It’s the final day of the year – time to squeeze in another yearly overview of the reviews submitted to this website. 2023 was the year of a double WHC which gave most of us large numbers of bonus ‘ticks’.
Community Travel
Zoë
(finally) has taken the top spot and crossed the mark of 1,000 visited WHS as the first on this website. Slowly we see that the people who still travel a lot are taking over the high rankings from the names we have become so familiar with over the past 10-20 years. The
Top 10
was entered by
Roman
, climbing from position 16 to 9. Overall there was a strong rise in totals, aided by the high number of new WHS that were added during this year's double WHC session.
Memorable Reviews
We saw 510 new reviews published, 60 more than last year. 85 different people wrote them. I (
Els
) wrote the most (71!), followed by
Clyde
(42),
Zoë
(33) and
Timonator
(27).
We saw the first reviews for
Dholavira
(
Randi
&
Philipp
),
Rachid Karami International Fair
(
Christravelblog
),
Lorentz NP
and
Ogasawara
(both by
Zoë
). Plus all the new additions from the 2022/2023 session were covered, except for these four:
Gedeo
,
Bale Mountains
,
Kazan Observatories
and
Odzala-Kokoua
.
Some sites that hadn't been reviewed for a long time got a much-needed update, including
Mana Pools
and
Tsingy de Bemaraha
(both by me), and the cultural aspect of
ǂKhomani Cultural Landscape
(by
Tamas
).
Bernard
reported on an in-depth visit to
Sawahlunto
.
Timonator
entertained us with lots of thorough reviews of South American WHS, ranging from covering all of the
Chiquitos Missions
to climbing the new observation tower at
Nasca
. Remote Canada got a boost with updated reviews by several people of
Nahanni
,
Sgang Gwaay
and
Gwaii Haanas NP
.
In Europe,
Ian
crossed 44 lanes of traffic in
Paris
,
Hubert
'completed'
Vauban
and
Adrian
couldn't get enough of the
Beech Forests
.
There are still enough Tentative Sites to review:
772 of them still don't have one
. In this category, we saw good coverage of the Transatlantic Cable Station (both the
Irish
(
Els
,
Solivagant
) and
Canadian
(
Argo
) sides), the
Waitangi Treaty Grounds
(
Carlo
),
Peruacu
(
Patrik
),
Antananarivo
(
Els
),
Nakhinchevan
(
Clyde
) and
Hegmataneh
(
Solivagant
) being added for example.
Awards
We have two awards this year to hand out to the "best" reviews: the already well-known
Tsunami Award for Travel Misadventure
and the new
WH Explorer Award
. The Explorer Award recognizes reviews of (parts) of WHS, where a new access route has been explored successfully. We want to read reviews that show determination and reflect on both the choices made during preparation and the journey itself.
I let the members of our
WhatsApp group
choose the winner in each category from a shortlist.
The Tsunami Award candidates were
Tsunami
himself with his cave story of
Evaporite Karst
("After almost 3 hours in the cave I was so glad that this tour was finally over."),
Frédéric M
who tried to come to terms with the remote islands of
Ujung Kulon
,
Squiffy
who visited
Delphi
in the mid-day heat, and "stubborn"
Stanislaw
who entered snow-covered
Deosai NP
and found it a good idea to return on foot (30km). The winner is: Tsunami!
For the WH Explorer Award, we considered
Zoë
as she was the first to cover
Lorentz NP
and found Lake Hamena as the best possibility for a 'tick' from Wamena. There was also
Jarek
, who managed to do a land visit to
Bacalar Chico NP
(Belize Barrier Reef) - it 'just' needed a bike. The winner here however is
Timonator
with his review of
Rio Abiseo
. He was the first to explore this rarely visited WHS from the north, called the 21-hour bus ride to reach the general area "really comfy" and braved a lazy and drunken guide to reach his goal.
Are there any memorable reviews from 2023 that you’d like to put into the spotlight again?