Rumors and gossip don’t equal the truth. What you’ve heard about some of the best holiday destinations in the world might not actually be what going there is really like.
And pretty much each and every place that’s worth going to has some stereotypes about it. From the romantic and culture-infused Paris to the party beaches of dozens of different towns and countries. But the locals are here to set the record straight.
A group of redditors dispelled the myths about their home cities and countries in a viral r/AskReddit thread, and we’re bringing their insights to you, dear Pandas. Read on and when you’re done, drop on by the comment section to tell us all about the myths about your home town.
Bored Panda got in touch with former art gallery director Shelby Bercume to have a chat about some of the myths about her home state, Florida, a place that got over 122 million visitors in 2021 alone.
"The sun shines all the time. I know we are called the Sunshine State but do recall this is also the land of hurricanes and floods. Also for whatever reason, our ads are always at these solitary beaches and stuff. We are so crowded! I don’t know where people got the idea we’re this laid-back remote beach place. If you know about Florida, so do all your friends. And they are all here to visit." she quipped. Scroll down to read the rest of Shelby's great insights, how to easily recognize tourists, as well as her warning about alligators in freshwater sources.
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I live in Las Vegas. Listen. What happens in Vegas stays on the internet and also in the stories of every local who saw you do it. Don't do stupid [things].
Shelby told us a bit about what's popular in sunny Florida. "Key West is super popular. It has the typical Florida experience with the beaches and the huts and the drinks and the cute beach houses," she shared with Bored Panda.
"Orlando is also a fun one for the theme parks. If you are a little more adventurous you may also enjoy an airboat ride in the swamps of Everglades National Park," she gave some awesome suggestions.
Australia is big, varied, and safe. There are dangers here, but your biggest risk is yourself. Just read the signs (not a metaphor - there's signs about every danger everywhere) and use common sense.
Honestly, I've seen Americans and Canadians, who have been near f*cking grizzlies, freak out over a lizard. Just relax man, it's nice here.
Los Angeles, specifically Hollywood. Literally everything about it is underwhelming. The Walk of Fame is cool for 2 seconds, Grauman's Chinese Theatre is smaller than you'd think, the Hollywood sign is just a big a** sign, and no, you're not going to run into a celebrities walking around. All the while it's incredibly crowded, smells terrible, and you have to dodge costumed street performers in droves.
Agree with things here. But yet… Santa Monica, Venice Beach, Malibu, Laguna Beach and Griffith Observatory are just awesome places. And don’t forget the amazing weather all year around.
According to Florida-based Shelby, it's always easy to spot someone who isn't a local. "You can literally tell how long a tourist has been here by how bad their sunburn is. That aside, it is really easy to spot a tourist though. Lots of pictures, walking slow, driving slow, stuff like that. As far as I am concerned, as long as you stay off the road during rush hour and are respectful of others, you are all good in my book," she subtly noted that tourists have to be considerate of the actual locals, too.
"If you are visiting Florida, assume that there are gators in every source of freshwater. DO NOT go swimming or let your kid or your pet swim in unfamiliar waters. Even if you think, 'This is a manmade pond. There can’t be gators,' trust me, there can and there are. Stay out," she warned everyone to be extremely wary of freshwater sources that they are unfamiliar with.
Tokyo here. I could name a few, but the one that always gets me is the misconception that people are going to accept (or even respond politely to) outrageous weebishness. If you roll up in Shibuya with a Naruto headband and a Hello Kitty backpack, trying to communicate through a handful of anime catchphrases while creepily leering at schoolgirls, people are rightly going to give you a wide berth.
Common sense has "common" in it for a real good reason. And then you live long enough to see the rather ironic humour in that the phrase. It is actually an oxymoron. Good sense isn't common and most people you meet lacked sense.
In Germany it's healthy human sense. For if you lack it, you're insane. Makes sense...
Load More Replies...Yeah, I think that's the issue more than the other things.
Load More Replies...Japan is still a traditional and conservative society. Yes, some folk rebel against this and get into nerdy culture, but they are the minority. It's kind of like if someone thought all of America loved Rick and Morty, played D&D, dressed up as Captain America etc.
Only lived there for a few months, but yes to all this. One particular aspect of Japanese culture (and not a particularly dominant part in my experience) is overly fetishized by deluded Western anime lovers who turn up in Tokyo with their dyed hair and kawaii outfits thinking they'll find their place or something - the majority of the population will give you more side-eye than you'd get back home.
None of this surprises me. I found the people in Tokyo (out on the street) to be incredibly unfriendly/unhelpful (and no, I wasn't a creepster like the one they describe)
Perhaps you were the problem. Japanese people cater to foreigners.
Load More Replies...my mom would love to go see Tokyo and i just realized that Kyoto is an anagram to Tokyo
Kyoto is the older city, therefore Tokyo is an anagram for Kyoto. Kyoto is cooler.
