Travel journalist Bruce Northam urges intuition when soloing
Julia Roberts is all over the tube these days promoting the movie, "Eat, Pray, Love," based on Elizabeth Gilbert's best-selling bookabout her soul-searching odyssey to mend a broken heart. My travel-writer colleague Bruce Northam (left) wrote "Eat Pray Love, and Be Cautious," as the title implies, a cautionary but not paranoid piece on Huffington Post. He began, "The book Eat Pray Love issued no travel warnings; nor does the movie. However, somebody needs to remind women traveling alone that Halloween-night-style caution is always necessary. I'm the only guy I know who read Eat Pray Love, Elizabeth Gilbert's wildly successful travelogue-cum-romance novel that's now a movie starring Julia Roberts portraying the lovesick and soul-searching editor who met her second husband in Bali."
I'm not paranoid when it comes to travel, and I don't advocate that travelers always leash themselves to a tour guide either, but caution and precautions make sense -- not just for women traveling solo but sometimes even for men as well. Northam is a believer in following your instincts about what is safe and what is a silly flirtation with trouble. Read his piece and the practical tips he includes from two well-traveled women writers, Carla King and Lisa Alpine. The more adventurous and out there the traveler, the finer line between reasonable caution and folly. Northam is just sayin'
Showing posts with label Blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blog. Show all posts
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Eat, Pray, Love -- and Watch Your Tail
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Travel Babel Named One of the Top 50 Travel Blogs
According to their own site, award candidates are selected by their team of "research associates scouring the web" or by nominations from their subscribers. I'm sure mine was the former. Their site further explains that five unnamed judges score each nominated blog "across 20 different attributes" to come up with their own subjective scores. These ratings are combined into an aggregate score, and the five judges' aggregates are then averaged to give the blog its final rating. wards go to blogs in the 99% percentile, meaning just the top 1% of nominated blogs receive awards.
When I look at the other travel blogs in the top 50, I’m honored to be in such good company. The list of award recipients is not numbered, but it's not alphabetical either. Travel Babel is No. 34 on the list of 50, and I have to say that I'm thrilled that five judges cumulatively consider this to be the 34th-best travel blog around.
When I look at the other travel blogs in the top 50, I’m honored to be in such good company. The list of award recipients is not numbered, but it's not alphabetical either. Travel Babel is No. 34 on the list of 50, and I have to say that I'm thrilled that five judges cumulatively consider this to be the 34th-best travel blog around.
Friday, April 15, 2011
Airlines' Food Costs Are Pretty Low
Inflight food costs predictors of lousy inflight fare
No domestic airline spends as much as $9, per passenger, for inflight food, according to Cranky Flier's post today called "What Airlines Spend on Food." The post, which I recommended reading, included a government chart (below) tracking key carriers' per-passenger food expenditures over the last decade.
Of course, nine bucks, which is about what Alaska Airlines used to spend, bought more and/or better food a decade ago than six dollars or less does today. What is unclear from this chart is whether it includes both Coach and the First Class. Free food and adult beverages are still offered in the front of the plane, but in steerage, passengers have to buy food other than perhaps a tiny little bag of free pretzels or peanuts. We have been doing so for nearly a decade, since carriers curtailed than eliminated free meals and phased in food fort purchase.
"United Airlines used to spend $100 million a year on coach-cabin food when serving free meals, but now spends $20 million and brings in $20 million in revenue," according to a Wall Street Journal report last September called "Pie in the Sky? Upgrading Food in Coach." I knew that carriers were spending less and earning more on inflight food, but I had no idea how much.
No domestic airline spends as much as $9, per passenger, for inflight food, according to Cranky Flier's post today called "What Airlines Spend on Food." The post, which I recommended reading, included a government chart (below) tracking key carriers' per-passenger food expenditures over the last decade.
Of course, nine bucks, which is about what Alaska Airlines used to spend, bought more and/or better food a decade ago than six dollars or less does today. What is unclear from this chart is whether it includes both Coach and the First Class. Free food and adult beverages are still offered in the front of the plane, but in steerage, passengers have to buy food other than perhaps a tiny little bag of free pretzels or peanuts. We have been doing so for nearly a decade, since carriers curtailed than eliminated free meals and phased in food fort purchase.
"United Airlines used to spend $100 million a year on coach-cabin food when serving free meals, but now spends $20 million and brings in $20 million in revenue," according to a Wall Street Journal report last September called "Pie in the Sky? Upgrading Food in Coach." I knew that carriers were spending less and earning more on inflight food, but I had no idea how much.
Friday, April 8, 2011
Lonely Planet's Travel Blog Honors
Prestigious guidebook series honors travel bloggers

Best Group-Authored Blog
http://www.spottedbylocals.com/, 10 Points
http://travelgeneration.com/, 7 Points
http://matadornetwork.com/. 5 Points
http://travelingmamas.com/, 3 Points
http://blog.mrandmrssmith.com/, 1 Point

Lonely Planet seeks nominations for its annual travel blog awards and invites readers to vote, accounting for 50 percent of the total, and judges evaluated the blogs for the other 50 percent. Below are the winners and the four runnersup in each category, along with an indication of how much the leaders won by. There are some really awesome blogs here, so check them out:
Best Destination Blog
http://www.govisithawaii.com/, 10 Points
http://www.manzanilloblog.com/, 7 Points
www.spottedbylocals.com/berlin, 5 Points
Best Destination Blog
http://www.govisithawaii.com/, 10 Points
