Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - What are the most unpleasant things that have happened to you while traveling? Which scenic spots do you regret visiting?
What are the most unpleasant things that have happened to you while traveling? Which scenic spots do you regret visiting?
A certain ancient town. Today’s ancient towns all have the same style, with small bridges, flowing water, boat houses, and both sides are full of nationally uniform food and souvenir stalls.
I have been to the Qingming Riverside Garden in Kaifeng, which is full of fake ancient buildings. I don’t even feel it when I look at it. The entrance fee is a rip-off.
There are also snacks that are the same across the country. The food on the street is the same, with no special features at all, and the prices are very expensive. I regret it very much!
At the end of September last year, my mother, sister, and I went on a five-day tour to Nha Trang, Vietnam. The tour fee is 2480, and the visa is 550 per person.
This was the most unpleasant trip I have ever experienced.
The scenery in Nha Trang is not bad, and I highly recommend Pearl Island. It is really beautiful. It is clean and bright, flowers are in bloom, and the blue sea surrounds the island. The island has complete recreational facilities, comparable to Disney.
But! As the old saying goes, unruly people come out of remote areas.
When entering and exiting Vietnam, the customs requires everyone to obediently hand over ten or twenty yuan as a tip. The customs’ face is really enough. I didn't leave a tip on the two trips back and forth. I just looked the other person in the eye and waited for them to criticize me, but they all let me pass quietly and calmly. Mom and sister were not so lucky. The customs were looking for trouble and they added a "tip".
On the third day, we visited the Three Islands. After lunch at Bamboo Island, the tour guide said to rest for an hour. The three of us went to the beach to take pictures, leaving my mother alone to look after the bag.
A Vietnamese woman in her forties or fifties came over, with dark skin, wearing a bamboo hat and a scarf covering her face. She wanted to give my mother a massage, and she first quoted a price of 100,000 Vietnamese dong, equivalent to 30 yuan in RMB, but my mother did not agree. After a while, the woman came back and quoted 50,000 dong.
Old ladies may be greedy for petty advantages, but my eighty-year-old mother agreed in a daze.
When the woman was giving a massage, she first opened the lid of a small bottle and let her mother smell it, telling her to relax. During the massage, she asked her to turn her body to the left and right, without paying attention. The Vietnamese woman opened my bag and stole more than 4,000 yuan in my wallet. In other words, this is equivalent to the average income of local people for half a year.
My mother saw her hiding the money in her underwear, but she didn’t react at the time. She thought the thief had a gynecological disease and was scratching her itch.
When I found out that my wallet was empty, I waited for several hours through various channels. When I found the thief at the dock, she had already transferred the money. There were a dozen or twenty local people on the pier protecting her fiercely and shouting at us. Everyone imagined the scene. I took the thief to go to the police station. The thief was very fierce, cursing, waving his hands, and ran away quickly. There were too many people on the other side, blocking me and preventing me from catching up.
Except for one young man who came out to help, the entire group watched silently. The hostess was a Vietnamese woman. She came forward and tried to solve the problem. The whole escort was a Chinese female tour guide who was never seen.
Then the police were called, but the police never came. The police paid one million dong, which is equivalent to 300 yuan, and I agreed to pay. But no one came! A group of people had to enter the Pearl Island together because they signed a group visa. I was impatient to wait, and urged and advised: give up money to avoid disaster. Otherwise, I would be asked to leave the group and go to the police station to report the crime. When it was almost dark, I had to give up and did not report the crime.
In a foreign country, there is no place to reason, no one cares, no way to ask for help, and the thief succeeds.
This is not the most disturbing thing. I supported the tour guide's work along the way, gave tips, and bought jade, rubber pillows, and specialty products. During free time, I went to a shopping mall in Nha Trang to buy seawater pearls. Once you enter the pearl shop, you are not allowed to leave the shop, which is a bit of a forced sale. I said I didn’t want to buy it because I had lost my money and I wasn’t in the mood to buy it. The whole family immediately said sarcastically: You and your family only spend 4,000 yuan to travel!
What a disturbing trip.
A reminder to netizens who plan to travel to Vietnam in the future, please pay attention to safety when you go out! If public security is not good, we must guard against theft and robbery.
The previous set of pictures of Nha Trang.
Picture 1 Cham Pagoda.
Figure 2 Wuzhiyan.
Picture of Sanzhu Island, this photo is worth more than 4,000 yuan.
Picture 4: The thief with fierce eyes.
Figures 5 and 6 Pearl Island.
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