What We Loved This Week: Cat Cafes, Robert Service and ‘Transsiberian’

Our contributors share a favorite travel-related experience from the past seven days.



Eva Holland

I visited the Robert Service Cabin in Dawson City, Yukon, last weekend—it’s a two-room log house where Service lived for three years writing poetry, now maintained as part of a National Historic Site—and I loved seeing an enthusiastic performer tell us about the life and work of the “Bard of the Yukon.” Here’s one of the poems I heard during the performance: Goodbye, Little Cabin, a farewell verse Service wrote before leaving Dawson for good in 1912, to serve as a war correspondent in Europe.



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Kerouac: ‘I Rode Around This Country Free as a Bee’

In a new Poetry Foundation essay, Aram Saroyan looks back at his time with the Beats. “God, man, I rode around this country free as a bee,” he remembers Kerouac saying of his “On the Road” days. “We had more fun than five thousand Socony Gasoline Station attendants can have.” (Via The Book Bench)



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Travel Song of the Day: ‘Walkin’ to New Orleans’ by Fats Domino



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Photo We Love: Beach Day in Karachi

Clifton Beach, Karachi, PakistanREUTERS/Athar Hussain


A man collects shells on Clifton Beach in Karachi, Pakistan.



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How to Stay at a Love Hotel in Japan

Want a memorable pay-by-the-hour experience? Lisa Gay explains the ins and outs of a stay at the famous Japanese love nests.


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How Bad is the Air Quality in the Air?

It’s “basically adequate,” writes Scott McCartney. Not very comforting. The airline industry knows that, so last year it put together a panel of experts to recommend changes—changes that, of course, haven’t been implemented.



McCartney investigates further and does a good job explaining what we really need to worry about when it comes to air quality on planes. As one expert told him, “In general the air on an airplane is not too bad, but when things go wrong, they can get really bad. And it happens in a hurry.”



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The Top 10 Comic Book Cities

I’m not a comic book reader, but I found this list at the Architects’ Journal compelling—and the artwork amazing. Among the cityscapes included: Tintin’s Inca city and Chris Ware’s Chicago.



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Bombs Hit Two Jakarta Hotels

Grim news from the Indonesian capital, where a pair of apparent suicide bombers attacked the JW Marriott and the Ritz-Carlton hotels last night. According to the BBC, nine people are confirmed dead, and around 50 injured.



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R.I.P. Julius Shulman

Julius ShulmanREUTERS/Fred Prouser/Files


The famed Los Angeles architectural photographer died yesterday at his home in Laurel Canyon at the age of 98. Among his most iconic photographs: a shot of Pierre Koenig’ Case Study House #22—the photo within the photo here.



Dwell magazine put it well: “His photography helped define mid-century modernism and no one can claim more credit for documenting, and in some ways inventing, what post-war California cool looked and felt like.”



Orignal From: R.I.P. Julius Shulman

Photo We Love: Beach Day in Karachi

Clifton Beach, Karachi, PakistanREUTERS/Athar Hussain


A man collects shells on Clifton Beach in Karachi, Pakistan.



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How Bad is the Air Quality in the Air?

It’s “basically adequate,” writes Scott McCartney. Not very comforting. The airline industry knows that, so last year it put together a panel of experts to recommend changes—changes that, of course, haven’t been implemented.



McCartney investigates further and does a good job explaining what we really need to worry about when it comes to air quality on planes. As one expert told him, “In general the air on an airplane is not too bad, but when things go wrong, they can get really bad. And it happens in a hurry.”



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How to Stay at a Love Hotel in Japan

Want a memorable pay-by-the-hour experience? Lisa Gay explains the ins and outs of a stay at the famous Japanese love nests.


Orignal From: How to Stay at a Love Hotel in Japan

The Top 10 Comic Book Cities

I’m not a comic book reader, but I found this list at the Architects’ Journal compelling—and the artwork amazing. Among the cityscapes included: Tintin’s Inca city and Chris Ware’s Chicago.



Orignal From: The Top 10 Comic Book Cities

YMO Day Tripper Live



matrixsynth.blogspot.com Video sent my way via Pete of http Thanks Pete!


