Last year, we stayed in Brooklyn and rode bikes around New York City for a week. We had no car. It was awesome.
I want to do a similar thing in Chicago this year. What are your vacation ideas? Not so much "the dream vacation that I want to do someday but can't", what do you want that you might do soon?
boss can still reach you at home – while you have to deal with sunburn and malaria in exotic locales, you can at least claim lack of cell coverage for not answering your coworkers’ calls about how to load toner into the printer …
Nope, I'm not going to pick up their phone calls. I would be extra obnoxious about it when (if!) I come back to the office to discourage anyone who wants to try that on anyone else. I'll tank the consequences; I got nothing to fucking lose.
I'm taking a somewhat unplanned trip to Pittsburgh this weekend.
We were supposed to be going to Detroit to see a relative's new house, but the remodelers are there, so I had a day planned in Pittsburgh to break up the long drive back, but now it's going to be the whole trip.
I'm stopping at the National Aviary and booked the private owl encounter so I can hold an owl! Greatly looking forward to that!
And I haven't really spent time in Pittsburgh before, but I passed through it about 10 years ago, and after just seeing it in textbooks from the steel industry days I had very low expectations, but I thought it looked very nice! There were lots of big bridges due to the 3 rivers, so there were nice views everywhere. I'm excited to get a closer look at everything.
I just came back to Sweden after a week in the south of Spain, and if you like dramatic nature environments, check out El Caminito del Rey, it is now safe and easy to walk, but it is scary at the end, even if it is safe and well built
Is it that crazy concrete trail sticking to the rock high above the land? Like path to some dam/power plant? I've seen one gopro video from that and almost threw up. I'm too afraid to put that in search engine now.
Yep, that is the old path, the new path follows the old but is safe and well maintained.
At the end you have to cross a suspension bridge with a grated floor above a 100+ meters drop, the bridge is bouncy, but when you look at the cables you can see that they are way over built for the stresses they encounter.
Didn't stop my vertigo though.
Then when walking down a few stairs I would turn around and back down them at that point.
If you wonder about it, you can check it out on google street view, it is all documented there with the new path
I don't know how long you're out in Kyoto, but my personal hidden gem is sanjusangen-do. It wasn't on our itinerary at all, but we just happened to stumble upon it and it's definitely worth a visit. Highly recommend checking it out if you can spare the time.
Awesome! I appreciate the suggestion. That’s actually pretty close to our Airbnb and on the way to a couple of other things we want to see so I will for sure put that on the list. Domo!
This year, I either want to go on a seaside holiday to Southern France (Nice, Marseille or Biarritz), or return to Germany. Went to Leipzig and Dresden last time I went and I want to visit my half-American friend again.
I live just over the border from Switzerland and I can promise you, the vast majority of it is pretty flat and boring, and the price of everything is extremely off-putting after a while
That said, the two most surprising things about the Swiss is their fantastic wines and amazing coffee beans. Some of the vineyards near Geneva have been around since the Romans
The internet lied to me, I thought there would be fields and waterfalls, haha. The cost is indeed off-putting, I'm many many years off being able to afford the other places let alone Switzerland.
Colour me surprised about the coffee and wine though, I'll have to stick those on my bucket list.
Want to go back to Iceland - this time with my family and do a trip around the ring road.
One of my life ambitions is to visit every continent, so I'd like to also take a cruise to the Antarctic. Not sure I'll ever be able to afford that though.
We love to travel and meet people and cultures but this year an unexpected large expense had us staying closer to home. Luckily we’re in CO and have decided to do a lot more camping and hotspringing this year. Lots of fun things to do in this state that don’t cost a lot.
The two big travel goals I have are to visit every major region of the world at least once and then to do a big road trip across the continental US (and then visit Hawaii and Alaska by plane because non contiguous states are non contiguous)
If a full continental circuit rail network gets set up I want to ride that all the way around the country too.
I'm going to visit a lake called Blåisvatnet in Norway this summer. I've been to many beautiful places in Norway but this one is still on the bucket list. Look it up, looks gorgeous!
I'd really like to visit New Orleans. The rest of my family has been there except for me.
Or I would like to revisit Savannah, Georgia. I went there once when I was younger, and I absolutely loved it. I'd like to experience it again now that I'm older.
I did this in Chicago: find a deal on a hotel as close as possible to to lake then walk to the stuff on the lake like the aquarium, art museum, etc. Bonus is great restaurants nearby too. Also walk the river to/from the lake. There's also the beach and navy pier if those interest you. Awesome vacation.
Probably Tongeren in Belgium or Monschau in Germany with a friend next month. I already went to Tongeren with my girlfriend in January and we enjoyed it.
We always do small trips for 2 days and book an appartement instead of a hotel. Here in South Limburg (the Netherlands), Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg and France are really close, so mostly we drive less than an hour to visit the Eifel or Ardennes.
Would love to visit NYC, but I don't like to travel public.
Queenstown in New Zealand is my happy place, but I'm on the east coast of Australia.
Its under 8 hours door to door, no language barrier, no jet lag, and Im in a cool mountain town with awesome food and amazing scenery. I can get to my accommodation and I know exactly where to go to get some amazing (overpriced but amazing) pizza and the best icecream I've ever had.
My hobbies are free diving and mountain biking, and my Spanish is getting conversational (ish). Weekend trips to local lakes and rivers in the summer, tons of mountain biking where I live. I love the ocean though so I hope to go to a coastal this year. Eventually I want to save up to visit some South American countries
Hopefully Serra das Estrelas next week, and I plan on going to Rio hopefully as soon as next year. Sit on the beach with an ice cold Brahma just vibing, visit São Januário and watch a match.
Well, after next week, I think I might have spring break off before spring quarter at college, so I think I'll vacation in my bedroom and might spend a little bit of the remaining winter quarter financial aid I have going to a mall not too far from where I live and buy a boba tea for myself after visiting my favorite store if it's still there.
New York fit that pretty well. I think Chicago does too. DC, Seattle, Boston are all recommended. Have not done that kind of trip in Atlanta or Philadelphia, but they are what you want.
It's hard to answer because, although there are places I'd appreciate the intentions behind someone inviting me to, none of them are anything I'd seek out on my own. I feel like I could extract an equal amount of memories regardless of location assuming I wasn't emotionally numb like I am now, as "fun" is a spontaneous thing. People have fun if they feel like they can.