Faroe Island-Hopping
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Sitting smack-dab in the center of the North Atlantic Gulf Stream, the Faroe Islands are a bundle of green-archipelago paradis
Put a Cork in It!
Playing poker makes you wonder where you’ve landed: the throne of some alien world or the sweaty tiles of your smoky basement. This is the high and the low of gambling. The draw of poker, like drawing three cards in hope of catching a book-end
Try the European Angler Experience
In the annals of spirited holidays for the angler, what could be a more memorable trip than fly fishing on one of Europe's gazillion rivers, lakes and ponds? Forget the steamy streets of touristy Rome, Paris, Madrid or Berlin this trip. Head for
Amalfi's Off Season
Summer is busy in Europe, no matter what the economy says. Travel is sort of like beer: you drink it when you're up because you can ... and you gulp it when you're down to drown your sorrows. When economies sour, travel opportunity opens up: chea
Long Gone Are the "Europe on $1 a Day" Days ...
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But Euro-cities are still accessible. First thing is, you have to put costs into perspective: people earn a helluva lot more money these days th
First Female Beefeater at Tower of London
For 1000 years Beefeaters have kept watch at the Tower of London. Now the Tower's Body of Yeoman Warders has welcomed its first female, Moira Cameron. After rigorous training, including duties attached with the famed Ceremony of the Keys conducted e
Best Travel Tip: Pack it once, pack it right
Packing light, packing right, is essential to getting around Europe (or any destination) quickly with less hassle and ... ahem! ... baggage. These tips come to you care of Briggs & Riley travel products:
Hauppauge, N.Y. – Ask any seasoned tr
London to Paris just got faster! Thanks, Eurostar . . .
As if the Eurostar wasn't already attractive enough, the UK's first high-speed line will improve the journey time from London to Paris.
From November 14th, 2007, the journey from London to Paris will take 20 minutes less than before, making the t
For 1000 years Beefeaters have kept watch at the Tower of London. Now the Tower’s Body of Yeoman Warders has welcomed its first female, Moira Cameron. After rigorous training, including duties attached with the famed Ceremony of the Keys conducted each night of the year, Yeoman Warder Cameron has donned her blue and red dress uniform.
“Working here at the Tower of London is absolutely amazing, I feel so privileged to be here and it’s great to be in the uniform at last. I’m still getting used to wearing it but it certainly makes you stand very straight!”
Chief Yeoman Warder John Keohane said: “Yeoman Warder Cameron has been with us for a few weeks now and I can see she already has built up a great rapport with our visitors. Now that she is in exactly the same uniform doing exactly the same duties as her male colleagues, I think she will prove a great asset to the Tower and a valuable member of my team.”
Yeoman Warders are all former military people who have proven service to the crown and boast exemplary records for all duties. Over the following year, Yeoman Warder Cameron will learn by heart the complete history of the Tower so that she can lead one of the hour-long visitor tours that cover the myths, legends and stories of key events in English and Tower history.
Yeoman Warder tours are highlights of any Tower of London visit. The Beefeaters are all gifted storytellers who play to the crowd. The animated behavior entices and sometimes scared the hell out of children. Along the way, they describe grisly executions, house arrests and torture techniques, marriages and wars. On any cold, blustery day in London, a Yeoman Warder tour of the Tower takes the chill off your back.
For a peek at what you’ll experience, visit The Tower of London web site.
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Packing light, packing right, is essential to getting around Europe (or any destination) quickly with less hassle and … ahem! … baggage. These tips come to you care of Briggs & Riley travel products:
Hauppauge, N.Y. – Ask any seasoned travel pro and they’ll tell you: a successful trip starts at home with smart packing! Briggs & Riley Travelware, a leader in innovative, high-quality luggage, polled a host of well-traveled professionals from journalists to business owners to get their top tips and tricks for successful packing.
Jim Lahren, Vice President of Marketing at Briggs & Riley states, “We polled hundreds of top travelers to get their best packing secrets and tips to help consumers save time and headaches in advance of their trip. Some of the key themes that came up repeatedly: pack ahead so you don’t rush, only take essentials, keep important items handy for easy access, and many suggested keeping key garments in the plastic bags they come in from the cleaners to eliminate wrinkles. There were also many unique and funny tips as well.”
Here are the top suggestions for anyone who wants to pack like a pro!
- “Do what I call packing ahead: start a few days before your trip and as you think of things you need/want to bring either write them down or lay them out. This way you make sure you don’t forget anything in the last minute rush.”
- “Never let your husband pack. No good can come from it.”
- “At least a week in advance of the trip, I start reminding my wife she takes too much clothing and packs way too much stuff. I do this with the hope that by the time I’m ready to start squeezing everything in, it won’t be too strenuous an undertaking.”
- “Lay everything out that you intend to take, and then remove one-third of it. This will eliminate ‘over-packing.’” Another respondent suggested, “To limit what I carry, I go through my bag a second time after packing to eliminate things that I might not need. Simple toiletries like tooth paste, mouthwash, and even white t-shirts can be purchased in small quantities after arrival at my destination.”
- “I save clothes that I’m about to throw out and then I pack them when I take a trip. I wear them on the trip and then throw them out before I pack to come home. That means I now have room to pack the new stuff and any souvenirs I bought. Beware though: two people emailed me that they threw their old clothes away at very fancy, high-end hotels. And the hotels had them dry cleaned and Fed Ex’d back to them, thinking they had thrown them out by mistake!”
- “Business travelers who frequent the same hotels can pack a bag or plastic storage box and leave it at the hotel until their next visit. In the interim, the hotel will launder, press and fold clothes as necessary, and hold them for you until your return. Slip the concierge $20 every now and then and you’ll be treated like royalty each time you visit and your property will be well protected for you.”
- “I had a favorite room in a nice hotel in Chicago. The room had a drop ceiling. Because of this I was able to lift a tile and hide things in the room above the ceiling. Every time I went there I stayed in the same room by booking far enough in advance to get it. I kept razor blades, shaving cream, deodorant and several other things in a small Tupperware container above the ceiling and never lost any of it. I don’t go there very often anymore, but I suspect that my things are still there!”
- “I’m on the road constantly and I try to make the road feel as much like home as possible. I try to get hotels to give me the same room every time, of course, but I also carry a couple of pictures of my wife and a couple of pictures of my daughter in my luggage. I also bring a small iPod player so I can listen to my music. My desk – here in Minneapolis today – looks just like my desk at home or my desk in New York or my desk in San Francisco.”
- “First rule: NEVER CHECK BAGS. One roll-on bag that fits in the overhead should do it for any trip – even up to a month. You can do it if you follow my second tip:”
- “Pack EVERYTHING BLACK: black shoes, black undies, black clothes, black makeup bag. It never goes out of style, always looks clean, always makes you look slimmer, it’s good for every season, and it’s easy to accessorize with color. With black, you can travel for two weeks or two months with one little carry-on bag. You’ll look chic in NY or London or Kuala Lampur.”
- “It’s not the clothes, it’s the shoes that matter! Pack with similar colors or styles in your clothes so that you can minimize the number of shoes required for the trip as they take up more space than clothes.”
And most important:
- “I always pack my underwear first so that I don’t forget it.”
Source: Lois Whitney & Christine Carney, HWHPR /New Media
Published: October, 2007
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