>Best
MSP
>Worst
LAX
>Overrated
ATL
>Underrated
CVG
If you don't think Singapore is the best, you ain't been there
>free tours to take you into the city all hours of the day
>indoor gardens
>outdoor gardens
>butterfly garden
>that's right, an indoor jungle room where you can walk around and pet butterflies
>free internet kiosks and wifi
>free console and LAN gaming
>free movie theater
>free massage chairs and foot massage machines
>sleeping area
>the food court is themed after Asian street food, with one stall for every imaginable kind of Asian cuisine
Best place on earth for a long layover
>>1035573
Also what's so great about MSP?
>>1035588
I think it's designed beautifully and efficiently. Plus all of the staff is really nice. For the local weather the layovers are minimal. Lovely surroundings upon landing. I haven't flown intercontinentally so my experience is limited to US, Canadian, and Central American airports.
I was sitting in a hostel kitchen, eating an omelette wrapped around some olives and canned tomato, only slightly more difficult to make than a sandwich, drinking a tankard of belgian beer (the only tankard in the kitchen stock), holding my fork and knife in the formal style, fork in left hand. I got into a mild back and forth with an American, and he became convinced that I was French. It wasn't an accusation, he just couldn't identify my accent and seemed to jump to this conclusion based on my accessories. Usually people mistake me for being Russian. I'm actually quite tickled by this, as I usually am by bad guesses about who I might be. I enjoy not being understood.
Mistaken identity stories?
You have a very strange way of writing. Reminds me of Murakami almost.
>>1031196
while in Syria, people regularly chanted "Death To America!" while I was around. Me, being American, purposely mistook my own identity on these occasions, and told them I was from Chile.
>>1031200
>Reminds me of Murakami almost.
Holy shit that's true.
i made a post the other day, but it done died. im trying to move to washington, oregon, or california. today, im focusing my research on california, but i will appreciate your suggestions and insight on WA and OR towns as well. if i choose CA, i want to be within 2 hours of LA, because im an aspiring actress. i know a lot of you will say "durr if u want to act u have to go to la" but thats not necessarily the case, because i just started and its better to start out somewhere other than la from what ive heard. anyway, does anyone know about any cool towns within 2-3 hours of la? im looking for someplace hip, unique, maybe mystical, artsy, with things to do and big enough to have a theatre, or with theatres in close proximity. what i really want is a place in or near the mountains around there, but thats not entirely necessary, just a big bonus. i really really really dont want anything boring or same old same old. i want a place that has a lot of personality and character. i will appreciate anyyy suggestions : )
>>1038864
Have a seat.....
>>1038865
lol. nah, im sure i wont go down that road. im not an idiot.
>>1038864
San Diego
Trying an experiment:
Were has /trv/ been, as a community? Here is a starter-map. It shows where I've been, List countries I need to add based on where YOU'VE been. I'll update the map every so often.
(I'm doing it at the country level because I do not want to get into "No, that fiddly little unlabeled district in Colombia is two up and one over from the one I was in..." I'll remove "trip planned" and the wish list on the first update -- this is ONLY where we've been.)
>>1039413
Im all down to do this OP but I opt that we use this map. Is it really correct to say that someone has seen the giant fucking blob of earth we call Russia just because they had a day trip to Moscow? There are so many regions so culturally different within the same country.
Post an updated pic and I'll contribute my experiences though, I just don't wanna do it by country alone.
Canada, USA, Mexico, Brazil,
Portugal, Spain, France, Switzerland, England, Germany, Italy, Austria, Slovenia, Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey, Greece, Croatia, Hungary
Tunisia
Germany (Bavaria and Berlin)
Czech Republic (Prague and Brno)
Did everyone enjoy their Chuseok?
Wanna know what Chuseok is?
Don't give a shit?
South Korea general is here for you.
Chuseok was great. I got to see a drumband sweat it out in the midday sun.
ebin I was there by accident. what an inferior country
>want to breed some korean qts
>there are none because the country has an absymal birth rate
It's lower then the most industrialized cities in the world across the entire country, wtf.
What's the most poor and third-world country you have ever traveled or stayed in?
Spain
>>1036575
Detroit, Mi
>>1036575
Bangladesh
Have you ever fallen in love whilst travelling/on your gap year/year abroad, or know someone who has?
