 hours this time—then switch bus terminals and another 4.5 hours to Quepos.
A stopover town to get to Manuel Antonio’s beach and park!
A town just like the others we’d seen—deserted as soon as the sun sets, and not exactly bustling during the day either. (Where are all the tourists?)
Still as many bars on the windows and that feeling of being in the wrong place.
7 km later: Manuel Antonio beach and park.
The beach is very beautiful and quite large, but don’t expect turquoise blue water—the waves stir up the sand, giving the water a brownish color.
Along the beach, shops and restaurants for about 300 meters, and then nothing. At night, after sunset, the town shuts down too.
Manuel Antonio Park is highly praised for its wildlife, so we were eager to see it. When you express dissatisfaction with Cahuita or Manzanillo parks, the response is always, "But you should’ve gone to Monteverde or Manuel Antonio!" No matter what you do or say, they’ll tell you, "You should’ve gone there or here."
Back to our famous park—entry was about $16, and contrary to what we’d heard, it wasn’t crowded!
Guides at the entrance with spotting scopes offered their services for about $30.
The park: a mix of boardwalk and dirt paths through the forest, sometimes running alongside beautiful coves and beaches.
As soon as we entered, a crowd was taking photos of a deer eating leaves.
A little further on, a guide with a group of five stopped. The guide raised his arm and set up his spotting scope! He showed them, about 100 meters away, a hummingbird perched on a branch. Some, looking through the scope, exclaimed, "Oh my God! Amazing! Incredible!"
For a moment, we thought they’d discovered a unicorn or were in Jurassic Park and had just crossed paths with a T-Rex!
The concept is comical—looking at a bird or another animal through a spotting scope because it’s too far away. Isn’t that what TV is for?
For our part, we saw monkeys, ants, an armadillo, an iguana, and the backside of a sloth climbing a tree. Amazing, incredible!
We stayed a few days in Manuel Antonio to enjoy the beach, changing hotels often because prices varied wildly from one day to the next for shameful services. On top of that, they’d quote a price in dollars and convert it at their discretion—thieves!
Alajuela, a city near the airport, has a two-story mall and a local market downtown! No interest except its proximity to the airport.
What we liked:
The climate and, in hindsight, San José—the most authentic city we visited.
What we didn’t like, in addition to what we’ve already mentioned:
Costa Ricans aren’t very friendly or communicative. English is barely spoken, not even by doctors at Quepos Hospital, where my wife ended up with food poisoning (thanks, Google Translate). The widespread obesity among Costa Ricans, who eat like Americans. The insecurity. The eco-hipsters who leave their $150 lodges in minivans with guides to visit parks and other sites, then return to barricade themselves in their fortresses at nightfall (oh my God, amazing, incredible). The blue signs at the entrance of towns that accept this payment method: "We accept American Express." Parking lots that become paid just because a guy is watching your car. Prices displayed in dollars. The cost of living (hotels, restaurants, taxes). Landscapes that are too green and not flowery enough. Beaches—nothing exceptional. Pollution in cities where big American trucks rule. Sewage dumped directly into the sea. Aside from the jungle, there’s nothing to visit—no ruins, monuments, or anything worth seeing.
In short, my wife and I think the hype about this supposedly eco-friendly country is overrated. It’s just the trendy destination of the moment. There are much better, cheaper, and more authentic places.
In hindsight, we keep the good memories and our beautiful photos, but if we had to do it over...
Before signing off, a little message to those who don’t like hearing opinions different from theirs:
Well, some things aren’t up for debate. And to those who’d have us believe that in 3 weeks, we don’t have the right to criticize a country or express our feelings—how can you praise it in so little time? What a scam. Costa Rica is a money pit. Pura vida? Pure cosmic emptiness.
If you like spending your evenings barricaded in your cozy hotel after dark, this country is for you.
For everyone else: run!
Hello,
Since the war between Russia and Ukraine, nothing is simple anymore for traveling to Belarus due to sanctions.
No more direct flights from the EU to Minsk.
Driving is a huge hassle, especially crossing through Poland at the only open border in Brest—you can wait 2, 3, or even 4 days just to get through by car.
The least painful driving option is to come via Lithuania and cross at the only open border, with a minimum wait time of 8 hours, sometimes up to 20 hours or more!!
