7 Islands No One Wants to Buy Even for $1

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7 Islands No One Wants to Buy Even for $1

Do you ever you dream to own a private island? If you do, you'll probably find this information useful. Have you ever heard that there are whole islands out there that you can purchase for a fraction of the typical price? But the real kicker is that nobody wants to buy them! And there're reasons for that.

Have you ever heard, for example, about Japan's Rabbit Island? They began to thrive and multiply on the island after a chemical weapons plant was closed. And these days, thousands of friendly bunnies will greet you if you decide to pay them a visit!

Other videos you might like:
Scientists Finally Discovered the Truth About Easter Island
A New Continent Is Discovered on Earth In the Pacific Ocean
A Scary Island That Has Been Keeping a Secret for 80 Years

TIMESTAMPS:
Islands with colonial ruins, Brazil 0:31
Untouched nature and pine trees, Canada 1:15
Terrible Tilly, USA 1:55
Partly flooded island, USA 2:43
Island with an abandoned fort, USA 3:15
The island that disappears in the spring, Canada 4:19
Island for a couple only, Australia 5:04
Other islands where you can live
Rabbits island, Japan 6:44
Battleship Island, Japan 7:39
Island in Venice, Italy 8:22
The island of true paradise, the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste 8:57

#brightside #secretplaces #strangeplaces

Preview photo credit:
Maatsuyker lighthouse: By Jeff Jennings/Wikimedia, CC BY-SA 3.0
Animation is created by Bright Side.

Music by Epidemic Sound

SUMMARY:
- For just 80,000 bucks, you can become the owner of not one but six islands situated on Brazil’s Sao Francisco River. But you’ll be subject to small annual taxes.
- Although Little Rocky Island lies in the Atlantic Ocean, neighboring islands protect it from foul weather. There’s no property on the island, but you can build anything you like there!
- Also known as Terrible Tilly, this island’s nickname speaks for itself. Well, it’s not technically an island in the traditional sense, it’s basically a rock with a single lighthouse on it off the coast of Oregon.
- If you have an extra 40K, you can buy a 1-acre island with a view of picturesque Maine. There’s a little cabin on the island, and you can theoretically build some other property there too if you want.
- You could become the owner of a historic private island on one condition: you have to restore the fort situated on it.
- People typically associate private islands with some sort of tropical paradise. But Canada’s McGibbon Island is nothing like that. Perhaps that explains the super low price tag of 30 grand.
- Welcome to a tiny island off the coast of Tasmania, Australia. This offer is open only for couples, and both partners should be equally eager to go to the island.
- Ōkunoshima Island lies approximately 2 miles off the coast of Japan. From 1929 to 1945, there was a chemical weapons plant on the island that produced poisonous gas.
- Dubbed Battleship Island because it looks like an old half-destroyed battleship, Hashima is located about 9 miles away from Nagasaki. From 1887 to 1974, there was a profitable coal mine on the island.
- Located in Venice, Italy, Lazzaretto Nuovo is also open for tourists but home to nobody. In 1468, the island became a quarantine area for ships that approached the city. This move was meant to protect Venice from the plague.
- Jaco Island belongs to the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste. This island looks like the picture of true paradise: lush green trees, crystal blue waters, and white sand. But his place is uninhabitable.

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9 Castles No One Wants To Buy Even For $1

TOP 10: Islands that nobody wants to buy for any price

Islands at low prices, but nobody want to buy them?
Sounds crazy, but there's a catch.. Watch this video to find out why!


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Credit: TOP10
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The Cheapest Private Islands For Sale

A private island is not only an asset or real estate to invest in but a lifestyle. Private islands cost millions of dollars, and the most expensive island is a tropical paradise on Lanai Island in Hawaii, with a 610 million U.S. dollars price tag. But if you are searching for a cheap one, you can find one for below 60,000 U.S. dollars.

