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easyJet pilot reveals the worst possible routes for turbulence from the UK

easyJet pilot reveals the worst possible routes for turbulence from the UK

Yahoo09-04-2025

The prospect of flying can be daunting for some, and, well, I'm certainly in that group.
I'm extremely lucky that I get the chance to fly often; the only downside is that I risk losing four gallons of sweat (and tears) each time I do.
Turbulence, for that matter, puts the fear of god into me.
They say flying is the safest form of travel, but I just don't trust the idea of being in a tin can 50,000ft up.
Transatlantic turbulence aboard the B747😬😳 📸 by reddit/pouya02 Not an ad pic.twitter.com/zX0azZcofW
— aircraftmaintenancengineer (@airmainengineer) April 2, 2025
The fear of turbulence, often referred to as aerophobia or aviophobia, is a common anxiety among passengers during flights.
And now, one easyJet pilot has shared what he believes to be the worst route for this from the UK.
Speaking to eSIM travel company Airalo, Captain Chris shared his insights into what passengers should know about air travel and handling turbulence. And also, where fliers are most likely to experience a bumpy ride.
Captain Chris said: "When it comes to the worst areas for turbulence,
"Innsbruck, Austria, located in a valley, is notorious for severe turbulence. The strong winds in the area can reach speeds of up to 60mph."
Innsbruck Airport is well-known for its extreme turbulence, a result of powerful winds that whip through the narrow valleys flanked by towering mountains.
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Pilots are well-trained to handle turbulence and know that modern aircraft are designed to withstand.
Flight attendants, due to their extensive training and experience, do not get scared by turbulence.
They understand that turbulence is a normal part of flying and poses minimal risk to the aircraft.
Their training equips them to remain calm and focused, ensuring the safety and comfort of passengers during turbulent conditions.

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31 Dream-Turned-Nightmare Vacations That Went So, So, So, So, So, So Horribly Wrong For People
31 Dream-Turned-Nightmare Vacations That Went So, So, So, So, So, So Horribly Wrong For People

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time7 hours ago

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31 Dream-Turned-Nightmare Vacations That Went So, So, So, So, So, So Horribly Wrong For People

