Travel Blog

American Travelers Embracing (Gasp!) Food Tourism

We all know Americans love their food, so it’s not surprising that food is playing a prominent role in their travels these days. Nevertheless, a new study confirms it, finding that 27 million Americans have recently made culinary experiences—including wine tours and cooking classes—a part of their holidays. Barry Glassner, author of the new book “Gospel of Food” (as well as the excellent “The Culture of Fear”) isn’t surprised. “We define ourselves by how we eat,” he told the AP. “We show others and we show ourselves what kind of people we are by how adventurous we are about food.” So where are Americans going for culinary tourism? Among U.S. states, California leads the way, followed by Florida and New York.

Related on World Hum:
* How To: Dig Dim Sum in Hong Kong
* The Pasta Nazi
* Confessions of a Chicken Man

Photo by Jim Benning.


The New Yorker’s ‘New Orleans Journal’

Dan Baum has been covering New Orleans for The New Yorker since the Katrina disaster, and for the next few months he’s writing a blog of sorts—“scenes from his reporter’s notebook,” according to the intro—about his experiences in the city. His most recent post: A terrific chronicle of a gumbo dinner and a trip to the Ray Avenue Baptist Church with a mechanic he wanted to cultivate as a source.

Related on World Hum:
* Do You Know What it Means to Miss New Orleans?
* Rolf Potts in New Orleans: A Visit to the Lower Ninth Ward
* Tim Cahill and the Blues


Poverty Tourism: Exploration or Exploitation?

The Mumbai squatter settlement of Dharavi is known as one of the biggest slums in Asia. “It is also one of India’s newest tourist attractions,” writes John Lancaster in a thoughtful story on the phenomenon of poverty tourism in this month’s Smithsonian. For a little less than $7, Lancaster joined a small group of foreign travelers to walk through Dharavi, “a vast junkyard, a hodgepodge of brick and concrete tenements roofed with corrugated metal sheets that gleamed dully in the sunshine.” And what do such tours mean, for the residents of slums, the entrepreneurs and the travelers?

Tags: Asia, India

The New Hot Job in India: Flight Attendant

The country’s travel industry is growing so fast—50 percent last year, according to the Indian government—that Indians are clamoring to pursue careers in aviation. Indian women, in particular, are beneficiaries of the boom. “Until recently, many Indian families would have frowned on the idea of a young woman dressing in a short skirt and serving strangers on a plane,” Somini Sengupta writes in the New York Times. “But a rapidly expanding economy has helped to transform the ambitions, habits and incomes of India’s middle class in ways that would have been unimaginable just a generation ago, not least for young women.”

Related on World Hum:
* The Not-So-Glamorous Life of a Flight Attendant
* Singapore Girl: Icon, Anachronism, Winged Geisha and Pretty Young Thing
* Who Wears the Pants on Alitalia Flights?
* The Return of the Stews


Alex Espinoza: A Return to Michoacán

The youngest of 11 children, Alex Espinoza never felt the same connection as the rest of his brothers and sisters to his family’s native Mexico. They mostly grew up in a village called El Ojo de Agua in Michoacán; he was raised riding his BMX bike, watching cable TV and collecting “Star Wars” action figures in Los Angeles. “Their connection to Mexico was close, deep and also painful, something I simply could not grasp,” he writes about his family in a terrific Lives essay in the New York Times Magazine. “Growing up, I felt no ties to El Ojo de Agua. I traveled into Mexico with my family as a child a few times, but I felt disconnected and uninterested during those trips—and was always eager to return to my American life.” Recently, however, he returned to El Ojo de Agua with his mother to see if he could connect with a place that, over the years, had become “mythic” in his mind.


More Travels With Conan O’Brien

Travel certainly has its comedic moments, and yes, remembering to bring your sense of humor when visiting another city, state or country is almost always a good idea, but few people intentionally set out on a trip in search of slapstick. Not so with Conan O’Brien.

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Full-Body X-Ray Security Scanner Debuts

Initial reports out of Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport, where a full-body X-ray machine (read: one that can see through clothes) was unveiled Friday, reveal that air travelers seem willing to give up some of their privacy in favor of improved security. “Most passengers asked to submit to a full-body X-ray at Security Checkpoint B didn’t bat an eyelash,” writes Faye Bowers in the Christian Science Monitor. “Nine in 10 gamely stepped up to a scanner about the size of a vending machine, placed their feet on the red footprints painted on the carpet, and raised their arms.”

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Prince of Wales Island, Alaska

Coordinates: 55 47 N 132 50 W
Approximate area: 2,731 sq. mi. (7,073 sq. km)
With a relatively limited amount of physical evidence, the peopling of the Americas has long been a subject of study complicated by Bering Strait-sized gaps in our understanding. Recent DNA testing on remains recovered from Alaska’s Prince of Wales Island, however, suggests that the migration from Asia to Tierra del Fuego may have occurred earlier—and faster—than previously believed. Genetic similarities between the people who occupied On Your Knees Cave here on this heavily forested patch of land some 10,300 years ago and modern descendants of native Pacific coastal populations led researchers to this new hypothesis. The third largest island under U.S. sovereignty, Prince of Wales in the Alexander Archipelago saw a period of population growth in the late 19th and early 20th centuries with the introduction of salmon and pearl shell industries, but it has since declined.

