Features

by Rosemary McDaniel, Trenton, FL

Twenty-two years ago I traveled to New Zealand to hike the Milford Track, located in Fiordland National Park on the South Island. Promoted as the “finest walk in the world,” the 5-day, 4-night walk in the wilderness intrigued me, and I wasn’t disappointed with my experience. I enjoyed it so much that I decided to make the trip again, with my friends Sharon and Marc from New York City, in March 2008.

Impressive improvements

In 1986,...

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by Ed Kinney, El Cerrito, CA

In the spring of 2008, my wife, Moreen, and I decided to travel to the Far East instead of what had become a frequent destination, the Middle East. To decide where, we studied articles in ITN and other publications before selecting Cambodia and Vietnam.

Angkor Wat was certainly a top priority, and we’d heard that both Saigon and Hanoi in Vietnam had resurfaced as popular travel destinations. Lastly, we didn’t necessarily want to jet between...

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by Charles and Nita Swartz, Las Cruces, NM

My wife, Nita, had always wanted to visit the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. We searched for tours of those countries but never found one that visited all of the places in which we were interested.

A mathematician friend of mine does joint work with a colleague at the at University of Tartu in Estonia, so I asked him if he knew of any travel agencies there. His friend recommended Hansa Travel in Tallinn, and what a...

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by Wendy Schatz, Bellevue, WA

Twice a year I visit Australia to update information for my US travel agency. My midyear trips coincide with fall and early winter Down Under, and I find this is the best season for hiking — or, as the Aus­sies prefer to say, bushwalking.

Hiking season

The Australian bush is full of colorful and sometimes noisy birds, flowers that bloom throughout the year and forests that range from moist jungle to dry-land savannah, all surrounded by...

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by Jim Sill, Silverado, CA

My self-guided, 7-week summer journey to East Africa was a search for my origins. Since we each are the result of our personal and collective experiences, on this trip I wanted to live life as it is now and as it might have been 10,000 years ago on the continent where Homo sapiens originated.

My itinerary included places and activities that would uniquely weave the past into the present. There was Tofo, a ’60s time warp in southern Mozambique where I...

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by Sibyl James, Seattle, WA

Rio de Janeiro is synonymous with Carnaval, tiny thong bathing suits, “The Girl from Ipanema” and “Cristo Redentor,” the giant statue of Christ that overlooks its beaches from a nearby hill. For tourists, Rio’s favelas (slums) are not normally part of the agenda. They were part of mine.

Dispelling stereotypes

Braving a conversation on the hotel phone with my mix of Spanish and English (in a Portuguese-speaking country), I made an...

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by Teresa O'Kane, San Jose, CA

In Koh Chang, Thailand, we met an 18-year-old Canadian girl who told my husband, Scott, and me about the Tiger Temple outside Kanchanaburi. “You can touch tigers!” she said.

So we took a ferry to a bus to a third-class train to a second-class bus, then a motorcycle with sidecar to Kanchanaburi. It only took two days to get there!

A laid-back start

The opportunities to touch tigers at the temple started in the afternoon when the...

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by Marlene Smith, Livermore, CO

Accra was on fire.

Landing in Ghana late on Christmas night 2008, my husband, Don, and I went immediately to a hotel in the airport area, so we saw little of the capital city, but we could smell it. During the course of our 25-day stay we would become familiar with the smoke. Ghanaians burn a lot; they burn garbage, they burn their forests to make charcoal and they burn off fields prior to planting season.

During the dry season, Harmattan...

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