Laisvės-Alėja, Lithuania. The longest walking-street-in-Europe
Soomaa National Park Peat Bog walk in Estonia
As a tourist it’s easy to buy a package tour and visit the places that are high on the wish list.
This can have its problems.
The issue is that you are not alone, as there are millions following you.
As mentioned in a previous blog, this was highlighted in a BBC article about tourists flooding popular destinations such as Barcelona, Venice, Florence and some Greek islands.
And more recently Iceland.
It is expected that over 2 million people will have visited this spectacular and sparsely populated country in 2017 – completely overwhelming the local population of just 334,000.
This has been exacerbated by the influx of tourists from China, India and Russia, plus the growth of cruising.
Some of the popular destinations are so overrun with tourists that the locals are moving out during the high season.
This year 70 million tourists will have visited Spain.
Another factor that changes the state of the destination is the accommodation.
The more tourists there are, the more places they need to stay.
In steps Airbnb and other accommodation sharing businesses.
The result is that the locals move out, because their apartments are worth more when they are rented.
Apart from the sites, the other attraction in a destination are the locals.
Increasingly the only people you see in the tourist areas of Berlin, Athens and Santorini are other tourists.
Another casualty of excessive tourism is the loss of local cuisine.
Unless you venture into the backstreets of Geneva, Hamburg or Prague you won’t find much more than pizza and pasta.
The local restaurants all left with the locals and moved into the suburbs, well away from the tourists.
Try finding good Catalan food in the centre of Barcelona.
What is tourism about, if not experiencing the culture, food and people?
On this trip we have been to some big cities like Berlin, Helsinki and Warsaw. There English is always spoken and everything is relatively easy.
But you are not alone, tourists are everywhere.
The prices are higher and you are more likely to get fleeced, as the locals are aware of what the punters will pay.
While in many unexplored countries the prices are very reasonable.
This trip we have been fortunate enough to visit Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia and Slovakia. In Banská Štiavnica in Slovakia we seemed to be the only tourists that weren’t from Eastern Europe. Most seem to be from bordering countries, such as Hungary Poland, Austria and the Czech Republic.
The countries we visited offered us an insight into Eastern Europe and the Baltic States. It also gave us a new perspective on the history and culture of these places, both before and after the Second World War.
Both the German occupation and subsequently the seizure by the Soviet Union left its mark. However the history before that was equally as turbulent, as invasion from neighbouring countries seemed to happen on a regular basis.
Travelling to unique places allows you to experience different people, cultures and geography. We discovered the ‘longest walking street in Europe’ in Lithuania and walked in a peat bog in Estonia.
However travelling in uncharted water isn’t without its difficulties.
Language can be an issue as English isn’t widely spoken and communication can be an issue. Especially when it comes to ordering from a menu that’s only in the local tongue.
Tour guides at these tourists sites tend to deliver the narrative in the language that most of the tourists speak and in many cases this wasn’t English.
Failing to find an English speaking guide we turned to the next best thing – maps and and printed information.
Even this had its problems, as on many occasions they weren’t printed in English either.
In large, well patronised, tourist towns you can always find a meal, at any time of the day or night.
When you are in these smaller places you have to eat when the locals eat, which isn’t necessarily when when you’re used to eating.
The benefit here is you are eating and talking with the locals and having a genuine tourist experience.
One of the real pleasures in visiting these off-the-beaten-track destinations is that you are an oddity to the locals and local tourists.
People want to engage you in conversation, just to discover; “Why on earth are you here?”
This entry was posted
on Sunday, October 29th, 2017 at 2:19 pm and is filed under Comment, Travel.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Don’t follow, lead.
Laisvės-Alėja, Lithuania. The longest walking-street-in-Europe
Soomaa National Park Peat Bog walk in Estonia
As a tourist it’s easy to buy a package tour and visit the places that are high on the wish list.
This can have its problems.
The issue is that you are not alone, as there are millions following you.
As mentioned in a previous blog, this was highlighted in a BBC article about tourists flooding popular destinations such as Barcelona, Venice, Florence and some Greek islands.
And more recently Iceland.
It is expected that over 2 million people will have visited this spectacular and sparsely populated country in 2017 – completely overwhelming the local population of just 334,000.
This has been exacerbated by the influx of tourists from China, India and Russia, plus the growth of cruising.
Some of the popular destinations are so overrun with tourists that the locals are moving out during the high season.
This year 70 million tourists will have visited Spain.
Another factor that changes the state of the destination is the accommodation.
The more tourists there are, the more places they need to stay.
In steps Airbnb and other accommodation sharing businesses.
The result is that the locals move out, because their apartments are worth more when they are rented.
Apart from the sites, the other attraction in a destination are the locals.
Increasingly the only people you see in the tourist areas of Berlin, Athens and Santorini are other tourists.
Another casualty of excessive tourism is the loss of local cuisine.
Unless you venture into the backstreets of Geneva, Hamburg or Prague you won’t find much more than pizza and pasta.
The local restaurants all left with the locals and moved into the suburbs, well away from the tourists.
Try finding good Catalan food in the centre of Barcelona.
What is tourism about, if not experiencing the culture, food and people?
On this trip we have been to some big cities like Berlin, Helsinki and Warsaw. There English is always spoken and everything is relatively easy.
But you are not alone, tourists are everywhere.
The prices are higher and you are more likely to get fleeced, as the locals are aware of what the punters will pay.
While in many unexplored countries the prices are very reasonable.
This trip we have been fortunate enough to visit Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia and Slovakia. In Banská Štiavnica in Slovakia we seemed to be the only tourists that weren’t from Eastern Europe. Most seem to be from bordering countries, such as Hungary Poland, Austria and the Czech Republic.
The countries we visited offered us an insight into Eastern Europe and the Baltic States. It also gave us a new perspective on the history and culture of these places, both before and after the Second World War.
Both the German occupation and subsequently the seizure by the Soviet Union left its mark. However the history before that was equally as turbulent, as invasion from neighbouring countries seemed to happen on a regular basis.
Travelling to unique places allows you to experience different people, cultures and geography. We discovered the ‘longest walking street in Europe’ in Lithuania and walked in a peat bog in Estonia.
However travelling in uncharted water isn’t without its difficulties.
Language can be an issue as English isn’t widely spoken and communication can be an issue. Especially when it comes to ordering from a menu that’s only in the local tongue.
Tour guides at these tourists sites tend to deliver the narrative in the language that most of the tourists speak and in many cases this wasn’t English.
Failing to find an English speaking guide we turned to the next best thing – maps and and printed information.
Even this had its problems, as on many occasions they weren’t printed in English either.
In large, well patronised, tourist towns you can always find a meal, at any time of the day or night.
When you are in these smaller places you have to eat when the locals eat, which isn’t necessarily when when you’re used to eating.
The benefit here is you are eating and talking with the locals and having a genuine tourist experience.
One of the real pleasures in visiting these off-the-beaten-track destinations is that you are an oddity to the locals and local tourists.
People want to engage you in conversation, just to discover; “Why on earth are you here?”
This entry was posted on Sunday, October 29th, 2017 at 2:19 pm and is filed under Comment, Travel. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.