Tag Archives: Los Angeles

The IBIT TRAVEL DIGEST 6.2.13

The good, the bad and the bizarre in the world of travel

© Mtoumbev | Dreamstime.com

© Mtoumbev | Dreamstime.com

FLY THE CROWDED SKIES
You’re fastening your seat belt when the flight attendant announces, “Ladies and gentlemen, this is a full flight.” If you think you’re hearing those words more often nowadays when you fly, it’s not your imagination.

According to the US Department of Transportation, nearly 737 million of us flew on regularly scheduled airline flights last year, and airliners flew at or close to capacity last year more than they have at any time since 1945.

It’s true that, for all the griping we do about its cost and discomfort, lots of us are flying these days. But it’s also true that that airlines have spent the last couple of years taking planes out of service.

They do that partly to retire older jets with less-efficient gas-guzzling engines, but also to make fewer seats available to the flying public. Fewer seats means greater demand — and less need to lower airfares.

And speaking of flying…

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THE DREAMLINERS ARE BACK
Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner, its battery troubles apparently behind it, is returning to the world skies.

Several airlines have already put the 787 back on their established routes, and Ethiopian Airlines is going a big step further, recently committing to opening service next month between Addis Ababa and Brazil’s two biggest cities, Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo.

Now, Thomson Air has become the first British airline to accept delivery of a Dreamliner. And the Chinese government has cleared the aircraft for use by airlines in China, giving Boeing a crack at a fast-growing Chinese airline market.

So it looks as if Boeing has its new ultra-light, hi-tech jet back on track — and probably not a moment too soon.

That’s because Airbus Industrie is on the verge of debuting its 787 competitor, the A350.

Both these jets are designed to fly farther on a single load of fuel. That means less money spent on gas for the airlines, and more hours spent in the air by you.

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JETBLUE STEPPING UP
Sticking with the air theme, the word from Travel Weekly is that JetBlue is planning to create some kind of premium air service offering on its transcontinental flights, as well as free basic wi-fi and in-flight streaming of Netflix movies.

JetBlue already is one of only two US-based airlines given a 4-star rating by the British airline review site Skytrax (the other being Virgin America), but felt it was being edged out by its 3-star American competitors on transcontinental flights.

So the airline is looking to step up its game on its long-haul flights. Given th airline’s strong reputation among travelers for good customer service, it’ll be interesting to see what the JetBlue folks come up with…and whether it will be worth the price.

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And now, here’s The Digest:

AIR
from the Washington Post
Contrary to popular opinion (mine included), the merger between US Airways and American Airlines is not quite yet a done deal — and there are those who don’t believe it should be.

from USA Today
Flying itself may still be a largely miserable experience, but the airlines are starting to put some effort (and money) into making you more comfortable on the ground.

from The Guardian (London)
Looking for the best exchange rates when buying/selling foreign currency? Don’t do it in the airport. Any airport.

LAND
from USA Today
When you rent a car, do you prepay the rental company’s fuel charge? Better yet, should you?

from USA Today
Vital information for summer travelers: Where to find the world’s best ice cream parlors. If you can’t get Berthillon in Paris, these may be good alternatives.

from USA Today
European travel guru Rick Steves talks about how to do Europe by train.

SEA
from USA Today
On Jan. 23, 2015, the Pacific Princess will push back from the dock in Los Angeles harbor. She will return May 15. In the 109 days in between, she literally will have sailed around the world.

FOOD & DRINK
from the NY Times
California already produces some of the world’s best wines. So it’s only fitting that it now is producing the cheese to match.

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AFRICA
from the Washington Post
Say hello to Burkina Faso, a West African country relatively few Americans have heard of.

from Tanzania Daily News (Tanzania)
Can the country generate some “bounce” in its tourism from President Barack Obama’s visit to Dar es Salaam?

from the Washington Post
A look at the joys and struggles of a multi-ethnic neighborhood in Cape Town, South Africa.

from IOL Travel (South Africa)
Pardon me, would you like some whale with your salad? Whale watching, that is. You can do that in Cape Town.

from CNNgo
Somalia…tourist hotspot? Apparently, yes.

AMERICAS
from USA Today
Several North American cities are turning their waterfronts into great places to visit. Here are some of the best.

from The Guardian (London)
If you’re fascinated by wildlife, you can hardly find a better place for viewing it than Brazil’s Pantanal said to be the world’s largest swamp. But in a land that literally is constantly shifting, getting there is NOT half the fun.

from the NY Times
How to kill a weekend in Jackson, MS.

from The Guardian (London)
Bar-hopping Austin TX-style.

ASIA/PACIFIC
from CNN Travel
In Tokyo’s famed Tsukiji Fish Market, you truly have to be an “early bird” to catch this sushi.

from CNN Travel
Forget “the ugly American” — now it’s the ugly Chinese. Obnoxious behavior by newly well-off Chinese tourists has the Beijing government issuing instructions to its citizens on how to act abroad.

EUROPE
from the NY Times
How to enjoy the outdoors in Berlin.

from The Guardian (Europe)
Want to live the real “dolce vita” this summer in Italy? Live it like a local. That means skip the hotel scene.

from The Guardian (London)
Looking to save your food budget this month in the very pricey United Kingdom? These two-for-one lunch deals at some English and Welsh pubs might help.

from CNN
Are you a Game of Thrones fan? You can visit the castles in Northern Ireland and Croatia where the HBO series is shot.

TRAINS: Twelve lovely hours

One of an occasional series.

The view from a Superliner Roomette on the Amtrak Coast Starlight.

