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Lessons Learned Along the Mekong River Delta Vietnam and Cambodia

February 8, 2021

In late 2019, we cruised along the Mekong River Delta aboard the AmaDara river boat through Vietnam and Cambodia, with about 120 other travelers interested in seeing this part of the world. Many of them, like us, ignored the weather, extremely humid and rainy season, to climb aboard AMADara and learn about the area first hand.

I learned a lot of things about a region and its people, in 2 different countries, and since it was one of the last trips I took, I’ve had a lot of time to consider these lessons! Our river cruise traveled from Saigon, Vietnam (Port at My Tho) to Cambodia (Kampong Chang), and we visited many small villages along the way.

Click to see our reports on Saigon, Vietnam and coming soon! Phnom Penh, Cambodia and Siem Reap, Cambodia (with Angkor Archeological Park)


Vietnam


The River is Not Brown Because It’s “Dirty”

The immediate impression of the Mekong is it’s very silty brown color. This is due to the particulates that slough off into the water as it runs from the mountains in Tibet to Vietnam, where it meets the South China Sea. While some sections of the river do contain the waste from the cities and villages along it, (as is the case in many developing places in the world) the color has little to do with that. We’ve seen rivers look like this in the most pristine areas of Alaska.

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A River Cruise is a Comfortable and

Authentic Way to See this Remote Place

We noticed upon embarking AMA Dara that it is outfitted with every comfort you’d expect from a fine hotel. And yet, it was also a very authentic way to visit an area so remote it would be hard to see in any other way without days of arduous travel on land. The river is a very lively place with many people making their living on the river on boats and and along the banks.

The AMADara, with a team of local guides from Cambodia and Vietnam, not only safely guided us into places we could not have accessed on own, but we also had their first hand accounts of their lives. We would be aboard a very comfortable “home base” to explore the area for the week, but also had local chefs preparing food from local markets so we could safely enjoy local cuisine. For instance I enjoyed pho for breakfast, just as many locals do, freshly prepared at a live station in the ships dining room each morning.

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Cai Be: It’s Worth Trying Local Things, and Can Even Be Fun!

A jar of local rice alcohol, also used eliminate pests, which are perfectly preserved in the beverage!

A jar of local rice alcohol, also used eliminate pests, which are perfectly preserved in the beverage!

Our first stop along the Mekong was a shop where the villagers make rice cakes, paper and candy, which we were able to watch being made and were for sale in the small shop. We also were offered the opportunity to sample everything, the tasty sweet rice candy, hand wrapped by local ladies at a dizzying pace, and the savory rice cakes made up by men popping rice in vats volcanic sand over an open fire.

While some fellow travelers balked at trying popped rice cooked in sand, or sampling the “moonshine” stored in a jar with dozens of snakes, we couldn’t pass up these opportunities and we were glad we didn’t! Our great local guides, they helped us know what was safe to try and what to avoid! During a later tour of Siem Reap, our guide suggested avoiding a certain stall if we wanted to be feeling our best at dawn for a tour of the temples. But the things we tried and the people we met at these workshops turned out to be a highlight of our time in Vietnam!

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Sa Dec: Religions Can Coexist, Sometimes Even in the Same Temple

The Colorful Cao Dai Temple

The Colorful Cao Dai Temple

The Cao Dai Temple in Sa Dec was built in 1929 and features an alter with 4 gods: Buddhist, Confucius, Christian, and Taoist. We learned that this popular temple accepts everyone who wants to worship, and even learned from our guide that their are laws requiring people in Vietnam to be respectful about how they speak about different religious faiths.

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Tan Chau: You Have to Meet the People to Get To Know a Place

A grandma is proud to show off her grandchild and the grandparents in our group were delighted to share this universal joy with a woamn in Tan Chau

A grandma is proud to show off her grandchild and the grandparents in our group were delighted to share this universal joy with a woamn in Tan Chau

Our visit to Tan Chau, a small industrious village included a trishaw ride to several local craft shops, including a silk weaving shop still using 19th century looms and a walk through a local village where met families, including a proud grandmother, a young teen anxious to practice her English and several young men cock fighting. In every place we’ve ever visited it is always best to meet local people to see how much we have in common, like being delighted by our grandchildren or proud of our bright young students, instead of seeing our differences.

A 19th century loom creating beautiful silk in Vietnam

A 19th century loom creating beautiful silk in Vietnam

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A man inspects a rooster in a cock fighting area.

A man inspects a rooster in a cock fighting area.

Cambodia

Killing Fields and Tuol Sleng (S.21) Genocide Museum:

Sometimes History is Difficult

With whole families murdered during the reign of Pol Pot, many of the bodies found in the Killing Fields have never been identified. Skulls are sorted by age and gender to allow any loved ones to gather near where their presumed relatives might be in order to memorialize them.  Visitors are expected to visit quietly and dressing respectfully,

With whole families murdered during the reign of Pol Pot, many of the bodies found in the Killing Fields have never been identified. Skulls are sorted by age and gender to allow any loved ones to gather near where their presumed relatives might be in order to memorialize them. Visitors are expected to visit quietly and dressing respectfully,

Experiencing the history of the brutal Khmer Rouge regime under Pol Pot in Cambodia was one of the most difficult parts of our visit. But anytime we visit a place with a difficult history, we go out of our way to make sure we learn about that history, because it’s important to witness it and work to prevent these kinds of atrocities in the future.

The Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum is a converted school, whose classrooms where converted with bricks and fencing into torture chambers and holding cells for citizens often rounded up in the night and tortured to get them to name others to round up (if they lived through the torture) Then the people were sent out to the Killing Fields where they were murdered and dumped into shallow graves.

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Bou Meng supports himself today selling his story as victim of the brutal regime.  An artist, he and his wife were rounded up and brought to Section 21. He was given the job of capturing Pol Pots image artistically.  After seeing several artists murdered ahead of him for not producing a picture that pleased the leader, Meng created a portrait far nicer than the real man looked, thus won his favor and saved his own life.  His wife was sent to the Killing Fields and he has never found her or her remains.

Bou Meng supports himself today selling his story as victim of the brutal regime. An artist, he and his wife were rounded up and brought to Section 21. He was given the job of capturing Pol Pots image artistically. After seeing several artists murdered ahead of him for not producing a picture that pleased the leader, Meng created a portrait far nicer than the real man looked, thus won his favor and saved his own life. His wife was sent to the Killing Fields and he has never found her or her remains.