A private island can provide the serene and calm environment that most people seek. It could be a home away from the real world and offer the ultimate privacy and a paradise-like lifestyle. The best private islands for sale are found in Thailand, Dubai, and The Maldives, and the most affordable private Islands are located in South America. There are numerous private islands for sale within reach of any ordinary person.

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Why All People Left Hashima Island in Japan

A concrete island with tumble-down houses and not a single tree or plant around. The gloomiest place on Earth you’ve ever seen, for sure. Can it be real? In fact, it is. Welcome to Hashima!

This island 9 miles from Nagasaki is one of many hundreds of uninhabited islands in the prefecture. Unlike others, which are green and covered with forests, Hashima looks like bare rocks with no plants on them. If you look closer you’ll see that the rocks are actually empty high-risers standing on manmade coastal banks.

Other videos you might like:
7 Islands No One Wants to Buy Even for $1
A Scary Island That Has Been Keeping a Secret for 80 Years
A Secret New York Island That You Can Never Visit

TIMESTAMPS:
A brief history of Hashima 1:00
The first big concrete building in Japan 3:09
Why Hashima citizens had no umbrellas 5:01
No ground, no plants 5:59
Why all the residents of Hashima left the island forever 6:24

#Japan #Hashima #brightside

Hashima 4: By By VKaeru, CC BY-SA 3.0
A student exploring Hashima Island in Japan: By Jordy Meow - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0
The 16-story Ingalls Building in Cincinnati, Ohio became the world's first reinforced concrete skyscraper in 1903: By Wikimedia, CC BY-SA 3.0
Animation is created by Bright Side.

SUMMARY:
- For many centuries, people living on Takashima – a big island not far from Hashima, gathered coal, which lay close to the surface.
- In 18-19th centuries Takashima island was part of feudal lands belonging to the Fukahori family. They saw the profit that coal mining started to bring and took control of all the bargains in their own hands.
- Takashima coal had a high quality and soon filled the treasury of Nagasaki with foreign currency.
- At the end of the 19th century they sold the island to Mitsubishi, which was a shipping enterprise then. The new owner built dwelling houses for workers.
- Hashima produced about 150.000 tons of coal each year, and its population in 1916 was 3000 people.
- In 1959 the population of Hashima was over 5,200. The total square of the island is 6.3 ha, and 60% of it are rocky slopes where most of the dwelling houses are built.
- Between residential houses, there were squeezed a primary school, a secondary school, a playground, a gym, a cinema, bars, restaurants, 25 different stores, and a Buddhist church.
- Hashima citizens had no umbrellas, as the mazes of corridors and stairs connected all the dwelling houses and served as a transport system.
- Housing, electricity and water were free for workers, but all the residents had to take part in public works and clean-up of the territory.
- The most remarkable trait of this place was a total absence of the ground and plants. Hashima was nothing more but coal ash, laid around a bare rock.
- At the end of the 1960-s Japanese economy skyrocketed, and coal was admitted an ecologically dirty fuel.
- The government started shutting down coalmines around the country, and Hashima wasn’t an exclusion.
- Mitsubishi reduced staff on Hashima, retrained workers and sent them to other subsidiaries.
- By 1974 there were about 2000 people left on the island, and on January 15, 1974 the company officially announced the closure of the mine.
- Hashima now is an abandoned and forgotten island, which looks as a strange lighthouse guarding the entrance to Nagasaki bay.
- In September 2008 Hashima (Gunkanjima) island was included in the list to get the status of UNESCO world heritage as a monument to a whole period of Japanese history.

Music by Epidemic Sound

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10 Bridges You Won't Walk On Even for $1 Million

People learned to build bridges many centuries ago. At first, they were questionable constructions made of stones, wood, and even tree roots. But nowadays, bridges have turned into magnificent structures able to withstand huge strain. And still, some bridges are so bizarre and scary that not everyone would dare to step on them!

