Travelers' Intercom

The Queen is sold! Long live the Queen!

Little did we realize when boarding the QE2 in Los Angeles on Jan. 22, 2007, for her Silver Jubilee world cruise that the ship’s time afloat was limited*. But soon everyone knew that the venerable old lady of the seas had been sold to

“. . . Dubai World, which plans to turn the liner into a floating luxury hotel anchored at Palm Jameirah, the world’s largest man-made island, in Dubai, UAE,” as reported in ITN (Aug. ’07, pg. 95).

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I was very pleased to see the article by Yvonne Horn, “A 23-Day Exploration of Ethiopia,” in the August ’07 issue. The picture on page 10 is mislabeled, however. The photo of the priest with the vellum bible was taken at the Monastery of Nakuta La’ab in Lalibela, not at the large, modern, concrete Church of St. Mary of Zion in Axum.

I believe this detail is quite important, as the two churches and their sacred artifacts are very different indeed, and it would be nice to draw more...

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A year ago I posted in the “Person to Person” section a request for altitude sickness remedies because I was taking a group of people to Peru in June ’07; I own a yoga studio, and we lead an international yoga retreat every year. I experienced problems the first time I was in Cusco several years ago, so I wanted to avoid that. I received many helpful replies, and this is my report on the remedies as tested out in our group of 28, plus a remedy I discovered by chance.

Even though I had...

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My husband, George, and I went on a 16-day Smithsonian Journeys tour, “Treasures of Angkor Wat and Vietnam,” March 19-April 3, 2007.

The cost was $1,899 each, excluding airfare. Air travel from Thailand to Cambodia; Cambodia to Vietnam; within Vietnam, and from Vietnam to Hong Kong was billed separately and totaled $850 per person. Entry and departure taxes were not included and were collected during the tour. We arranged our own international air.

We booked through Smithsonian...

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ITN was mailed a copy of a letter sent by a reader to Oceanwide Expeditions, as follows.

My husband, Gene, and I were on Oceanwide Expeditions’ voyage to the Falkland Islands, South Georgia and the Antarctic Peninsula aboard M/V Aleksey Maryshev, Jan. 28-Feb. 15, 2007.

The expedition leader, Rolf Stange, and the guides and lecturers John Harrison and Rupert Krapp were well organized, fit and prepared for anything — and good company as well. Alan Hogan worked hard as hotel...

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Regarding travel insurance, all travel is a risk, but so is staying home, catching up on that “to do” list.

I generally have not purchased travel insurance but did so for a trip to Austria in May ’05 with Untours (Media, PA). My reasons were simple: on a prior trip to Switzerland, my wife overextended her knee and couldn’t walk for several days. Also, I had a friend who bicycled off a trail in Switzerland and slid 500 feet down a grassy slope into a tree; the rented bike was destroyed...

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One of the perils of international travel is dealing with illness or other health emergencies when in a foreign country. (Cruise ships with medical services aboard are the exception to this.) When we learned in 1988 that the International Association for Medical Assistance to Travellers, or IAMAT (1623 Military Rd. #279, Niagara Falls, NY 14304-1745; www.iamat. org), helps you do just this in numerous countries (in 2007 it’s 125), we joined.

IAMAT doctors speak English and have had...

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For pure pageantry and nationalistic bravado, visit the border post ceremony in Wagah, a town half in India and half in Pakistan, at sunrise or sunset. This is the only road crossing between the two countries, and twice daily crowds gather to witness the ceremonial opening or closing of the border.

My husband, Clyde, and I attended the ceremony on Feb. 26, 2007. We flew to Amritsar from Delhi that afternoon, checked into our hotel, the CJ International (July ’07, pg. 62), and...

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