Showing posts with label General Travel Fun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General Travel Fun. Show all posts

Monday, January 28, 2008

2007: The Year in Travel

But - before January ends - 2007: The Year in Review. It wasn't as active a travel year as 2006, but there were some gems.

January saw the New Year dawn on Nantucket Island. We rang in 2007 at Cinco, a delightful tapas joint. You'd think tapas on Nantucket would be sort of odd, but it's not. It's good.

Late January was the ill-fated annual Vermont ski weekend. Ill-fated because a benign sledding trip to the local golf course led me straight to the emergency room and some nice hardware I'm still toting around in my ankle. Not that I was ever a skier, but that pretty much sealed the deal.

It is no great surprise, then, that February and March were light on travel. Crutches can do that to a girl.

Luckily, all was redeemed with the April trip to Croatia with a brief run through Slovenia. Delightful.

May and June were chock full of time in Pennsylvania for work. Let's just say I don't have a lot to say about Wilkes-Barre. Hampton Inn isn't too bad. Enough said.

There was an upswing in June with a wedding in Berkeley followed by a few days in Napa Valley. Much eating and drinking. Lots of sun. Can't go wrong.

August saw a baby shower in Boston early on. Then, at the end of the month, a lovely week in Nantucket, doing the lazing about thing. Complete with a visit to what I still maintain is the best restaurant on the island - Oran Mor. Foie gras with figs on Portugese toast - done and done.



In October it was off for a month in Peru. Many details to follow. Learned a little Espanol, hiked some mountains, ate some guinea pig, saved a sloth.

One more trip in December to Nantucket and then we wrapped the year with visitors in our new hometown, Philadelphia.

So, the updated map of the world:

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Web Travel Fun

One of my guilty pleasures is surfing travel sites on the web. This habit actually comes in rather handy when I get around to planning trips because I have this little mental rolodex of where I’ll find all the info I need. Some favorites:

For general travel-pondering, I’m deeply addicted to the Fodors message boards. Admittedly, these boards do not skew towards the adventure/backpacker set, but they have great regular personalities and really detailed information in trip reports. No joke, posts have revealed serious gems in Italy.

Along the same lines, the Slow Travel website has great vacation rental reviews for most of Europe.

The king of all review sites, Trip Advisor, is completely addictive. You can read about just about every hotel in the universe here.

The Get Human site is just generally cool – it gives you the secret code for getting an actual human being at all kinds of places.

For road trips, especially in Europe, the Michelin website can’t be beat. This is unsurprising, given that their maps are among the most detailed of Europe. (For Italy, the Italy Touring Club maps are also rather good.) That said, I’m rather disappointed that they don’t have super detailed maps of Croatia.

For airfares, I always start with Kayak. Even though clicking through to airline’s own sites and searching can sometimes save you $10-20, and sites like Go Today sometimes have good consolidated deals, this is the best way to get the lay of the land. Plus I love the little sliding controls that let you adjust your criteria after you search.

The Inside Flyer site is the guide to mastering frequent flyer land. It lists “secret” deals and teaches you how to game the system. Seriously helpful if you’re planning a trip in advance and want to fly free.

The Fare Compare website is also all about gaming the airline system. In particular, you can sign up for alerts on particular routes and they email you when there’s a significant price change. Plus, for the serious travel nerd, the site gives tips for getting Q-up and Y-up fares (basically first class seats for coach fares).

Blurb, I think, is my coolest new discovery. It lets you create real, honest to goodness books from your photos or blog. And, you can stream photos or blog entries right from websites to your computer. Then you just play with the formatting. And the books are really nice when they come – great printing and photo definition and even spiffy book jackets. I made my sister one for Christmas and it was genius, if I do say so myself.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Oops


This is what a cancelled trip to Croatia looks like. Handiwork the result of a banal trip down a sledding hill in Vermont this week. Travel planning now refocused on something spectacular post-crutches. Bummer.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Trip Planning: Volume 1


I have spent the better part of my free time over the last several days trying to find a way to fly on frequent flyer miles from Washington to somewhere in or around Northern Croatia over Easter. In light of this somewhat random and undoubtedly challenging task, I shall write about my accumulated knowledge of finding cheap ways to get somewhere far away. And once I actually get there and back, I expect I shall write about the unexpected pleasures of Croatia.