http://www.manzanilloblog.com/, 7 Points
www.spottedbylocals.com/berlin, 5 Points
Best Expat Blog
http://bearshapedsphere.blogspot.com/, 10 Points
http://www.notesfromspain.com/, 7 Points
http://www.yucatanliving.com,/ 5 Points
http://roamingrachael.blogspot.com/ 3 Points
http://rwapplewannabe.wordpress.com/, 1 Point
http://bearshapedsphere.blogspot.com/, 10 Points
http://www.notesfromspain.com/, 7 Points
http://www.yucatanliving.com,/ 5 Points
http://roamingrachael.blogspot.com/ 3 Points
http://rwapplewannabe.wordpress.com/, 1 Point
Best Comsumer Travel Blog
http://blogs.nationalgeographic.com/blogs/intelligenttravel/, 10 Points
http://elliott.org/, 7 Points
http://www.matadorgoods.com/, 5 Points
http://travelingmamas.com/, 3 Points
http://www.travel-rants.com,%201/1 Point
http://blogs.nationalgeographic.com/blogs/intelligenttravel/, 10 Points
http://elliott.org/, 7 Points
http://www.matadorgoods.com/, 5 Points
http://travelingmamas.com/, 3 Points
http://www.travel-rants.com,%201/1 Point
Best Travelogue
http://windyskies.blogspot.com/, 10 Points
http://www.worldinslowmotion.com/, 7 Points
http://everything-everywhere.com/, 5 Points
http://www.uncorneredmarket.com/, 3 Points
http://www.theprofessionalhobo.com/, 1 Point
http://windyskies.blogspot.com/, 10 Points
http://www.worldinslowmotion.com/, 7 Points
http://everything-everywhere.com/, 5 Points
http://www.uncorneredmarket.com/, 3 Points
http://www.theprofessionalhobo.com/, 1 Point
Best Non-English Language Blog
http://www.lavoltadels25.cat/, 10 Points
http://www.triplib.de/, 7 Points
http://amafrika.blogspot.com/, 5 Points
http://dulichbonmua.blogspot.com/, 3 Points
http://aatomiku-seiklused.blogspot.com/, 1 Point
http://www.lavoltadels25.cat/, 10 Points
http://www.triplib.de/, 7 Points
http://amafrika.blogspot.com/, 5 Points
http://dulichbonmua.blogspot.com/, 3 Points
http://aatomiku-seiklused.blogspot.com/, 1 Point
Best Spanish Language Blog
http://churuymarianenelbolson.blogspot.com/, 10 Points
http://www.blogdeviajes.com.ar/, 7 Points
http://objetivolima.wordpress.com/, 5 Points
http://misviajesporahi.blogspot.com/, 3 Points
http://viajerasdelmundo.blogspot.com/, 1 Point
http://churuymarianenelbolson.blogspot.com/, 10 Points
http://www.blogdeviajes.com.ar/, 7 Points
http://objetivolima.wordpress.com/, 5 Points
http://misviajesporahi.blogspot.com/, 3 Points
http://viajerasdelmundo.blogspot.com/, 1 Point
Best French Language Blog
http://www.panneauxdumonde.toile-libre.org/, 10 Points
www.toothbrushnomads.com/dotclear, 7 Points
http://www.tropic-of-capricorn.fr/, 5 Points
http://matetlola.uniterre.com/, 3 Points
http://cathetyan.uniterre.com/, 1 Point
http://www.panneauxdumonde.toile-libre.org/, 10 Points
www.toothbrushnomads.com/dotclear, 7 Points
http://www.tropic-of-capricorn.fr/, 5 Points
http://matetlola.uniterre.com/, 3 Points
http://cathetyan.uniterre.com/, 1 Point
Best Italian Language Blog
http://www.ilreporter.com/, 10 Points
http://www.piedistanchi.com/, 7 Points
http://lafilibusta.blogspot.com/, 5 Points
http://turismolento.blogspot.com/, 3 Points
http://avventuregialle.splinder.com/, 1 Point
http://www.ilreporter.com/, 10 Points
http://www.piedistanchi.com/, 7 Points
http://lafilibusta.blogspot.com/, 5 Points
http://turismolento.blogspot.com/, 3 Points
http://avventuregialle.splinder.com/, 1 Point
Best Micro-Blogging
http://twitter.com/soultravelers3, 10 Points
http://twitter.com/travelsavvykayt, 7 Points
http:///, 5 Points
http://twitter.com/nerdseyeview, 3 Points
http://twitter.com/travelblissful, 1 Point
http://twitter.com/soultravelers3, 10 Points
http://twitter.com/travelsavvykayt, 7 Points
http:///, 5 Points
http://twitter.com/nerdseyeview, 3 Points
http://twitter.com/travelblissful, 1 Point
Best Video Blog
http://youtube.com/user/soultravelers3, 10 Points
http://www.amtrekker.com/, 7 Points
http://www.twoguysaroundtheworld.com/, 5 Points
http://scenicboys.typepad.com/scenicboys/, 3 Points
http://youtube.com/user/GoHawaiiTV 1 Point
http://youtube.com/user/soultravelers3, 10 Points
http://www.amtrekker.com/, 7 Points
http://www.twoguysaroundtheworld.com/, 5 Points
http://scenicboys.typepad.com/scenicboys/, 3 Points
http://youtube.com/user/GoHawaiiTV 1 Point
Best Themed Blog
http://soultravelers3.com/, 10 Points
http://travelswithtwo.com/, 7 Points
www.bigbluetech.net/big-blue-tech-news/ 5 Points
http://mykugelhopf.ch/, 3 Points
http://walktalktour.com/, 1 Point
http://soultravelers3.com/, 10 Points
http://travelswithtwo.com/, 7 Points
www.bigbluetech.net/big-blue-tech-news/ 5 Points
http://mykugelhopf.ch/, 3 Points
http://walktalktour.com/, 1 Point
Best Image Blog
http://tacogirlblog.blogspot.com/, 10 Points
http://atodocaucho.blogspot.com/, 7 Points
http://elsuenodeindia.blogspot.com/, 5 Points
http://everything-everywhere.com/Photography, 3 Points
http://mykugelhopf.ch/, 1 Point
http://tacogirlblog.blogspot.com/, 10 Points
http://atodocaucho.blogspot.com/, 7 Points
http://elsuenodeindia.blogspot.com/, 5 Points
http://everything-everywhere.com/Photography, 3 Points
http://mykugelhopf.ch/, 1 Point
Best Group-Authored Blog
http://www.spottedbylocals.com/, 10 Points
http://travelgeneration.com/, 7 Points
http://matadornetwork.com/. 5 Points
http://travelingmamas.com/, 3 Points
http://blog.mrandmrssmith.com/, 1 Point
Best Podcast
http://amateurtraveler.com/, 10 Points
http://indietravelpodcast.com/, 7 Points
http://notesinspanish.com/spanish-audio, 5 Points
http://notesfromspain.com/podcasts, 3 Points
http://viajerodelmundo.com/, 1 Point
http://amateurtraveler.com/, 10 Points
http://indietravelpodcast.com/, 7 Points
http://notesinspanish.com/spanish-audio, 5 Points
http://notesfromspain.com/podcasts, 3 Points
http://viajerodelmundo.com/, 1 Point
Congratulations to all.
Saturday, April 2, 2011
Links to 100 Great Travel Sites
Online resources for travel writers summarized on one long blog post
My friend Josh Berman's The Tranquilo Traveler made the Graduate Degree Blog's post called "The Art of Travel Writing: Tips, Tools and to Get Paid and Get Published." Although Travel Babel sadly didn't made the unidentified blogger's list, it's really worth checking out for anyone who writes about travel or wants to. The categories are Advice for Travel Writers, Writing Tips, Tips for Breaking into the Business, Travel Writing Blogs, Travel Blogs (where Josh's was listed and I wish this one had been t00), Meet Travel Writers, Travel Websites, Groups and Organizations, Travel Made Easy and the all-important Find Writing Gigs.