The view from a Superliner Roomette on the Amtrak Coast Starlight.

All images by IBIT/G. Gross unless otherwise identified. All rights reserved.

A day’s ride down the California coast aboard the Amtrak Coast Starlight proves the perfect antidote to two weeks of stress.

I had flown up from San Diego to Oakland to deal with medical emergencies in my family. Now, after two weeks, it was time to go home. This time, however, I wouldn’t be flying. In more ways than one, I needed a break.

Which was why, at precisely 8:50 on a drizzly Oakland morning, I was aboard the Amtrak Coast Starlight as it gently edged away from Jack London Square Station, heading south to start the second of its two-day run from Seattle.

Behind me were two weeks of hospital visits, doctor conferences,bedside vigils, rehab centers, dialysis clinics.

Ahead were 12 hours aboard the Coast Starlight, a double-deck Superliner train.

I’d made this run before — first as a kid with my mother, more recently with IBIT guest columnist Walt Baranger from LA to Oakland.
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This time, instead of sitting in a Coach seat, I’d be holed up in one of Amtrak’s Superliner Roomettes, the smallest and cheapest of its sleeping compartments. Two comfortable facing seats which convert at night into the bottom bunk, with a fold-out table between them to share by day and space beneath to store small luggage.

Let me be clear here: traveling by Coach on an Amtrak train is infinitely better than flying in Coach. A normal-sized human can travel in actual comfort. No Sardine Class on the rails. What’s more, even at top speed, passenger trains are amazingly quiet, much more than airliners with their noisy jet engines.

Still, if you’ve never done it, a train trip in your own compartment — or “sleeper,” as it’s still often called — truly takes rail travel to that proverbial “next level.”

First, there’s the “chill factor.”

In every passenger car on a train, people are constantly in the aisle — going to and from the bathroom, the lounge car, the dining car, the luggage rack. In your own compartment, you have only to shut your door and draw the curtains to create your own quiet, climate-controlled little world. Put on your headphones to listen to your favorite tunes and watch the world glide past your window.

Come nightfall, while Coach passengers are reclining nicely in their seats to go to sleep, you are curling up in your own bunk bed.

Another important difference shows up in the dining car, where Amtrak has worked hard over the last several years to raise the quality of its food. The cost of your compartments covers all your meals aboard the train. As long as you don’t order wine or beer with your meals, you can eat your way across America without once taking out your wallet.

You also get first dibs on meal reservations.

On the Coast Starlight, however, Amtrak goes a major step further with the Pacific Parlour Car, reserved for sleeper passengers and found exclusively on the Coast Starlight.
Train wine tasting
The upper deck is split into two sections. One is a lounge area, with comfy swivel chairs, along with couches positioned for sightseeing and small tables for your laptop or tablet computer, with plenty electric outlets and — drum roll, please — free wi-fi. The rest of the upper deck is a small dining area plus stand-up bar.

Downstairs is laid out as a rolling movie theater, complete with a big screen.

As a compartment passenger, you have the option of taking your meals in the dining car or the Pacific Parlour Car. It’s a tradeoff. The dining car menu is more extensive. The parlour car is calmer and quieter.

The Pacific Parlour Car also offers an afternoon wine tasting just before dinner — again, included in the cost of your sleeper ticket.

Actually, I might have spent the whole trip in the parlour car were it not for the 1950s oldies being played non-stop via Sirius XM radio, which pretty much guaranteed that I would spend as much time as possible in my comfy little roomette.

SOUNDS ON RAILS
For a lot of travelers, music is a big part of the experience. The airlines provide their own wide-ranging audio selections on long international flights, but the railroads are “there” yet. Not to worry; computers and digital audio/video players make it possible for every travelers to literally bring a library of tunes along with them.

When I’m on a train, I’m usually looking to chill, and the iTunes playlist I create generally reflects that. This is a sample of the playlist I created for my Amtrak Coast Starlight trip:

“French Dream,” Marc Antoine, from the album ‘Classical Soul’
“Big Girls,” Kenny Barron Quintet, from ‘The Kenny Barron Quintet: Quickstep’
“Dansa Negra,” Yo-Yo Ma & Kathryn Stott, from the album ‘Obrigado Brazil’
“When Love Comes Around,” the Braxton Brothers, from the album ‘Steppin’ Out’
“Dreamin’,” the Heath Brothers, from the album ‘Expressions of Life/In Motion’
“Just Gets Better with Time,” The Whispers, from the same album
“Keep Looking,” Sade, from the album ‘Stronger than Pride’
“Last Train Home,” Pat Metheny, from the album ‘Still Life (Talking)’

What would you play on a long train trip

All this self-pampering set me back $206 — $88 for the base fare and $138 for the roomette — or almost $40 less it had cost me to fly to Oakland in Coach.

It gets better. Every passenger pays the basic Coach fare no matter what, but the extra charge for a sleeper compartment is per trip, not per person. Friends or couples who can share the cost of a compartment can score both serious creature comforts and major savings.

There are some minor drawbacks to a Superliner Roomette. When I say it’s just big enough for two people, I do mean just. If you’re larger than a typical fourth grader, you may find the bunk beds more than a little cramped. Also, you don’t get your own wash basin, toilet or shower in a roomette. Amtrak reserves en suite bathrooms for its larger and more expensive bedrooms. For you, those are downstairs.

And none of the seats in sleepers recline.