Many times, over the last year, when some groups attempt to dehumanize other groups in my own country, my mind was brought back to the damage done to this small developing country by one man who was elected and then took over and held the reigns of power by perpetuating a genocide on his own people.

Oknhatey Island: There is Hope in the Children

A young girl learning English was assigned to read to visitors and ask questions about our lives and families.

A young girl learning English was assigned to read to visitors and ask questions about our lives and families.

We visited a small local school on Oknhatey Island where the principal shared that it is difficult to run a school in Cambodia today because of the loss of a generation of educated people because most victims of the Khmer Rouge were educated people: teachers, artists, doctors, lawyers and other professionals. Not only was the knowledge lost with the people, but the written history and books was also destroyed by the regime in the late 20th century. The local guides we spoke to, talked about the difficulty in “catching up” economically to their neighbors like Vietnam and South Korea after such a huge loss in their country.

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But the hope lives in the children and young people who did not live through the brutal regime and who are being educated today. They are the hope for Cambodia’s future in a global economy. The children at the school were delighted to show off their English skills and ask us questions about our families.

Wat Hanchey: Sometimes You Just Get Lucky

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We saw a lot of Buddhist temples in SE Asia during our visit. They are beautiful architecturally and historically interesting. Our guides did an excellent job of interpreting what we were seeing, but nothing was better than our visit to Wat Hanchey, a hilltop temple dating to 7th century. We were supposed to go to Angkor Ban, but because port issues, we couldn’t visit there. Our guides explained that instead we would visit Wat Hanchey.

Luckily, the day we visited the temple, it was open for the celebration of the Festival of the Dead, where people have a short few days each year to make donations of food and money to the monks at the temple and leave gifts for their dead. This goodwill gesture and any gifts they want to leave their loved ones is believed to be only visible by the dead during this short religious period. It is said to be both a way to support the temple and monks, while also giving people an avenue to support and remember their dead.

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Instead of seeing the ruins and walking around a silent temple, we were treated to a packed temple grounds with local people celebrating the festival, including a parade of monks and donations of food and money. People dressed in their best white clothing and eating local delicacies from vendors on the grounds, as well as music and children playing games.

A young woman dressed in white brings offerings to her deceased relatives at the temple.

A young woman dressed in white brings offerings to her deceased relatives at the temple.

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Biggest Travel Lesson

The biggest travel lesson I learned in SE Asia, is also the lesson that has served me well anywhere in the world we’ve traveled. Go with an open heart and an open mind, I allow myself to be awed and delighted by both the differences and also the similarities between people and places. Vietnam and Cambodia had a lot to teach me, and I am glad that I opened my mind to it, because with the events of 2020 that shut down the world, I couldn’t have known this would be one of the last trips I took, and I would have been disappointed if I had not experienced it to the fullest.

See more of our SE Asia trip report here and our reports of Siem Reap and Phnom Penh coming soon

In Cambodia, River Cruises, Vietnam Tags Trip Reports, Travel Tips
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A market seller in Sa Dec Vietnam

A market seller in Sa Dec Vietnam

Vietnam

January 29, 2021

In November of 2019, we took a trip, to Vietnam and Cambodia that included an AMA River Cruise along the Mekong River. As one does in Asia, mostly for the street level motor vehicle pollution, I brought along a paper mask. I didn’t need it and removed from my travel kit before we traveled to Mexico in mid January. It never occurred to me I’d need the mask in the Baja Sur, a remote tourist area in Mexico with lots of dessert and sea, but by the time we flew home through LAX at the end of January, cases of Covid -19 had passed through the airport and I’d wished I’d left that mask in my travel bag. When I can travel again, I will always have one with me, wherever I go! (Click here to see our post here about Baja Sur and the Sea of Cortez)

Covid -19 is also the reason it’s taken me over a year to write a report about our trip to Asia. During lock downs and with almost all travel ground to a halt, I was too busy rearranging trips and chasing refunds and vouchers to write about one of my last trips. Now that a vaccine is available and the possibility of travel is tangible, it feels like time to share this trip and prepare for a future where we can safely travel the world again! (Click Here to see our post here about upcoming trips)

Saigon

Independence Palace in Ho Chi Minh City, the modern name for Saigon, a name still used by many in the city today.

Independence Palace in Ho Chi Minh City, the modern name for Saigon, a name still used by many in the city today.

The trip was pulled together by a pair of expert travel agents- Jay Paul at CruisePlanners and Amy at Active Travels a membership based travel advisor. We could not have had the experiences we had without their assistance. An important part of traveling to the part of the world is ensuring that you have the proper visas. We purchased these services from operators trusted by our Travel Advisors. This includined streamlined customs and immigration assistance. These services were worth every penny paid, allowing us to relax and enjoy our arrival after a long flight, rather than be overwhelmed with paperwork in a language we don’t speak. We are not compensated by these travel advisors for recommending them .

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We were unprepared for how incredibly friendly the Vietnamese are towards Americans There is a very ugly history between the countries because of the Vietnam War. Having been just small children during the conflict, we spent time watching Ken Burns’ excellent documentary and were very concerned about we would be accepted as Americans in Vietnam.

We had no reason to worry! Our arrival in Ho Chi Minh City was expedited by a visa services company who arranged our transfer to The Sofitel Saigon Plaza. Our friendly South Vietnamese guide who drove us for the next two days, On our way to the Sofitel, our guide explained his father had been a South Vietnamese officer and spent extensive time in the re-education camps after the war. Because of the family’s affiliation, many were not able to find employment in good government jobs in Vietnam and had emigrated to the US, including his wife and two children. He explained that he had a relative visiting from the US, and invited us to come to his home and meet him that evening. He gave us the address, and while it’s an experience I’m sure we would have loved, visiting with a local family in their home; we were simply too jet lagged to get our heads off the pillow after 8 PM.

