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Travel Mezze - June 2007

Reasons to go Asian =^_^=

June 28th 2007 03:23
There are two kinds of people in this world-- those who want to travel to Asia, and those who don't.


Okay, so not true. Sure, there are some people who are focused, even fixated, on the idea of travel to an Asian country, and there are some people who are adamantly against it (and probably most travel opportunities). But A LOT of people think that traveling to an Asian country would be a really rewarding (and it would) but fear that the cultural barriers are too great or that the language differences are too difficult. But as someone who has traveled in Asia with virtually no language experience and on a low budget at that, I'm here to report that it can be a great decision.


Travel to Asian countries can hold special interest for a huge variety of people-- there's Asian art that anyone can appreciate, history buffs may be fascinated by the ancient Chinese history that comes alive in places like the Forbidden City and the Great Wall, fans of politics would love to sit down and have a chat with any South Korean about American presence and relations with North Korea, people interest in religion can witness Buddhism that varies greatly in practice and ritual depending on the country, and public health advocates have found locations in Japan, Thailand, Cambodia, and elsewhere to both learn about model public health systems and advocate public health improvement. I know people who have spent anywhere from a week to a year in an Asian country and done everything from language learning to volunteering to a Buddhist templestay. There is literally something for everyone to enjoy and learn about in an Asian country-- and no really good reason not to go.
south korea buddhist temple


Yes, customs in Asian countries may differ profoundly from what an American or Australian traveler may be used to, but you should never let a fear of culture shock keep you away. Pick up a good guide book and it will have a section devoted to explaining what cultural differences to be aware of and how not to offend people in the country to which you are traveling. Many south Asian countries receive a great deal of Australian and New Zealander tourism, and some (like South Korea) still have an American military presence, so there are many reasons why certain places in Asia may be more accustomed to non-Asian tourists than others, but things will work out best if you plan to not always be understood and accommodated. The success of travel in a country that is very different from you own is highly dependent on your ability to relax and be flexible when things don't work out exactly like you wanted them.

I'm serious about this-- if you're flying out of China and your flight gets cancelled and you can't find a new one leaving before your visa expires and can't find an airline employee who speaks English, relax. It might happen-- it happened to me-- but it wasn't the worst thing in the world. And eventually, it all got worked out. You won't always be comfortable in Tibet or in South Korea or Japan. But if you'll relax and not place your comfort zone as your first priority, you'll find that you gain a lot for the comfort you lose.

Personal comfort aside, there are a lot of logistical incentives to travel in Asia. If you are in to backpacking aorund, Asia is an awesome place to do it. The largest cost in traveling to Asia is almost invariably the plane ticket. While the plane ticket will be expensive, once you arrive, depending on the country and the exchange rate, you can usually get pretty good rates for food and accommodation. China is one of the cheapest places I know of to travel-- the daily costs are almost inconsequential compared with the plane ticket-- and so the longer you stay, the more you reap the economic benefits, so Asian countries are a great choice for extended travel to multiple countries. Also, if you're a student traveling to Asia, there is a lot of scholarship money available for study exclusively in Asian countries, not to mention any number of organizations that run study abroad programs (both language learning and no languag requirement), volunteer programs, templestays, and internships. Not to mention that travel to an Asian country as a student gives you some cool stuff to put on a resume and discuss in a job interview-- that's beside the point, but if you're considering travel as a student you should think long and hard (and lean in an Asian direction-- who needs Europe).

south korea toll booth
A South Korean toll booth


For more specific travel experiences, see my post on Tibet, and I'll hopefully have a post on South Korea coming soon, so check that out. But the first step in having an awesome experience in Asia is to find something there that you're really interested in seeing or learning about-- so start looking!
south korea airplane food
Korean Air food-- the best thing I've ever put in my mouth on an airplane!!!
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Take the 4th to D.C.!

June 27th 2007 03:07
It's approaching, and approaching fast-- sooner than you know it, Americans will be gathering to light the grills and lather on the bug spray, hitting the lake, beach, or grassy patch to enjoy anywhere from a few to a whole hot mess of fireworks. Here comes Independence Day!
fireworks in Washington D.C.
The Mall is packed as these fireworks explode in D.C.

