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IGOUGO EDITORS SHARE THEIR TOP 10 FAVORITE PICKS FOR MYSTERIOUS SITES AROUND THE GLOBE

10-17-2008

IgoUgo editors find the most mysterious, unexplainable and sometimes creepiest places to visit this Halloween

 

 

NEW YORK – October 16, 2008 – Halloween season or not, many people are drawn to mystery and intrigue. There is a fascination with the unexplainable, and sometimes people just like a good scare. That is why this Halloween season, IgoUgo has pulled together a list of their picks for the most mysterious places around the globe. From a burning town to a house of bones, these places are not for the faint of heart.

 

“IgoUgo editors dug deep to find some of the eeriest sites around the globe,” said Michelle Doucette, content manager at IgoUgo.com.  “This time of year people are drawn to places with mysterious qualities, and these sites won’t disappoint.”

 

IgoUgo editors, quoting advice and impressions from their savvy members, compiled their picks for the world’s top 10 places to visit this Halloween season.

 

IgoUgo’s Top 10 Most Mysterious Sites

 

Bran Castle

Bran, Romania

Photo: Castle Bran Tower

The legend of Dracula—or Vlad Tepes, since you’ll be on a real-name basis once you’ve visited his “dark and frightening” home—harkens back to Bran Castle, rising atop a


Transylvanian peak. Today the fortress is a museum, so you can call on Vlad the Impaler any time you want (during operating hours, anyway).

 

Old Melbourne Gaol

Melbourne, Australia

Photo: Old Melbourne Gaol

Visitors to Melbourne’s infamous jail, today marketed with a “Crime & Justice Experience” subtitle, report feeling “disturbed by lost souls” yet find the trip “strangely intriguing”—especially the collection of death masks and hanging beams of Ned Kelly and other outlaws.

 

Dilmun Burial Complex

Sar, Bahrain

Photo: Honeycomb Graves

One of the most intriguing ancient Arabian burial grounds, the Dilmun complex of intertwining graves is perhaps best known for its “honeycomb” appearance. Both the identity of the buried and the function of excavated buildings—thought to be temples of a very early civilization—remain unsolved.

 

Fort Raleigh National Historic Site

Manteo, North Carolina

Photo: Fort Raleigh National Historic Site

After nearly 420 years, visitors to Fort Raleigh are still asking the question, “where, oh where, is Virginia Dare?” The first baby born to English arrivals in the New World vanished, along with an entire colony of settlers, with a mysterious tree carving their only trace. See the story—minus the mysterious ending—dramatized in the long-running outdoor musical The Lost Colony.

 

Hill of Crosses

Siauliai, Lithuania

Photo: The Hill of the Crosses

The hill sagging under tens of thousands of crosses is such a striking sight that many visitors to Lithuania claim you haven’t really visited the country until you’ve seen it. Its origins are unknown, though Lithuania has long maintained a tradition of carving crosses that express “both sorrow and hope.”

 

Burning Town

Centralia, Pennsylvania

Photo: Warning - Underground Mine Fire

A must-see oddity on any northeast US road trip, a coal vein has been burning beneath this town for 46 years. You’ll know you’re close when you hit “undulating blacktop” on Route 61, and then you’ll see the ghost town with its “few families who refuse to leave, several cemeteries, and the smoking strip mine where it all started.” If you’re not creeped out yet, it’s two hours to Philadelphia and the “haunted” [Back to Press Releases Main]