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Rick Steves in the June ’08 issue notes that he travels with a convertible suitcase/backpack, adding that he avoids soft-sided suitcases with wheels.

“As long as I’m strong enough to carry my bag on my back, I will,” he states.

Good for him! But if he checks out a luggage shop he’ll find that some backpacks also have wheels, giving one’s aching back a break now and then. They also can be used as “roll aboards.”

MIKE STEIN

Irvine, CA

On a free afternoon in Rome, I visited the Palazzo Massimo alle Terme (Largo di Villa Peretti 67; phone 06 3996 7700 — open 9-7:45 Tuesday-Sunday; admission, €7), part of the Museo Nazionale Romano. I knew it contained a fourth-century stone artwork of a type called opus sectile. Opus sectile is a technique similar to mosaic except that the stones are large sheets of various kinds of marble, ground thin and precisely cut.

Unfortunately, after an interesting but long cross-town walk to the palazzo, I found that the work I wanted to see was “out for repairs”; however, there were many...

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My wife and I took a 6-week trip to Australia and New Zealand, Sept. 9-Oct. 22, 2007.

We are experienced travelers, both at home and abroad, and our preference and most common approach is to travel independently. For our trip, I planned the itinerary as usual, but when I attempted to implement it, I was repeatedly stymied by the logistics and complexity of travel arrangements in Australia, a problem I had never faced on previous trips. It wasn’t that I couldn’t do it; it was that the cost far exceeded our budget.

That’s when I turned to the Internet for answers and found out...

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The weakened dollar certainly affects our US friends who visit us here in Outer London (Wimbledon), but a bit of research and knowledge can reveal good deals and plenty of freebies.

Two-for-one offers on many attractions are available to those who travel by train, including those purchasing “TravelCards.” Try putting “London 2 for 1” and “London travel cards” in your search engine (I used Google). Note that the one-day “off peak” TravelCard is generally the best bet unless you want to start before 9:30 a.m. on weekdays.

A Zone 6 card covers all public transport services (...

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My domestic partner, Karen, in December ’06 found a delightful price for a flight from Miami to Guayaquil, Ecuador, on Feb. 9, 2007, through CheapOAir.com. The cost was $467 each plus a $50 agent fee for two round-trip tickets with Santa Bárbara Airlines (of Venezuela). We would overnight and the next day fly to San Cristobal, Galápagos Islands.

In January ’07 I e-mailed CheapOAir to obtain a telephone number for the airline. I received no response.

A friend in Miami located the airline’s number, and when I called them I was told that the connecting flight from Caracas had...

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My husband, my sister and I decided to spend the 2007 Christmas holidays in Europe, and to that end we booked a 14-day “Christmas Markets” riverboat trip with Vantage Deluxe World Travel (Boston, MA; 800/322-6677). Following that, we would have a rental car and a Christmas week timeshare in southern France, then spend New Year’s in a small Bavarian country inn in which my husband and I had stayed for New Year’s a number of years before.

The riverboat trip was wonderful, as have been the other trips I’ve taken with Vantage, particularly the Southern Africa one, which was an inspiring...

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I traveled to Bali, Indonesia, May 14-26, 2008, and the island of the gods remains one of the cheapest destinations on the planet, just the opposite of my trip to Iceland and Norway last October.

Getting around in Bali is simple and cheap. Taxis are a bargain, and every driver, trying to improve his lot, will inquire about your “program” for the following day. He wants your business.

It is very easy to strike a deal to have him take you anyplace on the island, with unlimited stops, during a period of eight to 10 hours for about $30-$40. Just be sure you get one with a...

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Many of us prefer traveling with a group, since it is cost effective. This often means, especially during busy travel seasons, being tightly packed in a big bus. In the last six months of 2006 my wife, Marlene, and I took three such tours, which I compare below. All prices are per person and include airfare to and from Chicago.

We started with a 17-day “Grand Tour of France,” Sept. 7-23, with Grand European Tours (6000 Meadows Rd., Ste. 520, Lake Oswego, OR 97035; 800/552-5545, www.getours.com). It cost $3,599 and we spent $180 on optional tours.

The second was the 15-day “...

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