Features

by Bill & Betty Reed, Denton, TX

They walked with purpose — gate 20, 21, 22… 35, 36 — looking like ants with determination on their faces. Every now and then I would join the procession, probably with the same look of determination.

By now it was around 11 o’clock and the flight we were supposed to take out of Oslo, Norway, had been delayed several times. Technical problems, we were told. With each delay came one more determined walk up and down the hall.

“Now...

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by Jennifer Petoff, San Francisco, CA

My husband, Scott, and I visited Buenos Aires in April ’08. It was our first trip to South America and we wanted to make it memorable.

For a number of reasons, we decided to rent an apartment for our 10-day trip rather than stay at a hotel. We expected it would give us a more authentic and local experience and hoped it would provide us the opportunity to be a part of one of the unique barrios that comprise Buenos Aires.

In addition...

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by Donna DeGaetani, Los Angeles, CA

It was with much anticipation that I looked forward to the “Bali and Beyond” tour offered by Asia Transpacific Journeys (Boulder, CO; 800/642-2742, www.asiatranspacific.com) in July ’08. The thought of viewing Komodo dragons and orangutans in the wild was foremost in my mind.

Having traveled on three previous trips to Asia with ATJ, albeit custom tours, I knew that their attention to detail, competency in third-world situations and high...

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by Julie Skurdenis, Contributing Editor. Photos by Paul Lalli

I consider myself a seasoned Indophile. With four previous trips to India spread out over a dozen years, I thought I had seen the best this vast subcontinent had to offer. On my fifth trip, in January ’08, I wanted to revisit a few old favorites, like the Taj Mahal, plus add something totally new.

My husband, Paul, and I chose Gujarat, a state in the northwest of India that juts out into the Arabian Sea. It turned...

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by Yvonne Horn, Contributing Editor

The winged lion of Venice, sculpted in stone, stood high above us just beneath the tip-top bronze bell of St. Mark’s Torre dell’Orologio, looking down on the populace as if it owned the world.

My grown daughter, Joanne, and I had come to Venice to board Windstar Cruises’ Wind Star — an appropriate starting place, as our week-long August ’08 voyage would trace a long stretch of Adriatic coastline systematically conquered by the Venetian...

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by Marisue Pickering, Orono, ME. Photos by John W. Pickering

In late April/early May ’08, my husband, John, and I were the guests of a Chinese couple who had lived with us for a year in the early 1990s, when they were in the United States as students. Now well established in the man’s home city of Shanghai, our friends provided us with round-trip air tickets and organized a visit that included time in Beijing, Shanghai, Suzhou and Hangzhou.

Our friends

Our friends,...

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by Art and Jean Thomas, Florham Park, NJ

2008 marked our 50th wedding anniversary, and we decided it would be a good year to celebrate with our family. Since we are longtime devotees of river cruising, we chartered a barge for our family of seven for a one-week trip in August ’08 through the Highlands of Scotland on the Caledonian Canal.

First impressions

So there we were: a pair of septuagenarians, three 40-somethings, a 13-year-old and a 10-year-old. Having flown...

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by Jerry Gordon, Riverside, CA

I was looking through the sale books in an airport bookstore when a nonfiction by one of my favorite writers, David McCullough, caught my eye. In “The Path Between the Seas,” written more than 30 years ago, McCullough tells the story of the Panama Canal from 1870 to 1914.

I had always had an interest in the canal, but, I have to admit, I knew a lot less than I thought I knew.

McCullough is a great storyteller, and the 600 pages passed...

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