Funny thing, though. Once you’re rolling in your roomette, with your tunes in your ears, sipping on a tasty beverage and gazing out the window as you watch the scene across the horizon change every second, none of that seems to matter.
Salinas Valley
You can take pics along the way and share them with your Facebook and Twitter friends (which I did). You can break out the laptop and get some serious work done (which I did not). Or you can exhale and do nothing at all (of which I did a great deal).

By the time you’ve covered your first 50 miles, you can almost feel your blood pressure dialing itself down.

Somewhere between the bottled water, the Martinelli’s sparkling cider and the Sierra Nevada pale ale, between the Cabernet, the riesling and the pinot grigio, between the salad of cherry tomatoes and strawberries sprinkled with grated Parmesan and the chicken hiding under a liquid blanket of red wine and beer sauce, the condos of Jack London Square and the backlots and backyards of East Oakland and San Leandro turn into the salt ponds of Hayward and Fremont.

Further on, sprawling suburbia fades seamlessly into farm country, where the vegetables of future dining car salads and the grapes that will star in future wine tastings still thrive in the ground, arrayed in precise rows that fan past your window like long fingers when the train is at speed.

Hills still green from winter rains briefly give way to rolling terrain so bare and brown that it lacks only a few craters to qualify as a moonscape. You almost expect to see a green, lizardlike Gorn from Star Trek, chasing a gimpy William Shatner in slow-motion through the narrow draws.

Not long after you clear Paso Robles and its quaint little station, the sand dunes in the distance signal that the sea is near. And when the Pacific Ocean suddenly spreads out before you, with the sun shining its own enormous spotlight down through the clouds on the waters that seem to fill the lower half of your window, you know why some passengers spend hours staking out seats in the lounge cars of this train.

The LA night skyline greets you as you pull into Union Station, the end of the line for the Coast Starlight. Ahead for me are two more hours aboard a different Amtrak train, the Pacific Surfliner, before San Diego and home.

By then, however, I was already de-stressed.

The Coast Starlight had done its job, in twelve lovely hours.

the IBIT Travel Digest 1.27.13

The good, the bad and the bizarre in the world of travel

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DANCING THROUGH CUSTOMS
One of the fringe benefits of writing a travel blog is that you can make some great friends doing great work. One such friend of mine is Renee King, who publishes A View to a Thrill.

In her most recent installment, she gives us the 4-1-1 on of the US government’s trusted traveler programs that can seriously speed you through the Customs process upon your return to the United States. It’s called “Global Entry” and here’s what Renee had to say about it:

“Originally created to target frequent international travelers, the U.S. Global Entry program has been a virtual god-send for travelers who want a fast and secure way of skipping the lines altogether when re-entering the United States.”

To pick up all the details on “Global Entry,” check out Renee’s article here. And then bookmark it. You’ll want to keep this one handy.

Anyone who doesn’t “get” the importance of this program has never walked/stumbled/staggered off a jumbo jet with about 300 other exhausted souls after a transoceanic flight lasting 12 hours or longer, only to queue up in a Customs line…with the passengers of two, three or four other jumbo jets, all doing the same thing you are.

I have. I don’t recommend it.

If such a trip is a one-in-a-lifetime deal for you, then you may not need this program, especially when it costs $100. You’ll also have to make an appointment to be interviewed, electronically fingerprinted and see if you qualify for the program — and frankly, not everyone will.

But when you walk off that plane in a jet-lagged fog and breeze by all those folks suffering in line, you’ll swear it was the best time and money you ever spent on travel.

And if you make more than, say, three or four globe-girdling flights per year, you need this.

To apply for the Global Entry program, start here.

ALL ABOARD…THE NIGHT TRAIN
If it’s true that, in the words of the old Amtrak commercial, “there’s something about a train, then there’s something even more captivating about an overnight “sleeper” train.

Watching the sun set from the privacy of your own compartment, then bedding down for the night with a window full of stars and awaking the next morning in a different city — or a different country — is unforgettable.

It’s also practical. A sleeper train combines transportation and lodging in one. Instead of losing a day traveling between points, you arrive at your destination early the next morning.

It’s not cheap, but a private compartment often includes all your on-board meals, as well as other perks unavailable to Coach passengers, all of which makes the sleeper experience worth considering.

London’s Daily Telegraph newspaper has considered it at length, and compiled a slideshow of what they consider to be the top ten overnight sleeper train runs in Europe, including one between Europe (London) and Africa (Marrakech, Morocco).

Paris-Barcelona? Paris-Berlin? London-Penzance? Yeah, I could happily do any of those.

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AFRICAN FASHION MADE EASY
Not many folks on this side of the Atlantic are aware of it, but Africa has developed quite the fashion scene. We’re talking high-end threads for men and women from high-profile designers from the length and breadth of the Mother Continent.

Until a few years ago, your best shot at checking out this vibrant and growing fashion world was to fly to one or more of perhaps seven African cities:

  • Lagos, Nigeria
  • Nairobi, Kenya
  • Cape Town, South Africa
  • Johannesburg, South Africa
  • Dakar, Senegal
  • Luanda, Angola

And if you want to get a feel for the sources of inspiration that drive these African fashions, that still might be the best idea.

However, you do have alternatives. Lots of them, in fact.

New York City, Los Angeles and Dallas both annually hosts African Fashion Weeks. But if you feel like giving your fashion trip some international flavor — with a bit less expense and a lot less flight time — there’s the Black Fashion Week in Paris and the Africa Fashion Week London, now in its third year.