.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) is the editor of the Oxford Atlas of the World.


Heading to Canada? You Better Have a Clean Record.

That’s because Canadian immigration officials have been turning away U.S. citizens with even minor criminal records, including a California man on a ski trip to Whistler who had been convicted of marijuana possession—in 1975. “Welcome to the new world of border security,” writes C.W. Nevius in today’s San Francisco Chronicle. “Unsuspecting Americans are turning up at the Canadian border expecting clear sailing, only to find that their past—sometimes their distant past—is suddenly an issue. While Canada officially has barred travelers convicted of criminal offenses for years, attorneys say post-9/11 information-gathering, combined with a sweeping agreement between Canada and the United States to share data, has resulted in a spike in phone calls from concerned travelers. They are shocked to hear that the sins of their youth might keep them out of Canada. But what they don’t know is that this is just the beginning. Soon other nations will be able to look into your past when you want to travel there.” Creepy.


Duo Charged With Inventing Fake Religious Organizations to Facilitate Travel to Cuba

Victor Vazquez and David Margolis “invented nonexistent religious organizations to apply for federal government licenses that allow U.S. residents to travel to Cuba,” according to the AP. Since April, thousands of travelers got permission to travel to Cuba through the alleged scheme. The U.S. government charged the two men with conspiring to violate Cuba-related travel regulations and lying on applications for religious travel licenses. U.S. law allows travelers to visit Cuba only for certain religious, humanitarian and research reasons, though a move to further open travel to the country appears to be gaining momentum.

Related on World Hum:
* New Hope for Legal Travel to Cuba?

Tags: Caribbean, Cuba

Just Out: Travelers’ Tales’ ‘The Best Travel Writing 2007’

Travelers’ Tales’ The Best Travel Writing 2007: True Stories from Around the World hits bookstores this week. It’s the fourth volume in the series, which was launched in 2004. This year editors included 29 stories, including pieces by Rory Stewart, Paul Theroux and Karin Muller. Smackdown in Tijuana, my story about enjoying some body-slamming lucha libre Mexican wrestling last summer, is also included, I’m pleased to note.


National Geographic Introduces ‘Talk Abroad’ Travel Cell Phone

Using a cell phone overseas has always been an expensive proposition, and that’s if you get service. But National Geographic, in partnership with Cellular Abroad, is about to release what it’s touting as an inexpensive solution for travelers that will work in more than 100 countries, from Aruba to Yemen: the National Geographic Talk Abroad Travel Phone. Coming in March, the $199 GMS phone will require no contracts. Instead, it will come with 30 minutes of free outgoing calls. Users then pre-purchase time at a rate that starts at $29 for 30 minutes. Incoming calls will be free and unlimited in 65 countries. CNET, among others, has coverage.


Oscar Travel: From Malibu to Iwo Jima

Harry Medved and Bruce Akiyama don’t seem to be interested in the creepy type of Oscar tourism. In advance of this weekend’s Academy Awards, the duo put together a travel story for MSN highlighting U.S. destinations where five Oscar-nominated movies were filmed, including “Little Miss Sunshine” and “Letters From Iwo Jima.” The latter flick was filmed at the same California beach where “Gidget” and “Point Break” were filmed: Leo Carrillo State Beach. Just how convincing was the California beach as a stand-in for Iwo Jima? Medved and Akiyama wanted to find that out, so in their second Oscar travel tie-in of the week they launched a poll at Fandango to determine which American city best portrayed another location in this year’s Oscar-nominated films.

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Paulina Porizkova Goes ‘Dancing With the Stars’

Globetrotting supermodel turned travel writer and novelist Paulina Porizkova will participate in the upcoming edition of Dancing With the Stars. She’s also a recent World Hum interviewee, and if she’s as candid on the show as she was speaking with us, it could make for some terrific television.


Introducing Xuani, Tijuana’s New (Sigh) Tourism Mascot

You have to feel for Tijuana tourism officials. The Mexican border city is plagued by murders and drug trafficking. And what of the city’s police force? Officers recently had their guns taken away from them by federal officials investigating organized crime. Yes, visiting Tijuana is a tough sell these days, especially for families on holiday in San Diego. But Tijuana officials think they’ve come up with a way to spit-shine the city’s image: a mascot. Meet Xuani, a cuddly costumed character representing a mix of Mexico’s native Indians. With his bright smile and fuzzy red-and-hello hat, Xuani will stroll along touristy Revolution Avenue, past the sad painted zebras and strip clubs, and, as the San Diego Union-Tribune put it in paraphrasing one official, “provide a more positive representation of the city’s offerings.”

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