Features

On an Antarctic trip, a short layover in Buenos Aires, Argentina, was extended due to airplane mischeduling. For our trouble, Grand Circle Travel offered dinner and a tango show at La Ventana. This photo that I took at the show reveals that the tango is alive and well in Buenos Aires; at least, it was in January ’04. On the weekends, street tango dancers could be found in the San Telmo district.

ROY CHRISTIAN

Aptos, CA

by Steven Emmet, Solana Beach, CA

When we decided to go to Vietnam, I naturally leafed through my old copies of International Travel News and found three travel companies recommended by other readers. I e-mailed all three and explained that we preferred meeting people to visiting museums and scenic places and we wanted to avoid visits to this famous building and that famous site. In addition, as I had spent a year there during what the Vietnamese call the American War, we did not need...

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by Jim Hendrickson, Bellingham, WA

Armed with a frequent-flyer ticket, a Lonely Planet guidebook and a good knowledge of Spanish, I decided to escape the wet Pacific Northwest winter by heading south to sunny Argentina in January ’06. I had been to Argentina twice before, but I had seen little of its immense region called Patagonia.

Buenos Aires beginning

My 5-week solo journey began in Buenos Aires, where I stayed at a small guest house called Mi Casa en San Telmo (...

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At the suggestion of Ellen Jacobson of Centennial, Colorado, we asked readers, “What makes a good guide and why and what makes a bad guide and why?” We threw in the questions “What are some constructive ways to communicate with a guide or help him or her better their performance, deal with a specific expectation of the group or improve the progress of the tour?” and “Have you come up with ways to salvage a tour led by a poor guide?”

We requested comments of a general nature, excluding...

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by Michael Algar, Toronto, ON

Long ago and far away, my mother used to read me stories from Beatrix Potter’s little white books. Those tales and their magical illustrations had me wanting to explore the make-believe world of Peter Rabbit and friends. Little did I know then that 50 years later I would do so, during my first visit to England’s Lake District.

Miss Potter wrote and illustrated her books at her 17th-century home in a hamlet known as Near Sawrey, using the proceeds...

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by Marvin Herman & Judy Licata, Delavan, WI

My wife, Judy, and I, both in our late 60s, have taken many escorted tours and have also toured independently, but neither of us had been to Spain (although we had visited almost every other country in Europe). So we decided on a trip to Spain, in February-March ’06, not only to experience a new country together but to challenge ourselves, as seniors, to an independent travel experience where the journey would be as important as the...

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—John Chatfield, Contributing Editor

As Dickens once wrote, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times....” So it was on my July ’05 African wildlife adventure to Uganda.

The worst was trying to find the mountain gorillas in the Mgahinga Gorilla National Park. The best, finally finding a family of 18, shyly hiding in the thick underbrush. Unfortunately, we were never able to get a clear look at these fantastic animals.

Uganda is not only known for gorillas, as...

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by J. Norvill Jones, Alexandria, VA

England is a land of walkers and paths to accommodate them. And none surpasses the splendor of England’s longest footpath, the 630-mile South West Coast Path, which runs from Minehead on the Atlantic around Land’s End to Poole in the English Channel. In May ’05, I had the pleasure of hiking 120 miles of this path.

South West Coast Path

More than a decade ago, an English friend, knowing of my interest in hiking, gave me a book about...

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