Wish you were there?

Live and Learn at the Oxford Summer School

The Beatles – Shakespeare – Henry VIII – Cotswold Towns

A suggestion for your first and best new year’s resolution: learn something!  Consider a vacation this summer at England’s legendary Oxford University, surely the oldest (almost a thousand years,) most prestigious and eternally elegant in the English-speaking world.

The vast and varied menu of more than 60 summer courses, called “The Oxford Experience,” is an intellectual smorgasbord – - heavy and light, serious and amusing, indoors and out, across a variety of disciplines, and open to everyone. No requirements, no exams and no papers. All classes are taught by friendly tutors and usually limited to 12 students:

Charles Dickens • Paradise in an English Garden • From Rasputin to Putin • Cathedrals of Britain • The Victorian and Edwardian Home • The Gothic Novel • Alice’s Adventures in Oxford • The Operas of Verdi •  The Indian Empire • Political Philosophy • 20th-Century Poetry • Spies in British Fiction… and more.

Live and study at Christ Church, one of the most prestigious and beautiful of the 40 Oxford colleges.  Dine in the ultra-aristocratic Hall which attained celebrity stardom in the Harry Potter films. Sleep well in good dorms.

Most courses also offer excursions to stately homes, cathedrals, museums, tours of Christ Church and the city of Oxford. In the evenings: a pub crawl, a special lecture, wine and croquet in the Master’s Garden, the vetty British “Morris Dancers,” or Evensong in the college chapel which is the Oxford Cathedral. All enjoy the college gardens, riverside walks in Christ Church Meadow and boating on the Thames (known as the “Isis” in Oxford).

Summer students range in age from 25 to 85, though the average is about 60 and the mix is cosmopolitan: Europeans, Australians, New Zealanders, South Africans, Asians and lots of Americans and Canadians.  Some sign up for two or three weeks and many have been returning for 10-or-more years.

A one-week course costs approximately $1,885 (extras for excursions and rooms with private bath.)  Tuition, accommodations and all meals (a full English breakfast, buffet lunch and a served three-course dinner) are included.  Everyone dines together in the legendary Hall and on one night during the week each participant is invited to wine and dine at High Table. The last night, everyone dresses up and gathers for champagne in the flowering Cathedral Garden and a celebratory farewell dinner.

Their very popular summer session runs from June 30 to August 10, 2013, Sundays to Saturdays. Registration deadline is May 1, but early application is urged as courses fill quickly. Please use the following site for information and registration forms: www.conted.ox.ac.uk/oxfordexperience, or send a snail with mail to The Oxford Experience, OUDCE, 1 Wellington Square, Oxford, OX1 2JA, U.K.

Foodie Alert: Travel to Japan With All-Star Chef David Bouley

Chef David Bouley, James Beard Award-winner, is offering a rather scrumptious way for you to see Japan. It’s an exclusive adventure to see, taste, smell and feel the country focusing on its unique cuisine.  Award-winning  Asia Transpacific Journeys has just announced a one-shot itinerary March 4-13, 2013, in collaboration with Food & Wine Magazine.

With insights and access that only Chef Bouley and Food & Wine can offer, this tour promises first-class exposure to the best of Japan:  meet craftsmen, enjoy tea ceremonies, art, shopping, temples and shrines for nine days. On the journey, Bouley will introduce and explore this

“rich culture full of health, passion and detail,” and one, he feels, “will give greater quality-of-life choices when participants return home to the West.”

Explore TokyoNagano and Kyoto as culinary insiders in super-duper first class style all the way.

Highlights

… an early morning Tokyo outing to the Tsukiji Fish Market, Japan’s largest and busiest, featuring the famously frenzied really early morning Tuna Auction.  A private cooking class to be co-hosted by a Japanese chef and Chef Bouley at Ecole Tsuji Tokyo, Japan’s top culinary school. Bullet train to Matsumoto in Nagano, the Japanese Alps. Visit the exotic Daio Wasabi Nojo (herb) farm, largest and most beautiful in the country.  Hang out, sip a sake and bottle-it-yourself in a brewery. Then bullet back to Kyoto and to the world-renown 400-year old ultimate Japanese inn, the Tawaraya Ryokan, home of the original “who’s who” of celeb guest books, and near the Nishiki food market, 135 intensely colorful shops crowded into two snaking small blocks. Geisha farewell dinner in Kyoto.

