Here you can browse through my blog posts prior to February 2022. Currently I'm sharing my travel experiences, candid opinions, and what's on my mind solely on my Facebook page. — Rick

Video: The World’s Most Insane Horse Race — Siena’s Palio

The Tuscan hill town of Siena is known both for its pride and for its independent attitude. And for five centuries, that spirit has shown itself in a crazy horse race — the Palio. Twice every summer, the entire community of Siena hurls itself into the traditional revelry of the event with abandon. In this clip from my new, one-hour Rick Steves’ European Festivals public television special, we get right into the thick of it all.

Want to check out the Palio in person? My Rick Steves Italy 2018 guidebook just hit the shelves.

Thoughts About My Immigrant Heritage

As a Norwegian American, Trump’s latest racist comments have got me thinking about my immigrant heritage. Sure, he would welcome Norwegians now — they’re about the whitest and richest people on the planet. But it wasn’t always that way. My great-grandparents immigrated to the USA from Norway back when it (except for the color of its people) was what our president would call a “shithole.”

My great-grandmother Amanda left Norway over a century ago because it was a miserable place to live…a land without promise. About the only thing I remember of Granny Amanda was that, because I had red hair like hers, she’d always put her arm around me and brag about me having “good stock,” and my other relatives would laugh.

Baby Rick Steves

On a recent trip to New York City, I visited Ellis Island, where I was inspired by the stories of tired and huddled masses finding refuge in the United States. I looked up another of my Norwegian relatives in their database: According to a ship’s register, exactly a hundred years ago John Romstad landed with a buddy, bound for Duluth, with $20 in their pockets. Anyone considering Duluth the Promised Land (with a net worth of $20) must have come from a pretty hopeless place.

These Steves ancestors left their homeland to escape and came to America because they wanted to work hard and contribute in a land of opportunity and justice. They toiled long and hard, as immigrants do, and two generations later I am as American as can be.

I recently learned that, a century ago, immigration to our country was based on the concept of “good stock.” The racist term my great-grandmother used to describe me was the term used to describe those coming from an acceptable heritage. That law was changed in the 1960s and today — true to our ideals (sorry, Granny Amanda) — we no longer consider good and bad “stock” when it comes to immigration. (Our president didn’t get that memo.)

It takes gumption to pick up and immigrate to a new country. And, in America, it takes hard work and character to succeed and become established. As a society of immigrants, we can shape our future. It can be angry, fearful, and white — hunkered down behind tariffs and walls, squinting at globalization as if squinting at bad weather. Or it can be open, positive, celebrating diversity, and embracing (rather than fighting) the reality of a global, integrated, and interconnected world. Our future can be determined by bully bargains, zero-sum calculations, and “me first” policies. Or it can be about sharing, caring, and win-win solutions. If our national direction is inspired by our president, we’re heading in a sorry direction. Thankfully, I believe America is more American than that — and that we’re waking up.


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Trip Planning? Follow the Fun and Head to a Festival

It’s winter — my favorite time for travel dreaming!

Video: thetravelphile.com

If you’re still deciding on your next destination, here’s a tip: Find a great local festival and build your trip around that. Festivals are filled with rich tradition, great food, and lots of fun with the locals.

While it can be hard to get tickets for some festivals, most are widely accessible. For the Highland Games, Pamplona’s Running of the Bulls, Bastille Day in Paris, or Munich’s Oktoberfest, your biggest challenge is booking a hotel room well in advance.

I take you along to all of my favorite festivals in my new Rick Steves’ European Festivals book — and once you have your destination pinned down, be sure to grab a 2018 guidebook.

Happy travels!


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Happy New Year of Travels!

Rick Steves 1978

In 1978, I befriended a Communist worker in Yugoslavia, and the seed of an idea began to grow: “We’re all in this together.”

 

Some people clean house to start the New Year. I clean up old folders of photographs, taken over the years, that document my travels. Last night, doing just that, I got swallowed up in an amazing decade of trip memories — natural wonders, taste treats, artistic eurekas, faraway friends, and inspirations. I pondered what an integral part of my life these travel experiences are. I suppose other people — like an avid painter, a football star, or a beloved pastor — have similarly powerful life stories contributing to the weave of who they are. For me, it’s travel.

The tapestry of my life is made strong and colorful by the rich rewards of travel: The hikes — cut-glass peaks shouting their glory to the heavens; the taste treats — dipping the eagerly ripped bits of baguette into the garlic sauce for my “snail chaser”; the artistic triumphs — swizzled into a gravity-defying Russian/Jewish/child-of-God/French cocktail of life in a gallery full of Marc Chagall murals; the new friends — like my private whisky coach in the Edinburgh pub, who spent an entire evening showing me how a wee dram can be a very good friend; and the lessons learned — like how our world is filled with joy, love, and people…beautiful both inside and out, and eager to meet us.

If you traveled with Rick Steves’ Europe in any way in 2017, thanks so much. If you are blessed with the opportunity to travel in 2018, I hope we can be of some help. In so many ways, we’re all in this together…and I think that’ll be my theme in the New Year.

Best wishes, and Happy Travels in 2018!

Climate Change Observations

climate change

The Dutch are preparing for a rising sea by moving mountains of sand to fortify their dikes

I get very frustrated when I hear people call climate change a “theory.” From a European perspective, humans are causing the planet to warm up — which will likely lead to devastating hardship and suffering for future generations…most severely in the poor world. Those who deny that fact are either very greedy or very stupid.

In my travels, I see signs of our changing climate everywhere. In England’s Portsmouth, floodgates are being built on medieval streets that never needed them before. In Hamburg, you’ll find all-new riverside construction basically on stilts, in anticipation of storm surges that could push the Elbe River into people’s living rooms.

Flood embankment

The Dutch — famously smart, famously frugal, and famously below sea level — are spending billions of euros shoring up their dikes and preparing for a rising sea. Rotterdam has a new storm surge barrier, the size of two horizontal Eiffel Towers on wheels, that can roll together when high seas threaten. And the Swiss (who don’t build ski lifts these days without plumbing them to make snow) remember summer skiing in the Alps as something their parents did.

In my personal world, the Iditarod dog race in Alaska that my sister participates in has become an annual rocky slog — even with a course that has been relocated to find some snow. And my family’s cabin retreat in Washington’s Cascade Mountains is threatened by persistent forest fires.

What about you? Have you witnessed the effects of climate change during your travels? Please share your observations in the comments below or on Facebook.

(Of course, inspiring so many people to cross the Atlantic makes me a huge contributor to climate change. This is something I’ve struggled with for a long time, and I’m still working to find a clear and effective way to make our company carbon-neutral. I’d love to hear if you’ve found a good way to balance the negative impact flying has on the environment.)