Posts Tagged ‘peter greenberg’
Belize: Don’t Go There
Wednesday, December 17th, 2008Belize, this small country in central America was one of the stops that our cruise ship made,I know they have good diving and fishing,but those are not family stuff. I was very disappointed that there was no beaches to relax at, we asked a cab driver to take us to a beach and we ended up at a mud-hole dug in the ground that the locals hang-out at, if it were not for the local brew it would have been a bust.
International Falls Minnesota smells!
Wednesday, December 17th, 2008If you are basing this off of smelling bad, International Falls, MN is definitely the place to NOT go. The first time I arrived there it smelled terribly, but I believe there is a paper factory there. Other than that DO GO there. I’m not bashing International Falls like Peter basically bashed Fountain, MN. However, there are days where it smells terrible.
Dirty & Dangerous Looking Pasay City, Manila
Wednesday, November 26th, 2008I had traveled to the Philippines with my lady about a month ago & we stayed in the vicinity of Pasay City. Unfortunately, the area is pretty much a slum where you can see a lot of poor people by the roadsides especially at night. Additionally, the local jeep vehicles used for cheap transportation are parked in large numbers in the area, making it a hangout for many locals. Most of the people in the street at night are presumably harmless but the lack of street lighting in the area makes it feel more dangerous than it actually is so no sense in taking the risk of being mugged by taking a walk into the night at Pasay City with the locals staring creepily at you. One experience of walking in the area at night was enough for me & my lady. So don’t go there because you can’t see anything interesting especially at night plus it’s not worth the risk.
What alarmed me most was that there was a security guard in a 24 hour convenience store. There must be a reason for it. Furthermore, I arrived to Pasay City by bus from Clark airport. Beware of the sleazy Aussie Connection cab driver in the white taxi at the bus station who will charge triple the cost of cab fare. It does not make sense to pay the same amount of 10 minute cab fare which costs similar to a 3 hour travel by bus. He will be offering to show his ideals of better hotels. I realized now that he had rigged his taxi meter to start at 285 Philippine pesos (about US$6) even before the cab moved. Hence, whatever the amount that shown on the meter of the scamming cab driver, the real amount you are supposed to pay is way less because a hotel service car cost only 150php. More ??worst places to travel to?? information is available at Peter Greenberg’s site(www.petergreenberg.com) who is the author of the book called Don’t Go There & also travel host for the Today Show.
Abas
Don’t Go There: Some Places That Stink.
Thursday, November 13th, 2008Well, at least they smell. These are just a few of the places found in Peter Greenberg’s new book:
HEREFORD, TEXAS
Hereford, Texas, is proudly called by many in this region “The Saudi Arabia of cattle manure,” with more than 3.5 million meat and dairy cows within a 100-mile radius of the city. With just 154,5000 people calling Hereford home, that means there are about 233 241 cows for every human living in town for every human.
With quaint hotels, various horse shows, and historical spots, Hereford is a subdued diversion from nearby Amarillo but otherwise doesn’t have much to offer, unless you count odor as a commodity. As the locals like to say about Hereford and its cows, “It’s the smell of money.”
CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA
Some people call Cedar Rapids “The City of Five Seasons,” where the fifth is “time to enjoy the other four.”
Well, Cedar Rapids also has an unofficial nickname: “The City of Five Smells.”
With I-380 running directly through it, Cedar Rapids, the second second-largest city in Iowa, is home to many grain processing plants, including General Mills and Quaker Oats, which is the largest cereal plant in the world. In Cedar Rapids, most people claim the smells emanating from processing plants are more or less innocuous, pleasantly redolent of Cap’n Crunch’s Crunch Berries or oatmeal, though some days, these sites can offer up a miasma of odors.
Burnt corn, stale, rotting garbage, and over-overcooked oatmeal are some of the more overpowering smells that combine into one nasty stench. Cedar Rapids is also home to the food manufacturing sites of Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), Cargill, and Ralston Foods. You’ll know when you get close to the town: It will beckon you with clouds of smoke emanating from the industrial center, followed by the smell.
To add insult to injury, at least 100 blocks in Cedar Rapids were under-water when the Cedar River flooded in June 2008. And weeks later, the debris and garbage remaining from the flood began piling up. So much that officials had to reopen the formerly closed Cedar Rapids landfill (once known as “Mount Trashmore”) to accommodate what equated to four football fields, or two years’ worth, of trash.
WILLIAMSBURG, MICHIGAN
Tucked between Elk Lake and Lake Michigan, Grand Traverse Bay, is a great pit stop for the road trip through Michigan’s watery regions. Williamsburg, Michigan, is off the beaten path, with rolling hills and a handful of old-fashioned bed bed-and and-breakfasts. It’s hard to imagine that life in the once-pristine township is no bowl of cherries.
