Morocco
by Jessica Festa (RSS feed) (2 months ago)
The Galeries Lafayette, a department store in Casablanca, Morocco, has received an award from the Guinness Book of World Records for having "the largest in-store shop façade". The façade has a combined area of 36,402.68 square feet (about 46 feet high and ...
by Laurel Miller (RSS feed) (2 months ago)
Holiday shopping is easy if the people on your list like to eat and/or imbibe. If they're into travel--be it armchair or the real deal--the options are endless This year, think beyond the predictable bottle of wine or pricey "artisan" cookies and give reusable, portable, ...
by Alex Robertson Textor (RSS feed) (2 months ago)
This black and white image of breakfast at a cafe in Fez was snapped by Flickr user clee130. For anyone who has spent time in Morocco, this is a familiar scene: an outdoor cafe full of men conversing together over slowly savored drinks or nibbles. Ourika, the cafe's ...
by Jessica Festa (RSS feed) (2 months ago)
Cars, trains, buses, and planes aren't the only way to get around a country. From the Bamboo Train in Cambodia to the Rail Cart in the the Philippines to the Couch Bike in Canada, here are ten unique modes of transportation from around the world.
Chicken Bus
Guatemala, ...
by Meg Nesterov (RSS feed) (2 months ago)
Some say if you're bored, then you're boring (it's even a lyric in the '90s favorite song Flagpole Sitta). It's something older people say to shame you when you're being a sullen teenager. But I'd argue there are certainly legitimately boring experiences, even while ...
by Kraig Becker (RSS feed) (7 months ago)
Fans of reality television and adventure travel shows will want to set their DVR's for tomorrow night's premiere of ABC's Expedition Impossible, the latest creation from Mark Burnett, the man who brought us Survivor. The show looks to be a combination of The Amazing Race and ...
by Kraig Becker (RSS feed) (8 months ago)
A new reality television show entitled Expedition Impossible is set to make its debut on ABC this June, pitting 13 teams of three against one another in what looks to be an adrenaline fueled competition through remote regions of Morocco. The show, which seems to combine ...
by David Farley (RSS feed) (8 months ago)
Just what motivates us to travel? What exactly inspires us to get on a plane and, thousands of miles later, blurry eyed and sleep deprived, to step into a place that was hitherto unknown to us? I'd be willing to guess that for an increasingly large amount of leisure ...
by Laurel Miller (RSS feed) (8 months ago)
A post written by Chris on Tuesday reminded me of this little language series I started in March. In "Ten things Ugly Americans need to know before visiting a foreign land," Chris recommended brushing up on the local language. He joked about dashing around Venice clutching ...
by Laurel Miller (RSS feed) (10 months ago)
I've frequently pimped Lonely Planet's Phrasebooks on this site, but I swear I don't get kickbacks from the company. It's just that I'm a big believer in not being a). A Tourist (although, let's face it, if I'm not at home, I am indeed A Tourist) and b). helpless.
Even if ...
by Kraig Becker (RSS feed) (10 months ago)
Fans of National Geographic have long been drawn to the magazine's fantastic photos, with many of us wishing we had the skills to take similar shots ourselves. Now, National Geographic Expeditions is offering us the opportunity to go on a photographic adventure while ...
by Elizabeth Seward (RSS feed) (1 year ago)
Traveling isn't just about seeing beautiful sights. It's about experiencing culture. The little day-to-day activities we witness while away from home can be the most touching. This image of boys in the water in Rabat, Morocco transported me a bit. I heard the water ...
by Chris Owen (RSS feed) (1 year ago)
Maybe hiking, biking, backpacking or pretty much any other minimizing endeavor is more what you have in mind for traveling but someone is dragging you along on a cruise. There's just no way you're getting out of it. Is there hope for you? Yes. A little. Not much. But some.
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by Alex Robertson Textor (RSS feed) (1 year ago)
Now that Thanksgiving is underway, it's time for many of us to start thinking about our immediate futures. The holiday season and our travel schedules for the new year are all on deck.
Here's one very appealing idea for travel in the new year.
Tamara Reynolds and Zora ...
by Sean McLachlan (RSS feed) (1 year ago)
What would travel bloggers do without Ryanair? From trying to get rid of co-pilots to arresting passengers for complaining about the sandwiches, the budget airline provides endless grist for our mill.
Yesterday more than a hundred passengers refused to leave their plane ...
by Laurel Miller (RSS feed) (1 year ago)
Over the years, I've become a bit of a bag lady. I'm always finding new and surprising uses for Ziploc® bags or their generic counterparts when I travel. I'm also a rabid recycler, so I like getting extra mileage out of my airport security "liquids and gels" ...
by Laurel Miller (RSS feed) (1 year ago)
Another decade is about to bite the dust, but the savvy travelers at Lonely Planet have given us a jump start on the hot list for 2011. They've just announced their picks for the world's best cities to visit next year, and while you'll find some of the usual suspects (New ...
by Don George (RSS feed) (1 year ago)
Earlier this month I had the exhilarating opportunity to interview Susan Orlean on stage as part of the National Geographic Traveler Conversations series. I've been a fan of her work in The New Yorker and elsewhere for many years, but had never met her until early this year ...
by Stanley Stewart (RSS feed) (1 year ago)
Fes is one of the great survivors. A medieval Muslim city, barely changed in a thousand years, it offers a vision of a world when the clash of civilisations involved Barbary pirates and white slave traders. Still enclosed within high walls, still threaded by a labyrinth of ...
by Laurel Miller (RSS feed) (1 year ago)
I'm usually allergic to pastels and anything labeled "women-specific," but Pink Pangea has won me over. The new women's travel site was launched in June, by world traveler Rachel Trager and two similar-minded female friends. The trio work for an organization that finds ...
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