Monday, June 16, 2014

"How Far Away Have You Traveled?"

by John
Our path around the world starting in Indy. 14 airports in 14 days.

That's the question we got from our waitress at dinner the other night when the subject of travel came up and we indicated that we had traveled rather extensively.  I don't think we've ever had that particular question. We always get "What's your favorite place?" or "Have you ever been to________?"  (Italy and probably, respectively).  But the way this question was phrased was a new one.  "How far...?"  My initial response was, "As far as we could, because once we had gone so far, we were on your way home."

I was thinking of the classic riddle:
How far can you walk into the woods?  The answer: Half way. After that you're walking out of the woods.

That was the case on a trip back in 2010 that took us around the world (see the accompanying flight path nearby).  Ann wrote about it in a previous Excellent Adventure post.  Now, even though we can officially say we joined the Circumnavigator's Club, I suppose we didn't technically go as far away as physically possible on the planet.  That would be the exact opposite side of the globe from Indianapolis; a point somewhere in
The farthest away spot.  Flight 370?  Maybe.  Ann & John?  No.
the southern Indian ocean.  Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 might have made it there, but not us.  Yet.

It is an intriguing question, nonetheless.  So we'll ask you.  How far away have you traveled?

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Tuesday, May 13, 2014

A Day in Petra

Ann likes to say, “I’ve never met a ruin I didn’t love.”  That’s why we often plan our trips around seeing world-renowned archeological sites, like Pompeii, the Parthenon, and the Pyramids.  (What the… do all the great ruins start with ‘P’?)  Well, add another one to the list: Petra, Jordan.  Petra is the city carved from the mountains in an area of southern Jordan called Wadi Musa (Valley of Moses).  It’s most recognizable structure is the Treasury, made famous in the scene near the end of Indiana Jones and the LastCrusade.  You may have seen it and assumed it was a Hollywood back lot.  No, it’s the real deal… and then some.  Petra isn’t just The Treasury.  It’s a vast complex of caves, tombs, stairs, and temples, all carved into the pink sandstone in the 3rd century BC by the people known as Nabataeans.
 Ann first visited Petra some 40 years ago on a trip with her family, so it was way past time for a return visit for her and my first.  Our trek to Petra was part of a G Adventures tour of Jordan and we spent a full day hiking more than 17 miles up and down the treacherous stairways, through the narrow passages, and in and out of the ancient tombs.  What follows are some of the visual highlights of our breathtaking (literally and figuratively) experience.








The narrow canyon that leads to The Treasury
and the rest of Petra.
Ann & John in front of the iconic Treasury.
A 2-hour hike up 650 steps and across some
treacherous plateaus got us this rare view of
The Treasury from above.
This is an amphitheater - like the rest of Petra - that
was carved out of the existing rock.
These are known as the Royal Tombs.
A closer look at one of the Royal Tombs, this one
called the Silk Tomb.  It takes its name from the
colorful ribbons of ancient stone that are said
to look like silk fabric.
Perhaps the most impressive structure at Petra, The Monastery.  For scale, note the people standing in front.
You can also see by the outcropping of stone on the right side of the picture how deeply this building was
carved into the mountain.

Thursday, January 30, 2014

A Perpsective on Snow

"In December it was pretty.  Now it's just a cold bucket of suck.  #winter"

                 (l)Yellowstone.                (r)Cold bucket of suck (aka, our driveway)
That was a Tweet from our friend Greg Cooper on January 20th that pretty much sums up this winter in Indiana.  The first gentle snowflakes of the holiday season gave way to January's Polar Vortex and all it entailed: endless school and business closings, road closings, sub-zero temperatures, etc.  And just when we're about to get to temps above freezing that might actually start to melt the permafrost that's been on our driveway for weeks, there's talk of another Snowmageddon on the way.  Wonderful.

Ann & John at the Grand Tetons
Earlier this month we decided to escape the snow and cold of Indiana and visit... the snow and cold of Jackson Hole, Wyoming.  The big difference between the snow and cold of Indy and that of Jackson Hole is that it was by choice.  Oh, that, and the beauty and grandeur of the Grand Tetons and Yellowstone.  That's a little different, too.

