47. Lessons learned in 25 years of travel

A quarter of a century of adventure travel has been exciting, frustrating, tiring and wonderful. I was going to try to pass on what I learned to future travelers, but honestly most of this is common sense and personal preference. Therefore, instead of taking the attitude of “learn from me”, I am an expert now, I will recap what I learned and how I used the knowledge as I went along. I am glad that I began adventure travel in my 50s when I was young enough to climb mountains and put up with less than comfortable accommodations for the … Continue reading 47. Lessons learned in 25 years of travel

46. Salzburg & Munich – 2025

2025 started with a January hip replacement for me. Would I be able to still travel? We held off making any travel plans until I was sure that I was mobile after the operation and then I started to look for a tour. Jerry suggested an opera or classical music tour. I found Great Performance Tours, which was going to Salzburg & Munich (two cities that would be new to me) over Easter for both opera and symphony performances. The timing worked. I could still go to my son, Sean and daughter-in-law, Joy’s house for Passover. Tight but doable. We … Continue reading 46. Salzburg & Munich – 2025

45. 1200 miles on the Danube – 2024

At our travel agent’s suggestion we decided to take Amadeus Cruise Line 11-day, 1200 miles Danube cruise from Bucharest, Romania to Vienna, Austria.  We would get to visit countries that I knew very little about. We decided to start (and end) the trip in Vienna instead of Bucharest for three reasons: 1. Round trip tickets to Vienna and then a short flight to Bucharest were about 1/3 of the cost of Florida/Bucharest/Vienna/Florida. 2. I wanted a couple of days in Europe to get accustomed to the time change before the cruise and 3. Vienna is a lovely city to visit. … Continue reading 45. 1200 miles on the Danube – 2024

44. Portugal – 2024

The Portugal trip was conceived because my daughter Maggie and her husband, Kevin, were living in Braga, Portugal.  I wanted to visit them but I also wanted another adventure. The Rick Steves 11-day Portugal trip, which began in Lisbon and ended in Porto (45 minutes from Braga) seemed ideal. In addition to Lisbon and Porto, we visited Evora, Obidos, Fatima, Coimbra, a winery and a cork farm.  I had been on 3 previous Rick Steves trips.  I knew that the trips are active, utilize small interesting hotels and that we would have a great guide.  I looked forward to learning more about Portugal and … Continue reading 44. Portugal – 2024

43. Senegal – 2024

Senegal – a family visit. Senegal does not have the game parks that I enjoyed in Southern and Eastern Africa.  It does not have the culture that Morocco or Egypt are steeped in.  What it has is lovely beaches and beach resorts. But I live in a beach town with easy access to the lovely Gulf.  What drew me to Senegal was family.  The Lobles, my step son, Stefan, his wife, Rachel and grandson, Jules decided to spend two years (starting fall 2022) in Senegal, primarily because they wanted Jules to have a developing country experience.  Jules, 13 years old at the time, had been … Continue reading 43. Senegal – 2024

42. Japan: Windstar cruise-2023

Hong Kong As I said in post 41, the second part of the Japan trip was a Windstar cruise from Hong Kong back to mainland Japan, through a string of islands.  We flew from Kyoto to Hong Kong and were to spend only one night in Hong Kong, therefore, we figured we would just use our charge cards instead of cash. We walked to the taxi stand, only to read signs saying cash in HK$ only – no credit cards.  We went to the ATM and took out enough HK$ for the taxi.  Once in town, we tried to go out to lunch, … Continue reading 42. Japan: Windstar cruise-2023

41. Japan: Land Tour-2023

Windstar Cruises had an intriguing trip to the Japanese Island south of the mainland. We decided that it would be fun to do a land tour of Japan followed by the cruise. Japan was very slow to open up to tourists after Covid. Because the country was closed from March 2020 to December 2022, many tour guides found other jobs. The industry was having a great deal of trouble finding English speaking guides. Our travel agent suggested that we use some English speaking assistants to supplement the guides. We agreed. But even that was an uphill battle. For instance, in … Continue reading 41. Japan: Land Tour-2023

40. Fjord/Baltic cruise – 2022

I wrote about some of the Scandinavian and the Balkan countries in earlier posts; therefore, this time, I will write only about special and new experiences in that part of the world.   The cruise left out of Amsterdam, and we flew in the day before to be safe. Our night in the Amsterdam hotel was an interesting experience: I usually book my own hotels, but this time my travel agent (through another travel company) booked a hotel near the Van Gogh Museum. When we arrived, we learned that the “Hotel” was a pod hotel – all the “rooms” were pods.  … Continue reading 40. Fjord/Baltic cruise – 2022

