Puerto Rico. The sand flies! Ruined our trip |
I live in Seattle and think of it as a really difficult place to visit. The areas near tourist sites are grimy and filled with super shady situations, mentally ill people, and occasionally violent people. Traffic is daunting if you’re trying to enjoy the scenic parts of the area or get from one neighborhood to the next. It can take me an hour to go 3 miles. The areas that make my everyday life special are pretty much inaccessible to visitors- neighborhood swim and tennis clubs on the lake, school and university events, friends with boats, urban farm shares, ski houses 50 minutes away, etc. I think Vancouver is a bit more tourist-friendly in terms of having lots of stuff close by and some actual destinations. |
I wouldn’t say hate per say, but I never need to return to:
Vegas Seattle Madrid Orlando El Salvador OBX |
NYC in summer. Too hot and smelly.
I think late September is the best time to travel most places in the northern hemisphere. |
Not a fan of Myrtle beach, OBX, Vegas, Orlando and San Francisco. I don’t need to visit any of them again.
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Yes |
Indy. Holy crap is that a ghetto city. |
I haven't read the whole thread yet, but New York City for me. It's a running joke in my circle how much I hate NYC, but it's rooted in reality. Overcrowded, dirty, loud, too many rats, Times Square is overly commercialized fakeness, Brooklyn is soulless now, other boroughs are dumps. The only redeeming quality to me is Broadway. Even the cuisine, while plentiful isn't anything overly special.
Too hot in the summer, too cold in the winter. I really hate that place |
Another DP here. I also hated India. I visited Mumbai, Chennai, Bengaluru, and Kolkata, each on separate trips, when I was living in Pakistan for work. India is slightly better than Pakistan, which I hated more, but I did not like India and have no desire to ever return. Seeing the way wealthy Indians treat their "servants" and those in the service industry they deem beneath them was utterly sickening. You have to be OK with exploiting someone else whose life is hell for your comfort if you yourself want to be comfortable in India. Wealthy Indians are not only happy to exploit these people, they are super, over-the-top conspicuous and tacky in showing off their wealth, talking about their wealth, and making you understand as soon as possible that they are, in fact, wealthy. Hated India. Yes, the staff in nice hotels and shops WEFE suffocating. They hovered, they pestered, and they would not leave me alone to shop in peace. This is because wealthy Indian people like and expect that kind of thing. This also drove me crazy when I lived in Dubai and staff in pharmacies or shops in the mall would pounce and hover in the same way (though I liked Dubai). |
OBX in winter. I worked here one winter and it was the dampest, coldest, windiest, bitter coldest place I've ever been.
Venice in August--too smelly |
Davis Island Florida--first time I'd ever seen rats and they were big and plentiful. |
what is the dark underbelly of these places? |
Arizona, Phoenix and Tucson. Palm Springs. 29 Palms (Joshua Tree). I’ve learned I don’t like the desert.
Didn’t hate but was underwhelmed by Rome. |
I can definitely understand why someone may not like visiting Seattle but I've enjoyed living there for many years without the things mentioned. No clubs on the lake, friends with boats, ski cabins, urban farm shares. I've played tennis on public courts, swam in the lake and community pools, rented boats, skied for the day or even just the afternoon, gone to farmers markets and enjoyed open events at UW. All accessible to visitors. |
I had thought the same thing. Towns like Midland and Odessa are pretty bleak. Then on a driving trip up from Mexico, we crossed at Presidio, Texas and drove to Marfa. It was a stunning drive and Marfa is a quirky little place. Then we explored other small towns like Alpine, Davis, Marathon, Terlingua and the Big Bend area. It was amazing with incredible scenery galore. If you like wide open spaces, it’s really something to experience. Even if you don’t go for a full Mexico visit, definitely cross at Presidio into Ojinaga, Mexico to experience excellent food and a vibrant little town. My expectation were low but this is one of my favorite regions in the US now. And I’ve visited 49 of 50 states! |