Was it just a short and sweet romance? Are you still in touch, or maybe doing long distance or have even married and are now living together?
Tell me your stories!
I can say that I met my ex on a trip, because I smoked a blunt haha
I was with here for 3 years, cheated on me twice
I met my current GF on Erasmus. Currently we're in a long-distance relationship, we see each other every two-three months.
Erasmus is a bit like pic related. Everybody is far more... open than they probably would be at home.
>>1036189
Shit, sorry about that man. At least you know you're better off without her.
>>1036196
OP here, I actually made this thread because I also met a girl on Erasmus, haha. We're not exactly together though, and maybe I'll never see her again because we are so far apart, but who knows what can happen. :) Good luck with your relationship! Where did you do Erasmus btw?
Hey everyone, I am an American who has been teaching English in Japan for 4 years, and I plan on staying here permanently. If anybody has any questions about teaching English in Japan or any general TEFL related questions in general let me know.
>>1038146
How easy/hard it is to find a job there for an English teacher? What kind of degree you need to apply for a job there as an English teacher? In which city are you working in? Do you need to be fluent or half decent in Japanese to work there?
>>1038153
It's pretty easy if you have a bachelors degree and are white. I have a B.A in English, but you can have a degree in anything to get a job. I work in Osaka. No you don't need to know Japanese, in fact most employers will ask you not to speak any Japanese when you are at work if you happen to know how to.
>>1038146
What's your pay? What are your hours/benefits etc
Do you have plans to do anything more in life/Japan than teach English?
Are you a weeb? (please say no)
China General
Old thread is at: >>1007576
General info:
http://wikitravel.org/en/China
Hotels:
http://hotel.elong.net/
http://english.ctrip.com/hotels/
Buses:
http://bus.ctrip.com/
http://www.chinabusguide.com/
Trains:
http://www.cnvol.com/
http://www.travelchinacheaper.com/how-to-buy-china-train-tickets-online
Expat restaurants/supermarkets/bars:
http://listings.echinacities.com/
Apps:
Pleco (dictionary)
baidu maps/google maps
VPNs:
Astril/VPNNinja
4chan: get a pass or use a vpn or both (might be blocked now)
Is VyprVPN reliable?
Looking at traveling to and exploring Sichuan and Yunnan provinces next year, any hot tips or must see things for those areas?
>>1030728
>Sichuan and Yunnan
Those are some of my favourite places.
The backpacker trail in Yunnan is Kunming to Dali/Lijiang and up to Shangrila via Tiger Leaping Gorge. From Shangrila, you can either head back to Dali/Li Jiang, maybe whichever you didn't do the first time and then head on to Sichuan or go straight there from Shangrila.
protip: Shangrila isn't it's real name, it's Zhongdian, they just named it that for tourists. It's a nice Tibetan town even though half the old town burnt down a few years ago. Pic related, from before the fire.
Sichuan has Pandas in Chengdu which are cool (any hostel can hook you up) and Chongqing which I really like but which is kind of polluted. Still, one of the few places where every side of the building can have it's own street entrance on different levels. I love the underground arcades in Chongqing that link the tops of some buildings with the basements of others. The landscape is really dramatic if you stay in the central peninsula bit of it. There are a few hostels in both places, I recommend River View in Chongqing and Hump in Kunming.
If you do the pandas, make sure you pay extra for the 'training', it's a border-line scam but it's the only way you'll ever put your hands on an actual panda and it's not that much in real money.
Sichuan also has Ermai which is one of the big famous mountains in China and said to be beautiful in winter.
I am looking for small US and Canadian towns with their own unique flavors.
Help me flesh out this list. So far I have ;
Aspen
Taos
Big Sur
29 Palms
Terlingua
Bisbee
Also any comments on the towns listed would be great as I have only been to a few of them.
>>1024834
Kingston, Ontario is a cool town. Lots of limestone buildings and old architecture
All these places will likely very touristy and expensive.
Some places I can add to the list are Leavenworth, WA, a great german style village east of Seattle. It's incredibly beautiful but it reeks of kitsch tourism. Jackson, WY is great too, both have mountains cascading over them like in your pic. I really enjoyed Jackson but it was the slow season so everyone was local. Lots of cool looking 20 somethings and there's lots of money to be made there.
