Worst Bus Journey, Horror - Bus Style |
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| zzz_Nick |
Oct 28 2005, 12:43 AM
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Worst for me has to be that 100 baht bus from Bangkok to Siem Reap! There was such a lot of people on my bus that they breathed all the air and i nearly pased out!!!!!
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| askthevagabond |
Dec 8 2005, 12:56 AM
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Unregistered

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Pakisatan-Skardu to Pindi about two days to go the 470-km and counting the trucks and buses that went over the side.
Kashmir/Ladakh-Srinagar to Leh via Kargil....watching army mine sweeper get out of the way as the bus headed on, signs saying "you are now entering shelling range" or "the enemy is watching", oh yeah and shelled out houses in kargil. Two days 434-km Srinagar-Leh highway.
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| katieontherun |
Dec 8 2005, 03:12 PM
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QUOTE(meercatvinny @ Oct 28 2005, 01:03 AM)  The overnight "sleeper" bus from Yangshou to Guanzhou in China. I don't know why they call it a "sleeper" because you will not sleep. The bus is deceptively welcoming at first, as it is looks very modern and comfy. But believe me its not too long before you come to realise that this is the most uncomfortable, squashed, noisy and downright infuriating overnight bus journey you will ever take. Period. You've gotta try it!!
That's interesting, I'd like to hear more about that one. I was in Yangshuo and took the bus to there from Shenzhen. It was OK one way, but on the way back, total agreement, what a horror trip. The 'bed' was used, the sheets were used. It felt like sleeping in someone else's bed. YUCK!
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Katharina
www.travelpod.com/members/katieontherun
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| technotrekker |
Jan 21 2006, 04:26 PM
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QUOTE(katieontherun @ Dec 8 2005, 03:12 PM)  QUOTE(meercatvinny @ Oct 28 2005, 01:03 AM)  The overnight "sleeper" bus from Yangshou to Guanzhou in China. I don't know why they call it a "sleeper" because you will not sleep. The bus is deceptively welcoming at first, as it is looks very modern and comfy. But believe me its not too long before you come to realise that this is the most uncomfortable, squashed, noisy and downright infuriating overnight bus journey you will ever take. Period. You've gotta try it!!
That's interesting, I'd like to hear more about that one. I was in Yangshuo and took the bus to there from Shenzhen. It was OK one way, but on the way back, total agreement, what a horror trip. The 'bed' was used, the sheets were used. It felt like sleeping in someone else's bed. YUCK! I did one from Nanning to Guangzhou overnight - it was the best bus ride I'd ever had as I slept like a baby the whole way through and woke up being ushered off in GZ. Sweet! My worst ride was from the Lao border to Phnom Phen - meant to be around 10 hours, it ended up being 24 with a broken drive shaft (repaired on the roadside) and two flat tyres (the last only 10km ouside of PP but with no spare tyre left *sob*). I'm sure there's worse but that was pretty bad... TT
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Overland from Sydney to Scotland - via a wintry Siberia! Photoblog here.
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| Barrett |
Feb 9 2006, 11:15 PM
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Oh Good Lord, the worst bus trip, how to choose? One that stands out in my mind for sheer length and suckiness is the 28 hour ride from Vientiane Laos to Hanoi Vietnam. Terrible bus, whining and barking puppies stuffed into plastic buckets, treacherous roads, itty-bitty seats, breakdowns, and rip-off restaurants along the way. Argh. So a bit of advice: FLY! Pay the extra 50 bucks, save time and your backside. Of course, my partner Tina would vote for the buses in central India which are brutal in their own special sub-continental way.
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| Jessica_CDN |
Feb 17 2006, 03:34 PM
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Well, it's not a bus, but the 24 hour train ride from Budapest to Greece, through Romania and Bulgaria. I got on the train not actually realizing it was a 24 hour ride (yes, my fault...). So I wasn't really prepared. I got to my seat...small little compartment with five other people, none of whom spoke English, and one who slept on me for the first part of the trip. The windows didn't open, so it just got hotter and hotter in our little compartment. The washroom was similar in standard to the one that Carmella described, and they didn't sell anything to eat or drink on the trip at all. By about hour 10, I was going a little stir crazy...then they kicked me out of first class. haha. Did not even occur to me that I was sitting in first class.
