There is a category of place that defeats the normal cognitive equipment we bring to travel. Not merely beautiful, not merely historically significant, not merely unusual — but genuinely, persistently unreal in the specific sense that the information arriving through your eyes refuses to be processed by the part of your brain responsible for categorizing ordinary experience. The place looks like a dream. It looks like something rendered by a computer for a film whose budget was larger than its plausibility. It looks, most precisely, like something that should not exist — that violates some ambient assumption about what the world is made of and how its surfaces are organized.
Every destination in the world is, technically, real. The places in this guide are technically real also. They simply do not feel that way.
This is not the same quality as beauty, which is common, or rarity, which is less common, or even the otherworldly character explored in our Otherworldly Destinations guide. It is something more specifically cognitive — the experience of a mismatch between what the eyes report and what the brain is prepared to accept, a quality of visual and spatial information that exceeds the normal parameters of landscape experience and produces, in the visitor, a state of suspended disbelief more appropriate to fiction than to geography.
The places in this guide were selected for the specific intensity of this feeling. Some produce it through color — colors so saturated or so improbable that the landscape appears filtered or digitally enhanced when it is entirely natural. Some produce it through geometry — forms so precise or so regular that they appear designed when they were produced by geological or biological processes with no designer. Some produce it through scale — dimensions so extreme that the usual relationships between the human body and the landscape it inhabits are suspended. And some produce it through the specific surrealism of combination — the impossible juxtaposition of elements that have no business being in the same place simultaneously.
All of them, in the experience of travelers who have visited them, produce the same response: a moment of complete cognitive arrest, followed by the slow, uncertain recalibration of someone who has just discovered that the world contains more categories than they thought.
1. Lake Hillier, Western Australia — The Pink Lake
Lake Hillier sits on the edge of Middle Island off the southern coast of Western Australia, separated from the Southern Ocean by a narrow strip of eucalyptus forest, and it is pink. Not pale rose, not faintly tinted, not pinkish at certain times of day — but a deep, saturated, confectionary pink, the color of strawberry milkshake or bubble gum, entirely consistent from shore to shore and entirely unchanged when a cup of the water is removed from the lake. The pink color is caused by a combination of the halophilic algae Dunaliella salina and the pink-pigmented bacteria Salinibacter ruber that thrive in the lake’s extreme salinity — but no amount of scientific explanation makes the visual reality of a bright pink lake immediately adjacent to the dark blue of the Southern Ocean feel anything other than completely, stubbornly unreal.
The effect from the air — the standard way to experience Lake Hillier, since Middle Island has no permanent infrastructure and access is restricted — is the most immediately unrealistic image in Australian natural geography: the perfect oval of vivid pink water against the dark green of the eucalyptus forest against the deep blue of the ocean, the colors so saturated and so geometrically contained that the lake appears to have been placed there by a designer with an implausible color palette rather than produced by two billion years of biological and geological process.
Getting there: Scenic flights from Esperance (approximately 45 minutes flight time) provide the aerial view. Helicopter tours from Esperance land on Middle Island for direct access. Cruise operators occasionally include Middle Island as a stop.
Don’t miss: The aerial view of the color contrast between the lake and the surrounding ocean — nothing else in Australian geography prepares you for it. The lake water, when collected in a container, retains its pink color — one of the most persistently unreal portable experiences in world travel.
Best time to visit: October to April for the finest weather and the clearest aerial visibility.
2. Zhangye Danxia, China — The Painted Mountains
The Zhangye Danxia Landform Geological Park in Gansu Province, northwestern China, contains the most intensely and most variously colored mountain landscape on Earth — striated cliffs and rolling hills of red sandstone layered with bands of yellow, orange, green, white, grey, and deep purple in horizontal strata whose exposure by erosion over 24 million years has produced a landscape that appears to have been painted by a colorist with access to every pigment simultaneously and no interest in naturalistic restraint.
The colors are caused by the different mineral compositions of successive sedimentary layers deposited under different geological conditions — red and orange from iron oxide, green from chlorite minerals, white from calcium carbonate, purple from manganese — exposed by the uplift and erosion of the Qilian Mountains. The geology is entirely comprehensible. The visual result is entirely beyond comprehension: rolling mountain forms covered in bands of color so vivid and so various that the landscape appears to have been produced by a process more closely related to textile dyeing than to geological sedimentation.
