TRAVEL BLOGWorld Hum’s Most Read: May 10-16What We Loved This Week: ‘The Zen of Bobby V,’ ‘When the Levees Broke’ and Arriving With Our BaggageHow Bad is the Violence in Mexico?Tony Horwitz Blogs From the Road
Q&A
Tony Horwitz: Rediscovering the New WorldBen Keene talks to the author of the new book “A Voyage Long and Strange” about travel, American myths and the importance of visiting places where “history happened” SPEAKER'S CORNER
In Patagonia, In PatagoniaTim Patterson packs his fleece and long underwear, and enters the Twilight Zone where corporate branding meets the multilayered reality of place. ASK ROLFShould I Quit Law School so I can Travel the World?Vagabonding traveler Rolf Potts answers your questions about travel BOOKS
‘The Worst Guidebook Writer Ever’?Lonely Planet author Robert Reid reviews Thomas Kohnstamm’s “Do Travel Writers Go to Hell?” and weighs in on the controversy surrounding it HOW TO
Have a Hockey Night in CanadaFrom Montreal to Sault Ste. Marie, the sport is the country’s greatest passion. Eva Holland explains where to go to indulge—and who you need to know. AUDIO SLIDE SHOWPromised Land ClosedAnd other odd and unlikely signs from around the world. Aficionado Doug Lansky, editor of the book “Signspotting,” recounts his 10 favorites. THE LIST
10 Sizzling Hot Travel Tips From Sir Francis BaconRolf Potts repackages the 17th century philosopher’s ‘Of Travel’ essay in the manner of a 21st century magazine feature |
TRAVEL BLOG11.27.06
The Great Wall, Siem Reap, Stonehenge Getting Too Much Love
I visited a so-called wild section of the wall outside Beijing several years ago. I didn’t see any ravers, but the wall was crumbling, and Chinese tourists were shooting off huge firecrackers, which left me ducking for cover every few minutes. Poor Great Wall, I thought. According to the story, new regulations to protect the wall will go into effect Dec. 1. Still, it’s hard to imagine a way to protect every inch of a disappearing 4,000-mile wall. The AP, meanwhile, reported on growing pains at Siem Reap, the gateway to the Cambodian ruins of Angkor Wat. Tourism in the town is on the rise—up 37 percent last year from the previous year. The result is “unregulated development,” the AP reports, and specifically, “unrestricted local pumping of underground water to meet rapidly rising demand.” Unfortunately, the pumping “may literally be undermining Angkor’s foundations, destabilizing the earth beneath the famous centuries-old temples so much that they might sink and collapse.” Finally, on Sunday, Susan Spano at the Los Angeles Times wrote about overcrowding at tourist sites, covering challenges from Venice to Mount Everest. At Stonehenge, which gets 800,000 visitors a year, she writes:
Related on World Hum:
Photo by Jim Benning. Categories: Weblog • Cambodia • China • Eco-Travel • England
COMMENTSFor more on world landmarks getting too much love, here’s National Geographic Traveler on the Best and Worst World Heritage Sites Rated: http://www.nationalgeographic.com/traveler/features/whsrated0611/whsrated.html By Marilyn Terrell on 11.28.06 at 12:20 PM
I think the concerns of Siem Reap are silly. The town where tourists stay is far from the ruins themselves. The temples also once supported a large population when they were first built. Drought may in fact be a problem, but this is a climate issue unrelated to tourism. Tourism is good for Cambodia. By Adam Bray in Mui Ne, Vietnam on 8.13.07 at 08:15 PM
ADD YOUR COMMENT
We reserve the right to remove comments with profanity, personal attacks, spam, overt advertisements or other inappropriate material.
|
Latest from the Travel Channel
Subscribe to World Hum's RSS feed.
Got a suggestion? Add your travel photos to the World Hum pool on Flickr. Check out our take on the WEBLOG CATEGORIES
Adventure Travel |
||||||||||||||||||