Load More Replies...Thats coz they are gonna think you are straight out nuts, unless you went to an Anime Con or something, though the leering at schoolgirls thing, doesnt sit well in any country.
Hey Randy A. You must be Canadian a Brit, maybe Oz or NZL. "good sense and sound judgment in practical matters. "a common-sense approach" From the Oxford dict. I'm an ou user in that word.
I know you’re not speaking Japanese, but what the hell did you just say?
I only lived there for a little while, but it’s a common misconception that Hawaii is a great place to live. Don’t get me wrong - it might be the most beautiful place on earth and there are many, many exceptional things about living there. But it’s terribly expensive just to grocery shop, let alone try to buy a house. Many people just live with their parents and grandparents because no one can afford to move out. So many houses and apartments/condos are bought as vacation properties, which drives up the price. Then, houses/apartments in residential neighborhoods have a revolving door of vacationers coming in and out, which is disruptive to normal life. (People on vacation care very little about how much noise they’re making, etc.) It’s a catch-22 because so much of Hawaii’s money comes from tourism, but tourism is making it impossible for locals to buy homes.
Groceries are super expensive if you continue to eat what you ate on the mainland. It's significantly more affordable if you transition to eating foods grown, manufactured, or packaged locally.
Banff, Canada
The bears aren't friendly, if you feed them, they will come back.
All deer are not Bambi, they will hurt you.
Cougars are not kitty cats, you look like a nice steak dinner to them.
Don't go hiking or skiing in the back country if you aren't prepared. You make my job as a search & rescuer hard when you make stupid decisions like that.
Yes snow may be fun for 2 or 3 days of your trip, but from September to July, it gets dull fast.
Am I salty about tourists? You bet
Professor Christine Vogt, the Director of the Center for Sustainable Tourism at Arizona State University, went into detail about traveling and respecting other cultures with us.
She said that learning a bit of the local language and about the local customs is a must when you’re going abroad. "More than likely that is what draws a person to visit a certain place. The more local knowledge a traveler has, the more a traveler can feel like a local and fit in," she told Bored Panda during an earlier interview.
"Local customs can include how a traveler dresses, eats, uses a cell phone, etc. When a traveler is out in a community such as walking in a downtown area or eating in a restaurant, these local customs can come into play,” Professor Vogt said.
Scotland is seen as a wild and untamed land. In reality our hills have been burned for grouse or grazed into oblivion by sheep and deer after all of our large native predators were hunted to extinction. A lot of those iconic barren hills used to have actual scrub and plant life on them. Livestock farming and hunting have ruined our countryside. A report came out the other day that also states that wildlife is declining faster in Scotland than anywhere else in the uk. The people want change - particularly doing away with the big estates causing a lot of the destruction - but money talks like anywhere else. I still love my country with all my heart which is why it is incredibly difficult to watch it being destroyed.
Your country is absolutely beautiful and I'd like nothing more than to see it revert back to its true glory in the countryside and its creatures come back into their large numbers again.
Florida here.
It's called the 'Sunshine State' but it rains every single day in the spring and summer. Tourists always seem surprised by that.
No there is no dome over Disney to control the weather or the bugs - though Disney does have a great mosquito control program.
Also, Miami is nowhere near as sexy as they make it seem on TV. That's like 2 streets by the beach and that's it, not that you want to be in that area because everything is more expensive and also sinking into the ocean so things keep collapsing.
The wealth disparity is disgustingly clear.
The REST of Miami is full of poverty, construction that gets abandoned, and tons of homelessness because of the batsh*t housing prices. Florida is only fun for the rich-rich. Don't come here if you're not, you WILL struggle.
We lived on the beach in San Diego for years and apparently everyone who comes to visit thinks we like to party 24/7. Especially the AirBnB next door to us.
We would ask nicely the day before to please knock off at 3am but often they would party til 5 and there's no reasoning with drunk young people.
Since we woke up and left by 7:30am, we would put on a YouTube video titled "12 hours of a crying baby" and turn up the stereo and let it play the 5 or so hours we'd be away.
It certainly opened the channels of dialogue and respect from there on out.
I would report it to AirBnB, tbh. My sister rented a house for her bridal party, but the renters had to take it down because people who lived in the neighborhood full time didn't like the parties and noise. (Edit - this is not a post pointing fingers or blaming the neighbors, as I would have done something similar. It is an observation of what I have experienced and what can be done about said noise.)
“For example, in Buddhist countries, a woman who has not covered her shoulders or legs may not be allowed into temples or even a restaurant. Learn as many local customs as you can and a few key words to enhance your experience," she urged.
Unfortunately, some tourists are so disrespectful, they even take ‘souvenirs’ from historic sites. According to Professor Vogt, the locals can post the penalties for stealing, set up signs that would discourage this sort of behavior, and set up cameras to catch any rule-breakers.
