Posted by Andrew Hickey on Oct 7, 2009 in
Travel |

Well yesterday’s article was pretty revealing. I mean we had some very sinful travel experts get a lot off their chest. In fact it got so bad that I needed to close down the confession booth for 24-hours. But I am back with even MORE travel confessions.
I will try to keep it a little cleaner today I promise. When most travelers confessed to me, one topic seemed to come up quite a bit and that was “I have never been to…”. Below are some places that these vagabonds have yet to mark off on their “to see” list.
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Johnny Jet, a man you would think has touched every inch of this planet, has yet to make his presence felt at the Grand Canyon.
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Nomadic Matt is another globe-trotting individual that has also seen most of the world. He also runs one hell of a travel blog. But Matt confesses that he has not yet rolled the dice in “Sin City” Las Vegas.
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Stephanie Yoder of Twenty-Something Travel visited Amsterdam, but skipped the Red Light District. That is like going all the way to New York and not trying pizza! Stephanie also mentions here why she has yet to walk the streets of Paris.
Have you ever visited a popular destination and wound up being extremely disappointed? You’re not alone. Two such travelers shared their dismay with a certain Italian destination that millions of vacationers flock to each year.
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Andy Murdock of Lonely Planet told me, “I’ve only been to Venice once, and all I wanted to do was leave as quickly as possible. It was the height of summer so it was hot, filthy, smelly and just crammed full of tourists and hawkers selling tacky trinkets at every turn, and the geography makes it really difficult to escape the hordes. I hate telling this to people because they’ve either been and loved it and try to convince me to go back and give it a second shot, or they haven’t been and hold romantic notions of the city that I don’t especially want to dash because of my one bad experience. Maybe one day I’ll return off-season, but for me it’s like an expensive restaurant that everyone else loves but gave me food-poisoning: why should I spend the money and effort to go back when there are so many new places to try, not to mention places I would love to return to?”
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Gary Arndt ,who runs the extremely popular travel blog Everything-Everywhere.com, also did not enjoy his time in Venice. Arndt confessed, “My first reaction when I arrived in Venice was ‘Wow. This looks just like EPCOT Center!’.”
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The Elite Travel Gal herself Stacy Small has been to many great cities around the world, but one seems to keep getting away from her. Small told me that she has never been to New Orleans. “I had a few trips planned,” Small stated. “But I always had to cancel due to inclement weather!”
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Mike Barish, contributing travel writer to Gadling.com, expressed that, “It took me 30 years to get to Paris. Still haven’t been to London. Yet I’ve been to India twice.”
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Sarah Schlichter from IndependentTraveler.com told me that she likes to keep it simple for accommodations and that, “I never stay at luxury hotels. They’re too pretentious, and I don’t feel like I belong there. Give me a B&B or a mid-priced guesthouse any day.”
Wow! The confessional’s line is out the door. I am going to have to shut it down for today. Check back tomorrow for part 3/3 of travel confessions.
Tags: amsterdam, australia, cruises, england, florida, france, grand canyon, italy, japan, johnny jet, Las Vegas, London, lonely planet, louisiana, mexico, mexico city, nevada, new orleans, nomadic matt, orlando, Paris, red light district, sydney, tokyo, travel confessions, venice
These confessions have been great! As someone that is on the outside looking in at the travel world, it is cool to see so many experts dishing the dirt. Keep them coming!
I can never believe people don’t love Venice! I was there in the height of Summer back in 1998 and it still stands as one of the most beautiful cities I’ve ever seen or experienced.
A travel confession of my own would be having seen more national parks in the rest of the world than in the USA. I need to make it out West to see the big ones. I never thought much of them before, though when you meet foreigners abroad and they talk about visiting the US and seeing Yellowstone, it makes you realize the unique options your own country has to offer.
When I visited Venice I did have a sneaking feeling that I was actually at Disney World. That said I still thought it was a really elegant, beautiful place. Of course it might have helped that i went in December when the throngs of tourists were at a lull.