Columns

by Philip Wagenaar, second of four parts

Last month I discussed how to reserve lodgings in France, how to evaluate the room you are about to inhabit and how to obtain appropriate discounts. I continue this month with listings of specific hotel groups, followed by a discussion of the Michelin guide, the Logis de France and more.

ACCOMMODATION GUIDE

Below is a guide to accommodations, accompanied by my comments. In the listing of places to stay under headings A, B and C you pick the hotels by destination. In those within sections C through S you pick the lodging by its...

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by Yvonne Michie Horn

I’d come to the city of Oaxaca, southern Mexico’s cultural treasure, for a two-week immersion in Spanish. During that time, I wandered around the Old City in my off-school hours, jumping at every opportunity to practice my emerging language skills. As I walked cobbled streets, I kept running into the name of Francisco Toledo, Oaxaca’s reigning contemporary artist.

“Toledo is a seed,” my teacher told me. “Toledo has insisted that our total culture be preserved, and now nearly every art form is flourishing here, creating an ambience, a sense of the entire...

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A 62-day cruise aboard Holland America Line’s Prinsendam. This month, ports of Mediterranean Europe and Egypt (part 2 of 2)
In Varanasi, seeing is believing, including a bull in a fabric shop.

Part 3 of 4 on India & Nepal

It is an impossible task to convey in these few pages any real detail concerning the numerous varied attractions of the four distinct destinations in central India that are the subject of this column. My goal, instead, shall be to convey essence and hopefully inspire readers to further explore this important region.

I will proceed in the order of my visitations during a May 2008 individual tour of India and Nepal hosted by SITA World Tours (Encino, CA; 800/421-5643, www.sitatour.com).

Agra and the Taj Mahal

Driving from Jaipur...

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The Great Recession has not caused a stoppage in cruise-ship construction, although building has slowed somewhat, and no new giant megaships are on the horizon.

I define a megaship as a “post-Panamax” vessel that cannot fit through the (for now) 110-foot-wide Panama Canal locks and carries more than 5,000 passengers. So the current world-record holder, Royal Caribbean’s Allure of the Seas — at 225,282 tons and 1,187.1 feet in length, having a waterline beam of 154 feet and carrying an unbelievable 6,360 passengers — is likely to remain the largest...

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Magnificent stands of trees grace the Sete Cidades landscape. Photos: Gail Keck

(Part 2 of 2 on the Azores)

The second portion of my November ’08 sojourn to the Portuguese Azores with my wife, Gail, focused on the capital city of Ponta Delgada and the main island of São Miguel. The three days we spent on the island, hosted by Azores Express and the Azores tourist office, resulted in our having a capsule view of a lifestyle we found to be enviable.

Arriving in Ponta Delgada on our interisland flight from Pico in late afternoon, we were met by our guide for the next three days, Eduardo Almeida. He would prove to be exemplary and the key to our fast-...

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Dear Globetrotter:

Welcome to the 403rd issue of your monthly overseas travel magazine.

Here are a few of the items that have been making news in travel.

In cities around Nicaragua, be wary of anyone, even a woman, offering to share a cab or help you find one. Robberies and physical assaults in taxis are increasing, particularly around the international airport. Victims in taxis have been forced at knife-point to withdraw money from their accounts at ATMs.

The US Embassy recommends using only officially registered taxicabs (with red plates) or radio-dispatched...

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View of the Nile and Cairo from the Cairo Sheraton Hotel. Photos: Keck

(Part 1 of 3 on Egypt) I had the opportunity to visit Egypt in September ’09 on a journey replicating the 12-day “Egypt Grand” tour offered by my host, Value World Tours (an advertiser in ITN), in concert with the Egyptian Tourist Authority and EgyptAir.

A split stay in exotic, ancient Cairo prior to and following a seven-day Nile cruise provided the opportunity for visits to the cornucopia of historic attractions for which this huge city of nearly 23 million is so famous.

Despite its size and pulsating heartbeat, I found Cairo’s reputation for being...

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