Even something as setting up a display of items that have been returned by tourists can help motivate people to respect the local culture and history.
Alaska. Where to begin?? It’s not always dark. In fact, in the summer it’s quite light. Hence some difficulty viewing northern lights in summer months. Ditto cold — we do have summer. In Fairbanks we regularly hit 80° in the summer, sometimes hotter. But also our state is HUGE. So what’s true of Fairbanks isn’t necessarily true of Anchorage. Or Juneau. In fact southeast (Juneau, Ketchikan, etc - the cruise ship circuit) is almost like a separate state. They’re more like Seattle than the rest of AK.
People don’t ride around all day on dog sleds. We don’t live in igloos. We are Americans. Our Indigenous cultures are diverse and are not all Eskimo. Oh, and most of us can’t see Russia from our back yards.
(Bahamas) What's funny is when people come to the main island, and are surprised to find out that the entire place isn't a clean, beautiful, sandy tropical island no matter where you go. It's also funny when they find out the murder rate (which is high in comparison to the size and population).
Other popular misconceptions by people who know nothing about us are that we are (and I have seriously heard every last one of these) loin cloth wearing savages that fish all day, drink out of coconuts, and live straw houses, and sleep in hammocks. That does however perfectly describe the native people who were killed off by the Spanish hundreds of years ago soon after the western world was discovered. Someone once seriously asked me, "Do you guys ride dolphins or are they just friends." My response, "They are our main form of transportation as decreed by King Aquaman."
I live in the Caribbean and a lot of people (foreigners) seem to think in my island we live by the sea sipping coconuts all day.
In reality my country is struggling.
We had a hurricane like 3 yrs ago and people still live in sh*t (the government has helped a lot of people with housing to be fair) The man in power may or may not have stole like 1.5 billion dollars, this led to a major protest the other day and election is coming soon so yay more drama.
In other words the Caribbean is not a heavenly get away where nothing bad happens.
"Speaking of bad things, as a random side note" if you take a trip to any Caribbean island rape, robbery especially of white tourists (not really a race thing but a lot of people falsely think they are rich cus white skin) and human trafficking are a very real problem stay safe guys.
I noticed the same about folks from developed countries going to less developed countries. It's not as safe as your home country. I lived in these cities for work before. Imagine you going into the shady parts of your city, where you wouldn't want to be walking alone at night. Now that is the norm in a lot of these places.
London. People think it's really quaint and idyllic and we all fart around drinking tea and twirling canes. A huge majority of it is a sh*thole. The buses look very nice on a postcard but they generally stink of piss. The Thames could probably kill you if you dip a toe in. The London Eye is boring as sh*t.
Pubs are good though.
That's if you live there. Also when people plan to visit London they don't intend to roam around alley ways and have a picnic on the road. Central London has a lot to and the city's museums are among the best in the world. The Thames and the London eye are meh I agree, but then again for tourists it's something new.
I live in Munich. We just had Oktoberfest. The most aromatic of all events. Vomit. Urine. Mostly vomit.
I lived in Amsterdam for five years. I realized pretty quick for the rest of my life saying you lived in Amsterdam means people assume you’re really into weed, illicit drugs, crazy parties, hookers, or a combination of all that. In actuality, most of my going out was for drinks with colleagues, I don’t like pot, and only ever went to the red light district when someone visiting me was curious enough to see it.
I live in California. Non-Californians be like "ohhh wow I love all the palm trees and the beaches, you are so lucky!".
I live in the middle of a desert. Nothing but dirt, joshua trees, 70 mph winds, and sagebrush.
For real. The beach? Optimistically, that's an hour and a half away. Disneyland? That's at least an hour, maybe two. Six Flags? Two, three hours, easy. But we've got two Amazon warehouses and an old Air Force Base in town, so if that seems like paradise, by all means, come visit.
Not all of New York City is as crowded as the touristy areas. The vast majority of us aren't navigating through Times Square as part of our daily commutes (but mad sympathy to those who actually have to).
I live in Las Vegas. People are occasionally shocked when they hear I work at a school. I've been told several times, "I didn't even think Vegas had schools."
Idk if Ireland necessarily counts as a vacation destination but something that gets really old really fast is that tourists expect us to be drunk and roudy all the time? We are pretty proud of how friendly and welcoming we are, even in our biggest cities there's always someone willing to help a lost tourist close by. We are not always drunk or always looking for fights.
I live in Paris and all the tourists go to eiffel tower or the louvre museum. Sorry but noooo, there are so much other superb place in Paris.
Also I hate how everybody says Paris is city of love. Sorry but noooo, you walk out of your appartment and you have 1 000 cigarets/meter on the street. It's just disgusting.
PS: To all tourists, please go to other cities in France, there are many better places in France, Paris is the worst.