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And now, here’s The Digest:

AIR
from Business Insider via Yahoo
A Germany-based air safety monitoring group lists the world’s ten most dangerous airlines over the last 30 years. Read with some large grains of salt.

from eTurbo News
An Indonesian airline adopts new Sukhoi Superjet 100 airliners from Russia. The reason: They can operate from the country’s short runways.

from NBC News
Southwest Airlines is betting that you’ll be willing to pay $40 extra to board their planes early. Would you?

from eTurbo News
Ethiopian Airlines cuts flights from Addis Ababa to Europe.

LAND

from Travel Weekly
A heavy late-December snowfall has the skiing looking good at America’s ski resorts.

from The Telegraph (London UK)
What do you get when you take an Amtrak train between Toronto and New York? A 12-hour rail cruise through US history and some of North America’s most gorgeous scenery.

from Forbes via Yahoo
Can you measure a country’s happiness? The Legatum Institute of London says it can, and it’s produced a list of the world’s ten happiest nations. And no, the United States is nowhere in the top ten.

from Time
Has snowboarding lost its mojo?

SEA
from Cruise Industry News
More evidence of the cruise industry’s growing tilt toward Asia: Princess Cruises to homeport a second cruise ship, the Diamond Princess, in Japan.

from Cruise Critic
For those of you dying to escape the frigid winter, there are six cruise ships sailing in warm waters that nearly always have cabins offered at a discount.

from Cruise Industry News
The upscale cruise line Silversea plans to offer shorter (and thus cheaper) cruises in Northern Europe and the Mediterranean.

from Cruise Industry News
As cruises go, this one’s the ultimate icebreaker. Hapag-Lloyd Cruises is planning an August cruise of the Northwest Passage fron Greenland to Alaska on one of its expedition ships, the Hanseatic. You don’t often see the words “expedition” and “5-star” in the same sentence.

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AFRICA
from Reuters
You might want to hold off on that Cairo vacation a little longer. Things are getting hectic — and deadly — again in Egypt.

from al Jazeera
Museum in Mali trying to protect some of the country’s historic artifacts from the threat of destruction by radical Muslim insurgents.

from eTurbo News
British Airways pulls out of Tanzania, and Emirates is the first airline to step into the void.

from The Telegraph (London UK)
Tourism officials in Egypt report that foreign visits are up, but not as much as expected.

from eTurbo News
Ethiopia turning to China, India and Russia as potential new tourism markets.

AMERICAS
from the Huffington Post
George Hobica says Albuquerque NM has been overshadowed by Santa Fe, but it deserves a closer look. Especially if you’re a fan of beer, road trips and under-the-radar cool.

from Travel Weekly
Want a shot at some warm winter weather and a whiff of that new hotel smell? Start saving your coins and circle Dec. 2014 on your calendar. That’s the the 1,000-room $1 billion Baha Mar casino resort is set to open its doors.

from the Chicago Tribune
If you’re a baseball junkie, a visit to Chicago’s historic Wrigley Field is something close to a religious pilgrimage. Now, the Sheraton hotel chain is planning to put up a boutique hotel directly across the street from the old ballpark. Think they’ll pt bleachers on the roof?

from Reuters via NBCNews
More flights and a weaker dollar have combined to create record-setting tourism in Hawaii.

ASIA/PACIFIC
from BootsnAll
Southeast Asia is a great destination for rail travel.

from China Daily
The dispute between China and Japan over the Senkaku (or if you’re Chinese, Diaoyu) Islands is throwing cold water on tourism between the two countries.

from SFGate.com
Walking in the path of samurai. Scenic medieval walkways in Japan.

from The Guardian (London UK)
What would you see on a 40-mile walk across a city of 30 million souls? Marcel Theroux gives us his answers from his trek across Tokyo, the first of a series of walks across the largest cities on Earth.

EUROPE
from ABC News via Yahoo
Welcome to County Kerry in southwest Ireland, where drunk driving is legal. And no, that’s not a typo.

from eTurbo News
Ukraine’s largest airline, AeroSvit, goes belly up, stranding hundreds of passengers in the process.

from The Guardian (London UK)
It wasn’t that long ago that the term “luxury hostel” might have been the ultimate oxymoron in travel especially in Europe. It’s fair to say that things have changed. A lot. SLIDESHOW

AIRFARE ALERT: Hong Kong at a premium

 © Maurie Hill | Dreamstime.com

© Maurie Hill | Dreamstime.com

Cathay Pacific is putting their Premium Economy section up for sale for flights to Hong Kong. If you’ve never been to Asia, it’s your chance to experience upgraded service from one of the world’s few 5-star airlines.

For the next five days, Cathay Pacific has the mother of all airfare sales going to Hong Kong. Premium Economy seats starting at $1,629 round-trip from four US gateways — New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco.

(A BIG shout-out to IBIT’s own Aviation Queen, Benet Wilson, for pulling my coat to this deal.)

Two things make this a serious bargain. The first is the fare itself. For not a lot over a standard Coach fare, you get a better seat in a separate cabin with lots of amenities. About the only things you don’t get are the lay-flat seats you now find in Business Class.

All very important when you’re going to be on an airplane for 15 hours.

The other thing that makes this a great deal is the airline itself — and how often these days do you hear anyone say that?

Cathay Pacific is based in Hong Kong and they know it well. More than that, it’s one of the world’s most respected airlines when it comes to in-flight service and the way their cabin crews treat their passengers.

I’ve been raving about these guys since I first flew with them in 1976, and they haven’t lost their touch. Of the roughly 700 airlines in the world today, they are one of only six to win a 5-star rating from Skytrax.

You have two reasons not to dawdle on this deal. The first is that it’s only good for five days. The second is that there are only about 30 Premium Economy seats aboard Cathay Pacific’s Boeing 777ERs.

