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The running of the bulls (Spain): Every July, more than 1,000 runners participate in Pamplona's annual bull run -- when revelers try to outrun the charging bulls through the streets in the city's old quarter.
JIM WATSON/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
The Iditarod sled dog race (USA): The great race across Alaska lasts for at least eight days, covers more than 1,000 miles and takes place in temperatures as low as -50C (-58F).
SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Chernobyl (Ukraine): The Chernobyl nuclear power plant, as well as its nearby ghost city Pripyat, has become an unexpected tourist attraction more than three decades after the 1986 nuclear disaster.
IGOR SASIN/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
The Door to Hell (Turkmenistan): More than four decades after scientists mistakenly drilled a sinkhole and set the gas cavern on fire, the Darvaza Crater is still burning.
GREGORY BOISSY/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Teahupo'o (Tahiti): Riding the waves at Teahupo'o -- aka the world's heaviest and deadliest surf spot -- can either be the most memorable surf in your life or the most horrific wipeout.
RHONA WISE/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Death Valley (USA): Visiting Death Valley National Park in California is unlike any walk in any other park. Death Valley holds the record as the hottest place on Earth.
Maarten Takens/Creative Commons/Flickr
Oymyakon (Russia): This Siberian destination is the coldest community on Earth, with 500 hardy residents. It averages -50 C (-58 F) in winter and has reached -67.8 C (-90 F).
Greg von Doersten/Red Bull Content Pool
The Inga rapids on the Congo River (Democratic Republic of Congo): A white-water kayaking team led by Steve Fisher attempted to brave the rapids -- on an expedition called the Grand Inga Project -- in 2011. Fisher was named one of National Geographic's Adventurers of the Year for the attempt.
AFP/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Mawsynram (India): Averaging 467 inches of rain annually -- compared to 34.1 inches in "rainy" Seattle -- Mawsynram village in the northeastern Indian state of Meghalaya is the wettest place on Earth.
Rob Stone/USDCT
Chevé Cave (Mexico): One of the deepest caves on Earth, exploration of Chevé Cave is still ongoing three decades after it was first discovered.
Jumana El-Heloueh/reuters/Landov
Formula Rossa roller coaster (Abu Dhabi): Traveling from 0 to 149.1 mph (240km/h) in 4.9 seconds, the Formula Rossa, at Ferrari World in Abu Dhabi, is the world's fastest roller coaster.
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Cheese-rolling at Coopers Hill in Gloucestershire (England): Where tumbling down a very steep and rugged hill after a spinning, rolling, bouncing Double Gloucester cheese is serious business.
Francois Nel/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images
Al Marmoom camel-racing (Dubai): Camel-racing is an essential experience in the Middle East, and the most unforgettable race features robot jockeys riding the camels. The robots, when activated by remote control, whip their mounts to make them go faster.
MAXI FAILLA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
The Superclásico (Argentina): A game between Argentina's football rivals Boca Juniors and River Plate is both thrilling and unnerving -- fans have been known to pepper-spray players.
courtesy Trekking Team/007 Jump
The Contra (Verzasca) dam 007 bungee jump (Switzerland): Dubbed the 007 jump, the Contra dam is where you will have the opportunity to plummet 220 meters (over 720 feet) in Ticino, much like Mr. Bond did in "GoldenEye."
YASUYOSHI CHIBA/AFP/Getty Images
Rio de Janeiro hang gliding (Brazil): Seeing aerial views of the city from a drone camera is so mainstream, especially when you can hang glide over it.
LILLIAN SUWANRUMPHA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
The King's Cup elephant polo (Thailand): While this sport is not without controversy, it does at least provide a novel antidote to the horse version.
GIANLUIGI GUERCIA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Great white shark diving in Gansbaai (South Africa): For those who fantasize about being in the cast of "Jaws."
CNN  — 

It’s easy to travel the world and feel oddly at home, particularly if you’re in one of the planet’s 24,000 Starbucks.