My friend Josh Berman's The Tranquilo Traveler made the Graduate Degree Blog's post called "The Art of Travel Writing: Tips, Tools and to Get Paid and Get Published." Although Travel Babel sadly didn't made the unidentified blogger's list, it's really worth checking out for anyone who writes about travel or wants to. The categories are Advice for Travel Writers, Writing Tips, Tips for Breaking into the Business, Travel Writing Blogs, Travel Blogs (where Josh's was listed and I wish this one had been t00), Meet Travel Writers, Travel Websites, Groups and Organizations, Travel Made Easy and the all-important Find Writing Gigs.
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Travel Answer Man Publishes Viscape List of Top Tavel Blogs

I was surprised and pleased to find out that Travel Answer Man has included this blog on a list of Top Travel Blogs of 2008 that he found on Viscape. Thanks, TAM, for for the vote of confidence in Viscape and iin Travel Babel.
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Book Blog for Armchair Travelers and Otherwise
A Traveler's Library finds and reviews travel books, films and more
A lifetime ago, I read Helen MacInnes's The Salzburg Connection while in Salzburg and the lake region called the Salzkammergut. I re-read Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises in Spain and A Farewell to Arms after returning from Slovenia. Peter Matthiesen's The Tree Where Man Was Born came to Tanzania with me, and Peter Hessler's River Town and Simon Winchester's The River at the Center of the World provided insights to life on the Yangtze in particular and China in general. And I've happily slogged through many a James Michener tome when traveling in places he wrote about. After returning from Easter Island, I rented "Rapa Nui." Loved the island. Hated the movie. And so my reading and my reading, and occasionally film watching, run in parallel chairs, often intertwining like a braided river, with the experience and the book merging and diverging.
In truth, because I work with words all day, I don't read nearly as much as I once did -- except when I am traveling. So when my friend Rosemary recommended her friend Vera's blog, A Traveler's Library, I found a kindred spirit. I enjoyed roaming through it, and I hope you will too. And while you're at it, check out Feast, Rosemary's eZine, which celebrates travel and also food, films, literature and art.
A lifetime ago, I read Helen MacInnes's The Salzburg Connection while in Salzburg and the lake region called the Salzkammergut. I re-read Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises in Spain and A Farewell to Arms after returning from Slovenia. Peter Matthiesen's The Tree Where Man Was Born came to Tanzania with me, and Peter Hessler's River Town and Simon Winchester's The River at the Center of the World provided insights to life on the Yangtze in particular and China in general. And I've happily slogged through many a James Michener tome when traveling in places he wrote about. After returning from Easter Island, I rented "Rapa Nui." Loved the island. Hated the movie. And so my reading and my reading, and occasionally film watching, run in parallel chairs, often intertwining like a braided river, with the experience and the book merging and diverging.
In truth, because I work with words all day, I don't read nearly as much as I once did -- except when I am traveling. So when my friend Rosemary recommended her friend Vera's blog, A Traveler's Library, I found a kindred spirit. I enjoyed roaming through it, and I hope you will too. And while you're at it, check out Feast, Rosemary's eZine, which celebrates travel and also food, films, literature and art.
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
May 1: BYOB Day For Airline Passengers
Consumerist website declares Bring Your Own Blanket Day
American Airlines' new $8 blanket-and-pillow fee in domestic economy cabins inspired this new "holiday." Obviously, it's a great attention-getter for this website and will surely drive traffic to it, but every day needs to be BYOB day -- like every day is now BYOF (Bring Your Own Food) Day. If this catches on, I'm half-anticipating American, maybe Spirit or an other carrier to start charging for blankets that passengers bring on board. I'll just keep wearing a jacket when I board rather than pack it. I've been doing this for a long time, because even when airlines had blankets and pillows available, there often weren't enough for all passengers -- especially in the rear of steerage.
"Forty winks in the air shouldn't cost you eight bucks," said Leonard Lee, a former airline pilot who founded of CrazyAirlineFees.com. According to the site, USAirways, JetBlue and Virgin America have been selling what they are calling "sleep kits" with blanket and pillow (hopefully freshly laundered since they are charging) and Lee added, some of them also "conveniently include an eyeshade and ear plugs so you don't have to listen to other passengers complaining about all the in-flight fees."
The site also offers the following info about blanket fees: "Delta Airlines is the only major U.S. airline that still provides free pillows and blankets for its Economy class passengers. Several airlines, including Continental, United and Southwest, no longer carry pillows and blankets onboard for their Economy class passengers. Southwest removed its pillows and blankets last year because of concerns during the H1N1 flu scare." I guess it was OK for front-cabin passengers to catch the flu!
CrazyAirlineFees.com's home page features a chart comparing the myriad add-ons that airlines are now charging in an effort to "unbundle" air fares and, in the end, wring the maximum revenues from travelers. Now, the site has declared May 1 as Bring Your Own Blanket Day to encourage passengers to bring their own blankets on board. Pretty soon, Linus, who goes nowhere without his blanket, will become the patron saint of fliers.
American Airlines' new $8 blanket-and-pillow fee in domestic economy cabins inspired this new "holiday." Obviously, it's a great attention-getter for this website and will surely drive traffic to it, but every day needs to be BYOB day -- like every day is now BYOF (Bring Your Own Food) Day. If this catches on, I'm half-anticipating American, maybe Spirit or an other carrier to start charging for blankets that passengers bring on board. I'll just keep wearing a jacket when I board rather than pack it. I've been doing this for a long time, because even when airlines had blankets and pillows available, there often weren't enough for all passengers -- especially in the rear of steerage.
"Forty winks in the air shouldn't cost you eight bucks," said Leonard Lee, a former airline pilot who founded of CrazyAirlineFees.com. According to the site, USAirways, JetBlue and Virgin America have been selling what they are calling "sleep kits" with blanket and pillow (hopefully freshly laundered since they are charging) and Lee added, some of them also "conveniently include an eyeshade and ear plugs so you don't have to listen to other passengers complaining about all the in-flight fees."
The site also offers the following info about blanket fees: "Delta Airlines is the only major U.S. airline that still provides free pillows and blankets for its Economy class passengers. Several airlines, including Continental, United and Southwest, no longer carry pillows and blankets onboard for their Economy class passengers. Southwest removed its pillows and blankets last year because of concerns during the H1N1 flu scare." I guess it was OK for front-cabin passengers to catch the flu!
