In previous lists we have looked at amazing holiday destinations – today we are looking at the bottom ten; these are ten places you don’t want to visit! Having said that, maybe the curious would get a thrill from visiting some of these strange and dangerous places, but for most of us, reading about it is quite enough. Feel free to mention any other contenders for the list in the comments.
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch, also described as the Pacific Trash Vortex, is a gyre of marine litter in the central North Pacific Ocean located roughly between 135° to 155°W and 35° to 42°N. Most current estimates state that it is larger than the U.S. state of Texas, with some estimates claiming that it is larger than the continental United States, however the exact size is not known for sure. The Patch is characterized by exceptionally high concentrations of pelagic plastics, chemical sludge, and other debris that have been trapped by the currents of the North Pacific Gyre. The patch is not easily visible because it consists of very small pieces, almost invisible to the naked eye, most of its contents are suspended beneath the surface of the ocean. This is not a place the average Joe would want to visit.
The Izu Islands are a group of volcanic islands stretching south and east from the Izu Peninsula of Honshū, Japan. Administratively, they form two towns and six villages; all part of Tokyo. The largest is Izu Ōshima, usually called simply Ōshima. Because of their volcanic nature, the islands are constantly filled with the stench of sulfur (extremely similar to the smell of thousands of farts). Residents were evacuated from the islands in 1953 and 2000 due to volcanic activity and dangerously high levels of gas. The people returned in 2005 but are now required to carry gas masks with them at all times in case gas levels rise unexpectedly.
Address: Derweze, Turkmenistan
This has featured on listverse before, but it would be remiss of us to exclude it from this list. While drilling in Derweze in Turkmenistan in 1971, geologists accidentally found an underground cavern filled with natural gas. The ground beneath the drilling rig collapsed, leaving a large hole with a diameter of about 50-100 meters. To avoid poisonous gas discharge, scientists decided to set fire to the hole. Geologists had hoped the fire would go out in a few days but it has been burning ever since. Locals have named the cavern The Door to Hell. As you can see from the picture above, it is one hell of an amazing place, but certainly one you wouldn’t want to visit.
Address: Denwick Lane, Alnwick, NE66 1YU, England
Inspired by the Botanical Gardens in Padua, Italy (the first botanical garden which was created to grow medicinal and poisonous plants in the 1500s), the Alnwick Poison Garden is a garden devoted entirely to plants that can kill. It features many plants grown unwittingly in back gardens, and those that grow in the British countryside, as well as many more unusual varieties. Flame-shaped beds contain belladonna, tobacco and mandrake. The Alnwick Garden has a Home Office license to grow some very special plants; namely, cannabis and coca which are found behind bars in giant cages – for obvious reasons.
Address: Thetford-Mines, Quebec, Canada
Asbestos is a set of six naturally occurring silicate minerals highly prized for their resistance to fire and sound absorption abilities. On the downside, exposure to this stuff causes cancer and a variety of other diseases. It is so dangerous that the European Union has banned all mining and use of asbestos in Europe. But, for those curious enough to want to get close to the stuff, all is not lost. In Canada at the Thetford Mines, you can visit an enormous open pit asbestos mine which is still fully operational. The workers in the mines aren’t required to wear any sort of respiratory protection, and in some sections of the nearby town, residential areas are butted right next up against piles of asbestos waste. The mine offers bus tours of the deadly environment during the summer months. Tickets are free (would you expect it to be any other way?). If you decide to visit, don’t forget your full body bio-hazard suit.
Ramree Island in Burma is a huge swamp home to 1000s of salt water enormous salt water crocodiles, the deadliest in the world. It is also home to malaria carrying mosquitos, and venomous scorpions. During the Second World War, the island was the site of a six week battle in the Burma campaign. Here is a description of one of those horrifying nights: “That night [of the 19 February 1945] was the most horrible that any member of the M.L. [motor launch] crews ever experienced. The scattered rifle shots in the pitch black swamp punctured by the screams of wounded men crushed in the jaws of huge reptiles, and the blurred worrying sound of spinning crocodiles made a cacophony of hell that has rarely been duplicated on earth. At dawn the vultures arrived to clean up what the crocodiles had left…Of about 1,000 Japanese soldiers that entered the swamps of Ramree, only about 20 were found alive.”
The North Yungas Road (Road of Death or Death Road) is a 61 kilometres (38 mi) or 69 kilometres (43 mi) road leading from La Paz to Coroico, 56 kilometres (35 mi) northeast of La Paz in the Yungas region of Bolivia. It is legendary for its extreme danger with estimates stating that 200 to 300 travelers are killed yearly along it. The road includes crosses marking many of the spots where vehicles have fallen. The road was built in the 1930s during the Chaco War by Paraguayan prisoners. It is one of the few routes that connects the Amazon rainforest region of northern Bolivia, or Yungas, to its capital city. Because of the extreme dropoffs of at least 600 metres (2,000 ft), single-lane width – most of the road no wider than 3.2 metres (10 ft) and lack of guard rails, the road is extremely dangerous. Further still, rain, fog and dust can make visibility precarious. In many places the road surface is muddy, and can loosen rocks from the road.
