Foreign Travel?

/ Foreign Travel? #261  
funniest was in Rome when I was about 20 (yes, a long time ago), we approached a very pretty young lady and got charged by her chaperone from across a large square.
I had never seen a women that large move so fast before.
 
/ Foreign Travel? #262  
Naples was not too bad, just like anywhere, know where not to be at night.
Train station is not marked well, ask for some help and you become very welcome and people will walk you over and make sure you get on the right train.

Paris used to be bad for "welcoming" but not so bad last time we were there.
Pickpockets and people watching our luggage was pretty funny, when we start to stare back.

No pocketbooks for the ladies and no fanny packs and all is well in most places.
"ask for some help and you become very welcome and people will walk you over and make sure you get on the right train. Italians are very good about this. They go out of their way to help you. I do love that country, cause they act that way. It is in their nature.
 
/ Foreign Travel? #264  
I knew I had been in Venezuela too long (in Maracaibo, where the New Jersey refineries sourced their petroleum back then) - when I greeted an obvious newly arrived Texan oilman and his family, and got a cold rejection.

But on the other hand I enjoyed going to see regional villages by bus on my Sunday's off, and a coffee shop waitress out in the boondocks admiringly asked if I were a Spaniard due to an accent she hadn't heard before.

Long ago and far away. Nothing is the same there now.
 
/ Foreign Travel? #265  
Long ago and far away. Nothing is the same there now.
That's a problem, everywhere. Even 80+ years ago, Hemingway was lamenting the fact that by writing about the running of the bulls, he essentially destroyed everything he loved about Pamplona.

The world used to be so much more varied and interesting, before global mass media started causing worldwide homoginization.
 
/ Foreign Travel? #266  
It's still pretty wild outside the cities though.
One of the differences in working within a country vs. just visiting.

I have been way off the beaten path in a lot of countries.

But yes, the global access to internet and media has deeply affected a lot of places.
Can really see it in Japan and especially parts of Europe.
Seeing crowds in foreign dress (compared to normal European dress). Restaurants that look like anything you might find in a US strip mall, etc.

In Japan, there is less bowing, but also less mumbled Gaijins.
Japanese food is also changing.
China has modernized and instead of bicycles everywhere like when my wife worked there, now it's clogged with cars in Beijing.

Everything changes over time, but in the last 30 years it has accelerated.

London looks so different then when I first went there in the 80's , even the south side of the Thames is all rebuilt and nice.
 
/ Foreign Travel? #267  
global access to internet and media has deeply affected a lot of places.
Fer sure!
Friends visited from Ecuador and brought a young lady who just graduated from university, to be nanny for their toddler. She said she had visited NYC and wanted to see San Francisco. She has approximately zero English (and fits the profile ICE is picking up, Latino people who arrive on a tourist visa with no convincing reason to return home) so I was asked to chaperone her for a day of tourism in San Francisco.

She dressed hottie style, something we hadn't seen before. As we approached SF on the bus she got excited and photographed a women's clothing store (Nordstrom's?) that she said all her friends photograph and consider essential to visit when they come to the US.

When we got to San Francisco she pulled out a list of sites to see ... all the places the recent Barbie movie was filmed. She posed at each for her Instagram, instant cred! Later I saw only one of the photos, one I had taken for her with her camera, it had a rainbow of stars over her head, and music.

Next day she was back to unassuming nanny with her nose in her phone. Apparently Zuckerberg's Instagram is her reality. In Spanish.

Palace of Fine Arts.jpg

 
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/ Foreign Travel? #268  
I just mentioned introducing the tourist sites of San Francisco to someone who had never been there.

If anyone is interested in San Francisco tourism, below is a YouTube video that approximates where we went.

My photo in the previous post is at Palace of Fine Arts (restored, originally built for the 1915 Panama–Pacific International Exposition). From there we went to Pier 39 and the Ghirardelli Chocolate factory building, (now tourist shops), the USNPS Maritime Museum, photos at the Hyde Cable Car terminus, and the Waymo driverless taxis. Then shopping in Chinatown, and boarding a bus on Market Street.

She took photos of views across the Bay to Berkeley, Oakland, Alcatraz Island, Marin.

Then - exceeding what the YouTube tourists (below) did in a day - a rock concert in Golden Gate Park, Japanese Tea Garden, the DeYoung Museum. Back across the park to catch the Muni bus to Golden Gate Bridge Toll Plaza where we used the final credit on our $20 bus passes for the hour trip north up the freeway. Parking at any of our stops could have cost that much.

We went everywhere in the City on Muni buses same as the locals would do it, avoiding the nightmare of time wasted searching for parking when there isn't any.

For anyone who wants to duplicate this ... Enjoy!

Stock photo. It was becoming night when we got here.


Some happy tourists.
 
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/ Foreign Travel? #269  
We were so disappointed in down town SF as to how run down it was and how many homeless wandering the streets, most of the stores by the Palace hotel/Market st. were closed down.
The Palace hotel, which used to be so expensive it was mind boggling, is now cheap and empty. We stayed there and it's an amazing place, that we hope can stay in business.
The pier has become a strip mall and if you take the trolly buses after dark, you better know where to get off.
The parks still look great like the fine arts palace and presidio. But getting out to Muir was very welcome. Even though you have to reserve a spot in advance.
The tourist areas were still full during the day and safe. Same as when you got out of the market st area.
Not having been there in a few years, the difference was striking.
 