Controls are very strict and annoying on both the Lithuanian and Belarusian sides. Avoid bringing alcohol, food, or cigarettes—everything will end up in the trash, especially when leaving Belarus for Vilnius, where the Lithuanians are tough, even with EU citizens.
The joy I once knew when visiting my wife in Minsk is sadly over—it’s now a real ordeal.
The fastest solution is to fly. My wife travels to France by taking a bus to Kaunas in Lithuania, where you can catch a flight (though not daily) to Paris Beauvais or Charleroi in Belgium with Ryanair, for example.
For the return trip, it’s the same: a flight to Kaunas and then a direct bus from the airport to Minsk.
The bus crossing is quicker than driving—the 250 km journey, including border checks, takes about 6 to 8 hours for buses leaving Lithuania around midnight, but controls are still strict at the border.
The biggest challenge is finding flight schedules that align with the bus routes between the two countries, given the unpredictable border crossing times.
Now, my wife travels via Charleroi in Belgium (near Brussels), and you can take a train to Paris. Alternatively, you can fly into Beauvais and take a bus to Paris (Porte Maillot).
For those driving, note that EU insurance and assistance policies no longer work in Belarus or Russia. You’ll need to get local insurance, usually limited to third-party liability (I don’t think full coverage exists?), as well as mandatory medical insurance. This is available at the border.
You now have to pay highway tolls—no more BELTOLL boxes. Instead, you pay a flat fee for the duration of your stay. Stop at the first gas station after crossing from Lithuania to fill up on fuel and cigarettes.
From what I know, Lithuania bans carrying more than 60 € in cash, but there’s no limit for USD (though it’s capped at $10,000??).
With a Visa card, you can now withdraw 1,000 rubles per week (about 270 €)—two months ago, it was only 500 rubles!!
For now, you can still pay by card in shops and gas stations.
However, major retailers like KORONA (which may be Russian-owned??) no longer accept foreign Visa cards.
Unfortunately, the additional sanctions announced by the U.S. on August 5, 2025, against Russia—and possibly Belarus—aren’t promising for the future.
After 20 years of visiting Belarus, I’m truly saddened to see the joy of living in this country with my wonderful wife turn into such a bleak situation, all because of human folly.
Hi everyone!
I’m putting together our travel itinerary for Veneto at the end of April. And the more I look and research potential sites to visit, the more I find!
We’ll only be there for a week—my family and I—including 3 days in Venice. So we have to make some choices...
I plan to rent a car when we arrive in Venice and head straight to Bergamo, which would be our first stop. We’d leave the car at the airport when we return to Venice so we can explore the city at our leisure.
What do you think:
1 night in Bergamo (a 2h15 drive from Venice airport),
1 night in Garda,
1 night in Verona,
1 in Padua, and
3 in Venice—would that be doable?
Thanks in advance for your tips and experiences! :)
Now that the curtain has fallen on the past year, it’s time to see what’s happening around here.
It seems pretty quiet, but I’ll read more in detail later.
First, I need to tell you all an anecdote.
My eldest little girl, in her third year of law school, was really scared she wouldn’t pass the year.
I told her:
“Trust yourself, you’ve worked so hard, and worst case, if you fail, you’ll just redo the year.”
“But I don’t think I’ll make it—they changed the rules, and if I mess up even one unit, I have to start all over.”
I knew her grades weren’t exactly stellar, and with what I was about to say, I wasn’t taking much of a risk.
“Here’s the deal, sweetheart: if you pass, I promise I’ll take you to India, just the two of us.”
I have to admit, India is a country I’ve talked about so much to all my grandchildren that in their minds, it’s become a magical, mythical place (hmm).
July had barely begun when my phone rang, her name flashing on the screen.
“Mamido, I did it!”
My promise came rushing back—oh no, oh no, oh no!
“Congratulations, sweetheart!”
A little shyly, she said:
“Is the India trip still on?”
And me, replying:
“Of course it is!”
And that’s that—a promise is a promise, or you risk losing that precious trust that keeps hearts warm and at peace.
We’re leaving in February. Only 8 days—yikes, the carbon footprint!
But we can’t miss her tutorials, or she’ll be kicked out.
Personally, that works just fine for me.
Going to India has become a challenge for me. It’s far, it’s exhausting, I sweat, I hate mosquitoes, the spices bother my mouth when I used to love them. There’s noise all the time—at night, the dogs bark nonstop, and we almost get run over. I’ll get lost in the streets because my sense of direction has vanished. I don’t like rice anymore. All that chaos and those cultural differences that once enchanted me now just overwhelm me.