This day represents a lot of things for us as Americans-- our initial desire to not have to pay taxes to someone who received them by boat months later, generations of men and women who have fought and worked to keep America safe and healthy, and our own freedom to do whatever we want on this one day-- not like Christmas, when you can't really do whatever you want because you have to cook a big dinner and give people gifts, or New Year's when you don't have as much to do as on Christmas but it's still really cold and miserable, but on a glorious SUMMER day, when you can picnic and put on a bikini with an American flag design. You can get together with family or friends-- you can travel a long way to see people and to catch the best fireworks, or you can just set off a few against local ordinances in your backyard and hope the neighbors are out. You can go see one of those movies that advertise premiers on July 4th no matter what day of the week it is (or if they're actually coming out on the 2nd or the 3rd)-- this year I think it's Transformers and License to Wed? You can cash in on some July 4th sales (usually featuring patio furniture, grill accessories, and short-sleeved button down shirts that look like the American flag). You can enjoy a music festival or parade or river regatta, all depending on your local flavor. You can probably even stay at home and watch some kind of cable TV marathon, though I have to admit I've never done it before.

This year I'd like to suggest a small travel venture that I've really enjoyed in the past-- a trip to the mother of all Independence Day celebrations in Washington D.C. It's not as hard as you'd think to find a place to stay in the nation's capital, and with easy public transportation and tons to see, it's the perfect stop for a few days this summer holiday.

Washington D.C. has a huge variety of activities going on around July 4th-- on the day, the main events you'll find are the parade (which begins at 11:45 a.m. on Constitution Ave. and 7th Street) full of military units and marching bands, the Smithsonian Folklife Festival, an annual event with crafts, exhibits, and performances and running all day long, and finally, the big event-- the fireworks on the mall!!!
Jefferson Memorial, Washington D.C.
Night time is the right time to see the monuments!

I don't care what you spend the entire day doing, but early in the afternoon you MUST head to the Mall to get a seat on the lawn for the fireworks over Washington Monument. You'll have to go through a security checkpoint to get in, so allow yourself extra time to be standing in line, and bring a blanket and a picnic so you'll be comfortable and happy while you wait. And you'll be happy you came early enough to have to wait when it gets on toward dusk and you're surrounded on all sides by hot, sweaty, excited families waiting for the bursts and canonfire. These are the most spectacular fireworks I've ever seen-- the demonstrations just go on and on-- and there's something extra special about seeing them burst above the Washington Monument and hundreds of people who have come from all over to see them in the nation's capital.

Coming to D.C. for the 4th of July is a wonderful experience-- you get to be a part of the exciting atmosphere of D.C. in its most alive and lively time, you'll have a chance to visit some great museums (like the Smithsonians, the National Gallery of Art, and the Holocaust Museum), check out the monuments (I recommend viewing them both by day and by night, when they are beautifully lighted), and enjoy a splendid display of fireworks that just might bring a tear to your eye (no matter how big a guy you are and how many hot dogs you've eaten).


The D.C. area is very large and offers a wide variety of accommodation options depending on how close to the city center you want to be. Even if you are in a suburb, though, you can often still catch the Metro in with ease, so check with your hotel on the location of the nearest Metro stop and avail yourself of the convenience of public transportation in the D.C. area.
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More Edisto Musings

June 24th 2007 03:41
After a few more days in a beach house on Edisto Island, enjoying beachy views and sandy feet and salty hair, it's coming time to end my little vacation sojourn and head back to Augusta, Georgia (where the heat and humidity come without the ocean and breeze). And I start reflecting on what it means to go on a little vacation after all. Have I enjoyed it enough? Having come here every year for the past six, have I enjoyed it as much as I did last year? And the year before that?

