The World's 5 Most Dangerous Tourist Attractions
Care For a Nice Warm Dip? Bungee Jump into a Volcano!
We
begin our "ain't people crazy" tour with bungee jumping. To me, just
plain ol' bungee jumping is foolish enough. And there are plenty of
exciting jumps that aren't likely to send you home with a singed scalp.
Switzerland's Verzasca Dam jump was featured in the James Bond film "Goldeneye", and Macau's 765-foot SkyJump is the highest jump in the world. But bungee jumping into a volcano?! That's just nuts.
Ok, technically you're not jumping into a volcano -- at least you'd better pray you're not -- but rather over
a volcano. It's called Villarrica and it's in Pucón, Chile. For a
mere $10,000, you'll take a 5-day trip to Pucón, where you'll be flown
by helicopter to hover some 1,100 feet above bubbling pools of white-hot
lava. Then you'll jump.
Insane, right?! The jump takes you to
less than 700 feet above the boiling lava -- high enough to be "safe"
but definitely close enough bring vivid memories of those fire and brimstone
sermons Pastor Peters used to preach. No "toasted tourists" to report,
there have been no fatalities at Villarrica jump. Yet.
They Must Be Jelly 'Cus Jam Don't Sting Like That
The greatest predator in Australia is not a shark or a crocodile, or even those adorable dingos.
It's the box jellyfish. Box jellyfish are known as the "suckerpunch"
of the sea -- you can't see them coming, they're virtually transparent,
and worse yet, their sting is rarely detected until the venom is
injected. Nasty surprise, that.
With a sting that can lead to cardiovascular collapse and death in as little as two to five minutes, the box jellyfish has killed more people than all other deadly Australian animals combined.
Your best protection against a box jellyfish sting? Wear pantyhose! Seriously.
Welcome to Death Road -- Please Fasten Your Seatbelts!
Here's
a test: When you learn that the highway you're about to take is
nicknamed "Death Road", do you A: ask Siri for an alternate route, B:
call your lawyer to ensure your last will and testament is in order, or
C: put the pedal to the metal and burn rubber?
If you answered "C", stop reading right now and seek immediate psychiatric help.
Winding
some 37 miles from La Paz to Coroico, Bolivia's North Yungas Road --
"Death Road" to those in the know -- offers no guardrails, narrows to
just 10 feet wide at some points, and borders cliffs of up to 1,830
feet. Cars have been known to simply fall off the edge, tumbling nearly a half-mile before coming to a stop. It's no wonder this highway is said to claim as many 300 travelers' lives each year.
Visit Chernobyl! Where Our Motto is "Let Us Glow Together"
Who
doesn't love a haunted house, especially at this time of year. And
what is Chernobyl but one great big haunted house? The site of history's
worst nuclear disaster in 1986, the abandoned and ghostly Chernobyl
nuclear power plant is a warren of abandoned buildings, empty houses,
rusting Soviet-era autos and - oddly - some pretty healthy wildlife.
The
management of the Chernobyl tours assure us that any remaining
radiation levels from the disaster are too small to harm your health,
and the Ukrainian government too claims it is safe.
Oh really?!
Then why is it visitors are not allowed to touch any onsite
vegetation, and are even forbidden from eating outdoors or setting
their tripods on the ground? Hmmm?
She'll Be Comin' Down the Mountain...
I could probably psychically survive a bungee jump. Swimming with jellyfish, a snap. But this - THIS!! - is just NUTS!
Hike
along the face of Mount Huashan in China, thousands of feet above the
ground, nothing supporting you but 12 inch wide wooden planks tied into
the face of the cliff. There are no hand rails, and the only thing
keeping you attached to the side of the mountain -- if you had the
foresight to bring one -- is a safety harness. Eventually even the
wooden planks run out, and you're walking on the supports that used to
hold the wooden planks.
Reports are, there are about 100 deaths
on the trail each year. For those of us who are sane, there's a cable
car. Yes please!
_____________________________
So there you go! Five of the craziest, most dangerous, most
thrilling ways you can spend a vacation. In "You Only Live Twice" (the novel), James Bond writes an improperly-constructed haiku:
You only live twice
Once when you are born, and once
When you look death in the face
You extreme travelers, take note! Me? This
one life will do just fine, thank you.
Until next week!
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