And no, those are not Boeing’s problematic Dreamliners, so no worries there.

If this deal appeals to you, head over to the Cathay Pacific Web site and get busy.

ALSO CHECK OUT
CATHAY PACIFIC: A good airline gets better
The world’s best airlines
FLY THE FLAGS, Part 1
FLY THE FLAGS, Part 2

AIRFARE ALERT: Southwest — $100 or less

This one-day fare sale will get you to a lot of Southwest’s destinations for a Benjamin. If the return fare is decent, it could be a bargain. IF…

It looks as if Southwest Airlines has come up with a fresh gimmick for a fare war, but don’t expect its competitors to match this one.

According to the folks at Smarter Travel, for today only, Southwest is putting 750 of its routes up for a most usual sale — nothing over $100.

And thanks to the federal government’s new rules for advertising airfares, that’s not $100 “plus taxes, surcharges and fees.” Nowadays, the airlines are required to quote you the entire fare up front.

So when Southwest says $100, that means $100, period.

There is still a catch, however. Three of them, in fact.

The first is that the sale applies to most, but not all of Southwest’s entire route system.

According to Southwest, it flies to 97 destinations, including the ones covered by AirTran, which Southwest now owns. According to ST, the sale applies to 77 cities. Whether the sale prices apply to AirTran as well as Southwest flights is not made clear.

If a sale doesn’t apply to a destination that interests you, it’s not of much use, and airlines tend to apply these sales on the routes on which they have the most trouble filling airplanes.

Still, according to ST, places like Los Angeles, Orlando, New Orleans and New York are included in this sale, so this could be worth something.

The second catch is summed up in two words: one-way.

Southwest will happily show you the total round-trip purchase price, but the bargain-basement fares apply in only one direction. If you actually want to come back, you’ll be paying more. It’s a standard airline sales gimmick.

The third, according to the ST crew: You can only use it for travel on four days in the month of December, including Christmas Day.

Even so, if you can get one of those rock-bottom fares to some place you actually want to go, and the return fare is decent enough, you can still come out ahead.

Again, this is a one-day deal, which means you have until 11:59 tonight. After that, this sale turns into a pumpkin.

Here’s the Southwest Web site. Good luck!

TRAINS: Bring back the North American Rail Pass

old train station

© Josefhanus | Dreamstime.com

A month-long pass for rail travel between the United States and Canada? It seemed like a great idea. So why did Amtrak decide to kill it?

Anyone who’s even explored the possibility of traveling in Europe has probably heard of the Eurailpass, which lets you travel between a certain number of European countries in a month, or allows you a certain number of train travel days per month.

It’s a great, economical way to see Europe, with the comfort and convenience of train travel as a bonus. And as an absolute fan of rail travel, I sure wish we had something like that here in North America.

So it came as a somewhat unpleasant surprise to learn that, until relatively recently, we did. It was a cooperative venture between our Amtrak and Via Rail of Canada. For one set fee of $423, you could travel for 30 days in both countries.

It was called the North American Rail Pass and it was a great idea. Until 2008, when Amtrak unilaterally discontinued it.

You can get a USA Rail Pass good for 15, 30 or 45 days of rail travel, or a California Rail Pass good for 21 days up and down the state, but those obviously are good only in the United States.

Likewise, you can get a Canrailpass from Via Rail good for coast-to-coast travel across Canada, but only Canada.

The idea of a rail pass that allows travel between the two neighboring North American giants, with all their beautiful scenery and great cities? Gone. Dead.

It wasn’t Via Rail’s idea to kill it off. Amtrak did that. I just don’t know why.

To make it easier for U.S. and Canadian rail passengers to travel between the two countries by train made so much sense for both sides.

Canadians could do a lovely little loop from Toronto south through Chicago and Memphis to New Orleans, then back north via Atlanta and Washington DC aboard the Amtrak Crescent before crossing back into Canada and hitting Quebec City and Montreal on the return.

Americans, meanwhile, could head north from Los Angeles aboard the Coast Starlight up to Vancouver, BC, where they could head east across the Rockies and the great plains, then past the Great Lakes to Toronto before heading south to New Orleans, only this time swinging west aboard the Sunset Limited back to LAX.

So far, I haven’t found anything that gives a clear explanation for why Amtrak decided to do away with this. What was Amtrak afraid of?

If it wants to emphasize USA Rail Passes, fine, but why not offer both? Rail travelers who wished to confine themselves to the US or Canada would simply buy one of the national rail passes in either of those countries, while travelers who wanted to ride the trains on both sides of the border would still be able to do so for a great price. Everybody wins.

Or they did…until four years ago.

Especially in this era when so many people find air travel to be such a miserable experience, wouldn’t it make sense for Amtrak to seize on every opportunity it can find to encourage travel by train, even if it meant sharing some of the proceeds with its northern neighbor?

If I ever find out what Amtrak’s rationale was behind killing the North American Rail Pass, I’ll be sure to share it with you. Meanwhile, we fans of rail travel can hope that sanity one day returns — and brings back the North American Rail Pass along with it.

ADDENDUM
I’ve reached out to Amtrak’s public affairs people to see if anyone will tell me why Amtrak chose to unilaterally do away with the North American Rail Pass. When I get an answer, IBIT will publish it.

Edited by P.A.Rice

SAN DIEGO: Get your passports here

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All images by Greg Gross and property of I’m Black and I Travel unless otherwise indicated.

The opening of a State Department passport office is one more sign that the city is emerging from the shadow of Los Angeles.