An apartment building hosts a variety of “shops”

An apartment building hosts a variety of “shops”

Cu Chi Tunnels and Vietnam American War Museum

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The next morning our guide took us to the Cu Chi Tunnels on the outskirts of Saigon. This interactive historical park glorifies the bravery and ingenuity of the Vietnamese in the face of their civil war. The network of tunnels served as shelter and transportation into Saigon for the members of the NVA and Viet Kong during the conflict. It is a painful place of memories for Americans, especially for anyone who may have served in Vietnam. With the deep jungle stretching out from the park and it’s labyrinth of narrow tunnels, with visitors invited to “shoot” historical weapons of the era on a shooting range, and many inventive weapons and traps on display, I imagined it felt and sounded very much like the war, but without the terror that must have accompanied soldiers on all sides of this sad conflict.

Warning: may be upsetting to some viewers. The sounds of the park, including gunfire

Many of our fellow travelers on the river cruise who lived or served during those times expressed that they could not visit the Chu Chi tunnels, while others felt it was a way to learn and heal. This would not be the only place we visited in Southeast Asia with a dark and difficult history, but for us, learning from history is one way to prevent future atrocities.

The jungle
The jungle
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A women demonstrates rice paper wraps
A women demonstrates rice paper wraps
Exploded ordinance saved, nothing wasted
Exploded ordinance saved, nothing wasted
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reusing rubber tires, see his shoes
reusing rubber tires, see his shoes
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Dong Khoi Street Area

Our visit coincided with the wet, hot, rainy season. The soaking rain held off for our visit to the tunnels in the relative cool of the morning. In the afternoon, when the showers came, we had arranged a visit at a local café run by a member of the new generation of Vietnamese. Duong Dang shared her life engaged in the new economy of Vietnam where young people are encouraged to run businesses. We also shared a “typical” Vietnamese lunch at her table at the café.

A highlight of our visit to Saigon, was meeting and enjoying a typical lunch with Duong, Dang, a member of a new generation of Vietnamese entrepreneurs .

A highlight of our visit to Saigon, was meeting and enjoying a typical lunch with Duong, Dang, a member of a new generation of Vietnamese entrepreneurs .

We had a lively, and open discussion about the challenges and rewards of running a business in Vietnam and enjoyed many local typical dishes that Duong Dang ordered for us to try at her table. We spent the remainder of the afternoon, on our on on foot, where we could easily explore the top “sights” in Saigon including, the famed French Colonial architecture, and sights of historical interest during the war, such as the US embassy building where the dramatic helicopter withdrawal of embassy staff occurred during the war. We got a “birds eye view of the city form the modern Bitexco Financial Tower Observatory.

Bitexco Tower in the distance
Bitexco Tower in the distance
French Colonial Post Office Building
French Colonial Post Office Building
Notre Dame Cathedral
Notre Dame Cathedral
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Views from the Bitexco Tower
Views from the Bitexco Tower
Views from the Bitexco Tower
Views from the Bitexco Tower
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Municipal Theater
Municipal Theater
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Getting Around Saigon

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Saigon is a motor bike city…most people travel on motor bikes, sleep on them, drive their unhelmeted children to school. text, carry items and even shop on them, pulling in front of a market and ordering items while still on their bikes, and them driving off. During the frequent pouring rain storms, everyone pulls over and the driver pulls a poncho over the whole bike except for the drivers eyes, and carry on.

This makes the city challenging to navigate on foot, because the bikes have the practical right of way on any paved surface including the cities sidewalks and crosswalks . In general, things visitors want to see in Saigon are usually within easy walking distances from tourist hotels, but pedestrians must be hyper aware of motor bikes whenever walking in the city!

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For more on Vietnam and Cambodia, please see our upcoming posts: Cambodia and Ama Dara Meekong River Cruise

In Vietnam, River Cruises Tags Trip Reports, Touring Tips
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Empty Airports in 2020 Photo credit: Susan Smith)

Empty Airports in 2020 Photo credit: Susan Smith)

Didn't See That Coming?! 2020 Review and New Years Resolutions for What's Next

December 31, 2020

It all started out so hopeful, didn’t it? New Years 2020! Here is what I wrote about our “Travel Vision” for 2020. Click Here to see 2020 Travel Vision for the New Year. I’m not exactly a visionary am I?!

During 2020 I lost the will to post about our late 2019 adventure to Cambodia! But Jeff’s photos are too amazing, I need to get to it in 2021

During 2020 I lost the will to post about our late 2019 adventure to Cambodia! But Jeff’s photos are too amazing, I need to get to it in 2021

The year started well, at the end of 2019 Jeff and I took an amazing adventure aboard an AMA Meekong River cruise and touring in Vietnam and Cambodia. My plan was to enjoy the holidays with family, travel to the Baja Peninsula in Mexico in January (See our trip report here) and then spend the winter writing about our travel adventures, until we had more exciting trips in the spring and fall.

Baja Sur Mexico was our last trip…on our way through LAX in late Jan, we were warned that an “unknown” virus might also be traveling through LAX from the Far East.

Baja Sur Mexico was our last trip…on our way through LAX in late Jan, we were warned that an “unknown” virus might also be traveling through LAX from the Far East.

But the Covid -19 Pandemic hit in March and all of our worlds got turned upside down. Not only could we not travel, there wasn’t even an appetite for for me to write about it or for people to read about trips we couldn’t take. Our live travel presentations were canceled and people were so enmeshed with the new challenging reality of life, that we didn’t have many readers for the few posts we could make. We realize have been lucky, everyone is healthy and able to work from the safety of our home and we didn’t miss any major milestones, like some have- weddings, holding new grandchildren or graduations, so we consider ourselves very lucky! But travel and our travel work pretty much ground to a halt with a few exceptions.

Where We Did Go:

In addition to BajaSur, MX on an Uncruise in Jan 2020 (see Trip Report here) we were able to visit relatives in PIttsburgh, PA and do some “local” travel and road trips in our home state visiting the Maine Seacoast (See Trip Report here) and a moose safari in the northern Maine woods at Lake Nahmakanta (see our Moose Safari report here) And like most people we spent a lot of time outdoors exploring our own backyard (see our tips for local travel here) We also interviewed folks who did travel, asking them to share their experiences (see GoSeeIt People interviews here)

Local travel was what we did this past summer and fall including this moose safari at Nahmakanta WIlderness Lodges

Local travel was what we did this past summer and fall including this moose safari at Nahmakanta WIlderness Lodges

So what’s next?

In 2020, mostly, we stayed home, masked and didn’t gather in large groups and re booked 2020 trips to late 2021 0r 2022.