Been to Paris and loved it, even drove my car through the city and was impressed by the flow of traffic. And at the end of the day found some acceptable kebab for like 5 euros...
Australian here.
Sydney and stuff are expensive. But the one thing that people underestimate about our country is the sheer size of it, people go to the hotspots like Uluru, GBR, Sydney and Melbourne but they forget that it is a country nearly the size of USA. It's not small and you will meet people who have never left their state before.
The bigger mistake people make is not realising that Australia is virtually unpopulated. So while it's as big as America, you can't cross it like you can America. You can't even get to quite a bit of it, or at least not without a lot of expense and trouble.
I used to live in Bangkok, Thailand.
Not all Thai women are prostitutes and easy. In fact, they're pretty conservative and preserved.
Most of female millennials are educated white collar workers. And we're more into Korean or Japanese culture/people than the western. Everyday BKK women won't approach men first because it's a big NO NO unless they're from certain areas.
Those who work in sex industry come from the poor parts of Thailand or near by countries where there're not many job opportunities.
That New Yorkers are rude.
We can be totally. But it’s because you mess up the flow of the rest of us who need to get somewhere.
If you get lost a New Yorker will jump at the chance to help. Need a photo taken for your vacation someone will take the snapshot.
New York really did surprise me with this. Super nice people and if I was looking at a map, people would voluntarily stop and ask if I needed help. Even a guy that didn't speak English could tell I was looking for a connecting bus to get me to the airport. He made sure I got on it. New Yorkers are awesome people.
I don’t live there, but a lot of my family does and I’ve been there (Jamaica)
It’s a paradise
No, it isn’t. A lot of people can’t afford food, water, and electricity at the same time (apparently electricity used to be cheaper but since the government is a total assh*le they sold it to some company and now it’s expensive)
Probably not a misconception because it’s sadly one of the things we are known for (especially if you live in the uk) crime. Our crimes are pretty bad. Not as bad as Latin America, but it’s still bad, and our job market isn’t exactly helping its case (it’s pretty bad, and the mlms also are not helping) (do keep in mind that some places are saferthan others, like port Antonio)
The people here are nice
Well yes, but actually no. We tend to be vain and general assh*les to other Jamaicans . We will treat tourists nicely if your a tourist because your basically one of the few things that fuel our economy
And don’t come if your gay, they won’t mind killing you and your spouse for being bad to the Bible or some sh*t.
The country is nice, but we could really use a do over..
New Zealand here. It's sold as a clean green eco country where there are views out every window and you can romp along the empty tracks and beaches to your heart's delight... The realty is a lot different. The country is going through an eco crisis, water quality in most rivers has dropped to the point where they are not swimmable, old school sewerage overflows are contaminating the beaches and every track of international note is shuffling room only. While there is still stunning scenery, the rest of the country is struggling to keep up with an influx of people alongside a housing crisis that's made home ownership a pipe dream for many.
Tourists often think that, being such a small country, they can drive from A-B in X hours as that's what it would take back home for that distance. The realty is that the majority of our roads/highways are single lanes on winding roads with one way bridges and few chances to overtake. The drivers suck and you will cop a gesture or two if you dare look at another driver.
For the most part people are nice and friendly but it's like every other developed country. Leave something of value in your car and it'll get nicked. Walk down a dark Street at night and some P head will try one over on you. Flash a bit of coin and someone will figure out a way to part you with it.
New Zealand's a great country but it is a heavily developed country which comes with all the associated problems. It's a long time since it's been 100% Pure.
Please do not make it sound as though a lot of this happens up and down the whole country. It does not.
Tokyo. It's not the perfect paradise people imagine it to be. It's a major city, just like London, New York, Toronto, etc, and has major city problems.
The trains run at 130% capacity; garbage & graffiti almost everywhere; rats, cockroaches, feral cats, & attack crows (no robots just yet) roam the city; the homeless population just gets shunted around or thrown in jail (little support for them)...
I live in a touristy part of Wales and would like this cleared up.
We don’t all suddenly switch to speaking Welsh when an English tourist arrives.
There are genuinely people that believe as soon as an English person enters a pub, say, that all the Welsh people who were previously speaking English suddenly switch.
Yep. They don't, the visitors hear the person that had been speaking Welsh before they entered continuing to speak it, because it's distinctive if you're not used to hearing it. I live in less touristy a place but we're big enough that tourists stop into the convenience shops or the pubs, and this area is very heavily Welsh speaking, so get to hear this claim said often.
Appalachian tourist destinations.
Unless stuff in the giftshops is advertised as locally made, you can get it in bulk for cheaper off the Internet, because that's totally where the boss did. And the locally made stuff is sometimes nice, sometimes makes you miss Regretsy.
The food stuff, check the labels.
No, the locals do not like to be called hillbillies, except Hillbilly who owns Hillbilly's Junkyard, and he is a character, let me tell you.