The price of $10,995.00 per person, double basis is hefty but this is a trip not to be missed—even if you’ve already been.

Go Go Galapagos!

As the first to bring non-scientific explorers to the Galapagos in 1967, Linblad Expeditions, the venerable 50-year old adventure outfitter, has amassed over 40 years’ experience there and they are keenly focused on the preservation of this remote and unique site.  Together with National Geographic they have raised and donated more than $5.5 million for vitally important local protective projects in the Galapagos National Park Service and the Charles Darwin Foundation.

An isolated archipelago, the Galapagos are set in the Pacific Ocean more than 500 miles west of Ecuador.  Over the course of many millennia, great numbers of large birds, reptiles, insects, and plants drifted or flew in to create its fragile and unique flora and fauna.  Their remote, pristine beauty beckons to us as it did to the British geologist and naturalist, Charles Darwin, who first arrived on the HMS Beagle in 1831. He landed, camped there, left and returned, studied, researched and conceived his earth-shaking theory of evolution, On the Origin of Species, in 1859.

Boobies!

Today the Galapagos are a designated UNESCO Natural World Heritage Site. Who’s home?  A great variety of unusually tame animals in big numbers such as the amazingly curious and seemingly fear-free (so far) gigantic turtles, huge iguanas, penguins, dolphins, sharks, colossal manta ray, fat sea lions and the rock-star locals: blue and red footed boobies (seabirds).

Cruise with them in the 56-cabinEndeavor -like a small, comfortable, mobile hi-tech beach town. In addition to seeing and barely believing the animals so up- close, anEndeavor expedition offers long and short hikes, coastal explorations by kayaks or Zodiacs, swimming, snorkeling, or floating in a glass bottom boat for amazing undersea viewing.  The Endeavor also offers a good library, a wellness spa and massages on a floating platform. In addition to staff naturalists, National Geographic Certified Photo Instructors are always aboard and available to photo enthusiasts at every skill level, ready to help capture fantastic images and document bragging rights.

Rates begin at $4,990 pp, double. And Happy New Year: A GOOD DEAL alert – Linblad is offering free roundtrip airfare (Miami/Galapagos) on 5 select trips if you reserve by December 31, 2012.

 

The Sundance Film Festival: How To get into the Best Seats and the Top Parties

January 17-27, 2013

The minute tickets to Robert Redford’s Sundance Film Festival go on sale, the mad scramble for one of their “randomly assigned timeslots” begins. So if you’ve always had a yen to hang out in the snow with stars, the well-positioned events company, ”Goviva,“ is your best shot at getting into all the right screenings and parties. Go it alone and you may be trampled under snowboot stilettoes, but go with Goviva, and be part of the fun, not sobbing on the sidelines.

In the story tale setting framed by snow covered mountains, Park City, Utah, home to Sundance, is one of the most beautiful and fun (3 ski resorts) in the U.S.

The movies to be screened this year have not yet been revealed although, as we all know, Sundance has showcased  some of the most innovative and memorable films of our time such as sex, lies, and videotapeMaria Full of GraceThe CoveHedwig and the Angry InchAn Inconvenient TruthPrecious and on.

The 10 festival days are stuffed with such celebs as Rashida Jones, Kirsten Dunce, Taylor Swift, Chris Rock, Bruce Willis, Sean Penn, Spike Lee, Tracy Morgan, and Cuba Gooding Jr., all attended last year.

“Goviva” is all about access and personalization. They specialize in experience and events. In the midst of the paparazzi, the lounge lizards, the star wannabes, the fakirs, the skiers, they’ll create a hassle-free zone for you to see the films, screenings and attend the parties of your choice . The basic package of $2,140 pp double and $3,070 per single includes an ace hotel, Sundance credentials, shuttle service, big breakfasts, tips and taxes, AND your own invaluable Goviva guru-manager to personally assist before, during and after.