Reddit user u/ujin- asked the community: "What was the scariest moment you've had on vacation?" The thread quickly filled with tales of travels gone very, very wrong. BuzzFeed Community members also shared their own vacation horror stories. Here's what people shared: 1."On a family trip to Spain during Easter week, my husband got food poisoning from oysters (he was the only one who ate them). He got violent diarrhea, and on Easter Sunday, as he was driving, he passed out and went up a curb, knocking down a stop sign and almost mowing into a crowd of people on their way to Easter Mass! I had to drive to Madrid and he had a very long, hard flight back to the USA!" —Anonymous 2."We flew from Los Angeles to Rome to start a three-week vacation. On the first full day of the vacation, I tripped on an extra curb set away from the sidewalk and broke two ribs and shattered my arm (humerus) into six pieces. I spent the next day in a Rome emergency room. I tried to get a flight home the following day. I finally flew on the fourth day. This was almost six weeks ago, and I still have pain and almost no use of my arm. The doctor says it will take six to eight months of physical therapy to regain full use of my arm. The trip insurance (no pun intended) only covered $8k of the $27k we paid." —Anonymous 3."It was the mid-'70s, and we were in Casper, Wyoming, on a family vacation. I was about 12 years old. My dad had a bad habit of driving until it was dark before trying to find a hotel for the night. This put us in some very shady hotels over the years. This particular night, the hotel was an old, two-story brick building that looked more like a jail than a hotel. There was one bathroom on each floor. When my dad asked for a room for two adults and four children, the clerk laughed. We were put in a room with one bed and given an extra mattress to throw on the floor. About halfway through the night, a commotion woke us all up. We heard people shouting and furniture banging around. Then there were three gunshots followed by silence and the sound of footsteps running down the hallway and out the door. I've never seen my parents pack a car faster in all of my life." —u/Sparky3200 4."We were on our honeymoon and flying into the Toronto airport. We were about to land to make a connecting flight overseas when we heard grinding under the plane. This repeated a couple of times, and then the pilot, calm as can be, clicked on the intercom and said, 'We seem to be having a little trouble with the landing gear. Everyone, please take your seats and buckle your seatbelts. We're going to delay our approach. Please bear with us.' One of the flight attendants rushed towards the cockpit. The seatbelt light went on, and I looked at my husband, who hates to fly. He just gave me a look of pure dread and terror, not saying a word. I knew this trip was my idea, so this was all my fault." "There was more grinding, and the plane tilted as we started to circle. The pilot returned to the intercom and said, 'All flight attendants to their seats, please.' More grinding. Then, the pilot said, 'Everyone, we have the landing gear down and engaged. We will be landing shortly. Thank you for your patience.' The whole plane cheered when we landed." —u/darkest_irish_lass 5."I went vacationing in Mexico with my family when I was 9. I lost my parents in a marketplace in Cancun and tried to tell a guy I was trying to find my family. He told me he'd find me a new one mere moments before my father arrived." —u/DoorstepCult 6."I was snorkeling with my wife and son. My wife was free-swimming, so she went ahead of us while my son and I gently paddled over to the main snorkeling area. She was probably about 50 yards away, and everyone else in the area was about 30 yards away. I was swimming and suddenly felt something start pushing me into the water. I recovered and realized my son, who's 17 and bigger than I am, was holding onto me. He took water into his snorkel and started panicking, so he grabbed me. I was trying to tread water, hold up another full-grown man, and figure out how to get somewhere safe to stand or get to shore." "I started dipping in and out of the water because my arms and legs started getting tired, and I was treading for my son's life. Finally, I got the other snorkelers' attention and called for help, and a group of them came over. Someone with a paddleboard got my son, and then I floated and paddled as much as possible while a dude there pulled me toward a boat. I almost passed out from exhaustion when I got on the little boat. I legitimately thought both my son and I were goners. The thing is, we're both good swimmers. If he hadn't been panicking, he could have swum to shore, which wasn't far away, or expelled the water from his snorkel and continued swimming. And since he was pulling me down, I was panicking and not thinking straight enough to tell him what to do. It was one of the scariest experiences of my life." —u/SweetCosmicPope 7."On our way to the New Orleans airport at like 4:00 a.m., the vehicle next to us on the highway shot at us for no reason. The bullet went through the windshield and rearview mirror, lodging in the roof right between me and my wife's heads." —u/Guerilla555 8."My uncle decided to mess around on a trail in Yellowstone near some hot pools. He was walking backward on the trail and FELL OFF right onto the crust near the hot pools. By sheer luck, he didn't fall through. It was horrifying. I thought we were witnessing a man die." —u/alizabs91 9."It was the last day of our trip to San Diego, and my friend and I called an Uber for brunch. A car pulled up that didn't match the app description at all. The car was the wrong model and had the wrong license plate. The driver yelled my name, acting super casual like, 'It's your Uber! Come on in!' My phone rang, and it was the actual Uber driver I requested. He was confused about why I hadn't gotten in the car yet. I tell him I didn't see his car, and he says, 'Uber hasn't updated my car model or license plate yet,' but the person in the car clearly wasn't even on the phone! He was looking straight at me!" "I told the person on the phone I was canceling, and the next thing I know, the driver in the car yelled at me through the window to get in. He even got out of the car at this point. My friend and I ran back into the hotel lobby. We explained the situation to the front desk, and thankfully, the staff jumped into action. We also reported it to Uber. I am grateful we were close enough to the hotel to run away. If we weren't, I don't know what would have happened." —u/Moon2078 10."I was 13 on vacation overseas with my mom. We woke up at 5:00 a.m. due to jet lag, and the morning was beautiful, so we decided to go for a swim. We are used to a very calm sea (technically, a bay), so we didn't think swimming was a big deal when there were no lifeguards. As a result, we got caught in a rip current without knowing what it was. My mom was a very weak swimmer, so she told me to swim to the shore and call for help. But the shore was empty, so I knew she just wanted me to leave her and save myself. I grabbed her by the hand and swam