Couldn’t agree more with those, except 3. Every country I’ve lived (7 now) drives on the right side, apart from the year I spent in New Zealand. Renting a car there then being stuck in roundabout hell when it was the first time I’d ever driven on the left side of the road was an experience.
Trader Joe’s probably my fave store OAT, but I rarely get to see it except when returning home to visit (a couple weeks per year except Corona).
The size difference of the people after returning from Europe is shocking, Latin America not so much. I still haven’t seen an obese person after 6 weeks in Istanbul. 3 months in France/Spain I saw 2 obese people, and a handful of considerably overweight people. Everyone else, slender or normal.
Bidets are incredible. If I ever settle down in an apartment for awhile that will be one of my first purchases. The Japanese ones are probably amazing.
When I went to England a few years ago, I was really nervous about the whole left hand drive thing. Turns out after like a half hour of driving my subconscious kind of got used to it and didn’t have any issues. Roundabouts were fine for me, they are common enough now in the US that I’m used to them.
The biggest issue was getting an auto instead of a manual. We got changed from a small sedan to some eurovan because they barely had any autos and ran out lmao. I’d like to learn manual but it didn’t seem like the right time to do so.
Sucks ass. Every flight from Prague to either Georgia or Armenia that’s reasonably priced lands in the middle of the night.
Given that most of them transfer at Istanbul, it makes me think: why not just travel to Turkey? I mean it was on my list as a possibility earlier this year and it’s cheaper and shorter to fly there than to fly round trip Armenia/Georgia.
Not sure if I’ll get an answer to this here, but my Irish passport should grant me visa-free access to Turkey. However, it states (correctly) that I was born in America. I am not sure if this would disqualify me from visa-free travel. Anybody with some experience in this area?
I can’t think of any visa situation where the location of your birth trumps the citizenship on your passport.
Maybe if you’re an American and you were born in Israel, they wouldn’t let you into Saudi Arabia (But you have to have a visa even if American, the last time I checked. So they just would reject the visa application). But I’m not even sure about that.
I just booked a vacation in Newfoundland for the first two weeks of July, so if we are going to have a nuclear war that time period works well for me. Just in case anybody needs scheduling advice for doomsday.
Visiting family, probably not much else. I’ve been quite a few times and have already done everything worth doing, which honestly isn’t all that much. It’s a big, bleak island with not a lot going on.
A lot of it, yeah. Mostly as a kid. Never been to L’Anse aux Meadows though because it’s absurdly far away and it’s just a lumpy field with some replica sod buildings.