Travel

Tourist things that are actually quite fun

Whoever crosses the border and considers themselves a reasonably modern person with taste has one greatest fear: being seen as a tourist. Tourists are always annoying, often rude or clumsy, and moreover, they get in the way terribly. At least, that's how I see most tourists in Amsterdam. They also like to operate in groups, which creates huge blockages that jump around like dumb deer whenever I'm on my bike. to come riding. I live just a stone's throw from the Dam in Amsterdam, so my patience with tourists is tested particularly often, but I still roar quite often: THIS IS NOT A SIDEWALK GODDAMMIT when yet another horde of Japanese people pulls out a selfie stick from their hip bag a selfiestick from the hip bag.

But the thing is, the moment you are abroad, you are a tourist – even if you are there for work. And no matter how great the aversion to tourists in Amsterdam is, abroad I am not the least bit ashamed of my tourist status. On the contrary the I actually find many of the universally hated tourist attractions really fun.; the pinnacle.

Open bus tours

The of tourist activities: a double-decker hop-on-hop off-bus that does the same city loop day in and day out. Amidst. fat Americans in white sports socks and hysterical Chinese with eighty cameras, you pass all the major attractions under the inspiring guidance of a cheerful tour guide who makes the same jokes every round. So I quite like those buses. I am writing this in Toronto. and we also did such a tour here, and yes it is super cheesy, but also super handy. You see everything right away, know where everything is, get a pretty good picture of how the city is put together and, very importantly, it is foolproof. Normal bus systems abroad are often completely impossible to decipher, taxis are expensive, and you can't see a thing in the subway. In short, the hop-on-hop- is the perfect way to discover a city in a short time.that does the same city loop day in and day out. Large squares.

The aversion I have for the Rembrandtplein in Amsterdam is almost indescribable, and hell no I am happy

that I am confronted with the chaos called the Dam almost every time I leave my house. In your own city, you prefer to stay far away from that kind of hustle and bustle, but abroad, it is a whole different story. With my ultimate example my love for Times Square , the place where every self-respecting New Yorker has to throw up a little but which makes me intensely happy. The hustle and the lights, I can't get enough of it. in New York, When I was in Beijing three years ago, I had the greatest fun at Sanlitun, one of the most popular bar streets. In.

Barstraten

neon-lit places, hordes of tourists sit with large mugs of beer at tourist prices, because all those silly tourists don't look further than their noses. In Amsterdam, you have the Damstraat and of course all the streets around the Leidseplein, and I really don't know any Amsterdammer who goes there voluntarily. But somehow, in a foreign country, all those pubs together are just nice and easy.  for her role in wIn Amsterdam, at the same places as the bar streets, and also at the Rokin and Damrak, it is teeming: cheap restaurants of the type that has pictures of the food on the menu. When I see all those people sitting there at the Damrak, I always think, ".

Toerist valstrik restaurants

man, if you walk a couple of streets further, you can really eat somewhere nice, why on earth would you sit here?!“ But when I myself am tired from walking through a strange city, I can also just plop down at a simple cheap lousy restaurant because I couldn't care less and I'm just hungry. Moreover, those places are often located in tourist spots and in the hustle, so the view is often quite nice.“jCarriages.

Our Peggy has a big wish in life: to ride in a carriage

through Central Park and during my trip through Canada, a carriage ride was also on the program (which was canceled due to rain, ). But when I see carriages driving through Amsterdam, I always think, "why would you do this to yourself?" Suburbs and outskirtsHere we find suburbs boring and bourgeois and outskirts downright annoying, but abroad it suddenly becomes “interesting to see how people really live.”

Whoever crosses the border and considers themselves a reasonably modern person with taste has one greatest fear: being seen as a tourist.

Tourist things that are actually quite fun: Amayzine.com“