Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - What are the unpopular but distinctive tourist spots abroad?

What are the unpopular but distinctive tourist spots abroad?

1, an overseas autonomous territory of Denmark in Faroe Islands

The scenery of the Faroe Islands is dominated by fjords, but it is different from the forest fjords in Norway. The landform here is mainly similar to the grassland in Scotland, with different mountain shapes. The most distinctive feature of the Faroe Islands is that although the population is only 50,000, cross-harbour tunnels have been built between the major islands, so go on road trip does not have to worry about traffic problems at all.

2、? Tristan da Cunha is a British Overseas Self-Governing Territory.

The volcanic island in the South Atlantic, the most inaccessible place in the world, is more than 2,500 kilometers away from any inhabited place (Hawaii is the farthest from the mainland, but there are other islands nearby).

The name of the town on the island is "edinburgh of the seven seas", which is very poetic. The whole island only needs more than 260 residents, living in a paradise. It's not easy to come here. There is no airport on the island, and it takes a week by boat from South Africa.

3. Mauritius Underwater Waterfalls

The underwater spectacle formed by optical illusion, when viewed from a specific angle by helicopter, will feel that there is a waterfall on the seabed, which is unique in the world. In fact, it's just a sudden change of color when the sea water gets deeper, but it just constitutes the feeling of 3D painting.

4. Lake Plitvece National Park in Croatia

It can be said that it is the European version of Jiuzhaigou, but it is not the glacier landform of Jiuzhaigou, but the kind of karst similar to Guizhou, with an altitude of only 500 to 600 meters. There are many interesting places in Croatia, but the seaside is famous. This national park is inland and few people know it.

5、? Isek Lake, Kyrgyzstan

A well-deserved water tower in Central Asia. Lake Issyk Kul was named "Rehai" and "Daqingchi" in the Tang Dynasty, but it was ceded to Russia in the Qing Dynasty and returned to Kyrgyzstan after the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Lake Issyk-Kul covers an area of 6,236 square kilometers, with a uniform depth of 278 meters and the deepest point of 668 meters, with a salinity of only 6‰.

Assuming that Lake Issyk-Kul is in China, it will be the largest and deepest lake in China, and there will be no shortage of water in Xinjiang. The scenery here is very similar to the Sailimu Lake in Yili, Xinjiang, but the area of Sailimu Lake is several times larger.