Features

by Richard Berner, San Diego, CA

Martha and I, like many travelers, are drawn to Paris and seem to return there more often than to any other European city. On a recent 3-week trip to France, we spent our first week in Paris.

Getting there

We left San Diego on American Airlines during the last week of April ’07, connecting to Paris through JFK. We were able to use frequent-flyer miles to book our flights.

We had a delay leaving New York due to a mechanical...

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by Brita Bishop, Dallas, TX

To sail French Polynesia — and to do so on a square-rigged, tall-masted brigantine — seemed the height of romance. So in July ’07 I signed on for a cruise on the Søren Larsen, becoming a member of the Voyage Crew. Sixteen of us were joined by the permanent crew of 10, all of them laid-back, friendly and patient.

Getting acquainted

The Søren Larsen (www.sorenlarsen.com) circumnavigates the South Pacific out of New Zealand every year....

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by Larry Taylor, Fullerton, CA

Before our trip to the Middle East two years ago, we mentioned our plans to our friends and most questioned why on Earth we would go there — terrorists, religious strife and all. In 2007, however, when we said we were going back to this area, flying to Dubai to embark on a cruise, the responses were different. After hearing “Dubai,” their reaction was one of envy. Most had heard about this amazing city and were anxious to see it themselves.

We...

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by Larry Hughes, Houston, TX

Historians will often point out that the reason we remember Columbus is that he was the last to discover the Americas. From A.D. 900 or so on, continental America was well known to the seafaring Vikings. There were settlements in Newfoundland and evidence of Viking life in Iceland and the Faroe Islands.

We followed the trail of the Vikings on a summer 2007 trip aboard Holland America Line’s Maasdam.

The voyage

Travelers on HAL’s “...

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by Roger Canfield, Contributing Editor

Before my late October ’07 trip to the Philippines, I was aware that the Philippines and America share certain historical commonalities, including Christianity, colonialism, war, independence and democracy. While, on my trip, I found friendly people and fine food, the country also has its share of poverty-stricken areas.

First impressions

At the Manila airport, we were warmly greeted with leis and a “Mabuhay,” a Philippine...

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by Fritz Oelrich, Stafford, VA

For years I’ve been reading about the trains of South Africa — The Blue Train and those of Rovos Rail and Shongololo Express — with great interest. If you’re not worried about cost, take The Blue Train. If you want to wear a coat and tie to dinner, use Rovos Rail. But if you want a bargain, go with Shongololo Express.

In May ’06, I saw an ad in ITN from Wild African Ventures (Shadow Hills, CA; 800/358-8530, www.wildafricanventures.com) featuring...

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by Marilyn Lutzker, Sunnyside, NY

Vienna is an urban delight. It is a majestic and opulent city for lovers of art, architecture, music, coffee and pastry.

Everywhere I went in this outdoor museum, something enticed me to look more closely. The city’s Baroque past was everywhere. Men and women of stone and marble stared out from doorways of elaborately ornamented buildings while carved faces peered down from amongst the swirls and curves above their windows. The statues that...

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by Harvey Hagman, Fort Myers, FL

Tahiti’s jagged gray peaks pierced the opalescent dawn, the foaming white surf roaring and streaking along the sheltering reef, the surge coming to rest in a heart-stopping turquoise lagoon lined by a white-sand beach.

Where were we? On the island of Moorea in French Polynesia.

An introduction

If this wasn’t paradise, it was close enough for us. The sensuous siren French Polynesia had my wife, Kathy, and me in her grip — soaring...

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