 

  • An Artist at the Table: Cocktails with film makers, reserved seating screening, dinner with artists, and a performance. Thursday, January 17, 2013
  • Day One Party: Big annual bash for film makers and Festival friends Thursday, January 17
  • Awards Night Party: Celebrate the ground-breaking new films, Saturday, January 26
  • Luc Robitaille’s Celebrity Shoot Out Hockey – Hockey stars and celebrities smack that puck around

According to our insider, R.T., a regular, Sundance is “all about creativity, success, cutting edge, cutting room floor, glam, music, music, yes yes and yes… oh, the parties!  Everyone in the entertainment industry is there!”

To be there too, click www.goviva.com.  Email: info@goviva.com or call  646-571-0784  in New York City.

Vienna to Hong Kong — The Most Exhilarating Way To Go: Drive It Yourself

Retrace the 2000-year old routes which first connected East and West. Travel the legendary Silk Road formed by the forays of Genghis Khan, Marco Polo, and Tamburlaine.  Traders, pilgrims and armies followed in their hoofbeats and travelled from the Mediterranean into China via this massive network of many roads. They carried silks and spices and spread an infinity of cultural influences during these colossal journeys. The trip today is no snap, but a lot less dangerous.

This April, 2013, take the  trip of a lifetime. Flip on the ignition of a highly charged, tip-top, ready-to-roll Land Rover in Vienna and cruise in a convoy all the way to Hong Kong in an amazing driving adventure.  Over the course of 92 varied and dauntless days, navigating 16 countries and about 12,500 miles, “Drive the Silk Road®” is the safe and savvy way to ride into exotic cities, unknown towns and villages while bringing history alive in a gritty, realistic, experiential way. Tab for the whole trip: $37,557.

But if this sounds a tad too cher and/or too long a haul, consider driving one or more of the 4 sections:

Section 1:  Vienna to Istanbul – From the Alps into Balkan Peninsula,  approx. 1,600 miles.  21 days from April 6 – 26, 2013. Austria – Slovenia – Croatia – Montenegro – Albania – Macedonia – Bulgaria – Turkey

Section 2Istanbul to Baku – The Ottoman Empire and the Caucasus, approx. 2,750 miles. 26 days from April 26 – May 21, 2013. Turkey – Armenia – Georgia – Azerbaijan

Section 3: Ashgabat to Kashgar – Central Asia, approx. 2,265 miles. 19 days from May 23 – June 10, 2013.  Turkmenistan – Uzbekistan – Kyrgyzstan – Xinjiang, China

Section 4Kashgar to Hong Kong – Taklamakan Desert – Amdo (Upper Tibet) and Southwestern China, approx. 4,900 miles. 30 days from June 7 – July 6, 2013 in China

Sections are priced from $9,250 -$12,530 pp on a double basis, and single supplements are approx. $2,500- $3,000.

Convoy commanders are the intrepid and indefatigable Ms.Yue Chi, China-born and Toronto-based, and her husband David Visagie, from Zimbabwe and Germany. An expert mechanic and off-road specialist. Both are popular lecturers with years of travel experience and intimate knowledge of each itinerary who will do everything to minimize risks and problems.

After all considerations, mechanical and otherwise, the top car is the muscular Land Rover Discovery with its 16V engine – best in class for overland expeditions into remote regions and extensively tried and tested for safety and dependability.  Very smooth automatic transmission. These tough-ies are loaded to the max with 4-wheel anti-lock braking systems, dual front air bags – all bells and whistles down to cup holders, map lights, and fog lamps.

Driving on any road almost anywhere means putting oneself at risk, even more so on really foreign roads where conditions, signs, and “traffic language” are alien.  Driving also maximizes the possibilities of the unexpected: encounters with the startling, the surprising, the unprogrammed –lost thrills of the road.