In the Spring of 2001, volcanic activity under the Caspian Sea off the Azeri coast created a whole new island. In October 2001 there was an impressive volcanic eruption in Azerbaijan at Lokbatan, but there were no casualties or evacuation warnings. But Azerbaijan does not have a single active volcano, at least not in the usual sense of the word. What Azerbaijan does have is mud volcanoes – hundreds of them. Mud volcanoes are the little-known relatives of the more common magmatic variety. They do erupt occasionally with spectacular results, but are generally not considered to be dangerous – unless you happen to be there at the wrong time: every twenty years or so, a mud volcano explodes with great force, shooting flames hundreds of meters into the sky, and depositing tonnes of mud on the surrounding area. In one eruption, the flames could easily be seen from 15 kilometers away on the day of the explosion, and were still burning, although at a lower level, three days later.
The Zone of Alienation is the 30 km/19 mi exclusion zone around the site of the Chernobyl nuclear reactor disaster and is administrated by a special administration under the Ukrainian Ministry of Extraordinary Situations (Emergencies). Thousands of residents refused to be evacuated from the zone or illegally returned there later. Over the decades this primarily elderly population has dwindled, falling below 400 in 2009. Approximately half of these resettlers live in the town of Chernobyl; others are spread in villages across the zone. After recurrent attempts at expulsion, the authorities became reconciled to their presence and even allowed limited supporting services for them. Because of looting, there is a strong police presence – so be warned, if you visit, you may either be shot or get radiation poisoning – and we all know how awful that can be.
Off the shore of Brazil, almost due south of the heart of São Paulo, is a Ilha de Queimada Grande (Snake Island). The island is untouched by human developers, and for very good reason. Researchers estimate that on the island live between one and five snakes per square meter. That figure might not be so terrible if the snakes were, say, 2 inches long and nonvenomous. The snakes on Queimada Grande, however, are a unique species of pit viper, the golden lancehead. The lancehead genus of snakes is responsible for 90% of Brazilian snakebite-related fatalities. The golden lanceheads that occupy Snake Island grow to well over half a meter long, and they possess a powerful fast-acting poison that melts the flesh around their bites. This place is so dangerous that a permit is required to visit.






























Izu island, I can’t believe.
Great list. Izu Island pic reminds me of Silent Hill.
Also…everyone knows that Hamilton is the real Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
Great list! Some of the places like the poison garden actually sound fascinating to me.
Great list and nice pictures too.
I like the Door of hell the most.
Turks ppl must be MAd at those scientists!
Shiver me listers, Jaime!!!
How creepy is #1??
But I must admit, it doesn’t seem possible.
1-5 snakes per square meter?
What on earth do they eat?
(I had the same problem with Indiana Jones…)
The door to Hell is actually in my old back yard.
It’s where the out house used to be.
That’s why we moved.
This is a GREAT post! But I’m using it as a list of places I would love to go.
Don’t know Chernobyl till you’ve tried it, its one of the craziest places I have ever been and we’ll worth a look.
If you are a high school student, South Hadley, MA, is a place you may not want to visit.
Just ask Phoebe Prince. Oh, wait. You cannot ask her as the native high schoolers essentially bullied her to death.
I’m from Burma, but never heard of ramree, the crocodile island–how fascinating. thanks for your post! i am also shocked and sad about the pacific dump. have you seen photos of the city in china that gets 90% of the world’s e-waste?
Number 11: my bathroom.
I love this list! This stuff is so interesting, especially the Pacific Garbage Patch, all of this stuff sounds like something borrowed from C-List Sci-fi Channel movie marathons..
How on earth are those Abestos workers not forced to wear protective gear? I wonder what their average lifespan is….
Around 85 and then they die of natural causes
I made an account just so I could say that the pic in #9 is going to give me nightmares. No joke. I can’t watch that one episode of Doctor Who to the day – “Are you my mummy?” *shudder*
My main concern with the Zone of Alienation wouldn’t be the physical hazards, but the mental ones. I don’t think I could handle being in a place that abandoned, with that kind of history.
@127 sauer kraut
Hi
I live in Boston,are you refering to that beautiful young lady from Ireland,who was bullied so badly,she killed herself? OMG just awful,other recent case is of a MA. highschool boy,who was bullied everyday,the bullys pushed him down a flight of stairs,now he’s paralized from head to toe,so sad.From my understanding,in both cases,criminal charges will be enforced,as they should be.
