Travel Tips & Adventures

Real People. Real Travel.

Posts Tagged ‘Adventure’

Traveling to Spooky Jerome AZ

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Traveling to Spooky Jerome, Arizona

A few miles and up the hillside – a very steep hillside/mountain – from Clarkdale and Cottonwood, Arizona is the historic town of Jerome, Arizona.  The fact that residents pride themselves on their probable insanity is based on the location of the former mental asylum and the fact that the town is perched precariously on hillsides.  Ironically, you drive through “Deception Gulch” to reach Jerome.

Sign in shop window - the mental state of Jerome

Sign in shop window - the mental state of Jerome

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Traveling to the Blazin’ M Ranch Dinner Theatre

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Near the picturesquely named Dead Horse Ranch State Park in Cottonwood, Arizona, the Blazin’ M Ranch – and Dinner Theatre- conveys a feeling of the Old West, both its hospitality and its rambunctious good times. (more…)

Ridin’ the rails – Traveling on the Verde Canyon Railroad

Friday, February 26th, 2010

We took a trip on the Verde Canyon Railroad.  Starting from a depot in the little town of Clarkdale, Arizona, the Verde Canyon Railroad offers a chance to relax and watch the scenery.  The four-hour adventure takes you through open areas with wildlife and scenic vistas to a little depot with only one family in the even tinier town of Perkinsville. (more…)

South of the Border – Travel to Mexico

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Grab your passport!  We’re heading south to Mexico and the – sometimes – sleepy village of San Felipe. (more…)

Down Below We Go – Travel in the Copper Queen Mine

Monday, February 15th, 2010

We thought for a long time about whether we wanted to go below to experience what it was like in the mines of Bisbee.  The Copper Queen Mine offers tours to recreate a miner’s experience during the over 60 years (1877-1943) the mines were open to find – guess what – copper. (more…)

Traveling in Time in Bisbee – Food and Fun

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

One of the best parts about Bisbee is how easy it is to visit other, earlier, times.

For instance, want to see an old 1950s style diner? (more…)

Traveling to Cacti – Saguaro National Park – East and West

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

If you’ve ever had the urge to go hug a cactus – well, that would probably be a painful experience. Some of them do look cute and cuddly – in a rugged, western, prickly kind of way.  If the chance to see cacti up close makes you long for the Old West, Uncle Sam offers the Saguaro National Park, just outside of Tucson, Arizona.

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Why Travel?

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Despite the fees, the security searches, the waits – the hassles – why do we travel?

Aside from traveling for business or because of family obligations, there are many reasons to travel.  However, with the threats, the delays, the escalating costs, it would sometimes appear that it would just be easier to stay at home.

So, again, why travel?

Pleasure is a major factor.  Honeymoons come to mind.  Vacations are another reason to travel. Go on vacation and see a new culture, country, environment.

Even the most fabled, luxurious vacation site has something new to learn, people to meet, experiences to know.  Travel can change your life.

Example: The current disaster in Haiti is changing many people’s perception of suffering and what other human beings endure.  As with Katrina and New Orleans, nothing is ever the same after you have experienced a tragedy of this magnitude.  New Orleans is personal to me since I’ve visited there twice – it’s more than just a spot on the map.

In more normal circumstances, travel can broaden you – and not just your hips from pigging out on food.  New places, faces and spaces can give you a profound respect and understanding of other ways of life.

Example: Many years ago, I Iived in Southern Germany.  Before I traveled there, I barely had time to get a passport, let alone learn the language, customs and culture.

My neighbor in Germany was a Swedish woman who was a very easy-going and well-educated person.  Another neighbor I had met, while in the local market, was a native German woman.

A custom of our host country was that people only called their close family members by their first names.  I was unaware of the custom, so when I met the German neighbor, I asked her first name. Startled at what she perceived as my rudeness, she told me.  I could tell that she was uncomfortable, but wasn’t sure why.  After all, Americans are very casual, know and use each other’s first names and rarely use last names except in extreme situations of deference.  Many people don’t even know someone’s last name.

At a luncheon that our Swedish neighbor hosted for the three of us, the German woman (whom I’ll call Frau Hoff), Ingrid Swenson and I wound up dealing with an extreme awkwardness.  I called myself by my first name, Ingrid introduced herself as “NIni,” and the German neighbor remained Mrs. Hoff.  What complicated things was that “Nini” was the oldest of the three of us; I was the youngest.  The luncheon had some of the most difficult silences – and those were not due to the language differences. (Both of them were fluent in English.)

Things never did warm up with my attempted friendship with the German neighbor and I did not find out the reason for many months.  My neighbor was offended by my, what she perceived as, unnatural intimacy by using her first name.

Moral of the story: Learn about where you’re going to have the best experience.  Know major phrases (won’t you want to know where the restroom is and be able to ask that and understand the answer?) I made a point of learning some key phrases and questions.  My biggest difficulty?  Understanding the answers of those who were kind enough to respond with directions I requested or other answers.  So, it didn’t help me that they answered me – for the life of me, I didn’t know what they were telling me – because they didn’t respond with the guidebook’s phrases in the exact words.

Other things I learned were the German advanced approach to conservation of energy.  They turned off lights they were not using and reused long before recycling became a common thing in the United States.  They packed their own groceries at the store.

When I returned to the United States, I was changed.  I expected to bag my own groceries and had become more aware of all of the waste.

Even if you don’t travel to a foreign country, you can learn new things about yourself and those around you.  On a snowy trip to my family’s new home in Minnesota, we stopped in a small city in Wisconsin named Eau Claire.  It happened to be Christmas Day and the only food we had with us was one loaf of raisin bread.  No stores appeared to be open.  My family of five was hungry, tired and needed to get off the road.  It had been a long day and it was already mid-evening.

We found a hotel open that provided food for us, even though the restaurant was officially closed for the evening. We had beds, a place to sleep and a friendly smile from the hotel staffer.

That one act of kindness has always predisposed me to have fond memories of Wisconsin.  I haven’t been in Wisconsin for years, but I think of the state as a place of kind people.

What did I learn?  That people can be caring, unselfish and help strangers; That a family can be together and manage, even in tough situations.

So, travel.  See the world, learn about others – and, even more, about yourself.

Next week:  Visit the Wild West, some majestic cacti and a B & B with a great view.

And, don’t forget to check out our shop where you can buy your own little piece of the scenic places we’ve highlighted.

Geocaching adventures

Monday, January 11th, 2010

One adventure that almost anyone can have anywhere in the world is “geocaching.” To the uninitiated, geocaching is using a Global Positioning System (GPS) to locate coordinates and find where someone has left a “treasure.” But, really, the fun is in the hunt. (more…)

Travel Up Above Everything – Powered Paragliding

Friday, December 11th, 2009

Since we feature favorites on Fridays, we’re returning to a favorite activity that is quite terrific in the Phoenix area: powered paragliding (PPG). (And also available elsewhere, but the weather is very favorable for this in Arizona.)

Getting up in the air is a great way to put life in perspective, clear your head and find an exhilaration that is hard to match.  (more…)