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Sites and Blogs with Names Similar to Travel Babel
With tens of thousands of blogs and websites, I found just a few similar domain names
I do occasionally check the number of visitors to this blog, but today I'm feeling puckish this morning and suddenly wondered how many other blogs and sites I could find quickly with names similar to my Travel Babel blog. I immediately found another Travel Babel in Poland. Its URL is almost identical to mine, but without the hyphen between "Travel" and "Babel."
Flipping the words around, I also found a Swiss tour operator called Babel Travel that organizes adventure trips to North Africa, the Middle East and Southeast Asia. There's a Travel Babble in Canada, a site that doesn't seem to travel far beyond Toronto and offers information for visitors traveling to that wonderful city. And I came upon a dead-end URL for a website called My Travel Babble that was once a domain name of Bob and Claudia Brill, " two people with extensive travel experience," says the Google search page. And I found a lame YouTube video titled "Travel Babble" of two blokes sitting around in the Jardin du Luxembourg in Paris and describing their time in Paris with only some words audible .
I do occasionally check the number of visitors to this blog, but today I'm feeling puckish this morning and suddenly wondered how many other blogs and sites I could find quickly with names similar to my Travel Babel blog. I immediately found another Travel Babel in Poland. Its URL is almost identical to mine, but without the hyphen between "Travel" and "Babel."
Flipping the words around, I also found a Swiss tour operator called Babel Travel that organizes adventure trips to North Africa, the Middle East and Southeast Asia. There's a Travel Babble in Canada, a site that doesn't seem to travel far beyond Toronto and offers information for visitors traveling to that wonderful city. And I came upon a dead-end URL for a website called My Travel Babble that was once a domain name of Bob and Claudia Brill, " two people with extensive travel experience," says the Google search page. And I found a lame YouTube video titled "Travel Babble" of two blokes sitting around in the Jardin du Luxembourg in Paris and describing their time in Paris with only some words audible .
Sunday, February 20, 2011
"Reputation Management" Tarnishes Credibility of Customer Reviews
Some hotels pressure guests to writer favorable online reviews -- sometimes even before they've stayed
Neither this site nor my http://www.culinary-colorado.com/ have the rep or the reach of Tripartite.com or Chris Elliott's various online, print and broadcast presence, but fans and foes of specific businesses have tried to sway customers to or from a place. This has happened with my culinary blog more often than this travel blog.
Back in 2008, I posted news of Duy Pham, a classically trained chef who had been with several noteworthy Denver restaurants, who opened Restaurant Fifteen Twentyone in Pueblo, a city known more for its Mexican food and blue-cheese curds than for French bistros. Someone who clearly had it out for him left some nasty, unsubstantiated accusations as comments to my posts, all under the cloak or anonymity. I deleted them, not because I believe any restaurant or other business is immune to criticism, but undocumented, anonymous vituperative comments have no place here. I haven't been in Pueblo in a while, but as far as I can tell, it's still around -- no mean feat in a struggling community and a shaky national economy.
On the flip side, I didn't have much good to write about the food at Boulder's Scotch Corner, a pub with a great location, good booze, abysmal food and questionable service. I try to give any business the benefit of the doubt when I write, because I am mindful of the challenges they all face, but in my post, I took the kitchen to task about such simple-to-rectify issues as toast that was burned on one side and untoasted on the other, square pastry dough placed on a round pot-pie so that it came out with four burned triangles, two salt shakers and no pepper on our table, and no shakers of either sort on others, I suspected that the owners encouraged their loyal customers to leave comments debating my evaluation. If they had trained their kitchen and waitstaff a little better, the pub might still be in business -- although more likely, the high cost of occupying a large space on a visible downtown corner was partly an issue in its demise.
But back to the original topic, we travel writers are always suspected of being unobjective because travel providers court us with generous hospitality. I would like to think that we can be more objective because we have been to more hotels, flown on more airlines, have dined out more, etc. than the overage traveler who could be more susceptible to the offer of an upgrade or some other perk in exchange for a favorable post somewhere.
Elliott cited MeasuredUp.com, a social network site created in 2006 to enable customers to review and rate how how businesses have treated them. It serves as a conduit for complimentary or aggrieved customers to the appropriate individuals or departments in a business and for those businesses to respond. Travel is one of MeasuredUp.com's categories. If you have a comment or complaint, it's another avenue to get the word out, pro or con. And of course, TripAdvisor. Yelp and other social networking sites do welcome legitimate, uninfluenced comments.
"It's not enough to ask guests for a write-up on a popular site such as TripAdvisor or Yelp after they've checked out. Lately, some innkeepers have been pressuring their customers to say positive things online — in extreme cases, even before they've checked in.That was the lead consumer advocate Christopher Elliott used in his syndicated "Travel Troubleshooter" column that appeared in today's Denver Post travel section. "called "Some hotels cross the line for a good review" was the title of the column about some properties' practice of "reputation management" of consumer reviews on the Internet. Big Internet sites have policies in place to assure that reviews are legitimate and untainted. TripAdvisor.com's is, "Property owners are welcome to encourage their guests to submit user reviews upon their return home, but they are not allowed to offer incentives, discounts, upgrades, or special treatment on current or future stays in exchange for reviews."
"Take what happened to Pam Stucky when she recently made a reservation at a small hotel in Scotland. Before she arrived, the owner sent her an e-mail soliciting a recommendation on TripAdvisor, even though she'd never been to the hotel."
Neither this site nor my http://www.culinary-colorado.com/ have the rep or the reach of Tripartite.com or Chris Elliott's various online, print and broadcast presence, but fans and foes of specific businesses have tried to sway customers to or from a place. This has happened with my culinary blog more often than this travel blog.
Back in 2008, I posted news of Duy Pham, a classically trained chef who had been with several noteworthy Denver restaurants, who opened Restaurant Fifteen Twentyone in Pueblo, a city known more for its Mexican food and blue-cheese curds than for French bistros. Someone who clearly had it out for him left some nasty, unsubstantiated accusations as comments to my posts, all under the cloak or anonymity. I deleted them, not because I believe any restaurant or other business is immune to criticism, but undocumented, anonymous vituperative comments have no place here. I haven't been in Pueblo in a while, but as far as I can tell, it's still around -- no mean feat in a struggling community and a shaky national economy.
On the flip side, I didn't have much good to write about the food at Boulder's Scotch Corner, a pub with a great location, good booze, abysmal food and questionable service. I try to give any business the benefit of the doubt when I write, because I am mindful of the challenges they all face, but in my post, I took the kitchen to task about such simple-to-rectify issues as toast that was burned on one side and untoasted on the other, square pastry dough placed on a round pot-pie so that it came out with four burned triangles, two salt shakers and no pepper on our table, and no shakers of either sort on others, I suspected that the owners encouraged their loyal customers to leave comments debating my evaluation. If they had trained their kitchen and waitstaff a little better, the pub might still be in business -- although more likely, the high cost of occupying a large space on a visible downtown corner was partly an issue in its demise.