as hard as I could. Luckily, we were close to the shore, and my desperate 'sprint' got us to a place where we could stand. We returned to our room and felt incredibly sleepy, so we went to sleep and woke up 10 hours later. When we looked out the hotel window, we noticed the red flags on the beach, and no one was swimming." —u/Sleepy_Glacier 11."On a three-week tour of Thailand with my Muay Thai instructors, we happened to be in Krabi during December 2004. We took an early boat ride for about two hours to Bamboo Island to snorkel and hang out on the beach. We noticed a weird feeling in the water, like something was stinging, and got out after a while. Then we noticed, 'Wow, that is a bizarre loud wave coming in.' Our next thought was, 'Wow, that big wave just keeps coming. I wonder if that's related to how all the water receded a few minutes ago, making the shoreline a thousand feet wider?' Then we climbed the highest point on the island and sat there for about 12 hours, watching the next two tsunami waves come in and leave, all while wondering if the highest point would be high enough to avoid the water." "The pre-smartphone days were rough; we had no idea what was happening. After being rescued by the Thai Coast Guard and getting back to the mainland 12-15 hours later, we found out that thousands of people had died. It was a shock. Overall, it was the scariest vacation moment I've had and the scariest day of my life." —u/Azagsloth 12."My appendix ruptured while on vacation in England. Full perforation. I was on a school trip, and my classmates had to continue their trip, so I was left behind. It happened on my second day in England, and I spent 13 days alone in the hospital before getting out. Then, I had two days left before I flew home. I was puking my guts out and crapping my brains out. Tubes down my throat, oxygen in my nose, catheter down my pipe. I was 15, and my parents didn't have passports, so I had to handle it myself. I had one amazing nurse (we are still friends to this day, 19 years later), and that alone made the whole ordeal worthwhile." —u/PigeonFace 13."Remember that 2018 Hawaii Ballistic Missile false alarm? That. I was visiting my brother and sister-in-law, and my girlfriend and I thought we were going to die. We called our loved ones to say goodbye and cried in the closet, taking shelter, waiting for our imminent doom. The funny thing is, we were supposed to have left days prior, but I decided we should stay an extra three days since the seven-day flight round-trip ticket was the same as the 10-day one. It took 45 minutes or so for the correction to go out. Everyone in public looked like they went on with their day just fine. We remained shell-shocked the whole day, and my girlfriend and I needed therapy when we got home." —u/Rigar_ 14."On a girls' trip to Cabo, my friend and cousin decided to do an ATV beach excursion. Before taking off, I asked if I could ride with any of them, and they said no, and the tour guide wasn't allowed to carry a passenger with him. Therefore, I was left to ride on my own. I didn't want to ride on my own because I have carpal tunnel on my right index finger, and it acts up with frequent usage. Take a guess where the accelerator was located? The tour was over an hour long, so I was worried. On the way to the beach, I was placed behind the guide, so it wasn't bad because I set the speed for the others. However, I was placed last on the way back, and they were hungry for speed." "I was trying to catch up, but my finger started giving out. At one point, I was so far behind that I tried to go a little faster, and that's when my finger locked up and I slammed into a dune hill, causing the ATV to flip over on top of me. It wasn't a little one either, and my life literally flashed before me. It all happened so fast that all I remember was that I was pinned under, but my adrenaline must've kicked into high gear because I somehow managed to lift this 1,000-pound object off my back. I walked out with minor scratches and a lifelong fear of ATVs." —Anonymous Buggy on the beach 15."I got sun poisoning as a kid, became delirious, sleptwalk (which I have no history of doing), opened the hotel doorway, and knocked on what I thought was my parents' bedroom. A guy answered and told me I had the wrong room. Luckily, I somehow found my way back to my room, went to the bathroom, and went to bed. I remember it all, so I don't know if it was sleepwalking or only happened as a result of my sun poisoning. Who knows. It's terrifying to think about what could've happened, especially as a kid." —u/AlternativeGreen6400 16."When I was 12, my dad took me to the Grand Canyon. He had bad arthritis and couldn't walk well, so I asked if he wanted to walk down a trail. He said he'd stay put, but I could go. I walked down the trail, like a switchback, only a little ways. Then I turned to see if I could see my dad, and was waving to try to get his attention. I kept waving and backing up and waving, then turned, and my back heel was right at the edge of the Grand Canyon. I was not the smartest kid." —u/DueEntertainer0 17."I got bitten on the neck by a cheeky monkey in a park in Vietnam. I did not have a rabies vaccination and had to rush to the nearest hospital to get the shot. It was scary as hell. I was traveling solo." —u/Honey-bee542 18."We lost my baby brother at Seaside Heights Boardwalk. My family went wild for about an hour. We finally found him sitting outside a saloon surrounded by bikers and their chicks. He had a bowl of popcorn and a tall soda. They were all facing the boardwalk and watching people go by, waiting to see if he recognized anyone looking for him." —u/Rosanna44 19."I was on an overnight bus from Delhi to Dharmsala. (I am female and was 26 at the time). We stopped at a gas station at night to use a restroom. I was the last in line, and when I came out, the bus was taking off and headed back onto the highway. I sprinted after it, repeatedly screaming, 'No!' at the top of my lungs. Someone must have heard or seen me, and the bus stopped. I truly do not know what I would have done had I been left behind." —u/liabt 20."I was in one of the ruined temples of Cambodia and got lost from my group, and I ended up in a restricted section by mistake. I photographed a dead end with roots coming down the wall. Looking at the photo later, I noticed an infamously venomous snake in the corner, staring at me in a defensive position." —u/placeholderNull 21."While studying abroad in New Zealand, I took a solo trip to the South Island. I was supposed to go with a few friends, but they canceled at the last minute. This was my first solo trip ever, and I booked a few hostels along the way. There was a French man whom I immediately noticed upon arriving at my hostel in Queenstown. I remember him saying something odd to me. Then, after a day at the hostel, he moved into my room. He then spent an entire afternoon in the room staring at me while I watched YouTube in my bed. Later, when I went to grab dinner in town, I spotted him off in the distance as if he had followed me." "Later that night, when I finished showering, he was waiting in