So, step 1: accumulate frequent flyer miles. These buggers can be really frustrating, but a little discipline can reap great rewards. Step one is consolidation. I try my hardest to make sure I’m accumulating miles on the same airline. So this means using a miles credit card for purchases, work and personal. It also means getting miles on the chosen airline whenever I rent a car or stay in a hotel (most places have some sort of arrangement with airlines). Also, sometimes you can use miles from one program (say Amtrak) to “buy” miles with another (say Continental). This is also rather handy. Some airlines also let you transfer miles from one account to another at a fairly reduced price, which is quite useful when you’re trying to get two tickets. So, all of this hopefully yields enough miles to start looking for tickets.

Step 2: finding the frequent flyer seats. If you know 11 months in advance that you’re taking a trip, you’re all set in this department. Otherwise, it takes some creativity. Most airlines now allow you to search online for frequent flyer seats, but it’s all rather deceptive. That’s because most websites will only show you the seats on that airline, and most miles programs also let you buy seats on partner airlines.

So, for example, at continental.com, you can search for Continental frequent flyer seats. But if you have the endurance to sit on the phone, they can also access Delta, Northwest, and other airlines’ seats. This is rather handy when, for example, you want to fly from Washington using Continental miles, but most Continental flights from Washington connect through Newark, which is deeply irritating. Luckily, Air France flies to Europe direct from Dulles, and you can use your Continental miles on Air France, by way of Delta. An added bonus is that I’ve found the telephone folks at frequent flyer programs to be pretty handy. They can do better searches than the website – such as, I want to leave April 6th, but I only want to use 50,000 miles, so if there aren’t seats on April 6th, what day are there seats? Or, I want to go to Pula, but I’ll take a 50,000 mile seat anywhere within a couple hour drive, are there any other airports with free seats? So, moral of the story: suck it up and sit on the phone for a while.

Step 3: making the frequent flyer flight work. One of the problems I have faced a time or two before is that I can get a frequent flyer seat to the general vicinity of where I want to go, but not exactly where I want to go. The great news is that Europe, and increasingly Asia, is overrun with discount airlines that are the perfect solution. For Europe, as a general matter, if you fly to London, you’re pretty much good to go anywhere in Europe or Northern Africa. Surprisingly, this phenomenon has spread across the continent, so you can now get Swiss, Czech, Italian, Belgian low cost airlines and a host of others. For the most genius list of low cost airlines, this website can’t be beat. We’ve flown Geneva-Rome, Venice-Geneva, London-Gibraltar, and are probably headed for a London-Ljubljana flight. So convenient.

That said, sometimes it’s more fun not to fly over all those fun places. There’s the obvious romance of the train (I rather enjoyed a Nice-Rome sleeper some years ago, complete with espresso served by the conductor in the morning and people in the neighboring cabin who we imagined as a husband and wife spy team). But I’ve grown rather fond of renting a car and heading out on the open road. I’ve never driven in Asia, but I think I’d give it a whirl the next time back, if the itinerary was right. Europe, certainly, is doable – roads are good, support services are good, roads are much better marked than at home.

The appeal of driving to me is that you actually get a little more local flavor this way, you don’t have to schlep your bags much, and you can stop off in fun little places along the way where the train never goes. Plus you get harrowing tales of driving through the madness of European cities (I believe I did a good 8-10 laps of the center of Nice at one point, and more or less screamed my way through downtown Barcelona) and of squeezing your car through tiny medieval streets (let’s just say you actually can drive through Montepulciano – who knew?) Admittedly, this appeals more to those of us who were forced to learn to drive stick shift in our youth, but there are enough Americans around that for a little more money, they’ll rent you an automatic. Plus, if you drive in Italy, you get to stop at the Autogrilles (rest stops, Italian style).