Yes, we genuinely are this friendly and really do like to talk with strangers this much, but it comes from either the terrifying isolation of deeply insular small towns where everyone knows everyone else's business or being a transplant who has to drive three solid hours to so much as a decent-sized Costco.
Some of the kids get backpacks full of food every Friday from volunteers at the schools because even if their folks had the money for groceries, they might not also have the hour and back's worth of gas to get them that week from the nearest store.
No, we are not paid a living wage at this tourist site. Incidentally; management is a family and doesn't understand why $8/hr isn't enough to live on.
When I lived there, I had four jobs and the two that were tourism-related were purely to stave off the boredom and have an excuse to see people."
But if you go about four, maybe five hours that way, depending on the traffic, it's our nation's capital, so...yeah.
Living in Bali. Yes there are some beautiful places but its really dirty here. There is literally garbage everywhere as the local government doesn't have a trash collection program. People burn their trash everywhere. Also tons of corruption by police that try to supplement their income. Lots of poverty and poor people from whole of Indonesiz trying their luck here. There is a reason why the Indonesian government is trying to steer tourist to the "new Bali's" : it is overcrowded.
The tourist spots were over crowded, mainly in the southern part of Bali. There are many hidden gems in the island that are still very beautiful. Untouched by the drunk tourist. See the problem?Overcrowded drunk tourists. Oh about the homeless dogs. When tourist stay for months and decided they want a dog, and then abandon the dogs when the decided to go back to their country. This is the root of the stray dog problem. If you're a tourist in Bali please take care of it too.
I'm from Spain, we don't drink Sangría and we don't have Paella (not PAELA, PLEASE) every day.
And there's more than football, every time I meet someone and they ask me where I'm from, the one and only question appears... Madrid or Barcelona? F*off
From Blue Ridge Mountains: Bears will, do, and can hurt you. Stay. In. Your. Room. Or. Car. If you cannot grasp that a baby bear means Mama is nearby. She didn't abandon them. As with human toddlers, they're exploring a little, but she *does* know how to get to them at light speed.
I love being a tourist, but I hate how tourists can behave. Take some time to learn about your destination, how people live there and the living standards, and for f**k's sake take your s**t with you afterwards. I've visited Greece a few years back when the country was on the verge of going bankrupt (or so I was told), and prices for hotel rooms etc were incredibly low. Parallel to that, lots of Greek people were either working non-stop or were just sitting at their empty hotels, it was really sad. We left feeling incredibly priliveged (which we are).
I grew up in a little village in the UK that became a bit of a tourist attraction. Yes it’s very pretty but people actually live here. Please don’t stop in the middle of the road to shout loudly about “It’s so quaint y’all”. Please don’t all cluster around your umbrella wielding tour guide, standing on people’s flower borders and blocking the pavement. Really, don’t trespass and peer in people’s windows, I shouldn’t have to tell grown adults that’s rude. We live here, we’re not entertainment.
Actually peering in your windows?? I cannot fathom the stupidity of some people...just wow!
Load More Replies...I live in Southern California in a beach town. Had a friend visit from Arizona. She was stunned to learn that I don’t go to the beach every single day. I also don’t go to Disneyland and/or Knott’s every day, even though they’re only about a half hour away. XD
I've often lived in or near tourist hotspots. I have to say, for the most part, tourists are respectful and interested and happy to learn and adapt. But the ones that aren't ruin it for everyone else. Working as a safari guide in Africa was so eye-opening. I lived in the town of Victoria Falls, next to the actual falls. The things people would do... trying to explain to them that you can't play with the baby vervet monkeys because the mother will bite you and then you will have to go through the rabies treatments. Explaining that a hippo can run at 30 kph. That the baboon in the rain forest will tear your face off if you challenge him. That the lions WILL eat you if you hang around the wrong place at the wrong time. That you can't swim in certain places, because the crocodiles WILL eat you. That some water is not safe because of bilharzia. And no, we cannot "turn the sound down" at night. That is what the wild animals night chorus actually sounds like, and we have no control
Not a misconception, more of a common mistakes by tourists. In Montreal, the best restaurants are NOT in the Old Montreal! Most of it, like more than 85%, is overrated and overpriced. A short 10-15 minutes subway rides and you can find some really good restaurants in other neighborhoods with fair prices.
It can no longer really be called a holiday hotspot, and I don't think it ever was one internationally, but Blackpool's domestic seaside holiday image still persists, despite the fact it is also consistently at the top of the "most deprived" and "most miserable" places to live list. People don't live here, they survive. Jobs are seasonal at best. Crime rates are scary high and there is significant racism against Romany (connected to the temporary and seasonal nature of the jobs, as well as the crime rate - chicken and egg applies). People only ever see the Illuminations - lots of coloured lightbulbs that haven't been updated in more than 40 years - or the Tower. Blackpool is LGBT welcoming - and that *baseline level* is the best thing I can say.
