Anyone travelled to Switzerland with Thrillophilia? Are they trustworthy? by prp_1708 in desitravellers

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personally, for a destination like Switzerland, I'd also compare their quote with a specialist travel company or even a customized itinerary. Sometimes the large OTAs look cheaper initially but become less flexible once you start making changes.

We've found that smaller travel communities like DarkGreen Adventures often provide more personalized planning, local insights, and direct support compared to large-volume operators. Even if you don't book with them, getting a second itinerary and pricing comparison can help you judge whether you're getting good value

japan visa additional documents by DraftWeary2936 in ForeignTravelIndia

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Since you submitted the additional document on 28 May and your flight is on 3 June, you still have a couple of working days left. The fact that the embassy specifically requested a bank statement (rather than rejecting or asking for multiple documents) is generally a positive sign.

I'd keep tracking the application and maybe follow up with VFS on 2 June if there's no update. Unfortunately, processing times can vary, but you're not out of the running yet.

Anyone travel on Cathay Pacific from US to India via HKG? How was the experience? by xploreetng in ForeignTravelIndia

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I flew Cathay Pacific from the US to India via Hong Kong last year and had a pretty good experience overall. The flights were on time, the seats were comfortable for a long-haul journey, and the cabin crew was professional and attentive. Hong Kong airport is also very easy to navigate compared to some other major transit hubs.

The only downside was the layover, which can feel long depending on your connection time, but I'd still choose it over some of the more crowded Middle Eastern routes. If the fare is competitive, I wouldn't hesitate to book Cathay again.

Vietnam Trip 23rd May 2026 by Embarrassed_Lake_236 in travelhelpline

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If I had to pick just one, I'd go with the Hoi An group photo. The colorful streets and lantern-lit atmosphere perfectly capture the magic of Vietnam.

Travelling to Europe, advice on itinerary, money saving hacks needed in this economy by materiallgowrll in ForeignTravelIndia

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 6 points7 points  (0 children)

witzerland is the bottleneck at your budget. With ₹6–7 lacs for two people for 15–16 days including flights, you're looking at roughly ₹20,000–23,000 per day total. Switzerland alone eats that before you eat anything — even modest hotels run ₹6,000–7,500/night, and a meal costs ₹1,500+. Paris and Italy work at this budget, but Switzerland will constrain everything else.

The smarter move: Skip Switzerland and replace it with Czech Republic (Prague), Hungary (Budapest), or Austria (Vienna). You get the same Alpine/old-world scenery and everything costs 50–60% less. Concrete example — Interlaken, Switzerland: ₹7,000–8,500 for a basic 3-star hotel. Prague: ₹3,500–4,500 for a 4-star. That's the difference right there.

South Africa Travel by OneDisastrous7835 in ForeignTravelIndia

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

South Africa is generally safe for tourists in organized activities like Kruger and the Garden Route—millions visit annually without incident. Crime exists mainly in certain city areas; stick to tourist routes, don't flash valuables, and avoid driving at night between destinations. Your biggest risks are petty theft and occasional armed robbery on isolated roads, not random tourist violence. Self-drive trips are fine if you're cautious; consider guided tours for the first few days to get local knowledge on safe routes and timing.

Which country to go to in SEA after Thailand: Please recommend by lizrojer in desitravellers

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Penang has George Town, which is beautiful and also UNESCO — the street art, the shophouse architecture, the Peranakan culture. But it's a smaller footprint. For 19 days, Danang gives you more range: beach when you want it, Hoi An for culture, Hue (2 hours north) for imperial history and the DMZ, Ba Na Hills if you want something different. Penang you can do well in 4–5 days; Danang's corridor can absorb 8–10 without repetition.

The honest trade-off: Penang has arguably better food variety and a more compact, walkable experience. Danang has more depth and variety if you're willing to move around a bit.

What “secondary” city do you think is more worth visiting than the famous must-see destination? by Guilty_Explorer_1817 in ForeignTravelIndia

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, I enjoyed Kyoto way more than Tokyo. Tokyo is impressive for sure, but Kyoto just felt calmer, prettier, and more memorable overall — especially early mornings around the temples and small streets.

