Columns

Q

STEVE, except for a JetBlue flight that leaves at midnight, there are no nonstop flights from Denver to New York’s JFK Airport, and as a traveler who is sick and very tired of flying to Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Dulles, Boston or Detroit to get to JFK (to connect with an international flight), I would really like to know why. — Ellen Jacobson, Centennial, CO

A

DEAR ELLEN, for years now, airlines have not been in the business of providing service, so their decisions on where to fly are based on profitability. It is more profitable to fly you as far as they can on their own planes,...

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by Chris Springer, Contributing Editor

“The Travel Book: A Journey through Every Country in the World” (2004, Lonely Planet. ISBN 1741044510 — 444 pp., $39.99 hardcover).

This hefty coffee-table volume earns its definitive title. Assembled by the editors of Lonely Planet guidebooks, “The Travel Book” devotes one page-spread to each of 230 countries and territories around the globe. This simple, egalitarian concept produces a new world order that is strictly A to Z. For once, places like Chad, Dominica and Vanuatu get their due.

Each country is presented in a handful...

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by Larry G. Barratta, M.D., Ph.D.

Traveling to any exotic destination where sun, surf and beach activities are involved and where there are concerns of being overexposed by the sun can be the beginning of more than just a bad case of sunburn. Skin cancer is a serious health condition that comes in several forms, melanoma being the most aggressive and a potentially deadly type. Other skin cancers include basal and squamous cell carcinoma.

Nearly 50,000 cases of melanoma are diagnosed in the U.S. each year. It has afflicted luminaries like Senator John McCain and the late...

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by Janet M. Denninger

A young friend of ours, the daughter of close friends, recently returned from a 2-month trip to Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand and Bali. One afternoon she surprised us with a slide show of her pictures. It was on two CDs. Uh-oh!

First of all, I have to congratulate her on taking my advice and keeping her new Canon ELF digital point-and-shoot handy at all times. In fact, she hung it from a chain around her neck like jewelry and took many, many, many pictures.

With the camera’s tiny size, a large-capacity card and a small hard drive for storage, her...

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by Deanna Palic

When I arrived in Peru in mid-September 2005 for the Latin America Travel Mart, Lima was in the last throes of winter. Spring was just one week away and temperatures were in the high 60s day, mid-50s evening.

Limeños boast that rainfall there is “less than a tear a year” and that there isn’t an umbrella factory in the city. Except in summer, Dec. 23-March 23, the city is blanketed in a gray pall, a heavy mist that moves in from the sea. The locals call it garua. It is as close as Lima gets to a “drizzle.” When the garua is so heavy that the streets of the city...

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Hello! My name is Steven Venables.

When I started in the travel industry 40 years ago, everything was a little more formal. In fact, the airline I first worked for, United, required us to wear military-like uniforms and use only our last names when introducing ourselves to passengers or answering the telephone. I was “Mr. Venables.”

But people would often slaughter my name, calling me Mr. Vegetables, Mr. Animals or worse. So, with permission, I assumed a false but easier-to-pronounce last name and became known as Mr. Vernon — that is, until some bright guy came up with the...

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by Janet Denninger

Whether we travel to take pictures or just take pictures as we travel, we all want to come home with images which tell the story of our adventure and we are proud to share with friends and family. Each issue, this column will suggest simple techniques anyone can use, with any camera, to achieve a more dynamic picture.

Light up a smile

Almost every modern camera comes equipped with a flash. Whether yours is the automatic, pop-up variety or requires you to attach it, it’s a good idea to learn its capabilities and to use it often.

Your flash is...

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(Second of two parts)

Last month I described the romance of tall ship sailing. This month I will give some specific suggestions for fascinating tall ships around the world.

Where the tall ships roam

Cruising grounds for tall ships cover the entire globe. There are various tall ships in Australia, New Zealand, Indonesia, Japan and South America, and of course in America we have scores. Many U.S. cities and states have built or are building tall ships as roving ambassadors, and these often go overseas. There are numerous tall ships in Britain and Europe, and these...

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