Edisto Island has become pretty familiar to me over the past six years-- not like I have friends who live there, or like I know secret places to hang out or the secret password or handshake to get there, but just in the sense that my car can get there on it's own once I've crossed the Savannah River, I notice when old houses have been torn down or washed away or get a new coat of paint and when new ones spring up, and in our rental house I can find most of the dishes on the first try. I've been to the Pig so many times I no longer wander, and I can call the guys who work in the Bell Bouy seafood market by name (though I don't tend to). I've been out with Captain Ron, and then with Captain Jimmy, I've ridden my bike to every beach on the island looking for the best place to find a sand dollar, I've gotten up to see the sun rise and I've gotten up to go shelling with the sunrise, I've been crabbing morning, noon, and night, and I've caught a few and I've caught none. It's a small island, and there isn't a whole heck of a lot to do, but about the only thing I haven't done is attend a service at the Baptist church. So maybe I should. But I wonder if travelling to Edisto is, for me, about doing things at all.

Because above all, what I do at the beach is just be. I'm not saying I just sit around all day, because I don't-- I run and I swim and I boogie board and I bike-- but I live with my natural impulses like nowhere else. I wake up whenever I feel like waking up, but it's usually by seven. I go outside when I want some sun and salty air, and I come inside when I want some shade and cool. I drink water when I'm thirsty (or sooner, so I don't get dehydrated ) and I eat when I'm hungry. I play in the ocean when the waves are good and I read when I want to see one world on a page and another when I look up. I don't know what time it is and I don't have any goals or motivations other than impulse to act. It doesn't matter how many times I go to Edisto and how many things I've done, I'll always just be doing. Doing something-- something I've done before or something I haven't. And If what I feel like doing is something new, hopefully I'll be able to find that. There are some things you can experience new over and over again endlessly-- some movies you can watch and something new will always strike you, and some books you can read and you'll come out with a new favorite sentence every time. I haven't given geographic locations much chance with that, because the way I travel is ravenously-- always with somewhere new I'm itching to go and, no matter how much I love the places I've been and how many times I remind myself to return, always drawn just slightly more to the unseen and unknown.

There's this kid inside of me who loves to travel because she loves to stay somewhere new at night and sleep in someone else's bed, and then move on in a couple of days and do it all again, trading life for life for life until she gets back home to her own. Sometimes I wish we would go on a different trip-- or to a different beach. Or even just a different house...and discover something new, even if it's just which drawer the forks are in.

But I guess discovery can't always be so convenient.
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Edisto Island, South Carolina

June 19th 2007 15:27
Being a Georgia girl, when I’m not traveling abroad I often take my summer vacations in small doses to the Appalachian Mountains of Georgia or North Carolina and to the beaches of the Georgia and South Carolina coastal islands. Georgia mountains and beaches are not big events—they are inconsequential by most counts, but I’m happy to have them both and sometimes it’s nice to get away from rolling suburban hills even if it is for mountain with homogeneous vegetation from base to summit or a beach where the water, sky, and sand scarcely vary in color and composition. There’s something nice about climbing to the top of something or hearing an ocean breeze that is the same wherever you are.

So here I am for a week at Edisto Island, South Carolina, about 3 and half hours from my hometown of Augusta, Georgia. We go here every summer, my boyfriend’s family and I, and we read, cook fresh seafood, and stay out in the sun, all as much as we can stand in a single week. Edisto Island, for its residents, is much like the rest of the South Carolina low country, where people live in a sort of jungle, get their livelihood from farming, fishing, and shrimping, and have a hammock (or, our favorite, a queen-sized mattress and box spring suspended from a tree by four cords). The only real affluence here comes in for vacation to homes that either go vacant the rest of the year or are rented out. We rent a house on the beach that has probably never been lived in by anyone but vacationers, and although there are golf neighborhoods around the island, I doubt that any of the owners of those houses stay here year-round either, because although there’s a golf course there’s still only one school on the entire island and one Piggly Wiggly (the grocery store, for you non-Carolinians). But every year we like to try to get to know the island a little better. We used to just explore different beaches and points when shelling, but last year we decided to go on a boat tour