The finest viewing is from the elevated boardwalk platforms at the scenic area’s designated viewpoints, particularly at dawn and dusk when the low-angle light increases the color saturation and the shadows in the strata deepen the contrast between the bands. At these hours the mountains appear briefly more painted than ever, the colors briefly more impossible, and then the light levels normalize and the landscape settles back into something merely extraordinary.
Getting there: Fly or take the high-speed train to Zhangye from Lanzhou (2 hours), Xining (1.5 hours), or Xi’an (4 hours). The geological park is 30 km from Zhangye city, accessible by shuttle bus from the park entrance.
Don’t miss: The No. 4 viewing platform for the finest panoramic overview of the largest color-banded section, the dawn light on the western cliff faces, the walk between platforms for the full range of color variations, the adjacent Sunan Yugur Autonomous County for an overnight stay in traditional Yugur culture.
Best time to visit: June to September for the clearest skies and the richest colors. The park is stunning after rain, when the colors intensify.
3. Glowworm Caves, Waitomo, New Zealand — The Underground Galaxy
The Waitomo Glowworm Caves in the Waikato region of New Zealand’s North Island contain one of the most genuinely unreal visual environments accessible to tourists anywhere in the world — an underground limestone cavern whose ceiling and walls are covered in thousands of Arachnocampa luminosa, a bioluminescent fungus gnat larva found only in New Zealand, whose blue-green bioluminescence covers every surface of the cave ceiling in a display that is indistinguishable, to the eye and to the brain, from a clear night sky of extraordinary star density.
The experience is delivered by boat — a silent flat-bottomed punt guided by a rope through the Cathedral Cave, the largest cavern in the Waitomo system, its ceiling alive with the blue-green light of approximately 10,000 glowworms in a display that requires approximately three minutes of silent adjustment before the visual system accepts that the ceiling of a cave 30 meters below the surface of the New Zealand countryside is covered in what appears to be a galaxy of stars.
The unreality is not merely visual. The silence enforced in the boat passage — the guides require complete quiet, the boat moves without paddles, only the faint sound of the river and the dripping of limestone water audible — creates an acoustic quality of absolute stillness that the visual impossibility of the glowing ceiling transforms into something vertiginous and dreamlike. The brain receives sky-information from the eyes and underground-information from the body and cannot fully reconcile the two.
Getting there: Drive from Hamilton (45 minutes) or from Rotorua (1.5 hours). The Waitomo Glowworm Caves are operated by Waitomo Caves Discovery Centre, with tours departing regularly throughout the day. Book at waitomo.com.
Don’t miss: The Cathedral Cave boat tour (the glowworm display), the black water rafting option (tubing through the cave system with glowworm ceiling — combines the visual impossibility with physical adventure), the Ruakuri Cave (a second cave system at Waitomo with more extensive geological formations and a spiral tunnel entry).
Best time to visit: Year-round — the caves maintain constant temperature and the glowworms are active throughout the year. Shoulder season (April to June and September to November) for smaller tour groups and a more intimate experience.
4. Socotra Island, Yemen — The Dragon Blood Forest
Socotra appeared in our Otherworldly Places guide, and the dragon blood trees at the Diksam plateau deserve revisiting here in the specific context of unreality because the visual experience of a mature Dracaena cinnabari forest — the flat-topped umbrella canopies of hundreds of trees in perfect geometric alignment, rising from grey limestone on a plateau above the Arabian Sea — is the most persistently unreal biological landscape in the world.
Each tree individually is extraordinary — its perfectly flat canopy, its smooth grey-green bark, its trunk thickening toward the base in a form that appears deliberately engineered, its red resin bleeding from any cut like a wound. But the forest, the hundreds of trees together on the Diksam plateau, each maintaining its perfect umbrella form as if placed by a landscape architect with a specific and alien vision of what a forest should look like, is something that no single tree prepares you for.
The visual effect — looking across a plateau covered in hundreds of perfect flat discs of green foliage at a uniform height, the discs touching and overlapping to create a canopy that from above looks like a vast tiled surface and from below looks like the underside of a constructed shelter — is genuinely and persistently impossible to process as a natural landscape. The trees look designed. They look like the product of a civilization that wanted to create shade structures for a very large outdoor space. They look, most honestly, like something from the production design of a science fiction film set on a world where the evolutionary pressures were fundamentally different.
