Features

Ruins of the synagogue at Capernaum.
Inspired by the spiritual beauty and welcoming people of this Holy Land
View of Kylemore Abbey.
It’s not often that a natural disaster can actually bring about a stroke of good luck, but that’s what happened to us in August 2010. My husband, Ed, and I were scheduled to travel to Ireland in late July of that year, but our 2½-week tour was canceled due to a lack of participants — a result of the spring 2010 volcanic eruption in Iceland. We had booked our own air to Ireland at a very reasonable rate and our tickets were nonrefundable. What to do?!
Metropolitan Cathedral on the Zócalo.
My month-long stay in Mexico City with my friend Carole was an experiment. I had spent Christmas in Mexico City in the 1980s and it became one of my more memorable holiday experiences, so I wondered, ‘Could it be duplicated?’ However, we were up against another memory: a mugging on the Metro there in 1998. Could this December ’10 experience override our memories from that fateful day in ’98 while re-creating my memories of a magical Christmas?
We visited this beautiful dzong in Bhutan.
My husband, Mike, and I will forever treasure the memories of our Jan. 10-Feb. 2, 2011, travels to Bhutan and Nepal, our most challenging trip to date. Just getting to the Kingdom of Bhutan took three days and five flights. After such an ordeal, you can only imagine how I felt when I learned my luggage was lost, and, as if that weren’t bad enough, it was eight days before I saw it again. (It was the first time in my life that I have hugged a suitcase!) Thank goodness we had done some cross-packing, so I had some things in Mike’s luggage and he had some in mine. That saved the day.
One of the many beaches south of Castelsardo.
My husband, Lynn, and I are timeshare owners and frequently peruse the website of Interval International seeking a suitable swap. When La Fenice Resort in Sardinia, Italy, became available for a week in mid May ’11, we pounced, ultimately making it the centerpiece for a three-week trip to southern Italy. Fast-forward to May. After spending a week in Italy visiting Rome and Pompeii, which we found exhilarating, we were nonetheless ready for a change of pace: fewer crowds, with more wonders of nature rather than of man. Sardinia, we hoped, would fit the bill.
The fractured, eroded and impressive Uradome coastline.
During my first visit to Japan, in 2009, I hit a few of the typical first-time-in-Japan sightseeing highlights: busy cities, fabulous shopping, “tea and temples” and ancient castles. When I was offered an opportunity to return in July ’11, I hoped to focus on some of my personal interests: birding, gardens, history, art and, of course, savoring the local food. The compact Tottori Prefecture seemed like the perfect place to pack all of that into a relatively brief eight-day trip.
Approaching bridge No. 6 on the Stratford-upon-Avon Canal.
My wife, Margaret, and I have made many trips to Great Britain, often to visit her cousin near Oxford and our friends in Scotland. On our September ’10 visit, we were looking for a different experience. For many years we have had a timeshare with Diamond Resorts International, which we’ve utilized throughout the US and Europe. I noted that, besides traditional hotels and condos, they list canal boats operating from several marinas in England in their inventory of stays.
Ak-Baital Pass on the Pamir Highway.
I met my fellow travelers, a small group of Americans, in Almaty, Kazakhstan, to begin my third trip to the ’Stans, in September 2010. A third visit seemed necessary to comprehend the magnitude of Central Asia. This turned out to be the most in-depth, contrasting trip of all, arranged, as my previous trips were, by MIR Corporation (Seattle, WA; 800/424-7289). Their diligence and attention to detail helped create one of the best trips I’ve ever taken.