Gay crusing sites

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Indulge in the ultimate playground of desire with our tantalising gay cruising app! Get ready to ignite your passions and explore your deepest fantasies with like-minded men who are as hot as they come.

Cruising is your gateway to a nature where inhibitions melt away and seduction is the name of the game – from encounters with the hot guy next door, to an exotic hunk living thousands of miles away while you’re on holiday.

Why wait? Hunting season has begun.

CRUISING & CONNECTIONS:
* Create your profile and connect with gay men worldwide within minutes
* Search the route to find members in your close proximity or desired location
* View as many profiles as you wish
* Create a list of favourites
* Send unlimited messages and talk to as many members as you want

UPGRADE TO PREMIUM:
* Unrestricted access
* See who visits your profile
* Access exclusive private parties and invites
* Build meet-ups and invite as many members as you wish
* No display ads
* Delete your footprints after visiting a profile

Photos depicting nudity or sex acts are stri

Your Guide to Cruising

How to Cruise

Cruising has come a long way since hanky code, polari, and subtle glances. There are lots of alternative locations to suit any preference, such as:

  • Public bathrooms
  • Cruising bars and clubs
  • Gay saunas
  • Cruising parks
  • Gay cruising beaches

Not only can you meet guys in public spaces but in online ones too. For example, Grindr is essentially a cruising catalogue of who's around, and also a great tool to predetermine the location that you'll hook up in. You can also choose to cruise on alt twitter, a subsection of Twitter where people create mostly anonymous profiles, post spicy R18 content, and arrange hook ups or content collabs.

When it comes to public spaces, it helps if there are other people there to cruise! Click here for a comprehensive list of places throughout Fresh Zealand / Aotearoa that are known as cruising sites, or visit (this is a paid service) for more. Remember, you may also encounter people who aren’t looking to cruise so it’s vital to know what signs to look out for - read on to find out.

Cruising

Cruising (we’re not talking ships) refers to searching for a sexual partner for an anonymous run-in, often a one-off. Cruising areas or sites include streets, parks, road lay-bys, (nudist) beaches or sand dunes and other public areas. Some sites possess been around for decades, Hampstead Heath and Brompton Cemetery being two of the most (in) famous in London.  Imagine a nightclub dark room but free and outdoors, but daytime can work just as well.

Of course, men finding other men for sex has been going for centuries though the term ‘cruise’ is believed to reach from the Dutch ‘kruisen’. The legal title was also used as code by closeted gay communities when homosexuality was illegal, and is the title of a American crime thriller film with Al Pacino. The film was poorly received and did nothing to intensify the meaning though the term has since been absorbed into the mainstream heterosexual vocabulary. Whatever its origins, the term cruising has stood the check of time.

For some gay men, cruising is about the excitement and rush of hooking up with a stranger alfresco. Way before Gr

In Pictures: The Queer Cruising Sites of Soviet Moscow

It always struck me as odd when I was living in Moscow that, in a city of 12 million people, I had so many occasions to be alone – in metro underpasses late at darkness, in snow-covered courtyards, in the endless maze of backstreets and alleyways. It never occurred to me that these moments alone in the Russian capital were missed opportunities for sexual encounters but, after seeing ‘Moscow: Gay Cruising Sites of the Soviet Capital, s–s’, the recent show from Russian-American painter Yevgeniy Fiks, I recognize what a failure of imagination I had.

Currently on display at the Harriman Institute at Columbia University, Fiks’s show is comprised of photographs, taken in , of Soviet-era same-sex attracted cruising sites (pleshkas, as they’re called in Russian). Fiks, who is Jewish, describes the photos as a ‘kaddish’ for older generations of ‘Soviet gays’, but the tone of the show is more irreverent that funerial. The artist takes unmistakable delight in how queer Muscovites transformed prominent Soviet monuments into cruising spots, appropriating t