But back to the original topic, we travel writers are always suspected of being unobjective because travel providers court us with generous hospitality. I would like to think that we can be more objective because we have been to more hotels, flown on more airlines, have dined out more, etc. than the overage traveler who could be more susceptible to the offer of an upgrade or some other perk in exchange for a favorable post somewhere.
Elliott cited MeasuredUp.com, a social network site created in 2006 to enable customers to review and rate how how businesses have treated them. It serves as a conduit for complimentary or aggrieved customers to the appropriate individuals or departments in a business and for those businesses to respond. Travel is one of MeasuredUp.com's categories. If you have a comment or complaint, it's another avenue to get the word out, pro or con. And of course, TripAdvisor. Yelp and other social networking sites do welcome legitimate, uninfluenced comments.
Viscape's List of Top Travel Blogs
Travel Babel named as one of Viscape's Top 15 for 2008
Viscape (short for "Visualize Your Escape") has included this blog on its list of the top 15 travel blogs of the year. I'm thrilled to be included on the site describes itself as "a social marketplace for travelers, owners, and real estate professionals to come together to network, exchange ideas, conduct business, meet and organize trips around vacation properties and second homes." Of their selection, they wrote "Viscape really wanted to gear this to individuals sharing their passions and travel experiences, but some of the 'big dogs' in travel blogging can’t be ignored. (Ah..hem… National Geographic being the biggest)! Happy reading and happy travels!"
Here's the list of their 15 selected travel blogs and Viscape's comments on why they selected these:
1. National Geographic Intelligent Travel - "... they use those already extensive resources to create an entertaining and very informative blog about the known and unknown places of the world."
2. Traveling Mammas - "...great tips on great (and not so great) places to visit with children and how to have the best family vacations [by] four ladies [who] are a true traveling inspiration!"
3. Brooke vs. the World - "Brooke is a 25-year-old traveler from central Illinois on an extended journey to see the world....she made a promise to spend a large part of her life experiencing cultures other than her own."
4. Everything-everywhere - "[Blogger] Gary Arndt has... one goal in mind: see everything there is to behold....See what he sees through both words and photographs."
5. Travel Babel - "Claire Walter is a travel writer and began blogging in 2006. Now, she shares with her readers the latest news and trends of the travel industry."
6. Olga the Traveling Bra - "Want a good laugh, but still be informed?...Specializing in travel adventures that won’t disappoint!"
7. Killing Batteries - "Leif Petterson’s blogs are more than just fun and educational to read; they’re hilarious as well...."
8. The Perrin Post - "Travel tips from Conde Naste Traveler Magazine’s Wendy Perrin.... consumer news editor. She writes a practical advice column...[and] features on a wide variety of travel topics."
9. The Lost Girls - "Three twenty-something New Yorkers who ditched their media jobs to embark on a yearlong, round-the-world journey in search of adventure and inspiration."
10. LA times Daily Travel Deals Blog - "Hand-picked advice about travel deals and steals from some of the most comprehensive globe trotters on this side of the equator!"
11. Gas.tron.o.my - "If trying new food dishes is one of the sole reasons for visiting new places, then you should be reading Gas.tron.o.my...."
12. Travel Betty - "All about fearless travel for women! ...Travel From pampering to roughing it, [Travel Betty is] an experience collector [who] desires to be the old woman with the good stories. To her, travel is freedom."
13. Candy from Strangers - "Join the ever-lasting search for the best piece of chocolate or perhaps lollipop. Malena, a candy lover (like us) travels all around the world searching for the next best piece of candy...."
14. Delicious Baby - "...Take advice from Debbie, someone who can help make travel with your kids exciting (she has two delicious children of her own) and more enjoyable for everyone."
15. Viscape - "Are you visualizing your escape this minute? Well, Viscape can help you find the perfect place to stay or go on your next vacation. Read all about the latest trends in the real estate and the travel markets."
Viscape (short for "Visualize Your Escape") has included this blog on its list of the top 15 travel blogs of the year. I'm thrilled to be included on the site describes itself as "a social marketplace for travelers, owners, and real estate professionals to come together to network, exchange ideas, conduct business, meet and organize trips around vacation properties and second homes." Of their selection, they wrote "Viscape really wanted to gear this to individuals sharing their passions and travel experiences, but some of the 'big dogs' in travel blogging can’t be ignored. (Ah..hem… National Geographic being the biggest)! Happy reading and happy travels!"
Here's the list of their 15 selected travel blogs and Viscape's comments on why they selected these:
1. National Geographic Intelligent Travel - "... they use those already extensive resources to create an entertaining and very informative blog about the known and unknown places of the world."
2. Traveling Mammas - "...great tips on great (and not so great) places to visit with children and how to have the best family vacations [by] four ladies [who] are a true traveling inspiration!"
3. Brooke vs. the World - "Brooke is a 25-year-old traveler from central Illinois on an extended journey to see the world....she made a promise to spend a large part of her life experiencing cultures other than her own."
4. Everything-everywhere - "[Blogger] Gary Arndt has... one goal in mind: see everything there is to behold....See what he sees through both words and photographs."
5. Travel Babel - "Claire Walter is a travel writer and began blogging in 2006. Now, she shares with her readers the latest news and trends of the travel industry."
6. Olga the Traveling Bra - "Want a good laugh, but still be informed?...Specializing in travel adventures that won’t disappoint!"
7. Killing Batteries - "Leif Petterson’s blogs are more than just fun and educational to read; they’re hilarious as well...."
8. The Perrin Post - "Travel tips from Conde Naste Traveler Magazine’s Wendy Perrin.... consumer news editor. She writes a practical advice column...[and] features on a wide variety of travel topics."
9. The Lost Girls - "Three twenty-something New Yorkers who ditched their media jobs to embark on a yearlong, round-the-world journey in search of adventure and inspiration."
10. LA times Daily Travel Deals Blog - "Hand-picked advice about travel deals and steals from some of the most comprehensive globe trotters on this side of the equator!"
11. Gas.tron.o.my - "If trying new food dishes is one of the sole reasons for visiting new places, then you should be reading Gas.tron.o.my...."
12. Travel Betty - "All about fearless travel for women! ...Travel From pampering to roughing it, [Travel Betty is] an experience collector [who] desires to be the old woman with the good stories. To her, travel is freedom."
13. Candy from Strangers - "Join the ever-lasting search for the best piece of chocolate or perhaps lollipop. Malena, a candy lover (like us) travels all around the world searching for the next best piece of candy...."
