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Your Greatest Travel Moment

Posted on 6/19/20 at 6:26 am
Posted by Globetrotter747
Member since Sep 2017
4330 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 6:26 am
Maybe it’s visiting a landmark you always wanted to see, a physical accomplishment like climbing a mountain, a special family moment somewhere like Disney World, or whatever.

What’s yours?
Posted by jkylejohnson
Alexandria
Member since Dec 2016
14021 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 6:55 am to
Walking the freedom trail in Boston last year was one of my favorite travel moments that comes to mind. You could just feel the history at every landmark. It was a freezing cold but beautiful day in December last year.
Posted by jmarto1
Houma, LA/ Las Vegas, NV
Member since Mar 2008
34061 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 6:59 am to
Got sing happy birthday to the Queen while visiting Windsor a few years ago
Posted by DeltaTigerDelta
Member since Jan 2017
11348 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 7:02 am to
Watching the sun rise at the Grand Canyon. Purely majestic.
Posted by OldHickory
New Orleans
Member since Apr 2012
10602 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 7:35 am to
Making love on the banks of the Danube to an Austrian girl I met.
Posted by jsquardjj
Member since Oct 2009
1318 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 7:47 am to
First time traveling internationally (17 years ago) and taking the first walk through Florence upon arrival. I was a complete novice tagging along on my parents trip, and I had never bothered to look at a travel guide or even do a google search. I honestly do not think I had ever seen a picture of Florence prior to that and it changed my outlook on life completely.



And Climbing half dome.
Posted by The Spleen
Member since Dec 2010
38865 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 7:57 am to
Sitting by myself in Minnewaterpark in Bruges, Belgium just minding my business and reading a book. I had been there about 30-45 minutes when a mom with two young boys arrived. The older of the boys was around 4 or 5 and was learning English and was excited to practice with an American. Sat there for 20-30 minutes helping him with his English, which was hard because I barely knew any Dutch(I think that was his primary language.) The mom spoke perfect English, like most people I encountered in Belgium did.

Kinda lame I guess, but it's an encounter that has stuck with me for 20+ years now.
Posted by slaphappy
Kansas City
Member since Nov 2005
2340 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 8:00 am to
Driving up the Up north In California and you go around that bend near Santa Barbara and see the Pacific Ocean. It is breathtaking!
Posted by Sus-Scrofa
Member since Feb 2013
8188 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 8:26 am to
I was in London for a few days and I took the water taxi down to Greenwich one morning to see the observatory and the naval museum.

On the boat ride back I noticed there was a ton of traffic and a lot of the boats had signs and things on them.

I got off on the west side of the river and started walking up towards the bridge back over to by Parliament.
It was a circus. I had inadvertently rode up the river with and then hung out and watched all of this:

LINK /

(Washington Post article)

It was awesome.
This post was edited on 6/19/20 at 8:27 am
Posted by Lawyered
The Sip
Member since Oct 2016
29488 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 11:17 am to
I'd have to say Zimbabwe for me as a whole... that was the best trip.

As roosters crow here at sunrise there, the lions start roaring and that's a hell of an alarm clock to start the day...

seeing the stars at night... with hardly any electricity around for miles and miles let me see the sky as it was intended.. and man... that was divine....

Watching an african sunset is something I plan to do one more time in my life.

Posted by hungryone
river parishes
Member since Sep 2010
11987 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 11:19 am to
Many years ago, on a first trip to Washington, DC: coming up out of the Smithsonian metro onto the snow-covered Mall and seeing the Capitol dome, Washington monument, etc.

A couple years ago: sitting at an outdoor table in Maratea, Basilicata in Italy, overlooking the mountainous coastline...having a long, long lunch of local seafood & wine, and discovering that the restaurateur/owner was a distant cousin of my friend's husband. It was one of those "perfect few hours" times in your life, with no concerns or blemishes, only pleasure and relaxation.

