Columns

(Second of three parts)

World Heritage Sites are places of special significance as determined by the United Nations Educational, Scientific & Cultural Organization, or UNESCO (whc.unesco.org/en/list).

According to UNESCO’s World Heritage mission statement, these sites include “cultural heritage,” such as monuments, groups of buildings and sites with historical, aesthetic, archaeological, scientific, ethnological or anthropological value, as well as “natural heritage,” such...

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France’s Loire Valley is known as the “Garden of France.” Wandering off the well-trod châteaux route, I took a discovery tour of unique gardens of the Loire. In this series of four articles, the first, “Chedigny,” appeared in the October 2015 issue. Here is the second. — YMH

How many historic, over-the-top, Loire architectural monuments to money and power can one ooh and ahh over before château fatigue settles in? I knew I’d reached my limit...

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Europe is a treasure chest of great cultural monuments, but it’s also a continent filled with natural beauty, often overlooked by tourists sprinting from sight to sight or searching for the perfect souvenir. I’ve found that a day biking in the great outdoors can be just as culturally fulfilling as time spent in a great church or art gallery.

Biking through the countryside (using a town as a springboard) is extremely popular in Europe. Thanks to the laws of supply and demand, you can...

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(Part 2 of 3 on central Mexico)

Having just visited La Cañada de la Virgen, considered the main archaeological site in the Bajío region of central Mexico, my husband, Paul, and I decided we wanted to see more pre-Columbian sites. 

The Bajío is not generally known for its archaeological sites. In fact, most books on Mexico that I looked at skip this region of Mexico entirely when discussing Mesoamerican archaeology. Yet there are hundreds of sites — most only...

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(Second of two parts)

En route to the Atlantic coast on our June 2015 driving adventure in southwestern France, my wife, Gail, and I drove 400 kilometers from Collioure to Lourdes, where we found a hotel row stretched along the banks of the Gave de Pau.

After negotiating a good rate of $78 at the 4-star Hôtel Le Méditerranée (23, av du Paradis, Lourdes; www.lourdeshotelmed.com), we joined the stream of visitors, mostly foreigners and many in wheelchairs, making their way to...

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Dear Globetrotter:

Welcome to the 477th issue of your monthly foreign travel magazine.

In ITN, we print letters and articles provided by our subscribers. 

After your next trip outside of the US, or if you’ve recently returned from one, write about anything other travelers might appreciate knowing about. A way to save money. A way to save time. A place with a warm welcome. Or maybe a site you would have preferred to avoid.

When you share your travel...

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Tibetan man making a spool of wool from yak hair (in China). Photo ©piccaya/123rf.com

Dear Globetrotter:

Welcome to the 477th issue of your monthly foreign travel magazine.

In ITN, we print letters and articles provided by our subscribers. 

After your next trip outside of the US, or if you’ve recently returned from one, write about anything other travelers might appreciate knowing about. A way to save money. A way to save time. A place with a warm welcome. Or maybe a site you would have preferred to avoid.

When you share your travel...

CONTINUE READING »

(First of three parts)

As I traveled on the train to the top of the Jungfraujoch in Switzerland in June 2015, it dawned on me that I had entered one of UNESCO’s World Heritage Sites. ‘Wouldn’t it be nice,’ I thought, ‘to plan a trip where I would visit one UNESCO Heritage Site after another?’

I looked on the Internet at whc.unesco.org/en/list/?&delisted=1 and found a complete list of all Heritage Sites, arranged by country. I decided I would describe the sites of one...

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