Requirements: adventurous spirit, voracious curiosity and an open mind.  The ability to drive and some stamina also helpful.

For more info and itinerary details, please contact: President/CEO of AAST Inc.,Yue Chi, at Yue@AAST-Journeys.com;  or phone 866-564-1226 and/or click  www.drivethesilkroad.com

 

How To Ride The Whitewaters In Siberia

Although the Chuya and Bashkaus Rivers in southern Siberia may not yet have made it onto your bucket list, if you are a rafting enthusiast with moderate skills here is a top Class II-IV whitewater adventure.

Veteran rafting company ECHO River Trips is offering a new 16-day itinerary in the largely unexplored and ultra-remote Altai Mountains of southern Siberia, just north of the Mongolianborder. This vast region has very few villages and roads, but is rich in rivers, mountains, glaciers and Siberia’s taiga, subarctic forests.

Here’s the drill: Warm up to the biggy by doing some practice runs on the Chuya River. Build up to raft down the Bashkaus which splits into two: the Lower Bashkaus – definitely one of the most difficult whitewater trips in Siberia – narrow, high-reaching, slick canyon walls and Class VI rapids. The good news is that on this trip, ECHO adventurers will be sticking to the Upper Bashkaus to enjoy all the adrenaline-pumping fun of riding a glorious and more manageable river section in this pristine wilderness. Pack horses for gear; tents for sleeping.  Visit two villages, Saratan and Ust’-Ulagan, and become acquainted with their age-old nomadic, independent forest life. Highlights: clean up in an all-enveloping Russian banya (sauna) and see the petroglyphs of mysterious little antelopes in the Chuya Trakt.

Shortest and cheapest way to fly is viaBeijing to meet in Novosibirsk – surprisingly, one of the largest cities in Russia after Moscow and St. Petersburg. One awesome trip is scheduled for next summer: July 17-Aug. 1, 2013. The price of $4,495 a person includes most everything and most especially the expert services of Vladimir Gavrilov, their top Russian-born guide, former physicist and current U.S. teacher and author of Rivers of an Unknown Land, the ultimate guidebook to rafting in Russia.

ECHO, 40 year old, multi-award winning Oregon-based outfitter, also runs rafting expeditions in Bhutan, Turkey, and Patagonia and the good ol’ U.S. of A. Call 800-652-3246 and/or click: www.echotrips.com

Israel Inside/Out: Perspectives And Prisms

In the exotic and often tempestuous neighborhood that makes up the Middle East,Israel is the stellar stronghold of extraordinary biblical landmarks, hi-tech international industries, tip-top cuisine, very creative arts, gold-standard hoomus, a vibrant and rich cultural scene, and home to red hot, buzz-buzz, 24/7 Tel Aviv.

 

National Geographic Expeditions has just announced a series of in-depth Israel tours. Plunge into the politics, present day realities, the problems, as well as many of the satisfying pleasures of this exciting and complex country led by cultural educator Aziz Abu Sarah. A young man dedicated to building deeper understanding and lasting friendships between Israelis and Palestinians, he has been named as one of Nat Geo’s “Emerging Explorers.” His startup company, Medji, is an innovative concept offering “dual narrative” peace-building tours.

Experience Israel through a broad spectrum Christian-Muslim-Jewish matrix as you hear narratives from a diverse assortment of citizens: imams, rabbis, artists, and settlers – all dialogue aimed to stimulate and promote peace among neighbors. In Jerusalem, explore mysterious underground tunnels, walk in knee-deep water still flowing through Hezekiah’s 2,700-year old Tunnel, go deep underground to explore the ongoing excavation of the City of David, the biblical Jerusalem, and meet with an archaeologist. Visit the awesome desert fortress of Masada (UNESCO World Heritage Site,) and sail on the Sea of Galilee.

Spotlights on: the archaeological wonders of Caesarea with another National Geo “Emerging Explorer,” Beverly Goodman. Visit the Holocaust memorial complex, Yad Vashem, and meet with a survivor.