One more: standing on the cliff at Point du Hoc in Normandy, thinking about the young Army Rangers who scaled the 100 ft cliff on D-Day, with the rising tide at their backs and the Germans above.
Posted by geauxpurple
New Orleans
Member since Jul 2014
12489 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 11:25 am to
Not the "greatest" but certainly one of the most memorable was last April in Paris. I saw the fire at Notre Dame almost from the beginning. I posted about it on here that night. Heartbreaking.
Posted by Zappas Stache
Utility Muffin Research Kitchen
Member since Apr 2009
38781 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 12:25 pm to
The first time I was in Copenhagen in about 2003 or so. Walking around town, any green patch of grass would be adorned by a topless danish woman sunning herself. At one point I was looking at the map trying to figure our route and could see a street sign about 100' away but couldn't make out the street name. I told my gf (now wife) I was going to walk down there so I could read it. There was also a low brick wall before I got to the sign and as I passed the brick wall there were 6 pair of lovely danish breasts laying there. I looked at the sign, walked back to where my gf was standing. She asked me the name of the street and I replied...."I have no idea...I forgot". So I had to walk back over there to get a better look.....at the street sign.

Alas, the next time I went back to Copenhagen about 3-4 years later, social media had taken off and girls were no longer laying out topless everywhere since perverts like me were taking and posting pics of them. That's when I knew Facebook was a detriment to society.
This post was edited on 6/19/20 at 12:27 pm
Posted by Rep520
Member since Mar 2018
10445 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 1:35 pm to
In 2003, I drove from Las Vegas to Reno in 4.5 hours in a 1991 Dodge Caravan.
Posted by RogerTheShrubber
Juneau, AK
Member since Jan 2009
261654 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 10:05 pm to
Driving across continent with my kids. It was an epic 10 days.
Posted by habz007
New Orleans
Member since Nov 2007
3715 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 11:09 pm to
quote:

accomplishment


Visiting all current 30 MLB ballparks. That was a lot of years and miles and commitment. I truly enjoyed them all and some aspects of all the cities.
Posted by DoUrden
UnderDark
Member since Oct 2011
25965 posts
Posted on 6/19/20 at 11:13 pm to
Angkor Wat at Sunrise


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Posted by weaveballs1
Baton Rouge
Member since Jun 2010
3042 posts
Posted on 6/20/20 at 3:37 am to
I was solo in Rome two summers ago while taking a break from traveling with a larger group. I had dinner the first night I was there at this little trattoria a friend had recommended near the Trevi fountain. I was the only tourist in the place, the 2 little Italian grandmothers that ran it gave me a bemused look and showed me to a table. I sat and had a bottle of chianti and ate my first real Cacio e Pepe and Osso Bucco and watched the goings-on of the little shop unfold, the 2 ladies shouting at each other from the open kitchen to the dining room, the regular families coming in and sitting at long tables, kissing each other on the cheeks jovially, it was like a symphony and I had a front-row seat.
After that unexpected, incredible (and incredibly reasonably priced) meal I began to wander around, taking in the sights. I passed the Pantheon kept wandering until I came across a church, St. Ignatius of Loyola, that had its doors open to the night. I walked in and there was this lovely choir singing and I looked up to see the church's "false dome", a 1685 fresco that creates the optical illusion of a dome on a flat ceiling that I had actually seen in a Rick Steves' video while planning my trip. I had just wandered into the church, drawn in by the sound of the choir, and discovered I was in a place I had wanted to be without even realizing it.
I left the church and kept walking, it was late June and the weather was perfect so I just kept going, all of the buildings, monuments, and statues were illuminated and there was the sound of a string band and the smell of juniper in the air. I came to Trajan's forum and was admiring the column there when I came around a corner and caught my first glimpse of the Coliseum in the distance. It was a decent way off but I figured what the heck and set off in its direction. I got closer and came around a brick wall that was obstructing my view and just stopped in my tracks. One of the most famous buildings in the world, a testament to western civilization and mankind's craftmanship and ingenuity was bathed in the light of the full moon. It was spectacular. I had known about this place since I was a small child and I was finally seeing it with my own eyes, I felt like I was the only one seeing it.