the room and again wouldn't stop staring. I told him off and had a worker at the hostel change me to a private room. I gathered my stuff and booked it out of there the next day. I was 20, and it was my first solo travel experience. It sucked." —u/shimmysticks 22."I was 7 years old on my first European trip, and we were in Brussels. My dad and I were waiting for the subway, and when it arrived, it was crowded, so my dad decided not to get in, but I decided I could get in between people, given my small size. I remember turning around to realize my dad was not on the train with me, and the doors closed as he reached to pull me out. Panic. Tears. My dad yelled at me, 'Get off at the next station.' That brief ride to the next station was the longest wait of my life. Luckily, a man saw the whole situation and got off the train with me, and we both sat on a bench waiting for the next train, not even being able to speak the same language. My dad finally arrived on the next train, but that was a horrible and traumatic experience. Thank god for good Samaritans; it could have been awful." —u/zevoruko 23."My in-laws' family overloaded a golf cart shuttle, and as it was climbing a hill, it tipped, falling 10 or so feet down the embankment. My father-in-law was underneath it with his mother and two other people, including the 20-year-old driver, still in the cart. If it weren't for him holding it up, his 70-year-old mother would have been crushed as well, and the cart would have continued falling into the lake 20-30 feet below. He had some nasty bruises, but everyone was okay overall." —u/Conquistador-Hanor 24."We were tent camping in a state park, and a large tree limb fell in the middle of the night in the campsite next to ours. It fell directly across where a tent would go if we had picked that site, which we almost did. It scared the living crap out of us when we heard the 'boom' sound that woke us up at 3:00 a.m." —u/cofclabman 25."I got food poisoning while in Japan. I was with a tour group on a bus with no bathroom when the diarrhea struck. I had to wait until we arrived at our stop, which was five agonizing minutes away. When we finally got out, I had to scramble to find a store that A) had a bathroom and B) wasn't busy to avoid the embarrassment of crapping my brains out. And it's not like anyone spoke English, which made it harder. It took 10 minutes of me searching, all while holding in impending diarrhea, before I finally found one. 10 minutes is an eternity when you're holding in liquid poop. I was drenched in sweat from the effort of holding it in and the fear that I might crap myself in public, in a foreign country." —u/ipissnapalm 26."We were on our way back from a small trip. My mom had texted that my kiddo was sick, so we did our best to get home fast. It was about a three-hour drive on all back roads with few places to pass. We got stuck behind two semis. My partner insisted I go past them, but something told me not to. He pushed it for about five minutes, but I just would not. Something in me said no. Suddenly, the first semi stopped to turn, and the semi behind it had to slam the brakes and swerve to stop in time. You could see the smoke coming off the tires. If I had tried to pass, we would have been hit. I fully believe we would have died. It was a silent ride home." —u/Megnuggets 27."I saw the Grand Canyon for the first time back in the '90s in the winter. As we drove into the area, the fog was so bad that we couldn't see very far, and we were afraid we'd never get to actually see it. As we pulled into a parking lot, the fog drew back, revealing a breathtaking view of snow-frosted canyons. One other car was parked there, with a young couple. The woman stood up on a wall above a sheer drop after the guy with her asked her to pose for a picture. Suddenly, he shoved her hard. Her arms windmilled for several seconds, and she almost fell. Somehow, she got her balance, yelled at him (he just stood there and watched her almost go over the edge), then they both got in the car and left. I was speechless. I know I had just watched that guy try to kill that girl. My companions never saw anything because they were looking at the amazing view." —carotha 28."On the second day of our vacation in Puerto Rico, my husband and I were excited to go to the local beach. There were some kite surfers, but no one was swimming in the ocean because the waves were pretty big. We wanted the ocean experience, so we went out, but only up to our knees. My husband started diving into the whitewater and encouraged me to as well. I grew up in CA and knew how to dive under waves, but I was nervous for some reason. I did it anyway. The third time I dove, I could no longer touch the ground when I came up because there was a drop off, and I was swept back into the bigger waves. I tried my hardest to swim towards shore, but the tide was too strong and I was now battling huge waves to stay alive." "I yelled for help. My husband was trying to come to my rescue, but was fighting the waves to get to me. My energy quickly depleted, and after the next wave, I only barely came up for air. That's when I realized that no one was going to be able to save me, and I was going to drown. At that moment, a voice told me to stop fighting the waves. My survival instinct told me otherwise, but the voice was calm and commanding. So I did, and within two giant waves, I had been brought close enough for my husband to grab my arm and pull me to shore. I sat quietly, shaking and blue, for a while as my husband cared for me. Needless to say, I avoided the beach pretty much the rest of our trip." —Anonymous 29."Driving in Maui, I noticed a dump truck headed toward me, getting closer and closer to the lane line. I kept watch, and we passed each other with no incident. I looked in my rearview 10 seconds later, and it collided head-on with a car behind me in our lane." —u/jwangy84 30."I arrived at the airport in my long-distance girlfriend's country. I was traveling alone, and she was coming to pick me up. As I was leaving the airport, people aggressively tried to offer me rides (cabs, Uber, unlicensed, etc.), which I obviously declined. Then, one guy called out to me by name and said he was sent to pick me up. I called my girlfriend to ask about it. She freaked out and told me to return to the airport immediately until she arrived to get me. So, I guess I almost got kidnapped or something? I have no logical explanation as to how they knew my name." —u/unsoldburrito "I was about 11 years old while on vacation at the beach with my family. I was swimming in the ocean and got stuck in a rip current, which pulled me far from shore. My father came out to save me. As we were both succumbing to exhaustion and starting to drown, someone on a surfboard floated over and had us hold onto the board until lifeguards made it out to us. As we were catching our breath on the shore, we looked around for the surfboard person, but they were nowhere to be found." —u/k_marts Have you ever been on a dream vacation that quickly turned into a nightmare? What happened? Tell us in the comments or share anonymously using this form.

