Basic Tips for Travelers

Tips for Better Travel

Register for frequent user programs — airlines, trains, hotels, resorts and car rental companies. Keep a list of the account numbers with you.

Check memberships — know the discounts you are entitled to through professional associations or affiliated credit cards.  Discounts are offered through AAA, AARP, AYH, CIEE, USAA, and other organizations.

Use visitor centers, convention bureaus and websites presented by tourist bureaus.   Public libraries may offer travel guidebooks online for a digital reader. Scan or copy the pages you need or buy the book used and rip out the section or pages you’ll need.  Why carry weight?

Expect the best by shopping around and contacting vendors directly to request rates and discounts.  Ask for suites with kitchenettes and use hotels where children stay free if you are traveling with family.  Inquire about special deals.

Save space–pack everything and cut the volume in half, and half again.

I.D. — tape your name and contact information inside every bag, notebook, electronic tool or entertainment device.

Scan or Photocopy — your passport data page, visa if traveling abroad, credit cards, etc. and upload to your secure cloud-based data storage or email account. Leave paper copies with family or an office contact.

Prepare — buy digital media cards, SIM cards for cell phones, chargers or batteries.  Pack snacks before arriving at the expensive airport shops.

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Travel Adventure Film Makers from Long Ago

Exploring my vast collection of postcards, I found a postcard from the collection of the

Osa Johnson and her husband Martin lived in Africa and photographed vanishing wildlife and native people during the 1920s. Their collection of images is held at the Martin & Osa Johnson Safari Museum in Chanute, Kansas, USA.

Osa Johnson and her husband Martin lived in Africa and photographed vanishing wildlife and native people during the 1920s. Their collection of images is held at the Martin & Osa Johnson Safari Museum in Chanute, Kansas, USA.

Martin & Osa Johnson Safari Museum in Chanute, Kansas.  The card displays young women of the Lumbwa Tribe in full body draping and head coverings like hoods with circles cut out for the eyes.  They’re standing near Osa Johnson who was rigged up in 1920s Indiana Jones safari gear with a wide brim hat covering her coiffure.

The card advertised Maiden Voyages, a San Francisco based guide  to women’s travel and I received it during my years as a writer for the Washington Post. The postmark is faint; the stamp cost 20 cents, so that was a while ago.  By the way, that maiden-voyages.com website is up for sale now, so the publisher must have moved on.   A similar web address,  Maiden Voyage, offers connections to like minded travelers so women don’t have to dine alone on business trips.

Martin and Osa Johnson lived the get-up-and-go global nomad lifestyle at a time when the going wasn’t all that easy.  Equipment and clothing a century ago weighed considerably more than in 2013.  Food, lodging and transport options weren’t as diverse or easy to arrange.

The museum collection includes their films, photographs and memorabilia, natural history specimens and other collections donated by early travel film makers.  The images in the Le Blond collection depict women mountain climbers and cyclists in the 1880s.

Photos from the expeditions by Martin and Osa Johnson are indexed by year and destination.  I was intrigued by the photos of African people and scenes of  the 1920s.  The George Eastman House still photograph archive includes some of the Johnson’s photographs.

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6 Markets for Travel Writers

1. ABOARD PUBLISHING  – Bilingual Spanish / English  inflight magazines for airlines with routes in Central and South America. The company also produces in-room travel books for luxury hotels and other travel promotion products.

2. TIME OUT – Publishes in just about every city anyone wants to visit.  If you’re a local freelancer, you have more to offer.

3. OUTPOST –  Canada’s best adventure travel magazine. You don’t have to be Canadian born to write for them.

Travel Writing: See the World Sell the Story by L Peat O'Neil, Writer's Digest Books.

Travel Writing: See the World Sell the Story by L Peat O’Neil, Writer’s Digest Books.


4. SPH MAGAZINES –  This Singapore based custom magazine publishing house wins awards for the Singapore Airlines inflight magazine.  Opportunities for writers and other editorial staff.

5. MATADOR NETWORK – No bull work needed.  Online travel writing network for travelers with an eye for the odd and true.

6.  EASY JET — Travel and business writers for Easy Jet’s In-flight magazine which is produced by INK, a publishing house for multiple customer magazines.  Writers and editorial staff should contact INK directly or use the contact form on the Easy Jet site.

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What to Write in your Travel Journal

What to write in the travel journal?

