By Expedia Team, on March 21, 2017

Travel Bucket List: 5 Unique Travel Experiences

YOLO. How about experiencing things most of your friends here in Malaysia can’t say they’ve even thought of trying? If the fire to travel and experience the diversity of the world burns bright in you, then these amazing experiences in different parts of the world will interest you. From Siberia to Guatemala, add these unique experiences to your (travel) bucket list for adventures that will leave a genuinely lasting impression. Exhilarating and not your average run-of-the mill activities, here are 5 things to add to your bucket list as you travel the world.

5 Unique Travel Experiences to Add to Your Bucket List

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Storm-chasing in the USA

From chasing sandstorms in Namibia to blizzards in Sweden, tours are now available everywhere and to all manner of tourists, not just hardcore thrillseekers. However, it all started in the USA.

Storm Chasers - Bucket List

USA  has the highest number of tornados in the world, with an average of 1000 reported each year. Most gather momentum in the great plains of the American midwest and the south in a region known as ‘Tornado Alley’.

The storm-chasing season spans April to July and excursions usually last between 5 to 10 days. Often-cited agencies include Storm Chasing Adventure Tours, Silver Lining Tours and Storm Chasers Unlimited, all of which offer guides with more than 20 years experience.

It’s time to pray to the weather gods (though for what exactly, is the question!) and live out your Twister fantasies. (Although autocorrect is suggesting it’s more like ‘twisted’ fantasies.)

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Live with Nomadic Reindeer Herders in Russia

Reindeers in Siberia - Bucket List

The nomadic Nenet people – who have lived as reindeer herders since the late 15th century – travel every summer with about 10,000 reindeer to graze in the north of the Yamal Peninsula overlooking the Arctic Ocean.

How about leaving the heat of Malaysia to live out in the cold white powder up north?

You can follow the Nenet on their migration and live with them in their chums (teepee-like tents made of reindeer hide) and eat with them to test how strong your constitution is. Their favourite meal, not surprisingly, is reindeer meat and blood, eaten and drunk raw directly from a freshly-killed carcass. You can wash it down with vodka.

So brave the Siberian cold for the trip of a lifetime with Yamal Peninsula Travel (www.yamalpeninsulatravel.com). You’ll be guided by Edward Adrian-Vallance, a Briton who has been living in Russia since 2007 and cultivated a close relationship with the Nenet.

If you’re looking to experience the diversity of the world, it doesn’t get much more different than this. Definitely a winner of a travel bucket list idea.

A Chum, Nenets in Russia - Bucket List IdeasA chum

Nenet reindeer herders - Bucket List ideas Reindeer herder

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Get Up Close with an Active Volcano in Guatemala

What red tape? This is Central America and in the Guatemalan city of Quetzaltenango, you can hike the Santiaguito crater which has been cited as one of the world’s 10 most dangerous volcanoes.

Guatemala volcanoes - Bucket LIst ideas Crater of Santiaguito Santa Maria

‘Little Santiago’ is in fact a lava dome which grew out of the top of the Santa Maria volcano which collapsed when it exploded in 1902. At 2500 metres above sea level, it’s the most active volcano in Guatemala and reportedly erupts every 45 minutes, spewing rocks, ash and mushroom plumes of smoke to a height of about 500m.

If you add this to your bucket list, then a stop in Guatemala as you travel the world will give you the opportunity to see all this up close, either on a half- or full-day hike, or an overnighter. The easier options include hiking mid-way or to the top of Santa Maria from where you can look down at its rebellious offspring. Hiking Santiaguito is more challenging and will take two days.

Altiplano’s and Kaqchikel Tours offer a variety of treks to suit all fitness levels.

Peak Santiaguito, Santa Maria - Bucket List Ideas On a peak in the Guatemala Highland,  volcano Santa Maria view

Horizon over guatemala - Bucket List Ideas  Horizon over Guatemala

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Ski Sand Dunes in Namibia

Even when winter is over, you won’t have to store those skis away. You can also cut some lines on sand dunes in the Peruvian desert and in Dubai, but Namibia was the first country to put it on the map. However, it wasn’t a Namibian, but German skier Henrik May who invented it in 2002 and saw its potential as a travel experience.

Sand Dunes of Namibia - Bucket List Ideas

The Namib Desert is next to the Atlantic coast and is surprisingly cool due to cold air coming in from the ocean current originating in the Antarctic. Its ski runs are between 200 and 400 feet vertically, with climbs of around 20 minutes. ‘Moon-skiing’ is also available if you want to enjoy being out under the desert night sky. Either way, you must have previous skiing experience and can choose between downhill, cross-country and Telemark skiing. (If you know what the difference is, you’re well on your way.)

Forget white powder. Brown is gold. The Namibian ski season runs from June to November. Excursions with Ski Namibia.

Sand Dunes in Namibia - Bucket List Ideas Oryx on Namibia Sand Dunes - Bucket List Ideas Oryx on sand dune of Sossuvlei, Namibia

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Swim with Tuna in Australia

Are you more of a mermaid? Then this one’s for your bucket list.

Port Lincoln, an hour’s flight from Adelaide, is the town where tuna kings rule – and home to more millionaires per capita than anywhere else in Australia. It’s also the only place in the world where you can swim with bluefin tuna!

Swim with Bluefin Tuna - Bucket LIst Ideas

On pontoons just a 15-minute boat ride from the shore, you’ll snorkel with about 60 of these massive fish which average about two metres, weigh 60 to 75 kilograms and can go from zero to 70 km/h in one burst. You’re advised not to try and touch them as their speed alone could injure you on contact.

However, you are allowed to hand-feed them, holding out small fish and dangling them by the tail on the surface of the water. Somehow, these bluefins are so precise they won’t take your fingers off or even touch you – darting away just as quickly as they come in metallic blue-silver flashes.

Later, pop into any of Port Lincoln’s restaurants for fresh tuna sashimi – if you can stomach it.

The only outfit running these tours is Swim with the Tuna.

Port Lincoln Marina, Australia - Bucket List Ideas Port Lincoln marina

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