Features

by Julian Worker, New Westminster, B.C.

As the fiery ball of the sun began to rise over the eastern bank of the Ganges on our left-hand side, the lighted candles on banana leaves, offered in prayer to the gods, started to float past our boat. The oars lapped gently in the water as the high, stepped bank on our right-hand side gradually became a hive of industry.

Women’s saris, individually vivid as they were picked out by the sun’s earliest rays, were being readied for washing...

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by Hugh Clark, Tampa, FL

I had so much fun traveling by rail in Europe during my working years that after retirement I formed a company (European Train Tours) to share with others the joy of rail travel. From 1989 to 1999 my wife, Ruth, and I had the great pleasure of taking small groups on train tours in the Alps.

We deactivated our company in 1999, and since then we have traveled for two weeks each summer in the Alps — primarily Swiss, Austrian and German — with our son,...

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by Richard Reid, Clarkston, WA

Since the mid-18th century, Scottish immigrants have contributed to the growth of the United States, Canada, New Zealand, Australia and elsewhere. For those wishing to discover their Scottish heritage, there is no better way than to go to the country from which those immigrants originated.

What usually is discovered, however, is that these ancestors came from small, isolated villages or towns. With that being the situation, the best approach is...

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by Bill Altaffer, Mammoth Lakes, CA

After an overnight in Seoul, South Korea, one of the most populated cities in the world today, our MIR Corp. tour group flew to Vladivostok, our entry and exit city for the Russian Far East.

First stop, Vladivostok

Between the end of World War II and the collapse of the Soviet Union at the end of 1991, Vladivostok was off-limits to foreigners and most Russians. Today it is a sister city to San Diego and is a lucrative base for...

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by Jane Albusche, Contributing Editor

I’d wondered why Grand Circle Travel named its European river cruise ships after composers or musical terms (Debussy, Ravel, Concerto, Harmony and so on). After the first few days aboard the M/S River Melody, the answer was obvious: our September ’07 cruise, “Romance of the Rhine & Mosel,” had a soothing yet swinging rhythm and was as fun as a German beer hall song.

It’s incredibly relaxing to have your “hotel” travel with you from...

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by Richard Shally, Walnut Creek, CA. Photos by Henk Ten Dam, Netherlands

Laos is known as “the land of a million elephants,” but are there really a million? To find out, I took a 17-day Small Group Discovery Tour with Carpe Diem Travel, a UK-based socially responsible tour company. The January ’07 tour started and ended in Bangkok.

After our arrival, an introductory meeting was held by our tour leader, Marc Lansu, for the 12 world travelers who were...

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by J. Norvill Jones, Alexandria, VA

Iran has been demonized by our government and the American news media, but is it really part of an “axis of evil”? As one who spent much of his working life dealing with foreign policy issues, I am inherently skeptical of government pronouncements. In April 2007 I went to Iran to see the country for myself.

The plan

Iran is an ancient land of proud and friendly people where many villages have been continuously inhabited...

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Jim Sill and his travel companion Jenna continue their January-February ’07 overland journey through West Africa, embarking a bus in Burkina Faso for Bobo-Dioulasso.

When we reached the bus station in Mopti, the big buses were leaving, one by one.

“Which one is ours?” asked Jenna. “Maybe we can get on board early.”

I asked the ticket agent. He pointed to a beat-up minibus that we hadn’t really noticed. As he pointed it out, the driver opened the door and it came off in...

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