But it’s still possible to break loose from the rut and go to destinations that are beyond the ordinary. (Indeed, some of these are arguably insane.)

Spanning multiple continents and oceans, these adventures will make you feel alive – albeit in some cases terrified you might not be among the living much longer.

Running of the bulls: Spain

Every July, Pamplona offers an exciting chance to get gored.

While deaths at this event in Spain are relatively rare, the risk of getting injured is very real, with 35 people hurt in 2019.

How: Bull Run Pamplona

Less extreme alternative: Share the street with thousands of sheep during Madrid’s annual Transhumance Festival.

The Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race: Alaska

JIM WATSON/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Mushers race through 1,000 miles of beautiful Alaskan landscape in the annual Iditarod Sled Dog Race.

It takes at least eight days to complete the 1,000-mile journey which generally features falling snow, high winds and temperatures dropping to -50 C (-58 F).

For the canines completing it, never has “Good dog!” been so earned.

How: Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race

Less extreme alternative: Have a pint of beer while rubbing the bellies of these London pub dogs.

Chernobyl tours: Ukraine

Courtesy Anita Isalska
Three decades after the nuclear disaster there, guided tours take increasing numbers of tourists deep into Chernobyl's Exclusion Zone. Pripyat, the town built near the Chernobyl power plant, lies abandoned. This ruined swimming pool stands empty under rotting wooden beams.
Courtesy Anita Isalska
Pripyat's amusement park is its most photographed area. Barely used, its rusty funfair wheel has become a symbol of a once lively city silenced by disaster.
Courtesy Anita Isalska
The park's official opening had been planned for May 1, 1986, but the city was evacuated just days before. Bumper cars are at a standstill on cracked concrete.
Courtesy Anita Isalska
Trees and grass are slowly encroaching on Pripyat's buildings.
Courtesy Anita Isalska
The rotting remains of an abandoned superstore hold fascinating appeal for some.
Courtesy Anita Isalska
Background radiation around the Exclusion Zone can be up to 10 times the normal level. Slow-growing vegetation, especially prone to absorbing radioactive particles, tests even higher.
Courtesy Anita Isalska
Catfish still swim in Chernobyl's cooling pond. Increasing numbers of visitors to the area describe Chernobyl as a wildlife haven.
Courtesy Anita Isalska
The turquoise and white St. Elijah Church continues to welcome devotees. Approximately 200 people still live inside the Exclusion Zone despite government orders to leave.
Courtesy Anita Isalska
A monument to the men who gave their lives fighting the fires at Chernobyl power plant stands in the town.
Courtesy Anita Isalska
Traces of the USSR are everywhere. Vivid Soviet murals dance on walls. Faded gas masks in children's sizes lie in their dozens.
Courtesy Anita Isalska
Soviet-era portraits, posters and a ballot box inside the abandoned Soviet city of Pripyat.
Courtesy Anita Isalska
Silhouettes of dancing figures are daubed on walls of Pripyat's buildings, perhaps an attempt to bring a suggestion of human life back.
AFP/Getty Images
A new "safe containment" barrier is being built over the Chernobyl power plant to reinforce a sarcophagus structure originally constructed to limit the escape of radiation.
Courtesy Anital Isalska
This sign on the city's limits reads "Pripyat" and gives its foundation year, 1970.

The site of the 1986 nuclear power plant disaster has become an unexpected tourist attraction.

Bizarrely, one of its chief pulls is a chance to see an array of wild animals ignoring the after-effects of nuclear fallout to thrive in humanity’s absence.

How: Chernobyl tours

Less extreme alternative: Visit Bataan Nuclear Power Plant in the Philippines, which was built more than 30 years ago but has never been used. You even get to see a reactor without the radiation.

The Door to Hell: Turkmenistan

Also known as the Gates of Hell or, less colorfully, the Darvaza crater. You won’t find anything else like it in Central Asia (or anywhere else on Earth for that matter).

