My Travel Corner

Georgia: Black wine, polyphonic sounds

Some travel experiences leave a warm glow long after the event, and an evening spent in Georgian wine country last fall is in that category. The setting was a cozy restaurant in a hill town named Sighnaghi, and the after-dark hours spent there involved dinner, a wine tasting and an

2021-02-18T11:59:17-05:00February 21st, 2016|My Travel Corner|

Hungary: Horsemanship on steroids

I have from time to time seen photos of Hungarian horsemen riding their horses while standing on the horse. Finally, a couple of years ago, I had the chance to see this. I was traveling with a few other travel writers. Our excursion from Budapest was typical of what any

2016-02-08T20:28:42-05:00February 8th, 2016|My Travel Corner|

Germany: Now about that Onion Festival

There are a lot of onions at a festival that celebrates the onion. So, I suppose it sounds a bit odd when I say I thought I would see even more at the Onion Festival in Weimar, Germany, in the fall of 2015. There were countless stands displaying and selling

2016-01-14T20:55:56-05:00January 14th, 2016|My Travel Corner|

Germany: The pleasantest surprise

This fall (2015), a friend and I aimed to spend a weekend in Weimar, in the former East Germany, when the Onion Festival was on there. But we could not get a hotel room in Weimar. Erfurt, a larger city about a 15-minute train ride from Weimar, was our fallback.

2015-11-28T01:18:26-05:00November 28th, 2015|My Travel Corner|

Connecticut: Where the ‘glass’ is marble

I read this week that Yale University is buying a huge collection of photos, mostly focused on Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War era. To be more precise, it is Yale’s Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library and Yale University Art Gallery that are acquiring the collection, which includes 57,000

2020-12-31T16:15:18-05:00April 2nd, 2015|My Travel Corner|

Traveling with teenagers in Italy, France

I’ve been clearing out old files, all to reduce clutter and, no doubt, to make room for more of the same. Rifling through old papers has jogged many a memory, recalling long-ago trips to destinations no longer safe to visit and, in particular, the trips I hosted to Europe for

2014-11-28T22:26:00-05:00November 28th, 2014|My Travel Corner|

Estonia: A squishy stroll

In early September of 2014, I walked on a bog in Estonia. I hasten to add that, given I was not adept at this, the walk was very short. Within minutes, I had gotten my boot buried past my ankle in the waterlogged moss that I was supposed to stay

2014-11-04T17:34:03-05:00November 4th, 2014|My Travel Corner|

New York: Touring the 9/11 Museum at Ground Zero

The 9/11 Museum, which opened in 2014, is underground, reaching down about 70 feet to bedrock. It extends under the two memorial reflecting pools that mark the footprints of the World Trade Center’s Twin Towers, destroyed by terrorists in 2001. The museum had to go below ground because it is

2014-10-08T22:01:59-04:00October 8th, 2014|My Travel Corner|

New York: Tickets for the 9/11 Museum

Last year, at my sister’s request, we booked a timed visit to the World Trade Center site in New York where I live, but this year (2014), with the 9//11 Museum now open, she wanted to return to see the new facility. So, we did just that. Timed entry tickets

2014-10-06T20:48:21-04:00October 6th, 2014|My Travel Corner|

Kenya and the world’s largest land mammal

I have a foster elephant, and her name is Kamok. Actually, quite a few people are foster “parents” to the same elephant. This youngster, born in September 2013 in Kenya, was orphaned at birth (natural causes, it says on her paperwork). David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust’s orphanage for elephants and rhinos,

2014-08-06T17:42:04-04:00August 6th, 2014|My Travel Corner|
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