I know there is a big push for tourism in Manitoba. People think it's all about Winnipeg or Churchill. If you want to go to Churchill it has to be in the summer months, since the only way to get there is by a seasonal train. Winnipeg downtown as some interesting sites, but they are spread apart and most of the whole inner core is desolate, especially after office business hours. Most places are closed by 6pm. If you really want to experience more of Manitoba it's best to get out into the other parts of Winnipeg, and ask the locals of those communities where the locally owned shops and eateries are. But don't expect everyone to know where everything is. It's a vastly spread out city, and a lot of the independent places are going out of business these days. Just because we're geographically in the middle of the continent doesn't mean we don't have beaches and plenty of lakes and rivers. Manitoba has thousands of lakes and rivers. Grand Beach is not the only one but most crowded.
On that note, Winnipeg is not the only city in Manitoba. You can visit Brandon. I believe there is still a bus that goes there from Winnipeg. And there's also Portage La Prairie. Morden has a cool museum of ocean dinosaur fossils found locally. There are many festivals around the province. It just takes some planning. Also take note that even though McLean's Magazine has deemed Winnipeg "the most racist city" it was met with a lot of backlash by Manitobans. Racism is everywhere. We're not perfect. There's not any more of a problem here than anywhere else in Canada. No matter where you're from, you'll be safe as anywhere else in Canada.
Load More Replies...Tourists miconceptions are in the base of the whole tourism industry.
Branson Mo. I'm not from there, but I have family near there, so I used to go there a lot in the summer. I've heard people describe it as Bible Vegas, but that's not really true. The main drag and the surrounding amusement parks are more like a cutsey, family-friendly version of Vegas, but there isn't really anything religious about it. They also think everyone is going to be walking around in cowboy hats and spurs. Hate to disappoint you, but in the summer it's mostly shorts and flip flops. The town actually grew up because of all the lakes in the area, so there's quite a bit of boat-mentality, lots of fishing and glamping. Lots of dense woods in the area, coupled with the steep landscape makes for some great hiking trails.
Most of the things on this list are simply that tourists forget that people actually live in the places that they are traveling to.
I live in maine. It's a nice place and the people can be friendly enough, but in my experience most of us want the tourists to go away. Also, not all of us hunt. Only about half of us do, and the rest of us have never even fired a gun.
I have absolutely no interest in traveling as it would have to be alone. However, I do enjoy reading about other places, including my own home (America). My parents traveled to Europe twice in the 1970's, and they loved it. They were very polite people who spoke to the locals intelligently, but also explaining that they didn't know some things, and could they have help, please. They always got the needed help, and generally with smiles all around. I'd be afraid for them now, if they were alive and wanted to travel.
Australia:if you visit Sydney don’t think you can go to Melbourne or Brisbane or Uluṟu in one day they are not close to each other and if you ever go away from Sydney inland please don’t ask where the kangaroos are also don’t ask if we ride them and don’t say put another shrimp on the barbie we don’t do that and they are not shrimp they are prawns
The downside to most of these places is caused by overpopulation. Pollution, dwindling resources, inadequate housing.......... all of it caused by too many people.
We just moved from San Diego to Oregon. Biggest misconception people have about San Diego is that your friend who lives there is just dying to entertain you. Yes, we had 3 bedrooms for just the 2 of us. Not one of them was a guest room because we're not an AirBnB. We have jobs, so again, NO, we will not be driving you to the beach (40 minutes away) every day. And HELL NO we will not take you to Disneyland!
"Rumors and gossip don’t equal the truth." No. They equal dollars in the bank, don't they Bored Pansy.
Living there is always different from being a tourist. Being a tourist is always different from living there. Case in point, Bermuda.
Huh no one in the list talked about new orleans. Lived there for 5 years. Mardi gras is cool but dont go to bourbon st unless you like being packed like sardines having a difficult time moving around to get to any bars. Also, throws (beads) for flashing is only a thing tourists do. Indecent exposure is still a crime there and cops will arrest you if they feel lile it. Also, the french quarter smells like alcohol, urine, vomit, and BO on mardi gras. I recommend to skip that entirely. The weeks leading up to mardi gras are way better, have parades all the time, everywhere. Also come to the city during voodoo or jazz fest much more fun. People in nola are generally very nice and yes the food is amazing (go to mom and pop run places not some place like commanders palace). Halloween is huge there too but all year they do "ghost tours" which are neat and provide a different side of history of the area.
Brazil. We don't speak Spanish. A lot of people hate Carnaval, it's noisy and a waste of public money that could be used for many better things. People are poor. Minimum wage is about U$250 when exchanged and many people live under it, and the ones who live above is just slightly above. People are rude and very verbally aggressive. I'm autistic and extremely afraid of people due to fear of verbal aggression, but I'm more comfortable talking to a random foreign online that talking to a neighbor. You will be robbed. And hopefully nothing else.
