Columns

by Philip Wagenaar (Part 4 of a series)

Having narrated our Australian travels from Broken Hill to Sydney last month, in this issue I will conclude the Down Under portion of our ’round-the-world trip.

After leaving Sydney, my wife, Flory, and I drove north through lovely rolling countryside under an azure sky to our overnight at Mount Seaview Retreat (315 Mt. Seaview Rd., Mount Seaview, NSW 2446, Australia), the head office of Australian Wilderness Tours, the company that had...

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Many savvy travelers tunnel their way through Europe’s big cities by subway, popping up from below like gophers on a golf course. True, subways are a cheap and efficient way to get around, but by staying at street level on public buses and trams, you get amazing views and the chance to really cozy up to a city. And they still get you where you want to go, for cheap.

One of my favorite experiences in Paris is a ride on bus number 69. Running from the Eiffel Tower to Père...

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The impregnable, 13th-century Caerphilly Castle
I spent three hectic days in London in March 2010 as part of a small press contingent being hosted by Visit Britain and Ireland. The next stage of our journey began as we departed the city by rail from Paddington Station bound westward to Cardiff, capital of Wales. After a two-hour journey, we arrived in Cardiff and were immediately transferred to the waterfront for an extensive, behind-the-scenes tour of the state-of-the-art Millennium Centre, a truly world-class entertainment venue.

Our current game (with prizes, as usual) is “Which Airline Did You Fly Overseas With In 2009?” Entries to: Airlines, c/o ITN, 2116 28th St., Sacramento, CA 95818-1910, or to ArmondNoble@yahoo.com. Don’t forget to include your ZIP code. And, remember, our current essay contest is “I Love London” in 300 words or less. Here’s your chance to let your creativity flow. Deadline for both of these is 21 November 2010.

To give some of you a head start on your favorite place, our future essay...

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Dear Globetrotter:

Welcome to the 416th issue of your monthly overseas travel magazine.

Lots to go over with you this month!

The British medical journal The Lancet reported in August that dozens of Britons who traveled to India or Pakistan for medical procedures, including cosmetic surgery, returned to the UK with bacteria resistant to almost all antibiotics, including the most powerful class of drugs called carbapenems.

The bacteria are of common varieties,...

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There are over 100 cruise lines, with more than 450 ships, listed in the bible of cruising, Kay Showker’s “The Unofficial Guide to Cruises,” 11th edition (2010. John Wiley & Sons. 690 pp., $23.99). And even Showker doesn’t list all the ships or lines, nor does she critically review some of the smaller ones of note.

To help you choose the right ocean or river cruise for your next vacation, I will give you my assessments and opinions of a few of the lines which may be of interest to...

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by Philip Wagenaar (Part 3 of a series)

This month, I continue the discussion of our travels in Australia, the second country that my wife, Flory, and I visited on our 72-day, ’round-the-world trip, August-November ’09. The arrangements for the five-week tour that we took in Australia included lodging, breakfasts, dinners, SUV, driver and extensive sightseeing,

From Broken Hill, our last stop, it was on to Lake Mungo, part of the Willandra Lakes Region, a UNESCO World Heritage...

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When people ask me about the scariest situation I’ve ever been in, I think back to a taxi ride I took to the Moscow airport in the early ’90s. A no-neck guy who looked like a classic Russian mafia thug picked me up in a beat-up old car and drove for an hour down puddle-filled alleys and past derelict apartment buildings. All I could think about were those movie scenes where the good guy is taken down to the riverbank to be shot. Instead, the no-neck pulled up to the airport, shook my hand...

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