Travel Blog: News and Briefs

A Life’s Travels, Six Words Only

Photo by jurek d. via Flickr (Creative Commons).

Last month, the online magazine Smith published an addictive collection of six-word memoirs, titled Not Quite What I Was Planning. As you might expect, the project’s abbreviated life stories—contributed by Smith’s readers and a few well-known writers—cover a wide arc of joy, tragedy, heartbreak and fulfillment.

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World Hum’s Most Read: Feb. 23-29

Our five most popular features and blog posts this week:

1) Promised Land Closed
2) One Man’s Odyssey into ‘Eat, Pray, Love’
3) Photo: What You Don’t Want to See in the Cockpit High Over Belize
4) Mint and Djinns in Fes (pictured)
5) A Journey to Remote Kenya to Meet Granny Obama


Photo: What You Don’t Want to See in the Cockpit High Over Belize

Okay, so he’s not exactly asleep, but still. And we thought only passengers were raiding airport gift shops for sudoku books. World Hum contributor Abbie Kozolchyk shot this recently somewhere over Belize:

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Deadly Ricin Found in Las Vegas Motel Room

The discovery was made Thursday at an Extended Stay America Hotel. Seven people, all apparently in good condition, have been sent to hospitals for observation. It puts the whole bedbugs debate into perspective, doesn’t it?


National Parks Riddled With Contaminants

Photo by Patrick Doheny via Flickr (Creative Commons).

We recently noted that fewer Americans are spending their free time camping, hiking and fishing in our great outdoors. But while our parks are losing human crowds, they may are gaining some people-produced troubles—contaminants such as pesticides and mercury.

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Protesters of Heathrow Expansion Hit the Roof

Five members of a group called Plane Stupid managed to breach security and climb onto the roof of the British parliament this week, to protest the planned expansion of London’s Heathrow Airport.

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‘Once’ and the Art of Busking

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The Implications of a Viable Northwest Passage

Photo of the Arctic Sea by wili_hybrid, via Flickr (Creative Commons).

We’ve touched on what a navigable passage through the Arctic will mean for international shipping and travelers. The latest issue of Foreign Affairs offers a thorough look at the economic and political implications of an ice-free Northwest Passage, something that, according to experts, could happen as soon as 2013.

 


A Turban Too Far

When in Gujarat, wear a turban, or in Chile, a poncho. Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Vladimir Putin and scores of other world leaders have long followed the practice and escaped unscathed, so why not Barack Obama? A Guardian photo gallery brings much-needed perspective to the photo (above) that has stirred controversy this week.

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Cracked Picks World’s ‘Most Baffling’ Theme Parks

Baffling? I guess Cracked hasn’t been keeping up with Planet Theme Park, where baffling is the norm.


Pizza and Intrigue in Naples: A Graphic Travel Story

Tom Downey, whose first ‘graphic travel story’ we blogged about awhile back, has put out another in this month’s Conde Nast Traveler. As in the first story, Naples: The Case of the Stolen Starter was created with artist Neil Gower and fuses techniques from graphic novels and detective fiction to create a unique piece of travel writing. From the piazza to the mercato to the trattoria, Downey encounters all kinds of compelling details of Neopolitan life while his illustrated hero attempts to save a pizzeria whose dough has been stolen.

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Travel Headline of the Day: ‘Eight Reasons You Need to Fly Private’

Oh, Forbes, how you amuse me so.


Airlines Offer ‘Service George Orwell Could Get Behind’

Rob Lovitt offers “compelling evidence that George Orwell is still with us and gainfully employed in the airline industry.” His MSNBC story is doubleplusgood.

Related on World Hum:
* Big Brother in Burma


R.I.P. Dutton’s Books

Sadly, Los Angeles’ beloved literary bookstore, located in Brentwood, plans to close April 30.


Tracking the Lapita, ‘Pioneers of the Pacific’

Photo of Vanuatu by PhillipC, via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Fascinating story in National Geographic about how the Lapita managed to explore and colonize the Pacific Ocean beginning 3,000 years ago. Roff Smith writes:

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