Left-over places

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gbb

Squire
Location
Peterborough
Flying_Monkey said:
We went to those islands last year - there is a fantastic hotel/restaurant there called the Locanda Cipriani, where we had a superb lunch in gardens full of lavender looking out towards the old Byzantine church (no way we could afford to stay there!)... and that is really almost all there is there - once there were thousands of people living there but now it is deserted and quite eerie.

BTW, great pics, gbb.

Why thankyou :rolleyes: makes a post a bit more interesting...
A few more..

This one reminded me of Hell Drivers (the oldies will know the film) :biggrin:
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This is more laurel and hardy :ohmy:
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One of the beaches...on a river ???
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They like the wine...apparently :biggrin:
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The impressive entry to Nueva Palmira port :smile:. Evidently a multi billion dollar wood pulp factory nearby has caused a huge spat between Argentina ( just a few miles away) and Uruguay. The locals really were quite worried at the time about how it would play out..This deep water port was heavily upgraded to accept the shipping traffic.
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gbb

Squire
Location
Peterborough
Rigid Raider said:
Another in Scotland is Loch Coruisk. WILD!

skye-2.jpg

Now that is fabulous :becool:
 
U

User482

Guest
Rigid Raider said:
Another in Scotland is Loch Coruisk. WILD!

skye-2.jpg

Yes, you can do a fabulous boat trip to it from Elgol. But I'm not sure it qualifies as a left over place?
 
Swakopmund in Namibia was 'interesting' when I went there about 10 years ago.

Namibia used to be German South West Afrika colony until we took it off them after the First World War, was then run by South Africa until it became an independent (black) African state in the 1970's/80's after a war of independence.

But Swakopmund particularly still has a very Germanic feel,
- lots of the shops have Germanic names above the windows, German food in delicatessens/pastry shops, you hear German spoken as you walk down the street, etc.

There's a war memorial thing down near the harbour - a uhlan (sp ?), a German cavalryman on a horse, one of those pointy-spikey coalscuttle helmets on his head.
It commemorates the Herero uprising of 1910-or-so (African Herero tribesmen vs. colonial troops : score, 20-or-so German soldiers dead, hence the statue, vs. 30,000 Africans on the other side...)

I was looking at this and a very, very old white woman came up to me and started talking to me. She said that 'they', the government, wanted to pull it down, 'they' said it was colonial and not right in the modern Namibia, but she said, "these men died for us".

I found a shop selling guns and bowie knives, etc - all openly displayed in the window. Some hunting rifles, but also assault rifles and pump-action shotguns.
Although not on display, a sign said that anti-personnel mines were available 'for your protection and security against intruders'...

Back on the bus, someone else said they'd seen one shop selling swastica badges...

Like I said, 'interesting' place, and maybe a bit 'left over'...
 

terry huckle

New Member
My vote goes to Whittier Alaska. Built during the 2nd world war as a supply base, it was chosen because the weather is so dreadful there that Japanese bombers operating from the Aleutian chain would never be able to find it. Apparently without direct sunlight between October and March, it is the most dismal and scruffy place I`ve ever been (went there by train from Anchorage, to get on a boat to go and look at glaciers in Prince William Sound)

Here`s the train at the "station"

alaskarrwhittier1.jpg
 

Bodhbh

Guru
mr_cellophane said:
Dungeness

Orford Ness, Suffolk
Was thinking, few places with the 'ness' appellation have a left behind feel to them (durness, skegness, etc). Suppose not a suprise - 'ness' is old norse for promontary.

Knoydart technically has the most remote pub in the UK (by land) but there's daily ferry trips across and when I visited at least a load of climbers walking over (the bothy and campsite across was packed). The paradox of lots of people trying to get away from it all visiting the same remote places. Remember one of the broadsheets had a list of the 10 most remote places in Britain not so long ago, heh, not any longer.

Sandwood Bay on the west coast is one of these well known remote places and me and mate went there to camp for the night ( untouched beach in the far NW of scotland, need to walk 4miles or so across moorland to access it). Dismayed went we turned by the amout of people walking over for the day, but zero litter left there at all and emptied at night, don't want to get all mushy but is a magical place.
 

Fab Foodie

hanging-on in quiet desperation ...
Location
Kirton, Devon.
mr_cellophane said:
Dungeness

Orford Ness, Suffolk

Dungeness I'd agree with. It's like "Southern Comfort" or Deliverance. It's certainly a world apart.
I was once taken sea-fishing there, parking-up at the old shanty town at dawn and going into this guys shack to buy bait was all a bit weird. (caught a few nice Cod though...).

The Island of Bornholm in the Baltic is another place mostly undiscovered, a small almost-tropical island, bright white beaches, cute Danish fishing Villages and fantastic hot-smoked herrings...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bornholm

I'd also add the German village in southern Brazil where I worked 2 years ago now, there in the middle of nowhere by a vast river was a town of white people with a beer festival! There are also Swiss and Italian towns, the variations in the buildings and the names of the shops are the initial clues as to what kind of town you're passing through.
 
 
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