All those Colorado mountain towns are great. I really enjoyed Breckenridge and Steamboat Springs which is supposed to be very hip. That has to be one of my favorite areas in the US.
Taos is a dump from what I gathered. Manby hot springs is there right on the Rio Grande, they filmed a bit of Easy Rider there. Only naked hippies when I was there though. Donald Rumsfeld has a house there among others. I remember laughing at Taos because the power was out and nothing worked. This was also during the summer so it wasn't cool and snow covered. Hippies galore.
Big Sur was cool too but it seemed more of a nature place than an actual town. Santa Cruz is cool too, the locals are iffy though.
Asheville, NC is beautiful. Lots of bums. With all these great little towns comes some very lousy people too. That's the shame of it.
Two Harbors, CA is a great little place, I lived there for a bit. It's expensive to get there, $75 ferry round trip but it's a hidden gem for sure. Again, small town + high tourism = xenophobia, small mindedness, and social retards.
There are tons of great little places. The ones that are less absurdly beautiful are gonna be cheaper and have a more easy going community.
Are you looking for a place to live, OP?
New Japan General since the old one is past the bump limit:
As always, feel free to ask about:
>Travelling to Japan
>Living in Japan
>Teaching in Japan
>Joining the Yakuza
Also info on prostitution http://rockitreports.com/category/sex-in-tokyo/
Please check the /trv/ sticky before asking questions. It's filled with links to great resources, many of them specific to Japan travel.
Please refrain to the old thread while it's still up: >>1033933
What stores in tokyo/japan (im willing to travel far if needed) can i buy these fuckers?
I assume there are candy stores that would be really likely to sell them but I was hoping to find specific names from peolle here,instead of asking random japanese people on the street.
it costs way to much to buy them online (and there is a very small variety of them) and i'd rather just buy some on my trip to japan in december and finally have the collection i've always dreamed of. i seriously love these fucking tins.
>>1037422
You can probably find the candy in conbinis but those tins are collectibles even in Japan
>>1037422
posted a reply in the last thread
I love flying, the taking off and landing is the best part and I was wondering about your experiences flying.
What's your favourite airline to travel on?
Do you have a preferred airline you stick with or do you have no loyalty at all?
Share your airline experiences
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXlmF3eI9R0
>>976654
Have you seen the price for the eithad residence class, it costs 21,000 USD for a flight from Dubai to London, you get your own butler and a separate bathroom, living room and bedroom.
Generally I fly British Airways cause I work for them therefore get discount. I agree that landing and taking off are the best part by far, although i always love the mid-flight turbulence.
I hate to fly. I was evacuated during a hurricane and the plane was hit by lightning, causing it to free fall for a few seconds. Didn't get on a plane for at least 10 years after that, and basically I only fly to Hawaii, I'll drive everywhere else.
Stereotyping is something we inevitably run into while traveling, whether from our own preconceived notions of another or someone else's assumptions on your character. What are some stereotypes you've encountered, and how did you react?
>where are you from (home country and/or ethnic background)?
>what stereotypes you have heard about your background by other travelers?
>agree/disagree?
bonus:
>what stereotypes do you think are true for others?
>where are you from (home country and/or ethnic background)?
USA USA USA USA USA
>what stereotypes you have heard about your background by other travelers?
I've been asked a lot of questions but rarely felt like I was being accused. In Europe, a lot of folks seemed surprised that I was a gluttonous gun-nut. One of my worst memories from traveling is having a drunken Frenchman lambaste my supposed ignorance. When it became it obvious that I was more informed about world events and had a better grasp on geography than him, he stared saying that I was, "the only American" he ever liked. I don't know if that was supposed to be flattering, but it annoyed the piss out of me.
In the Middle-East and South Asia, the stereotypes overwhelming deal with Western values. Every guy in India seemed to think that I could pull any girl I wanted, simply because I'm white. Some people seemed to be under the impression that "most American women" have children out of wedlock and in their teens.
Thanks, MTV.
>agree/disagree?
Eh. A bit of both. I feel like I've been enough places that I'm more than capable of not being a self-loathing prick. I can see the good in the United States. However, we do have a lot of stupid people living here. I just feel like most Americans I've met abroad have been awesome, especially in "out of the way" types of countries.