But I promised.
The upside—and it’s a big one—Raman, the same driver I’ve had forever, will be at the airport with a sign with our names. We’ll stop at the same little shop for chai (or tea, plain and simple) with that aroma that intoxicates me, halfway through the trip.
It’ll be a tiny trip—staying with friends, I’ll show her a few places I love: Chidambaram, Mamallapuram, and the clinic where I worked. Then we’ll head back.
My little girl will go home to her parents.
As for me, I’ll leave right away for our Scottish island with Homme for our chilly winter.
How can you love a country so much you want to live there, then suddenly reject it, no longer able to appreciate what once made it special?
That’s the mystery of love, I guess.
I’ve visited the U.S. four times myself, including two long road trips. The last one was just this past August...
I won’t be going back. I already felt guilty last August, but recent policies have finally convinced me: the humiliation of Zelensky, authoritarian excesses, Gestapo-like methods for detaining people of foreign origin, the murder of innocent people (a mother shot dead), corruption, insane "tariffs," skyrocketing healthcare costs for Americans, the abduction of foreign figures to secure oil, the requirement to disclose social media accounts, and now... threats and blackmail to forcibly take Greenland—a region that belongs to Denmark and thus the European Union!
The reality is that simply posting this could get me denied entry to the U.S.!
In this context, I just can’t keep spending money there. I loved my trips, but there are so many other countries with stunning landscapes to explore.
So I get why you’d want to travel there. I did, and I loved it. But once a country no longer respects any of the values that made us love it, why go?
How can we even consider traveling to a country that threatens to take one of our territories by force?
Hello everyone,
Controversial topic? Not necessarily—maybe just a reflection on a world to come.
I spent the last 15 days of August on a cruise in Greenland, from Kangerlussuaq to Tasiilaq.
I was utterly amazed by this unique world of rock and ice, the little houses in every color, a simple life that’s also complicated by isolation and climate, among other things...
I carry in my heart the kindness of the people I met, the raw and gentle majesty of the icebergs, the colors of the sky...
So, I can’t even imagine a massive presence of raw material prospectors, heavy machinery requiring roads to be built—if that’s even possible—changing their way of life... putting sled dogs out to pasture!
Do fast food and Greenland’s northern lights really mix?
I wouldn’t trade my memories for an ESTA!
All opinions are respectable, which is why this isn’t a controversy—but I’m sorry, I have a soft spot for *my* Greenland.
We’re a couple aged 58 and 63. We’ve just returned from a wonderful trip to South India in Tamil Nadu and a few days in Kerala. We traveled with a local French-speaking guide and his friend, the driver. They both live in Pondicherry. We spent 3 weeks with them in the most authentic way!
We covered just over 2,500 km and visited not only temples but also archaeological sites, museums, and small artisanal businesses making tiles, tea, sculptures, bronze, and silk spinning. We were lucky enough to visit a public school, attend a wedding, and even a death announcement in a small countryside village. We were fully immersed in the culture, food, noise, and colors—it was incredible!
The hotels and guesthouses we chose were very clean and mostly quiet. We’re returning from India with amazing discoveries!
We’re happy to share more info if you’d like!
M-Claire and Jean
This catchy and somewhat mysterious title comes from several questions I’ve been asking myself.
VF has been back open for a reasonable number of weeks and months now.
The number of visitors overall matches past averages, but the number of members online in the last 24 hours seems relatively lower than what we used to see.
Yet, to my surprise, I’m seeing fewer travel journals, way fewer messages, and way fewer questions.
I don’t see many new registered users online, and I notice a number of members who are logged in but either aren’t participating or have stopped participating.
Something’s not adding up for me because, in my opinion, VF is still appealing, and I don’t see which other sites could really compete.
Was there a real break between pre- and post-Covid?
Does it just take more time for some people to discover the site or learn that it’s active again?
Do people now prefer quick consumption on sites like FB or others I’m not familiar with?
Where have the site’s old-timers gone, and what are they doing with their time now?
What’s really going on here?
This isn’t exactly a traveler’s question... I’d like to know who handles the technical side of this forum?
I run a similar forum on a different topic (unrecognized children), and we’re dealing with a few technical issues that are slowly killing our forum... so I’d have one or two questions to ask 😊.
Also, I was wondering who created this forum... who the administrators or moderators are, etc.