You see, whether you enjoy snow or dread it is a matter of perspective.  Shoveling snow: bad.  Playing in snow: good.  And when you're in Jackson Hole there are any number of ways to play in the snow.  Skiing.  Snowboarding.  Tubing.  Something for every skill level and adrenaline junky.  We chose to snowmobile through Yellowstone National Park.  Old Faithful Snowmobile Tours was our guide on the full-day tour of this beautiful national treasure that took us through the scenic, snow-covered forest,














past the numerous waterfalls and cascades,















around the steaming pools of Yellowstone's many geyser basins,














across the Continental Divide

John, Ann and Ann's son Zack (front)















and finally to Old Faithful herself.

Wow, this thing really blows



















During our stay, we also fit in some snow tubing (we don't ski), a drive through the Tetons and a side trip to Park City, Utah for the Sundance Film Festival.
Zack, Ann & John stargazing at Sundance

Under the right circumstances (Jackson Hole), snow is either the direct source of the fun or simply a nice accent.  Under the wrong circumstances (Indiana), it's a cold bucket of suck.

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Saturday, February 2, 2013

Ann & John from Antarctica

Here we are, about halfway through a 16-night cruise aboard the Azamara Quest.  The whole journey took us from Buenos Aires, Argentina to Montevideo, Uruguay, the Falkland Islands, the Antarctic Peninsula, back and forth across the treacherous Drake Passage, Ushuaia, Argentina, Puerto Madryn, Argentina and finally back to Buenos Aires.  This video is as we sail near Antarctica.



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Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Springtime in Italy


I’m always so happy when Spring arrives even when winter, like this past one, wasn’t so bad.  I can’t imagine anywhere in the world where it wouldn’t be pretty in the Springtime.  One of my favorite memories is of a Spring in Italy a few years ago.  It was May and we had saved up enough frequent flyer miles that we could fly into Venice and out of Rome.  So we decided we would rent a car and drive the length of the whole country.  I certainly wouldn’t advise it, but it was an experience!   

We started in Venice, one of my favorite cities in the world.  I’ve heard people say that it’s dirty and there are too many pigeons.  But I think it has more atmosphere than almost any other city I can think of.  It is completely unique.  You travel from one part to another by boat on the canals, but much of it is accessible by foot.  It’s pretty easy to get lost in the tangled narrow streets full of shops and architecturally significant buildings.  Every corner you turn is photo-worthy; whether it’s a bridge with a canal background or a several-hundred year old beautiful church or some quaint corner café with blooming flowerboxes.

Be careful how you order though, we wound up paying over $170 for a fish dinner when it turned out the price was per gram of fish and not per dinner!  Lesson learned.   

Next up was Milan where the streets were so confusing that after driving around for an hour and a half we literally abandoned the car and walked to our hotel.  The hotel desk clerk sent a bellhop with John to retrieve the car and show him where the parking garage was.  One of the main things we wanted to do in Milan was see Da Vinci’s Last Supper which he painted on an inside wall of a 500 year old convent.  We asked the desk clerk how to find the convent and he kept saying, no, we wouldn’t be able to see it and in a thick Italian accent he kept repeating something that we finally figured out was “Dan Brown”.  It seems that because of the huge popularity of the Da Vinci Code, showings were sold out unless you had a reservation, which, unfortunately, we did not have.  We decided to try our luck anyway and headed for the convent on foot.  Miles later we arrived and were told that it was sold out for the day.  After practically begging the very nice Italian ticket agent, he said he would sneak us in.  He did and, boy, was all the pleading worth it.  It is huge and breathtaking.  

After Milan, it was on to Tuscany.   Up to this point we were on major highways where traffic flew by at 100 miles an hour.  Heading for Pisa and Florence, meant taking the back roads of Tuscany which wind and turn and take forever to get somewhere but you really don’t care because the scenery is so beautiful.  We arrived in Pisa, and checked out the  iconic tower, which was hard to do because of all the crowds and the very annoying souvenir hawkers.   


Then on to Florence where the streets are so narrow that they seem to disappear.   Florence is beautiful with gorgeous churches and unparalleled museums.  Michaelangelo’s David is worth the trip alone.   

Getting out of Florence was challenging and we got hopelessly lost, but we managed to make our way back out to the Tuscan roads.  That’s where we came across one of the loveliest things we have ever seen.  It was a field of freshly blooming red poppies leading up to an old Tuscan farmhouse.  It looked like a painting.  We pulled over to take pictures and there was a group of bicyclists from America who ditched their bikes to take in the awesome scene. 