/ Foreign Travel?
  • Thread Starter
#270  
We were so disappointed in down town SF as to how run down it was and how many homeless wandering the streets, most of the stores by the Palace hotel/Market st. were closed down.
The Palace hotel, which used to be so expensive it was mind boggling, is now cheap and empty. We stayed there and it's an amazing place, that we hope can stay in business.
The pier has become a strip mall and if you take the trolly buses after dark, you better know where to get off.
The parks still look great like the fine arts palace and presidio. But getting out to Muir was very welcome. Even though you have to reserve a spot in advance.
The tourist areas were still full during the day and safe. Same as when you got out of the market st area.
Not having been there in a few years, the difference was striking.
Yes… and not car friendly from smash and grab and high parking fees.

The city lights with the bridges make a wonderful backdrop from my vantage point across the bay…
 
/ Foreign Travel? #271  
WeWe were so disappointed in down town SF as to how run down it was and how many homeless wandering the streets, most of the stores by the Palace hotel/Market st. were closed down.
Downtown SF feels like it's dying with all the Market Street flagship stores closing - same as is happening with suburban malls all over the US, as people shift to online shopping.

We avoided Downtown and Market St, aside from changing busses there. (and admiring the odd vintage trolleys). But Chinatown, immediately adjacent, was full of life and crowded with tourists, no change from when I used to ride my BSA over from Berkeley many years ago.

Younger daughter lived in SF a couple of years ago and took us to brunch over in the Mission district, the partly Hispanic restaurant/shopping corridor. Like Chinatown, bustling with activity and cheerful people. She switched to WorkFromHome and now lives in the East Bay an hour away. She says walking from BART across Market to her office in the business district can be unpleasant but she doesn't feel threatened.

For our adventure last month we were mostly on the northern perimeter of the City in tourist areas and didn't see any of the gritty urban problems. That lighthearted video I linked illustrates SF from this perspective.

Getting back to the theme of this thread - the thread started with realistic concerns over safety in traveling to foreign lands. There are people who are told in their news that SF is awful, dangerous,backward, foreign relative to America as they know it, whatever. My posts above are intended as a counter to that perspective. My guest enjoyed her Barbie adventure in San Francisco. Again, see the linked video to see this perspective.
 
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/ Foreign Travel?
  • Thread Starter
#274  
If you don’t like crowds SF is getting better…

I have friends on SF… I doubt they will ever leave but even they said their non SF friends no longer want to come to SF.

This year had a few European visitors stay with me and they used BART to get to SF and had a great time… saw many things and also asked questions such as why so much vacant commercial space and homeless around BART stations…
 
/ Foreign Travel? #275  
SF- hoisted on it's own Salesforce tower. SF is trying to be New York, and succeeding in the wrong ways - skyscrapers, dregs on two legs. I used to live across the bay from SF, and didn't really enjoy the slog across the bridge nor the urban decay even then beginning to take over in SF. Flowers wilt, so does flower power.
 
/ Foreign Travel? #276  
I'm dealing with a travel agent for a trip overseas to a distant tropical island. I'm almost to the point of forfeiting my $35 deposit and doing it myself. A friend swears by using chatgpt for a rough idea of cost. The previous conversation was implying the quote they sent me was correct. It wasn't correct per conversation with another office personnel.
 
/ Foreign Travel? #277  
I'm dealing with a travel agent for a trip overseas to a distant tropical island. I'm almost to the point of forfeiting my $35 deposit and doing it myself. A friend swears by using chatgpt for a rough idea of cost. The previous conversation was implying the quote they sent me was correct. It wasn't correct per conversation with another office personnel.
We do all our own planning and then buy local tours.
In one trip we saved $200/night (Polynesia) over a travel agent price and about $5000 for a whole trip (South Africa).
Everything is on line and you can price them yourselves.

The travel agents have to pay themselves and airline ticket fees do not get them very many $ any more.

If you are staying a week or more and don't care about room service, renting an apartment or house can save huge $.
 
/ Foreign Travel? #278  
The agent claims they get their payback from resorts but I have ran loose numbers and can get a better price. Also, for some reason they bumped my travel month in the last go-around to Sept which is entering the pricier time of year. I told them before I don't care if it's the rainy season. I lived on Guam for 15 months so can handle rain.

Back in the late 90's I was still using a local travel agent for flights. She could find better deals that i couldn't find on Expedia. Plus she was good at catching tight connections which could easily become a missed connection when a flight gets delayed.
 
/ Foreign Travel? #279  
the thread started with realistic concerns over safety in traveling to foreign lands. There are people who are told in their news that SF is awful, dangerous,backward, foreign relative to America as they know it, whatever. My posts above are intended as a counter to that perspective.
Great job:

1765733346986.png
 
/ Foreign Travel? #280  
When I cancelled my Philippine trip over safety concerns I can’t help but thinking I may have over reacted.

The people telling me not to go are hospital co-workers from the Philippines…

I finally said ok… I will cancel and just stay home in East Oakland California where I know I am safe!

The same people said you live in Oakland… we never go to Oakland!!!

My 22yr/old son much to my dismay, began communicating with a Filipino gal online when he (both) were 18. He's been there to visit her 4-5x and goes for 1-2 months at a time, having to quit a job here every time which is whole 'nother point of contention for me. He stays with her and her family in the Mabalcat City/Magalang area. I now have a 1yr old grandson there that my wife and I have only interacted with on facetime, etc at this point. The whole family is very sweet and excellent to My son that has little to offer. He is there now for a visit and to hopefully tie the knot with her to make things official. I would like him, mom and baby to come here, but it's been a struggle. Anyhoo.. Welcome to my Philippines story and my life. LOL
 

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