cdbeck
Posts: 1374
Joined: 8/16/2005 From: Indiana Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Doggie New York City sucks. I wouldn't go there if you gave me an expense account and an armored car. Barbarian... Philistine... I am originally from the Midwest in the US, but moved to New York City. I have found New York City to be one of the most exciting, amazing, beautiful places on the planet. Sure, it is a huge city, but you can see nearly anything and everything, and the neighborhoods are much like small towns in themselves. I suggest that you don't dwell too long at the tourist sites, even though they are iconic. Take a nice boat tour around Manhattan, there you will get to see the skyline as you cruise the river and hear a little history. The Metropolitan Museum of Art (the Met) is nice, but being from Europe you can see things like that pretty easily (like the Louvre). New York is very safe, I never felt in danger no matter what time of night we were out (and I am not some huge imposing guy or anything). New York is best explored "off the guidebook," going around and trying to find things that interest you - not some tour guide writer. Eat NY pizza, have a drink (overpriced) at a club/bar that you find charming, go to Central Park, cruise Broadway and 5th avenue, take a movie tour (takes you to places that have featured prominently in movies), wander into the Museum of Sex (or some other smaller, stranger museum). Just go with the flow, you'll have much more fun. I really love Maine, Acadia National Park, very picturesque. They have mountains and the sea, right next to each other. Vermount's Green Mountain range and New Hampshire's White Mountains (my personal favorite) are also very nice. Out west, you should try to see the Badlands. You really won't see anything like this anywhere else. The sights are nice in California's Yosemite national park, but it is basically like a nature oriented Disneyland with all the tourists and you would be better staying out of the valley and going around the park perimeter on your own (heavy hiking required). Or you could go to some of the quieter and nearly as nice parks like Zion National Park in Utah, which has breathtaking red rocks and huge canyons. Just saw the above post - missed it before - I was trying to think of Brice national park as well, both it an Zion are great. Yellowstone, although very busy, is also great fun - strange terrain, almost like another planet. SoM
< Message edited by Son_of_Montfort -- 1/18/2009 3:14:31 AM >
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"Neca eos omnes. Deus suos agnoscet!" (Kill them all. God will know his own.) -- Arnaud-Armaury, the Albigensian Crusade
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