Old Man Bucket List: 28 Places to See Before You Die—the Taj Mahal, Grand Canyon etc (where you been & where you still wanna go!)

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28 Places to See Before You Die—the Taj Mahal, Grand Canyon and More
We’ve traveled the globe and compiled a “life list” of places to visit before taking the ultimate trip to the great beyond
By Smithsonian Magazine Staff
SMITHSONIAN MAGAZINE | SUBSCRIBE
JANUARY 2008
2564122
Editor’s Note: We’ve since expanded our life list to 43 sites around the world for wildlife lovers, adventure seekers and those seeking just a respite from their busy schedules.





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"We are all of us resigned to death: it's life we aren't resigned to," novelist Graham Greene once wrote. A growing number of Americans of all ages are embracing that idea by renewing a resolve to live life to its fullest.

Exhibit A is the recent popularity of "life lists"—itineraries of things to do and places to go before taking the ultimate trip to the Great Beyond. Bookstores brim with titles such as 1,000 Places to See Before You Die, 1001 Paintings You Must See Before You Die and—for the high-minded—Fifty Places to Go Birding Before You Die. A cottage industry of Web sites has also popped up, enabling life list enthusiasts to exchange ideas ranging from learning Japanese to getting a tattoo. Now even Hollywood has gotten into the act, with the release this month of the film The Bucket List, in which two cancer patients, played by Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman, break out of their medical ward and embark on a life list road trip that includes dining on expensive caviar and gambling in Monte Carlo.
Life list experts (yes, there are such beings) advise people not to set themselves up for disappointment by trying to accomplish too much. (When's the last time you completed your daily to-do list?) With the entire world to choose from, the maxim "so much to do, so little time" takes on added meaning.
To that end, the staff of Smithsonian—as diverse a group of travelers as you're likely to meet—put their heads together to come up with an exclusive list of 28 places the Smithsonian reader might wish to visit before ...it's too late. Some of the sites are portals into the past—ancient cities so well preserved that visiting them is like stepping into a previous century. Others feature feats of engineering or sublime works of art—or, in the cases of the Taj Mahal and Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater, both. Travelers can visit temples and churches so breathtaking they must have been built with divine inspiration. For the more adventurous, we offer rewards beyond mere sightseeing—from a three-day hike across the Grand Canyon to a ride along China's Yangtze River.
While all of these destinations beckon year-round, there are places where timing matters: many travelers are at a loss for words after witnessing the sun rise over Machu Picchu or seeing Iguazu Falls by the light of a full moon. And, appropriately, some of our sites now confront their own mortality—endangered by pollution or just worn down, like a few of us, by the passage of time.

Whether you visit only a couple of these destinations or all 28, your life will be enriched by the experience. And if along the way you want to gorge on caviar or get a tattoo, that's entirely up to you.
Portals into the Past
Walk the timeless streets and byways of ancient cities on three continents

Mesa Verde
Pompeii
Tikal
Petra
Feats of Engineering
The world's surviving architectural wonders hewed from stone and mortar beckon as ever

Pyramids of Giza
Taj Mahal
Easter Island
The Great Wall
A Matter of Timing
Choosing the right year, month or even moment can make all the difference

Aurora Borealis
Serengeti
Iguazu Falls
Machu Picchu



Triumphs of Vision
Come face to face with history's finest works of art and design

The Louvre
Zen Garden of Kyoto
Uffizi Gallery
Fallingwater
Scale New Heights
Don't just see nature's most spectacular sites—experience them

Yangtze River
Antarctica
Mount Kilimanjaro
Grand Canyon
In the Presence of Gods
Encounter temples so magnificent then could only have been built by divine inspiration

Bagan
Parthenon
Angkor Wat
Ephesus
Here Today, Gone Tomorrow?
Visit these deteriorating or threatened destinations before they disappear

Venice
Amazon Rain Forest
Great Barrier Reef
Galápagos Islands
 
i love motorcycles as you can tell from my avy...

ive only had the oppurtunity to ride cross country once.....rode an R1 from Michigan to Louisiana.....

i want to ride all over the world....there was a cat that did it cross country a couple times on a panigale 1199.....then he did the same thing across europe.....

i hang out over at advrider.com and there are a lot of people who've done it.....
 