Oh wow, this is certainly an eye-opener. I can’t believe i have never heard of a rubbish patch in the Pacific Ocean (how did they manage to keep that hush-hush??) nor believe that an asbestos mine is in full operation with tours??? Do they offer subsequent medical care then??
this definitely has broaden my knowledge, in case i would ever want to be a tourist guide =p i didn’t even know that a place such as great pacific garbage patch exists..but it would be interesting to visit the poisonous plant garden, the snake island and ramree island…just out of curiousity…though i definitely don’t want to die by the snakes or the crocodiles…Isn’t it interesting? The more dangerous something is, the more drawn u are to it…
What I want to know is who/what are the animals stupid enough to go to #1. I mean, the snakes have to eat something, so something other than snakes must live there or travel there. Or do the snakes eat each other? Not that I want to go there to find out
I would love to see the Mud Volcanoes.
How about Love C*****, New York?
Mmmmmm… dioxin.
haha they’re definitely places i won’t visit..
thanks for the stuff. I have learnt alot
oh man, that “2 The Zone of Alienation” is there in Game Call of Duty 4
btw Awesome posts mate. loved the Yungas rod too
I would add Cairo, Egypt to this list. Most polluted city in the world. Just living in Cairo is the equivalent of smoking a pack a day. 98% of foriegn women are *****ually harassed (according to a study conducted by the Egyptian Center for Women’s Rights).
Great list, good reading!
I wish I could have a small burning whole in my backyard. Would be good to roast the marshmallows without much effort.
How interesting. We spend so much time figuring out where we want to go that we never think of places we want to avoid.
Thank you for the list…and the education!
Awesome list! Is it weird that I totally wanna go to ALL of these places right now?
Especially the Mud Volcanoes and the Door to Hell.
I lived in a town close by the Asbestos mines in Québec… I guess I never realized it was so toxic!
Loved the list. I’m English but have lived in La Paz, Bolivia for 3 years now. I’ve driven the Death Road (Carretera de muerte) several times in my Toyota Celica. The second time I was running on a tire with no tread on it, making it more of an adrenaline rush.
There are a few narrow spots which can give you a shudder but what used to be the most dangerous aspect of it was that until 2 years ago, it was a real highway, with buses and trucks passing each other every few metres with only inches to spare.
Now there is a new road with asphalt which takes a different route, so as someone already pointed out on this forum, the old death road is only used by tour groups on mountain bikes.
Interestingly, one of my friends from England is staying with me at the moment and we will be undertaking the Death Road mountain biking on Sunday 28th March. If anyone is interested in seeing some first hand photos of it, let me know, be happy to post some!
Okay, so maybe I don’t want to see the WHOLE world after all… =P
Umm… I lived on Izu Oshima for two years, and I must say, the entry on the Izu Islands is completely false, and the picture has nothing to do with the islands. Whoever wrote this article simply read the “6 Real Islands Way More Terrifying than the One on LOST” article on Cracked http://www.cracked.com/article_17379_6-real-islands-way-more-terrifying-than-one-lost_p2.html(which created the misinformation and used the same picture above) and took them as fact.
Do your research — the Izu Islands are beautiful, and only ONE of them, Miyakejima, has any sulfur gas.
What an awesome list! And here I thought I wanted to go everywhere!
Sorry, messed up the link:
http://www.cracked.com/article_17379_6-real-islands-way-more-terrifying-than-one-lost_p2.html
Dude! Except for the asbestos mine – I want to see them ALL! I mean, it would be amazing to witness a huge patch of garbage the size of Texas just floatin’ round the pacific!
I traveled the Death Rd (#4) in Bolivia in a rusty old van-bus. It was pretty freaky, especially rounding corners where you couldn’t see what was coming – they have people standing there holding flags to tell you whether to go or not! Passing other vehicles is the scariest.
But we also saw bike tours with crazy tourists hurdling down the road covered in mud. Yikes.
That must be awesome! Well, it wouldn’t be awesome to fly off the road, but to have done something like that! It is idiosyncrasies like these that makes travelling worth it!
Number 10 is the worst. Imagine the animals that live by that dump. As big as Texas? Are you kidding me? That’s despicable on our part.
great post. i would love to go to england for that poison garden. lol
So do people work at the poison gardens?? That sounds like a bit of a risky job… As if they have a license to grow *****! Weird…
Oh my goodness! The first picture upsets me in such a way. All this trash swimming on the water surface. Poor mother nature…
Wow, that was an incredible read.
Great post. I agree I would not go to any of these places… but the photography was great.
I could indicate Rio de Janeiro to a higher position than Snake Island. Take a walk in Rio, that’s real danger!