As a travel blogger bent on getting more black Americans to travel internationally, my focus is global. Every so often, though, one has to stop and check out what’s going on at home.

When it comes to international travel, San Diego has always played sidekick to Los Angeles.

If you wanted to fly non-stop anywhere other than Mexico or maybe Canada, you had to make your way north to LAX. If you wanted to take a cruise to Mexico, you had to board in Los Angeles/Long Beach harbor.

And if you needed a passport, LA again.

Things are changing, though. It started back in the early 1990s as San Diego raised its cruise profile to become both a destination and a port of embarkation.

It gathered pace when British Airways returned last year to Lindbergh Field (SAN) with non-stop flights to London Heathrow (LHR), and really accelerated when Japan Air Lines announced its new non-stop route from San Diego to Tokyo.

San Diego now has its own non-stop air links to both Europe and Asia. That’s big. Very big.

Somewhat overshadowed by all these all these high-profile developments was one with perhaps a lot less glitter, but no less important.

Next month, the San Diego Passport Agency, an office of the U.S. State Department, will mark its first anniversary in the city.

Located in the Columbia Center tower at 401 West A Street (the end of A Street closest to the old Santa Fe train station in downtown San Diego), the agency issues both the full blue passport book and the newer passport cards.

Rick Saltzman, director of the San Diego agency, was kind enough to give me a tour around his still-new domain last weekend as part of national Passport Day.

“It used to be that everything had to go to Los Angeles,” Saltzman said. “We’re trying to educate people that they don’t have to do that anymore.”

Coincidentally, it was the one day of the year when the agency opens on a Saturday and accepts walk-in passport applicants without an appointment. By lunchtime, they’d already seen about 500 people, with plenty more sitting in a packed upstairs waiting room and a long line downstairs in the lobby.

These folks also can expedite a passport for you.

In the old days, you had to express mail your documents to some private expediter on the other side of the country. Now, for an extra fee of $60, you can get your expedited passport right here in San Diego.

“It’s a service for people who need a passport that’s good for at least six months and theirs only has three months left, people who don’t look for their passport until the week before their trip and can’t find it,” Saltzman told me.

There are 28 such passport agencies around the United States, most of them in cities on or near one of our two land borders.

According to Saltzman, all this is an outgrowth of the Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative, which requires US and Canadian travelers to present a passport or other trusted form of identification when entering this country.

“That was a real sea change for us,” he said.

Saltzman also said that the travel.state.gov Web site also has lots of information for travelers, even a pilot program that will allow you to apply online for a passport card.

He had one other little tip: Look for non-State Department offices that accept walk-in passport applications. In San Diego, that would include the County Administration Building, the UC San Diego campus in La Jolla — and possibly your neighborhood post office.

All in all, the feds have taken much of the hassle out of getting a passport for travelers in the San Diego area. It’s another step toward transforming San Diego into a true international travel hub.

And yes, that’s a good thing.

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San Diego Passport Agency
Columbia Center
401 West A Street, 10th floor
San Diego, CA

HOURS: 8 a.m.- 4 p.m. Monday-Wednesday, Frday
9:30 a.m. – 4 p.m. Thursday
CLOSED WEEKENDS

APPOINTMENTS REQUIRED
To make appointments, call 877 487-2778 (automated)

FEES
Passport, first-time: $135 adults, $105 children (under 16)
Passport, renewal: $110 adults

Passport card, first-time: $55 adults, $40 children
Passport card, renewal: $30 adults

FORMS
Form DS-11 is for those applying for a passport or passport card for the first time.
Form DS-82 is for those who want to renew your passport or passport card.

You’ll also need two passport photos, which you can have taken at a drug store, private mail store or other commercial shop for a price. If you apply at your local post office, they may do it at no charge.

A Dreamliner of Africa

Boeing 787 Dreamliner of Ethiopian Airlines

Image courtesy of Boeing

One of Africa’s premier airlines is the first on the Mother Continent to acquire Boeing’s new 787 Dreamliner. The implications for African travel are enormous.

While US-based airlines wait to get their hands on the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, the world’s newest jumbo jet is already changing the game in Africa.

Ethiopian Airlines is the first African carrier to put Boeing’s new state-of-the-art airplane into regular service on the Mother Continent. The first arrived last December and Ethiopian has nine more on order.

This comes as Ethiopian becomes the 26th member of the Star Alliance, the world’s largest airline alliance.

Both of these developments carry huge implications for American travelers with an interest in Africa.

Let’s start with Boeing’s shiny new toy. The Dreamliner is likely to have a much greater impact on African tourism than the Airbus A380 super-jumbo jet, at least in the near term.

Simply put, the 787 is more Africa-ready than the A380. Here’s why.

With the A380, Airbus took the position that “bigger is better,” creating the world’s first fully double-decked airliner, capable of flying as many as 800 travelers at a time.

Big plane equals more seats and (in theory, at least) cheaper seats.

Boeing chose range and fuel economy over size, limiting the Dreamliner to fewer than 300 passengers and marrying its two highly fuel-efficient engines to an aircraft made mostly of lightweight composites instead of metal.

That gives the Dreamliner a maximum range of nearly 9,500 miles, which puts virtually all of Africa within easy reach from virtually all of North America.

As an example, the 6,200 miles between Los Angeles and Dakar, Senegal would be nothing for this airplane.

This means that airlines like Ethiopian, Nigeria’s Arik Air and Kenya Airways, both of which have 787s on order, will be able to reach European and American destinations in one hop, without pilots nervously watching their fuel gauges.