It was created more than 40 years ago when the ground collapsed in the desert during a Soviet drilling mishap. Then scientists set the gas cavern on fire.

Decades later, it still burns like … let’s just say the name is apt.

How: Karakum desert adventure tour

Less extreme alternative: Visit the Crater of Diamonds – an Arkansas state park where you can dream of finding something as eternal and more sparkly instead.

Extreme surfing: Teahupo’o, Tahiti

GREGORY BOISSY/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
A must-surf for any brave wave riders.

Considered to be home to both the world’s heaviest and deadliest waves, it’s the ultimate in high-risk, high-reward surfing.

To ride these waves is a once-in-a-lifetime experience, but to fail is to risk a truly horrific wipeout.

How: Teahupo’o Adventure Tours

Less extreme alternative: Brush up your surf skill at Wales’ Surf Snowdonia, an inland wave pool where there are waves for all levels of surfers.

Extreme heat: Death Valley, California

If you insist, “It’s not the heat, it’s the humidity,” this may put your belief to the test.

While there is debate over the authenticity of Death Valley’s alleged record high of 56.7 C (134 F), this California desert also holds the record among temperatures that are generally accepted as legitimate at 54 C (129.2 F).

Which is frankly warm enough.

How: Visit Death Valley National Park

Less extreme alternative: A Finnish sauna session in Helsinki allows you to shake off the heat by walking into the cold, or vice versa.

Extreme cold: Oymyakon, Russia

Once you’ve handled the heat, why not try the other end of the spectrum? Five hundred incredibly hardy residents make this Siberian destination the coldest community on Earth – it averages -50 C (-58 F) in winter and has reached -67.8 C (-90 F).

And yes, this is the place to make the Iditarod seem balmy by comparison.

Less extreme alternative: Any of the Icebars around the world. But the best one is the world’s original Icebar inside the ICEHOTEL in Jukkasjärvi, Sweden.

Inga Rapids on the Congo River: Democratic Republic of Congo

It’s the world’s largest rapids, so dangerous that kayaker Steve Fisher was named one of National Geographic’s Adventurers of the Year just for attempting them.

Nat Geo describes them as a “50-mile section of waterfalls, whirlpools and kayak-eating hydraulics.”

How: Steve Fisher’s Inga Project

Less extreme alternative: Try one of these world’s scariest – but tamed – water slides.

Extreme rain: Mawsynram, India

ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Mawsynram receives about 20 times more rainfall than London annually.

This village in Meghalaya is the world’s wettest place, averaging 467 inches of rain annually.

It’s made all the more intense by the fact the rain isn’t evenly spaced out, with the result that villagers have experienced more than 5 feet of rain in just 24 hours.

How: Exploring India’s abode of the clouds

Less extreme alternative: Soak into the turquoise geothermal water of Blue Lagoon in Iceland.

Chevé Cave: Mexico

Kasia Biernacka/USDCT
The United States Deep Caving Team (USDCT) is carrying out another expedition to Chevé Cave in 2017.

While still being explored, it’s believed this cave in Oaxaca is your chance to go more than 1.5 miles underground.

If you suffer from claustrophobia or a fear of the dark, head elsewhere. Spelunking, since you ask, is the exploration of caves.

Learn more: The United States Deep Caving Team’s 2017 Sistema Chevé Expedition

Less extreme alternative: Physically demanding but accessible, Hang Son Doong in Vietnam is the world’s largest cave.

Formula Rossa Roller Coaster: Abu Dhabi

Speeds on the Formula Rossa Roller Coaster fall just short of 150 mph, clocking in at 149. Riders are whipped around a 1.3-mile course in a mere 92 seconds.

How: Ferrari World Abu Dhabi

Less extreme alternative: If you try hard enough, Disneyland’s spinning teacups can cause light-headedness, too.

Cheese-rolling at Coopers Hill: Gloucestershire, England

Thousands gather to watch a group chase a cheese as it rolls down the hill, continuing a tradition that’s lasted 200 years.