14. Delicious Baby - "...Take advice from Debbie, someone who can help make travel with your kids exciting (she has two delicious children of her own) and more enjoyable for everyone."
15. Viscape - "Are you visualizing your escape this minute? Well, Viscape can help you find the perfect place to stay or go on your next vacation. Read all about the latest trends in the real estate and the travel markets."
Monday, February 14, 2011
Travel Babel on Elliott's Top 50 List
Recognition by a leading travel blogger: How sweet it is!
Last year, I was honored that award-winning travel journalist and travel blogger Christopher Elliott included Travel Babel on his list of the 20 Most Inspiring Travel Blogs of 2007. This year, he combined his list of his favorite individually written travel blogs (like this one) and "most influential" travel blogs, which were mostly staff-written or corporate blogs within the travel industry.
For 2008, Elliott has compiled a list of "50 Travel Blogs I Can't Live Without." His list is an eclectic mix of or corporate and independent blogs, and he describes his methodology as being "simple. I looked at every travel blog I follow from my RSS reader and identified the ones I read the most." I'm pleased as punch that Travel Babel is again on his list. I'm familiar with some of the other 49. In fact, I have links to several of them on the newly reorganized list to the left. Now, I have to click on those I don't know that I'll also start following.
Thanks, Chris -- again -- for the recognition.
Last year, I was honored that award-winning travel journalist and travel blogger Christopher Elliott included Travel Babel on his list of the 20 Most Inspiring Travel Blogs of 2007. This year, he combined his list of his favorite individually written travel blogs (like this one) and "most influential" travel blogs, which were mostly staff-written or corporate blogs within the travel industry.
For 2008, Elliott has compiled a list of "50 Travel Blogs I Can't Live Without." His list is an eclectic mix of or corporate and independent blogs, and he describes his methodology as being "simple. I looked at every travel blog I follow from my RSS reader and identified the ones I read the most." I'm pleased as punch that Travel Babel is again on his list. I'm familiar with some of the other 49. In fact, I have links to several of them on the newly reorganized list to the left. Now, I have to click on those I don't know that I'll also start following.
Thanks, Chris -- again -- for the recognition.
Sunday, February 6, 2011
British Airways Cabin Crew Stages Three-Day Strike
If you're flying British Airways in the next couple of days, be prepared for chaos, and even if you're flying another carrier on BA-served routes or airport, it might not be much better.So far, the airline has reportedly canceled more than 1,000 flights out of the nearly 2,000 scheduled during the strike period that began earlier today. There is also a possibility of an additional four-day strike beginning on March 27. This might mean a protracted period of flight cancellations, delays and crowded terminals and aircraft that could extend to the busy pre-Easter travel time.
The union workers are striking against cost-cutting changes to working conditions that the union says result in a "second-tier workforce on poorer pay and conditions." BA plans to keep "at least 60 percent of passengers flying," with planes crewed by people who are not striking (whoever they might be) and also leasing, 22 crewed planes from as many as eight other European airlines.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown called the strike "a disaster," and not to get too much into British politics here, members of the Conservative party believe that the Labour prime minister himself is a disaster. Meanwhile, the phrase "second-tier workforce" might be code for contract workers rather than BA employees. This has already happened in the US. I have checked in for international flights at New York's JFK at counters staffed by airline service contractors, and James Van Dellen, who blogs as Future Gringo, recently posted a report called "Airserv: Does My Shirt Say United?" on just how negatively contractors can impact on the travel experience. Bottom line, IMHO, is that every time airlines seek to cut costs, the passenger pays in one way or another, whether it's via add-on fees or the quality of traveling.
The union workers are striking against cost-cutting changes to working conditions that the union says result in a "second-tier workforce on poorer pay and conditions." BA plans to keep "at least 60 percent of passengers flying," with planes crewed by people who are not striking (whoever they might be) and also leasing, 22 crewed planes from as many as eight other European airlines.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown called the strike "a disaster," and not to get too much into British politics here, members of the Conservative party believe that the Labour prime minister himself is a disaster. Meanwhile, the phrase "second-tier workforce" might be code for contract workers rather than BA employees. This has already happened in the US. I have checked in for international flights at New York's JFK at counters staffed by airline service contractors, and James Van Dellen, who blogs as Future Gringo, recently posted a report called "Airserv: Does My Shirt Say United?" on just how negatively contractors can impact on the travel experience. Bottom line, IMHO, is that every time airlines seek to cut costs, the passenger pays in one way or another, whether it's via add-on fees or the quality of traveling.
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Oddball Tours Highlight 2010 "Obscura Day"
Quirky "holiday" spotlights off-the-radar local attractions
Obscura Day is a day for special tours and visits to places around the corner, around the country or around the world that you might never even have heard of, and it falls on Saturday, March 20, this year. It was organized by the folks behind Atlas Obscura, which describes itself as "a compendium of of the world's wonders, curiosities and esoterica." It's a bit like Ripley's Believe It or Not meets the Guinness World Records meets Wikipedia. Oddities around the world are posted, and site visitors are encouraged to enhance, correct or illustrate the posting with additional images.
But back to Obscura Day. Twenty-five places in the US and 29 in other countries are offering special tours to unusual places. The tours and visits tend to be cheap or free, and space is often limited, but they are places most people are likely to miss. In fact, some are sold out and have waiting lists. There are a lot of skeletons and such, including The Bone Room in Berkeley, National Museum of Health and Medicine's collection of medical specimens dating back to the Civil War in Washington, D.C.; and the Cryptozoology Museum in Portland, Maine. There are the mysterious stone ruins of Gungywamp Hill near Groton in my native Connecticut, and there are eerie streets of never-built housing developments, such as Everglades Unit 11 near West Palm Beach, now teeming with wildlife species, and California City, 100 miles northeast of Los Angeles with streets in the desert that resemble the Nazca Lines from the air.
And there are just plain (OK, not plain) curiosities. They include the world's tallest treehouse in Crossville, Tennessee, the wild, whimsical Cathedral of Junk in Austin, Texas, the Newnes Glow Worm Tunnel in Australia; the Iceland Phallological Museum boasting "probably the only museum in the world to contain a collection of phallic specimens belonging to all the various types of mammal found in a single country." Probably?!?!.
Thanks to Harriet Baskas, travel journalist and Stuck at the Airport blogger, for alerting me to this, well, obscure holiday.
Obscura Day is a day for special tours and visits to places around the corner, around the country or around the world that you might never even have heard of, and it falls on Saturday, March 20, this year. It was organized by the folks behind Atlas Obscura, which describes itself as "a compendium of of the world's wonders, curiosities and esoterica." It's a bit like Ripley's Believe It or Not meets the Guinness World Records meets Wikipedia. Oddities around the world are posted, and site visitors are encouraged to enhance, correct or illustrate the posting with additional images.