Until more Africans start traveling by air, the 787′s extended range serves the Mother Continent better than the A380′s size. And with most of Africa’s international airports lacking the facilities or the runways to comfortably handle the massive A380, the Dreamliner literally is a better fit.

Where Africa-bound Americans are concerned, Ethiopian’s presence in the Star Alliance is just as important, especially if you happen to be a member of United Air Lines’ or US Airways’ frequent-flyer mileage program.

Star Alliance is now the only airline alliance in the world with three African airlines as members — Ethiopian, South African Airways and Egyptair. You now can put your United or USAir miles toward an Africa flight on any one of them.

Kenya Airways is a member of the SkyTeam alliance, which means you can use your Delta frequent-flyer miles with them.

Meanwhile, Arik Air was accepted late last year as a member by the International Air Transport Association, which sets safety standards and represents most of the world’s airlines. That clears the way for Arik to join an alliance.

oneworld is now the only one of the Big Three alliances without an African partner. Arik Air membership in oneworld would enable travelers holding miles on American Airlines or British Airways to snag code-share flights to West Africa via Arik.

Don’t be surprised, then, if oneworld puts the moves on Arik Air to partner with them.

What’s more, international airlines can and do form code-sharing partnerships outside of the alliances. South African Airways, for instance, has already hooked up with JetBlue.

Expect to see more connections like this, and soon.

Without the 787′s ultra-long reach, we wouldn’t even be having this conversation. With this new long-range airliner coming into African hands, a whole world of new opportunity now opens up for them — and for the world’s travelers who are increasingly turning their eyes to Africa.

ALSO CHECK OUT:
Know your alliance, Part 1 Part 2
New wings over Africa, Part 1 Part 2
Dreamliner sighting
Delta does Africa

“Black folks don’t ski!” — You wanna BET?

If you’re one of those people who treat winter as a no-travel time because you think things like skiing and snowboarding aren’t for “us,” Brother, are you in for a shock.

It won’t be long before the fall foliage has fallen and winter is upon us. For much of the country north of, say, Las Vegas, that means ski season is fast approaching.

And to a lot of active black Americans this winter, that means…absolutely nothing.

The reason: a lingering bit of urban mythology, namely that black folks don’t ski. Or snowboard. Or ice skate.

This ranks right up there — or down there, depending on your outlook — with “Black folks don’t…:”

  • …swim
  • …scuba
  • …surf
  • …skydive
  • …ride bikes
  • …play hockey
  • …drive race cars
  • …travel
  • …fill in the blank: _________

You get the idea.

If you’re one of those, regardless of race, who believes all or any of that, prepare to be very surprised.

Start with the National Brotherhood of Skiers, which has been around since 1973. NBS began as a coalition of 11 black ski clubs around the country.

Kwame Knrumah Acheampong, Ghana's "Snow Leopard" | image property of Ghanaweb

Three of those were in California — Oakland, Los Angeles and Compton — none of which could be called snow country.

If you check the NBS Web site today, you’ll find a listing of 77 black ski clubs in 43 U.S. cities. Alas, a goodly number of those clubs are no longer active, but 45 of them still are. One club, the Washington DC-based Black Ski Inc., claims more than 1,000 members alone.

NBS puts on a good half-dozen regional ski trips a year, not to mention an annual Black Ski Summit that draws black skiers (and others) from all over the world.

And if you think that doesn’t draw some second looks, consider this from the NBS Web site:

“There is nothing more impressive than seeing the mountain filled with Black skiers and snowboarders getting off the chair lifts, filling the après bars, emptying the shops, and partying the nights away. Once you meet some of these adventure seekers, you learn that these are doctors, lawyers, entrepreneurs, engineers, dentists, and every other profession you can think of. The local residents and other visitors are often speechless, and often hilarious when they try to figure out the best way ask innocent questions.”

Surya Bonaly -- © Melissad10 | Dreamstime.com

Say hello to Kwame Nkrumah Acheampong, who represented Ghana in the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver — as a skier. A one-man ski-team, self-taught.

They call him “the Snow Leopard.”

What about ice skating, you ask? Vanessa James and Yannick Bonheur represented France in the ice skating pairs competition in those same Olympics.

And speaking of skating, the names Debi Thomas or Surya Bonaly may ring a few bells.

But you don’t have to be an Olympian, or a professional. You don’t even have to be all that good.

On my Christmas markets visit a few years ago to Strasbourg, capital of the Alsace region of eastern France, I saw a young brother doing his thing on the ice skating rink set up next to the city’s massive cathedral.

In the short time I watched him, he spent as much time falling as skating. But he was clearly having a blast.

Ice? Snow? Yeah, we do that.

Looks like some fun, doesn’t it?

Beats the hell out of just shoveling your drivewway for three months every year.

What’s more, taking up a winter sport gives you a whole new reason to visit other parts of the country, or the world, that you might not have otherwise.

so if the only thing that’s been holding you back is the fear pof not seeing a familiar-lookng face on the slopes or on the skating rink, stop. We’re already out there.

the SUNDAY TRAVEL DIGEST 9.18.11

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

Liverpool | ©Greg Gross

COOL SAVINGS IN the NOLA
When it comes to travel, summer is the best of times and the worst of times for New Orleans.

A typical summer weather forecast calls for 99 degrees with 99 percent humidity, which will make it feel more like 109 — and you can just about set your watch by the pounding afternoon rain.

That’s the worst.

It seems to work some special hardships on the restaurant business in the NOLA, as this msnbc story points out.

