this post was submitted on 15 Apr 2024
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Asklemmy
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I think Greenland will fit the premise of your question in a few years.
There's not a ton of tourism infrastructure yet, but there are currently a lot of subsidies going into roads, airports, lodging, etc. to induce more tourism.
https://traveltrade.visitgreenland.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Strategi-EN-feb2021.pdf
This is a great find. I remember about a year ago, people were speculating that Air Greenland was going to become a partner of Air Canada - my hopes were dashed when that didn't materialize.
I'd definitely like to go there someday too--it's just a bit too remote for me at the moment.
I can see its tourism becoming what Iceland was like 15-20 years ago.
I'm in South Greenland atm and it's just amazing! No tourists, no tours, no souvenirs just incredible nature and huge mountains. I've not been to Iceland yet, but the nature here is just so amped up it's insane. Bonus icebergs floating around all year!
Those are the exact things I'm looking for (just waiting for a few more roads to connect towns). I'm glad to hear it's living up to the expectations I've heard of!
I went to Iceland a couple years ago and the landscapes are amazing, but there are definitely areas where you run into a lot of tourists, busses, etc.
I'm visiting the Faroe Islands later this year and I'm hoping to experience some rugged landscapes in relative isolation there too.
There will never be roads to connect towns, there's too many mountains. Best take a boat or a helicopter ๐. Definitely have Faroe on my bucket list too.
I would have thought so too, but they're working on at least one. Although you're right about a lot of places being unfeasible--anything more than dirt/gravel in a very limited number of communities would be cost prohibitive.
I feel like they actually could attract a reasonable number of adventure tourists who can't afford a charter plane.