31 Vacation Disasters That Will Make You Stay Home
31 Vacation Disasters That Will Make You Stay Home

Buzz Feed

time8 hours ago

  • Buzz Feed

31 Vacation Disasters That Will Make You Stay Home

Reddit user u/ujin- asked the community: "What was the scariest moment you've had on vacation?" The thread quickly filled with tales of travels gone very, very wrong. BuzzFeed Community members also shared their own vacation horror stories. Here's what people shared: "On a family trip to Spain during Easter week, my husband got food poisoning from oysters (he was the only one who ate them). He got violent diarrhea, and on Easter Sunday, as he was driving, he passed out and went up a curb, knocking down a stop sign and almost mowing into a crowd of people on their way to Easter Mass! I had to drive to Madrid and he had a very long, hard flight back to the USA!" "We flew from Los Angeles to Rome to start a three-week vacation. On the first full day of the vacation, I tripped on an extra curb set away from the sidewalk and broke two ribs and shattered my arm (humerus) into six pieces. I spent the next day in a Rome emergency room. I tried to get a flight home the following day. I finally flew on the fourth day. This was almost six weeks ago, and I still have pain and almost no use of my arm. The doctor says it will take six to eight months of physical therapy to regain full use of my arm. The trip insurance (no pun intended) only covered $8k of the $27k we paid." "It was the mid-'70s, and we were in Casper, Wyoming, on a family vacation. I was about 12 years old. My dad had a bad habit of driving until it was dark before trying to find a hotel for the night. This put us in some very shady hotels over the years. This particular night, the hotel was an old, two-story brick building that looked more like a jail than a hotel. There was one bathroom on each floor. When my dad asked for a room for two adults and four children, the clerk laughed. We were put in a room with one bed and given an extra mattress to throw on the floor. About halfway through the night, a commotion woke us all up. We heard people shouting and furniture banging around. Then there were three gunshots followed by silence and the sound of footsteps running down the hallway and out the door. I've never seen my parents pack a car faster in all of my life." "We were on our honeymoon and flying into the Toronto airport. We were about to land to make a connecting flight overseas when we heard grinding under the plane. This repeated a couple of times, and then the pilot, calm as can be, clicked on the intercom and said, 'We seem to be having a little trouble with the landing gear. Everyone, please take your seats and buckle your seatbelts. We're going to delay our approach. Please bear with us.' One of the flight attendants rushed towards the cockpit. The seatbelt light went on, and I looked at my husband, who hates to fly. He just gave me a look of pure dread and terror, not saying a word. I knew this trip was my idea, so this was all my fault." "I went vacationing in Mexico with my family when I was 9. I lost my parents in a marketplace in Cancun and tried to tell a guy I was trying to find my family. He told me he'd find me a new one mere moments before my father arrived." "I was snorkeling with my wife and son. My wife was free-swimming, so she went ahead of us while my son and I gently paddled over to the main snorkeling area. She was probably about 50 yards away, and everyone else in the area was about 30 yards away. I was swimming and suddenly felt something start pushing me into the water. I recovered and realized my son, who's 17 and bigger than I am, was holding onto me. He took water into his snorkel and started panicking, so he grabbed me. I was trying to tread water, hold up another full-grown man, and figure out how to get somewhere safe to stand or get to shore." "On our way to the New Orleans airport at like 4:00 a.m., the vehicle next to us on the highway shot at us for no reason. The bullet went through the windshield and rearview mirror, lodging in the roof right between me and my wife's heads." "My uncle decided to mess around on a trail in Yellowstone near some hot pools. He was walking backward on the trail and FELL OFF right onto the crust near the hot pools. By sheer luck, he didn't fall through. It was horrifying. I thought we were witnessing a man die." "It was the last day of our trip to San Diego, and my friend and I called an Uber for brunch. A car pulled up that didn't match the app description at all. The car was the wrong model and had the wrong license plate. The driver yelled my name, acting super casual like, 'It's your Uber! Come on in!' My phone rang, and it was the actual Uber driver I requested. He was confused about why I hadn't gotten in the car yet. I tell him I didn't see his car, and he says, 'Uber hasn't updated my car model or license plate yet,' but the person in the car clearly wasn't even on the phone! He was looking straight at me!" "I was 13 on vacation overseas with my mom. We woke up at 5:00 a.m. due to jet lag, and the morning was beautiful, so we decided to go for a swim. We are used to a very calm sea (technically, a bay), so we didn't think swimming was a big deal when there were no lifeguards. As a result, we got caught in a rip current without knowing what it was. My mom was a very weak swimmer, so she told me to swim to the shore and call for help. But the shore was empty, so I knew she just wanted me to leave her and save myself. I grabbed her by the hand and swam as hard as I could. Luckily, we were close to the shore, and my desperate 'sprint' got us to a place where we could stand. We returned to our room and felt incredibly sleepy, so we went to sleep and woke up 10 hours later. When we looked out the hotel window, we noticed the red flags on the beach, and no one was swimming." "On a three-week tour of Thailand with my Muay Thai instructors, we happened to be in Krabi during December 2004. We took an early boat ride for about two hours to Bamboo Island to snorkel and hang out on the beach. We noticed a weird feeling in the water, like something was stinging, and got out after a while. Then we noticed, 'Wow, that is a bizarre loud wave coming in.' Our next thought was, 'Wow, that big wave just keeps coming. I wonder if that's related to how all the water receded a few minutes ago, making the shoreline a thousand feet wider?' Then we climbed the highest point on the island and sat there for about 12 hours, watching the next two tsunami waves come in and leave, all while wondering if the highest point would be high enough to avoid the water." "My appendix ruptured while on vacation in England. Full perforation. I was on a school trip, and my classmates had to continue their trip, so I was left behind. It happened on my second day in England, and I spent 13 days alone in the hospital before getting out. Then, I had two days left before I flew home. I was puking my guts out and crapping my brains out. Tubes down my throat, oxygen in my nose, catheter down my pipe. I was 15, and my parents didn't have passports, so I had to handle it myself. I had one amazing nurse (we are still friends to this day, 19 years later), and that alone made the whole ordeal worthwhile." "Remember that 2018 Hawaii Ballistic Missile false alarm? That. I was visiting my brother and sister-in-law, and my girlfriend and I thought we were going to die. We called our loved ones to say goodbye and cried in the closet, taking shelter, waiting for our imminent doom. The funny thing is, we were supposed to have left days prior, but I decided we should stay an extra three days since the seven-day flight round-trip ticket was the same as the 10-day one. It took 45 minutes or so for the correction to go out. Everyone in public looked like they went on with their day just fine. We remained shell-shocked the whole day, and my girlfriend and I needed therapy when we got home." "On a girls' trip to Cabo, my friend and cousin decided to do an ATV beach excursion. Before taking off, I asked if I could ride with any of them, and they said no, and the tour guide wasn't allowed to carry a passenger with him. Therefore, I was left to ride on my own. I didn't want to ride on my own because I have carpal tunnel on my right index finger, and it acts up with frequent usage. Take a guess where the accelerator was located? The tour was over an hour long, so I was worried. On the way to the beach, I was placed behind the guide, so it wasn't bad because I set the speed for the others. However, I was placed last on the way back, and they were hungry for speed." Buggy on the beach "I got sun poisoning as a kid, became delirious, sleptwalk (which I have no history of doing), opened the hotel doorway, and knocked on what I thought was my parents' bedroom. A