In January 2006, Bill O’Brien, of the Traverse City Record Record-Eagle, reported on the fetid odors emanating from Williamsburg Receiving and Storage’s fruit-processing plant, a place where fresh cherries are turned into delectable maraschino cherries. Turns out that the simple maraschino packs a pretty pungent stench, which may help to explain why the locals plan outdoor parties but don’t stay outside for long.
The reason: a horrible smell coming from the plant’s industrial waste-water site, composed of ferocious quantities of sulfites and salt used in the processing of the cherries. Imagine a 5-million million-gallon, football foot-ball-field-sized lagoon of stagnant wastewater. Welcome to Williamsburg.
ROTORUA, NEW ZEALAND
Home to constantly emitting sulfuric gases, Rotorua is the self-proclaimed stink capital of the world—in fact, it calls itself “Sulfur City.” You want to smell rotten eggs endlessly? You’ve come to the right place. This geothermally active region is actually a major tourist destination for its steaming geysers, otherworldly pools of bubbling mineral lakes, and healing mud baths. But don’t pack your Prada for this trip. The smell of sulfur not only will overpower you during your stay, but will stick to your clothes through several washings! Is it worth a visit? For the first time tourists, perhaps yes, with the cautions mentioned above. Worth a second visit? No.
NAPLES, ITALY – THE STINKIEST PLACE ON EARTH? SOMETIMES
Lots of organized tours to Italy go to or through Naples. It’s the third-largest city in the country, and people usually visit to see Mount Vesuvius and interesting Roman ruins. But they’ll also see something that the brochures don’t mention: How about having to wade through piles of festering filth and trash? In Naples and the surrounding Campania region, the waste disposal industry is Mafia run, specifically by the Camorra, with often disastrous consequences and no way to cut through the red tape. The city goes through cycles when it is literally drowning in garbage.
Things really came to a head when collectors stopped picking up the trash in Naples on December 21, 2007 … and didn’t come back until early to mid-January 2008! A few months later, the European Union filed suit against Italy for failure to dispose of the massive piles of garbage in Naples. In the meantime, residents were surrounded by heaping mounds of moldering trash, and many took to burning the piles, which created a toxic hazard and an overwhelming stench.
And this isn’t the first time this has happened: The region’s dumps hit maximum capacity more than a decade ago, causing the problem to arise almost on an annual basis. Local officials have yet to announce a yearly garbage festival in an attempt to attract curious, unwitting tourists, but that might be their only salvation. Speaking of salvation: Save yourself and don’t go there.
From Don’t Go There!: The Travel Detective’s Essential Guide to the Must-Miss Places of the World (Rodale, $17.95).
Don’t Stay in Mandarin Oriental Hyde Park, London
Thursday, November 13th, 2008
This hotel had to shell out several million dollars after one couple sued them on allegations that they had been infested with bugs from their five-night stay. The couple claimed to have awoken to bug bites all over them! After returning home, they discovered that the nasty insects had stowed away in their luggage and were now infesting their own home. They said that there were several pieces of furniture that had to be thrown away due to the incident. All of this for no less than the equivalent of 500$ per night! The hotel admitted eventually to having known to have some infestation in the headboards of a few of their guest rooms. An incident has not since occurred, but still…
Stay Away From Kabwe, Zambia
Wednesday, November 12th, 2008Lead from the old mine seeps up through the soil and into the atmosphere, clogging the air and infecting people with heavy metal toxins. Open quarries and scrap metal litter the ground. This environment is most a problem of children, as longtime exposure leads to dire results. Their lead count ranges from 60 to 120 micrograms, and can even go up to 300 micrograms. The highest accepted value is 10.
Peter Greenberg Live Chat Here!
Tuesday, November 11th, 2008Don’t go to the Westin Europa & Regina, Venice
Tuesday, November 11th, 2008Westin Europa & Regina, Venice: The 6th floor smelled like a sewer, the carpet was torn and filthy, the room needed painting. When I complained to Tauck World Discovery and Westin I received a perfunctory reply that did not address the problem, it is my opinion that no one [cares].
Don’t Go To San Joaquin Valley, California
Monday, November 10th, 2008Nestled near both San Francisco and Los Angeles, this valley is like a bowl of pollution stew. All of the smog from the major cities carries over and settle in the lower area, mingling with the heavy diesel pollution from the local agriculture communities. One of its cities, Arvin, has been dubbed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as the most polluted in America. For goodness sakes, some people have to actually remain inside on some of the worst days! Childhood asthma is nearly 5% more common than anywhere else in the nation.
The neighboring city, Bakersfield, adds heat in from the highway for one broiling stinkfest. And Fresno, also in the area, has air that is proclaimed to be “just as bad as smoking a pack of cigarettes a day”. 99 days of the year on average it is on orange alert for such contamination, and 15 days when it’s in code red! So unless you’d like to find yourself acquiring asthma, emphysema, cardiovascular disease, or diabetes, don’t go there!