Last night we observed WWFs campaign to help reduce activities that boost global warming. Then we see that ocean of waste in position number 10. Many places in this list are either natural or a result of some accident, but the garbage patch is due to nothing else but ourselves! It should be number 1 in a list of human absurds!
I am Brazilian and I love this place too visit Brazil is a wonderful place.
Did not know this island, but we have many places and thousands of islands (and no snakes). Here is the world’s best place to live. And unlike the U.S. we are happy here. And we live in truth.
Who can ($) visit.
Who can not cry!
For here is for those who can! Living truth !!!!!
Hey, thanks for the list! Now I can say that I live near the most dangerous place in the world!!! Queimada Grande is actually in the shore of the city I live Itanhaém (translating from the native indian tupi as “The Stone that Sings”), and I know that there’s always someone showing interest in researching the Island (the translation is more like “The Big Burn” beacause of the rocks in its coasts appears like a burning scar on the Island)… A place tere even Bear Grylls couldn’t survive lol
Wow…these are incredible stories. Is it me or do you actually want to visit these places more now that you aren’t “supposed” to?
Things like that almost make me want to visit those places more… call me crazy.
I’m Brazilian, I live in São Paulo and I didn’t know this island existed LOL
But it seems to be a beautiful place to visit – I mean, if you like snakes.
Nice list, btw!
I´m Brazilian too and this island is usefull to Scuba Dive. I dived in front of this island in 1999. Of course, the snake didn´t enter in salt water…
I am brazilian too!!!!
I don’t believe that the mother *****ers putted fire on the gas. More CO2 in this planet.
I knew about the Poison snake Island because a very potent medicine for hypertension is made through her poison…well you see it can deadly kill but it can save lives as well…
Just for information now, I live in the city of Thetford Mines. I was born there and I still live there! And I don’t wear bio-hazard suit all year long! When I was a kid, I visited the mines a lot of times, even gone playing and exploring the piles!! And I’m perfectly fine!!! My grand-mother is now at 75 yo and we even have several centanial persons you bunch of pussies!!
Wonderful! Both sides of my family come from Thetford Mines, both of my grandparents still live there and its my favorite place to visit…#6 is RIDICULOUS, do your research man..
Darvaz is awesome.
Those pictures and places were absolutely wonderful. I love this blog man!!!
hi. i live in thetford mines. my great-granfather worked in the mines. he died of old age. my grandfather worked in the mines, he had kidney and heart failure, not due to asbestos exposure. ive ived in mines my whole life. hell, when i was a kid, we used to play in the mine dumps. a study shows that in 30 years, only 1 person in 30 living in thetford will die, or have died, of some exposure of asbestos. it’s not dangerous. it is only dangerous when being transformed. you’ve probably all touched an asbestos rock, and don’t even know it. so please, if you haven’t been anywhere near thetford, don’T judge. we live in one of the most beautiful regions of the province of quebec.
im born and raised in thetford mines. the sky is blue and the birds chirp and it’s a really beautiful place. it’s not at all a dangerous place to live. when i was a kid, we used to play on the dumping hills all day. my great-grandfather works in the mines, and he died of old-age. my grandfather worked in the mines, and he died of kidney and heart-failure, not due to asbestos exposure. a study shows that in thirty years, only one person will die, or have died of asbestos exposure in thetford. pretty sure that all of you have touched an asbestos rock in your lives and not have know it. we live in one of the most beautiful regions of quebec. one open mine is not a reason not to come.
and BTW: asbestos is only dangerous when it’s processed. that’s why workers don’t have to wear protection. And our life span, pretty high, thank you very much.
Whoever wrtoe this, im pretty sure never visited Thetford.
Hey! I live in Thetford Mines and I honestly don’t understand why people are so afraid of asbestos! I’m not dead, neither are any of my family members!! There is nothing wrong with our mines and nobody her eis dying (even though we dont wear bio-hazard suits)!
Canada is a land of opportunities. Most people living in this country are open-minded. Liberty of expression is guaranteed by our democratic system. This allows people to publicly express their ideas, the best, but also the worst. Suggesting that visiting an open pit mine in Canada is dangerous falls into the latter category. Common sense, more than preconception, should guide the decision-making process.
If you believe in vampires and King Kong stories, please stay home. You will be disappointed when visiting a clean, safe and efficient chrysotile asbestos mining and milling complex located in Thetford Mines – Coleraine, Quebec, Canada.
@engineeradam [2]:
Hi engineradam!
I’m from São Paulo-Brazil, i was expecting that Brazil would appear in this list with places like the Cidade de Deus (city of god, from the movie) but i was wrong!!!
Ilha da Queimada Grande is a beautiful, but dangerous paradise!!!