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1202 of 1223 WHS have been reviewed by our community.


Ancient Merv

Zoë Sheng Chinese-Canadian - 19-Aug-24

Ancient Merv

You need to see this and it's on every Turkmenistan itinerary, however, I find the places near Mary nowhere near as good as Gonur which is further north through the desert. I was very disappointed with Merv before that spot. Then I noticed there are a few dozen spots as locations for the UNESCO property and the locals say UNESCO are stupid. Well basically the sites don't connect and weren't at the same time so you are combing them because of location only.

Gonur is a marvel though. It has hardly been excavated and will take a few more excavators to give their life like Victor did here

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Kuressaare Fortress (T)

Jan-Willem Netherlands - 23-Aug-24

Kuressaare Fortress (T)

Kuressaara Fortress (or Episcopal Castle) is a well-restored fortress outside the lovely town of Kuressaara. If I understand well, even though many restorations have taken place, the basic structure still goes back to medieval times and that’s part of what gives it its historic value (but do correct me when I’m mistaken).

When we visited in 2011, work on the outer walls was very much in progress (photo), but looking at recent pictures on internet and Roman’s picture in the header of this THWS, that seems to have been completed by now. It’s an impressive fortress on the one hand, but to my personal taste also a bit ‘clean’ and not very adventurous to see. I didn’t really feel and smell its history, like I got e.g. from the walls of Tallinn. And other sites on the Saaremaa island left deeper memories, such as the WWII memorial sites, the spot of the lighthouse on the most southern tip, and the Kaali impact crater

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Ir. D.F. Woudagemaal

Tony H. Finland - 21-Aug-24

Ir. D.F. Woudagemaal

The odd name of this WHS has always intrigued me so I was very happy to finally visit Ir. D.F. Woudagemaal in April 2024. The parking lot of the steam pumping station was quite empty when I arrived on a Thursday afternoon. I arrived by car but I could imagine it's easy to arrive here by public transportation too, as the pumping station is right at the edge of the lovely town of Lemmer. The parking lot is few hundred metres away from the station but you'll see it already from the road. When you arrive you'll first enter the ticket/souvenir shop. Just like earlier on the same day at Schokland, the staff seemed bit confused to see non-Dutch visitor showing up. Besides the tickets, I picked up some brochures about Friesland region, they had quite good selection of them!

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Stoclet House

Daniel R-F France, U.S. - 26-Aug-24

Stoclet House

Just adding a review to note that, until December 31, 2024, there is an exhibit at the Hôtel Van Eetvelde (one of the Horta townhouses) entitled "Stoclet 1911 - Restitution". The exhibit includes a "virtual reconstruction" of the Stoclet House interior -- basically a CGI video, but one that gives you a fairly good sense of what the inside of the structure looks like, or what it looked like in 1911. (Think acres of clashing marble, covering every square inch.) The exhibit is the result of a collaboration of the Architecture Faculty La Cambre Horta and the Art & History Museum of Brussels, where it was displayed last year

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Dinosaurs and Caves of Koytendag (T)

Zoë Sheng Chinese-Canadian - 19-Aug-24

I only visited the Hojapil State Landscape and Paleontological Sanctuary as far as I know. It's not easy getting around here but dinosaur footsteps are definitely something you can see, and should see. The footprints are big and all over the platform as seen in the pictures. It only takes a few minutes to reach and then you explore as much as you like, even though they are usually the same. A few spots has them in a pattern which is nice. Basically the idea is that the surface was hot or erupting and the stupid pterodactyls still walked around here before it got too bad. Nothing of what I wrote is proofen by what you see and you just have to believe the stories. The dinosaur footprints are definitely the thing to see though.

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Blog WHS Visits

WHS #924: Shiretoko

It has been a long, hot summer in Japan this year. It still affected Hokkaido’s Shiretoko NP when I visited in early September – with daily temperatures of about 26 degrees, it wasn’t what I had expected. No mist and clouds, and it looked more like Central Sweden during Midsummer than a place notorious for its seasonal sea ice. 

