Travel Blog: News and Briefs

Golf Courses, Bedsheets and the ‘Endless Search for the Peculiar’

Photo by Jan the manson via Flickr (Creative Commons)

“What constitutes a meaningful cultural difference?” That’s the question that The Smart Set contributor Michael Gorra is faced with after a bedsheet-shopping expedition in Hamburg. What follows is a thoughtful essay on the traveler’s search for differences, our inevitable comparisons to the familiar and our efforts to make it all add up in the end. Laced with references to the peculiarities around him (Berlin’s new golf courses, or the way cashiers in Hamburg make change), the essay left me reassessing the way I take note of the world around me when I travel. It also left me craving the “cool pilsner tingle” of a mug of German beer.


The New Yorker ‘Journeys’ Issue Goes to China, New Guinea, Bengal

As usual, The New Yorker turns to big-name writers for its Journeys issue: Jonathan Franzen, Jared Diamond and Caroline Alexander among them. Also as usual, several of their stories aren’t online. Two that are: Alexander’s journey through the mangrove forest of Bengal, and Paul Goldberger’s intriguing look at the architecture of airports. “The best new airports in the world right now are in Beijing, where Norman Foster’s Terminal 3 has just opened, and on the outskirts of Madrid, where Terminal 4 at Barajas, designed by Richard Rogers Partnership, has been in operation since 2006,” he writes. “Foster has achieved what no other architect has been able to: he has rethought the airport from scratch and made it work.” A conversation with Franzen about his trip to China is also online.


Movies and Books That Inspired Travel Booms

Jon Krakauer’s book “Into the Wild”—and Sean Penn’s movie adaptation—have boosted tourism in parts of Alaska more than 100 percent, and the “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy caused a 34 percent increase in travel to New Zealand during its run a few years back, according to a piece in the April issue of Outside by World Hum contributing editor Frank Bures. Bill Bryson’s “A Walk in the Woods” also inspired travelers, drawing 57 percent more through-hikers to the Appalachian Trail in the two years after his book’s 1998 debut.

Read More »


Dengue Epidemic Hits Tourism in Rio

Since January, more than 70,000 people have been infected with dengue fever in the Brazilian state of Rio. At least 80 people have died. Now, the growing health crisis is “taking a toll on tourism,” reports the International Herald Tribune. A number of foreign embassies have warned citizens about the outbreak, including the U.S. Embassy.

Read More »


Global Warming’s Next Victim: Beer?

We’ve already noted the rise of see-it-before-it’s-gone tourism, or climate tourism. Is “drink-it-before-it’s-gone” tourism next? A scientist in New Zealand is warning that climate change could affect the growth of malting barley, both in New Zealand and neighboring Australia, thus causing a fall in beer production.

Read More »


The Wires Behind American’s Flight Cancellations

Wired offers a detailed explanation of just why American Airlines’ inspection of its MD-80s last week was so important: “The wiring bundles are located near the plane’s fuel tanks, and failure to follow the FAA directive could result in a wire shorting out and sparking. Which could result in jet fumes igniting. Which could cause an explosion in the fuel tank. Which, as you can imagine, could be a really bad situation.”


Remembering Octavio Paz

This week is the 10th anniversary of the death of the great Mexican writer and poet Octavio Paz. The Los Angeles Times’ La Plaza blog notes that the Nobel Prize winner is being remembered in Mexico City with conferences and radio programs. For travelers, Paz’s Labyrinth of Solitude is a challenging but essential book for understanding Mexican culture. Paz also wrote a travel memoir of sorts, In Light of India, based on his time as a diplomat in the country.

Read More »


Communing with Kerouac: Ben Gibbard in Big Sur

The singer and songwriter for Death Cab For Cutie wrote songs for the band’s upcoming album, Narrow Stairs, at a cabin in Big Sur—the same spot Jack Kerouac wrote his book “Big Sur.” For its most recent issue, Paste magazine sent Gibbard back to the cabin, where he filed a cover story about his love for Kerouac and the impact of the writer on his life, particularly his book “On the Road.”

Read More »


Robert Burns Would Have Scoffed at Vegetarian Haggis

But I love it. I was in Scotland last week, eating the herbivore version of Scotland’s national dish as much as possible. It’s not that I’m afraid of the real haggis —an agitative mix of sheep liver, heart, lungs and other internal organs blended with meat, oats, barley and spices and cooked inside a sheep stomach. It’s just that “fake haggis” tastes better and seemed far easier to find. It may be a sign of the health-food times in Scotland, great purveyor of heart-attack cuisine. But a furious Robert Burns is surely scoffing in his grave.

Read More »


U.S. State Department: Be Alert to Safety Concerns in Mexican Border Zone

Not terribly surprising, but it’s worth noting that the U.S. State Department reissued a travel alert for Mexico on Monday, citing “[v]iolent criminal activity fueled by a war between criminal organizations struggling for control of the lucrative narcotics trade.”

Read More »


Delta, Northwest Merger to Create World’s Largest Airline

Delta and Northwest announced plans to combine last night. “The proposed merger would be the largest U.S. airline deal ever, creating a global giant with more than 800 jets, 6,400 daily flights and nearly $32 billion in annual revenue,” according to USA Today. “The carriers estimate the value of the new company at $17.7 billion dollars, far above their current market value.”

Read More »


World Hum’s Most Read: April 5-11

Our five most popular features and blog posts this week:

1) Why the World is Avoiding America
2) Absolut on How to Lose Customers with Historical Maps (pictured)
3) How to: Use a Squat Toilet
4) Out of the Wild? Alaskan Town Considers Removing McCandless Bus
5) Inside the ‘2008 Typo Hunt Across America’


The Life of a Pilot: ‘It’s a Nightmare’

Pilots sound off on what it’s like to be an airline pilot in 2008 in this New York Times story. Among the revelations: “You’re much better off going into plumbing, from a purely financial perspective.”


A Clash of Civilizations Over Disney’s ‘It’s a Small World’

Disneyland fans are abuzz—and many are up in arms—over news that changes are coming to the classic boat ride “It’s a Small World.” The attraction was inspired by a conference Walt Disney attended in 1956, at the invitation of President Eisenhower, aimed at promoting “world peace through international civilian travel,” according to Wikipedia. Slow-moving boats pass scenes depicting various countries and cultures, all set to music. (See this YouTube video.)

 

Read More »


To Seattle, Guided Only by User-Generated Information

A writer for Slate tried to pull off a trip to Thailand guided by user-generated information last year, but ended up purchasing a copy of Lonely Planet. Now another writer has tried a similar experiment. Wayne Curtis appears to have made it all the way through his trip to the Pacific Northwest without picking up some professional dead-tree media, but with mixed results. “For travelers, as for so many other Web users, the Internet is great for finding the needle in the haystack,” he writes in the Atlantic. “But it’s not so good at finding the haystack—at culling infinite possibilities into a manageable list of options.”