TRAVEL BLOG
Friday, January 04, 2008
When can you say you've been to a country?
Can you say you have been to a country if you only spent a few hours in one of its cities? Changing planes at international airports doesn't count (of course), but what about a weekend or day trip to one place? Technically you can, but do you?
I was thinking about this question when filling in one of those where have you been maps that you might have seen doing the rounds on Facebook and Myspace.
I had a go at one of these maps when someone sent me a link, and I found that large countries lit up because I had been to one of its cities. I felt like a British colonialist shading when they used to shade the world map red.
I wasn't going to publish mine but then I thought I should just to illustrate this train of thought. This is the map of the world of the countries that I've technically been to. (This map of Visited Countries by VirtualTourist).

Notice how all of Turkey is coloured in. I did a day trip from Rhodes in Greece to Marmaris in Turkey. Marmaris is an expat enclave and the 4 hours I was there didn't really feel like Turkey.
I once spent a weekend in Mexico at Puerto Penasco (Rocky Point), about 60 miles from the US border on the Gulf of California. I went with some friends from Arizona. Rocky Point is a beach resort town and it is the closest beach to Phoenix. I didn't feel like I was in Mexico (except for those mariachi buskers with the oversized hats) and back then you didn't even need a passport to go there. So when I'm asked if I have been to Mexico I usually say no. I guess you could say I've been there, but I haven't done it.
I have been to the capitals of every Scandinavian country but I have never seen the Fjords of Norway or the Wilderness of Lapland, so I don't usually say I've been to Norway or Sweden either. I have though beaten myself with birch branches in a sauna in a small town in Finland, so I don't beat myself up about that one and proclaim Finland as done.
With these sort of maps at least they break down the states and territories of the US and Canada. Even so, some of these areas can be vast. The territory of Ontario has been lit up on my map because of a weekend I spent, mostly indoors, at a convention in Toronto.
I have lived in a few different countries and I have found my preference is to base myself in one place and get to know a country. I feel confident in saying that I have done England, Ireland, Switzerland and Hungary.
Australia is my home country so I have to say I've been there but so far I have only done the East Coast.
I was thinking about this question when filling in one of those where have you been maps that you might have seen doing the rounds on Facebook and Myspace.
I had a go at one of these maps when someone sent me a link, and I found that large countries lit up because I had been to one of its cities. I felt like a British colonialist shading when they used to shade the world map red.
I wasn't going to publish mine but then I thought I should just to illustrate this train of thought. This is the map of the world of the countries that I've technically been to. (This map of Visited Countries by VirtualTourist).

Notice how all of Turkey is coloured in. I did a day trip from Rhodes in Greece to Marmaris in Turkey. Marmaris is an expat enclave and the 4 hours I was there didn't really feel like Turkey.
I once spent a weekend in Mexico at Puerto Penasco (Rocky Point), about 60 miles from the US border on the Gulf of California. I went with some friends from Arizona. Rocky Point is a beach resort town and it is the closest beach to Phoenix. I didn't feel like I was in Mexico (except for those mariachi buskers with the oversized hats) and back then you didn't even need a passport to go there. So when I'm asked if I have been to Mexico I usually say no. I guess you could say I've been there, but I haven't done it.
I have been to the capitals of every Scandinavian country but I have never seen the Fjords of Norway or the Wilderness of Lapland, so I don't usually say I've been to Norway or Sweden either. I have though beaten myself with birch branches in a sauna in a small town in Finland, so I don't beat myself up about that one and proclaim Finland as done.
With these sort of maps at least they break down the states and territories of the US and Canada. Even so, some of these areas can be vast. The territory of Ontario has been lit up on my map because of a weekend I spent, mostly indoors, at a convention in Toronto.
I have lived in a few different countries and I have found my preference is to base myself in one place and get to know a country. I feel confident in saying that I have done England, Ireland, Switzerland and Hungary.
Australia is my home country so I have to say I've been there but so far I have only done the East Coast.
Labels: country, international travel, maps
Posted by James Clark - editor of itravelnet.com
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