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We asked the independent self-drive travelers among you to share any tips on buying gas overseas (outside of North America and the Caribbean), including choosing which establishments to patronize, which gas to buy, etc., plus any warnings relating to the mechanical, economical or logistical aspects of automobiles, fuel, repairs, rescue, etc. Responses appear below. If you have anything to add, write to Driving and Buying Gas Overseas, c/o ITN, 2116 28th St., Sacramento, CA 95818, or e-mail...

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I think of Amsterdam as a painter’s palette with a variety of colors to dip into. There are the vibrant rainbow shades of the famous floating flower market complemented by the subdued ochre tones of old city buildings bordered by blue canals.

And everything in this gallery of a city is easy to get to and easy to see. Whether by boat, foot or public transportation, no place is more than a few minutes from the heart of the Old Town.

On our trip to Amsterdam in July ’...

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During our stay in Argentina, March 30-April 13, ’06 (Sept. ’06, pg. 84), my husband, Joe, and I took a few days to travel to Uruguay. We wanted to see both Colonia del Sacramento and Montevideo and decided to spend three nights in Montevideo.

While in Buenos Aires, we went to the ferry to reserve our trip to Uruguay. It was good that we did that ahead of time because we heard that others were told the ferry was full. As it was, only first class was available and we paid nearly $200...

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Panama Canal

On reading the current series on Panama by Randy Keck, my wife, Jean, and I are reminded of our trip there 10 years ago. As we recall, it was arranged as a more or less private tour through Panama Jones.

The thing that the company owner, Winston Rice, said up front and emphasized was that, prior to going, one should read “The Path Between the Seas” by David McCullough (latest edition, 2004, Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0743262131 — 698 pp., $35...

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Kopinko in SE Asia

A wonderful and intense-flavored coffee drop named Kopinko is made in Indonesia but is available in Thailand as well as Vietnam. We bought as much as we could carry in January ’05. A fellow traveler who had lived in Thailand clued us in.

The deep flavor is not to be believed. A 150-gram bag cost about 70¢ in Vietnam; larger bags were a better value.

SKIP SIEGEL West Bloomfield, MI

Dutch Hopjes

Although we have found wonderful...

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A reader recently “fumed” about speed traps in New Zealand after receiving a $25 fine for exceeding the posted 100 km/h speed limit by 10 km/h (Oct. ’06, pg. 79).

$25? Just wait until you get to Switzerland, where exceeding the posted limit by as little as either 2 or 3 km/h (depending on the officer’s equipment) incurs a fine much heftier than $25.

Let’s be prudent motorists and good ambassadors. LORENZ RYCHNER Denver, CO

I enjoyed the article in the September ’06 “Mideast and Mediterranean” column regarding the Bardo museum in Tunis. I’ve been there and it just keeps getting better.

I thought readers would enjoy going online to www.worldisround.com. Put Tunisia in the search box, then go to the photos of the Bardo posted by Paolo Motta, they are just great.

ELEANOR A. ROBB Scottsdale, AZ

While on a tour in France in the fall of 2005, my husband and I feared that we were going to run out of toothpaste before we got home, so we went to a pharmacy and bought a tube of toothpaste called Elmex. Even though we couldn’t read French, we could see that it had fluoride in it. The price was a little over $6. We brought it home with us.

I started using it at home and noticed that my teeth were appreciably whiter. Several people asked me if I had gotten my teeth whitened. When it...

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