Orignal From: YMO Day Tripper Live

Bombs Hit Two Jakarta Hotels

Grim news from the Indonesian capital, where a pair of apparent suicide bombers attacked the JW Marriott and the Ritz-Carlton hotels last night. According to the BBC, nine people are confirmed dead, and around 50 injured.



Orignal From: Bombs Hit Two Jakarta Hotels

R.I.P. Julius Shulman

Julius ShulmanREUTERS/Fred Prouser/Files


The famed Los Angeles architectural photographer died yesterday at his home in Laurel Canyon at the age of 98. Among his most iconic photographs: a shot of Pierre Koenig’ Case Study House #22—the photo within the photo here.



Dwell magazine put it well: “His photography helped define mid-century modernism and no one can claim more credit for documenting, and in some ways inventing, what post-war California cool looked and felt like.”



Orignal From: R.I.P. Julius Shulman

Parking Fees Around the World

The Economist has a great chart on parking fees around the globe. Among the highlights from its report: “European cities have some of the highest daily parking rates, with Amsterdam and London coming out on top. Tokyo is the most expensive place to leave your car outside Europe.”



Cheap travel tip: You’ll find great rates in Chennai, India. Um, road trip!



(Via the Idea of the Day blog)



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Parking Fees Around the World

The Economist has a great chart on parking fees around the globe. Among the highlights from its report: “European cities have some of the highest daily parking rates, with Amsterdam and London coming out on top. Tokyo is the most expensive place to leave your car outside Europe.”



Cheap travel tip: You’ll find great rates in Chennai, India. Um, road trip!



(Via the Idea of the Day blog)



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Crossing My Fingers

Tomorrow is the day we move into our house. I am excited and nervous. Hopefully all will go well. The move out here had some major hiccups...not just one. I called the moving cordinator to make sure all was well and I think they thought I was crazy....

I just want to make sure all will go smoothly. You would think since these people do this for a living they could get it all straight. Only time will tell.



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Maniquies enmascarados

¿Entraríais a comprar en esta tienda?


Visto en Shimokitazawa

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Piedra sagrada

En muchos templos es típico encontrarse con árboles sagrados protegidos por vallas y cuerdas “shimenawa”. A veces también hay rocas sagradas bastante grandes también protegidas, esta roca de la foto me llamó la atención por lo pequeña que es, si no te fijas parece que es un recinto cerrado sin nada dentro.


Piedra sagrada vista en [...]

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Gay Travel Book in Translation Trouble

Long-time Frommers writer Michael Luongo’s “Gay Travels in the Muslim World” has become the first gay-focused English language book to be translated into Arabic. The only catch? Every instance of the word “gay” has been translated to read “pervert.” Luongo had planned a Middle Eastern promotional tour, but, as he told Page Six, “this has thrown a wrench into the plans. Imagine standing in front of a crowd declaring yourself a pervert. So far I have avoided real fatwas, though I’ve been told the Taliban produced a Web site condemning the book. But with this new title, who knows?” (Via The Book Bench)



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The Plight of the Paris Bouquinistes

Times are tough for the booksellers along the Seine. Mildrade Cherfils writes in GlobalPost:



For centuries, used booksellers, with their unmistakable dark green boxes perched along the banks of the Seine River, have been charming and permanent fixtures of Parisian life.



Or as Christian Nabet put it, “we’re part of the scenery.” And that’s partly a problem, as he sees it.



“Look,” Nabet said, pointing toward a sizeable group of tourists who wandered past his stall with hardly a notice of the classic titles, which he has been selling in the same spot for about a decade. We’re “a little like the animals at the zoo.”