As far as car rentals go, I’ve had unparalleled success with Europcar. They let you pick up in one country and drop in another, they run good discounts from time to time, they don’t force you to buy insurance, they arrange for after-hours drop offs, and to date their customer service counters have been excellent. (By my count, this includes Paris city office, Nice city office, Rome Ciampino airport, Rome Termini Station office, and two rounds with the Piazzale Roma office in Venice, and a Fes-Marrakech reservation we never actually used). I’m a fan. Also a huge fan of the Michelin site for maps (and their print road maps are great, too).

So, it looks like April will have us flying on free seats to London, then Easyjet to Ljubljana, then a drive to Istria, in Northern Croatia, from there. Sounds like the perfect trip.

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

2006: The Year in Travel

My posts seem to have ground to a bit of a halt, due mainly to the fact that I've had a few easy weeks and thus have spent limited time in front of my computer at odd hours. Luckily, though, there is an easy way for me to add a little something without distracting more than momentarily from my new pile of work. So, here it is, 2006, the year in travel.

2006 began in Los Angeles, hosted by some local denizen friends (who have begun 2007 as new parents - fantastic!) I am not a huge lover of LA, but the trip was for the company, so that was all good. Local activities engaged in: drinks at the Chateau Marmont and Standard, "california" sushi, and a stay at the surprisingly affordable, not as crappy as it could have been Elan Hotel.

January is home to the annual ski weekend for Mike's friends, housed by some lovely residents of Bennington, VT. For the second year in a row, we did not actually ski during the ski weekend, which was a huge personal victory for me, the crappiest skier of the bunch. There is also a growing crop of babies at the ski weekend, who I hope will keep skiing at bay for a little while longer, although I admit to fear that one of them may soon be a better skier than me. Resolution for 2007: ski lessons.

January also saw a week in Vegas at the Bellagio for work. All of the 30ish male coworkers were jealous, but I rather dislike the place. Bellagio is a nice hotel, on someone else's dime, and had the added bonus of having good (if insanely overpriced, again the someone else's dime) coffee at the "Espresso Bar" and a pair of Marc Jacobs shoes on sale in one of the stores. Restaurants (Olives, Mon Ami Gabi at the Paris, FIX in the Bellagio) were universally underwhelming.

February was a trip to NYC to hang out and see friends, accented by a lovely dinner at Jack's Oyster Bar, followed shortly thereafter by a long night of food poisoning. Would have highly recommended the place otherwise. Oh well.

February also saw a weekend at Disneyworld for a certain bachelorette. Let's just say my future children may see Disneyworld, but it will be with their grandparents. On a practical note, the Disney Yacht Club, shielding your eyes from the requisite theme, had decent rooms.

March was Houston for a wedding. Not much to report, except that Mike did serious damage at the Galleria mall while I was bridesmaiding. Houstonian Hotel (wedding site) had a superlative gym, and also a large elk mural in the lobby, in front of which I now have a lovely photo.

Then it was off to London for a weekend to visit friends. My third trip, Mike's first. Highlights were Borough Market, drinks at the Tate Modern, gastropubbing, Indian fast food, and trying to drink our wine from Italy so we didn't have to carry it home.

April was a wedding in Princeton which, despite the rain, had the requisite dose of nostalgia during the Chapel wedding. Followed shortly thereafter by a chicken parm from Hoagie Haven.

May kicked off with a fan-tastic birthday weekend in Paris. Highlights were undoubtedly dinner at Le Cinq and meeting our friends from London for a drink because we both happened to be in town. So chic.

It was back to NYC in June, thankfully stomach illness-free. New favorite bar from this trip: Pegu Club, 77 W. Houston.