12 days of exceptional itinerary in really good hotels visiting Jerusalem,Bethlehem, the West Bank, Dead Sea, Caesarea, Tiberias and wrap up in very vibrant Tel Aviv. Cost: $5,500 per person, double basis, plus air. Departures are scheduled almost monthly though not all are led by Abu Sarah. Check out details by clicking here or calling 888-966-8687.

***

And while in the vicinity, sign on for National Geographic’s quickie over- the-border into Jordan for 4 more remarkable days. In Petra, walk the Siq, the wind-carved sandstone canyon; see the now-iconic Treasury carved into red-rose cliffs; walk about in the spectacular Roman ruins of Jerash and Wadi Rum where

 

Burma Now – Why and How

Shrouded in decades of secrecy and isolation, suffused with mystery, the Burma travel window has been flung open to reveal one of the most exciting travel destinations on the planet.  A spectacularly beautiful cultural/aesthetic intermix of China and India, Myanmar (as Burma is now named) has shaken itself free of military shackles.  As you travel into this thrilling country, time unwinds and the clock, amazingly, almost stops.

The best way to see Burma and any other exotic country, especially if traveling solo, is to place yourself in the hands of a highly experienced outfitter who will enable you to see more and better. Additional perk: benefit from any trip with like-minded fellow travelers.

R. Crusoe & Son is just such an outfitter and not parenthetically, publishers of the most romantic brochure in the industry. Their next exclusive hosted 11-day tour will be next November 14-25, 2013 but they specialize in private, custom-made itineraries.  **If you are ready to roll now, however, see their late-breaking news below.

Their “Burma & the Road to Mandalay” tour is hosted by Alex Kerr, their senior and stellar Asia expert with 50 years experience.  Take advantage of his expertise to understand the exotic basics of Burma, see beneath the surface, and pick up on insider information that can be overlooked or misunderstood.  In a recent newsletter, he writes:

Myanmar, a truly miraculous survival of a beauty lost in most of the rest of East Asia, is still mostly intact. So now is the time to go. Change is coming with breathtaking speed, and the country, in the form we’ve known it, won’t always be there.

Highlights: Yangon (formerly Rangoon) the capital and nose around the golden, gleaming, gigantic Shwedagon Pagoda.  See and meet with some of the Intha natives of Inle Lake who live among its handful of cities and villages, visit the floating markets, watch the unique skill of leg rowing locals, meet canoe makers, silk and lotus weavers and traditional cheroot-rollers.  A cruise aboard the gorgeous Road To Mandalay riverboat (best on the Irrawaddy River), will be the experiential heart and soul of the trip: Sagaing, southwest of Mandalay, is an important religious and monastic center heavily dotted with Buddhist monasteries and pagodas in the hills along river, and then arrive at the UNESCO World Heritage Site — awesome, breath-taking Bagan. Thrilling at sunrise and mysterious even in the bright sun, a dusty plain of many thousands of scattered, ancient sacred Buddhist shrines and temples.  (Anyone for a hot air balloon floatover?)

Luxury-oriented, this trip, priced from $8,680 per person (double occ),  Click:  www.rcrusoe.com.  Call 888-490-8019 or e-mail Jane Franklin at jfranklin@rcrusoe.com.

**Stop Press. Memo just in (late Sept.):  A cancellation for this year’s hosted Burma journey with Alex Kerr — one room for two travelers — suddenly available. Departs October 25, 2012 and returns to the U.S. November 4, 2012.

Other fine award-winning Burma tour resources:

National Geographic Expeditions http://www.nationalgeographicexpeditions.com/

Abercrombie & Kent   http://www.abercrombiekent.com/

Indochina Travel, headquartered in SFO  http://www.indochinatravel.com/

 

How To Explore The World’s Most Pristine Landscapes On Horseback

Explore two of the world’s most pristine and wild landscapes on horseback: the Torres del Paine National Park and the Atacama Desert (highest and driest) in Chile. Stay for five days and four nights in either of the world-class resorts, the explora Patagonia and explora Atacama, and jump onto their new program — guests and gauchos rise at dawn to drive cattle across the pampas (open grasslands) between remote estancias (ranches.)