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Travel Song of the Day: ‘Michael and Heather at the Baggage Claim’ by Fountains of Wayne



Orignal From: Travel Song of the Day: 'Michael and Heather at the Baggage Claim' by Fountains of Wayne

Pet Airways Begins Flights for Pampered Animals; Humans Still Out of Luck


Beginning today, Florida-based Pet Airways will fly your critters to and from New York, Washington D.C., Chicago, Denver and Los Angeles. The new airline promises that pets will be constantly attended to and treated as first-class “pawsengers,” with rates for one-way flights—for Fido only; you’ll have to book on a regular carrier—starting at $149. Representatives are confident that the high prices are well worth it, offering peace of mind against the “severe emotional and physical harm, even death” that can befall your pet traveling in the cargo hold on human-centric flights.



The airline has even started a blog featuring everything from the latest in-flight pet news to expert tips on keeping fit with your dog on the road.



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How About a ‘Harry Potter’ Holiday?

Photo of Alnwick Castle by Eva Holland


It’s that time of year again: The sixth installment in the world-dominating series, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, hits theaters this week. The Telegraph has compiled a list of the best Harry Potter landmarks for fan pilgrimages, with mixed results. The specifics are fine—Alnwick Castle as Hogwarts, Platform 9 3/4 at Kings Cross and so on—but the list also includes whole countries merely mentioned, not visited, in the books. Are there really any Potter fans crazy enough to visit Norway just because it’s the natural habitat of the Norwegian Ridgeback dragon?



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‘How Does Travel Inform Writing?’

The Sicily Papers author Michelle Orange fields that question in a Q&A at The Virginia Quarterly Review. Here’s the last part of her answer:



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Détente at the Russian Baths

Peter Wortsman didn't mind peeling off his clothes at the banya. But he feared the worst when he revealed that he was American.


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Pedaling Through New York’s Neighborhoods

Photo by Seth W. via Flickr (Creative Commons)


Good news for travelers on two wheels: New York City’s planning department has launched a series of cycling guides to lesser-visited areas of the five boroughs. The Times’ J. David Goodman took the first installment, “Queens Around the World,” for a test drive, and apart from a few logistical hitches he gives it a positive review. He wrote of his trip through Flushing, Corona and Jackson Heights: “Cruising this route by bike reveals how each community bleeds into the next, and does so at a speed that is quick enough to show the juxtapositions, but not so fast that each is lost in a blur.”



A guide to the Bronx is due out next.



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AirTran Presents ‘Internetiquette’

As we’ve noted, AirTran has been leading the charge on in-flight Wi-Fi service—and now it’s pioneering in-flight internet protocol too. The airline’s new seat pocket guide, “Internetiquette: A Guide to Keeping Everyone in Line, While They’re Online,” is no dry list of rules, either. Take, for instance, Tip #10 on personal photo galleries:



SFF, or Suitable For Flights: family vacation photos, graduation photos, birthday party photos.



NSFF, or Not Suitable For Flights: the photos from Vegas. You know the ones.



Sometimes humor can be the best way to get a point across. Here’s hoping AirTran’s passengers take note, and that e-card jingles and musical MySpace pages are kept to a minimum on future wired flights.



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Photo We Love: On the Rocks in Shanghai

REUTERS/Stringer


A worker walks on the bank of Huangpu River. Shanghai is getting a citywide facelift in advance of the 2010 World Expo.



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Primary

I got a call a few weeks back from the executive secretary in our new ward. We are not even living in the Ward boundaries yet, so I figured I was pretty safe....you know what I mean. Anyway, he called to find out if we had a move in date, our old Ward's name, the Bishop's name and his phone number. That last one got me to thinking. I figured it must be something for Skip. I was wrong.

On the fourth, the call came from the Bishopric and they wanted to meet with me. I said, " Great, when?"I met with them the next day. After making sure we were for sure moving into the ward, I was extended a call to serve in the Primary Presidency.

I can tell you I was a little surprised. I really hadn't met a whole bunch of people yet and when I asked the name of the president, he told me. I had no idea who she was. I couldn't even pick her out in a line up. As I stood in church on Sunday to sustained, I looked around to see who I would be serving with. I smiled at each not knowing who they were or what I was in for.

We met in Primary and exchanged hellos. They seemed nice. I was subbing for Blakes class and ended up with two other classes to boot, so I really didn't have time to talk. We had an appointment after church and Jack's scout camp was heavy on my mind. I didn't really get to talk after church either. I was told we would be set apart on the next Sunday. I would have to wait to find out.

