Features

Colorful carousel at Honfleur’s old port.
We were inspired by Beth Habian’s article in the September ’09 issue about her trip to the Dordogne region of France — so much so that we immediately contacted George Nevin, the owner/operator of Intimate France, to ask about his 2010 tour of Normandy and the Loire Valley. We were pleased with his prompt and informative responses to our inquiries, so we booked the 12-day tour departing Sept. 12.

by Patricia Arrigoni, Fairfax, CA

From a treetop deep in the jungles of Peru, a tiny brown monkey stares down at me with curiosity. I aim my binoculars and stare back into his intense, dark eyes. We check each other out for a couple of minutes, then he is gone, swinging with ease to the next tree.

But there were more animals to discover on this May ’03 trip to Peru, like the saddle-back tamarin and the three-toed sloth, plus a selection of beautiful birds.

A complicated journey

I was one of a group of three American travel writers and three photographers on a...

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by Marilyn Lutzker, Sunnyside, NY

There are advantages and disadvantages to being older. Neither my friend (at age 81) nor I (77) wanted the responsibility of driving in Italy, but I am old enough to have a son with adult children, himself, who was willing to devote a week to driving his elders around.

Peter joined my friend and me with a rented car after we had spent six days in Florence. Preferring taking day trips from a central base to moving every night, we had arranged for three nights in a hotel in Perugia followed by four nights in an apartment in Certaldo Alto...

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by Rod King, New Haven, IN

Motoring into the harbor at Poros, Greece, on the Anna II from Athens, I was excited to see that it was as picturesque as I had envisioned it. The bright afternoon sun reflected off the white and cream houses on the hillside, giving them a freshly painted look. The spire of the Church of St. George and the town’s clock tower stood out above the orange tile roofs.

Along with other members of the Alumni Campus Abroad group, organized by Alumni Holidays International (AHI, 6400 Shafer Ct. Rosemont, IL 60018; phone 800/323-7373 or visit www.ahitravel....

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by Lei Chatfield, Contributing Editor

Imagine: nomadic yurts, incredibly beautiful tiled mosques, medieval architecture and an ultramodern city created by a dictator “president” with portraits of him and his family at every turn. This mosaic is Central Asia.

Kyrgyzstan

There’s something magical about Kyrgyzstan. On our first evening in Bishkek, we were treated to a double dose of Kyrgyz culture at a local restaurant. First there was a special performance of a Kyrgyz epic legend by a master manaschi (storyteller). We were very privileged, as this is a fading art form...

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by Ed Kinney, Roanoake, VA

For years I thought most travelers went to Ecuador only to visit its Galápagos Islands, but a 10-day tour of Ecuador proper in January 2010 changed my perspective. I found a nation of diverse and wonderful cultures, beautiful landscapes and colorful wildlife.

Planning the trip

Having spent the majority of my travel time in the Middle and Far East, I was looking for a different venue for my latest trip. While reviewing travel brochures, I read of an Exploritas (Elderhostel) tour entitled “Photographing the Colors of Ecuador,” offered by...

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—by Beverly Shaver, El Cerrito, CA

Almost every visitor to Asia at one time or another passes through Singapore, be it on a shore excursion from a cruise ship or while changing planes. We did not plan to linger as we arrived there on our way home following a 2-week, September ’04 ramble through eastern Malaysia, given the few antiquities and the super-modern urban environment there. We likely would have spent the night before our departure in our hotel room had it not been for the concierge.

That lively gentleman, Mr. Sultaya, spotted an appliqued bearcat on my flight jacket...

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My journey to India began when my wife, Peggy, an ardent wildlife photographer, read an article in the May ’09 issue of Outdoor Photographer magazine. The article, called “The Quest for Tigers” and written by Susi Allison-Lama and Butch Lama, described where to find and photograph the elusive Royal Bengal tiger. Featured was Bandhavgarh National Park in central India. We had been to Africa twice to photograph the large mammals there, to Alaska several times to photograph grizzly and brown bears and to northern Canada for polar bears. One of the few remaining large mammals for Peggy to photograph was the Bengal tiger, and what better time to go than 2010, the year of the tiger?!