Don't go to Sweden though. Nothing to see there at all.charlesdarwin55Really... Note on image: it may not show up properly here
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Don't go to Sweden though. Nothing to see there at all.charlesdarwin55Really... Note on image: it may not show up properly here
[QUOTE="EagleEyedOne"][QUOTE="chicknfeet"]I seem to have a few people who want me to visit the UK...and I would love to take a trip down to Mexico --- but only the non-kidnapping parts of MexicochicknfeetThere is no such thing. Of course not...>_>There's really not outside of maybe Cancun. Once you get further south, it's a little less of a Cartel scare but you start getting more of a central/south American presence there and completely different kidnapping dangers.
Wonder if anyone ever answered one of these threads with a 'Wales' pie-juniorA neighbor of England...nothing special but football teams
[QUOTE="charlesdarwin55"]Don't go to Sweden though. Nothing to see there at all.Smashbrossive50Really... Note on image: it may not show up properly here Yeah I lived there for 20+ years. Only the first picture is something worth seeing in real life.
Can't believe more people want to see that than any of these for example:
Anywhere in particular? Along the lines of the conventional east coast tourist scene. New york city, Washington d.c, Boston etc. I have family in Forida, so definitely not there.[QUOTE="pie-junior"]The US. I've planned trips with different people since I was 18 but it always fell throughPirate700
Was hoping you would go to an Irish pub and drink all the Irish cream you can getI always wanted to visit Ireland, hopefully one day I can make it happen..solidruss
[QUOTE="Pirate700"]Anywhere in particular? Along the lines of the conventional east coast tourist scene. New york city, Washington d.c, Boston etc. I have family in Forida, so definitely not there.Do yourself a favor and visit the 4 corners.[QUOTE="pie-junior"]The US. I've planned trips with different people since I was 18 but it always fell throughpie-junior
Bannf National Park will do perfectly, that's the oldest Canadian park with the best view yetI'd also like to visit some of the more scenic/nature parts of Canada. I'm not sure Canada is ready for me though.
Pirate700
ive visited a good chunk of the pacific and love the hospitality of the people (thailand, japan, guam, philippines) id really like to visit the scandanavian countries or the english speaking countries of europe to get a culture shock from them
um the christians do it all the time dude................ ThaneKrios28Missing the point. I'm talking about regimes, the governing bodies of countries and their absolutely medieval laws. There are Christian politicians that TRY to legislate their beliefs, but are largely unsuccessful due to secularism. That, and Islam is a scary religion that promotes violence towards those who are not Muslim, the subjugation of women under men and child rape. Christianity tells us to get rid of most/all of our property to help the poor, love our neighbours and offer our other cheek to those who would practice violence against us. I don't agree with either, but one is certainly more negative than the other.
Along the lines of the conventional east coast tourist scene. New york city, Washington d.c, Boston etc. I have family in Forida, so definitely not there.Do yourself a favor and visit the 4 corners. I've seen westerners and breaking bad, I think I got the gist of it[QUOTE="pie-junior"][QUOTE="Pirate700"]Anywhere in particular?
Pirate700
[QUOTE="Pirate700"]Do yourself a favor and visit the 4 corners. I've seen westerners and breaking bad, I think I got the gist of itYou don't if you haven't been there.[QUOTE="pie-junior"] Along the lines of the conventional east coast tourist scene. New york city, Washington d.c, Boston etc. I have family in Forida, so definitely not there.pie-junior
Oh gosh so many as I've never been able to travel so I have a lot of pent up interests and desires. Like to bop over to Japan during a sumo tournament and soak that all in. Go to France and just museum the hell out of that place. Go to Italy and just wander the gorgeous countrysides. Wander around Amsterdam and check out all their modern architecture. It be nice to safely visit Egypt as I'd really like to check out Hatchepsut's temple. Also would be nice to visit Germany at long last as it is my native home and I've always wanted to spend some time there.