All week long I wondered how the next Sunday would play out. I got a call on Saturday asking if I would conduct Primary on Sunday. " Of course, not a problem." I said. I was a little intimidated since I really knew none of the children and didn't know how Primary had been handled in the past. I didn't want to step on anyones toes.

Sunday came. After Sacrament I rushed Claire to the bathroom and then to nursery. We have been staying with her for a few minutes every time because everything is so new. Sorry Claire, you are on your own I have to get to Primary. I did feel a little sad, because she looked a little sad.

I got up in front of the kids to start and I was bowled over with the Spirit. Every time I went to speak I got all choked up. This was just the welcoming part. I couldn't get past it. when the Pres did sharing time she too got all choked up. These kids must think we are a bunch of ninnies.

After Primary our family went into the Bishops office to witness the setting apart of our presidency. I must say that having the mantle of your calling being pronounced on you by someone with the proper authority is very moving.

I testify that callings do truly come from the Lord. The president didn't know me, but after fervent prayer I was the one who she felt would work out in this calling. The counselor in the Bishopric didn't know me, but the blessing he conferred upon me was exactly what I needed in my life. It was truly amazing and defiantly from the Spirit.  The blessings of the other women were also quite powerful. The Lord knows us, he knows what we need and where we need to be.




Orignal From: Primary

Banana pudding ice cream

I have a confession. I've never had the pleasure of eating Blue Bell's Banana Pudding ice cream. I'm not sure why. After all, I love banana pudding and I love ice cream.

As you probably know, Blue...





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Desodorante Ag+

Este es el desodorante de moda este verano, es de Shiseido y se llama Ag+ porque lleva partículas de plata ionizadas que son muy efectivas eliminando microorganismos. Lo que más me llama la atención es lo simple que es el frasco (en Europa estamos acostumbrados a frascos de desodorantes mucho más “chulos”) y la abuela [...]

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Cementerio en Kioto

Al viajar por Japón os encontraréis con una gran variedad de templos Budistas o Shintoístas, con un poco de práctica es fácil diferenciarlos. Un método fácil para saber si es el templo es Budista es si tiene un cementerio al lado. El 99% de los cementerios en Japón son Budistas (La mayoría de las excepciones [...]

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Boogie (board) time

Heading out to boogie



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Crab sunset

Crab



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Sand castles

Sand castles



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Dragonfly newborn

Dragonfly newborn



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Skaket Beach sunset (Cape Cod)

Skaket Beach sunset



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Day Tripper - Nancy Sinatra



Nancy puts a new twist on this Beatle's favourite.


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Cape Cod windmill

Cape Cod windmill (Orleans)



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The Strange Case of ‘World Travel Watch’ and Toronto

Photo by bensonkua via Flickr (Creative Commons)


File this under “bizarre adventures in globalized media.” When Travelers’ Tales editor-in-chief Larry Habegger called out Toronto—currently enduring a garbage workers’ strike—as a place to avoid in his “World Travel Watch” column, I doubt he expected to become a player in the city’s local politics. But then CNN picked up the column, the Mayor’s political opponents got ahold of the story, and suddenly Habegger’s latest was being offered as proof that the Mayor is mishandling the strike—and “causing devastating damage to our city” to boot.



A San Francisco travel columnist wreaking havoc on Canadian municipal politics? It’s times like these I get the urge to start singing “It’s a small world after all…” (Via Adam Radwanski)



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The Sounds of London

Giles Turnbull carried his audio recorder to 10 spots around London to capture its audio portrait. The Morning News features 10 snippets, including the sound of Waterloo Station and outside Royal Festival Hall.



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What We Loved This Week: Grizzly Bears, ‘Among the Thugs’ and Matisyahu

Eli Ellison

Guilty of writing superlative-laden tripe about Disney theme parks (hey, I had to pay the rent), I loved finally reading Carl Hiaasen’s wickedly funny book Team Rodent: How Disney Devours The World.



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Embassy Architecture: Can the U.S. Build More Than Bunkers?