In 2020, mostly, we stayed home, masked and didn’t gather in large groups and re booked 2020 trips to late 2021 0r 2022.

My List of Travel New Years Resolutions:

20200120 - Aqua Verde - 433.jpg 20200920 - Southwick Zoo - 229.jpg 20200123 - Isla San Francisco - 253.jpg 20200619 - Acadia and Bar Harbor - 028.jpg 20200707 - Picking Strawberries - 158.jpg 20200724 - Bridge Paddle with Sarah - 015.jpg 20200927 - Moose Safari - 055.jpg 20200729 - York and Ogunquit - 032.jpg 20200815 - Birds & Boats at Stump Cove Beach - 028.jpg

1.Share The Great Travel Advisors We Work With Everyone!

When the cancellations just kept coming, and with each one, we were seeking refunds, strategizing whether to cancel, reschedule, or attempt to “keep it on the books” in hopes the pandemic might “end” before the travel dates arrived. Never before has the advice of my travel agents been more helpful.

Our travel advisors are the unsung heroes of the pandemic. They were first faced with helping clients stranded across the globe to get home safely, then they had to help people with immediate travel plans rebook, cancel or strategize what steps to take next. All of this work was done for clients with no income of their own coming in (most travel agents and advisors are paid by the travel supplier once the client takes the trip) And their travel supplier partners were asking them to the impossible- get clients to book future travel in very uncertain times. The advisors we worked with this year went above and beyond and deserve kudos! It had been in my plans to create my referral list in 2020 and I most certainly will get to that this year because these professionals have impressed me with their dedication to clients even when the world was falling apart around them.


2. Write up our Vietnam Cambodia Trip Report

I did get to write about our incredible trip to Baja Sur, (see report here) and thought I’d write up our Vietnam and Cambodia trip after that. With everyone grounded and finding the “new normal” I didn’t get to do that…It’s now a top priority because it truly was an incredible adventure and one I am eager to share! And it doesn’t hurt that I literally have noting else to do for fun right now!

20190914 - Saigon - 090.jpg
20190916 - Mekong River - 083.jpg
20190917 - Sa Dec - 082.jpg
20190917 - Sa Dec - 087.jpg
20190919 - Cambodian Dance - 050.jpg
20190924 - Angkor Wat - 035.jpg
20190917 - Sa Dec - 180.jpg
20190922 - Wat Hanchey (Festival) - 063.jpg
20190920 - Ox Cart Ride - 052.jpg
20190914 - Saigon - 090.jpg 20190916 - Mekong River - 083.jpg 20190917 - Sa Dec - 082.jpg 20190917 - Sa Dec - 087.jpg 20190919 - Cambodian Dance - 050.jpg 20190924 - Angkor Wat - 035.jpg 20190917 - Sa Dec - 180.jpg 20190922 - Wat Hanchey (Festival) - 063.jpg 20190920 - Ox Cart Ride - 052.jpg



3. Travel in 2021 When We Can Do It Safely

North to South, Swap Norway for New Zealand

Our May 2020 Norway Fjords cruise was fully paid and we had to reschedule within a certain time limit. We were a bit disappointed with Over Seas Adventure Travel. They were accessible and very friendly despite extremely difficult circumstances for everyone. They offered a full credit toward future travel, but their policy clearly stated we were entitled to a full refund if THEY canceled the trip and we held off canceling ourselves with that expectation, confirmed by their own representative.

Essentially, they changed their Terms and Conditions on the fly, refusing to refund our money and insisting we take a credit and book a future trip with them. A recent article by Christopher Elliott, (See the article here) travel consumer advocate pointed out that this was not only “unfair” to travelers who were told by their advisors to wait for a refund, but also illegal. We could “fight” this legally, but we also realize that travel companies are struggling, and that this one usually has a great reputation, so without any other options, we accepted the offer to rebook a trip for one to New Zealand in Oct 2021. It did leave me feeling concerned about our investment in OAT, and worry about recommending them in the future. Hopefully, we will travel with them (our first trip with OAT) and see if our experience allows us to feel comfortable investing with them in the future or recommending that others do.

Christmas is cancelled!

Our cruise expert travel planners Jay and Erin Paul of Affordable Vacation Station saved the day getting us moved and airfare refunded for a December 2021 trip aboard AMA Waterways to visit the Christmas Markets in Prague and along the Danube in Central Europe. This one was scheduled with good friends and we have “moved” it to December 2022, hoping the joy and festivity of the European Christmas Markets will be back in full swing.

20191222 - Christmas Cookies - 242.jpg


We Moved Machu Picchu

May 2021 Amazon and Machu Picchu trip with Linblad National Geographic Expeditions was rescheduled to May 2022. Linblads’s generous one time move allowed us to move our deposit to the same trip a year later. We chose this option because we feel pretty confident with a vaccine available, that we will be able to travel, and it’s a trip we feel we can take safely in a very small group. Our Travel Advisor Christopher Myers of Expedition Trips was invaluable in helping us navigate this change.


Royal Caribbean Will Sail Without Us

Oh how we love a relaxing cruise (see our report of Harmony of the Seas here) but “go big or go home” has become “stay home”! We had a back to back cruises on Royal Caribbean booked for Feb 2021 that was moved to Feb 2022 before the pandemic (this cruise booked in 2017, it had been rearranged by the cruiseline due to its own scheduling issues many times before the pandemic) The last move was the last straw…we were offered a full refund of our non refundable deposit and we took it. Our cruise expert travel planners Jay and Erin Paul of Affordable Vacation Station were advocating for us every step of the way here!

Why won’t we book some of the amazing deals on the big cruise ships for the future right now? I’m sure we are missing out on “deals” but most of the cruise lines have not resumed sailing with passengers. We don’t yet know what the changes will look like when they do resume sailing.

My immediate concern is that we book our mass market cruises to provide a short relaxing break between bigger trips…but how relaxing will it be cruising with thousands of others undertaking health and safety measures, such as limits on independent tours or no buffets? It’s a question I can’t answer right now and until I can, I’m not ready to invest. But some folks are going to get great deals on the first mass market cruises that sail in order to entice people to get back on board. If you want one of those deals, call my travel specialist Jay! He knows how to get you hooked up!