guy answered and told me I had the wrong room. Luckily, I somehow found my way back to my room, went to the bathroom, and went to bed. I remember it all, so I don't know if it was sleepwalking or only happened as a result of my sun poisoning. Who knows. It's terrifying to think about what could've happened, especially as a kid." "When I was 12, my dad took me to the Grand Canyon. He had bad arthritis and couldn't walk well, so I asked if he wanted to walk down a trail. He said he'd stay put, but I could go. I walked down the trail, like a switchback, only a little ways. Then I turned to see if I could see my dad, and was waving to try to get his attention. I kept waving and backing up and waving, then turned, and my back heel was right at the edge of the Grand Canyon. I was not the smartest kid." "I got bitten on the neck by a cheeky monkey in a park in Vietnam. I did not have a rabies vaccination and had to rush to the nearest hospital to get the shot. It was scary as hell. I was traveling solo." "We lost my baby brother at Seaside Heights Boardwalk. My family went wild for about an hour. We finally found him sitting outside a saloon surrounded by bikers and their chicks. He had a bowl of popcorn and a tall soda. They were all facing the boardwalk and watching people go by, waiting to see if he recognized anyone looking for him." "I was on an overnight bus from Delhi to Dharmsala. (I am female and was 26 at the time). We stopped at a gas station at night to use a restroom. I was the last in line, and when I came out, the bus was taking off and headed back onto the highway. I sprinted after it, repeatedly screaming, 'No!' at the top of my lungs. Someone must have heard or seen me, and the bus stopped. I truly do not know what I would have done had I been left behind." "I was in one of the ruined temples of Cambodia and got lost from my group, and I ended up in a restricted section by mistake. I photographed a dead end with roots coming down the wall. Looking at the photo later, I noticed an infamously venomous snake in the corner, staring at me in a defensive position." "While studying abroad in New Zealand, I took a solo trip to the South Island. I was supposed to go with a few friends, but they canceled at the last minute. This was my first solo trip ever, and I booked a few hostels along the way. There was a French man whom I immediately noticed upon arriving at my hostel in Queenstown. I remember him saying something odd to me. Then, after a day at the hostel, he moved into my room. He then spent an entire afternoon in the room staring at me while I watched YouTube in my bed. Later, when I went to grab dinner in town, I spotted him off in the distance as if he had followed me." "I was 7 years old on my first European trip, and we were in Brussels. My dad and I were waiting for the subway, and when it arrived, it was crowded, so my dad decided not to get in, but I decided I could get in between people, given my small size. I remember turning around to realize my dad was not on the train with me, and the doors closed as he reached to pull me out. Panic. Tears. My dad yelled at me, 'Get off at the next station.' That brief ride to the next station was the longest wait of my life. Luckily, a man saw the whole situation and got off the train with me, and we both sat on a bench waiting for the next train, not even being able to speak the same language. My dad finally arrived on the next train, but that was a horrible and traumatic experience. Thank god for good Samaritans; it could have been awful." "My in-laws' family overloaded a golf cart shuttle, and as it was climbing a hill, it tipped, falling 10 or so feet down the embankment. My father-in-law was underneath it with his mother and two other people, including the 20-year-old driver, still in the cart. If it weren't for him holding it up, his 70-year-old mother would have been crushed as well, and the cart would have continued falling into the lake 20-30 feet below. He had some nasty bruises, but everyone was okay overall." "We were tent camping in a state park, and a large tree limb fell in the middle of the night in the campsite next to ours. It fell directly across where a tent would go if we had picked that site, which we almost did. It scared the living crap out of us when we heard the 'boom' sound that woke us up at 3:00 a.m." "I got food poisoning while in Japan. I was with a tour group on a bus with no bathroom when the diarrhea struck. I had to wait until we arrived at our stop, which was five agonizing minutes away. When we finally got out, I had to scramble to find a store that A) had a bathroom and B) wasn't busy to avoid the embarrassment of crapping my brains out. And it's not like anyone spoke English, which made it harder. It took 10 minutes of me searching, all while holding in impending diarrhea, before I finally found one. 10 minutes is an eternity when you're holding in liquid poop. I was drenched in sweat from the effort of holding it in and the fear that I might crap myself in public, in a foreign country." "We were on our way back from a small trip. My mom had texted that my kiddo was sick, so we did our best to get home fast. It was about a three-hour drive on all back roads with few places to pass. We got stuck behind two semis. My partner insisted I go past them, but something told me not to. He pushed it for about five minutes, but I just would not. Something in me said no. Suddenly, the first semi stopped to turn, and the semi behind it had to slam the brakes and swerve to stop in time. You could see the smoke coming off the tires. If I had tried to pass, we would have been hit. I fully believe we would have died. It was a silent ride home." "I saw the Grand Canyon for the first time back in the '90s in the winter. As we drove into the area, the fog was so bad that we couldn't see very far, and we were afraid we'd never get to actually see it. As we pulled into a parking lot, the fog drew back, revealing a breathtaking view of snow-frosted canyons. One other car was parked there, with a young couple. The woman stood up on a wall above a sheer drop after the guy with her asked her to pose for a picture. Suddenly, he shoved her hard. Her arms windmilled for several seconds, and she almost fell. Somehow, she got her balance, yelled at him (he just stood there and watched her almost go over the edge), then they both got in the car and left. I was speechless. I know I had just watched that guy try to kill that girl. My companions never saw anything because they were looking at the amazing view." "On the second day of our vacation in Puerto Rico, my husband and I were excited to go to the local beach. There were some kite surfers, but no one was swimming in the ocean because the waves were pretty big. We wanted the ocean experience, so we went out, but only up to our knees. My husband started diving into the whitewater and encouraged me to as well. I grew up in CA and knew how to dive under waves, but I was nervous for some reason. I did it anyway. The third time I dove, I could no longer touch the ground when I came up because there was a drop off, and I was swept back into the bigger waves. I tried my hardest to swim towards shore, but the tide was too strong and I was now battling huge waves to stay alive." "Driving in Maui, I noticed a dump truck headed toward me, getting closer and closer to the lane line. I kept watch, and we passed each other with no incident. I looked in my rearview 10 seconds later, and it collided head-on with a car behind me in our lane." "I arrived at the airport in my long-distance girlfriend's country. I was traveling alone, and she was coming to pick me up. As I was leaving the airport, people aggressively tried to offer me rides (cabs, Uber, unlicensed, etc.), which I obviously declined. Then, one guy called out to me by name and said he was sent to pick me up. I called my girlfriend to ask about it. She freaked out and told me to return to the airport immediately until she arrived to get me. So, I guess I almost got kidnapped or something? I have no logical explanation as to how they knew my name." And: "I was about 11 years old while on vacation at the beach with my family. I was swimming in the ocean and got stuck in a rip current, which pulled me far from shore. My father came out to save me. As we were both succumbing to exhaustion and starting to drown, someone on a surfboard floated over and had us hold onto the board until lifeguards made it out to us. As we were catching our breath on the shore, we looked around for the surfboard person, but they were nowhere to be found." Have you ever been on a dream vacation that quickly turned into a nightmare? What happened? Tell us in the comments or share anonymously using this form. Note: Submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity.