I both loved and hated this gallery. I loved hearing what locals think of their homes, and was saddened to hear that they aren't the paradises I was seeing on TV. I wasn't really surprised, but it was a really lovely way to think of them. Since I was a little kid I held Bali in my mind as a beautiful and unspoiled island paradise, and thought New Zealand was eco-heaven, and Japan was a clean and orderly place. I guess a little dose of reality was probably called for, even though I know no place is the way it seems on television or in the movies.
I grew up in a city which fits the bill for being a 'quaint' tourist destination. It's a small historical city, which has beautiful Tudor and Medival buildings (it's in the UK) and many of the houses were very old. I used to live in a house from 1659 which was extremely cheep. Never any tourists though, probably one of the reasons it was so nice.
From Blue Ridge Mountains: Bears will, do, and can hurt you. Stay. In. Your. Room. Or. Car. If you cannot grasp that a baby bear means Mama is nearby. She didn't abandon them. As with human toddlers, they're exploring a little, but she *does* know how to get to them at light speed.
I love being a tourist, but I hate how tourists can behave. Take some time to learn about your destination, how people live there and the living standards, and for f**k's sake take your s**t with you afterwards. I've visited Greece a few years back when the country was on the verge of going bankrupt (or so I was told), and prices for hotel rooms etc were incredibly low. Parallel to that, lots of Greek people were either working non-stop or were just sitting at their empty hotels, it was really sad. We left feeling incredibly priliveged (which we are).
I grew up in a little village in the UK that became a bit of a tourist attraction. Yes it’s very pretty but people actually live here. Please don’t stop in the middle of the road to shout loudly about “It’s so quaint y’all”. Please don’t all cluster around your umbrella wielding tour guide, standing on people’s flower borders and blocking the pavement. Really, don’t trespass and peer in people’s windows, I shouldn’t have to tell grown adults that’s rude. We live here, we’re not entertainment.
Actually peering in your windows?? I cannot fathom the stupidity of some people...just wow!
Load More Replies...I live in Southern California in a beach town. Had a friend visit from Arizona. She was stunned to learn that I don’t go to the beach every single day. I also don’t go to Disneyland and/or Knott’s every day, even though they’re only about a half hour away. XD
I've often lived in or near tourist hotspots. I have to say, for the most part, tourists are respectful and interested and happy to learn and adapt. But the ones that aren't ruin it for everyone else. Working as a safari guide in Africa was so eye-opening. I lived in the town of Victoria Falls, next to the actual falls. The things people would do... trying to explain to them that you can't play with the baby vervet monkeys because the mother will bite you and then you will have to go through the rabies treatments. Explaining that a hippo can run at 30 kph. That the baboon in the rain forest will tear your face off if you challenge him. That the lions WILL eat you if you hang around the wrong place at the wrong time. That you can't swim in certain places, because the crocodiles WILL eat you. That some water is not safe because of bilharzia. And no, we cannot "turn the sound down" at night. That is what the wild animals night chorus actually sounds like, and we have no control
Not a misconception, more of a common mistakes by tourists. In Montreal, the best restaurants are NOT in the Old Montreal! Most of it, like more than 85%, is overrated and overpriced. A short 10-15 minutes subway rides and you can find some really good restaurants in other neighborhoods with fair prices.
It can no longer really be called a holiday hotspot, and I don't think it ever was one internationally, but Blackpool's domestic seaside holiday image still persists, despite the fact it is also consistently at the top of the "most deprived" and "most miserable" places to live list. People don't live here, they survive. Jobs are seasonal at best. Crime rates are scary high and there is significant racism against Romany (connected to the temporary and seasonal nature of the jobs, as well as the crime rate - chicken and egg applies). People only ever see the Illuminations - lots of coloured lightbulbs that haven't been updated in more than 40 years - or the Tower. Blackpool is LGBT welcoming - and that *baseline level* is the best thing I can say.
I know there is a big push for tourism in Manitoba. People think it's all about Winnipeg or Churchill. If you want to go to Churchill it has to be in the summer months, since the only way to get there is by a seasonal train. Winnipeg downtown as some interesting sites, but they are spread apart and most of the whole inner core is desolate, especially after office business hours. Most places are closed by 6pm. If you really want to experience more of Manitoba it's best to get out into the other parts of Winnipeg, and ask the locals of those communities where the locally owned shops and eateries are. But don't expect everyone to know where everything is. It's a vastly spread out city, and a lot of the independent places are going out of business these days. Just because we're geographically in the middle of the continent doesn't mean we don't have beaches and plenty of lakes and rivers. Manitoba has thousands of lakes and rivers. Grand Beach is not the only one but most crowded.
