"Plitvice National Park in Croatia was a disappointment. I expected a stunning natural wonder, and hoped it would be a little crowded on a random Monday in September (not peak season, not a weekend). The reality: a perfectly pleasant national park that was absolutely jam-packed with the world's pushiest, screaming, selfish visitors. I was basically trapped on a boardwalk shuffling along desperately just trying to get a space to see the waterfalls."
Absolutely true, especially if you day-trip. You have to be prepared for itr, and remember that Venice was a tourist town 600 years ago. If you want to get a better feel for it you have to stay over night. The whole vibe changes after the last train leaves in the evening. Still, it is extremely expensive to stay and eat there.
As negative as this sounds... I live in a tourist city in Alaska and ANYONE that goes to a "famous" destination is obviously gonna have OTHER tourists that also know of its fame. Tourist places make their living off selling extras, making mass food, and having thousands of people each day go through tiny locations. Best option, see what you can while you can and accept anything as an experience even if its not the one you fantisized.
In lots of these places locals need tourism to live. Can't blame the for advertising it with great pictures.
What country? They never said whwre they were from, only their USA tourist experience.
#18 Hear hear!!
Also, look into what else is there . E.G. Prague was home to Kepler, Einstein, Dvorak, Doppler, Kafka - visit (the front of) their homes and drink beer at their favorite bars. Mozart premiered Don Giovanni here, etc. Every place has its charms.
In Iceland we also skipped the BlueLagoon and we at smaller thermal springs.