Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - Do you like Poor Travel?

Do you like Poor Travel?

I don't like this kind of trip. Bad travel, also known as reverse travel, refers to choosing an unknown destination for vacation, staying at a hotel and eating local food, rather than punching in at popular cities and places where online celebrities are located. "Swing tourism" has undoubtedly opened another way of leisure, reflecting the changes of the younger generation's tourism mentality. Young people are under great work pressure, have a fast pace of life and pursue purity. Wherever "rotten tourism" goes, it is often not over-exploited, and its commercial atmosphere is not strong, retaining mellow local features and characteristics.

"Swing tourism" is encouraged by young people and "seen" by more people, which is also related to the positive actions of minority destinations. It is not difficult to see that these popular cities generally pay attention to improving industrial restructuring and service level. On the basis of retaining the local tourism characteristics, we are committed to providing tourists with a better experience, reducing the cost of obtaining customers and enhancing their popularity.

Some "unpopular places" of "bad tourism" have problems such as low development level, insufficient appreciation, poor reception conditions and troublesome transportation connection, which directly affect the tourism experience and even leave a negative impression on tourists. In some places, "enclosure is king", scenic spots are set up privately, which destroys the ecological environment, disrupts the order of the tourism market and is more likely to threaten the safety of tourists' lives and property. The popularity of "rotten tourism" also announced the decline of the absolute attraction of traditional scenic spots. Every holiday, some "hot spots" have poor experience and low cost performance, so they are commercialized and become stereotyped, and are being spit out by more and more tourists, especially young people.