20190603 - Coco Cay - 029.jpg


Family First

There are so many loved ones separated right now, some lost forever. A vaccine is available and many loved ones are first in line for it. My first wish for when we can be vaccinated and travel again is to see those loved ones we’ve missed. My hope for everyone is that in 2021 brings you good health and that we will all be able to travel and be reunited with our loved ones and can hug our friends, and celebrate our occasions! Happy New Year, and when it’s Safe, Happy Travels!

From our family to yours!  Happy New Year!

From our family to yours! Happy New Year!

In Year in Review Tags Trip Reports, Travel Tips, Just Thinking Outloud
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Index

  • May 2025
    • May 1, 2025 Back to Africa! May 1, 2025
  • April 2025
    • Apr 18, 2025 Spring In The Lakes District UK Apr 18, 2025
  • March 2025
    • Mar 22, 2025 Mexico City; A GoSeeItPeople Interview Mar 22, 2025
  • February 2025
    • Feb 8, 2025 Seeing Puma in the Wild in Costa Rica's Corcovado National Park... Feb 8, 2025
  • January 2025
    • Jan 2, 2025 New Years, New Places and New Faces Jan 2, 2025
  • December 2024
    • Dec 16, 2024 Under the Caribbean Sea Dec 16, 2024
  • November 2024
    • Nov 21, 2024 48 Hours in Curacao; Netherland Antilles Nov 21, 2024
  • September 2024
    • Sep 23, 2024 Vermont Foliage Season; Avoid the Crowds - Go Northwest! Sep 23, 2024
  • July 2024
    • Jul 9, 2024 Wildlife in Our Backyard Jul 9, 2024
  • June 2024
    • Jun 4, 2024 This Spring Glows!! Jun 4, 2024
  • May 2024
    • May 13, 2024 48 Hours in Santiago Chile May 13, 2024
  • April 2024
    • Apr 28, 2024 A Good Night In Boston Apr 28, 2024
    • Apr 11, 2024 Stories From the Hawaiian Islands Oahu Apr 11, 2024
    • Apr 9, 2024 This Is The Way To Do Walt Disney World! Apr 9, 2024
  • March 2024
    • Mar 28, 2024 Patagonia -Trekking and So Much More... Mar 28, 2024
    • Mar 13, 2024 Luck in Antarctica Mar 13, 2024
  • February 2024
    • Feb 1, 2024 French Polynesia: A Warm Look Back on a Cold February Day! Feb 1, 2024
  • January 2024
    • Jan 12, 2024 Antarctica; Our "White Whale" Jan 12, 2024
    • Jan 2, 2024 Las Vegas A Sleepy Little Town?! Jan 2, 2024
  • December 2023
    • Dec 27, 2023 Where Have You Been?! Where Are You Going?! 2023/2024 Dec 27, 2023
  • November 2023
    • Nov 28, 2023 GoSeeIt Interview- Meg Attends Vivace Music Festival in Vilnius Nov 28, 2023
  • October 2023
    • Oct 24, 2023 When You Buy A Car and Get a Family Minis Take Vermont Rally Oct 24, 2023
  • August 2023
    • Aug 29, 2023 Crown Of Maine Balloon Fest Aug 29, 2023
  • July 2023
    • Jul 24, 2023 Cruising...What's Better? Big Ship, Little Ship? Jul 24, 2023
    • Jul 10, 2023 Stories From The Hawaiian Islands Hawaii Jul 10, 2023
  • June 2023
    • Jun 26, 2023 Stories From The Hawaiian Islands Maui Jun 26, 2023
    • Jun 19, 2023 Stories From The Hawaiian Islands Lanai Jun 19, 2023
    • Jun 6, 2023 Stories From The Hawaiian Islands Molokai Jun 6, 2023
  • April 2023
    • Apr 5, 2023 Ocean Cruising, What's New? Apr 5, 2023
  • March 2023
    • Mar 1, 2023 My Favorite Travel Apps Mar 1, 2023
  • February 2023
    • Feb 13, 2023 Disney World News and Tips for Right Now! Feb 13, 2023
    • Feb 2, 2023 DON'T DO EVERYTHING, EVERYWHERE, ALL AT ONCE Feb 2, 2023
  • January 2023
    • Jan 3, 2023 2023 Looking to Travel Ahead! Jan 3, 2023
  • December 2022
    • Dec 14, 2022 New York City Christmas on Broadway! Photos, Notes and Anecdotes Dec 14, 2022
  • November 2022
    • Nov 29, 2022 Amazon in Peru; It Was Real, But Felt Magical Nov 29, 2022
    • Nov 1, 2022 Hundreds of Gnomes and Thousands of Guitarists in Poland!? - A GoSeeIt People Interview Nov 1, 2022
  • October 2022
    • Oct 27, 2022 My Travel Advisors and Suppliers Let Me Down! Oct 27, 2022
  • June 2022
    • Jun 20, 2022 A Nostalgic Trip to Boston to Celebrate a Milestone Birthday Jun 20, 2022
  • May 2022
    • May 15, 2022 48 Hours in Siem Reap Including Angkor Archeological Park May 15, 2022
    • May 1, 2022 Yellowstone In Winter May 1, 2022
  • April 2022
    • Apr 15, 2022 Broadway Is Back! And So Are We! Barely! Apr 15, 2022
  • March 2022
    • Mar 22, 2022 A Three Dog Day In Yellowstone! Mar 22, 2022
  • February 2022
    • Feb 8, 2022 Walt Disney World: I Went Back to See What's New on Disney's 50th Birthday Feb 8, 2022
  • December 2021
    • Dec 14, 2021 Jamaican My Vacation Complicated- But Still Worth It! Dec 14, 2021
    • Dec 1, 2021 Midwestern Road Trip Dec 1, 2021
  • November 2021
    • Nov 22, 2021 COVID Travel Terror on Halloween Week! (or Not?) Nov 22, 2021
  • October 2021