OK, not as glamorous as some events on this list, but that’s a lot of history and it’s both unexpectedly exciting and dangerous.

Indeed, it was canceled over safety concerns in 2010 before resuming.

How: Gloucestershire cheese-rolling

Less extreme alternative: You don’t have to risk breaking your neck for some Parmigiano-Reggiano in Modena.

Al Marmoom camel-racing with robots: Dubai

Francois Nel/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images
The race between camel-riding robot jockeys is a highlight at Al Marmoom Camel Racing.

Camel-racing is big business in the Middle East, with winners commanding prizes in the millions. Even so, it’s more about the experience than the stakes.

Some races feature robot jockeys riding the camels. (When activated by remote control, they whip their mounts.)

Even in races with humans, it’s a revelation when you realize the camels’ trainers and owners are speeding along next to them in 4x4s, yelling at them to go faster.

How: Visit Dubai

Less extreme alternative: The camel market in Al Ain, Abu Dhabi, is also packed with action … of the bargaining and trading variety.

The Superclásico: Argentina

JUAN MABROMATA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
River Plate players were pepper-sprayed by Boca Junior supporters in a game in 2015.

It’s more than a game when two legendary teams from Buenos Aires, Boca Juniors and River Plate, play. (Their alumni include Diego Maradona and Alfredo Di Stéfano, two of the greatest players ever.)

You don’t watch so much as live it, as the rivalry can cross the line between thrilling and unnerving: Fans have been known to pepper-spray players.

On a personal note, a friend attended one installment and had a great time until he realized a man in the upper tier was urinating on rival fans below.

How: Superclásico tickets

Less extreme alternative: You may get a sense of the rivalry by joining a tour to both stadiums.

The Contra (Verzasca) Dam 007 Bungee Jump: Switzerland

Your opportunity to plummet 220 meters (over 720 feet) in Ticino, much like Mr. Bond did in “GoldenEye.” You, however, will probably not end up with Famke Janssen, who played Xenia Onatopp in the film.

How: Jump like James Bond

Less extreme alternative: Take a ride on the world’s fastest elevator – 20.5 meters per second – in the Shanghai Tower, the world’s second-tallest building.

Hang gliding: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

You’re already used to seeing aerial views of this remarkable city, watched over by the statue of Christ the Redeemer. What better way to experience it personally?

How: Hang gliding in Rio

Less extreme alternative: If you’re more comfortable on terra firma, here are a few scenic day tours from Rio.

The King’s Cup Elephant Polo: Thailand

The elephant is at the core of Thai identity. (Example: The hit Thai film “The Protector” revolves around Tony Jaa avenging his personal elephant.)

While this sport is not without controversy, it does provide a novel alternative to the horse version. If you’re in Bangkok, check it out.

How: Elephant polo

Less extreme alternative: This luxury tented camp helps you to make friends with one of the rescued elephants in residence.

Great white shark diving: Gansbaai, South Africa

02:07 - Source: CNN
Cage diving with great white sharks

It fully blurs the gap between a dream and a nightmare, as you sit in a cage underwater – which, when you think about it, is fairly terrifying itself – and then Great Whites enter the picture.

How: Dive with sharks

Less extreme alternative: Swimming with gentle manatees

Dune bashing: Qatar

The stunts from “The Fast and the Furious?” Picture those done in the dirt.

That’s off-roading in the desert, as drivers leap dunes or sometimes fishtail down them.

You can try yourself, though with the high risk of flipping it’s probably best to take at least one run as a passenger first to get a sense of what’s possible on the Inland Sea.

How: Sand dune-bashing in Qatar

Less extreme alternative: Participate in a sandcastle competition. California’s Sun & Sea Festival and the Netherlands’ Sand Sculpture Festival are two of the largest.

Sean Cunningham has written for and served as an editor for a variety of publications and websites and conducted interviews with everyone from Oscar winners to Wu-Tang Clan rappers while occasionally appearing on radio and television shows.