To Boston for the 4th of July, with a lovely trip to the Harbor Islands. This was a new discovery for me, but what a great urban getaway. Take a little ferry ride from the harbor docks, end up on an island. Have a picnic. Walk around the docks. Ferry back for dinner in the North End, followed by watching the locals play bocce. Divine.

August was quiet (too much work for vacations), then off to Morocco by way of Gibraltar and Algeciras, Spain in early September.

September saw a trip with the Princeton ladies to our local Atlantic spot: Bethany Beach, where we spent a cozy weekend listening to the wind howl and the weather cleared in time for a beach walk on Sunday.

A lovely fall weekend in October in Nantucket found us a new fave restaurant: 29 Fair. Expensive, but worth it. And of course visited all the old favorites.

The rest of the fall was filled with work travel (Boston and Manchester, NH), plus the requisite holiday trips to Cleveland.

Closed the year out this past weekend with another weekend in Nantucket. Despite the distinct tragedy of the Downyflake having closed for the winter this year, we had some divinely cooked bay scallops and a lovely New Year's Eve at Cinco.

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Christmas in...

So there was this family I knew growing up who, instead of buying their kids Nintendos and such, spent every Christmas travelling somewhere exotic. And each year their obligatory Christmas card photo was a photo of them on last year's trip. I always that that was the coolest. In fact, I anticipate that I will go home in a few weeks and search my parent's Christmas card basket (yes, there is such a thing) to see if they've continued the tradition this year (harder when there are grandchildren and such). I rather hope they do. So, with that thought in mind, here are some thoughts as to where I would spend the holidays, were I ever able to convince my family to do so.

Brazil. Seems odd, I know, but there's some logic here. First thought: it's cold as heck and somewhere warm would be spot on. Brazil is warm. Second thought: it'd be kinda nice to go somewhere where Christmas is celebrated so you don't feel totally alienated. The Brazilians do the Christian holidays (see, e.g., Carnevale). I think it makes sense. Were I to do this, I think the way to do it would be Rio over Christmas itself, then to the beaches in Bahia for some lazing and eating of fresh fish. And there's apparently a pretty cool local festival on New Year's Eve in Salvador, complete with a midnight dive into the waves. Plus, I really, really keep meaning to go to South America and it just hasn't happened yet.

The Philippines. Not only is this a shoutout to the Tothanos, currently following this plan, but Manila is the only place in the world I've ever spent Christmas other than scenic Cleveland. And it was pretty cool - midnight mass in the streets was definitely one for the ages, plus I kind of dig parol - the stars that are traditional holiday decorations there. Plus, another opportunity for post-holiday beaching at one of oodles of spectacular beaches. Okay, okay, I'll link to the place I'm dying to go again - this private island. But I'd settle for Palawan. Who am I kidding? I'd settle for Fort Meyers right now.

Arosa, Switzerland. Skiing is obvious, admittedly, but a place like this would allow for full on skiwear plus enough of a scene to keep the nonskiiers among us entertained. And swank hotels. And raclette (potatoes and cheese - how can you go wrong?).

Edinburgh. A bit random, admittedly, but I feel like if you're going to do the tartan-wearing British Isles version of the holiday, this would be prime territory. I have visions of holing up in a castle, pheasant on the table, scotch in the library after dinner.

Vienna. The germanic bits of Europe have never really grasped my attention, but there's something appealing, in a gingerbread house, cinderella way about Christmas in Vienna. They have the whole Christmas Market thing going on. Plus the Vienna Philharmonic. Plus you can bring your gown and stay for the Imperial Ball for New Year's. I'd go all out and stay in a palace.

Rome. Seriously, must this even be explained? Home of the pope. Food and wine that can't be beat. Cute streets for wandering with your muffler on. Plenty of apartments to rent for sipping mulled wine and reading. Plenty of restaurants with hearty fare to indulge in when you feel like venturing outside. Plus, you could spend a whole day stopping in for an espresso to warm up.

