Fucking is a small town in Austria (population 150). Deikenal this small town named "Fucking" more or less since 1070.
The most popular in this city is road markings with the name of this town, sometimes a lot of English speaking tourists who stopped just to take photos. In fact, this one lane into the lane most often stolen in Austria. City residents have a special budget to replace the road markings were stolen.
2.The Mojave Lonely Phone Booth.
The Mojave Phone Booth is the only phone booth in the Mojave National Preserve which attracted the attention of many people in 1997, because the location is not reasonable. Booth this one is 15 miles from the nearest highway interstate, and miles and miles from any buildings. People sometimes call this booth just to get a andseveral others traveled to the location of this booth to answer the phone , oftenthere are camping in the vicinity . The story inspired the making of the movie Mojave Phone Booth, which was released in 2006.
3. Climb the Rabbit’s Hill.
Colletto Fava is a 1,500 m altitude hill in the southern Piedmont region in Italy. In 2005, a giant pink rabbit was built beside the mountain. Members of the Viennese artist who founded the group is not just hope people will pay attention to their work, but also for climbers interested in climbing and resting on it. Why should a rabbit?.
4. A Christian Chapel decorated by the bones of 40,000 people.
he Sedlec ossuary small Christian chapel, located under the Cemetery Church of All Saints in the Czechs Republic. The ossuary contains approximately 40,000 human skeletons artistically arranged to form the decoration and equipment for the chapel.
5. A museum devoted to the Penis.
The Icelandic Phallological Museum in Husavík, Iceland, is a museum dedicated to the phallology. The museum currently has 154 specimens displayed like hunting trophies, embalmed in formaldehyde, or dried in display cases. The museum attempts to collect penis specimens from every mammal in Iceland, including several species that are endangered or already extinct in Icelandic waters.
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