    • Oct 13, 2021 Nahmakanta Lake Wilderness and Appalachian Trail in Northern Maine Oct 13, 2021
  • September 2021
    • Sep 29, 2021 Really Bad Hikers on the Appalachian Trail Sep 29, 2021
    • Sep 15, 2021 Pivot, In Abundance of Caution During These Difficult Times Sep 15, 2021
  • February 2021
    • Feb 8, 2021 Lessons Learned Along the Mekong River Delta Vietnam and Cambodia Feb 8, 2021
  • January 2021
    • Jan 29, 2021 Vietnam Jan 29, 2021
  • December 2020
    • Dec 31, 2020 Didn't See That Coming?! 2020 Review and New Years Resolutions for What's Next Dec 31, 2020
  • October 2020
    • Oct 2, 2020 Moose Safari Nahmakanta Lake Wilderness Camps Oct 2, 2020
  • August 2020
    • Aug 25, 2020 Travel In Your Own Backyard Aug 25, 2020
    • Aug 13, 2020 A Trip Down Memory Lane; York and Ogunquit During a Covid 19 Summer Aug 13, 2020
  • July 2020
    • Jul 22, 2020 Airline Travel During Covid: A GoSeeIt People Interview Jul 22, 2020
    • Jul 2, 2020 A "Normal Day" in Acadia National Park During the Covid 19 Pandemic Jul 2, 2020
  • March 2020
    • Mar 4, 2020 What In the World?! What's New In Walt Disney World Trip Planning Mar 4, 2020
  • February 2020
    • Feb 26, 2020 Baja Sur Mexico and Islands of Sea of Cortez: Desert Explorations Feb 26, 2020
    • Feb 19, 2020 Los Cabos Baja Sur Mexico Feb 19, 2020
    • Feb 12, 2020 Sea of Cortez- Under the Sea Feb 12, 2020
    • Feb 5, 2020 Baja Sur CA Mexico: Sometimes the Wildlife Comes to You! Feb 5, 2020
  • January 2020
    • Jan 22, 2020 Harmony of the Seas with Perfect Day at Coco Cay Jan 22, 2020
    • Jan 8, 2020 2020 Travel Vision for the New Year! Jan 8, 2020
  • October 2019
    • Oct 30, 2019 Motion on the Ocean 2019 Zumba Cruise! Oct 30, 2019
  • May 2019
    • May 21, 2019 Austin- Texas Cool on a Student Budget. A GoSeeIt People Interview May 21, 2019
  • December 2018
    • Dec 1, 2018 Where Would YOU like to GO? Dec 1, 2018
  • November 2018
    • Nov 15, 2018 Jamaica. One Love, Too Many Miles! Nov 15, 2018
    • Nov 1, 2018 Venice is Underwater! Now What!? Nov 1, 2018
  • October 2018
    • Oct 23, 2018 Backpacking In Iceland: A GoSeeIt People Interview Oct 23, 2018
    • Oct 5, 2018 Alaska Ports A Day in Sitka/A Day in Haines Oct 5, 2018
  • September 2018
    • Sep 19, 2018 Bears of Southeast Alaska Sep 19, 2018
    • Sep 17, 2018 Redemption In Glacier Bay National Park Sep 17, 2018
    • Sep 12, 2018 Whales of Southeast Alaska Sep 12, 2018
    • Sep 6, 2018 So What the Heck is an UnCruise?! Sep 6, 2018
  • August 2018
    • Aug 23, 2018 UnCruise In Alaska For Some Unfinished Business.  Aug 23, 2018
    • Aug 9, 2018 Are We in Miami, or Does it Just Feel That Way?! Aug 9, 2018
  • July 2018
    • Jul 26, 2018 River Cruise on the Mississippi; A GoSeeIt People Interview Jul 26, 2018
    • Jul 17, 2018 How I Survived 5 days on a Zumba Charter Cruise Jul 17, 2018
  • June 2018
    • Jun 26, 2018 Airline Flight in Your Near Future? Save Yourself from Misery with these Tips! Jun 26, 2018
  • May 2018
    • May 29, 2018 There Is More Than Vice In Amsterdam May 29, 2018
    • May 17, 2018 Tulip Season in the Netherlands May 17, 2018
  • April 2018
    • Apr 3, 2018 The Secret to Surviving Long Haul Flights Apr 3, 2018
  • March 2018
    • Mar 27, 2018 Go Jump Off a Cliff! Mar 27, 2018
    • Mar 19, 2018 Crushing Boarding Day on an Ocean Cruise Mar 19, 2018
    • Mar 13, 2018 A Different Look at Liberty of the Seas (Ship Tour) Mar 13, 2018
    • Mar 1, 2018 Sometimes, You Have To Get High! Mar 1, 2018
  • February 2018
    • Feb 20, 2018 Biggest Animals, Small World After All! Zambia Trip Report Feb 20, 2018
    • Feb 15, 2018 Photo Walk Ely Catherdral Feb 15, 2018
    • Feb 6, 2018 Fear of the Flowrider Feb 6, 2018
  • January 2018
    • Jan 30, 2018 Brrr? Iceland in January! Jan 30, 2018
    • Jan 25, 2018 Photo Walk in Kochi India Streets and Coast Jan 25, 2018
    • Jan 23, 2018 Reykjavik In January? The perfect college break trip! Jan 23, 2018
    • Jan 2, 2018 Where To in 2018? Jan 2, 2018
  • December 2017
    • Dec 27, 2017 What's Wrong With Their Home? Dec 27, 2017
    • Dec 18, 2017 Vatican: Tips and a Trip Report Dec 18, 2017
    • Dec 15, 2017 Rome: A Trip Report Dec 15, 2017
    • Dec 12, 2017 Rome Wasn't Built in a Day, But We Only Had a Day to See It! Dec 12, 2017
    • Dec 7, 2017 Joyeux Noel Montreal Dec 7, 2017
  • November 2017
    • Nov 29, 2017 Path Of the Gods Amalfi Coast Nov 29, 2017
    • Nov 28, 2017 Almafi Coast (Sorrento, Amalfi, Nocello, Pompeii) Nov 28, 2017
    • Nov 27, 2017 Climbing Mount Etna with Angelo, Lorenzo, Guliano and Mama's Parmigiana Nov 27, 2017
    • Nov 16, 2017 How Malta Celebrated Our Wedding Anniversary Nov 16, 2017