Get your own Gaucho

The private stables in these resorts house the stellar Chilean Criollos (horses with ancient Iberian blood) and purebred Arabians – both trained for experienced riders. Each group is accompanied by a genuine gaucho.

Located far south in South America, the Torres del Paine National Park in Chilean Patagonia was declared a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve in 1978. Patagonia riders are eased into the five-day riding program with a gentle ascent and tour of Lake Toro before moving on to more advanced rides along the banks of the crystalline Serrano River. The epic conclusion to the riding program is a full day ride into the northern sector of the park for an intimate view of the Grey Glacier at Puntilla Pehoé.

Known as the driest, highest desert in the world, the Atacama Desert is full of surprises: mountains, volcanoes, salt flats, geysers, wetlands, hot springs and an abundance of animal and plant life. It also has a culture that dates back 10,000 years, ruins of which can still be seen today in the daily lives of the local Atacameños.  Experienced horseback riders will be guided to the mountain peaks of the Cordillera de la Sal to descend across the dunes towards the Valle de la Muerte (Valley of Death).  Love this!

Four luxury-lodge nights at explora Patagonia start from $2,780 US, or at explora Atacama from $2,640 (per person, double occ.

explora’s series of nomadic journeys, travesías, lead travelers across borders into Argentina and/or Bolivia on extended expeditions. For more information on these two horseback adventures or their other exotic trips click www.explora.com or e-mail: reserve@explora.com.

explora P.S.  We’d like to emblazon their manifesto on our “Travel Trophy” flag:  Leave home, enjoy the journey, pack light, go far, forget the time, walk, deviate from the route, go outside when it rains, ask questions, try new flavours, don’t stop, stop, talk with people, listen to stories about the place, protect nature.

Sub Antarctic Adventure Of The Decade: Russian Icebreaker Expedition

Are you an “Island Ticker?”

“Island Tickers” are travelers with a burning desire to visit islands on which no one else has stepped foot. If inspired by this aspiration, nab one of the four remaining available cabins on a Heritage Expedition’s Russian research icebreaker (approximately 3-star) sailing on November 8 – December 2, 2012 from Western Australia to two of the most remote islands on the planet.

 

Cut through the icy waters to Heard andMcDonald Islandsterra incognita.  Deep in the South Indian Ocean, these two protected World Heritage sites, a mere 1,010 sea miles north of Antarctica, are rarely visited, and not at all for the past decade. Travel trophy of a lifetime.

Wild! Heard Island boasts no ports and no harbors. Zodiac access only. In addition to its beginning-of-the-world astonishing beauty, expect two active volcanoes, tens of thousands of Southern Elephant Seals (biggies with really big noses), Antarctic and Sub Antarctic Fur Seals, predatory Leopard Seals, the rarer, slender and pale Crabeater, the plentiful Weddell Seal, and the rare, small, sort-of-sexy Ross Seals famous for their trilling and siren-like sounds.

A bird paradise too: Penguins are the most populous: King, Gentoo, Macaroni and Eastern Rockhoppers; plus three species of albatross, and burrowing petrels.

 

Who’s onboard?  In addition to other daring “island tickers,” Rodney Russ, owner- founder of New Zealand-based Heritage Expeditions with 25 years of experience under his windbreaker. Lively professional staff, hands-on photographers, two Australian Geographic lecturers and some top birders.  Lectures. Library.

How: Fly to Perth in Western Australia, then drive about half an hour to the port of Fremantle. Return to the port of Albany on the southern coast.

  • Average age: around 60.
  • The sea: rough
  • Grub: Family-style “hearty” cooking.
  • Gear: layers to protect from single-digit Centigrade cold.
  • They provide brand-new waterproof gear.
  • Mandatory: evacuation insurance
  • E-mail: Amazingly, yes.
  • Price: $16,000 pp.

Click: www.heritage-expeditions.com or write to the general manager, Dave Bowen: dave@heritage-expeditions.com.