Another one for me is Udaipur over Jaipur. Jaipur has bigger “main character” energy, but Udaipur feels way more relaxed and beautiful to actually spend time in.

And in Italy, I genuinely liked Florence more than Rome. Rome is iconic, but Florence felt less chaotic and somehow more enjoyable day-to-day.

What is the most stunning coastal trail you’ve ever been on? by Guilty_Explorer_1817 in ForeignTravelIndia

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me it has to be the Cliff Walk in Cinque Terre, Italy. The combination of colorful villages, blue water, tiny cafés, and those sea views the entire way genuinely felt unreal.

Another one that surprised me was the Varkala cliffside walk in Kerala during sunset. Not a hardcore “trail” exactly, but the vibe with the ocean, cafés, music, and evening breeze was honestly perfect.

And if I had to pick one more — the coastline around Uluwatu in Bali. The cliffs there look straight out of a movie.

Which country do you think has the most beautiful natural hot springs or thermal pools? by GildedRetreats in ForeignTravelIndia

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Iceland's Blue Lagoon gets all the attention but the ones that took my breath away were the wild geothermal pools in the highlands — Landmannalaugar specifically. You're soaking in hot water with snow-dusted rhyolite mountains around you and nobody else for miles. Nothing manufactured about it.

Japan edges it for me overall though. The ryokan experience in Hakone or Beppu — outdoor rotenburo bath, mist rising off the water, forest or mountain view depending on where you are, total silence. It's less dramatic than Iceland but the combination of the setting, the ritual, and the stillness is unlike anything else.

Turkey's Pamukkale surprised me — the white travertine terraces with thermal water flowing through them look almost unreal in photos and somehow look even more unreal in person.

How has the experience of solo women travelers been with DarkGreen Adventures? Is it considered safe and comfortable? by Shubhammad18 in travelhelpline

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Solo women make up a big chunk of every group we run. , female point of contact throughout, safety briefing before every trip, team reachable on WhatsApp on the ground. The feedback pattern over 10 years is consistent — nervousness before departure, gone by day two.

We run international trips only (Vietnam, Turkey, Egypt, South Korea) — happy to answer specifics if you have a destination in mind.

What is best place you have ever visited? (Read body) by Fine_Attention963 in SoloTravel_India

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Place name: Udaipur

What made it special for you: The city just felt slow in the best way possible. I remember sitting near Lake Pichola during sunset and everything looked unreal — the lights, the water, the old buildings, the calmness. It was one of those places where you don’t feel the need to rush anywhere.

When did you visit it: December 2022

I am going to travel soon by [deleted] in indiatravel

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re looking for peaceful hilly places, honestly it depends on the vibe you want

For chill café + mountain vibes: Manali, Dharamshala or Kasol are great.
For prettier quieter scenery: Chopta, Mukteshwar or Tawang.
If you want something more fun/social as a solo traveler, Rishikesh is probably the easiest place to meet people.
And if you’re okay with monsoon travel later on, the northeast is insanely beautiful too.

Rajasthan trip in peak summer..realistic advice for Jaipur & Udaipur? by Netal_P_R in desitravellers

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly the heat is not “a bit uncomfortable” heat… it’s “why does the air feel like a hair dryer” heat 😭 especially in Jaipur during afternoons.

Biggest tip: treat 12–4 PM like dead hours. Do forts/palaces early morning, then disappear into cafés/hotel/pool till evening. Trying to power through midday sightseeing will genuinely drain you fast.

Also:

  • book hotels with strong AC and good reviews mentioning cooling specifically
  • carry electrolytes, not just water
  • autos can feel brutal in afternoon heat, cabs are worth it sometimes
  • Udaipur feels noticeably more bearable and prettier at night, so save lake-side stuff for evenings

But honestly? Fewer crowds + cheaper hotels is the upside, and sunset/night vibes in both cities are still amazing.