Photo by skpy via Flickr, (Creative Commons)


Our recent troubles with terrorists have wrought many changes, including the rise of American embassies designed with such a strong emphasis on security—at the expense of everything else—that they’ve become, as L.A. Times architecture critic Christopher Hawthorne puts it, “one-size-fits-all bunkers.”



But a new report issued this week entitled “Design for Diplomacy” from the American Institute of Architects suggests that, while security must be at the forefront of embassy design:



U.S. embassies can, and must, reflect American values and ideals. U.S. embassies should symbolize America’s vitality, enduring strength, decency, and innovation. These essential qualities contribute to the conduct of American diplomacy, encourage international commerce, and enhance cultural exchange.



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Travel Song of the Day: ‘California Stars’ by Wilco



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Coming Soon: Neverland China

If you can’t make it to Neverland Ranch to pay your respects to Michael Jackson, don’t fret: There’s a Chinese replica in the works near Shanghai. (Via @KelseyTimmerman)



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Travel Books and Graphic Novels: ‘A Natural Fit’

Whether in Burma, Naples or beyond, we’re fans of travel stories told in pictures—so it’s nice to see the travel book-as-graphic novel genre getting some love in this round-up from Perceptive Travel. Marie Javins writes: “Travel stories are charged with creating an atmosphere, their text inspiring imaginary visuals of foreign lands in the minds of the reader. Graphic novels are a natural fit.” Agreed.



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French Tourists: The Worst in the World?

Oui, according to a survey of hotel owners. Why? The French come across “as bad at foreign languages, tight-fisted and arrogant.”



The best tourists, according to the survey? The Japanese.



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12 Great Summer Vacation Movies

Eva Holland and Eli Ellison missed out on some prime tanning time to dig up the finest summer travel flicks


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Site to Watch: Atlas Obscura

The site’s not-so-modest goal: To catalog “all of the singular, eccentric, bizarre, fantastical, and strange out-of-the-way places that get left out of traditional travel guidebooks and are ignored by the average tourist.”



Joshua Foer and Dylan Thuras created the site, and they’ll be looking to travelers to help with the cataloging. (Via @jodikantor)



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A Broken Record

I know I sound like a broken record, but I love the ferry!!! I had to go over to Bainbridge today to pick up Jack from his week at scout camp. I was all alone. No kids to question me about everything under the sun or to worry about. I must say I am jealous that Skip gets to do this twice a day five days a week. The sun was shining, temp around 75, smell of the ocean, blue skies and blue water.
 I told him this today and I don't think he gets it. His response was about how much time it would take and the planning it would take, but Honey think of the sweet pay off...beautiful views for thirty minutes, time to breath and just enjoy Gods creations.....and catch up on e-mail if you must, take a quick cat nap to be ready for your wonderful family when you get home, read a good book...the possibilities are endless....scripture reading....
I was able to read in peace. I finished two WHOLE chapters....wow...I didn't have to reread anything. Amazing what a little quiet does for you.

_________________________________________________________

Here is my man at large. He seems happy. A little smelly, a little dirty and funny, this is what I left him wearing 7 days ago.....hmmmm.... After some probing questions, he has been wearing this all week? He has been sleeping in this ensemble all week? WHAT?....... The pants will be able to walk to the washing machine of their own accord. I am not going to touch them..ewwww!

More later.......


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Concurso de gritos de colegialas

Según este programa si quieres realmente asustar a un sospechoso que te ataca por la calle necesitas emitir un grito de más de 90 decibelios. En este vídeo se puede ver parte de un concurso de colegialas de un instituto que compiten para ver quien emite el mejor grito. Gana el grito más efectivo a [...]

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A Short History of Landmarks Exploding on Film

Photo by laverrue via Flickr (Creative Commons)


In honor of the summer blockbuster, Slate looks back, via video slideshow, at Hollywood’s penchant for blowing up major landmarks over the years. There’s some social context included—the impact of 9/11 on the disaster movie, for instance—in between the video clips, and writer Keith Phipps also teases out some rules for the genre. My favorite? “When a city is in jeopardy, its most famous landmarks fall prey first. Aliens and natural disasters always target the Golden Gate Bridge, never the Bay Bridge.”