Getting there: Charter flights from Abu Dhabi when accessible. The political situation in Yemen affects access periodically — check current travel advisories and use only established tour operators.
Best time to visit: October to April when temperatures are manageable. May to September monsoon season makes the island inaccessible.
5. Fly Geyser, Nevada, USA — The Accidental Sculpture
Fly Geyser is one of the finest examples in the world of a place whose unreality is produced by a specific combination of biological and geological accident — an accidentally created geothermal feature whose extraordinary colors and forms have developed over 100 years of continuous mineral deposition into something that appears to be the work of a visionary sculptor rather than the product of a drilling error.
The geyser was created in 1964 when a geothermal energy company drilled a well and hit a pocket of geothermally heated water at approximately 200°C. The well was not properly capped, and the superheated water has been erupting from the original drill hole ever since — depositing calcium carbonate and silica minerals in successive layers that have built up over sixty years into the extraordinary mound-and-cone formation that is now approximately 1.5 meters high, continuously erupting from three main openings, and covered entirely in vivid green and red thermophilic algae (Cyanidium caldarium and related species) that grow in the permanently wet mineral surfaces.
The color — the combination of the vivid green algae covering the mineral deposits, the red-orange of the secondary algae in the pools, and the white of the freshly deposited calcium carbonate at the eruption points — against the flat grey alkaline desert of the Black Rock Desert is the most immediately unreal chromatic combination in American landscape photography, and in person, with the three water spouts visible and the steam rising from the surrounding thermal pools and the extraordinary silence of the Black Rock Desert extending in every direction, it produces the quality of willed suspension of disbelief that the finest surrealism seeks.
Getting there: Fly Geyser is on private property (Fly Ranch) owned by the Burning Man organization, which purchased it in 2016. Access is by guided tour only, available through the Burning Man Project (burningman.org/flygeyser). Drives from Reno (approximately 2 hours) are required.
Don’t miss: The three erupting vents at close range (the water temperature is approximately 200°C at the source — maintain the guided tour’s safety distance), the surrounding thermal pools (their colors range from turquoise to orange depending on the specific algae communities), the Black Rock Desert view from the geyser site — the flat playa extending to the mountains in every direction creates a spatial context for the geyser that emphasizes its improbable presence.
Best time to visit: Spring and autumn for the finest weather. Summer on the Black Rock Desert is extremely hot.
6. Patagonia’s Torres del Paine, Chile — Impossible Granite
Torres del Paine National Park in Chilean Patagonia contains what are widely agreed to be the most dramatically improbable mountains in the world — the three granite towers (torres) of the park’s name, which rise 2,500 meters from the Patagonian steppe in vertical walls of nearly unbroken granite whose profile is so geometrically extreme — so vertical, so regular, so completely unlike the normal profile of a mountain worn by weather and time — that they appear to have been placed by something with no interest in geological plausibility.
The torres are the exposed cores of ancient plutons — granite intrusions that cooled slowly deep beneath the Earth’s surface and were then exposed by millions of years of erosion of the surrounding softer rock, the Patagonian glaciers completing the work by scouring the sides of the granite into the near-vertical faces that now rise from the valley floor. The geology explains the form. The form remains implausible.
The standard viewpoint — the Mirador Las Torres, reached by a 4–5 hour hike from the Refugio Las Torres — looks across a turquoise glacial lake at the three towers rising directly above, their vertical faces changing color through the course of a day from grey to gold to pink as the sun moves around them. The specific unreality of this view is produced partly by the towers themselves and partly by the lake — its extraordinary turquoise color, caused by glacial flour suspended in the water, is too saturated to appear natural against the grey granite and the grey Patagonian sky.
Getting there: Fly to Punta Arenas from Santiago (3 hours) then bus or transfer to Puerto Natales (3 hours), from which park buses and transfers depart. The park requires advance booking for trails and refugio accommodation — reserve at torresdelpaine.com months ahead in peak season.