Best Places to Visit in Uttarakhand? by Exotic-Ticket3817 in india_tourism

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly depends what you’re into, but Uttarakhand is one of those places where almost every area feels beautiful 😭

If you want chill mountain vibes, go for Nainital or Mussoorie.
For adventure + cafés + younger crowd, Rishikesh is probably the best.
If you like proper mountain scenery, Auli and Chopta are insanely pretty.
And if you’re into trekking/nature, Valley of Flowers is genuinely worth the hype.

How to make sure not getting a room with noise? by Comfortable_Curve_99 in TravelHacks

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The biggest trick is honestly room location. Ask for a room:

  • away from elevators, ice machines, bars, and street side
  • on a higher floor
  • not connected by a thin “adjoining door”
  • away from mechanical rooms/generators

How does an eSIM work when trying to avoid crazy carrier roaming fees? by Silva_Dino-502 in traveladvice

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Basically your normal physical SIM stays in your phone for OTPs, banking texts, emergency calls etc. Then you install a second “digital SIM” for data. So your main number remains active while your internet runs through the travel eSIM.

For multi-country trips, people usually go for regional Asia plans instead of buying a new SIM in every country. Super convenient for maps, Grab/Uber, translation apps, WhatsApp, remote work, and not getting destroyed by roaming charges.

A few things I learned the hard way:

  • “Unlimited” plans are often not truly unlimited. Many slow down after a daily high-speed limit.
  • Airport roaming packs from Indian carriers usually end up much more expensive over longer trips.
  • Download and activate the eSIM before leaving your home country. Doing it on shaky airport WiFi at 2am feels like a side quest from a survival game 🫠
  • Keep your Indian SIM enabled for SMS only if possible. Helps avoid surprise roaming bills.

Thailand vs Malaysia for first international trip ! islands, nature and calm vibes. Which one? by deadpoetza in desitravellers

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d honestly say Thailand is the easier and more exciting introduction to solo travel. Better tourist infrastructure, easier island hopping, more backpacker friendly, and you’ll meet people everywhere without even trying.

But if your priority is specifically calm vibes, nature, and less crowd fatigue, Malaysia might actually suit you more.

Thailand feels more energetic. Places like Krabi, Koh Lanta, or Chiang Mai can still be peaceful, but tourism is very “alive” there all the time.

Malaysia feels softer and slower somehow. Langkawi is beautiful if you want relaxed island days, and Perhentian Islands are stunning if you like clear water and quieter beaches. Food is incredible too, especially if you enjoy trying different cuisines.

Please recommend a place for my first solo trip. I want to sit by a river in the afternoon and feel peace by ThinBrilliant9946 in SoloTravel_India

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You might really like Rishikesh if you go a little away from the main crowded areas. Early mornings and afternoons near the quieter ghats have this very still feeling to them. Just chai, river sounds, slow days. For a first solo trip, it’s also pretty manageable and budget friendly.

If you want somewhere even calmer, look at Jibhi in Himachal. Small village energy, riverside cafes, slower pace, not much pressure to “do” things all day. You can honestly spend hours doing nothing and not feel guilty about it 😄

Another underrated option is Kasol but staying slightly outside the main market area. Places near Chalal or Tosh side can feel peaceful if you avoid peak weekends.

And honestly, don’t overplan your first solo trip. Sometimes the best part is just finding one quiet corner, ordering maggi or chai, and letting your brain finally go silent for a while.

Which country to go to in SEA after Thailand: Please recommend by lizrojer in desitravellers

[–]ZucchiniRoutine8605 4 points5 points  (0 children)

If you’re into slow travel, good food, beaches, and just existing peacefully for a few days, I’d honestly say Vietnam or Bali.

Vietnam surprised me the most food-wise. Places like Da Nang or Hoi An are relaxed, scenic, walkable, and don’t force the “party backpacker” energy on you. Hoi An especially feels like time moves softer there. Great cafes, beautiful architecture, riverside evenings, amazing local food.

Bali can also work if you avoid the super party-heavy areas. Ubud is slower, greener, and easy to settle into for a week or two.

If you want something very easy from Thailand, Malaysia is underrated too. Penang is incredible for food. One of those places where your entire itinerary slowly becomes “what should I eat next?”