Features

by Diana Hunt, Aiken, SC

A search for “learning vacations” on Google produced 465,645 results. Obviously, many travelers are looking for more than zonk-out beach vacations and the whirlwind “If this is Tuesday, it must be Belgium” kind of forced march. Experienced travelers have become hungry for global education.

Organized cultural vacations pre-sent opportunities to learn a language; to learn a skill, such as sailing, golf, skiing or cooking; to participate in scientific...

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by Marcia Brandes, Atlanta, GA

I had been saving up Delta frequent-flyer miles for years, hoping to use them for a long flight in first or business class. My destination depended, in part, on where the airline flew and what seats were open. Delta offered tickets to New Zealand through their partner Korean Air. Traveling almost halfway around the world: that looked like a good use for 300,000 Sky Miles, so I booked a trip for my husband, Steve, and myself leaving Oct. 29, 2005.

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In the chilly dawn of the Kalahari Desert, two dozen meerkats turn the dark fur of their bellies to the sun, warming up for the day’s hunt for food.

Television stardom hasn’t spoiled the long-tailed, foot-tall creatures. Despite being subjects in Animal Planet’s “Meerkat Manor,” the group has to work hard to stay alive. Watching these pound-and-a-half animals is part of my responsibility as one of three volunteer assistants organized by the Earthwatch Institute — a Massachusetts-based...

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On our first visit to France’s Pont du Gard, the famous 2,000-year-old aqueduct near Nîmes, in 1996, we stood in envy as we looked down on the river below dotted with canoes and kayaks, promising ourselves that someday we, too, would be among them. It was a long time before that anticipated day arrived; in fact, not until my 80th birthday in June ’05 did we return.

On the river We were in a rented house nearby with our daughter and her husband when the day was right for a ride on the...

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The Holy Island of Lindisfarne lies three miles from the mainland of Northumberland, England, not far from the Scottish border. It’s not only a picturesque site but a religious and historical place well worth a visit if one is traveling in northern England.

A little history Since the island is connected to the mainland by a causeway at low tide, visitors must check the tide timetables located at the entrance to the causeway so as not to be stranded on the island for a much longer time...

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I was aware of the buzz surrounding Iceland as a new travel “hot spot,” but the only in-depth coverage I had actually come across was filtered through the acerbic wit of Anthony Bourdain on an episode of the Travel Channel’s “No Reservations.” (There seemed to be a lot of late-night drinking and eating of odd foods….)

On the whole, I tend to avoid “it” destinations, as they usually boast nothing more than overpriced attractions and the...

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Trucks, lined with tourists sporting assorted hats like exotic crested birds, raced jeeps to the gatehouse in Ranthambore National Park in Rajasthan, India. After securing route assignments, the drivers fanned out like beaters on a tiger hunt over dirt roads pockmarked by monsoon rains. My daughter, Anna, and I were among the lucky few in a jeep.

We zipped past colorfully saried women and children processing to temples hidden within an ancient fort, its stone fortifications snaking...

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Improvisational travel is challenging, exhilarating and the ultimate expression of freedom because one can go where, when and with whom one chooses on a daily basis. It’s also exciting because it varies — sometimes wildly — from its more predictable counterparts: cruises and professionally organized tours with their frequently inflexible itineraries.

But such travel is not for everyone. Sometimes surprises are happily serendipitous, sometimes they’re edgy and provocative, but often...

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