Best time to visit: November to March (Patagonian summer). The park is open year-round but winter weather makes hiking challenging. January is the busiest month; November and March offer the finest balance of accessible weather and manageable crowds.
7. The Cave of Crystals, Naica Mine, Mexico — The Crystal Cathedral
The Cave of Crystals (Cueva de los Cristales) in the Naica lead and silver mine in Chihuahua state, Mexico, was discovered in 2000 when miners broke through a wall into a chamber containing the largest natural crystals ever found — selenite gypsum crystals up to 11 meters long and 1 meter in diameter, formed over 500,000 years in the geothermally heated brine that filled the cave until the mine’s pumps lowered the water table.
The cave is not currently accessible to tourists — the extreme conditions inside (50°C temperature, 99% humidity, conditions in which an unprotected human loses consciousness within approximately 10 minutes) make standard visitation impossible. Scientists who enter wear specially designed cooling suits and can work for maximum 45 minutes per visit. The cave exists in this guide because its documentation — the extraordinary photographs by Carsten Peter that appeared in National Geographic in 2008, the scientific literature, the accounts of researchers — describes an environment of such complete visual impossibility that its existence represents the ultimate expression of the places-that-don’t-feel-real category: a place so extreme and so extraordinary that it remains inaccessible, its unreality preserved by its hostility to human presence.
For accessible crystal environments: the Pulpi Geode near Almería, Spain — a 10-meter geode of selenite crystals discovered in 1999 and accessible on guided tours — provides the finest publicly accessible crystal cave experience in the world, its crystals up to 2 meters long, transparent and colorless, lining the walls of a chamber large enough to stand inside. Book at museopulgidelinea.com.
The Pulpi Geode: Drive from Almería (45 minutes) to Pulpi. Tours run daily with limited capacity — book weeks ahead. Entry approximately €13.
8. Waitomo’s Cousin: Bioluminescent Bays, Puerto Rico — The Living Sea
The bioluminescent bays of Puerto Rico — Mosquito Bay on Vieques Island, Laguna Grande near Fajardo, and La Parguera near Lajas — contain the highest concentrations of bioluminescent dinoflagellates (Pyrocystis fusiformis and Noctiluca scintillans) in the world, their waters producing blue-green light when disturbed by movement — by a paddle, a swimming body, the wake of a boat — in a display of biological light production that is, at its most intense on dark moonless nights, among the most genuinely unreal visual experiences available in the natural world.
Mosquito Bay on Vieques is the most concentrated of the three bays and consistently produces the most intense bioluminescence. Kayaking through the bay on a moonless night, each paddle stroke producing a swirl of glowing blue-green light, the wake of the kayak trailing luminescence, a hand trailed in the water producing a glowing outline of every finger — the experience is one of direct interaction with the bioluminescent phenomenon rather than observation of it from a distance, and the quality of unreality is correspondingly more immediate.
The specific visual quality that makes the bioluminescent bays feel unreal is the relationship between the dark, invisible water surface and the light that emerges from within it when disturbed — the light appears to come from inside the water, from a source that should not exist, producing the specific cognitive experience of seeing something that the visual system categorizes as impossible even as the hand producing it confirms that it is entirely real.
Getting there: Fly to Vieques (VQS) from San Juan (20 minutes) or take the ferry from Ceiba (30 minutes). Kayak tours from the Vieques bioluminescent bay depart from the island’s water sports operators — book in advance.
Best time to visit: Year-round, but the bioluminescence is most intense on new moon nights (the absence of competing moonlight allows the full visibility of the bio-glow). Avoid visiting in the week before or after the full moon.
9. Dead Vlei, Namibia — The Surrealist Painting
Dead Vlei is a white clay pan in the Sossusvlei area of the Namib-Naukluft National Park in Namibia, surrounded by some of the tallest sand dunes in the world, containing approximately 900-year-old dead camel thorn trees whose black, desiccated trunks and branches have been preserved by the extreme aridity of the Namib Desert since the dunes blocked the river that once fed the pan, ending the water supply that the trees required to survive.
The visual result is the most precisely surrealistic landscape in Africa and one of the most surrealistic in the world: black, skeletal tree forms standing in cracked white clay, surrounded by orange and red dunes 300–400 meters high, under a blue Namibian sky of extreme clarity. The colors — white, black, orange, red, blue — are four of the most saturated colors available in the natural landscape, combined in a spatial composition of such deliberate-seeming precision that the entire scene appears to have been arranged rather than found.