"It's Basically A Cult Town": 24 Places Across The U.S. That People Deem "The Most Unsettling"
"It's Basically A Cult Town": 24 Places Across The U.S. That People Deem "The Most Unsettling"

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"It's Basically A Cult Town": 24 Places Across The U.S. That People Deem "The Most Unsettling"

A hot minute ago, Reddit user Bennevada asked the folks over on r/AskReddit to share the little towns across America they've passed through that gave them the creeps. From abandoned ghost towns to cities stuck in the past, here are 24 of the most bone-chilling places they shared: Hey, you! Have you visited or passed through a town in the US that was so eerie, you won't ever forget it? Tell us about it in the comments or anonymous form at the end of this article. Note: The following submissions are simply the opinions of these Reddit users from the previously mentioned thread, as well as these three (1, 2, 3) similar ones. If you're from one of these towns and think they got it all wrong, set the record straight in the comments! 1."Tonopah, NV. It's on the north end of the Tonopha missile range and Area 51. It's the beginning of nowhere and is home to the world's largest Clown Motel. The only reason to stop is for gas, then get TF outta there as quickly as possible." —littlebitstoned AK: "The entire population lives in a single apartment building, and the only access to the town is by boat or a 2.5-mile tunnel." —WeOwntheNightX Whittier has about 200 residents, almost all of whom live in the Begich Towers. TX: "We detoured through it due to a road closure. The residents hung white sheets saying, 'Don't stop' and 'Go that way.' They seem to have lots of white sheets..." —whatyoucallmetoday "I did some engineering co-op assignments in the Golden Triangle area (Beaumont, Orange, Port Arthur) back in the early '90s. Everyone I worked with warned me to never stop in Vidor for any reason. I took their advice to heart. They said the town's claim to fame was being the former national headquarters for the KKK, and that there was a billboard on the stretch of I-10 that passed through Vidor that would occasionally get spray painted with the message '*n-word*, don't let the sun go down on you in Vidor.'" —underpants-gnome 4."Los Alamos, NM: Lots of land surrounded by barbed wire. Signs EVERYWHERE indicating 'No drones allowed.' Weirdly quiet. Pretty much everything closed at 3 p.m. We joked that it must be to give people time to get inside before all the radioactive monsters came out. A lot of the labs and facilities are still active for, I assume, reasons." —knittinator City, AZ: "Me and some friends were driving up to Duck Creek, UT from Vegas in winter and had to go in the back way via 89. This route takes you through Colorado City, Arizona, which is Mormon territory and about the creepiest place I've ever been. We had to stop for gas and we were watched like we were being hunted." —thai-stik-admin "I came here to see if anyone posted about this place. I stopped in there on my way to the north rim of The Grand Canyon back in 1999. This is not just Mormons, but Warren Jeffs's polygamous sect. I went into the grocery store to get supplies. All the young women wore 19th-century style clothes and would not look me in the face when they spoke to me. They tried to establish a compound in Texas several years later and Jess was arrested. Their idea of marriage was 50-year-old men marrying 12-year-old girls." —Troubador222 "So many polygamists. You can feel how unwelcome you are as you enter the town. We stopped there once on a family trip to get gas. A police officer immediately parked behind us and wanted to know where we were going and how long we were going to be in his town. He didn't leave until we did and he followed us until we got to the town border. We never stopped there again. It's basically a cult town." —ProfessorBrownie 6."The Loneliest Road" (Route 50), NV: "I went on the 'loneliest road' in Nevada, and it truly gave me a sense of scale for America as a place. In Europe, you simply cannot go that distance without encountering multiple massive cities. Where I live, every square cm of land has been apportioned for centuries, and then you go to Nevada, and it's And you have actual warnings telling you to fill up your car or else." —Ok-Commercial8968 St. Helens area, WA: "If you're adventurous and have a truck, you can find the old forest service roads on the side of Mt. St. Helens that got blown out by the eruption. I found them at night driving through there on a whim. Old forest service signs with half of the sign melted or blown off, completely overgrown roads, muddy trails, and absolutely no light. It was a clear sky with a full moon and, I shit you not, I couldn't see more than 50 feet ahead of me with the brights on. Eeriest shit I've explored, and I grew up exploring abandoned asylums and prisons. 14/10, absolute recommend." —Beautiful-Page3135 Related: "Something In My Head Said, 'Don't Get Up'": 16 Older Adults Reveal The Wildest Supernatural Encounters From Their Childhood 8."Centralia, PA: An underground coal fire drove out most of the population, so it's essentially an abandoned town. It was the inspiration for how Silent Hill is depicted in the first Silent Hill movie." —rookhelm An underground mine fire has been burning beneath the town since at least 1962. While most of the small town's residents have fled since then, a handful have remained. 9."Harrison, AR: It has billboards for White Power Radio. I had heard about it on the internet but had forgotten until some friends and I went camping on the Buffalo River. It's 100% legit." —pickleparty16 Haw, OH: "I've driven through it four times. Every single time it's the same story. Cars parked on the sides of the road, but no traffic. Doors wide open, but nobody is visible. No music, no people. Legitimately saw a ball roll across the street once and nobody could have thrown it. It looks like everyone who lives there disappears whenever I drive through, and then spontaneously, they reappear when I leave." —GNSasakiHaise *** Salton Sea area, CA: "The area around the Salton Sea in Southern California — particularly the upper half of the western shore, towns like Salton City, Desert Shores, and Oasis. I actually quite enjoyed the people there. Back in the 1960s, a bunch of resort towns popped up along the sea. In the 1980s, agricultural runoff severely polluted the sea. There were also wild variations in the salinity of the sea, and