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1205 of 1223 WHS have been reviewed by our community.


Gulf of Porto

Twobaconsandaboston Australia - 16-Jun-25

Gulf of Porto

We visited the Gulf of Porto between 4 - 6 June 2025.  We had a hire car and drove up from Bonifacio.  We decided to drive along the Stradi di e Calanche Road through the mountains that borders the UNESCO inscribed gulf.  Once you pass through Piana, a short time later you will drive past a fairly small sign advising you that you have entered the UNESCO area.  Blink though and you will miss the sign.  The drive along this part of the coast provided amazing views of the Gulf and the land formations along the southwestern part of the gulf before arriving in Porto itself.  We stayed in Hotel Subrini which is right on the foreshore overlooking the bay and the old Genoese Tower that stands on the peninsular looking over the bay.  2

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Megalithic Temples of Malta

Zoe United States - 12-Jun-25

Megalithic Temples of Malta

I managed to visit 4 of the 6 inscribed temples so I wanted to leave some short thoughts on them (and also some updated pricing info)! You can buy a pass to all museum sites in Malta (besides the Hypogeum) for 60 euros now as of 2025... but this is too expensive if you just want to see the WHS. So, instead I spent 26 euro seeing 4 temples.

Tarxien: only a 10 min walk from the Hypogeum! Tarxien has rock carvings, something I didn't see at the other 4 temples -- giving it a different "vibe" from the others. Hypogeum museum staff even gave me a map at the  specifically encouraging me to visit it so it's hard to pass up :) I think this is also the only site I visited that is completely wheelchair accessible, with paved ramps taking you in and around the temple. Cons: most of what was interesting there seemed to be reconstructions. Tarxien also doesn't stand as tall as the other sites

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Poblet Monastery

2Flow2 United States - 07-Jun-25

Poblet Monastery

I have to agree with Andrew_Kerr that this site deserves higher ratings than it was previously receiving, and from reading the older reviews it seems to be largely due to the way in which the tour system has been re-worked. Whereas previously an in-person tour was required, the availablity of these has now become significantly more limited as they have been supplanted with an audio guide that you can use to enter the full monastery at any time and tour at your own pace. (I say "full monastery" to refer to the large section open to tourists, though, as this is still an actively used monastery so there are sections exclusively reserved for the monks which travellers cannot enter.)

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Tarraco

2Flow2 United States - 07-Jun-25

Tarraco

For me, Tarraco (Tarragona as it is called today) is a light 3.5 stars for me, bordering on a 3. As you can gather from the other reviews on here, none of the individual locations are particularly jaw-dropping for this WHS, but taken together they make up quite an interesting vision of Roman life. Also, the fact that this is one of the first Roman settlements not only in Spain, but outside of Italy as a whole is just plain cool.

Tarragona has done a decent job of making each of these locations accessible and providing explanations of what you're seeing via signage and audiovisual displays at each of them. If you want to just hit the biggest highlights and avoid the stuff that are mostly just "rocks" or a piece of hardly-identifiable architecture, then I recommend doing the Amphitheatre, the Circus, the Walls, and the Aqueduct. This is more or less what my group did, as we were limited on time and there is only so much I can convince my non-WHS friends to go out of their way for

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Ambohimanga

Dennis Nicklaus - 12-Jun-25

Ambohimanga

Ambohimanga is one of those places I probably wouldn't have bothered to visit if it weren't a WHS. But I'm very glad I did because, the visit, combined with a visit to the Queen's Palace in Tana, gave me a much better understanding of Madagascar's pre-colonial history. I had a private driver to take me to the Royal Hill of Ambohimanga, about an hour outside of Tana.  It's not a huge site, you can spend about an hour there. One there, I picked up a guide at the entrance who spoke very good english.  She was very informative. After a brief overview of the fortress from the ceremonial courtyard, and the large sacrificial stone where zebu were sacrificed, we proceeded inside the complex

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Top Tips for Kenya

Kenya almost killed me. The murder attempt actually was done by a Kenyan goat, which, while I was walking the streets of Old Mombasa (pictured below), decided to make a run for its freedom and jumped down to street level from a balcony. Its hoof bruised my hand black and blue, but it could as well have landed on my head. It must have been an absurd scene to watch, but the Kenyans aren’t disturbed by a bit of chaos and unpredictability. 

