Features

Among the cherished memories of our childhoods are the stories my wife, Judi, and I heard from our parents and grandparents about the towns and villages in Poland and Belarus that they came from. These good stories may have been at odds with the turbulent 19th- and early-20th-century history of those places that we had learned about in school, but they were, nonetheless, the stories of our families. Visiting those places became part of our post-retirement travel agenda. 

On our...

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For my husband, Guy, and me, Colombia was one of the last places in South America we had not yet visited, but we had been seeing positive news about the country.

Former drug lords are now benefactors of schools, and improved infrastructure has made cities like Medellín places of pride for Colombians. Further, the FARC political guerillas have concentrated themselves in the Amazon, in places where travelers have little reason to venture. So we decided to devote three weeks in July...

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Crystal Cruises celebrated its 25th anniversary in 2015, and to mark the occasion it scheduled a world cruise — not an ordinary world cruise like the ones it and other cruise lines schedule every year but a true world cruise, a circumnavigation of the globe, from Miami to Miami, for 108 days. 

This cruise was divided into six segments ranging from 15 to 21 days each. Passengers could sign up for all or some of the segments. I was told that Crystal had never had more than...

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When an ad in ITN for a trip to Japan piqued my interest, I immediately emailed Michie Taylor, who offers guided tours to her native country. She immediately responded, and so began a remarkable and unique journey. 

There were only five travelers on this March 2014 tour plus our enthusiastic leader, whom we called the “Energizer Bunny.” Our group not only saw castles, shrines and temples but traveled off the beaten path to visit artists, stay in ryokans, eat...

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Paging through travel brochures in search of my next adventure, I discovered various gorilla treks, and the idea that you could actually get close to them and watch them in their natural habitat piqued my interest. But how do you choose where to see these African mountain gorillas: Uganda or Rwanda? 

Luckily, I didn’t have to choose one over the other because I found a trip that went to both countries. I would be able to compare the treks and would be lucky enough to have...

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Visiting wine regions is a hobby of ours, not only for the wine but because vineyards tend to occupy some of the world’s most beautiful places. As Californians, we also appreciate the nexus between the grapes grown in our state and the same grapes grown in their country of origin. 

Some of South America’s best vineyards and wineries lie between 32°53'S and 34°51'S in latitude. Within that narrow band (a width of about 119 miles) are Uruguay’s...

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When my wife, Carolyn, and I reflect on our April 2015 trip to France, we inevitably focus on our love of Saint-Émilion, the Dordogne region, the castle within a castle of Carcassonne, the wines of Burgundy and all the expressways, country roads and medieval streets undertaken in our little white Peugeot. 

We had little in the way to guide us: a foldout map provided by the rental-car company and the small city illustrations in our Rick Steves guidebook. Carolyn imposed a ban on...

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We hopped on the donkey cart at a dusty corner in the Bahariya Oasis, about half a block from our hotel. The driver of the cart spoke no English and we spoke no Arabic. The lead donkey walked with a slight limp as we started down the main road. 

The instructions given to our guide, at my request and over my wife, Betty’s, objections, were to arrange for the two of us to have a ride into town (about a half mile), circle the center of town and come back to the hotel. None of...

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