Nihon = JapanNothing against Japan (loved it when I visited) but it seems a bit odd to be that obsessed with a place you've never been to. Didn't realise I had an obsession with the place, thanks for the check up doc![QUOTE="Chicken453"][QUOTE="CHOASXIII"]
I don't speak moonspeak
Pirate700
@pirate
Well, It's like 1000$ just on the tickets alone. I'm of the opinion that seeing a tumbleweed in person doesn't measure up :3 seriously, though, there's probably a lot of great things to see in colorado et al, but I'm not planning a trek across the country; I'm thinking along the lines of a 2 week vacation. that wouldn't leave me much time for anything aside form the regular 'international' tourist destinations
Well, It's like 1000$ just on the tickets alone. I'm of the opinion that seeing a tumbleweed in person doesn't measure up :3 seriously, though, there's probably a lot of great things to see in colorado et al, but I'm not planning a treck across the country; I'm thinking along the lines of a 2 week vacation. that wouldn't leave me much time for anything aside form the regular 'international' tourist destinationspie-juniorI guess it depends what you want. The southwest (especially CO) is an international tourist destination for people who want a more laid back, scenic vacation. Honestly, I never understood the foreigners that come all the way over to the US just to visit NYC or LA. You can experience downtown city life almost anywhere. It's a long way to travel just walk around a busy city or to see a beach.
Honestly, I never understood the foreigners that come all the way over to the US just to visit NYC or LA. You can experience downtown city life almost anywhere. It's a long way to travel just walk around a busy city or to see a beach.
Pirate700
I never understood the american sitcom husbands who got into fights with their out-of-their-league-wives to go on a caravan vacation and see the grand canyon, or something, because they don't want to see boring art in paris. The american southwest scenery doesn't really do it for me and i'm more interested in the cultural aspects of a trip
You do have a point, I guess, though. I would much rather have a gap year type trip across the US. Can't see when I might ever be able to do something like that, though.
Good man.I dont find that there's anything interesting to see in big cities (modern ones, not ancient ones), let alone in the north east. Unless your loaded, it seems like a boring place to be.[QUOTE="BossPerson"]if i went to the US id probably go to places with some epic scenery, colorado, nevada, etcPirate700
Good man.I dont find that there's anything interesting to see in big cities (modern ones, not ancient ones), let alone in the north east. Unless your loaded, it seems like a boring place to be.It's just that there's very little that's uniquely American about LA and NYC. They're what's known as "international cities". Coming all the way to America just to stay in an overcrowded major urban city just doesn't make sense to me if you want an "American" vacation. That's like going to Japan and never leaving Tokyo or the greater China region and sticking with Hong Kong. While there's a lot of fun to be had in those places, they all have a similar cookie cutter big city feel that you can get in any major city throughout the developed world.[QUOTE="Pirate700"]
[QUOTE="BossPerson"]if i went to the US id probably go to places with some epic scenery, colorado, nevada, etcBossPerson
if you want to come to america come to branson missouri. nice southern feel, a nice fun adult feel with no gang or danger and missouri is just awesome
I dont find that there's anything interesting to see in big cities (modern ones, not ancient ones), let alone in the north east. Unless your loaded, it seems like a boring place to be.It's just that there's very little that's uniquely American about LA and NYC. They're what's known as "international cities". Coming all the way to America just to stay in an overcrowded major urban city just doesn't make sense to me if you want an "American" vacation. That's like going to Japan and never leaving Tokyo or the greater China region and sticking with Hong Kong. While there's a lot of fun to be had in those places, they all have a similar cookie cutter big city feel that you can get in any major city throughout the developed world. precisely[QUOTE="BossPerson"]
[QUOTE="Pirate700"]Good man.
Pirate700
Good man.I dont find that there's anything interesting to see in big cities (modern ones, not ancient ones), let alone in the north east. Unless your loaded, it seems like a boring place to be. For me, old european cities are something i'm used to, and giant american metropolins are something i'm not. For you it's the other way around.[QUOTE="Pirate700"]
[QUOTE="BossPerson"]if i went to the US id probably go to places with some epic scenery, colorado, nevada, etcBossPerson
[QUOTE="BossPerson"]I dont find that there's anything interesting to see in big cities (modern ones, not ancient ones), let alone in the north east. Unless your loaded, it seems like a boring place to be. For me, old european cities are something i'm used to, and giant american metropolins are something i'm not. For you it's the other way around.Fair enough. May I ask where you are from?[QUOTE="Pirate700"]Good man.
pie-junior
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