But those same conditions that send rivers of sweat pouring down your face can bring tears of joy to the dedicated bargain hunter, because summer is when New Orleans starts lowering prices at hotels and restos.

The msnbc story makes mention of this, and a quick check of your favorite travel sites (you do have more than one, of course…right?) will lead you to still more bargains.

Meanwhile, how do you handle all that heat and humidity? Stay in the shade. Stay by the water, be it Lake Pontchartrain or the Mississippi River. Dress in cool, light colors.

And always keep some change handy for a big snowball, an ice-cold local soft drink — or an even colder hard one, like a frozen daiquiri.

You will survive, and your travel budget will thrive.

And as long as you’re there, you might as well check one of these daytrips, courtesy of CheapoAir.

PLANES v. TRAINS
A travel story in USA Today compares air travel against train travel for comfort, the check-in process, luggage and food.

The author tries to make it sound like it’s a contest. Those of you who’ve traveled on both already know:

It isn’t. It just isn’t.

At this point, the only thing the airlines really have going for them is speed over long distance — and the fact that American trains are literally a half-century behind the rest of the developed world when it comes to speed.

For anything short of a transcontinental trip, trains are easier, more convenient, more comfortable — and you don’t feel as if you’ve been abused with fuel surcharges and other add-on fees.

Train stations are even easier to use, more fun and classier than most airports. Often, they’re more beautiful than airports, as this BBC Travel slideshow suggests.

And you can enjoy the best ones, like New York’s Grand Central Terminal or Washington DC’s Union Station, without even taking a trip.

Trains v. planes? It’s not even close.

PASS/NO-PASS
And speaking of trains, Europe’s advanced network of high-speed trains and frequent local trains make getting around the continent almost sinfully easy.

Sooner or later, however, one question always comes up when you’re planning a European rail vacation:

“Should I get the Eurailpass or just buy point-to-point tickets for each leg of the trip?”

I’ve struggled with this more than a few times myself, believe me. The closest I could come to a definitive answer is: It depends on your budget and your itinerary.

Which basically is that the folks at Lonely Planet tell you. Only in much more clarity and detail, and with all your options neatly broken down.



And now, here’s this week’s Digest:

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AIR
from CNN
TSA fires 28 employees in Hawaii for failing to screen luggage for explosives. Let’s see: They’ll feel up women and search babies in their diapers, but can’t be bothered checking the BAGS? Oh, okay…

from CheapoAir
Meanwhle, TSA creates the first express security line in Pittsburgh’s airport.

LAND
from Frommers
Great locales for cooking vacations or to attend cooking schools, SLIDESHOW For my own take on the whole cooking travel thing, click here.

from Good Transportation
Three brothers are walking the route of California’s proposed high-speed passenger rail, from Los Angeles to San Francisco.

from Gadling
Your hotel safe may not be all that safe.

from Mallory on Travel
Travel insurance, yes or no? Iain Mallory breaks it down.

from The Urbane Urbanite
How to wine and dine during a power outage. If you live in hurricane country, tornado country — or anywhere within range of an Arizona electrical worker doing maintenance — you need this info!

SEA
from USA Today
How to pick your perfect cruise.

from Travel+Leisure
Are you one of those folks who turns up their nose at the mention of traveling on a ferry? This list will show you why you shouldn’t. SLIDESHOW

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AFRICA
from The New Vision (Uganda) via allAfrica.com
Northern Uganda ready to replace armies of insurgents with armies of tourists.

from the Maghreb Arabe Presse (Morocco) via allAfrica.com
Morocco is emerging as a medical tourism destination for Europeans.

fromThe Independent (Rwanda) via allAfrica.com
Another sign of Rwanda’s emergence as a serious travel destination: Marriott is building a 254-room, $55 million hotel in the capital city of Kigali.

from the ​Daily Nation (Kenya) via allAfrica.com
Fore…Africa! Plans announced to build a five-star hotel in Kenya’s capital city, Mombasa. The motivation: to encourage the growth of golf tourism in the country.

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AMERICAS/CARIBBEAN
from the Matador Network
Nine — count ‘em — cool and safe places to visit in Mexico.

from the Wall Street Journal via Zagat
Attention, foodies: Peruvian cuisine looks like it just might be the NBT — the Next Big Thing. Next stop, Lima? Road trip!

from the New York Times
Suriname — the most captivating South American destination you never heard of.

from the New York Times
The NYT’s Michelle Higgins says the folks who treat Quito, the capital of Ecuador, as just a jumping off point for the Galapagos Islands are missing something worthwhile.

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ASIA/PACIFIC
from Canada’s Adventure Couple
Cool things to do in Malaysian Borneo.

from Lonely Planet
A tour of China — one tastebud at a time. SLIDESHOW

from Velvet Escape
World traveler Keith Jenkins examines the other Thailand, the one all the tourist hordes haven’t ruined yet. Large. Poor. Beautiful. Endearing. Welcome to Isaan.

from The Guardian
Broome, western Australia. Once, this was where you came to find pearls. Now, Broome is the pearl. The part of the story that deals with Australia’s aborigines, as usual, is anything but pretty.

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EUROPE
​from The Daily Mail (London UK)
London hotels have the worst reputation in Europe? There’s a British-based travel site that says yes. Jolly good…NOT!

from Bonjour Paris
The only thing I like more than farmers markets are farmers markets in Paris, and the 7th arrondissement has one of the best. Even if you don’t have access to a kitchen, it’s worth a visit.

from eTurbo News
Portugal is making a comeback as a European travel destination.

from eurotrips
A list of secret spots in Paris, compiled by a small group of former Parisians and mapped.