Street detail Buenos Aires
Trust your instincts, I advise, but as a beginner, you may not yet have developed the second nature  that noses out the compelling street scene, the picturesque vantage point, the bristling marketplace.  Maybe you’re not comfortable interviewing strangers to find an amazing character who represents the place beyond any descriptive phrase or image.

Until you know where to find the truly interesting corners, you’ll wear your flip-flops thin, sit on many a park bench, nurse cups of joe or kava while you study the locals and take notes that won’t result in articles.  Which writer was it who said – 90% is junk for the 10% that soars.  Something like that, anyway.

IMG_3971But that’s why you chose this avocation, isn’t it, because you love to watch people,  chew the fat with whoever is at hand, experience new places, observe and participate in the passing scene. If a scene or interaction seems important to you, write about it. Don’t clutter your emails — and mind — by writing general statements about what happens on the trip. Forget about writing “We drove to x, we bungee jumped, then found an awesome restaurant at z.” Be specific. State the color and make of the car or bus, the passing scene, odd signs, getting lost, the condition of the road, words with driver, the type of lettuce or the smell of the local hot sauce on the cafe table.

When you look out and contemplate what to write on your tablet or in emails that you’ll reword later into finished articles, describe gradually as well as specifically.  Place events in context; compare scenes — not to whatever you left behind at home — there’s nothing more boring than gee-whiz comparisons to how “different” everything is when you’re on the road.

Events - 0588Use universal themes. The big picture description might be the opening sentence or the ending.  In journal entries, you should have word clusters, phrases or sentences that capture individuals in action — the methodical street sweeper or the women with the baggy stockings feeding crumbs the pigeons; weather conditions — steady breeze, sweat inducing heat; the quality of light — orange-blue glow of sunset, harsh high noon. Look for interruptions or aberrations in the scene and describe them –an ambulance racing down the street, an itinerant fruit-seller crying out for customers. How does this scene contrast to what you see if you turn 180 degrees and look in the other direction?

For more information, check out Travel Writing: See the World, Sell the Story.  TW 2nd ed

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If it were easy anyone would do it….

http://moneyfortraveling.com/specialty/travel-writing/start-a-writing-career/

John invited me to chat about my travel writing and global networking experiences. I believe in sharing what I have learned.

Events - 1830 Events - 1831 Events - 1846 Events - 1851 Events - 0534

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Goodwill Ambassadors and Volunteers

Volunteer Programs/Goodwill Ambassadors

This is the ultimate reference book for anyone considering an international volunteer experience ~~  How to Live Your Dream of Volunteering Overseas By Joseph Collins, Stefano DeZerega, and Zahara Heckscher. Penguin Books.

Pursue your dream of serving overseas as a volunteer while learning about other cultures and countries.  Some teaching assignments even provide a stipend.

American Friends Service Committee

Burma Today – recruiting English teachers

Citizen Democracy Corps

Council on International Educational Exchange

Doctors Without Borders/Medecins Sans Frontieres

Global Service Corps

International Executive Service Corps

Learning Service Information

People to People International

Road Scholar

Servas International

World Teach

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Agincourt to Zanzibar

From Agincourt to Zanzibar, A Where-in-the-World Guide

Agincourt to Zanzibar

Agincourt to Zanzibar

From Agincourt to Zanzibar is just the ticket for traveling through history.

Curious about Capri? Wondering about Waterloo?

Then drill through this book for insight and background data.

Authors Don Hausrath and Paul Wasserman have created a fact-filled gazette of mythical and real place names. The book is a fantastic resource for thoughtful travelers, teachers and trivia fans.

Especially useful is the index of place names by category — defunct empires, crucial battles, biblical sites and other locations celebrated in fiction and film.

Who knew Hoboken had such an interesting past?

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My 10 Back Packs

Great information on backpackers lifestyle and how to pick a backpack that fits your needs:  http://www.backpackeurope.com/packing/backpacks.html

I admit to hoarding backpacks. You never know which pack you’ll need for the climate, trip length, culture, road best traveled.  Alas,  my very first Canadian army surplus pack is gone, but I do have the second, a vintage Camp Trails special with extra cushioning hand sewed on the straps. Saw me through three months of tramping around Italy, including Sicily, Sardinia and Elba.

Then there’s the expensive internal frame model for long-distance trekking that’s been to Kamchatka, the Grand Canyon of Kuwai, the NEK, the DAKS, Algonquin, Central Asia, eastern outposts of Indonesia, Thailand and assorted SE Asian whistle stops between.