But back to Obscura Day. Twenty-five places in the US and 29 in other countries are offering special tours to unusual places. The tours and visits tend to be cheap or free, and space is often limited, but they are places most people are likely to miss. In fact, some are sold out and have waiting lists. There are a lot of skeletons and such, including The Bone Room in Berkeley, National Museum of Health and Medicine's collection of medical specimens dating back to the Civil War in Washington, D.C.; and the Cryptozoology Museum in Portland, Maine. There are the mysterious stone ruins of Gungywamp Hill near Groton in my native Connecticut, and there are eerie streets of never-built housing developments, such as Everglades Unit 11 near West Palm Beach, now teeming with wildlife species, and California City, 100 miles northeast of Los Angeles with streets in the desert that resemble the Nazca Lines from the air.
And there are just plain (OK, not plain) curiosities. They include the world's tallest treehouse in Crossville, Tennessee, the wild, whimsical Cathedral of Junk in Austin, Texas, the Newnes Glow Worm Tunnel in Australia; the Iceland Phallological Museum boasting "probably the only museum in the world to contain a collection of phallic specimens belonging to all the various types of mammal found in a single country." Probably?!?!.
Thanks to Harriet Baskas, travel journalist and Stuck at the Airport blogger, for alerting me to this, well, obscure holiday.
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Travel Blogger Explores Bereavement Fares
Ability to travel affordably to a death or other family emergency depends on the airline
Mark Ashley, a writer and frequent traveler whose Upgrade: Travel Better blog follows the in's and out's of the fickle air travel industry, recently had to fly to Germany for his 99-year-old grandmother's last days. He explored airlines' bereavement fares and wrote a lengthy post called "Bereavement and Compassion Fares: Firsthand Experience" about his findings. Among them: international compassion fares are easier to obtain than domestic ones; most such fares (Continental excepted) must be booked over the phone; and airlines have different policies regarding required documentation. His column on this topic is worth bookmarking, should the need arise.
Mark Ashley, a writer and frequent traveler whose Upgrade: Travel Better blog follows the in's and out's of the fickle air travel industry, recently had to fly to Germany for his 99-year-old grandmother's last days. He explored airlines' bereavement fares and wrote a lengthy post called "Bereavement and Compassion Fares: Firsthand Experience" about his findings. Among them: international compassion fares are easier to obtain than domestic ones; most such fares (Continental excepted) must be booked over the phone; and airlines have different policies regarding required documentation. His column on this topic is worth bookmarking, should the need arise.
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Earthbound Friendships Can Start in the Travel Blogosphere
After Emailing back and forth, we met fellow travel bloggers in real life and real time
I can't recall whether I found Audre and Dimitri's A Traveling Love Affair blog, or whether they found mine, but I've been reading about the peripatetic life with a lot of admiration and a little bit of envy, and we have occasionally corresponded. They have been traveling the world since 1995, by plane, train, bus, motorcycle, bicycle and automobile. Their individual itineraries are epic, starting with a nine-month trip from Jakarta, Indonesia, where they had worked to Istanbul, Turkey, where they spent five months. Most recently they traveled from Santiago, Chile, to Denver for a planned half year in Colorado.
When I found out they they were her, we speeded up our correspondence with an intention to meet personally. Yesterday, the intention to get together became reality. We were expecting a FedEx shipment of four fresh lobsters from Maine, and when I learned in the last minute that there would be six, I invited Audre and Dimitri in the last minute. They were free and joined us. You can read about our dinner here, but the interesting part, for me, is how in the 21st century, people we meet in the cyber-community of travel bloggers can easily turn into face-to-face friendships. When we follow each others blogs, we know quite a bit about each other before we ever shake hands.
This was the third time this year that I met a fellow blogger. Last March, travel blogger and travel ombudsman Christoper Elliott and I happened to be in Durango at the same time. I managed to catch him and his wife at the tail end of their breakfast, and we spent a bit of quality time over a cup of coffee before we went our separate ways. You can read about our coincidental presence in Durango here.
And from the food blogging community, I met Massachusetts blogger Don Lesser and got together with him, his wife and his sister when they came to Colorado for a wedding. They wanted Mexican food, and I wrote about our dinner at Juanita's here.
It's wonderful to put faces to cyberspace relationships, which is yet another thing that I've learned to treasure about the travel blogosphere.
I can't recall whether I found Audre and Dimitri's A Traveling Love Affair blog, or whether they found mine, but I've been reading about the peripatetic life with a lot of admiration and a little bit of envy, and we have occasionally corresponded. They have been traveling the world since 1995, by plane, train, bus, motorcycle, bicycle and automobile. Their individual itineraries are epic, starting with a nine-month trip from Jakarta, Indonesia, where they had worked to Istanbul, Turkey, where they spent five months. Most recently they traveled from Santiago, Chile, to Denver for a planned half year in Colorado.
When I found out they they were her, we speeded up our correspondence with an intention to meet personally. Yesterday, the intention to get together became reality. We were expecting a FedEx shipment of four fresh lobsters from Maine, and when I learned in the last minute that there would be six, I invited Audre and Dimitri in the last minute. They were free and joined us. You can read about our dinner here, but the interesting part, for me, is how in the 21st century, people we meet in the cyber-community of travel bloggers can easily turn into face-to-face friendships. When we follow each others blogs, we know quite a bit about each other before we ever shake hands.
This was the third time this year that I met a fellow blogger. Last March, travel blogger and travel ombudsman Christoper Elliott and I happened to be in Durango at the same time. I managed to catch him and his wife at the tail end of their breakfast, and we spent a bit of quality time over a cup of coffee before we went our separate ways. You can read about our coincidental presence in Durango here.
And from the food blogging community, I met Massachusetts blogger Don Lesser and got together with him, his wife and his sister when they came to Colorado for a wedding. They wanted Mexican food, and I wrote about our dinner at Juanita's here.
It's wonderful to put faces to cyberspace relationships, which is yet another thing that I've learned to treasure about the travel blogosphere.
Thursday, December 23, 2010
13 Airlines Shut Down in 2009
Small and little-known airlines around the world grounded forever
Thirteen airlines that were flying a year ago are no longer in the air. From Air Comet (Spain) to Zambian Airways (Zambia, naturally), the Cranky Flyer found a baker's dozen carriers that folded in 2009 for a number of reasons. None of these have the global importance of, say, Pan Am, but each had a niche. Some were operationally unsound and were shut done by their respective national aviation authorities. Others succumbed to mismanagement and financial failures. Cranky wrote about the often-checkered history of each and what finally did it in. A tombstone graphic accompanied each writeup. Although I never heard of most of these doomed carriers, the stories made for interesting reading -- a must for anyone who vacuums up airline trivia.