Back on a major highway we headed for Pompeii, one of our favorite archeological sites of all time.  Pompeii was covered and, at the same time, preserved by the ash of the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in 79AD.  It is so well preserved that you literally walk into people’s homes and can see their paintings on the walls.  

 The bakery’s wheat grinding stone is still in place where it was left 2000 years ago.  And there are casts of the bodies of people who were overcome by the ash.  It’s a close as you’ll get to 2000 year old bodies.




Next up was Sorrento, the Island of Capri and a drive along the absolutely stunning Amalfi Coast, the most beautiful coastline in the world.    

We ended in Rome where we spent a couple of days seeing all the historical sites that are unrivaled in the world.   


Several weeks after we got home, we got a souvenir in the mail from Italy:  a traffic ticket.  Then a few weeks later, yet another one!  Since they were in Italian, we’re not sure what we did, but apparently we inadvertently broke a couple of traffic laws and they tracked us down.  Despite the problems, it was an absolutely fabulous trip.  And, in case you are wondering, we did NOT pay the traffic tickets!

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Great Cities of the World


Indianapolis proved that it was worthy of being awarded a Super Bowl during the recent celebration here and showed that it could play very well on the world’s biggest sports stage.  Being downtown for some of the festivities reminded us of the vibe you get in other major cities of the world.  It didn’t feel like Indianapolis.  Not that there’s anything wrong with Indy.  We’ve lived here 30 years and it’s been a great place to live, work and raise a family.  But we often do find ourselves unwittingly making comparisons when we visit world-class cities around the globe.  Of course, we don’t have the problems here that many of those cities have either.  In honor of the attention of the world on our city, we thought it would be fun to pick our 5 favorite cities in the world to visit:
 
1)  New York – It’s got everything from iconic sites, museums, architecture, art, funky boroughs, great restaurants, the theater  and just plain fun people watching.  There’s nowhere else in the world like it.




2)  London -  Fabulous historical sites, museums, within driving distance of castles and, they speak English !(well, sort of)  It’s just fun to eat in a real pub.
3)  Rome – what more can be said, that hasn’t already been said?  Everywhere you look there’s history and art.  Between the Coliseum, the Forum and the Vatican & St. Peter’s, you could spend days.  But even smaller churches off- the- beaten- path are full of surprises.  For example, St. Peter in Chains is home to Michaelangelo’s statue of Moses, a stunning masterpiece.


4)  Sydney – One of the most beautiful harbors in the world features the Sydney Harbour Bridge on one side and the world-famous Opera House on the other.  The city is modern with great restaurants and shopping and the people are the friendliest anywhere.  They really do invoke the phrase “no worries” all the time! There’s a petting zoo where you can actually feed the kangaroos and koala bears.

5)  Hong Kong – Another breathtaking harbor that is highlighted with a nightly laser and fireworks show.  It’s a pulsating, neon-lit city by night with beautiful parks right in the middle where you’ll catch people doing Tai Chi.


Runners Up:  Paris (of course), Prague, San Francisco, Athens, and Cairo.  I wouldn’t go now, but Cairo is one of the most fascinating cities in the world.  Beautiful, it is not, but there’s no equal on the history front.
There’s nothing groundbreaking in our list.  But perhaps it will serve to reinforce your own preferences or help to encourage you to get out and see other parts of our beautiful world.  But it is always nice to come back home to Indianapolis!

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Saturday, January 7, 2012

NYE in NYC

We just spent New Year’s Eve with a million other people in the most famous and crowded place on the planet and not once did I get annoyed!  That is a bit of a New Year’s miracle in itself.  We decided to cross a big item off our bucket list this New Year’s and go watch the ball drop in Times Square in New York.  So for somebody who doesn’t like crowds and doesn’t like to get cold, that’s a recipe for total discomfort.  I have a mental process that I employ on trips that might be a bit challenging, in which I set my mind, determined that whatever it takes, I can do it.  I really wanted to witness the most famous turn of the calendar in the world. 

We actually drove to New York which is about an 11 hour drive and stayed outside in New Jersey at a hotel that was within a five minute walk of a city transit busstop.  On New Year’s Eve, the weather was more like a chilly spring morning which bode well for the day.  The New Jersey transit bus was right on time and the trip into Manhattan was only an amazing 30 minutes.  And the cost?  $5.50 a head!  What a bargain! 