The modified mountain pack that saw me across France for 7 weeks of daily walking includes a water reservoir and tube.  I used the criss-cross elastic binding lines designed for a mountain axe or crampons to hang wet laundry which swung dry as I hiked.

The latest addition is a slim line model I picked up for a long trip to Tasmania and cities in SE Australia. Until the end of the trip when I started picking up souvenirs and gifts, it held everything.

Speaking of backpacks, this guidebook series might be of interest:

Europe from a Backpack © Europebackpack.com

Europe from a Backpack © Europebackpack.com

http://www.europebackpack.com

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Skipping Winter

NZ Palm TreeLong as I can remember, I’ve made an effort to skip out of Winter.  Cold kills my happiness, though I learned to enjoy X-ski during the years I lived above 45º N latitude.  Something about the lack of light, the inability to walk barefoot wearing shorts and a tee to grab the paper off the front lawn patch……Life is too short to wear parkas.

Still, there’s a compulsion to move  towards the Equator. One time all I had was 8o bucks and a jar of peanut butter, but I made it last nearly a month in the U.S. Virgin Islands, sleeping under the stars.  Stubby beers were only a dollar back then and local food was cheap.  I walked or hitched rides.

A few times, I managed to swoop to the Southern Hemisphere for a second summer. As a list maker, I plumbed memory to recapture those Winter escapes.
Big Snow Storm on 38th Parallel
Like most Canadians, I learned to clip coupons and save up for a winter getaway even while I was at university.

1970-1975 – Barbados, Fort Lauderdale, Bahamas, Sanibel Island, Puerto Rico, Saint Petersburg, Florida
1976-1977 – Big Sur and Santa Cruz, California
1978-79 – Saint Petersburg, Florida
1980 – Cumberland Island, Georgia, U.S. Virgin Islands – Saint Croix, Saint John
1982 – Costa Rica
1985 – Sicily, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, Spain
1988-89 – South East Asia, Malay Peninsula, Indonesia, India
1990 – Yucatan, Mexico
1991 – New Zealand, Fiji
1992 – Hawaii
1995 – Hawaii
1996-97 – Hawaii, South East Asia, Indonesia
1997-98 – Mexico
1999 – Florida
2000 – Curacao
2001 – Pine Island, Florida
2002 – Panama
2003 – Gomera and Grand Canary, Canary Islands
2004 – Florida
2005 – Mexico
2006 – Hawaii
2007 – Kunming, China
2008 – Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
2009 – Cayman Islands
2010 – Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, Brazil
2011 – Coya Costa, Florida
2012 – South East Australia and Tasmania, Hawaii

2013 – Key Largo, Florida

Where to next winter? Belize, Ecuador, Hawaii, Tahiti, Capetown, Madagascar, Seyshelles, Sri Lanka — all are in my dreams. We’ll see what the winter weather brings!

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Goddess of Travel

Western Hemisphere 



Trivia, a Roman diety, is said to be the goddess of commerce and travel.  She is an aspect of Artemis/Diana with three heads to represent the place where three roads meet or the triune goddess of  earth, heaven and the underworld. During a life cycle, we travel through those worlds.  Her Latin name is  Taurian Artemis.  Another form of the name is Termemina which protects the life and death cycle.

Ayizan, in the Haitian symbolic tradition, is the first ‘mat’ laid on original water represented by a palm leaf.  She takes the form of serpent, protects the marketplace, roads, doorways and gates.  Her alternate name is Ayizan Velequete.






Eastern Hemisphere

Inari of Japan is a Shinto goddess described as a vixen associated with commerce and travel, life and death cycle, sexuality, wealth, hunting and wild animals.  These are also attributes of Artemis/Diana in the Greco-Roman tradition.  And like Artemis, this icon protects prosperity bringing long life.  She is affiliated with rice and fertility.  

Poi-Soya-Un-Mat, from the Ainu province of Japan, is the woman of Poi Soya who raised herself above the gods, dressed like a man to go hunting and sailing like a trader.

Tian-Fei  is the sailor’s goddess of navigation and safe passage.  The Celestial Spouse originates in Chinese tradition to protect travel and commerce.

Doumou, or Toumo is the goddess of the Northstar, and she also originates in China. Buddhists and Daoists invoke her while traveling and for protection from disease and war. It’s possible that she is affiliated with Marichi from India and also Buddhist goddesses Guan yin and Maritchi the Queen of heaven, a Buddhist dawn goddess of three faces, who is not known to offer travel protection. 
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