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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Location
    Belgium
    Posts
    931

    What's the weirdest/funniest thing ever happened to you on a holiday?

    A couple of years ago we went to beautiful Zanzibar. A tropical island near Africa. One day we wanted to see the other side of the island so we took a cab to take us there. When we were really in the middle of the jungle the cab broke down. It was really hot and the cabdriver asked us to wait outside. So we did. About five minutes later we were surrounded by at least a hundred people. Staring at us. Probably thinking: look how white they are...

    After half an hour or so (and at least a hundred people more) we saw a white woman coming our way. She shouted in dutch... do you guys want a Stella (Belgian beer)?

    She was married to a local guy and lived there permanently. She always dreamed of asking that question some day.

    Zanzibar was the most beautiful, funny, remarkable vacation we ever had. Sweet sweet memories.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Between the Blue Ridge and the Chesapeake Bay
    Posts
    5,203
    I was in Rio de Janeiro a few years ago for a wedding. I did not bring my hair dryer because of the differences in electrical outlets. I searched all over town to buy a hairdryer to use for the wedding...my hair looks terrible if it's not tamed. No luck. Anywhere. I speak a little Portuguese and asked in every shop that would conceivably carry a hairdryer. Apparently they cannot be purchased in Rio!

    So I took a deep breath and went into a hair salon for a haircut on the day of the wedding. I essentially spoke a mix of Portuguese and French, and with lots of hand gestures, I got a really good haircut for $12. I was pretty proud of myself for negotiating a haircut in Rio with no English.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Posts
    2,841
    This one didn't actually happen to me, but it's in line with Papaver's story & her being belgian. When I first started dating a belgian guy, he hadn't told his parents/family in Belgium that he had a girlfriend... A while later, he gets a call and his family knows that he has a girlfriend.... Because... one of his colleagues at work in Washington, DC had gone on vacation and climbed up Mount Kilimanjaro... and while climbing Mount Kilimanjaro meets a belgian guy and mentions, oh I work with a guy from Belgium! Turns out it was a childhood friend of the belgian bf's.... and they got to talking about his new gf... So the friend goes back to Belgium to report to the family that there apparently was a gf that noone had heard about.


    Odd thing that happened to me - I was doing the Inca trail to Machu Picchu when Fujimori resigned as president of Peru... It's a 3 day walk, 4th day at Machu Picchu... And we arrive and learn that Fujimori has resigned. We just sight see, take pictures, and when we're done exploring walk down to the town to take the train out. We buy our train tickets, but gradually the train station is getting fuller and fuller of people coming down from Machu Picchu and apparently... there is a train strike. So the train is basically going to be standing room only when it comes and only so many people are going to fit to leave... Everyone's getting a bit agitated, because what are we all going to do at Ages Calientes?

    But eventually, hours later, the train finally arrives and they've managed to add a couple box cars to it - so everyone fits, it's still just standing room only.

    Then I think we flew from Cusco to Puno/Lake Titicaca and there was a layover in Arequippa ... And at this point, there is a truck strike and whoever knows what other strike. So when we get to our lay over, there's no airplane fuel at the airport... our plane can't actually take off again.

    So after a while, they deplane us.... And after another while, another airplane comes a long, parks near our airplane.... And they stick a big hose from the new airplane into our airplane and start siphoning fuel from the one to fill the other.

    We wake up in Puno the next day, and there's soldiers marching the streets... and we're going... Oh no! Was there a coup??? Turns out it was some march for a festival of some sort.

    Much later on, we got back to Lima - the brother of a Peruvian that we were visiting there was a congress person who was in line to possibly take Fujimori's place, so he got us a tour of the capital building... which was surrounded with protesters and riot police.

    It sort of struck me - that for a democracy and the rest of that, the US doesn't really have that much in the way of protests or civil action most of the time.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    somewhere between the Red & Rio Grande
    Posts
    5,297
    When I was pretty little (maybe 5-6) we went to Galveston, TX with my Nanny and Pawpaw. While we were at the train museum and ran into one of the teachers at my daycare. I thought that was kinda funny.

    I also got my Nanny in trouble when she took us to Vegas when I was 7. I didn't know kids couldn't take a short cut to the arcade through the casino. A security guard pulled Nanny from her slot machine to take me to my room. My big brother was supposed to be watching me.
    Amanda

    2011 Specialized Epic Comp 29er | Specialized Phenom | "Marie Laveau"
    2007 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Road | Selle Italia Lady Gel Flow | "Miranda"


    You don't have to be great to get started, but you do have to get started to be great. -Lee J. Colan

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Location
    MI
    Posts
    2,543
    My mom and I had just finished laying out Thanksgiving dinner on the table. And about 25-30 family members were to start arriving any minute. My mom set the Apple pie that was in a glass pie pan on the stove to wipe up the counter. Well, the burner was on and my mom didn't realize.

    Just as the doorbell announced the arrival of the first guest, the glass pie container EXPLODED! Along with the Pie! There was glass and apple pie everywhere. Glass in all of the food. Apple pie on the walls. It was just too funny to be upset about.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Newberg, OR
    Posts
    758
    My sister and I and a few cousins went on vacation with my great aunt and uncle in their RV. We were all swimming in the lake when my great aunt called us in for a snack. Everyone, except my sister and I, started chowing down on the beef jerky (puke!) my aunt bought until one of the cousins decides to look at the wrapper. Turns out it was a beef jerky treat for dogs. I've never been so glad that I hate beef jerky!


