Columns

Dear Reader, in my August ’06 column I replied to Daniel Crough, who had shared a letter he wrote to Princess Cruises suggesting that they change their frequent-cruiser program to recognize not only the number of cruises a person takes but each cruise’s length as well. For example, he felt that two 14-day cruises ought to be more valuable to Princess than three 7-day cruises.

I’m happy to say that, perhaps because of Dan’s letter, Princess has announced that their “Captain’s Circle loyalty program has broken new ground, becoming the only such program of a major cruise line to...

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R.J. Pazara of Arlington, Texas, wrote the following to ITN:

“My wife and I took a cruse aboard the Azamara Journey from Miami, Florida, to Santos (for Saõ Paulo), Brazil, Nov. 11-29, 2007.

“We learned that all of the cruise lines of Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd., including Azamara Cruises, had the following as section 3 on their Cruise/CruiseTour Ticket Contract: ‘No undertaking or warranty shall be given or shall be implied as to the seaworthiness, fitness or condition of the Vessel or any food or drink supplied on board.’

“In other words, the cruise company did not...

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Moss gone amuck was not intended to be the garden’s definitive element when Muso Soseki, 14th-century Zen priest and famed garden designer, created the gardens surrounding Saiho-ji temple in Kyoto, Japan. That would come centuries later, muffling a design rare and original for its time: a garden intended to be enjoyed for its idealized earthly beauty, not as a religious exercise.

Paths invited pleasurable strolling; small, flat-bottomed boats took visitors to three islands floating in its centerpiece heart-shaped pond. During cherry blossom time, the then emperor — who seven times...

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Q:

Dear Steve, I’d like your input regarding the editor’s statement on page 2 of the February ’07 issue. He wrote that U.S. air travelers can lock their checked bags and added, “Of course, Travel Sentry® Certified locks must be used.”

That these locks must be used is not entirely true. For the past several years I’ve checked bags at both Washington, D.C., airports for international flights and used my own little padlocks.

Most major airlines at both airports already require all travelers, after they leave the check-in counter, to take their bags to a nearby location for...

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Here are a couple of the latest travel-book reviews written by ITN readers.

“Panama” by Sarah Woods (2005, Bradt Travel Guides/Globe Pequot Press, Inc. ISBN 184162117X — 340 pp., $21.95).

There’s more to Panama than the canal, and the best thing you can do is let Sarah Woods’ guidebook introduce you to this fascinating land only three hours away from Miami.

When looking for a guidebook, “Bradt” does not easily come to mind, yet Hilary Bradt has been an established guidebook publisher for over 30 years. The British company has just over 100 titles and seems to cover...

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by Julie Skurdenis

Lithuania is revving up for a grand celebration. The year 2009 will mark the 1,000th anniversary of this Baltic nation. It was in 1009 that the country was first mentioned in a written source, a German manuscript called the Quedlinburg Chronicle (in Latin, Annales Quedlinburgenses).

July 6th is celebrated in Lithuania as Coronation Day, the day on which Mindaugas, the country’s only king, was crowned in 1253 (subsequent Lithuanian rulers were called grand dukes). July 6, 2009, promises to be a special year’s most special day. It’s when a long-anticipated...

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It was just what we had always looked for: a 2-week stay in a 4-star accommodation — a large, airy room with great en suite facilities; personnel hovering over my wife, Flory, anticipating her every wish and accommodating her every whim; fantastic meals, and the zero charge upon checkout.

This took place in 1991. Since I was somewhat afraid you might want to overnight in this Shangri-la, I waited until now to report it.

Come to think of it, maybe you wouldn’t want to stay there, after all, since this phenomenal facility was the County Hospital in Nelson, New...

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by Jay Brunhouse

Romanian Railroads (CFR) was a logical extension in 2004 to the stable of railroad companies accepting Eurail passes, but Hungarian Railroads (MÁV) was a surprise expansion of the Eurail system in 1985, and when it happened, I made a last-minute trip in time to add MÁV to the very first edition of my book “Adventuring on the Eurail Express.” Now a single 2-country pass covers unlimited travel on both.

The distance between the capital cities, Bucharest (Bucuresti), Romania, and Budapest, Hungary, is so great that the long EuroCity train consisting of first-...

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