Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

RECENT DISPATCHES
5.6.08

On the Occasional Importance of a Ceiling Fan

Emily Stone knew well the kind of moment she was experiencing in Puerto Rico: the guy, the Cuba libres, the accelerated intimacy. It was perfectly safe, she told herself, as long as she knew when to get out.

4.23.08

A Writer’s Port of Call

Adam Karlin went to Indonesia to work as a reporter. But after a visit to Jakarta’s old wharf to see the aging Makassar schooners, he left with a calling of a different order.

SPEAKER'S CORNER
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In Patagonia, In Patagonia

Tim Patterson packs his fleece and long underwear, and enters the Twilight Zone where corporate branding meets the multi-layered reality of place. 

ASK ROLF
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Should I Quit Law School so I can Travel the World?

Vagabonding traveler Rolf Potts answers your questions about travel

BOOKS
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‘The Worst Guidebook Writer Ever’?

Lonely Planet author Robert Reid reviews Thomas Kohnstamm’s “Do Travel Writers Go to Hell?” and weighs in on the controversy surrounding it

Q&A
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Thomas Kohnstamm’s Lonely Planet: The Firestorm Around ‘Do Travel Writers Go to Hell?’

The author of a new book that purports to explore the underside of travel writing is taking a lot of hits. Frank Bures asks him about the controversy he’s stirred up and his take on the guidebook industry.

HOW TO
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Have a Hockey Night in Canada

From Montreal to Sault Ste. Marie, the sport is the country’s greatest passion. Eva Holland explains where to go to indulge—and who you need to know.

AUDIO SLIDE SHOW
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Promised Land Closed

And other odd and unlikely signs from around the world. Aficionado Doug Lansky, editor of the book “Signspotting,” recounts his 10 favorites.


THE LIST
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10 Sizzling Hot Travel Tips From Sir Francis Bacon

Rolf Potts repackages the 17th century philosopher’s ‘Of Travel’ essay in the manner of a 21st century magazine feature

TRAVEL BLOG: Mexico

Happy Cinco de Mayo

It’s White-People’s-Excuse-to-Let-Loose Day! (Or, if you’re NPR, it’s your excuse to go completely loco and play some Nortec Collective.)

By Jim Benning • 5.5.08
WeblogMexicoMusicUnited States
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In Los Angeles, ‘Carne Asada is Not a Crime’

imageHave more profound words ever been uttered? That’s one of the rallying cries of Save Our Taco Trucks, a movement opposing a new law that restricts taco trucks in Los Angeles County. The law requires the trucks to change locations every hour, with violators “facing fines, misdemeanor charges and, possibly, jail time,” the New York Times reports

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By Jim Benning • 5.5.08
WeblogFood: The Moveable FeastLos AngelesMexico
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Remembering Octavio Paz

imageThis 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. 

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By Jim Benning • 4.16.08
WeblogMexicoR.I.P.
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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.”

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By Jim Benning • 4.15.08
WeblogMexicoTravel and Security
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Absolut on How to Lose Customers with Historical Maps

imageWhat were they thinking? The Absolut vodka company was running ads in Mexico featuring an 1830s map showing the southwestern U.S. as part of Mexico and featuring the line, “In an Absolut World.” It’s part of a campaign depicting “ideal scenarios,” according to the AP. It’s a clever ad, and I’m sure it played well in Mexico. But, shockingly, it came to the attention of some humorless U.S. citizens. Cue the calls for boycotts, the angry letters and Absolut’s apology.

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By Jim Benning • 4.7.08
WeblogGeography for Fun and ProfitMexico
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‘¡Ask a Mexican!’ Columnist Says ‘Adios’*

Gustavo Arellano has retired his informative and, in some quarters, controversial ‘¡Ask a Mexican!’ column in the OC Weekly. “It’s no longer necessary to explain Mexicans to Americans because Mexicans are Americans,” he writes in his farewell note.

Update: April 2, 10:27 ET: Not so fast. Looks like Arellano was just playing an April Fool’s Day joke—five days early. I bit, and so did everyone else, Arellano says, except his best friend and one blogger.

Related on World Hum:
* Dear Mexican, Why the Yellow Cheese on Tex-Mex Food?

By Michael Yessis • 3.28.08
WeblogCaliforniaGlobal VillageMexico
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Violence Leads Some Spring Breakers to Bypass Mexico

imageMany college students on spring break once took the so-called “two-nation vacation,” consisting of a visit to South Padre Island, Texas and a jaunt across the Mexican border to Matamoros. But the AP reports today that news of drug-related violence in Mexico has many students this year taking a one-nation vacation instead and staying on U.S. soil. 

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By Jim Benning • 3.11.08
WeblogMexico
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Mexico’s Grand Plans for Loreto

The sleepy resort town on Baja California’s Sea of Cortez is in for some big changes. The New York Times details plans for thousands of new homes “in the best tradition of the new urbanism.”

Related on World Hum:
* A Bad Situation Gets Worse in Tijuana

By Jim Benning • 3.7.08
WeblogMexico
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Hanging With ‘The Serenader’

imageIn the southern Mexican town of San Cristóbal de las Casas, Steve Wilson shadows a for-hire singer and guitar player named Roberto as he waits for gigs and plays a serenade. I loved Wilson’s observation about the street musician and the power of the moment.

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By Jim Benning • 3.7.08
WeblogMexico
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The Dancing Old Men of Patzcuaro

imageThe Mexican state of Michoacán doesn’t get nearly the amount of press afforded the country’s coastal resorts and Mayan ruins, but for my money it’s one of Mexico’s great regions. Green and hilly and dotted with avocado orchards and sleepy villages, it’s well worth a couple of weeks’ visit. (Heck, the savory sopa tarasca alone is reason enough to stop by.) In Sunday’s Washington Post, World Hum contributor Jerry V. Haines sings the praises of one of its more well-touristed towns, Pátzcuaro.

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By Jim Benning • 2.26.08
WeblogMexico
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A Bad Situation Gets Worse in Tijuana

imageTijuana should be a safe and thriving border city packed with happy day-tripping tourists savoring a taste of Mexican culture. But a recent front page story in the Los Angeles Times paints a grim picture of violence and plunging tourism in the city: Murders and kidnappings are way up—more than 50 people have been killed this year alone—and according to a local merchants association, only 150 tourists trickle in daily now.

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By Jim Benning • 2.20.08
WeblogMexico
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Dispatch from Oaxaca: ‘A Year Later’

imageCeci Connolly visited the southern Mexican city of Oaxaca recently to see how it was doing after the deadly riots of 2006. “It didn’t take long to realize that the answer is more complicated than I’d thought,” she writes in the San Francisco Chronicle. “Oaxaca is no longer the filthy, smoldering wreck of 2006. Nor, however, is it the bustling cultural center of years past. It appears safe and clean. But unresolved political tensions have prompted the U.S. State Department to keep it on a watch list.”

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By Jim Benning • 1.31.08
WeblogMexico
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