Creepy!
Smash Monkey asks: "what's the creepiest thing you've seen, heard or felt? What has sent shivers running up your spine and skidmarks running up your undercrackers? Tell us, we'll make it all better"
( , Thu 7 Apr 2011, 13:57)
Smash Monkey asks: "what's the creepiest thing you've seen, heard or felt? What has sent shivers running up your spine and skidmarks running up your undercrackers? Tell us, we'll make it all better"
( , Thu 7 Apr 2011, 13:57)
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Deaded People
When we went to Peru, we were staying somewhere near the Nazca Lines. It's fairly remote there and for something to do, a group of us decided to visit a graveyard. However, this graveyard was in the desert, and a lot of the graves had been dug up by grave robbers, leaving holes in the ground with just the skeletons at the bottom.
It took about 30 minutes to drive out to this place, and it really was in the middle of nowhere. There were about eight of us and we were the only ones there, except for a man sitting in a wooden hut taking money. We made sure our taxi drivers in the beat up cinquecentos wouldn't leave us, and had a walk around.
The wind was howling, there were teeny, dusty tornados and the looming Andes were in the distance. Add that to the skeletons (some of which still had dried skin/ hair attached), it was pretty creepy. Plus there were bones in the sand we were walking through.
I love being a tourist.
( , Wed 13 Apr 2011, 13:25, 3 replies)
When we went to Peru, we were staying somewhere near the Nazca Lines. It's fairly remote there and for something to do, a group of us decided to visit a graveyard. However, this graveyard was in the desert, and a lot of the graves had been dug up by grave robbers, leaving holes in the ground with just the skeletons at the bottom.
It took about 30 minutes to drive out to this place, and it really was in the middle of nowhere. There were about eight of us and we were the only ones there, except for a man sitting in a wooden hut taking money. We made sure our taxi drivers in the beat up cinquecentos wouldn't leave us, and had a walk around.
The wind was howling, there were teeny, dusty tornados and the looming Andes were in the distance. Add that to the skeletons (some of which still had dried skin/ hair attached), it was pretty creepy. Plus there were bones in the sand we were walking through.
I love being a tourist.
( , Wed 13 Apr 2011, 13:25, 3 replies)
they don't fully bury them in the nazca desert. they're left out to dry.
like dead, wizened laundry. mmmm.
( , Wed 13 Apr 2011, 13:54, closed)
like dead, wizened laundry. mmmm.
( , Wed 13 Apr 2011, 13:54, closed)
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