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Although Croatia (or Hravatska, as the Croats call it) has only recently become an independent nation after being part of the Yugoslavia and subject to soviet government, it has a lot to offer as a travel spot to equal, and even exceed, more frequented western European spots. Don't be fooled by the fact that it's not a member of the E.U. (yet-- many Croats are OBSESSED with entering the E.U.-- but more on that later). The worst thing you can do when considering Croatia is to call it Eastern European and avoid it because of some "Balkan issue". And here's why:
Croat girl walking in vineyard
Croat girl walking in vineyard

Geography


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I'm a huge fan of literature of all kinds, and one of my favorite authors is James Joyce. So, when reading Ulysses last summer I decided to take my reading a bit further with a travel component. If you have read any James Joyce, you know that homeland and exile is the major theme of all his work-- he was born and bred in Dublin, Ireland, but left as soon as he finished college and never returned. While Joyce was hot to leave Dublin as soon as he could, it was still apparently very close to his heart, because Dublin is the setting of or figures prominently into everything he wrote. Sometimes I tend to feel the same way about the American South-- I live here, but all I've ever really wanted to was leave, and still the things I write always seem to end up in the Bible Belt. Anyway, to me, it seemed like a complex relationship that could only be understood better through immersion. So I decided to go to Dublin, Trieste (Italy), and Zurich (Switzerland), the places where he spent the majority of his life. But what I want to talk about here is primarily my Irish destinations, because a friend at Oxford recently told me that she'd be traveling with her mom in Ireland, and I got really excited about it.
St. Stephen's Green, Dublin, Ireland
St. Stephen's Green, Dublin, Ireland


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Another shoe post-- but then I'll get back to travel, promise!

I recently found out about a very cool charity that Chacos is working with called the dZi Foundation-- they do work to furnish Himalayan people in monasteries and schools with functional shoes (as well as promote education, health, and social awareness


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My boyfriend bought a pair of Crocs last week prior to going on a hiking trip with my family and me-- he has really wide feet and always struggles to find a well-fitting pair of shoes to hike in. He's tried extra wide boots, but still finds them too narrow, all kinds of hiking sandals, but doesn't like the fit of the footbed, etc. etc. The shape of his foot is really clog-like-- it kind of widens out like a paddle and never quite tapers back the way most feet do. So, oddly shaped feet aside, he gets a pair of regular Crocs (not the hiking kind, which weren't available in our Athens, GA outfitting stores, and which he subsequently tried on in Atlanta but decided were too rigid for his liberal sensibilities) to wear on this hike and enjoys them very much. They're lightweight, cushioned, breathe well, and generally comfortable. He enjoys the hike, we drive home, and he leaves them in the back seat of my car (where we store most of our possessions).

feet in shoes

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Are you a trekker or a day hiker?

June 2nd 2007 04:31
The great outdoors doesn't seem to be for everyone. Sure, those of us who love outdoor activities think that there's nothing greater than being active and surrounding by natural beauty, but we have to face the fact that many people on earth would just rather stay in a real bed and eat food that hasn't been on their backs for three days. And if we're really honest with ourselves, I think we can all admit that, yes, every now and then we all want to just blowdry our hair-- or put on some deodorant without wondering if we'll get attacked by bears. So when it comes to planning a hike, how do you know whether you'd be happier spending a week or two on the trail or just going up for the day and being home by dark?

Both trekking and day hiking offer rewarding experiences worldwide. Of course there are many aspects of trekking that appeal to hikers-- first of all, it's hard to find any other way to have a different hike every day for more than 3 or 4 days. Even in mountain towns, you'll be hard pressed to find enough trails to keep you busy for a week if a trail is what you want. So one of the biggest appeals of trekking, to me, is the ability to hike for a couple of weeks and see something new every day. Along with the opportunity to have a new hike everyday comes the exhiliration of actually going somewhere. It's just plain fun to know when you hike two hundred miles, you actually went someplace new! Furthermore, trekking can offer mental and physical challenges that are rarely matched by day hikes, and lend a greater sense of accomplishment to people who are actively seeking that challenge


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