Tag Archives: Celebrity Silhouette

the SUNDAY TRAVEL DIGEST

A roundup of the good, the bad and the bizarre from the world’s best travel media

©Roman Snytsar | Dreamstime.com

Want to be among the first passengers to fly aboard Boeing’s new 787 Dreamliner? Then turn toward the Rising Sun.

Welcome to “I’m Black and I Travel,” your Number One online source for absolutely, positively NOTHING having to do with Casey Anthony. It is, however, the ideal site for travel information to help you get as far away as possible from even the mention of Casey Anthony.

Indeed, she has now supplanted Lord Voldemort for the title of “(S)he Who Must Not Be Named.”

Okay, let’s get on with it.

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A DREAM(LINER) OF ASIA
Are you one of those folks who likes to be first with things?

I’m talking about the types who will sit under a blanket overnight in front of an electronics shop to be the first to buy Apple’s newest digital toy or be the first at the dealership to buy that hot new car or be one of the inaugural passengers on a brand-new cruise ship?

It’s not that often that you get the chance to be among the first to fly on a new jet airliner, but your chance is coming soon.

A Boeing 787 Dreamliner, a ground-breaking new airliner designed to fly farther on a single fuel load than any other before it, just finished a week of operational test flights in Japan with All Nippon Airways after three years’ worth of development snags.

ANA, which was the first airline to commit to buying the 787 from Boeing, will become the first airline to fly the Dreamliner in commercial service, perhaps as early as next month.

(They’re not as well known to Americans as Japan Air Lines, but they have pretty much eclipsed JAL as Japan’s top airline. ANA has been around since the early 1950s as a regional Japanese carrier. They started flying internationally in the mid-1980s.)

Given the troubled birthing process for this jet, however, and the fact that it still must win approval from aviation regulators before accepting paying passengers, I wouldn’t expect to see Dreamliners criss-crossing the skies until sometime in early 2012.

Meanwhile, since ANA will be flying them before any other airline, you now have reason to start planning a trip to Japan.



And now, here’s this week’s Digest:

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AIR
from Christopher Elliott via SFGate.com
Typos can be costly, especially on airline tickets and particularly on international flights. If the name on the ticket doesn’t match the name on your passport exactly, your trip may end at the airport.

LAND
from the New York Times
If you’re willing to volunteer some time and (maybe) some sweat as a volunteer, it can snag you some serious travel discounts around the world. It puts a whole new spin on the term “working vacation.”

from the Los Angeles Times
A burst of investment from cash-rich Asia is creating a wave of new luxury hotels — in Paris.

SEA
from USA Today
X marks the dock. The Celebrity Silhouette, the last of a half-dozen new cruise ships hitting the waves this year, is due to arrive in her winter port in New York in a week and could be available for you to cruise this fall. Meanwhile, here’s a little sneak peek.

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AFRICA
from the Times of Zambia
Zambia re-brands itself with an eye toward more broader, more upscale and domestic tourism. The new theme: “Zambia — Let’s Explore.”

from Lonely Planet
Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo. Gorillas — and live volcanoes — in the mist.

from the Financial Times (London UK)
Since it opened in 1964, the Africa Centre in London’s Covent Garden served as library, resto, pub, meeting house and cultural touchstone for generations of Africans in the United Kingdom who battled apartheid in Southern Africa and ultimately won. Now there’s a new battle underway, to save this piece of modern African history in Britain from the wrecking ball.

from The Telegraph (London UK)
South Africa — and the rest of Africa — by train.

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AMERICAS/CARIBBEAN
from USA Today
Cruise ships are a great there to get to Alaska. But to really see Alaska, you need a train.

from USA Today
Alcatraz, the prison island in San Francisco Bay, makes for a chilling visit during the day, but it’s downright eerie at night.

from Rick Steves via SFGate.com
Amid the great cities, Old World history and ancient art and architecture, don’t forget that Europe also has huge amounts of natural beauty.

from USA Today
Miami turns its graffiti into a tourist attraction.