Before going, it is important to understand which of the ‘seasons’ you’re in: this strongly affects which activities you can do and what animals you might see. There’s the ‘Drift Ice Season’ (mid-January to early March), the ‘Bear Active Season’ (May-July) and the ‘Eco Preservation Awareness Season’ (August to mid-November). Outside these tourist months, everything will be closed and roads are impassable due to snow. I flew into Memanbetsu Airport and rented a car from there (it’s a 1.5h drive). You can also get around on public transport but there aren’t many buses a day.

In September, the main trail at the Shiretoko Five Lakes can be walked independently (in ‘Bear Active Season’ you may not). You do need to get a permit though at the Shiretoko Goko Field House (costing a nominal 250 yen) and they make you attend a 13-minute presentation about the do’s and don’ts in the forest, and especially how to behave around bears (Don’t run!). The 3km long hike mostly follows a trail through the forest, which occasionally opens up for each of the five lakes. Several of the Japanese hikers that set off at the same time as I wore bear bells, so that probably scared the bears away if there were any present at all. Bears had been seen about every other day in August and September along this trail. During my hike, I only saw deer twice. The trail ends at the exemplary elevated wooden boardwalk, which entails the shorter hike you can do here.

A few km southward, a short trail leads from the Nature Center (one of the many interpretation / visitor centers of the park) to Furepe Waterfall. This is a fine hike in a more open setting than the one at Five Lakes. It provides good views of the higher mountains inland. The waterfall itself may be disappointing at first, as it trickles out of a crack fed by underground water from snow and rain (resembling “flowing tears”). However, the cliff has a steep drop of 60m into the Sea of Okhotsk.

In the evening, from 7.30-9.30 pm, I joined a Wildlife Night Drive with a company called Picchio. In a minivan, kitted out with binoculars and spotlights, we slowly drove the roads around the Nature Center and the Five Lakes access searching for animals. We quickly did find a young deer (a ‘Bambi’ also in Japanese), and later on a fox. We went looking for bears near the river, where the guide said they start coming this time of the year to eat the salmon. But we didn’t find one, and neither could we spot an owl. 

The next morning I drove the Shiretoko Pass to the other, eastern side of the peninsula. But not before I had made a little detour to the road which according to last night’s guide is best for bears in this season; it’s the road signposted to the onsen, parallel to Iwaubetsu River. Unfortunately, I came up empty (again). Driving the Shiretoko Pass isn’t anything spectacular this time of the year (it’s closed because of heavy snow from November to March). From the parking lot at the top, there’s an impressive view of Mount Rausu and the islands ‘floating on the clouds’ in the distance. I drove to the town of Rausu and then north on the coastal road, but this area isn’t nearly as developed for tourism as the Utoro side of the park. There are mostly fishermen’s villages. 

My final act for Shiretoko was joining one of the boat tours along the coast from Utoro. The tours are conducted in the open waters of the Sea of Okhotsk, which are often rough, and the coastline is very rocky. Over 50% of the cruises were cancelled during my first 2 days. Since the disastrous boating accident in 2022, where 26 people died, the operators may even have become more careful before sailing out. I had booked a 2h15 long tour with Aurora to Rutsha Bay at 9.15 am on my last morning. Not just to see a bit of the coastline, but also for the last opportunity to spot a bear: they like to visit Rutsha Bay (the company advertises an 87% success rate of spotting one). Well - my fate was the same as that of Randi & Svein Elias a year earlier: the boat turned around well before it reached its final destination. In this case, after about 35 minutes. We still got to see the funny rocks and caves included in the regular short tour, but we were back at the port an hour early (and got a partial refund).

Overall, Shiretoko is a pleasant national park that doesn’t present its unique qualities easily. It has a fascinating ecosystem where sea ice, phytoplankton, krill, salmons and bears play their part, but it is hard to witness this in action.

Els - 8 September 2024

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Comments

Durian 9 September 2024

If I remember correctly, there is a condition that when the boat reaches the waterfall, captain will make a decision upon sea and wind conditions to go further or not. They announced on the boat twice (in Japanese), but in my case, no cancel happened.


Els Slots 8 September 2024

No, they did not give any explanation (at least not in English). The other (Japanese) passengers all seemed to accept it. It was probably because the sea got too rough, although it was a bright sunny day and the ride so far had been smooth.


Jay T 8 September 2024

How odd that the boat tour doesn't always run its full length. We're you able to get an explanation why?


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