tamijoy
Cape Town
Untitled — 1 week ago
Not worth it!
I was a bit disappointed with my stay, as we were only there a very very short amount of time, and didn’t get to see much. Can’t say my opinion would be worth judging Albania on.
![]() arjan1966 2 entries Worth visiting! |
![]() tamijoy 1 entry Not worth visiting |
BIMIGJK 1 entry Not worth visiting |
HappyClamDiggers 1 entry Worth visiting! |
anjeza 1 entry Worth visiting! |
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shpirt_115 1 entry Worth visiting! |
![]() NitNatty 1 entry |
![]() syke930 1 entry Not worth visiting |
Lezieh 1 entry Worth visiting! |
![]() illumina3 1 entry Worth visiting! |
tamijoy
Cape Town
Not worth it!
I was a bit disappointed with my stay, as we were only there a very very short amount of time, and didn’t get to see much. Can’t say my opinion would be worth judging Albania on.
lifeasanewlywed1107
Ansonia
I am going to Albania in May 2008 and will be there for nine months. My husband is from Lac and in order for him to get his green card we must go back. We are going to be living with family in Tirana and I cannot wait! I’m so excited to go because I’ve never been here before. Anyone have suggestions of what I must see? My husband said we have to go to Durres because it has gorgeous beaches. I want to go NOW♥♥♥
BIMIGJK
Kosovo
Not worth it!
IT WAS A VERY GOOD TRIP BUT VISITING SERBIA WAS A VERY BAD TRIP.COUSE THEY ARE VERY UNFRIENDLY AND CRAZYKNOW THEY WAS SLAVES HAHAH">PEOPLES
HappyClamDiggers
4 places
Worth visiting!
I visited here for three months. Don’t come as a tourist, come as a cultural enthusiast. Stay with an Albanian family. Eat Albanian food. Drink the Raki. Lots of Raki. Grab a ride on a Mac Truck from Tepelena to Tirana. For the adventurous at heart.
The picture is of me with my Albanian grandma. I like John Lennon. When I was shopping for fruits in the local market I spotted some perfectly round Lennon-like glasses and I bought them. When I was showing them off at dinner that night, my grandma showed a big interest in them. “Do you want them?” I asked. “Oh, thank you, thank you!” she said and promptly put them on. This is dinner, mind you. So she’s walking around and then she goes to get something from outside and falls over a bucket. She still wouldn’t take the glasses off though. The picture was taken on the last day I was there. Grandma put on the glasses. I added the dew rag and the Adidas hat to complete the picture. The lady behind us is my Albanian mom, who was laughing hysterically
anjeza
Elbasan
Worth visiting!
Definitely worth it. If you know people better, you’d regret loosing so much time discovering them.
At the bottom line, the only think that matters is “PEOPLE”. A beautiful place & wonderful people is the perfect combination.
DO NOT MISS IT!!!!
arjan1966
Naples
Worth visiting!
i was born in ELbasan,Albania i lived there until i was 7 then i moved to the united states where i live in florida now i got my greencard 2 years ago and that was the first time i had visited in 6 years i spent basically all my time in Elbasan it was the best time i ever had in my life, sure it was dirty with litter and alot of fumes and dirty air but thats what i love not a clean eutopia i recommend you go their and enjoy your trip because i cant all the time because of school but you probbably can…. mirupafshim dhe tieni nga ana ime për këte.
megz4716
Portland
Albania…it’s like the last travel frontier in Europe (aside from Moldova and Belarus), why wouldn’t I want to go there?? I am very interested in experiencing the culture of a Muslim majority in a geographically European nation, especially in the context of a rapidly changing economy in the process of transitioning from communism to capitalism. Hope to see Tirana, Berati, and the Ionian Coast. And am looking forward to seeing the Hoxha era bunkers.
shpirt_115
Michigan
Worth visiting!
i’ve been going to albania off and on for the last 6 years alone, since i was 16. these people are so awesome and i have never felt threatened by any of them. i have worked with the orphanage in sarande and also with the local church there. i have also worked in some of the local villages with the gypsys. since my first trip to albania i knew that i would be moving there some day. now it looks like i moving for good in the next year. the people of albania are sweet and generous. if you needed it they would give you the coat of there back. also since my first trip i have started going to kosova to teach english. the buses can be very interesting. 8 hours from saranda to tirana and 13 hours from tirana to gjokova, kosova. if you have the time the bus is the cheapest way to travel.
NitNatty
New York State
I have spent most of the past two years living in Albania working in a home for orphans and street children outside Tirana (the capital). It is an amazing place with definite pros and cons.
Most of the country is drowned in poverty, and still struggling to re-build itself after it’s communist reign. The mafia still controls a lot in Albania and the black market is strong.
When I first arrived two years ago, the culture shock hit me hard. The living conditions were difficult, with usually no running water or electric. The power gets shut off several times a day in Albania, due to the government selling the electric down into Greece.
My experience is probably different than most people who go there for “tourism”. I saw the worst places in Albania, the slums, the gypsy communities. I worked with gypsy children who are literally the outcasts of society there. The orphanage was overcrowded, head lice, scabies, impetigo, and other sicknesses were a constant problem, but it soon didn’t bother me—what mattered was getting the children off the street and into a loving environment, safe and fed.
Honestly, I disliked the country, the way it was run, the way it looked and smelled. But I fell in love with the people (they are very friendly and gracious) and the culture and the language.
I do not recommend a young lady walking alone after 8pm in Albania. We learned this the hard way after I was confronted more than once by men and my friend was even dragged into a car once and fought to escape. It’s not the safest place to be, especially having blonde hair and blue eyes. That was mostly in the big cities though, Tirana, Elbasan, Durres.
The south of Albania is beautiful. I spent some time in the mountains where the air was cleaner, the community was very close-knit, it was lovely.
If you’re looking for vacation, steer clear of the north country and head to the Southern beaches. Still, you won’t find much of a modern world.
Even with its problems (and what country doesn’t have any?) Albania is an incredible country with much history and wonderful people.
syke930
London
Not worth it!
Went on a daytrip from Greece. There really isn’t much to see. It’s early in the stages of tourism development and really is not ready for Western tourism. The tours were unorganised and scammed the travellers out of money to go see places (the group chipped in about 60 euros to cover gas to a place a 15 min drive from where we were… gas would NOT cost 60 euros). The locals tended to scam too, overcharging for shottily made crafts and were very aggressive in bringing you off the street. Additionally, they have a different currency and when we got there they switched our money without using calculators, giving exchange rates or anything so I can’t imagine that the Albanians got the raw end of that deal…
I wouldn’t recommend this country, at least for 10 years while they get themselves organised.