Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Montreal. So dull.
Aw, I love Montreal. Great museums, shopping and restaurants. It's feels like going to Europe without the jetlag.
I'm from Europe. It really doesn't feel like Europe at all.
Except that men can be petite, I guess.
French men are not known to be particularly tall either.
But I understand you have to get your mood boost by claiming European superiority, as per usual.
Europe is huge. When someone posts that they are from "Europe" I just replace it with Moldova and feel bad for them.
Wow, you are very bad at logic. The population of Moldova is 2.5 million and the population of Europe is 745 million. That means there is a 0.33% chance that a European is from Moldova. In addition, Moldova is a beautiful up and coming country, as compared to the US where you live, which is in a death spiral race to the bottom as evidenced by the number of US destinations cited in this thread. Your comment just exposes your own insecurity knowing that Europeans are better educated and cultured than you are, yes, even those in Moldova.
Lmao can you be even more European? Why aren’t you using a European phone and on a European website? Wait, do you live in America?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Montreal. So dull.
Aw, I love Montreal. Great museums, shopping and restaurants. It's feels like going to Europe without the jetlag.
I'm from Europe. It really doesn't feel like Europe at all.
Except that men can be petite, I guess.
French men are not known to be particularly tall either.
But I understand you have to get your mood boost by claiming European superiority, as per usual.
Europe is huge. When someone posts that they are from "Europe" I just replace it with Moldova and feel bad for them.
Wow, you are very bad at logic. The population of Moldova is 2.5 million and the population of Europe is 745 million. That means there is a 0.33% chance that a European is from Moldova. In addition, Moldova is a beautiful up and coming country, as compared to the US where you live, which is in a death spiral race to the bottom as evidenced by the number of US destinations cited in this thread. Your comment just exposes your own insecurity knowing that Europeans are better educated and cultured than you are, yes, even those in Moldova.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Atlantic City, Orlando, Dover Delaware, Baltimore, Harpers Ferry, Charlestown, Martinsburg West Virginia.
+1 I don't understand why people like Harper's Ferry so much. It's tiny, and there aren't many interesting stores or restaurants. Same for Ellicot City. I don't get the appeal. Frederick downtown is more interesting.
I've been to Harper's Ferry a few times because I thought I'd miss something the way people around here talk about how amazing it is. So years later went back. I don't get it at all. It's totally bizzare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Atlantic City, Orlando, Dover Delaware, Baltimore, Harpers Ferry, Charlestown, Martinsburg West Virginia.
+1 I don't understand why people like Harper's Ferry so much. It's tiny, and there aren't many interesting stores or restaurants. Same for Ellicot City. I don't get the appeal. Frederick downtown is more interesting.
I've been to Harper's Ferry a few times because I thought I'd miss something the way people around here talk about how amazing it is. So years later went back. I don't get it at all. It's totally bizzare.
You go to Harper’s Ferry because there’s beautiful hiking close by, then you grab a burger and leave. You aren’t visiting it like you visit Frederick (unless you hike in the Catoctins).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Montreal. So dull.
Aw, I love Montreal. Great museums, shopping and restaurants. It's feels like going to Europe without the jetlag.
I'm from Europe. It really doesn't feel like Europe at all.
Except that men can be petite, I guess.
French men are not known to be particularly tall either.
But I understand you have to get your mood boost by claiming European superiority, as per usual.
Europe is huge. When someone posts that they are from "Europe" I just replace it with Moldova and feel bad for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Atlantic City, Orlando, Dover Delaware, Baltimore, Harpers Ferry, Charlestown, Martinsburg West Virginia.
+1 I don't understand why people like Harper's Ferry so much. It's tiny, and there aren't many interesting stores or restaurants. Same for Ellicot City. I don't get the appeal. Frederick downtown is more interesting.
I've been to Harper's Ferry a few times because I thought I'd miss something the way people around here talk about how amazing it is. So years later went back. I don't get it at all. It's totally bizzare.
You go to Harper’s Ferry because there’s beautiful hiking close by, then you grab a burger and leave. You aren’t visiting it like you visit Frederick (unless you hike in the Catoctins).
Anonymous wrote:I've enjoyed every place I've ever visited, except for one: Massanutten. Virginia. I still don't know why the place sort of unsettled me, but it did. We were not there in the winter, maybe that's why? I still cannot pinpoint exactly why. Everyone else had a fine enough time, and I went along, but it felt off. Low vibration strange. I've never felt like that anywhere else. And I grew up rural.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry to have repeated phoenix posts but I’ve also wanted to try this place on Phoenix:
https://www.frybreadhouseaz.com/
If anyone has to go to Phoenix please let mkrnow how it is!
Anonymous wrote:I have been many many places and the only 2 I'll never go back to are LA and Rome
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband has a friend who lives in Phoenix and we went and visited him for a few days and I hated it. The entire place just seemed like a giant suburb. No neighborhoods, no history. It was so dry and dusty. Scorpions? No thank you. I can't even imagine being there in the heat.
This is an accurate description and I’m there often. All the suburbs also look the same.