A couple of days after that I woke up eagerly anticipating going to see the Pantheon and the after-hours Vatican tour that I had booked, only to be disappointed by a message from the guide informing me that it was St. Peter and Paul's Day, and effectively, the whole city was shut down. I was pretty discouraged but figured I didn't need to let something I didn't have any control over put a damper on my trip. I googled and saw that the Pantheon was open, so I walked there, wrong. There was a line of about 40 people waiting to just get a glimpse through the crack of the gigantic doors. I saw what I could see through the doors and walked off, dejectedly, trying to find something else open. I put my headphones in and ended up walking about 45 mins up to the Borghese gardens and gallery. I got up to the grounds and it was at least ten degrees cooler than it was on the street, smelled fantastic, and had very few people. I wandered around for a while until I came to the gallery. I went online to check and see if there were any tickets available, unsurprisingly, there were not. There was a sign on the entrance that encouraged you to ask at the desk to see if there were any last minute tickets that had come up through cancellations or whatnot so I went up to the desk and asked the attendant if that was the case. Predictably, it was not.
I stood around for a minute, trying to figure out my next move when I saw the desk where three ladies were taking the entrance tickets and letting people into the exhibit. I walked up to them and put on my best charm,

"Hello, I was wondering if there was any way I might be able to get in to see the gallery today?" I asked, hopefully.

One of the ladies behind the counter looked at me slightly confused "Sir, did you ask the man at the main counter if there were any tickets?"

"Well, I did, and he said no", I said, "But please hear me out, it's my last day here and I didn't realize it was St. Peter and Paul's Day and everything in the city is shut down." She nodded, sympathetically. I continued, "This is the last thing on my list, is there anything you can do?"

"It's just you?", She asked. I nodded. She turned back to the other two ladies that were at the counter with her and whispered with them in Italian for a moment. She turned back to me and handed me a laminated pass. "Here, don't tell anyone. Have fun."

I lit up, "Grazie Mille, senora! Grazie Mille!", and bounded up the stairs into the exhibit and got to see some of the most amazing pieces of art I've seen to this day all thanks to a kind Italian woman taking pity on a dumb American's ignorance of local customs.

I finished the gallery and kept walking, past Piazza Navona and the Spanish Steps to Piazza del Popolo, where a celebration was planned for the holiday. I got a quick slice of pizza and a beer and walked into the square with the thousands of other Romans to wait for the festivities to start. The mayor came and said some words, there was a band, and they had an amazing fireworks display and I remember watching them go off above the six thousand year old Egyptian obelisk that had stood in the square since before the time of Christ and just thinking about how unbelievable it was that a day I thought was shot to hell when I woke up turned into one of my favorite and most memorable days I've had while traveling. It's times like that day that have taught me to never get too discouraged or frustrated when things don't go as planned, to go with the flow, and when all else fails, to turn on the charm.


TL;DR just go to Rome by yourself and let it come to you.
This post was edited on 6/20/20 at 4:19 am
Posted by HoustonGumbeauxGuy
Member since Jul 2011
29651 posts
Posted on 6/20/20 at 5:49 pm to
Solo trip to Thailand for a week. I got to see so much cool shite in a short period of time. I had a tour guide who was a relative of a coworker. Bangkok for 48 hours was plenty. That place is fricking as nuts as advertised. Got to head up north and sleep/eat in small villages for pennies on the dollar, very hospitable folks but having that guide played a big part.

Posted by Crow Pie
Neuro ICU - Tulane Med Center
Member since Feb 2010
25383 posts
Posted on 6/20/20 at 6:28 pm to
The first few minutes seeing the Grand Canyon blew my mind as i could not process the scale/size of the canyon the size. However.

Tunnel view at Yosemite is amazing

However, my greatest travel moments is when some dude in a VW bug picked us up on Airline Hwy in the dead of the night after we decided to walk home to New Orleans from Baton Rouge after after Pink Floyd concert in 1976
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