Thirteen airlines that were flying a year ago are no longer in the air. From Air Comet (Spain) to Zambian Airways (Zambia, naturally), the Cranky Flyer found a baker's dozen carriers that folded in 2009 for a number of reasons. None of these have the global importance of, say, Pan Am, but each had a niche. Some were operationally unsound and were shut done by their respective national aviation authorities. Others succumbed to mismanagement and financial failures. Cranky wrote about the often-checkered history of each and what finally did it in. A tombstone graphic accompanied each writeup. Although I never heard of most of these doomed carriers, the stories made for interesting reading -- a must for anyone who vacuums up airline trivia.
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Portland (OR) Airport Praised
Question: Why can't more domestic airports be like PDX?
There's lots in the world of air travel for The Cranky Flier to to get cranky about. In fact, there's lots to put all passengers out of sorts, but blogger Brett just explored an airport that made him smile -- at least I think he must of have been smiling when he wrote "Five Great Things About Portland Airport." You'll have to go to his blog to get details and see images, but here are the five things he found praiseworthy:
Amen!
There's lots in the world of air travel for The Cranky Flier to to get cranky about. In fact, there's lots to put all passengers out of sorts, but blogger Brett just explored an airport that made him smile -- at least I think he must of have been smiling when he wrote "Five Great Things About Portland Airport." You'll have to go to his blog to get details and see images, but here are the five things he found praiseworthy:
- Green-tastic: Dual-flush toilets for saving water in "a place that gets far more rain in a year than should be legal ."
- Pull Up a Seat - "Big benches just past security where you can sit and recompose yourself. "
- Be Entertained - Live music, including a pianist, offered regularly. "I had to do a double take to make sure I wasn’t in a Nordstrom store," wrote Cranky.
- Get Online Free - Free airport-wide Internet access, plus chargers for cell phones and iPods. Free WiFi is "more and more popular around the country, but I still don’t see it nearly enough."
- Public Transit to the MAX -"There’s nothing I love more about an airport than good public transit access, and this has to be one of the best."
Amen!
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Travel Blog Posting Contest
Here's a chance to win a trip around the world
Does the world need more travel blogs? Probably not. There are already way to many unenlightening "what I did on my vacation"-type blogs out there. Does the world need more informative, insightful, well-written travel postings in cyberspace? Maybe "need" is too strong a word, but armchair and actual travelers alike can never read of the latter. I applaud any medium, traditional or not, that tries to get more quality writing out there.
A British site called My Life of Travel, a searchable online, anthology of travel journal postings, seems to want to elevate the content on the site that currently includes a lot of pedestrian prose. It is trolling for more inspiring words than this sampling I just pulled up from some posts that are on the home page:
Site Features -- Contest or Not
The My Life of Travel site has some intriguing features, including each contributor's ability to create an interactive map to accompany his/her journal entry. And if you are planning a trip somewhere, finding what others have posted there. The search function is easy, and even if some of the prose is snooze-encouraging, you might just find useful gems there. And if you are lusting to launch to your words about travel into cyberspace, paid or not, you might explore My Life of Travel as a way to do it.
Does the world need more travel blogs? Probably not. There are already way to many unenlightening "what I did on my vacation"-type blogs out there. Does the world need more informative, insightful, well-written travel postings in cyberspace? Maybe "need" is too strong a word, but armchair and actual travelers alike can never read of the latter. I applaud any medium, traditional or not, that tries to get more quality writing out there.
A British site called My Life of Travel, a searchable online, anthology of travel journal postings, seems to want to elevate the content on the site that currently includes a lot of pedestrian prose. It is trolling for more inspiring words than this sampling I just pulled up from some posts that are on the home page:
- "Annie and I left Grand Junction, CO on the 22nd of June and drove until 4:30 a.m. to get to Sioux Falls, South Dakota. We spent Sunday biking with the Lohans and enjoyed ourselves as we biked past waterfalls, parks, rivers, and vagrants... (the vagrants are wild here so it is suggested that you don't feed them) :0) We then drove north to I'falls..."
- "So we headed for Mancora, a small beach resort in the North of Peru which at the right time of year is a great destination for surfing and general sun lovers! ...."
- "Well, we've done it. Exactly four months and 18,741km after arriving in Cape Town to start my African adventure, we arrived safe and sound in the bustling metropolis of Cairo."
How to WinThere is a link you can click on to enter, and you must register in order to do so. My Life of Travel does not indicate who the judge(s) might be, but if my quick scan of the posted journals from the land of Shakespeare and Byron and Austen are any indication, the competition might not be too stiff. Good luck.
Create at least 1 journal entry about any location you have visited.
Your entry must contain at least 100 words.
Your entry must
contain at least 1 photograph that you have taken.
Entry Closing Date
September 26, 2008
Site Features -- Contest or Not
The My Life of Travel site has some intriguing features, including each contributor's ability to create an interactive map to accompany his/her journal entry. And if you are planning a trip somewhere, finding what others have posted there. The search function is easy, and even if some of the prose is snooze-encouraging, you might just find useful gems there. And if you are lusting to launch to your words about travel into cyberspace, paid or not, you might explore My Life of Travel as a way to do it.
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
United Backpedals on One Extra Fee
Airline rescinds plan to charge economy passengers for meals on international flights
Airlines have been tromping all over themselves with unpopular add-on fees, one of the more recent of which was United's plan to start selling meals to international passengers. The airline polled passengers who seemingly howled their disapproval of this new fee. Mark Ashley who writes the "Upgrade: Travel Better" blog is skeptical that United is responding to its customers.
Airlines have been tromping all over themselves with unpopular add-on fees, one of the more recent of which was United's plan to start selling meals to international passengers. The airline polled passengers who seemingly howled their disapproval of this new fee. Mark Ashley who writes the "Upgrade: Travel Better" blog is skeptical that United is responding to its customers.
"What I’m also hearing is that the airlines’ partners in the Star Alliance
are another major source of the pressure," he wrote. "Disgust at the dilution of
the Star Alliance brand? Fear of reprisals from their own customers on
United-operated codeshares, enraged at having to pay a fee to eat a hockey-puck
sandwich? Or just the last straw, after seeing more and more fees pile
up?... Bottom line: The international meal fee is dead. For now. But don’t
expect this to be the last time you hear this concept floated, at United or
anywhere else. This is guaranteed to be one of those zombie ideas you think
you’ve killed, but it just keeps rising again, under the guise of “'testing new
ideas.'”
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