Comments on: Overtourism: How You Can Help Solve This Worldwide Problem https://www.nomadicmatt.com/travel-blogs/overtourism-solutions/ Travel Better, Cheaper, Longer Wed, 10 Jul 2024 14:41:19 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 By: James https://www.nomadicmatt.com/travel-blogs/overtourism-solutions/#comment-1766488 Sun, 26 Sep 2021 10:58:40 +0000 https://www.nomadicmatt.com/?p=142272#comment-1766488 This blog has changed quite a lot, for good, since the old days in which it recommended having some fun tubbing in Vang Vieng, one of the most pathetic activity backpackers have ever done in a small local town.

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By: Robert G https://www.nomadicmatt.com/travel-blogs/overtourism-solutions/#comment-1505579 Wed, 01 Apr 2020 08:21:44 +0000 https://www.nomadicmatt.com/?p=142272#comment-1505579 Great minds think alike, i have friends who go only where the trend is to go, to take their photos under that specific waterfall etc. This is as you mentioned an effect from social media, i don’t get it, why does some want to look like a product ad? I hope for the future that travel will go back to where it where at latest mid 2000. I do really hope as many others, that covid19 will change the world to a more calm and peaceful world.

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By: stewart parkinson https://www.nomadicmatt.com/travel-blogs/overtourism-solutions/#comment-1415245 Wed, 23 Oct 2019 09:15:32 +0000 https://www.nomadicmatt.com/?p=142272#comment-1415245 This is a really vexed issue with no easy solution. I recently returned from a cruise trip , Hongkong & Japan.
Yes, I experienced the shore excursions, together with the other 3800 passengers , and the destinations were totally swamped by tourists. Nevertheless I still enjoyed the trip and dont feel at all guilty .
I appreciate the opportunity to travel in this manner . It is affordable and permits me to observe life elsewhere in the world away from home.
I would not consider going anywhere that has turned hostile or unwelcoming towards mass tourism.
Each destination has to determine its own policies towards mass tourism and strike the balance between the the benifits and undesirable consequences.

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By: Jennifer Melgar https://www.nomadicmatt.com/travel-blogs/overtourism-solutions/#comment-1403245 Tue, 24 Sep 2019 18:42:15 +0000 https://www.nomadicmatt.com/?p=142272#comment-1403245 Thanks so much Matt for writing about this topic! It’s true that a lot of people have realized that travel is attainable (thanks to Instagram). Heck, I learned the exact same thing from your blogs and books! I got the travel bug and learned tips that made my travels more affordable. However, it makes me sad that these destinations that were considered special and once in a lifetime experiences, have become mere shells of what they once were. Tourist have turned these destinations into amusement parks thanks to social media. Social media in general has made travel destinations more like a “selfie bucket list”. We all need to take responsibility to conserve the world and respect the locals.

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By: Freddie https://www.nomadicmatt.com/travel-blogs/overtourism-solutions/#comment-1221429 Thu, 25 Oct 2018 15:58:27 +0000 https://www.nomadicmatt.com/?p=142272#comment-1221429 Found your article when researching on the growth in tourism: This is definitely a problem that is only going to increase in the coming years. I think that the starting point when trying to address the issue has to be how does one attract “a quality” tourist – that is a visitor who will contribute to the local economy, whilst at the same time being respectful of the fact that they are visitors who are getting a glimpse for a short period of time someone else’s culture and way of life. How can they enjoy their stay without impeding the local’s way of life?

Inevitably solutions are going to come first and foremost from local councils and mayors that run a particular city or site – and these changes will come at the request of local residents. Be it banning airbnb, avoiding cruise ships, and what would likely be an unpopular move amongst tourists – putting up prices in order to detract lower spending tourists.

That could mean an increased city tax rate when staying in a hotel, or an increase in prices for attractions fees and public transportation. We are starting to see more and more the creation of a double set of prices, one for local residents and another set for incoming visitors, and this will become more and more widespread.

The end result will be that, although you might continue to find low-cost airfares to a particular destination, the overall vacation spend-cost will substantially increase.

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By: Luis https://www.nomadicmatt.com/travel-blogs/overtourism-solutions/#comment-1217528 Tue, 16 Oct 2018 15:00:42 +0000 https://www.nomadicmatt.com/?p=142272#comment-1217528 I can really relate to this topic as I’ve seen myself in this situation lots of times. I consider myself a well travelled person for someone my age, and every time I travel somewhere I realise that the destination where I travelled to, is much more beautiful on photos and movies, because wherever I turn my head to all I can see is tourists!!! And not in a good way, like contributing to local businesses and such, but instead, being disrespectful and loud and littering the place! As I’ve seen in France, Italy, Spain, the UK and even my home-country Portugal, many foreigners walk around like they own the place and pay more attention to what they post on social media than actually what they are visiting, and I really think that’s a shame. Another problem that comes with over tourism that I’ve experienced is the dangers tourists are willing to take when trying to take an easier/cheaper route. For example: there’s a beach in Portugal famous for its 30-meter waves (Nazaré), with a huge cliff as well, and I’ve seen people risking their safety, standing on the edge of that same cliff, just so they don’t have to wait in line to take a photo from the safe standing area, and as they did so more and more people started doing the same even after warned by the locals that the waves could drag them from there!