those two factors combined to kill off a ton of the sea's fish. The dead fish washed up on shore, the sight and smell of which pretty well killed the tourism industry. What remains is an ecological disaster and a bunch of not-quite ghost towns. "It's a really eerie corner of the world, and as someone who's spent a lot of time in tiny back towns across the western states, the Salton Sea area is definitely unique in my memory." —MasteringTheFlames of Tears Road, GA: "My wife and I drove on it, and it was a beautiful, sunny day when we made the turn. As soon as we were on the road, it started raining, and the weather got worse and worse until it was like driving in a hurricane. Then, as soon as we got to the end of the road and turned onto the highway, the skies cleared up and it was a beautiful, sunny day again. Super weird experience, and now years later, when strange things happen in the world, we joke with each other that it's all a dream and we're still trapped on Trail of Tears Road." —brickhamilton Related: Adults Are Sharing Their "I Can't Believe I Have To Explain This To Another Adult" Stories, And I Need A Break From Life After Reading These MO: "A few years ago, I got lost in rural Missouri. Super lost. Like, back county roads lost. So I got directions from a gas station where the worker was super pissed I wouldn't buy his overpriced map. He gave me directions, and I followed them down this backroad and ended up in Skidmore. It was like 2 p.m. and completely dead. Not a single person around. Mostly older houses, a run-down downtown, a new post office, that kind of thing. I was suddenly filled with dread. Like, Stephen King dread. There's trash blowing everywhere and there's just nobody. I drive by the library, and it's pretty much abandoned. There are oversized books in the window, and they're completely swollen from what I assume was water." "So I made it out of town and kept heading on my way, finally making it safely to my destination. Later on, I Googled the town, and what I found was wild. For a small town, it was full of gruesome murders, like one woman murdering another pregnant woman to get her baby, a guy terrorizing the entire town to the point where they just all kill him in the street, and murders from the 1800s. That kind of thing. It creeped me out more than any other place on three continents I've been on." —Vio_ d'Alene, ID: "Stopped at the visitor's center, while passing through Coeur d'Alene. On the way through town, we passed by multiple breweries and interesting places to stop for lunch, but there seemed to be an odd feeling about the place. We chatted with the people at the visitor center while my friend went to use the restroom. When she came back, she changed her mind about staying in town for lunch. She had found out that Coeur d'Alene is home to a major compound for the Aryan Nations. We realized, as we left, that there were not any non-white people walking around downtown." —Grigio_cervello Tree, CA: "As someone who lives in a big city, I thought the desert was creepy as hell. I absolutely loved Joshua Tree, but it was hard for me to fall asleep. It's completely silent out there at night." —AmericanWasted WA: "Creepiest place I've been is Forks, WA, and the areas around it. Almost constant cloud cover, all the locals seem to know something you don't, and knowing you're on the tippy top left of the states feels strange." —PineTreeGorgon 17."Edgefield, SC: A friend and I had to drive through there on a long excursion to the only Gamestop in the area that had a part for his Xbox. We first got there during the day, and there wasn't a soul on the streets. This was a Friday afternoon, and the streets were dead. Grocery store parking lot? Empty. Gas station? No customers. Sidewalks? Barren. Traffic? Non-existent. Add to that a general feeling of spookiness and we were pretty glad to put it behind us. Later, returned from where we'd been going and had to go through Edgefield again, this time at night. The town was fucking jumping. Cars all over the place, the stores full, people walking around. "When I got home, I hit Google out of curiosity, and the first thing to autocomplete was 'Edgefield SC Vampire.' Not going back to Edgefield if I can help it." —PowerSkunk92 GA: "Lots and lots of really creepy places — graveyards, many tight walkways in the historic district with no lights, and lots and lots of swamp land. It is said to be one of the most haunted cities in the USA." —HunterRoze 19."Vineland, NJ: A utopian sober town known as the home of Welch's Grape Juice. NJ's largest city by area but, it only has only 60,000 people. Strange 'planned' city with huge spaces between buildings, ridiculously wide streets, and everything out of normal proportion." —tpatmaho IL: "Driving through there was like going through a town in the Walking Dead. No people around, all the buildings are decrepit and worn down." —ArguingPizza NV: "It's a semi-ghost town and remnants from the old west. Time seems to stand still there in that old mining town." —g6paulson Outer Banks, NC: "They felt surreal to too flat." —manicpixidreamgirl04 "The Outer Banks in the winter feels like they are lost in time and space, it's VERY eerie." —StrangePondWoman CA: "I had to drive through it in the dead of night due to a bad accident closing part of the 15 freeway on the way to Vegas. It looks like something out of a bad '80s horror movie." —Additional-Software4 finally, New Orleans, LA: "The entire city has an ethereal vibe and it just feels haunted. Lots of creepy and unexplained events have happened there throughout history and people go a little wild there (in my opinion). I personally love the place, but I couldn't live there because it would make me mental after a while." —None Now it's your turn! Have you visited or passed through a town in the US that was so eerie, you won't ever forget it? Tell us about it in the comments or anonymous form below and you just might be featured in an upcoming BuzzFeed Community article. Also in Internet Finds: People Who Never Believed In The Supernatural Are Revealing What Made Them Change Their Minds, And I'm Terrified Also in Internet Finds: "The Job Is A Complete Joke": People Are Revealing Professions That Are Wayyyyy Too Respected, And I Want To Know If You Agree Also in Internet Finds: "It Was Driving Everyone Bonkers With Mystery": 49 Times The Internet Came Together To Identify Weird Items That Had Everyone Completely Stumped

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