Columns

Q:

Steve, I am an 81-year-old, longtime subscriber to ITN, and you and ITN are my last resort for a problem that I have never seen addressed in print.

I made a reservation for my wife on US Airways and was given a confirmation number. I paid by credit card and asked for an e-mail or fax so that my wife could go to the airport with some documentation. After three days and several calls to India and the Philippines, I never received anything.

Is it impossible to find anyone in...

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by Alan M. Spira, M.D.

(Third of three parts)

In the prior two issues, routine and travel-specific immunizations held our attention. Now we turn to immunizations which are “required” and relevant to travelers.

There is good news, here. The only immunization mandated by international law is that for yellow fever, through the International Health Regulations (IHR) of the United Nations via the World Health Organization. This document was reratified in 2005 at the World...

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by Ed Kinney

Turkey, located at the crossroads of Europe, Asia and the Mediterranean, is a gold mine for travelers due to its rich heritage and reported 40,000 ancient sites. Though my wife, Moreen, and I have seen less than one percent of these, we feel fortunate to have visited many of its well-known ones during three in-depth trips in this pro-Western, largely Muslim country (the last trip in 1999). Officially, it is secular.

We’ve always enjoyed walking among Turkey’s...

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by Julie Skurdenis

“You’ve come at just the right time,” commented the cheerful young woman in the Tourist Information Office. “If you look just outside our front door, you’ll see the archaeologists excavating the Roman Forum. They just started six weeks ago.”

My husband, Paul, and I were in the Croatian town of Pula at the tip of the Istrian Peninsula jutting into the Adriatic. And, sure enough, what we had thought was just another street-repaving project was actually a...

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Dear Globetrotter:

Welcome to the 370th issue of your monthly overseas travel magazine.

January 2007 is when new rules would have gone into effect requiring all cruise passengers returning to the U.S. from Mexico, the Caribbean, Bermuda or Canada to show a passport, but that deadline has been pushed back to June 1, 2009, by legislators, who inserted a provision into a Homeland Security Department appropriations bill.

The requirement on having a passport for a land border...

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DEAR READER, I’d like to share an incident with you that I had on a recent trip to France.

Nearly a thousand years ago, in 1066 to be exact, one of my ancestors moved from a small village in Normandy to England and founded our family. He became known as “Gilbert of (or from) Venables,” and his descendants simply became Venables (without the “of”). Now every five years, the village, north of Paris on the Seine River and still small, hosts a party and all Venables are invited back to...

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(Second of three parts)

In the last issue, I covered routine immunizations, telling which ones and how many to get as well as when to get them prior to going on a journey. In this issue I will cover the recommended travel-specific immunizations worth considering before traveling abroad.

Hepatitis A: this is the most common vaccine-preventable travel disease. Immunization consists of two doses six to 12 months apart. The duration of protection is 10 to 20 years — and perhaps...

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(Second of two parts, click here for part 1)

Sitting in a small café in May 2006, my bica (espresso) in front of me, I put the finishing touch on the second installment of my Portugal travelogue. The results appear below.

The Alto Douro wine region

Beautiful vistas of the Douro River, of small picturesque villages, of quintas (wine-producing farm complexes, frequently offering accommodation), of chapels, of winding roads and of terraced vineyards greeted us on our...

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