Features

by Marlene Candell, Berkeley, CA

As the 2006 Christmas season, with its attendant festivities and responsibilities, was moving ahead at a scary pace, my husband, Cass, received an unexpected phone call and invitation. Would he and I like to accompany our friends Claudia and Jerry Johnson on a trip to South America? They had just been invited to enjoy some of the January summer near the beach house of a Chilean friend of ours who had been a foreign exchange student with them over 30...

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by Roger Canfield, Contributing Editor

I must admit, I had low expectations of Jordan’s tourist attractions, not to mention concerns about my safety in that part of the world. But I was dead wrong. I found eye-popping sights and smiling people. Everyone’s mantra was “Enjoy,” and I did!

Getting there is the hardest part

On the first leg of my travels, through three of 10 time zones, I took jetBlue’s (www.jetblue.com) efficient, secure and clean service to New York City...

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by David Tykol, Editor

Our bus parked at the lip of the valley and everyone gasped. Looking out at a landscape of bleached-tan earth nearly devoid of green grass or vegetation, we saw hundreds of giant cones and pillars — like 3-story-tall termite mounds tinged in yellows and reds — that seemed to be piercing through the ground skyward. Surrounding this were undulating cliffsides and rock masses. The scene was both beckoning and foreboding.

Three million years ago, the region...

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In the letter titled “Taxi Tours of Gibraltar” (Aug. ’07, pg. 16), a reader wrote about a cruise stop on which he and his wife wanted to go into town for shopping and then perhaps take a taxi tour. They weren’t interested in purchasing any of the ship’s shore excursions but couldn’t easily find a cab that would just take them into town.

On cruises of my favored line (Oceania Cruises), I have noticed that most passengers are unaware of online message boards geared to particular cruise...

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by Harvey Hagman, Fort Myers, FL

After spending the winter of 1419 on the barren, white sands of the island of Porto Santo, Portuguese explorer João Gonçalves Zarco set sail for the mist-shrouded land on the horizon. Zarco found an island of towering peaks and thick, ancient woods — madeira means "wood" — with rugged, cliff-lined coasts and, inland, abundant water.

Today cruise ships calling at the Portuguese island of Maderia anchor in Funchal Bay, but jets bring in most...

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by Marisue Pickering, Orono, ME

Regular visits to our son and his family in England have allowed us to explore numerous parts of the British Isles. Our trip in the fall of 2006 took us to two new places: St. Davids in southwest Wales and Beccles, near the North Sea, in England.

St. Davids

Our pattern is to spend a long weekend with our family, then go off on our own for a few days. Our first independent excursion during this trip took us to St. Davids, Wales, a...

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by Claus Hirsch, New York, NY

My first visit to a Mayan ruin occurred in 1982 when I was on a visit to the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico. After a long ride over very rough, unpaved roads from Cancún to Chichén Itzá, I saw the spectacular pyramids and ancient ball fields at the site. I vowed then to see more of such magnificent evidence of ancient Mayan architecture.

Twenty-five years and 59 countries later, I finally had that opportunity while on a 4-country tour of Central...

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by Tom McKenna, Montpelier, VT

Samarkand. The name evokes images of the ancient Silk Road, Genghis Khan, and camel caravans plodding across Central Asia. It brings to mind the Khyber Pass, scorching deserts and some of the highest mountains in the world.

I reserved my April-May ’06 tour of the area more than a year ahead to be certain I was one of the 16 travelers included on ElderTreks’ “Silk Road Journey to Samarkand.”

The journey begins

The tour started in...

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