Travelers' Intercom

Melk Abbey in Melk, Austria. Photos by Robert Siebert

I took a 14-day cruise from Amsterdam, Netherlands, to Budapest, Hungary, aboard the ms Treasures, a riverboat in the Tauck (Wilton, CT; 800/788-7885, www.tauck.com) fleet of vessels.

The price of my August 2019 journey was $7,590, which included all meals, beverages (including alcoholic), sightseeing and gratuities. I had a Category 1 cabin, which didn’t require me to pay a single supplement.

In Amsterdam, our Tauck group took a tour of the Rijksmuseum. Only part of...

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A tribesman at the Tumbuna Sing Sing — Mt. Hagen, Papua New Guinea. Photo by Sandy Fassett

The year was 2005, and one of the trips my husband, Larry, and I had on our bucket list was Papua New Guinea. Shortly after seeing an advertisement in ITN promoting tourism to PNG, we wrote to the address given. The agent Greg Stathakis responded immediately with all the information we requested, and he was always available for further questions.

Due to out-of-state college tuition bills, a wedding, grandkids arriving and a few health issues, that dream trip was put on hold for...

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Tour members sipping wine on the terrace of a room in the Tivoli Sintra Hotel in October 2019 — Portugal. Photos by Jean Moss

What is it about this funky little black-and-white magazine that makes people love it so much? Well, a lot! Perhaps the story leading to my personal discovery of ITN will explain what attracted me.

To go way back, after majoring in French in college in Maine, I spent a year at the Université de Caen in Normandy, France, graduating in 1973 without a clue about what to do with French besides teach, which I did not think was right for me.

What I really wanted to do was go back and...

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Boiling sulfuric water flows in Kusatsu’s town center. Photo by Miyako Storch

In earlier days, many rice growers in Japan worked hard from March/April until late October/early November to tend to their fields, and after the harvest was over, they treated themselves to R&R by soaking in onsens (hot springs). Luckily, Japan is part of a volcanic chain, and there are thousands of hot springs.

Hot water and good food were the themes of the trip to Japan that my husband, Bernie, and I took, Sept. 16-Oct. 8, 2019.

Before leaving home, we ordered vouchers...

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On a trip to Japan, my daughter Stacy and I stayed in a virtual ghost town when we lodged at Ryokan Sakaya - Nozawa Onsen (9329 Toyosato, Nozawa onsen, Nagano 389-2502, Japan; ryokan-sakaya.com), April 17-19, 2019. We arrived at the end of the ski season and all of the ski hotels in the resort were practically empty. The week before, the hotels were full!

We had found the ryokan online and called ahead. We asked for a traditional room with tatami mats on the floor as opposed to...

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My husband and I visited our friend Hilde in Turbenthal, Switzerland, Sept. 15-22, 2019.

Turbenthal is a small village with no hotels, but we couldn’t stay in Hilde’s tiny apartment. Instead, not far away, she found us the Zentrum Rämis Mühle (Rämismühle, Mühlestrasse 8, 8487 Ramismuhle, Switzerland; phone +41 52 396 44 44, www.raemismuehle.ch [in German only]).

We paid CHF872 (near $890) for seven nights — a great value! We had a lovely, large room with a...

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The Celebrity Eclipse. Photos by Dorothy Chang Van Horn

To treat my travel bug after two years of cabin fever and the humdrum routine of medical appointments, hospitalizations, surgeries and bouts with dialysis, I prescribed myself a dialysis-at-sea cruise of the Western Mediterranean aboard the Celebrity Eclipse of Celebrity Cruises (888/751-7804, www.celebritycruises.com). I did this with the assistance of Brandie Debroux of Dialysis at Sea (800/54407694, ext. 205; brandie@dialysisatsea.com).

My travel companion, Patrick Karst, and I...

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Frank Stewart in a cable car in La Paz.

After dreaming about a visit for many years, on June 24, 2019, I boarded Avianca for Bolivia, a landlocked republic that is home to the soaring Andes, South America’s largest lake (Titicaca) and the world’s largest salt flat (Salar de Uyuni). Its territory even includes part of the Amazon rainforest. Bolivia was once part of the Incan Empire, which stretched from Colombia to Argentina.

During my 3-week visit, I would take an 11-day group tour that I had booked through the...

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