Travelers' Intercom

I would like to second David Sutcliffe’s praise (March ’07, pg. 81) for Gayle and Michael Hawker of Tasmania Travel Planning and Australia Travel Planning (4428 E. Willow Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85032; 800/830-8999, www.australian.com or www.tasmania.com).

I discovered Michael and Gayle via their advertisement in ITN. Upon calling, I told them that if they did well by me they would have me as a client for several years to come, as I was seeing Australia and New Zealand in bits and pieces....

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My husband and I traveled throughout Botswana, then to Victoria Falls, in September and October 2006. We flew into Gaborone, Botswana, and stayed at the Gaborone Sun International Hotel (phone 09267-3951111 or visit www.sun-international.com). Bed and breakfast can be booked at $147 per night for two.

This was the best hotel in town.

Its rooms were Western and very comfortable. They had a lovely pool, a helpful staff and very good food. Every evening, hundreds of yellow birds...

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On a visit to Helsinki, Finland, in 2006, at noon on July 26 I bought a 24-hour Helsinki Card* for €29 (near $39). I flashed the card as I took a train to the ferry dock, where I boarded the boat for a quick sail to the Helsinki Zoo (€8, or $11). (All prices listed are what entry would have cost without the card.) The bear cubs were delightful and easily the highlight of my visit. I took a tram home (€2.20 per trip).

On the 27th, I again rode the tram to another dock (Helsinki has many...

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After arriving in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on an Oceania Cruises ship, departing from the nearby Ministro Pistarini International Airport (or EZE, in Ezeiza) for the U.S. in February ’07 was an eye-opener.

The queues, darling, the queues!

Let me count for you the ways you queue (line up) at EZE:

1) Pre check-in security check — tickets and documents, basically, and a luggage chain-of-evidence interrogation. Chugalug your water and toss the bottle.

2) Check-in —...

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My husband, Uwe, and I flew into Chengdu, China, on June 17, 2007, intending to board the train to Lhasa the next day.

We had booked a package with Pineapple Tours (Währinger Straße 135, A-1180 Wien; phone +43 1 403 98 83 0, fax 98 83 3, www.pineapple-tours.de), an Austrian company that supplies German-speaking trips. It was for 14 days door to door, June 15-28, but we would be 10 days in Tibet, traveling about 2,000 kilometers (1,250 miles).

The cost was €2,100 (near $2,826)...

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Dive! Dive! Dive! No, not a line from a submarine movie but the call to Fernando de Noronha, Brazil, a great dive and snorkel venue which is not very well known to many people other than Brazilians.

“Noroonya,” as it is pronounced, is a volcanic archipelago about 250 miles off the northeast coast of Brazil. Brazilians call it “The Emerald of the Atlantic” because it is so pristine. I visited the island for four days, March 4-7, 2007.

Fernando de Noronha was first described by...

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We spent a week in Reykjavik, Iceland, in July ’06. Reykjavik was a most pleasant adventure and surprise. We walked up and down and all over the town — lots of steep hills!

Iceland is VERY expensive for U.S. citizens. We learned that their economy is excellent and people are paid well.

English is spoken there (similar to all other Scandinavian countries), and people were very friendly and welcoming.

I also met several Spanish-only speaking folks. They turned out to be...

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In the letter “Car and Driver in Morocco” (July ’07, pg. 34), the writer mentioned that his driver was not a licensed guide and could not be seen behaving as one. That brought to mind a trip my husband, Steven, and I made to Morocco in April 2001.

We were staying at a hotel a few blocks from the medina and, throwing caution to the wind, we decided we could maneuver the medina without a guide. We did, however, remember that all the travel books said not to pick up a guide who is not...

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