Still want to go? Here are some tips for travelling to Kenya as a WH Traveller.

1. Be flexible

Kenya overall is an easy country to travel in: they’re used to tourists, almost everybody speaks English and is willing to help you out (often hoping there’s a little extra in it for them, but not pushing for it). But it certainly doesn’t run like clockwork: departure times of all my 3 domestic flights and the international flight were changed significantly at least once, access to a site that was granted can be revoked for vague reasons (see my Kaya Kauma story), I had an airport transfer who didn’t know how to get to the airport, etc. So be sure to allocate a buffer in both time and money for your trip, as a too-tight schedule might end in missing out on a WHS tick.

2. You need to spice it up a bit

Thematically, there is nothing wrong with Kenya’s set of 8 WHS (a bit of Swahili culture past and present, the Great Rift Valley, Mount Kenya), but they will not bring you to the highlights of Kenya per se. The average rating of its WHS is mediocre at 3.1, and I gave most of the sites between 2 and 3 stars. Visit times were also often short, leaving you to wonder what to do the rest of the day. The set leans more towards cultural sites than natural, and the East Coast seems to be a favoured place to promote. So, especially for a first visit to the country, you might want to spice your itinerary up a bit with a few extra national parks. Notably missing is the Masai Mara, of course, but also habitats further north, such as in Samburu or Meru, could be worth it. 

3. Be prepared to go fully digital 

To pay for goods and services, Kenyans use M-Pesa as a digital payment system. Even the preacher who came to bless us for a matatu trip to Nakuru accepted tips via M-Pesa. If you’re going to be travelling independently, it’s best to set up your own M-Pesa account (you need a SafariCom physical SIM card).  For shorter trips or guided safaris, you can still work your way around it by using cash, a credit card and Wise money transfer. 

Also, virtually all parks and cultural monuments can only be paid via the Ecitizen portal. You will already set up an account here when you’re applying for the ETA to get into the country. Ecitizen for foreigners either works or it doesn’t – 90% or so have no problems but there are lots of complaints to be found online; it worked for my ETA but I never got it to function for park payments. The whole system (it is meant for Kenyans to apply for public services such as getting a new passport and all kinds of permits) is way too elaborate to just pay an entry ticket. The workaround is to get a Kenyan to secure a ticket, sometimes at the last step you can then finish it yourself by handing over your physical credit card to the cashier.

4. Public transport is easy. 

Kenya is densely populated, which also means that there is a need for frequent public transport. I mostly used matatus, minibuses (pictured below), which are doable as long as you’re not very tall or have a lot of luggage. They no longer take more passengers than they have seats (the police perform frequent checks) and most of them are express ones, which means no stops en route. They’re hard to beat regarding speed and cost. In the cities, it’s easiest to just jump on the back of a motorbike (boda boda).  I was most proud of my 100 KSh (0,70 EUR) transfer (shared taxi) from Kenyatta Airport to the Central Business District in Nairobi, for which the airport taxis normally will ask 20-25 USD. The itinerary that I posted on the Forum shows my route along 7 WHS on public transport. For a comprehensive self-drive one, I recommend the one Zoë posted earlier.

5. Pricing is all over the place

‘Safari’ is the main business of Kenya’s tourism industry, so a Kenya trip can get expensive if you use safari companies to organize it for you (one quoted me 400USD to get to Arubuko Soko Reserve for a day). But the WHS are a whole different cup of tea and most of these sites can be accessed independently. Entrance fees add up to the overall costs due to foreigner pricing, which is routinely applied in Kenya. Especially the National Parks are expensive and they will raise their prices again by the 1st of July. On the other hand, food is inexpensive and the accommodation I found good value for money. Overall, the cost of my 7 WHS fell way below my 650 EUR per WHS limit. I did skip the Lake Turkana WHS, though, for cost reasons and because I think that region deserves more time than a quick one-day in and out.

Els - 22 June 2025

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