#dangerousbridges #scaryplaces

Other videos you might like:
14 Roads You Would Never Want to Drive On
How Deep Can You Possibly Dig?
11 Mysteries of Famous Icons People Don’t Know About

TIMESTAMPS:
The scariest bridge in America 0:43
The longest curved suspension bridge 1:34
The highest bridge in the US 2:17
The tallest bridge in the world 3:08
One of the oldest teakwood footbridges 3:56
The world's longest glass bridge 4:52
Walk of Faith (another glass bridge) 5:45
The largest rigid-frame bridge 6:32
The Drunk Bridge 7:09
Seven Mile Bridge 7:43

Preview photo credit:
A tourist walks on a pavement built with glass on the cliff at the national forest park in Tianmen Mountain in Zhangjiajie, central China's Hunan Province, Nov. 9, 2011. To improve the sightseeing experience of tourists, a 60-meter-long glass pavement built on the cliff of Tianmen Mountain with an altitude of about 1430 meters was put into use recently. Tianmen mountain is a popular tourist destination in China and is famous for its natural beauty: By Xinhua/Ding Yunjuan/Eyevine/EAST NEWS,
Aerial view of the 100-meter-long and 1.6-meter-wide glass skywalk on the cliff of Tianmen Mountain (or Tianmenshan Mountain) in Zhangjiajie National Forest Park in Zhangjiajie city, central China's Hunan province, 1 August 2016. A 100-meter-long and 1.6-meter-wide glass skywalk in Zhangjiajie Tianmenshan National Park opened to visitors on Monday (1 August 2016). The Coiling Dragon Cliff skywalk is the third glass skywalk on the Tianmen Mountain (or Tianmenshan Mountain) in Zhangjiajie National Forest Park in central China's Henan province. It oversees the Tianmen Tongtian Avenue (Avenue toward Heaven), featuring a total of 99 road turns, layers after another, known as the first highway wonders: By Shao Ying - Imaginechina/Associated Press/East News,
Animation is created by Bright Side.

Music by Epidemic Sound

SUMMARY:
- #1. The construction looms 186 ft above the water’s surface, and they say that when the weather is bad, you can't see the shore from the middle of the bridge. All things combined, it creates an eerie feeling of being suspended in some kind of nerve-racking limbo.
- #2. At 410 ft long, this is the longest curved suspension bridge in the world. The deck of Sky Bridge is 2,170 ft above sea level, among the mountain peaks, and boy, that's a sight to behold!
- #3. This bridge held the title of the world's highest from 1929, when it was completed, till 2001, when Liuguanghe Bridge in China surpassed it by 19 ft.
- #4. The tallest bridge in the world seems to be floating over the river Tarn's gorge valley in southern France. The total length of the bridge is 8,070 ft, and its maximum height is a whopping 1,125 ft above the ground!
- #5. This is one of the longest and oldest teakwood footbridges in the world. Besides, it's probably one of the most photographed as well!
- #6. The world's longest glass bridge, opened in 2017, hangs over a picturesque canyon in the Hebei province of China. About 1,600 ft long and more than 700 ft high, the bridge is paved with 1,077 glass panels!
- #7. The walkway isn't particularly long, only 200 ft, but the view that is waiting is breathtaking. Everyone using the pathway has to wear special anti-slip shoe covers.
- #8. This is the largest rigid-frame bridge in Japan, even though it looks more like a twisted roller coaster for drivers! The structure has incredibly steep inclines on both sides, and at first sight, you may doubt that a regular car is able to climb the bridge.
- #9. The locals call this construction the drunk bridge. Its length is only 850 ft, but the curve of the bridge that protrudes over the Norwegian Sea plays a funny visual trick on motorists.
-#10. The modern version of the Seven Mile Bridge was completed in 1982, and its construction cost was about $45 million.

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11 Places More Mysterious Than Bermuda Triangle

It’s one of the most terrifyingly fascinating places on our planet. Ships and planes simply vanish, radios and compasses just stop working, and some even say they’ve spotted strange objects there. And it's not the one and only Bermuda Triangle. There are at least 11 other mysterious places. So what are they, and how do they form?