    • Nov 15, 2017 Corfu..."bless you" Nov 15, 2017
    • Nov 13, 2017 A Painting, A Rock, A Wedding and A Near Carjacking; Just a Day in Montenegro Nov 13, 2017
    • Nov 9, 2017 Croatia Nov 9, 2017
    • Nov 7, 2017 Slovenia Nov 7, 2017
  • October 2017
    • Oct 31, 2017 Murano, Burano and Torcello; Islands in the Venetian Lagoon Oct 31, 2017
    • Oct 30, 2017 A Different Look at Venice Oct 30, 2017
    • Oct 26, 2017 St Mark's Square Venice Oct 26, 2017
    • Oct 24, 2017 Myth Busting in Venice Oct 24, 2017
  • September 2017
    • Sep 28, 2017 Hurricane Destruction and Your Vacation. What to Do Now! Sep 28, 2017
    • Sep 18, 2017 Celebrating 35 Years in Quebec! A GoSeeItPeople Interview Sep 18, 2017
    • Sep 6, 2017 Who Knew Littleton NH Was Cool? Sep 6, 2017
  • August 2017
    • Aug 18, 2017 Up the East Coast with "Open Hearts and Minds" and a Baby in a TESLA! Aug 18, 2017
    • Aug 11, 2017 "Well, We Have Museums in New York!" Aug 11, 2017
  • July 2017
    • Jul 26, 2017 Lawn Chair Travel Jul 26, 2017
  • June 2017
    • Jun 21, 2017 Cuba Travel, What's New(s)? Jun 21, 2017
    • Jun 14, 2017 What To Do with Two Gammy's and a Graduate on an Epic Road Trip? Jun 14, 2017
  • May 2017
    • May 10, 2017 Beach, Off Season and Here's Why! May 10, 2017
    • May 4, 2017 What's Your Travel Style and What Kind of Trip to Take May 4, 2017
  • April 2017
    • Apr 25, 2017 Maple Farming Vermont Style Apr 25, 2017
    • Apr 17, 2017 Pura Vida with the Feifer Family in Costa Rica Apr 17, 2017
    • Apr 6, 2017 Get Off My Ship! Apr 6, 2017
  • March 2017
    • Mar 30, 2017 What To Do in Cozumel Mar 30, 2017
    • Mar 24, 2017 Hiking, and Tubing, and Ziplining...You Better "Belize" It! Mar 24, 2017
    • Mar 21, 2017 Roatan, Honduras; We had a "PURPOSE" to go to Roatan! Mar 21, 2017
    • Mar 16, 2017 What to do on a Cruise on a Sea Day..and what NOT to do! Mar 16, 2017
    • Mar 15, 2017 They Booked A Spring Break Cruise, and You Won't Believe What Happened! Mar 15, 2017
  • February 2017
    • Feb 28, 2017 Oops, We Have a Little Emergency Feb 28, 2017
    • Feb 23, 2017 Wildlife Among the "Wild Life" Feb 23, 2017
    • Feb 10, 2017 Savannah- 5 Reasons That Savannah Could Be the Perfect Place for a Girl's Weekend Feb 10, 2017
  • January 2017
    • Jan 29, 2017 Dramatic Video of Polar Bears of Churchill Jan 29, 2017
    • Jan 26, 2017 Shanghai Photo Walk Jan 26, 2017
    • Jan 12, 2017 Don't Get Taken for Ride! How to Avoid Travel Scams Jan 12, 2017
    • Jan 3, 2017 Looking Ahead 2017 Jan 3, 2017
  • December 2016
    • Dec 27, 2016 Looking Back 2016 Dec 27, 2016
    • Dec 20, 2016 How To Navigate a Tourist Trap Dec 20, 2016
    • Dec 15, 2016 Gone to the Dogs! Dec 15, 2016
    • Dec 7, 2016 Don't Miss the Culture for the Trees Dec 7, 2016
    • Dec 1, 2016 4 Reasons to Visit Toronto Dec 1, 2016
  • November 2016
    • Nov 15, 2016 Polar Bears of Churchill Trip Report Nov 15, 2016
    • Nov 8, 2016 Election Day? Do You Have This Question On Your Ballot? Nov 8, 2016
    • Nov 3, 2016 Polar Bear Mama Drama! Nov 3, 2016
    • Nov 1, 2016 Cuba...In The News Again, My Advice For Going NOW. Nov 1, 2016
  • October 2016
    • Oct 30, 2016 Polar Bears of Churchill Day 1 Oct 30, 2016
    • Oct 26, 2016 Broadway Con...yes, its a thing! Oct 26, 2016
    • Oct 20, 2016 Happy Anniversary to Us! Oct 20, 2016
    • Oct 12, 2016 Can't Miss Foliage Off the Beaten Path in Maine! Oct 12, 2016
    • Oct 4, 2016 I Hate to Shop, But Love a Local Market! Oct 4, 2016
  • September 2016
    • Sep 16, 2016 Schoodic Woods in Acadia National Park Maine Sep 16, 2016
    • Sep 2, 2016 A Real Country Fair (a photo essay) Sep 2, 2016
  • August 2016
    • Aug 26, 2016 A Trip Report from North of London Aug 26, 2016
    • Aug 18, 2016 Time to Think About College Travel And How to Save Money! Aug 18, 2016
  • July 2016
    • Jul 28, 2016 Staying Where I Am Jul 28, 2016
    • Jul 13, 2016 A Bike Ride Around Manhattan Jul 13, 2016
  • June 2016
    • Jun 28, 2016 The Rain in Paris Falls Mainly on...Us! Jun 28, 2016
    • Jun 21, 2016 London Trip Report: Tips for Making the Most of a Short Stay Jun 21, 2016
    • Jun 13, 2016 Europe- don't make my travel mistakes! Jun 13, 2016
  • May 2016
    • May 24, 2016 The "FOLDER" May 24, 2016
    • May 10, 2016 Portland Maine May 10, 2016
    • May 4, 2016 4 Tips To See More Than the Four Walls of Your Hotel Room on a Business Trip May 4, 2016
  • April 2016
    • Apr 27, 2016 Six Reasons to Go to the Beach in the Off Season Apr 27, 2016
    • Apr 20, 2016 Alaska- "isn't it cold there?" Apr 20, 2016
    • Apr 15, 2016 Super Jeff Saves Seattle Apr 15, 2016
    • Apr 7, 2016 A Few Of My Favorite Travel Things (and one I regret buying) Apr 7, 2016