Not to interested in seeing whatever on this planet. I have seen a number of things already and usually was not impressed.

The one thing I would like to do when they figure out a way to do it safely is to up go in orbit above the Earth and look down on it. I also want to see it spin and see the sunrise and set within minutes of each other.
 
i love motorcycles as you can tell from my avy...

ive only had the oppurtunity to ride cross country once.....rode an R1 from Michigan to Louisiana.....

i want to ride all over the world....there was a cat that did it cross country a couple times on a panigale 1199.....then he did the same thing across europe.....

i hang out over at advrider.com and there are a lot of people who've done it.....

now that sounds amazing

i got NO SKILLS on a motorbike BUT
I want to try THIS before I leave the earthly plane



 
i love motorcycles as you can tell from my avy...

ive only had the oppurtunity to ride cross country once.....rode an R1 from Michigan to Louisiana.....

i want to ride all over the world....there was a cat that did it cross country a couple times on a panigale 1199.....then he did the same thing across europe.....

i hang out over at advrider.com and there are a lot of people who've done it.....

A few people here in NYC have ridden round-trip to Alaska. One dude did the trip solo a few years back and had about 100 bikers follow him from NYC to Pittsburgh.

On that list, I've seen the Grand Canyon... just spectacular!
 
No one is going anywhere anytime soon.

damn

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Tell your BGOL brethren to vote. Trump isn't going to mount a national response to covid unless he is forced to or stumbles into it by accident.

the ONLY issue I have been getting around my way is a WHOLE lot of folks scared of hr post office losing their absentee ballots

but they ALSO scared to vote in person

I don;t have a GOOD answer.
 
the ONLY issue I have been getting around my way is a WHOLE lot of folks scared of hr post office losing their absentee ballots

but they ALSO scared to vote in person

I don;t have a GOOD answer.

I think I'm going to vote absentee by mail. I'm 90% sure. I'll make a decision within the next week. Actually not by mail, I'll be returning it to a BoE Dropbox, not via USPS if I do it.
 
I think I'm going to vote absentee by mail. I'm 90% sure. I'll make a decision within the next week. Actually not by mail, I'll be returning it to a BoE Dropbox, not via USPS if I do it.

my wife is leaning the same way.

I am considering if maybe LEGALLY i can collect hem from the elderly or those AFRAID to go in person in my neighborhood and drop it off for them?
 
From that list I've only been to Mesa Verde and the Grand Canyon. I think I've seen everything the US has to offer. I definitely would like to see some of the foreign destinations.
 
Being in the military I have had the opportunity to see many places.

Germany was fun. Seeing the castles and fortresses were my main goal and I saw plenty of them. Never went to Berlin cause everytime my friends went all they focused on was drinking and I wasn't a big drinker. Bavaria is beautiful. Some of the places they want you to see in Germany you need to do your research and see what appeals to you.

Holland and Amsterdam we only focused on food and I ate good there. This pancake house was incredible.

I got my wake up call in Spain. I was in my early 20s and was happy to go see some beautiful Spanish women. When we got there I asked my friend why is everyone white. She looked at me like I was crazy and said they are all spainards just fair skin. Not what I expected. Barcelona is really about the churches and their designs. I wasn't that impressed but I did get paella.

Alaska is beautiful, if you never been go in June to August. The weather is incredible and there is so much to do and with great food. Never saw the Aurora Borealis, that was some BS. Was there for 3 years and I deploy in the winter and my office is all sending me pics of it. I had one year left after that and still nothing. But a month after I leave Alaska I'm getting more pics of the this spectacular phenomenon.

I saw the Grand Canyon now that is really awesome to see. And easy to see how people try to get that great shot and fall off a side. Thats why I have zoom lens I'm not getting close to an edge. I will hit it from an angle.

Had a stopover in Ireland and had a Guinness on the way back from a deployment. Had to try it out, it was so smooth.

Seen the Hoover Dam, the Redwoods in Cali, Rainforest in Puerto Rico, DMZ in Korea, beaches in Hawaii and gambled in Las Vegas. I have been to majority of the US National parks, still have few left on the list.

I want to go to Ireland, Scotland and Sweden. Just want to see those views that go on forever with a lighthouse on the edge of a cliff. Think I seen too many movies. I would like to take my kids to Germany and see if they enjoy it the way I did.
 
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