2

Sinful Travelers Confess Their Deepest, Darkest, & Downright Bizarre Secrets

Posted by Andrew Hickey on Oct 6, 2009 in Travel
Step right up!

Step right up!

The other day I was conversing with a friend of mine who is just about as obsessed as I am with gallivanting throughout this planet. It seems that when one of us is on the road, the other is planning the next “big” adventure and vice versa. One day over a few adult beverages at a local pub we got onto a topic I like to call “travel confessions.” This is when you get some travel nerds together and try to shock them with stories of odd occurrences on the road, places that as a serious traveler you have never visited, and possible habits you picked up while bouncing from one locale to the next.

My friend, who swears to have been just about everywhere, told me that he has no intentions of ever visiting London, England. He says it just looks like a real “boring city and expensive place to visit.” I was taken aback, not only because London is such a popular travel destination, but that this guy had recently become obsessed with the Manchester United football team. I figured someone who loves to travel for sports and concerts would eventually wind up landing at Heathrow Airport and then check out London en route to Manchester for a game.

It was my turn to share a few secrets or to squash some assumptions that people just believe since you call yourself a travel junkie and a nomad. Well for starters, I have yet to visit two “must visit” countries – France and Germany. Yes it pained me to tell my pal and some others sitting with me that I have yet to walk by the Eiffel Tower in Paris or raise an over-sized beer in Munich. But I swore that both were on the top of my list of countries to check out within the next few years…I promise!

Another confession that will probably make many hotel owners out there frown is my love of hotel key cards! I have a shoe box full of those digital door openers from all over the world. They are like mini-souvenirs that remind me of the many great places I was lucky enough to visit.

But enough about me. I decided that the only way to get over being such a guilty global navigator, was to reach out and ask some other travel experts to join me in a group confessional. Below are some uncensored secrets, habits, and revelations that they felt compelled to get off their chest. God have mercy on their sight-seeing souls.

  • First up in the confession booth is Gabe Saglie, Senior Editor and “Travel Guru” at Travelzoo.com, who revealed to me that, “When it comes to hotels, I always check-out with 2 things: amenities and stationary. Amenities are something hotels identify with, and even advertise, especially the upscale hotels. So this started years ago, when my traveling really began to pick up and I found myself forgetting where I’d stayed. Those little shampoo and shower gel bottles were miniature mementos of stays at great hotels. Somewhere along the way, I started passing them on to my mom, who lives in L.A. but travels little (by comparison), as souvenirs of cities I’d visited. Today, she has hundreds and hundreds of amenities from cool hotels all over the world. She gets them faster than she can use them and files them away in neatly organized cabinets.”

Saglie continued, “As for the stationary, I get a kick from mailing letters or bills inside hotel  envelopes. I think it adds a sense of intrigue for the person opening it on the other end. Plus, I haven’t had to buy envelopes in year.I also figure the hotels get some nice PR out of it, so it’s a win-win, no?”

  • Lonely Planet’s Andy Murdock also feels the need to snatch hotel items when he travel. Murdock confessed, “I like to swipe hotel room pens – I’m always in need of a pen and often seem to lose or forget them, plus I like finding them in a drawer years later and remembering where the pen and I first met. I think you can tell a lot about a hotel by the pen they provide: some hotels put a lot of thought into it and pick out a pen that writes well, has an interesting design, and suits the hotel’s look and feel; others don’t give it a moment’s thought and just buy thousands of ultra cheapo ballpoints that aren’t worth taking with you. The pencil hotels are the most mysterious to me because they invariably fail to provide a pencil sharpener. Be wary of pencil hotels.”

  • Sean O’Neill, Senior Editor for Budget Travel, felt compelled to express to me that while he may be a world traveler, there is just one kind of vacation he has avoided. “I’ve never taken an ocean cruise!” he exclaimed. “I feel silly about having left this off my travel to-do list. For millions, it’s an essential experience. But I’ve been turned off the idea ever since I read a Harper’s essay by David Foster Wallace, in which he ridiculed cruise-going. Sometimes I worry that I’m missing out. But I never worry enough to actually do anything about it.”

I must admit that I too have not gone cruising on vacation. Just not my thing. Next up is another troubled traveler that just needs to get something off her chest. I must warn you though that confession is a tad bit on the R-rated side.

  • Adena Harford, who runs the blog at tripwolf.com, told me that, “I kind of got into not using toilet paper in India.” I asked her to please explain that exactly that meant. She continued, “Let’s see – well, first of all, we noticed only the tourists stop at little stand to buy toilet paper – and that there is a faucet and a bucket in every bathroom stall. I was secondly inspired by Jack Kerouac’s idea that most (western) people think they are so clean, but they are actually going around with dirty assholes because we only wipe them with paper. So well, I got into using the water and faucet, and truly felt like I was cleaner than usual – we all referred to it as ‘going local.’ Like, have you ‘gone local’ yet? Sorry if this story was a little TMI.”

Hmm…

  • Moving right along we have flight attendant extraordinaire and travel blogger Heather Poole. Heather once told me on Twitter that she does in fact collect hotel “Do Not Disturb” signs, but her confession today was about someone else…or so she says. “I once knew a flight attendant who washed her panty hose in the hotel room coffee pot. NAST-AY!”

  • Where Ive Been’s Katy, who is both the Community Manager and #traveltuesday initiator on Twitter, shockingly told me , “Alright, my travel confession is…I always remove my shoes on flights. Even when I have EXTRA smelly feet.  Hee hee hee!” She also confessed that as a young traveler she used to steal the blankets on long, transatlantic flights. But in Katy’s defense she expressed, ” Come on, I was 10 years old!”