    When I was in high school my dad was stationed at Clark Air Base in the Philippines. This was right around the Marcos/Aquino coup time frame. My dad's job was playing in the Air Force Band (which is a really cool job if you're in the Air Force because that's all you do) and the whole band, including families, got to go to the American Embassy in Manila for a concert and picnic. The Philippine military band was also playing. They would play one song, then our Air Force Band would play one song, and so on. After the first few songs everyone was clapping along and enjoying themselves, but after about 5 songs each we were wondering when the concert would end. March after march was played....I swear the concert must have gone on for a few hours. Turns out there was supposed to be someone that gave a signal that it was time to quit and eat lunch, but no one did, and both bands were too polite to call it quits. My dad was so relieved when both bands finally exhausted their repertoire and we could finally eat lunch!
    Road Bike: 2008 Orbea Aqua Dama TDF/Brooks B-68


    Ellen
    www.theotherfoote.blogspot.com

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
    Posts
    6,984
    Great story oxy. Those wind musical players must have powerful lungs..

    Unusual holiday experiences:

    I was travelling in Greece for several wks. with some good friends. In Athens we took a transit bus to a wealthy, supposedly heavily inhabited by Arabs where we walked around. When I turned a corner in this neighbourhood, I nearly freaked about: I had dreamt this place several wks. before landing in Greece!

    Have never seen the place in photos in advance nor did I know we were going to this neighbourhood. Just a spontaneous thing. It was the strangest feeling.
    My Personal blog on cycling & other favourite passions.
    遙知馬力日久見人心 Over a long distance, you learn about the strength of your horse; over a long period of time, you get to know what’s in a person’s heart.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    Aggie, your trip to Galveston reminded me of my spring break trip from h#ll.

    I was supposed to have a ride to the Boston area to visit my sister, whose college was on a different schedule from mine. The night before spring break started, my ride fell through. This was in the days before ATMs (and before college kids had credit cards), and I didn't have enough cash for a bus ticket. Luckily my bank was open Saturday mornings. I think I had about 45 minutes between the time the bank opened and the time the bus left. So I caught the local bus into the nearest city and got on a Greyhound to Boston.

    The first bus gets stuck in 4th gear. We're going through tollbooths on the Pennsylvania Turnpike creeping as slowly as the driver can without stalling, explaining the situation to the toll-takers in motion. We stop at the next service plaza to wait for Greyhound to send a replacement bus.

    Second bus... same thing happens. I don't remember how far we got before we were, again, waiting at a turnpike service plaza. I want to say we were somewhere in upstate New York by then.

    Third bus... quits completely. I remember watching the sunrise in the middle of nowhere, Western Mass.

    Fourth bus is the charm. Almost exactly 24 hours from the time I left, I got off the bus, filthy and exhausted, made my way to Harvard Square where someone was supposed to pick me up, and who's the first person I see?

    My faculty advisor.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    The summer before we moved here, we took a 2 week vacation to the Cape and spent time around the suburbs, scouting out places to live. We were in Minuteman National Park (about 7 miles from where I live now), looking at one of those panoramic battle pictures, with an explanation underneath, outside in front of the Visitor's center. I looked up from the plaque and saw another family that lived in Tempe, that went to the JCC preschool with my kids... 2800 miles from home.
    This wasn't an incident, but a foreshadowing. In 2004, we went to Siena to visit my son, who was studying there. He came walking down the street to greet us, looking like a different person, wearing a cord jacket, hair slicked back and gesticulating loudly in Italian to his professor who was walking with him. For the rest of the trip, I felt like the dumb, old mother, whose child had to read the menus, make the reservations, and lead us around... an inkling of what it will feel like in another 25 years.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Newport, RI
    Posts
    3,821
    When I was in Spain this summer, I stayed in an apartment that had a washing machine. Every other appliance had manuals, except this one. It did have weird little diagrams for all the different cycles, none of which made that much sense, but we managed to wash our clothes several times with good results.

    One of the diagrams on the machine was of a soccer uniform and another was of shoes. Well, I guess that shoe diagram gave me the brilliant idea of washing my Keens, which I'd been wearing most of the time on my trip, and were looking a little shabby. I decided to use a little shampoo because we'd run out of laundry detergent. I used the tiniest drop, much less than I use to wash my hair.

    The next thing I know, suds are coming out of the machine like something out of an "I Love Lucy" episode. All over the floor, and not stopping. I had no idea how to make it stop, and just had to wait it out. I spent the next few hours of my last day in Spain mopping the floor, even moving the machine to clean under it, using all my towels up, too. It was a huge drag.

    I wonder what the cleaning lady must have thought after we left? Probably that those Americans sure were clean--they even washed the floor!

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Newberg, OR
    Posts
    758
    Quote Originally Posted by redrhodie View Post

    The next thing I know, suds are coming out of the machine like something out of an "I Love Lucy" episode. All over the floor, and not stopping. I had no idea how to make it stop, and just had to wait it out. I spent the next few hours of my last day in Spain mopping the floor, even moving the machine to clean under it, using all my towels up, too. It was a huge drag.
    Ha!! I find this amusing because I had a similar experience with a dishwasher. We had just moved back to the States from the Philippines. We had no dishwasher for 5 years (if you don't count our housegirl who did the dishes) and I mistakenly put regular dish soap in the dishwasher. Yikes!!
    Road Bike: 2008 Orbea Aqua Dama TDF/Brooks B-68


    Ellen
    www.theotherfoote.blogspot.com

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Posts
    94
    Quote Originally Posted by oxysback View Post
    Ha!! I find this amusing because I had a similar experience with a dishwasher. We had just moved back to the States from the Philippines. We had no dishwasher for 5 years (if you don't count our housegirl who did the dishes) and I mistakenly put regular dish soap in the dishwasher. Yikes!!
    I did this once when I was 16! I went to ask the neighbor to borrow some dishwashing soap (we were out), and she gave me regular dish soap instead of dishwasher soap! My mom was less than thrilled!

 

 

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