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By: Amund https://www.nomadicmatt.com/travel-blogs/overtourism-solutions/#comment-1216640 Mon, 15 Oct 2018 04:35:50 +0000 https://www.nomadicmatt.com/?p=142272#comment-1216640 Found your blog when I was doing research on an article about sustainable tourism. First of all I have to say that the topic is extremely important, and most travel bloggers do not tell this story. I guess it won’t fit into your narrative if you only write about how good it is to lay on the beach in Ibiza every week.

It is not more than 3 years ago I was in Barcelona and I can just say: no charm. No charm at all. Dubrovnik…more or less the same. It has gone so far that the local inhabitants are furious for all the tourists, and that puts the local government in an incredible awkward position. Should they limit tourism and earn less money?

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By: Hannah https://www.nomadicmatt.com/travel-blogs/overtourism-solutions/#comment-1215784 Fri, 12 Oct 2018 08:48:15 +0000 https://www.nomadicmatt.com/?p=142272#comment-1215784 This topic definitely needs more time in the spotlight. Over tourism, like you say has begun to take the shine of certain destinations through no fault of our own. For example, a line kilometres long to enter the Vatican City in European summer is beginning to get out of hand. We all want to travel and see new places right? Our equal rights allow us to make these decisions for ourselves when we see a new exciting place.

I don’t believe social media or the internet is fully to blame for over tourism, but as you suggested people see real people doing amazing things, not celebrities, and they want a piece for themselves, who can blame them? It’s my belief that going travelling for the photo game, is the wrong idea of what travel should be about. Immersing yourself in culture is great, shared on the internet or not! It has just become a shame that there seems to be a lack of respect for the people running the tourism industries in these over crowded places, as well as for the locals living there. Here’s hoping that creating conversation about this important topic will one day create a difference.

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By: Sirena https://www.nomadicmatt.com/travel-blogs/overtourism-solutions/#comment-1212462 Thu, 04 Oct 2018 03:04:56 +0000 https://www.nomadicmatt.com/?p=142272#comment-1212462 Let’s just play out a scenario and then you can tell me that you don’t have a “Nomadic Matt” effect…because you do. Just accept it. You make money “inspiring” people (more like selling people) to travel. To travel cheaply. To put themselves in hostels, where yes that’s where the parties and disruptiveness normally begin.

People who can travel, even if they spend only $50/day and live in hostels or couch-surf are still privileged. I don’t care if you managed to pay off all your college debt by some miraculous reason (mommy+daddy), I don’t care if you then worked a minimum to medium wage job for a few years to save 20,000 to travel the world for a year or longer. You traveled and you are privileged. There are so many people who cannot do this, and I don’t mean lazy or unmotivated people, or people not willing to give up their Starbucks coffee to save for a trip. I mean people who are so dirt poor, they are working three jobs just to make ends meet and feed their families and hardly get to see their kids at night because they have to work so late. These people are not privileged.

So you inspire someone to save their disposable cash for a long time and then quit their “boring” day job and travel the world. You write blog posts about destinations and they see them and they add those destinations to their list. YOU are creating this. Then they go there and they are feeling oh-so-free and can do whatever they want. They are not working. They are “living” and You Only Live Once, so why not do it big in that destination. Why not have 10 tequila shots, they are after all, half the price of what you would pay at home. Why not yell in the streets and wake the sleeping workers. You don’t live there. You don’t care. You can do whatever you want. You saved the money and are on this trip and making it the time of your life. Because it’s freedom! but it turns out in the end, when the trip is over, it isn’t freedom. It’s “back to reality”

You see, you don’t think you have a Nomadic Matt effect, but you do. All of the large travel blogs do. Legal Nomads, Gary, Brooke, The Blonde Abroad, etc, etc, etc. You were probably one of the first…Not even 1/4 of the people would have known about these places if you hadn’t posted or written about it. A lot of people might not even think about going to some of the destinations if you hadn’t shown it to them. You have inspired thousands if not millions of privileged people with spare cash to travel to all the destinations that you have shown them. And privileged people typically have been sold on this idea that when you travel or vacation, you are living in a fantasy world, far far away from “real life” and you can do whatever you please. Heed every whim and fancy you have.

You have had your part in ruining those destinations and don’t you dare tell me you haven’t. You sent thousands of people there. You added to that. You and every other travel blogger out there. It’s so sad and hypocritical to see you writing about this overtourism movement that has started and will keep going. And I hope it does. I hope that other countries disallow Westerners altogether from entering the country. After all, what have we done for them? Nothing except destroy their economy and treated their environment like our playground, our trashcan, our toilet. Our governments have spilled blood to ensure that the routes of trade, military, and people are kept open to benefit their pockets and keep their citizens thinking they are satisfied.

If you do one thing, just accept who you are and what this blog is and what it does. Just be honest. And don’t insult people by writing against something that you helped get worse…

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By: Dan https://www.nomadicmatt.com/travel-blogs/overtourism-solutions/#comment-1210861 Fri, 28 Sep 2018 19:04:01 +0000 https://www.nomadicmatt.com/?p=142272#comment-1210861 In reply to Dan.

You really think that limiting the amount of cruise ships from 8 to 4 per day and banning short term rentals is going to fix this problem. Let’s take Barcelona for example, it’s not going to make a lick of difference to the summer crowds. You are just regurgitating nonsense that is being proposed by local politicians trying to appease the masses. Those same politicians are too greedy to turn away the tax revenue from mass tourism. Sure they’ll turn a way a few here and there, but it’s not going to change the atmosphere much. I really wish you could fix over tourism by just “trying”, but I think the solutions outlined here have been short sighted.

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