Always the bridesmaid, huh, Bay Bridge? As a Canadian, I can relate. We inevitably get overlooked when the aliens invade.



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New Border Wall Going Up Between Mexico, U.S.A.

This time, according to The Onion, it’s the Mexican government that’s building a wall, and the move is going ahead despite fears for the tiny guitar, novelty sombrero and three-foot tall plastic margarita cup industries. Get all the details in this (sub-titled) video report:



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Study: Long-Distance Travel Triples the Risk of Deep Vein Thrombosis

The dangers have long been suspected. Now, apparently for the first time, there’s research to support the theory. A report in the Annals of Internal Medicine says anyone flying for longer than four hours has increased risk of blood clotting known as deep vein thrombosis. The risk is three times greater than it is for someone not traveling. USA Today and Reuters explain the science. 



Experts suggest long-distance travelers lessen the risk by, among other things, drinking water and getting up and walking around the plane every now and then, lest they suffer like Dick Cheney.



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America on Film: ‘50 Movies for 50 States’

Here’s one more leftover tidbit from the just-past holiday weekend: the film fanatics over at Rotten Tomatoes have put together a list of 50 movies for 50 states, in which each selection “features something special about the geography, history, or people of a particular state.”



Some picks are obvious (“Rocky” for Pennsylvania, “Oklahoma!” for Oklahoma) while others link movies and places that I never realized were connected (who knew “Fight Club” was set in Delaware?), but all contribute to a compelling whole. If you’re skeptical about a pick, chances are the description will convince you. Here’s a sample, justifying “Napoleon Dynamite” as the Idaho pick:



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The Rise of Silk Road Tourism in Uzbekistan

Photo by Gusjer via Flickr (Creative Commons)


In the Wall Street Journal, Patrick Barta takes a look at the emerging tourism scene in Uzbekistan’s three great Silk Road cities, Samarkand, Bukhara and Shiva, and what the long-ignored country is doing to adapt to the new visitors. The accompanying slideshow has me sold—Uzbekistan is officially on my list.



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San Fermin Festival: Flickr Meets Hemingway

Hemingway chose Pamplona as the backdrop for his first great novel, "The Sun Also Rises." In honor of the fiesta, we've put together 12 photos that capture the spirit of San Fermin, accompanied by some classic lines from the novel it inspired.


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Have We Entered the Era of the ‘Roadcast’?

Photo by Nicholas_T, via Flickr (Creative Commons)


Mark Vanhoenacker argues that we have. What’s a roadcast? It’s “a podcast that has particular qualities of randomness and reflection; they’re fascinating and thought-provoking but not news-focused or educational,” he writes in the Christian Science Monitor. “Like the tape deck itself, or the cup holder, roadcasts manage to revolutionize the road trip while also being right in tune with its sensibilities.”



Do these types of podcasts “revolutionize the road trip”? Not quite. Are they intriguing? Sure.



Some of Vanhoenacker’s examples of good roadcasts: Philosophy Bites, In Our Time and the New Yorker’s fiction podcast.



Vanhoenacker goes on to say he believes that roadcasts fill in “some gaps in the road trip experience.” He writes:



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Photo We Love: Black and Blue in Istanbul

REUTERS/Finbarr O’Reilly


Muslim women look out on the Golden Horn in Istanbul.



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Welcome to Naples. Meet Your Ex-Con Tour Guide.

As Elisabetta Provoledo writes, “It seemed like a great idea at the time: hire ex-convicts to escort tourists through seedy Neapolitan streets. Who better to explain to the uninitiated the potential dangers lying in wait?” Alas, as she reports in the New York Times, the “Escodentro Project” has hit a rough patch.



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On the Perils of Travel Writing

David Farley broke into the New York Times with a story about an eccentric Italian village. When he returned, he feared being chased out by torch-bearing villagers.


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Ferry Rides!

Ferry rides are fun! Come visit soon!


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Loving the Fourth!