  • March 2016
    • Mar 30, 2016 Photo Walk in Albany, New York Mar 30, 2016
    • Mar 25, 2016 Costa Rica: You just can't stump these guides! Mar 25, 2016
    • Mar 21, 2016 Panama City: A Contrast of Old and New Mar 21, 2016
    • Mar 15, 2016 Panama Canal Full Transit Aboard Azamara Journey Mar 15, 2016
    • Mar 11, 2016 Cartegena Columbia Mar 11, 2016
  • February 2016
    • Feb 25, 2016 Azamara Journey Cruise and Pacific Costa Rica Trip Feb 25, 2016
    • Feb 7, 2016 Azamara Journey Post Dry Dock Feb 7, 2016
  • January 2016
    • Jan 28, 2016 Looking Forward 2016 Jan 28, 2016
    • Jan 19, 2016 Looking Back 2015 Jan 19, 2016
    • Jan 13, 2016 A Long Weekend in French St Martin N.A. Jan 13, 2016
  • December 2015
    • Dec 31, 2015 Happy New Year! An Interview with a Woman Who Spent the Night in Times Square! Dec 31, 2015
  • November 2015
    • Nov 30, 2015 Denver Boulder Colorado Trip Report Nov 30, 2015
    • Nov 24, 2015 Don't Let Your Flight Be A Turkey This Thanksgiving! Nov 24, 2015
    • Nov 17, 2015 Should We Stay or Should We Go Now? Nov 17, 2015
    • Nov 3, 2015 OH, OH, We Didn't Know... Nov 3, 2015
  • October 2015
    • Oct 30, 2015 Travel Isn't Scary! Oct 30, 2015
    • Oct 27, 2015 Planning a trip to Costa Rica? Oct 27, 2015
    • Oct 6, 2015 Why Should Planning College Visits Be Harder Than the SAT? Oct 6, 2015
    • Oct 1, 2015 Woodstock VT: A Bridge to Another Time Oct 1, 2015
  • August 2015
    • Aug 16, 2015 Schoodic Penisula Acadia National Park Maine Aug 16, 2015
    • Aug 7, 2015 Go See It Cuba Aug 7, 2015
    • Aug 1, 2015 A Colorful Tour of South Beach, Miami Aug 1, 2015
  • July 2015
    • Jul 29, 2015 A "Colorless" Tour of Colorful South Beach, Miami Jul 29, 2015
    • Jul 14, 2015 Cuba- Cars and Cigars! Part 2 Jul 14, 2015
    • Jul 10, 2015 Disney Bans Selfie Sticks!? Yes, and Thank You! Jul 10, 2015
    • Jul 9, 2015 Cuba- Cars and Cigars! Jul 9, 2015
    • Jul 1, 2015 Cuba- We Can All Agree on Change Jul 1, 2015
  • June 2015
    • Jun 2, 2015 The Power of Social Media for Social Good!! Jun 2, 2015
  • May 2015
    • May 30, 2015 Expecting the Best, Preparing for the Worst: Preparing a Travel Medical Kit May 30, 2015
    • May 19, 2015 A Little Trouble in Paradise (St Croix) May 19, 2015
    • May 13, 2015 New Ship Tour- Adventure of the Seas May 13, 2015
  • April 2015
    • Apr 28, 2015 Antigua: It's All About That Boat (with apologies to Meghan Trainor) Aboard Adventure of the Seas Apr 28, 2015
    • Apr 24, 2015 Flora and People of St Lucia (aboard Adventure of the Seas) Apr 24, 2015
    • Apr 23, 2015 What Happens on a Sea Day? (aboard Adventure of the Seas) Apr 23, 2015
    • Apr 19, 2015 San Juan at Night Apr 19, 2015
    • Apr 18, 2015 Viejo San Juan Apr 18, 2015
    • Apr 12, 2015 Title Town, Boston MA Apr 12, 2015
    • Apr 7, 2015 The Reset Button Apr 7, 2015
    • Apr 2, 2015 Autism and Travel Apr 2, 2015
  • March 2015
    • Mar 26, 2015 Pashmina, Scarf or Linus's Blankie? The Always Useful Wrap! Mar 26, 2015
    • Mar 17, 2015 Just Thinking Outloud: Public Transportation Mar 17, 2015
    • Mar 14, 2015 New Feature! Ship Tours Mar 14, 2015
    • Mar 9, 2015 Burlington Vermont Trip Report Mar 9, 2015
  • February 2015
    • Feb 26, 2015 What In The Air is Going Here? Surviving the Airlines Part 2 Feb 26, 2015
    • Feb 25, 2015 New Feature- Trip Reports! Feb 25, 2015
    • Feb 24, 2015 Successfully Hunting Down Flights Part 1 Feb 24, 2015
    • Feb 3, 2015 "Real" Florida Feb 3, 2015
  • January 2015
    • Jan 26, 2015 Disney Last Minute with Late Mornings...How's That Possible!? Jan 26, 2015
    • Jan 12, 2015 You Have to Take Steps To Fly! Jan 12, 2015
    • Jan 6, 2015 Where We've Been and Where We Are Going Jan 6, 2015
    • Jan 1, 2015 Resolved! Jan 1, 2015
  • October 2014
    • Oct 16, 2014 Why Bother With a Local Guide? Oct 16, 2014
    • Oct 3, 2014 To Market, To Market (the many markets of Istanbul) Oct 3, 2014
  • September 2014
    • Sep 30, 2014 Istanbul - A Crossroad for Humanity Sep 30, 2014
    • Sep 26, 2014 "It's Complicated" Sep 26, 2014
    • Sep 24, 2014 "It's Not An Adventure Until Peril Is Involved" Sep 24, 2014
    • Sep 24, 2014 Postcards From Budapest Sep 24, 2014
    • Sep 23, 2014 Goodbye to the Goulash City Sep 23, 2014
    • Sep 21, 2014 A Monumental Day In Budapest Sep 21, 2014
    • Sep 20, 2014 Arrival in Budapest Sep 20, 2014
    • Sep 20, 2014 13 Words You Do Not Want To Hear Immediately After Takeoff Sep 20, 2014
    • Sep 19, 2014 What camera gear am I bringing? Sep 19, 2014
    • Sep 19, 2014 Pre Trip Planning and Packing 9/19/2014 Sep 19, 2014
    • Sep 18, 2014 Why do we travel? Sep 18, 2014