Saturday, November 04, 2006

In Search Of: A Summer Retreat

Back in the days when normal yuppies could afford it, my parents use to take us to Nantucket for a few weeks each summer. Thus, I learned the value of the laid-back summer vacation where the key goals were riding your bike, bobbing in the waves, whether to have chocolate or rainbow jimmies on your ice cream, and, once you hit teenagerdom, how to lighten your hair with lemon juice. Now that I'm old enough to have to pay for my own summer vacation, and I haven't turned out as a wildly successful hedge fund manager, or wife of one, Nantucket is increasingly out of reach. (I mean, entry level house price of $1 million - I think not). So, the quest is on to find a suitable replacement where, for the time being, we can go rent a cottage for a week or two and, some day in the future, buy a house and convince a few friends to do the same.

I'm definitely an ocean-over-mountains person and particularly partial to islands. The odds are good I will spend my remaining years on the East Coast, so that's the geographical boundary. And, due to the childhood referenced above, really we're talking New England. Although I'd entertain the possibility of crossing the Northern border. So, some options I've been pondering:

Cuttyhunk Island. So this is a small island off Cape Cod, part of the mostly-private (read: owned by the Forbes family) Elizabeth Islands. Reached by ferry from Rhode Island, but no flights, it is short on cars and definitely the quiet side of vacation islands (think one seasonal restaurant, one general store, etc.) Seems really appealing, although I can't seem to locate much of a rental or sale market, so it's hard to know what the price are like.

Block Island. Never been, but clearly larger and more accessible than Cuttyhunk. Certainly discovered, but doesn't seem to have suffered the private-jet-from-Teterboro problem that Nantucket has. Definitely pondering a weekend at this place to check it out.

Maine. I spent a wonderful teenage summer as a nanny in a place called Squirrel Island. No cars, one little general store, lots of paths over rocks and reachable on a little ferry from Boothbay Harbor. So quaint: square dancing on Saturday, an ice cream counter in summer, and the kids doing plays for the whole town. But I can't seem to find anyone renting a place there. I just know there are a bunch of islands in Maine like this, but can't seem to meet anyone with personal knowledge.

Canada. I know nothing about Canadian islands, but Prince Edward Island seems appealing. Would be a hike to get there, but maybe worth it for the peacefulness and price?

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Where to go next

So a certain someone (or, more accurately, someones) are off on travelling adventures for a while, which has me thinking about my next trip. Likely time frame for the next big trip is a week or two in the February-April timespan. There are competing philosophies here.

Philosophy 1. We just did a big trip (Morocco) that left us a bit worn out. It turns out our big-job lives make doing nothing on vacation a bigger priority than it once was. So this philosophy says we should go somewhere where we don't move around during the trip, and that somewhere should involve low stress. Leading contenders for the beach approach: a return to Belize, Costa Rica (I'm thinking this place in Malpais), a return to Tobago (at left). Leading contenders for the eat and drink wine approach: a return to Rome, a new Italian city, perhaps Provence.

Philosophy 2. Life is short and there are too many places not seen on the map. So we pick somewhere new, but not super nuts. Leading contenders for the exotic beach approach: Bali or a Thai beach or go nuts and go to this place that I just think is the coolest. Leading contender for the relaxing, but new mountains approach: a mountain house in the Alps. Leading contender for the new eating and drinking wine location approach: Dubrovnik, Madrid, Sevilla.

Philosophy 3. Why not just keep it simple and visit a few of those red states (or, ideally, newly blue ones). Contenders here: West Coast roadtrip (Cali or Oregon, I think) or see some canyons and mountains in the southwest.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Superfun!

So one of my new favorite blogs (see Tothano, at right) tipped me off to this cool website where you can make superfun maps.

All the countries I've been to:



create your own visited country map

And all the states I've been to (they seem very red, no?):



create your own personalized map of the USA

I think the moral here is someone needs to take me to (1) Hawaii and (2) pretty much all of South America.