Ivan T. Sanderson, a writer, a biologist, and a huge fan of the paranormal and inexplicable, traveled a lot and recorded his experiences. What caught his attention the most was where the strangest unexplained things kept happening. That is, disappearing ships and whatnot. He was able to map 12 of these places scattered all over the world. But the weird thing is, 6 of them lie almost perfectly in line above the Equator, and the same goes for the 6 below it...

TIMESTAMPS:
The Bermuda Triangle 1:11
The Algerian Megaliths 2:14
Mohenjo-Daro 3:02
The Dragon’s Triangle 3:44
The Hamakulia Volcano 4:30
Easter Island 4:59
The South Atlantic Anomaly 5:44
Great Zimbabwe 6:20
The Wharton Basin 6:53
The Loyalty Islands 7:27
The North and South Poles 8:06

Theories about these Vile Vortices:
- Ley lines 8:52
- Giant puzzle 9:32
- A lot of geologic activity 10:04

#mystery #bermudatriangle #brightside

SUMMARY:
- Besides the paranormal theories of wormholes to another dimension and gates to the underworld, the Bermuda Triangle is really foggy due to methane gas that sometimes makes it impossible for travelers to see, thus making navigation a little tricky too.
- The Algerian Megaliths are an architectural anomaly, showing just how advanced these people were for a time when we didn’t have the technology to help us build stable constructions.
- Mohenjo-Daro in Pakistan goes way back to the Indus Valley Civilization in 2500 BCE. Like in Algeria, this society was, for some reason, surprisingly advanced when it came to building and urban planning.
- Heading further east along the same northern line, we arrive in Japan, where the Dragon’s Triangle, also called the Devil’s Sea, is located. The most astonishing thing about this Vile Vortex is that there’s an underwater city dubbed Japan’s Atlantis.
- Located in the Ring of Fire, the next Vile Vortex is the Hamakulia Volcano in Hawaii. Locals treat it with utmost respect as the volcano is believed to have a mysterious power.
- Now let’s head south of the Equator to one of the most isolated places on this planet: Easter Island in Polynesia. This is where you can find nearly 900 Moai statues created by the Rapa Nui people.
- The South Atlantic Anomaly is a part of Earth where natural radiation flows out of control.
- Another impressive megalith, this time in Zimbabwe. It was once home to around 20,000 people… but it’s now a ghost town.
- Poor Australia has Vile Vortices on both sides. Heading over to the east, there’s the Loyalty Islands. A lot of strange whirlpools were found on this patch of the South Pacific as well as plenty of geologic activity.
- The North and South Poles are on opposite ends of the planet, but they’ve got two things in common: ice and odd disappearances.

Music by Epidemic Sound

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Man Arrested Camping on Abandoned Disney Island

THE BEST FOOD COURT EVER? ($1 PER MEAL)

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Ladies and Gentlemen, you have not experienced a shopping mall FOOD COURT until you come to BANGKOK, Thailand.

There are (literally) hundreds of shopping malls in this city, and on the top floor of each mall, you will find a wonderland of vendors selling cheap & tasty Thai meals in a food court (think less than $1 per plate).

In my opinion, no food court is better (or cheaper) than TERMINAL 21 in the heart of the city. I first stumbled upon this food court when I visited with friends in 2015, and I've been a regular customer here since moving to Bangkok last month!

Long story short, I am addicted to this food court called Terminal 21 in Bangkok, so I decided to make a video about it and show you how amazing it is.

So please, join me in finding out how much delicious Thai food I got here for less than $8USD (total)! If you come to Bangkok, make sure to add this place to your list, and come hungry!

Music: Epidemic Sound

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INSIDE NAURU: THE LEAST VISITED COUNTRY

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He Visited Every Country Without Flying

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