Being new to the area we were wondering what we should do for the Fourth of July. The kids were dying to see fireworks shot off from the Space Needle. While this idea appealed to me on some levels, the traffic getting home did not appeal at all. We had to be up to catch the ferry for church the next morning and I didn't relish putting kids to bed around mid-night only to wake them up at 7:00 and fight tooth and nail to get them ready, not to mention a whole day of whining. {They needed their sleep. I needed their sleep!}

We decided we would go over on the Ferry Saturday. We could stay in a hotel, swim, take in the Bainbridge parade, catch the fireworks show in Eagle Harbor..... and be able to get to church the next morning by just driving down the street...sweet! When I called Friday night to get a room the lady at the front desk was so nice and when she found out we were moving there she gave me the Island discount. "These people are great." I thought.

The kids were delighted. We packed our bags, some food and the toaster. { A Toaster is a must if you want to have homemade bread toast with raspberry honey for a snack and we did.} We headed for the Ferry and arrived on the Island just in time for the Bainbridge Parade.

I was really excited about the parade.{weird I know} parades, graduations, anything remotely patriotic pulls at my heart strings and I tear up. I was watching this Parade {which we missed my favorite part, the marching band} and I was thinking " This is my new home. These are my new people. This is my new life." The people around me don't know it, but I did and I was taking it all in. I felt this lump in my throat and my eyes welled up. This is home....in about ten days! I couldn't wait.


The Parade was a tell all of what to expect when we move here. You had the standard issue dance teams, ball teams, fire engines, cheer squads, horse riders, but you also had the Belly Dancing Club {interesting} the Crew Team, the Skipper Club {minus the Yachts}, the Protect our Land people {handing out saplings.... which what kid doesn't want and dream of in a parade? Defiantly better than the so out of style throwing of the candy, really people. You should see the look in the eye of a kid waiting on the outskirts, almost in the street, dying for candy to be thrown his way, only to be handed a plant}... the Library People {I am a fan}, the Jump Rope Club{evidently a big deal. they went to nationals this year....who knew?}, the People for Diversity Club {handing out the ever popular 70 strength sunscreen, thank you very much it went immediately on to Claire's cheeks and my toes..wonderful!}, The Save the Teachers Group, local PTO { which did raise enough money in one month to save nine teachers from being fired because of budget cuts..amazing!} I could go on and on, because it did go on and on, each with their own agenda. That was okay with me, because these people care about community and I love that.


We went back to the hotel for a swim. Skip did not have his suit.{ the non english speaking packers packed it with a pile of other thing that I told them not to pack, but that is a whole other story} So I swam in the cold water and dipped into the hot sauna with the kids.


After searching high and low we found a local restaurant that was open. Apparently everything closes down in this town on holidays and after 6:00 p.m....good to know. We sat outside on the main street watching people pass by. It was a beautiful evening in the 70's with a slight breeze coming off the sound. The air smelled a bit briny, but not too much..it was just right. The dinner was over priced and the service wasn't stelar, but my pizza of apples, blueberries, roasted chicken, candied pecans, over field greens, topped with goat cheese was Awesome! Everyone else had pepperoni....they missed out. {Sam did have a burger and fries.}

Sam, Blake, Caire and I wandered down to the docks at the Marina. We passed by a play ground and played on the swings and slides for a while. We were in no hurry, just taking our time. Skip and Jack walked back to the hotel to get the car to park it closer to where we would be after dark and buy some last minute snacks for his Scout camp that would begin the following Monday.


We got down to the docks and joined a group of kids scraping mussels off the bottom of the dock, smashing them, and feeding them to the crabs in the shallows of the water. The boys loved this.


I found a seat on the grass, staked out some room, and everyone joined me to wait for the festivities. It was the first time since 1973 that the Island has put on a fireworks show. The kids loved it, except Claire she dug her head into my chest and cried herself to sleep. After the show was over we trekked it up to the car and Sam waited till he could find the darkest corner and emptied out a half a box of poppers on to the ground. Smiles all around. We drove contently back to the hotel.



Orignal From: Loving the Fourth!

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