Travelers' Intercom

I have not used a language-translating app overseas, but a very important question to ask about such apps for smartphones is ‘Does it need to be connected to the Internet to work?’

The best language-translating apps require Internet connectivity. Getting such connectivity for free (via WiFi) in the middle of a random street in a random nation is very, very unlikely. To use such apps, you need to have paid for 3G or 4G Internet access in that nation.

MILES ABERNATHY

Austin, TX 

My wife, Paula, and another couple and I visited the Republic of Ireland, June 14-25, 2012. I have a few tips on topics that did not receive sufficient coverage in the guidebooks and Internet resources which we consulted pre-trip.

If you’ll be driving, update your GPS maps before you go. Several new motorways were not on our 5-year-old GPS map. We ended up using my smartphone’s map and navigation apps to supplement our GPS device. That worked well except in very rural areas with no cell phone service. I finessed that problem by caching maps for our next day’s planned route each...

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My wife, Betty, and I paid $6,800 to 2AFRIKA, Inc., for the 13-day tour “Affordable Kenya & Tanzania.” We booked our own airfare.

The tour originally was scheduled for May 2012, but a few weeks before the trip was to begin, 2AFRIKA owner Kenneth Hieber informed us via e-mail about a warning issued by the US Embassy in Nairobi regarding possible terrorist attacks. Other tour members were planning to cancel or had canceled, and our trip was rescheduled for Nov. 5-17, 2012.

2AFRIKA had originally contracted with Liberty Africa to provide local safari services. In October...

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A tour member and (center) Bune Primack, wearing clothes they bought in Iran, sp

My wife, Bune, and I took the 18-day “Ancient Persia – Modern Iran” trip from MIR Corporation (Seattle, WA; 800/424-7289), April 3-20, 2012. The land price was $5,895 per person, and internal airfare was $150. All meals were included as well as first-class accommodations (or best-available).

When I initially thought about going to Iran, I had several concerns based on misconceptions about the country. I wondered what the people would be like toward us. Bune was worried that demonstrators against America would pose a danger. What if we were kidnapped?

I called several tour...

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My husband, John, my daughter, Dorie, and I booked a private tour of Ethiopia for Jan. 16-Feb. 1, 2013, with someone whom friends of ours had used two years before, Daniel Damtew Aseffa of Glory Ethiopia Travel & Tours (P.O. Box 15303, Comoros St., Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; phone +251 11 860 1099, www.glo.ethiopiatravel.com.et).

After speaking to Mr. Damtew via Skype and sending emails back and forth, we paid him by means of wire transfers a total of $9,194 for the three of us.

We met Mr. Damtew in Addis Ababa, in central Ethiopia, and traveled to and around the Omo Valley...

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I visited Sarajevo, capital of Bosnia & Herzegovina, in late October ’11. I came by bus from Mostar and left by train for Pécs in Hungary. I fell in love with Sarajevo and hope to go back sometime.

I would highly recommend taking a tour (check with the tourist office or your hotel) that includes the tunnel under the airport runway; it was Sarajevo’s lifeline during the siege (1992-1996). The half-day tour that I took included some of the surrounding hilltops that illustrate how vulnerable the city was.

I ran into the tour by chance, just as it was beginning, and joined...

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About three miles outside of Siem Reap is a gem of a hotel: the Angkor Spirit Palace Hotel (Phneachey Village, Svay Dangkom Commune, Siem Reap, Cambodia; phone [855] 17 908 007). I found it on the Internet, and my husband, Bill, and I stayed there Nov. 16-17, 2012. The price per night was about $47 for a double or $36, single, breakfast included.

They have made the most out of their small piece of land. There’s a “controlled jungle” of tropical plants and trees all around the Khmer-style building. The rooms were mostly small and basic but clean. The pool was very clean and pretty....

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While spending two weeks in Shanghai, China, April 18-May 1, 2013, I took seven cooking classes from Cook In Shanghai (269 Zhaojiabang Rd. [near Jiashan Rd.], Bldg. 2, Room 502, Shanghai; phone +86 186 217 82 428, ). Two gutsy young women started Cook In Shanghai in 2011. I highly recommend it to foodies. It was really fabulous! 

I paid a total of $144 for four private classes plus $46 each for three public classes (class size limit, six people); the cost included materials. 

You are asked what style of cooking you’re interested in (Cantonese, Hunan, etc.) or what dish you...

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