  • Monica Wong, who runs the travel blog  “A Pair of Panties & Boxers” confessed to me that, ” When I was studying abroad in Shanghai, I took a weekend trip to Hangzhou. I initially planned to stay for one night but I fell in love with the sunset at the West Lake. I wanted to see it again so my boyfriend and I stayed an extra night. The only problem was we only brought one change of clothes. Which meant, we only had one pair of underwear. We had to wear it twice. Inside out, of course. That incident gave birth to the name of my blog.”

Geez, these confessions are just getting dirtier and dirtier. For shame you travel experts…for shame indeed! I am going to clean up this confession booth and will be back with part 2/3 of  travel confessions tomorrow! In the meantime be good you sinners.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

 
0

The tripwolf.com Weekly Round-Up For September 28-October 2

Posted by Andrew Hickey on Oct 2, 2009 in Travel

Each Friday I will be featuring the top travel stories that appeared on tripwolf.com’s blog this past week. If you are indeed hungry for travel, be sure to check out tripwolf.com.

Typical Korean cuisine. All of this goodness cost less than $20 US. Yum Yum!

Picture above is a typical Korean meal. All of this goodness cost less than $20 US. Yum Yum!

* Guest blogger Jason Di Vece from the website Pack You Knives And Go describes (and devours) a typical Korean meal.

* As you know from reading my site, tripwolf sent me on a great adventure to the Twilight Football Games. Well now you can check out some of their favorite pictures from all seven of the worldwide matches.

* Still hungry from that Korean article? Then click here for a great piece on how to make the Vietnamese dish of lemongrass beef  on cool noodles.

* What exactly is TheIndiaTube.com? To learn more about this site, tripwolf sat down with the online magazine’s editor for a little Q and A.

Still hungry for more travel insight? Then check out tripwolf’s blog.

Tags: , , , ,

 
0

The tripwolf.com Weekly Round-Up For September 21-25

Posted by Andrew Hickey on Sep 25, 2009 in Travel

Each Friday I will be featuring the top travel stories that appeared on tripwolf.com’s blog this past week. If you are indeed hungry for travel, be sure to check out tripwolf.com.

Yo mon, Jamaica be featured this week on tripwolf.com!

A journey through Jamaica is just one of the featured articles this week at tripwolf.com!

  • Yo mon! Be sure to check out part 2 of tripwolf member Colinstlouis’ trek through Jamaica. Missed part 1? No worries just click here.
  • Confused on what the phrase “sustainable travel” really means? Want to be a true blue…er green eco-tourist? Adena from tripwolf sits down with Gregor from GlobalBasecamps.com about how you can travel often and leave a smaller carbon footprint in the process.
  • All you Americans preparing for a trip to the Emerald Isle might want to click here for a fun Irish-English mini survival guide. As the luck of the Irish would have it, I have my grandmother handy to translate for me when I hit up Dublin, Galway, Belfast, and the rest of Ireland.
  • Love yoga? Really love cruises? Want to win a free trip to Fiji? Please click here now and enter another great tripwolf contest!
  • Plus much more, so check out tripwolf’s blog and stay hungry for travel.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

 
1

New Feature – The tripwolf.com Weekly Round-Up

Posted by Andrew Hickey on Sep 18, 2009 in Travel

Each Friday I will be featuring the top travel stories that appeared on tripwolf.com’s blog. If you are indeed hungry for travel, be sure to check out tripwolf.com.

Just another day at the office.

Just another day at the office.

  • Adena from tripwolf had the opportunity to chat with the founder of Istanbul Queens, which is a Gay & Lesbian Istanbul, Turkey travel guide.
  • Want to make a truly German-style breakfast? How about chowing down on a bowl of Bauernfrühstück? Read here to learn more about this delicious meal that includes eggs, bacon and potatoes.
  • Planning or thinking about a trip to Guatamala City? Well then you are in luck my nomadic friend, because tripwolf’s travel spotlight this week is focusing on “Land of Eternal Spring.”
  • Plus much more, so check out tripwolf’s blog and stay hungry for travel.

Tags: , , , , , , ,

 
2

Introducing TripWolf 2.0: Fresh Look & Great New Trip Planner

Posted by Andrew Hickey on Sep 10, 2009 in Travel

tripwolf

The end of the summer and start of the fall season usually brings about change. Schools are back in session, your favorite television shows return, and in the case of online travel guide tripwolf, it means a whole new look.

Available in five languages (English, Spanish, Italian, German, and French), tripwolf.com is a social network guide that offers guests a combination of professional travel pieces and user generated content.

With the launch of tripwolf 2.0, users will be able to enjoy a completely revamped look and feel to the website. One great feature includes the all new trip planner. With trip planner you can now put together your very own itinerary and immediately print a personalized travel guide. Best of all it is absolutely free and no registration is required.

tripwolf2You will be able to browse the tripwolf’s impressive 500,000 (and growing) destinations, points of interest, and hotels worldwide. Once you find something appealing, just click the “add to my trip” icon and it will appear in your trip planner. Pretty effortless and to the point…even grandma nomad could plan a trip.

In addition to the orderly trip planner, the guys and gals at tripwolf have even built hundreds of ready-made trips for you to use when trekking around the globe. Talk about travel made simple.

Once you have your plans all mapped out and set in place via the trip planner, you will be able to download and print it out through a PDF file (Coming soon you will even be able to download it directly to your iphone).

So for people that are hungry for travel, be sure to check out the all new tripwolf. Mmmmm, it still has that new website smell!

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Copyright © 2010 The Brooklyn Nomad All rights reserved. Drop me an e-mail: TheBrooklynNomad@gmail.com