39. Alaska – 2021

The 2 1/2 year gap (from 2018 to 2021) was caused first because we sold the NY Co-op in 2019 and then travel ceased because of Covid. An Alaskan cruise was booked for the summer of 2020, but, of-course, it was canceled.  Tourism had opened up in Alaska by summer 2021 but cruise ships were still not going.  Therefore, we opted for a rail trip through the state.  It was a great choice.  We booked first class rail tickets with dome cars for excellent viewing and were able to enjoy the countryside and mountains.   We flew through Seattle. The original flight was to get … Continue reading 39. Alaska – 2021

38. Tanzania – 2018

We were previously in Southern Africa in 2004 (see post 10). I loved game viewing and always hoped to be able to come back to the wildlife camps. Therefore when Galapagos Travels offered a trip to Tanzania, we jumped at it. I knew it would be a great trip. The main focus of this trip was game viewing and to that end we covered a great deal of territory by land and air and stayed at tented camps right in the parks for 9 of our 17 nights. The tented camps/lodges were basic, most with no electricity in the tent … Continue reading 38. Tanzania – 2018

37. Italy with Maggie – 2018

My daughter, Maggie, wanted to go to Italy with me.  How awesome is that? We found a Rick Steves tour that covered Rome, Volterra, Cinque Terre and Florence.  This would give her some of Italy’s highlights but also hit some new cities for me. We turned out to be very good travel partners, keeping similar hours and having similar energy levels.  It also gave us some precious mother/daughter time. As a bonus, Maggie has a great sense of direction – which I lack. I wrote about Italy a few posts ago, therefore, I will only mention any new experiences that I had on … Continue reading 37. Italy with Maggie – 2018

36. Tahiti – 2017

I went to Tahiti because of Jane Austen. Well, indirectly at least. The Jane Austen Society annual meeting was going to be in Huntington Beach, CA.  Since we were flying from NYC to California, we decided to continue on west to Tahiti.  WindStar Cruise company, which we had taken to Costa Rica/Panama and Athens/Rome, had a 7-day cruise on the 148 passenger Wind Spirit boat, in Tahiti, which worked with our schedule.  Perfect. The Tahiti trip was wonderful but not amazing .  What is the difference between a wonderful and an amazing trip?  A wonderful trip is one where all the arrangements work perfectly; you … Continue reading 36. Tahiti – 2017

35. China – 2016

My father’s dream was to see China. He never did. Therefore, in 2016 I decided to go in his place. We visited many wonderful places, but I will focus only on Beijing, Xian, Lhasa, Chengdu, Yangze River, and Shanghai.   Beijing:  Tiananmen Square is at least three times the size I expected it to be. It stretched in front and in back of the Mao memorial and burial place.  It was quiet when we visited, but our guide said that in the morning when the memorial opens, the line to get in is usually over an hour.  The square behind the memorial … Continue reading 35. China – 2016

34. Baltic Cruise – 2015

Southampton: Southampton provided me with a mini Austen pilgrimage. Jane Austen lived in the town for a short while and she danced at the Dolphin Hotel. The ballroom was locked but I could look in and enjoy the moment.  Baltic Cruise Now for the main event, the Baltic Cruise with stops in Bruges, Warnemunde, Tallinn, St. Petersburg, Helsinki, Stockholm, Copenhagen. Bruges, Belgium Since we were on a large ship, it docked at the Bruges container port and we had to take a bus to get into the town of Bruges. The ship only provided two busses into town: the 9:30am … Continue reading 34. Baltic Cruise – 2015

33. Scotland – July 2015

How to choose the next trip? We were visiting our friends, Vicki Ondis and Stewart Pemberton and they mentioned that they had just booked a Baltic cruise leaving out of Southampton, England and invited us to come with them.  The itinerary looked awesome.  Jerry especially wanted to go to St. Petersburg.  We agreed. We had never been to Scotland and decided to see if we could fit in a pre-cruise tour. Rick Steves Tours had a Scotland tour whose dates worked with the cruise. Perfect. The tour started in Edinburgh, continued to Pitlochry, Inverness, Oban and back to Edinburgh.  I will, again, give the … Continue reading 33. Scotland – July 2015