Overhyped Countries
In over-hyped countries a new, starry-eyed tourist is a sheep ready for slaughter. He is a target for con games, rip offs and even open scorn. Many people there are getting sick and tired of so many insolent foreigners coming in and buying up their land and taking their women.
However, when people start making bad comments and wry faces about my next trip to Slovakia or Uruguay or Cameroon, instead of Thailand or Kenya, then I know that I am on the right track. The best country is the one that is never in the news, good or bad. Robert Frost once recommended that we take the road "less traveled by". I prefer to stick with his advice. I will find people there who will not see me as just another foreign face to be ripped off, where women will be conservative, where traditions hold strong and where I can have genuine friends who will invite me to their house because they just want to socialize and not because they want to sell me a condo.
The "Good Life" section in the "Newsweek" this week featured 3-4 bedroom luxury villas in the Bahamas that rent for $4500 a night. There was also an article about some luxury resort in Phuket. I am sure that rooms there would be within the same price range. However, a 6-bedroom villa in Oman costs some $360 a month from September to July, the beaches are just as great and the scenery is breathtaking. Oman is a safe and modern country but no one knows about such cheap villas in Salalah, Oman. Many people have never even heard of Oman. So, they keep going to such overhyped destinations, or worse, they will not go anywhere thinking that it may be out of their reach. Those who are in the know will go where they can have a good life at the fraction of the cost. Being rich does not always mean that you have a lot of money. It can mean that you have enough money to get the goodies you want .And if you know where you can get them cheap and live a luxury lifestyle at a fraction of the cost, then you are by all means, rich. Because you are smart.
A European vacation can cost you a pretty penny, too. And if you decide to spend a summer in Europe, it may turn out to be very expensive. So, why not head to Uruguay? Uruguay is for all intents and purposes 'Europe'. The architecture is a mixture of French, Spanish, Italian and other classical styles. The people are a mixture of various Europeans. The beaches are great and all services are available. And it is three times cheaper than the US. But people do not know about Uruguay. Who goes to Montevideo on vacation? Not many.
It is also worthy of being noted here that very often a bad rap that a country gets in the news serves as a protection for that country from the hordes of boorish tourists. Colombia and Philippines come to mind. These two countries are quite peaceful and the people are great, however, there are critical areas where foreigners ( or even locals) should not go to. If one knows safe places in these lands and stays there, one will have a much better time socially than if one went to a much-lauded destination such as Hawaii or Hong Kong where one will often be a nobody.
Often one can take advantage of very cheap deals in countries that suffer from a bad reputation because they are located in a dangerous part of the world. While there is a war in Iraq or terrorist attacks in Saudi Arabia, it affects the whole region as now people do not wish to travel to the Middle East, period. But Dubai is safe and modern. So is Abu Dhabi. So is Oman. But these get painted by the same brush because they fall within the miuch broader category of "Arab countries".
When there is starvation in Ethiopia or disturbances in South Africa, people do not want to go to Gabon or Senegal which are safe and peaceful countries. Those Americans who think that Mexico is too "third world" for them, refuse to go to Buenos Aires, Argentina, believing that it must be just like Mexico. They speak Spanish, don't they?
So, ignorance in the field of geography and a distorted view of the world, coupled with tourist and investment propaganda that people are being bombarded with at travel agencies and from the press, keeps millions from enjoying a luxury lifestyle for very little money. Something they could do if they only knew where to look.