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ASIA/PACIFIC
from the Los Angeles Times
Five trends to watch in Asian travel.

from the Jakarta Globe
If you love cycling, ever find yourself in Indonesia, you have got to check out these folks. The Komunitas Ontel Batavia (Batavia Bicycle Community) regularly gets together at a traffic circle to show of their bikes. Antique bikes. Sometimes hundreds of them. And the riders dress in period costumes matching the age of their machines.

from the Los Angeles Times
And speaking of bikes, anyone who knows me will tell you that this is my dream ride — a sunrise bike cruise down Mount Haleakala in Hawaii. Twenty-seven miles, all downhill. But it’s not for daredevils.

from the Times of India
Discover Pulau Ubin, the last village in hyper-urbanized Singapore. If you can find it.

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EUROPE
from the Los Angeles Times
New museums sprout up in Amsterdam, Paris and Rome.

from As We Travel
Budget travel…in Switzerland? Is that even possible? These folks swear that it is.

from The Telegraph (London UK)
The twin riverside towns of Deauville and Trouville in France’s Normandy region give the country a second Riviera, not as universally known but no less lively.

from the San Francisco Chronicle

When it comes to Ireland, the charms of Cork just might steal you away from Dublin.

That new cruise ship smell

If you’ve ever wondered how it would feel to break in a brand-new cruise ship, the next year will present you with a golden opportunity. Ten golden opportunities, actually.

According to the cruise ship specialists at Vacations to Go, ten new ships are scheduled to hit the world’s oceans between now and July 2011.

They range from monstrous mega-ships with every on-board distraction imaginable to ultra-luxury vessels with suites for all but room for no more than 450 passengers (some of the newest mega-ships house that many folks on one deck).

Themes, regions and prices run the gamut. The Caribbean, the Americas, the Mediterranean. Asian cruises, transoceanic crossings. The Panama Canal.

Want to go old-school and relive the elegant era of the grand ocean liners? Want to get your spa life on, or your daily workout in? Want to climb rock walls and fly on zip lines with an ocean view? These ships have got you covered.

Want a ship that will entertain both you and your kids? Want to throw on a flowered shirt, throw back a few umbrella drinks and go buck-wild? Want to slip on that little black dress you’ve worked so hard to fit into and go deep-sea fishing, so to speak?

Yep, that, too.

What does all this mean to the cruise lines? It means capacity for more than 29,000 additional passengers — at a time when the global cruise fleet is already glutted with existing cabin space and recently added ships. One of the newest and most luxurious, Seabourn Sojourn, just made her first sailing a week ago.

And more are coming.

The cruise lines ordered all these new ships, a commitment in the billions of dollars, back when the economy was booming and people were really getting into cruising. But it takes a few years to build one of these — and a few years was all the time needed for the booming economy to go bust.

To have any hope of making their money back, much less a profit, the cruise lines desperately need to fill all these ships and keep them filled, which means they may be in the mood to offer some serious discounts.

At the same time, inaugural sailings are really popular with the cruise fanatics out there, recession or no recession. So if getting a whiff of that “new ship smell” is something that appeals to you, you need to start making plans.

Just remember our Number One rule here at IBIT:

DO YOUR HOMEWORK!

In this case, that means checking with the cruise line of your choice to see what’s on offer for the dates you want, then going to a travel agency, online or otherwise, that specializes in cruising to see if they’ve got a better deal on the same ship for the same days.

They nearly always do.

Vacations to Go in particular has discounted cruise ship prices that are pretty hard to beat. I know; I’ve used them before. But do compare their offerings with others. Just do an online search of the term “cruises.” You’ll find yourself with a virtual boatload of choices.

Anyway, here they are, along with their scheduled debut dates:

Norwegian Epic, Norwegian — June 24, 2010 — 4,200 passengers

Nieuw Amsterdam, Holland America — July 4, 2010 — 2,104 passengers

Queen Elizabeth, Cunard — October 12, 2010 — 2,092 passengers

Allure of the Seas, Royal Caribbean — December 1, 2010 — 5,400 passengers

Marina, Oceania — January 22, 2011 — 1,258 passengers

Disney Dream, Disney — January 26, 2011 — 4,000 passengers

Carnival Magic, Carnival — May 1, 2011 — 3,690 passengers

Seabourn Quest, Seabourn — June 20, 2011 — 450 passengers

Costa Favolosa, Costa — July 7, 2011 — 3,000 passengers

Celebrity Silhouette, Celebrity — July 23, 2011 — 2,850 passengers