Memories of Europe Through the Gutter, 1974

Back in my “Europe Through the Gutter” backpacking days, I’d end each trip by spending a good part of the flight home creating a “frieze” that captured the most memorable events of my trip. (It’s a great way to pass the time in flight, and if you have a travel partner, you can make it a creative collaboration: Make two at the same time, taking turns sketching alternate frames on each of your souvenir art pieces.)

Rick Steves handwritten frieze 1974

This was a solo trip: It was 1974, I was 19 years old, the world was very big, and I was very small. On this journey, I ventured from Edinburgh to Ireland to Paris and London. Along the way, I got some mean blisters, saw some great plays, took in a Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young concert, did my share of drinking, and fell in love with a hippie Israeli draft dodger nicknamed Coconut.

Enjoy making sense out of this and think back on your earliest trip overseas. Investing in travel rewards you greatly. While the blisters fade, and the lovers flutter by, you enjoy the memories for the rest of your life.

Dear Mr. Steves…

My favorite mail-reading time is at the end of a long day at work, when I can lose myself in the words and feelings of other travelers: Newly widowed Jared, whose wife always dreamed of climbing the bell tower overlooking Venice’s Piazza San Marco, finally did just that for both of them. Aaron, who met me at the Long Beach Travel Show, is recently back from a study abroad program in Germany that “changed who I am as a person.” Elizabeth from Florida finally enjoyed a sunset from the Acropolis, and just had to tell me.

I pore through letters from travelers who are jetting off with grandparents to see their ancestral hometown, celebrating anniversaries, getting on their feet again after a tough illness or divorce, helping their children leave the nest, and reaching life-long goals after overcoming life-long struggles. I get mail from felons in prison who make a virtual escape through my TV shows. And quite a few people mention, “I’ve grown up watching your shows” — which always makes me feel both happy and old.

I also hear from Europeans who’ve connected with American travelers. Mr. Brock is retiring after 20 years of running a B&B in Edinburgh that we’ve long recommended. He took time to share memories from two decades of greeting my readers with a wee dram of whiskey upon checking in, and serving hearty porridge (with a prayer in old Scottish by Robbie Burns) at his breakfast table.

For years, my dear friend Rolf Jung — the 84-year-old retired headmaster from a village on the Rhine River — has delighted in giving tours of his hometown to readers of my book. This week Herr Jung, who is pictured here, sent me an envelope full of photos taken with those travelers. He closed his letter with this nod to his appearance in my Postcards from Europe book:

“Rick, what a wonderful sentence for my gravestone appears in your book: ‘A walk with Herr Jung always makes me feel good about Europe.'”

Rick Steves and Herr Rolf Jung

My dear friend Rolf Jung

I’m blessed to have an inbox that opens up to the thoughtful sharing of highs and lows from people who’ve let me be a part of their travels. Reading through a season’s worth of readers’ trip reports, I’m seeing how, for so many, travel is more than a fun diversion. It’s a major force in our lives.

Rick Steves Drinking Game

Yes, I know I have favorite words, verbal tics, and trademark clichés that those who read or watch lots of my work find popping up over and over. These quirks give my travels maximum fun per mile, minute, and dollar while carbonating my ability to create experiences that are vivid and evocative.

Some of my fans shared this drinking game, which can bring even more joy to those watching my travel shows (watch full episodes for free). The rules are easy.

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Drink whenever I say these words:

1. Beautiful/Beauty
2. Convivial
3. Commanding view (not just view, but “commanding view”)
4. Ancient (avoid the Italy and Greece episodes if you don’t want to get alcohol poisoning)
5. Work-a-day
6. Evoke/Evocative (drink twice if used correctly: to bring a memory, feeling, or image, into the mind)
7. Excite/Exciting
8. Local
9. Excessive alliteration
(Three words starting with the same letter = one drink; each extra word = one more drink.)
10. “My friend and fellow tour guide”

Extras:

Drink anytime I drink.
Drink every time producer Simon shows up.
Drink anytime I butcher the pronunciation of a non-English word.

Would you add any others?

Stay safe, drink responsibly, and “keep on travelin’.”