The trees cannot be dated precisely by dendrochronology because they contain no moisture and therefore no datable carbon at accessible depths, but radiocarbon dating of the surrounding organic material suggests they died approximately 900 years ago and have been standing, blackened and desiccated, in the clay pan ever since — too dry to rot, too remote from human activity to be disturbed, preserved by the extreme aridity that killed them in a state of permanent botanical death whose visual quality is simultaneously tragic and extraordinarily beautiful.
Getting there: Fly to Windhoek and drive to Sesriem (approximately 5 hours) or fly to the Sesriem airstrip by charter. The Sossusvlei area requires a 4WD vehicle or the park shuttle for the final section. Enter the park at the Sesriem gate (open at sunrise) to reach Dead Vlei at dawn.
Don’t miss: Dead Vlei at dawn when the low orange light hits the dunes and the black trees are in shadow — the finest 30 minutes of Namib photography and Namib experience. The climb of Dune 45 (the most accessible of the major dunes, 45 km from Sesriem gate) for the sunrise view over the dune sea. The Deadvlei walk from the Sossusvlei car park (approximately 1 km across the salt flat — manageable in the cool of early morning, genuinely dangerous in the midday heat).
Best time to visit: May to October (dry season) for the clearest skies and the most extreme dune-to-sky color contrast. June and July can be cold at night.
10. The Marble Caves of General Carrera, Chile/Argentina — The Blue Cathedral
The Marble Caves (Cavernas de Mármol) of General Carrera Lake — the second largest lake in South America, shared between Chile and Argentina in Patagonia — are a series of cave formations carved by the lake’s glacial meltwater into the pure white and grey marble of a peninsula, whose polished surfaces and extraordinary geometry produce an interior color environment of such intense and variable blue that entering the caves by boat feels like entering a space that belongs to a different physical reality.
The color of the water — a saturated turquoise produced by glacial flour suspended in the lake — reflects off the polished marble walls and ceiling of the caves in a way that fills the interior with blue light of extraordinary intensity, the specific shade shifting as the light angle changes and the boat moves through the cave passages. The polished marble surface — worn to a perfect smoothness by thousands of years of wave action — reflects the colored light back into the water, creating a feedback loop of blue that saturates the entire cave interior in a quality of light more commonly associated with computer-generated environments than with Patagonian geology.
Getting there: Fly to Coyhaique (Chile) and drive to Puerto Río Tranquilo on the Chilean side (approximately 3.5 hours). Boat tours from Puerto Río Tranquilo run daily in season. The Argentine side (Perito Moreno) is accessible from El Calafate (approximately 4 hours).
Best time to visit: December to February (Patagonian summer) for the finest weather and the best water clarity. The turquoise color is most intense in spring when glacial melt is highest.
The Unreality of the Real World
The places in this guide have one thing in common beyond their specific visual impossibilities: they all exist in the face of a deep human expectation that the world, however beautiful, should behave according to the rules that daily experience has established. The pink lake should not be pink. The cave ceiling should not look like the Milky Way. The trees should not be that color or that geometry. The crystals should not be that size. The water should not glow.
And yet.
The world, it turns out, is significantly less constrained by ordinary expectation than ordinary experience suggests. The geological and biological processes that produce it — operating over timescales that make human history appear instantaneous, with access to chemical and physical resources that no human technology can replicate — produce, occasionally, results that the human visual system and the human cognitive apparatus are simply not equipped to process as normal.
These are the places where that processing failure is most complete, most persistent, and most rewarding. They do not feel real because reality, at its most extreme and most unmediated, is stranger than the experience of it that most of us are given most of the time.
Go and see for yourself. The world looks different when you have stood somewhere that should not exist.
We hope this guide to the world’s most surreal and dreamlike destinations has given you the inspiration to seek out the places where reality exceeds all expectation. For more travel inspiration, destination deep-dives, and the guides that help you experience the world at its most extraordinary, keep exploring GlobeTrailGuide — your trusted companion for smarter, deeper travel.
GlobeTrailGuide.com | Travel Smarter. Explore Deeper.