We arrived at the Port Authority, which is an unbelievable underground transportation hub that is the gateway to everywhere in the city and is clean with nice restrooms and even shops.  We changed to a subway train to make our way to the 9/11 Memorial at Ground Zero.  We had already done the walking tour of Ground Zero, which is worth a trip to New York in itself, but the Memorial just opened in 2011 and we had not seen it yet.  Free tickets are available online and you must reserve your date and time ahead of your visit.   

The Memorial is made up of waterfalls in the footprints of where the twin World Trade Center towers stood.  The water then flows into a “pit” in the center of each of the fountains.  It’s a beautiful yet melancholy site.  The names of all the 9/11 victims are etched on the containment walls around each of the fountains.  A museum on the site is scheduled to open next year.



While we were in the neighborhood we also checked out Zucotti Park, the home of the Occupy Wall Street Protesters and found only one protester left.   

Many more returned that evening, however and there was a bit of a riot.  Other stops before our Times Square ultimate journey included Grand Central Station, which is the most beautiful train station in the world with incredible architectural features, 

and the famous New York Public Library where many a movie has been shot in its renowned Reading Room. 


We also shopped in the original Macy’s which still decorates its windows with fabulous automated holiday-themed scenes.


It was then on to Times Square which was not only extremely crowded by this time but streets had been cordoned off and passes were required to get beyond the police lines.   

We had tickets for a party at Applebees and made our way there.  It was a mad crush of people everywhere and for those that are faint of heart or prone to claustrophobia, I wouldn’t advise it.  But we took it as part of the adventure.  I really had never seen so many people in my life in one spot.   Our vantage point from 42nd Street at midnight was incredible and we watched the ball drop with fireworks and singing and horn tooting all around us.   
The thing that strikes me most about the experience was how friendly everyone was.  From the people in Times Square partying, to the police that were everywhere, there was a spirit of kindredness.  In our last two visits to New York, the one thing that I have taken away is that New York is now a better, cleaner, friendlier place than in the past.  I’ve heard it said that New Yorkers were so moved by the fact that people from all over the world came to help and felt their pain as a result of 9/11 that they were forever changed by it.  .  If there is any good that can come from such a horrible occurrence it is that people are changed for the better because of it.  Start spreading the news: New York is one of the great cities of the world and a great place to spend a few days, especially New Year’s Eve.  Happy New Year!! 

Monday, November 28, 2011

Giving the Gift of Travel


Some of our favorite and most memorable Christmas presents in the Cinnamon family over the years have been trips.  John gave me a fabulous journey to China one year that stands out as one of my all-time favorite Christmas gifts.  And as our boys were growing up, we often took family vacations at Christmas time too.  Sometimes it was a few days before, but often it was a nice week or so after Christmas.  It gave us a chance to visit new places together as a family.  Traveling can definitely be a family bonding time.  It also is a great learning tool as it can make history come alive and make geography very personal.    

Since there will be a lot of traveling and trip-giving this holiday season, we thought it might be a good time to offer a list of some of our hard-learned travel and packing tips.  First on packing:

·        Place small items inside shoes to save space and protect breakables
·        Use free shower caps from hotels to cover shoes in suitcase
·        Take an extra collapsible carry-on bag in your suitcase to  bring home souvenirs
·        Put distinctive or colorful luggage tags on your suitcases for quicker identification
·        Don’t buy expensive luggage!  Besides the fact that it gets tossed around and beat up by baggage handlers, experts say that thieves often target more expensive luggage to steal or rummage through, assuming there might be more valuables inside.

If you are planning an international trip, here are some things to remember:

·        Check passport expiration date – many countries require as much as 6 months remaining on your passport at the time of your visit.
·        Check to see if you need visas or permits for the countries you are visiting.
·        Check with your mobile phone carrier for overseas charges as these can be very expensive and even turning your phone on can ring up charges.
·        Walk around and drink plenty of water on long flights.  Wear compression socks.
·        Dress NOT to stand out! There are places in the world where it is not appropriate to wear revealing clothing and it is an insult to their culture if you do.  You may be inviting unwelcome attention by doing so.  With the high level of tension in some parts of the world, it is often better not to advertise that you are American either.  Blending in is best.

Here’s hoping that you have a wonderful holiday season and that you find a great trip stuffed in your stocking this year!


Ann