> what stereotypes do you think are true for others
Hard to say. All the French people I meet seem to be be either massive douches or amazingly warm. Russians almost always seem to have a poor grasp of English and "the local language." Tour bus Chinese seem rude as fuck, too.
I don't like stereotyping too much. I've been to a few dozen countries and met nice people from all different backgrounds.
>where are you from (home country and/or ethnic background)?
USA, Black
>what stereotypes you have heard about your background by other travelers?
Will only list ones I encountered directly. Americans wear baggy tshirts and jeans, and sneakers. have been told more than once by what became friends that when they first met me they did not think I was American because I wore polo shirts, slacks or fitting jeans and casual shoes
As a black I'm "gangster". It's not in a derogatory manner. Just like "cool thug black guy like snoop dogg". had random kids "yo, yo yo" me in Italy. Non-ironically or maliciously called nigger in Spain. Like she legit though that was the word for black people.
Fathers tell their daughters to stay away from Marines because they are crazy/bad boys and will break your heart. (Norway)
Americans are loud. Americans are crazy. Americans are stupid.
In the Middle East, Americans are broke/cheap by Arabs.
American is full of serial killers and you'll get murdered if you come here
American high schools are exactly like Mean Girls and other teen movies with all of those cliques and stereotypes.
Blacks have big dicks and fuck the best (Spain, Italy, Middle East)
Black have big dicks and fuck too hard and will rip you in half (Asia)
>agree/disagree?
I don't agree with any of them. I've seen every type of American traveler. Even on this board with the "real traveler stereotype everyone doesn't fit in that box.
bonus:
>what stereotypes do you think are true for others?
Only that Norwegians are tall. They are freaking vikings. An average height American would be short there. I felt like a hobbit there. Outside of that, any minor stereotypes I had have been smashed during travel
>where are you from
Reunion Island, French, White
>>what stereotypes
For being french:
"Ah, l'amour!". US/UK Girls often made me fake a french accent, seemed a bit frustrating to them that I spoke a very neutral English.
Continental european gals don't give a fuck about us, but boy do british and american chicks have a romanticized view of the french.
Funnily enough most UK/US guys despise the french for being a douche, a fag and whatever.
>Most of them (gals and guys) have never actually spent extended periods of time with french.
Other than that, cuisine stereotypes (chinese ordering frog legs and liver for me in local restaurants), and the occasional awe and amazement at french' social(ist) system. 5 weeks paid vacation, free healthcare, immigration problems.
For living in a tropical island:
Do you surf? Do you need to work? Is there internet there? Why are you so white skinned? If I lived in a tropical paradise I'd spend my day at the beach! (hint: it gets old very very quick)
>agree/disagree?
Mostly disagree, the only reason the french lover stereotype is still alive is because the french who actually travels/moves to a foreign country is often already an open minded, charismatic person who can engage in an interesting conversation. But it's more the mindset than the background, I've met plenty of interesting people from all over the world, all of them where "romantic" material. If those chicks I've met abroad ever travel to bumfuck France, they'll find their share of pot bellied, red faced alcoholic factory workers who think quality time is spent watching soccer on TV, wearing track pants and drinking beer.
> true for others?
Relaxed outfit for the american: oversized jersey, track pants, pool sandals with socks.
Every. Fucking. Time.
The chinese are so relatively new to the outside world that the stereotypes are actually accurate. Let's see in 25 years what's still relevant
New Japan General since the old one is past the bump limit
As always, feel free to ask about:
>travelling to Japan
>living in Japan
>teaching in Japan
>how do I become a Yakuza
Also info on prostitution in Japan: http://rockitreports.com/category/sex-in-tokyo/
Please refer to the old thread while it's still up>>973906
>>976404
I'm from Scotland and Thinking of moving to Japan. One thing that makes me worry is the weather, is their any place that isn't extremely warm in the summer? I don't mind the cold because I'm used to it really.
Also anyone got any advise for someone wanting to move their, what jobs are easy to go for, how people act to foreigners?
>>976407
I guess mountain cities and Hokkaido region.
>have A.A
>don't know what I want to do.
Is tefl viable for a long term career. Would Japan require an education/English degree in the future?
What's the one place you need to visit before you die?
>>975167
Space
SEA
>>975183
The Mars Colonial Transporter should be ready by 2035. Will you still be alive?