Features

In January 2014, my boyfriend, Frank, and I headed from Miami to St. Lucia, 238 square miles of beach and rainforest in the Lesser Antilles arc of the West Indies. This paradise, famed as a wedding destination, is said to offer a rich Creole culture. 

Starting in Soufrière

Arriving at the Hewanorra International Airport on the southern tip of the island, we headed to Soufrière, located 40 minutes up the western coast. This town summoned us with its dramatic, front-seat...

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As a child, I had a very mild case of polio. While I never had any trouble breathing, I did have trouble walking for a few weeks, but after a week or so in the hospital and a few weeks of being carried around by my father, I regained my ability to walk and all seemed well. 

Fifty years later, I was astounded to have to deal with post-polio syndrome. I can still walk but only for 15 to 20 feet before I become short of breath, and I have to walk very carefully, since I fall much...

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While on business in Dubai and Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates in February 2014, I took advantage of the opportunity to indulge in the most luxurious desert experience I’d ever heard of. The experience was made all the more surreal as I watched, on television, the snowstorms and frigid temperatures ravaging the Midwest, where I live, while I was basking in the magnificent beauty of the desert. 

Specifically, I spent several days at the Qasr Al Sarab Desert Resort (1...

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Valencia is the third-largest city in Spain; it’s a 2½-hour train ride from Madrid and one hour south of Barcelona, yet it gets little mention in guidebooks about the country. The city features a long, wide and not overdeveloped beach, spectacular modern architecture, a charming large center with many pedestrian-only streets, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and an amazing festival called Las Fallas. In fact, it was a chance viewing of a video clip about Las Fallas that lured my...

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Despite lifelong interests in wildlife, my wife and I had never been to Africa. After looking through a variety of safari brochures, we found it was easy to become overwhelmed by the many travel options. 

We were faced with a number of questions, such as do we time our trip to watch the Great Migration or are there other equally outstanding viewing options? What time of year should we go? Which safari lodges would best fit our interests? Do we need a rental car? How do we avoid...

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Could a 14-year-old girl find happiness taking Spanish lessons in Guatemala with her 75-year-old grandparents? We hoped so! 

Making plans

Our granddaughter, PJ, was graduating from middle school, and my wife, Rosie, and I realized that, given her increasingly busy schedule, we had better offer her a trip sooner rather than later. So for the summer of 2014, we gave her a choice of trips: to Williamsburg, Virginia, to see American colonial life or to Antigua, Guatemala,...

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For as long as I can remember, Mt. Everest has fascinated me — not only for its lofty height of 29,029 feet but for its ruggedness and the strain it no doubt places on the minds and bodies of those who attempt to scale it. Enormous hardships are faced by the climbers, the Sherpas and the beasts of burden who must toil up the steep slopes and narrow, rocky paths in extreme cold, enduring mind-numbing loss of locomotion due to the brain’s lack of oxygen. 

Nevertheless...

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by Sharon VanDewark; San Diego, CA

¡Simplemente una maravilla! How many times would I say those words — an exclamation meaning “Just wonderful!” — on my spring 2014 trip to South America? Many! They applied to the lofty “Christ the Redeemer” statue in Rio; Iguaçu Falls, bridging Brazil and Argentina; Machu Picchu in Peru, and my adventures in the Amazon.

Arriving in Rio

I left southern California on March 22 and flew, via...

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