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10 places on Earth that don't feel real

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| etimes.in | Last updated on - Jul 7, 2025, 19:03 IST
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1/11

Too god to be true...but it is

There are places on this planet that feel less like corners of the Earth and more like fragments from a dream, or perhaps the pages of a fantasy novel accidentally brought to life. You stumble upon photos of them and question if someone’s been a little too generous with Photoshop — but no, they exist, untouched by editing, fully real yet fully surreal. These landscapes challenge your sense of logic, break the rules of color, gravity, and time, and remind you how little you actually know about this big spinning rock we live on.

2/11

Aokigahara Forest, Japan

Tucked beneath the stoic gaze of Mount Fuji lies Aokigahara, a forest so dense and hushed that it swallows sound. Nicknamed the “Sea of Trees,” its twisted trunks and gnarled roots seem to grow sideways, curling around you like nature itself is holding its breath. Interestingly, while GPS would definitely not work, a compass might give up too. The volcanic ground messes with magnetism, making direction a guessing game.

3/11

Lake Hillier, Australia

Scientists believe the lake’s vivid hue comes from salt-loving microbes or algae, but nothing’s confirmed. What’s even more mind-bending? The pink doesn’t change when scooped into a bottle. It stays that way.

Credit: Getty Images

4/11

Kolmanskop, Namibia

Once a hub of diamond dreams, Kolmanskop now lies half-buried in silence and sand. This ghost town, set in the unforgiving Namib Desert, has been abandoned for decades and now sand has started to take over it. The place is as gorgeous as it is hauntingly empty.

5/11

Vinicunca, Peru

It’s hard to believe that something as stunning as Vinicunca stayed hidden until 2015. Discovered only in 2015, Vinicunca is draped in stripes of turquoise, maroon, mustard yellow, and emerald green. Its unique appearance makes it look less like rock and more like melted crayons solidified into shape. The bands are all-natural, formed by layers of mineral deposits pushed upward over centuries. Found deep in the Andes, it requires a high-altitude trek to witness .

6/11

Cave of the Crystals, Mexico

The Cave of the Crystals is home to selenite crystals so massive, some stretching over 35 feet, they seem sculpted by gods, not geology. Temperatures can hit 58°C (136°F), and humidity can suffocate unprepared visitors, which is why access is restricted.

7/11

Kawah Ijen, Indonesia​

Kawah Ijen, which sits atop Java’s Ijen volcano, glows a surreal turquoise by day, thanks to a brew of sulfuric and hydrochloric acids, and burns blue at night as sulfuric gases ignite on contact with air. While the place is still mined, it is open for tourists too.

Credit: Getty Images

8/11

Sørvágsvatn, Faroe Islands

Perched on a cliffside above the Atlantic Ocean, this optical illusion has earned it the nickname “the lake above the ocean.” But it’s just a trick of perspective. The lake actually sits just slightly above sea level — not hundreds of feet. When you hike to the right angle, your eyes get fooled, and it’s mesmerizing.What is more that a waterfall called Bøsdalafossur spills out from the lake, tumbling directly into the churning sea below.

9/11

Grand Prismatic Spring, USA

The Grand Prismatic Spring isn’t just famous for being the third-largest hot spring in the world — it’s a swirling blend of vibrant orange, yellow, green, and deep blue, each color shaped by temperature-loving bacteria. The center stays an intense sapphire due to extreme heat, while the cooler edges burst with life and color. Steam rises constantly, adding a dreamy, floating quality.

10/11

Red Beach, Panjin, China

Along the Liaohe River’s edge, thanks to a plant called seepweed thriving in alkaline soil, the Earth turns crimson. As the seasons shift, the red deepens, creating an illusion of the earth bleeding with color. The entire area is a protected reserve, so access is limited, but observation walkways offer breathtaking views.

11/11

Zhangjiajie National Forest Park, China

If you’ve ever watched Avatar and wondered if its floating Hallelujah Mountains had a real-world counterpart — well, you’re looking at it. Zhangjiajie’s forested stone pillars rise like towers from misty valleys, some so tall and narrow they look like they shouldn’t stand at all. Formed by millions of years of wind and water erosion, these quartz-sandstone formations are often cloaked in fog, making them appear to hover in mid-air.

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