I think this forum is great. Much better than Facebook, which I’ve been using since it shut down (so I’m happy to see it’s working again...)
Hi there, I’ve been traveling for 18 years now, at least 6 months a year, and as the years go by, I actually enjoy coming back to France more and more—a feeling I struggled with at first. I mean, we always think the grass is greener elsewhere.
But in the end, I find meaning in that saying about how there’s no place like home. I still love traveling just as much, but now my trips are shorter, and I enjoy spending more time in our beautiful country, even though I don’t hesitate to criticize it.
How about you? How do you handle coming back from your travels?
A few years ago, I went with a group of friends to lend a hand at a small rural school near Thiès, Senegal.
It was a relaxed but hardworking atmosphere—hands in the mortar, laughter, exchanges, and everything that a COOPERATION project can bring.
Today, the little project is flying on its own.
Wanting to explore Senegal’s riches, we set off for some tourism in the Siné Saloum. One girl in our group fell ill (a malaria attack), and we decided to take her to see a doctor at a large tourist complex nearby. Despite her condition, we had to "show our credentials" (if I may say so) just to get in. She was treated and has been fine since.
This "stop" at a Club Med-style resort with a Teutonic twist—resembling Le Grau-du-Roi but fancier—was a horror show for us: pools, massive artificial basins dyed blue, pink, or green (!!!!), animators shouting around wet T-shirt contests or coconut tree climbing, and sunburned (or sun-pinked) *toubabs*.
The entire hotel was surrounded by a huge wall, behind which a small souvenir-seller slum had sprung up, worthy of Dakar’s outer neighborhoods.
On leaving, we saw a minibus of guests returning from an "excursion," loaded with masks, fabrics, and djembés—African souvenirs?
Maybe those will be *theirs*?
What impression did the kids clustered at the hotel gates get?
What about the Black servers in "traditional African costumes," serving cocktails and ice cream nonstop?
For me, who experienced Africa very young and in the bush, this remains a haunting image.
On VF, this kind of vacation doesn’t seem to be the norm among users, and that’s exactly why I signed up.
Have you ever experienced this kind of interstellar travel?
Do you understand the Martians?
Are their motivations peaceful?
I’ve been wondering: Is it still reasonable to rent a car in the U.S.?
Apparently, since early January 2025—and very quietly—the most important insurance coverage, namely the driver’s civil liability, has seen its coverage amount drop from $1 million to just $300,000. This coverage is supposed to protect us from damages we might be responsible for while driving. We can go decades without a single scrape (especially if it’s our fault), but anything can happen in a split second. A motorcycle appearing out of nowhere, a misjudgment at one of those huge intersections with staggered traffic lights, and suddenly we could be deemed at fault for the accident. We’d then have to pay out of pocket for the other party’s medical expenses. Given what hospitals charge... it can easily exceed $300,000 and turn into a nightmare in no time!!! Plus, anyone who’s driven on American roads has seen those billboards for lawyers offering their services to accident victims. So on top of the sky-high medical bill, the lawyer will demand compensation worthy of a Hollywood movie!!!! So, is it even worth getting behind the wheel in America anymore? Well... that’s just my take! And on top of that, I haven’t found any insurance company that offers such high civil liability coverage. Chapka and others do offer coverage in the millions, but motor vehicles are excluded.... So here’s the thing... Unless I’ve "missed something," I’ve come to this conclusion: Renting a car in the U.S. is like playing Russian roulette! But maybe I’m being too pessimistic? What do you think?
My two bullfighting traditions when I'm back home in Camargue (France) and in Colombia (Caribbean) every time I return. 🤠
Details:
Bullfights (corridas) aren’t part of my two bullfighting traditions, but I respect those who attend them!!!
In these two ancestral bullfighting traditions—which aren’t bullfights—the Bulls and Toros aren’t killed or tortured, as some might think.
These are bull games where the animals return to their pastures afterward and only come back to the Arenas 2–3 times a year at most.
They spend 15 minutes in the ring for the Camarguais and 5 minutes for the Toros in the Colombian Corralejas.
They’re cared for and pampered. They’ll die of old age in miles of open fields.
The young people who face them are professionals, risking their lives to support their families and live their Passion for the Toro!!! 😄
https://youtu.be/yYKQer42HoQ
Colombian Corraleja in the link below (hope it works) 🤪
https://fb.watch/BMfmuCgQpG/