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| Izzie |
Feb 17 2006, 10:25 PM
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For me it's gotta be the nightmare 26+ hour on a truck from Moyale (border town between Ethiopia and Kenya) to Nairobi. No tarmac until Isiolo and from there it ain't that great either. Through Northern Kenya the road is murram (rutted gravel with washboard bumps) and driving over these is so bad that your brain rattles and you have to yell to be heard over the noise, even when speaking in the ear of the person next to you. Bigger bumps mean you get thrown toward the ceiling with no warning. This is shifta (bandit) territory and it's a flat, dry, hot nothingness. We broke down and when we got out we really appreciated how hard it is to eak a living there. We drove through the night, and for one stretch we left the 'road' completely - our pathetic headlights illuminating bushes and rocks and big gullies as we drove between them all at speed. Very scary.
It just went on and on, our bones hurting and our hands aching from gripping the vibrating bar of the seat in front. Sleep was impossible and it got cold during the night. The window wouldn't completely shut so we were blasted by cold air laden with dust until we we coated. We were coughing up red dust for days after.
The worst thing was all the police/army roadblocks where men with AK-47s got on and demanded 'chai' or a bribe from every Ethiopian on board for having "out of date" yellow fever certificates. This was not the case - we looked at the certificates and they were fine - valid for 10 years. They left the Kenyan passengers and us two travellers alone. It was sickening.
We finally got to Nairobi to find that the guy sat on the roof had helped himself to some of our bag contents. Also, after that long hard trip, negotiating Nairobi was difficult, since you have to be alert the moment you get off.
All in all I think of it as an experience. But next time I'd fly!
Izzie
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Check out my travel podAsia 2004 - Bangkok to Bali Africa 2005 - Ethiopia to South Africa on public transport India 2007 - Himalayas India 2008 - Remote north-east India 2009 - professional nomadic-ness beckons!
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| matto |
Aug 13 2006, 05:06 PM
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Y'all are missing a fantastic mode of transportation here, the shared taxi. It's not a bus ride, but I recommend the shared taxi ride between Laayoune and Dakhla in Morocco/Western Sahara. There wasn't a bus leaving for three days so I bought 1/2 of the front passenger seat on an ancient mercedes and had a GREAT 7 hour ride through the desert. Oh and it was during ramadan too. Truly horrible.
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| claus-ragnarok |
Aug 13 2006, 05:23 PM
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Unregistered

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You have all just experienced bussrides that people in these parts of the world have to use dayly, monthly, yearly, and you are probably already aware of that you are in a country less developed than your own. That this is part of your adventure. Think about what you learn from it, how lucky you are, instead of whining about everything that is not comfortable to YOU! Or...just choose not to go anywhere, because you are bound to meet different means of everything outside your fantastic country anyway, thats your gift, the gift of choice!
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| matto |
Aug 25 2006, 02:15 PM
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I think your missing the point, of course it was a great experience and I'll bet everyone but Egypt toilet train at least got a kick out of it. But it wasn't like my experience was hard because I'm a stupid westerner who is used to better things, the people who shared that taxi (all locals) with me had a horrible time of it as well. It was a true testament to their faith (and my stubborness to not look like an ass) that none of us drank any water on that trip. This is not whining, I'm looking back and thinking damn, that was cool, but I wont repeat it, next time I will pay a few more bucks and upgrade. To say that we are all just focusing on how much it bothered us is missing the point of sharing these experiences, it is just cool that all of us have had a nightmare traveling experience because traveling on the road in a lot of the world is REALLY DANGEROUS  and it is something that all of us have had to endure through and laugh about later. Just my opinion.
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| Izzie |
Sep 17 2006, 11:28 AM
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QUOTE(claus-ragnarok @ Aug 13 2006, 11:23 PM)  You have all just experienced bussrides that people in these parts of the world have to use dayly, monthly, yearly, and you are probably already aware of that you are in a country less developed than your own. That this is part of your adventure. Think about what you learn from it, how lucky you are, instead of whining about everything that is not comfortable to YOU! Or...just choose not to go anywhere, because you are bound to meet different means of everything outside your fantastic country anyway, thats your gift, the gift of choice!
Well, in my account I mentioned that it was an 'experience' so I'm certainly not whining that it was awful and that I wish I'd never done it. It was a great experience. And we are all aware that the bad things are something the locals have to endure on a daily/weekly basis. Telling others of my trip through Northern Kenya is letting them know about the corruption we witnessed there - I think it is important to tell of things like this so MORE people are aware of how the majority of the world live. Besides, this thread is really just a lighthearted delve into those 'travellers tales' we all come home with - none of us are slagging the countries off or warning people not to go there. Thanks for taking the time to chastise us....
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Check out my travel podAsia 2004 - Bangkok to Bali Africa 2005 - Ethiopia to South Africa on public transport India 2007 - Himalayas India 2008 - Remote north-east India 2009 - professional nomadic-ness beckons!
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