On that note, Winnipeg is not the only city in Manitoba. You can visit Brandon. I believe there is still a bus that goes there from Winnipeg. And there's also Portage La Prairie. Morden has a cool museum of ocean dinosaur fossils found locally. There are many festivals around the province. It just takes some planning. Also take note that even though McLean's Magazine has deemed Winnipeg "the most racist city" it was met with a lot of backlash by Manitobans. Racism is everywhere. We're not perfect. There's not any more of a problem here than anywhere else in Canada. No matter where you're from, you'll be safe as anywhere else in Canada.
Load More Replies...Tourists miconceptions are in the base of the whole tourism industry.
Branson Mo. I'm not from there, but I have family near there, so I used to go there a lot in the summer. I've heard people describe it as Bible Vegas, but that's not really true. The main drag and the surrounding amusement parks are more like a cutsey, family-friendly version of Vegas, but there isn't really anything religious about it. They also think everyone is going to be walking around in cowboy hats and spurs. Hate to disappoint you, but in the summer it's mostly shorts and flip flops. The town actually grew up because of all the lakes in the area, so there's quite a bit of boat-mentality, lots of fishing and glamping. Lots of dense woods in the area, coupled with the steep landscape makes for some great hiking trails.
Most of the things on this list are simply that tourists forget that people actually live in the places that they are traveling to.
I live in maine. It's a nice place and the people can be friendly enough, but in my experience most of us want the tourists to go away. Also, not all of us hunt. Only about half of us do, and the rest of us have never even fired a gun.
I have absolutely no interest in traveling as it would have to be alone. However, I do enjoy reading about other places, including my own home (America). My parents traveled to Europe twice in the 1970's, and they loved it. They were very polite people who spoke to the locals intelligently, but also explaining that they didn't know some things, and could they have help, please. They always got the needed help, and generally with smiles all around. I'd be afraid for them now, if they were alive and wanted to travel.
Australia:if you visit Sydney don’t think you can go to Melbourne or Brisbane or Uluṟu in one day they are not close to each other and if you ever go away from Sydney inland please don’t ask where the kangaroos are also don’t ask if we ride them and don’t say put another shrimp on the barbie we don’t do that and they are not shrimp they are prawns
The downside to most of these places is caused by overpopulation. Pollution, dwindling resources, inadequate housing.......... all of it caused by too many people.
We just moved from San Diego to Oregon. Biggest misconception people have about San Diego is that your friend who lives there is just dying to entertain you. Yes, we had 3 bedrooms for just the 2 of us. Not one of them was a guest room because we're not an AirBnB. We have jobs, so again, NO, we will not be driving you to the beach (40 minutes away) every day. And HELL NO we will not take you to Disneyland!
"Rumors and gossip don’t equal the truth." No. They equal dollars in the bank, don't they Bored Pansy.
Living there is always different from being a tourist. Being a tourist is always different from living there. Case in point, Bermuda.
Huh no one in the list talked about new orleans. Lived there for 5 years. Mardi gras is cool but dont go to bourbon st unless you like being packed like sardines having a difficult time moving around to get to any bars. Also, throws (beads) for flashing is only a thing tourists do. Indecent exposure is still a crime there and cops will arrest you if they feel lile it. Also, the french quarter smells like alcohol, urine, vomit, and BO on mardi gras. I recommend to skip that entirely. The weeks leading up to mardi gras are way better, have parades all the time, everywhere. Also come to the city during voodoo or jazz fest much more fun. People in nola are generally very nice and yes the food is amazing (go to mom and pop run places not some place like commanders palace). Halloween is huge there too but all year they do "ghost tours" which are neat and provide a different side of history of the area.
Brazil. We don't speak Spanish. A lot of people hate Carnaval, it's noisy and a waste of public money that could be used for many better things. People are poor. Minimum wage is about U$250 when exchanged and many people live under it, and the ones who live above is just slightly above. People are rude and very verbally aggressive. I'm autistic and extremely afraid of people due to fear of verbal aggression, but I'm more comfortable talking to a random foreign online that talking to a neighbor. You will be robbed. And hopefully nothing else.
I both loved and hated this gallery. I loved hearing what locals think of their homes, and was saddened to hear that they aren't the paradises I was seeing on TV. I wasn't really surprised, but it was a really lovely way to think of them. Since I was a little kid I held Bali in my mind as a beautiful and unspoiled island paradise, and thought New Zealand was eco-heaven, and Japan was a clean and orderly place. I guess a little dose of reality was probably called for, even though I know no place is the way it seems on television or in the movies.
I grew up in a city which fits the bill for being a 'quaint' tourist destination. It's a small historical city, which has beautiful Tudor and Medival buildings (it's in the UK) and many of the houses were very old. I used to live in a house from 1659 which was extremely cheep. Never any tourists though, probably one of the reasons it was so nice.