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

2010 Travel Tips (Part 4 of 5): Connecting with Turkey, Prague Smarts, Rome Less Eternal

It’s fun to think of special ways to really connect with Back Door destinations we recommend in Europe. If you’re heading for these favorites, here are a few tips to do it right.

Istanbul — My favorite city in Europe for an extended visit (along with London, Paris, and Rome)
Every rush hour, the Bosphorus Strait is churning with more than a million Istanbul commuters riding the colorful and ramshackle ferries between Asia and Europe. Join them just to be part of the scene (and say you took an intercontinental cruise).

For a vivid slice-of-life experience, take a taxi to the Chora Church (and see its exquisite frescos). Then explore the Lonca, Balat, and Fener neighborhoods between there and the Golden Horn.

Stroll the length of Istiklal Caddesi to feel the pulse and energy of the city. At the fish market, sample every local’s favorite treat: kokorec (chopped-up sheep intestines, grilled and served with tomatoes, green peppers, and fresh herbs).

Bring a plastic baggie of show-and-tell items from your life from home (photos of your family, work, school, whatever). Share these with new friends in a neighborhood teahouse.

Prague — The best-preserved Baroque city in Central Europe
As you stroll across the Charles Bridge with all its lively crowds and entertainers, remember that it’s one of the most popular places in Europe for pickpockets.

To escape all the tourists, join romantics in a leisurely paddleboat ride among the swans in the Vltava River. Boats rent cheaply by the hour; look for them on the river island near the National Theater.

The Via Musica Box Office (under Tyn Church on the Old Town Square) is a handy place to get tickets to concerts. A clear schedule of all the events is posted on the wall next to photos of each plush venue.

A typical mug of Czech beer is 17 ounces and lands on your table like water in the US. When you’re done, another seems to appear until you say stop. Czechs don’t go from bar to bar like many other Europeans. They say, “In one night you must stay loyal to one woman and to one beer.”

Rome — The Eternal City can be both eternally challenging and eternally rewarding
Roman taxis are regulated. They can charge only the fixed €40 rate from the airport into the town center. But non-Roman cabs can charge €60. Upon arrival at the airport, be careful to hop into a city cab (look for “SPQR” on the door).

 The little “Elettrico #116” bus winds silently through the narrow lanes of Rome’s medieval core from Campo de’ Fiori to the Pantheon and up to the Villa Borghese Gardens. While designed for local seniors who don’t walk well, they are great for simply joyriding.

To enjoy Rome with the help of Rick Steves’ Audio Tours, download the file to your iPod (or other MP3 player).

2010 Travel Tips (Part 2 of 5): Belgian Cuteness, an Italian Riviera Dream, Thatch-Happy England

It’s fun to think of special ways to really connect with Back Door destinations we recommend in Europe. If you’re heading for these favorites, here are a few tips to do it right.

Bruges — The cutest town in Belgium
Rent a bike (or take a bike tour) and in minutes you’re in the wide-open countryside. For the best, easiest bike ride from Bruges, just follow the canal to the charming town of Damme.

Herberg Vlissinghe, with Dutch Masters’ ambience and a boules court in the garden, is the oldest pub in Bruges. An €8 bowl of angel-hair spaghetti and a great Belgian beer makes for a wonderful Bruges evening.

Bruges has some of Europe’s best B&Bs. For  €70 a night, you get a fine double room with private bathroom and breakfast — and a chance to actually feel like you have local friends.

Bruges’ bell tower is famous for its carillon. Benches are placed in its courtyard for music lovers to enjoy free concerts several nights a week through the summer (schedules are posted).

Vernazza — Get properly connected to the best town of Italy’s Cinque Terre (in spite of its tourist crowds)
Twin Sicilian brothers entertain their visitors with tasty Sicilian pastries and drinks each evening and at breakfast time. Their café is at the top end of town — no Mediterranean view…just lots of crazy camaraderie and good prices.

Dead Vernazzans are given the best view in town. Visitors can hike above Vernazza to its cemetery to enjoy the same vistas and witness a community tending the tombs of their loved ones.

The village subsidizes a shuttle bus to connect Vernazza with hamlets high in the surrounding hills. Any tourist can use it as a scenic joyride or a cheap lift to a high country of scenic hikes.

Really late, after things close up, the young and hedonistic waitstaff of the Vernazza’s many restaurants and bars gather at a cave at the end of the town beach.

Cotswolds — A collection of the cutest little towns in all of England
Visiting a formal English garden is a must. Hidcote Manor Garden, one of England’s best, is just four miles from Chipping Campden.

The Cotswold Farm Park (just outside Stow-on-the-Wold) delights young and old alike with a chance to meet rare and endangered breeds of local animals. Be careful. I greeted a rare old goat and he ate my map.

Keith Harding’s World of Mechanical Music (in Northleach) offers a unique chance to listen to 300 years of amazing, self-playing musical instruments. Music-box lovers give private tours with plenty of demonstrations.

2010 Travel Tips (Part 1 of 5): A Danish Isle, a German Spa, an English Coney Island

It’s fun to think of special ways to really connect with Back Door destinations we recommend in Europe. The next five blog entries include tips on how to do it right.

Aeroe Island — My favorite rural experience in Denmark
As you wander around town, peek through windows and into homes. Locals love it. That’s why they leave their drapes open.

Be on the Urehoved Beach at the edge of town at sunset, when Danes gather to barbecue shrimp and sing songs.

The best lunch deal in town is smoked fish at the Aeroeskoebing Roegeri. When they open the cooker, an eruption of smoke announces to hungry locals that their choice of delicious fish is ready.

Each evening in July and August, the night watchman (Jan Pedersen) takes anyone who is interested on a historic stroll through town. Unless you want to hang out with the farmers in one of the town’s two pubs and drink, it’s the best (actually…the only) action going on after dark.

Baden-Baden — Relax with the Germans in their ultimate spa resort
Ride the funicular from town to the 2,000-foot summit of a peak called Merkur. From there, enjoy a frothy beer on the restaurant terrace while watching thrill-seeking paragliders leap into space.

For dinner in a cozy cellar or a leafy garden courtyard, eat at Weinstube im Baldreit, where Nicole serves and her husband Philippe cooks gourmet regional dishes at great prices.

For a chance to connect with the latest town scandal, ask a local about the Russian mafia owning most of Baden-Baden…and what the current mayor is doing about it.

If you’re going to the casino to gamble, you’ll need to dress up. Men who don’t wear a coat and tie can rent them for 11 euros.

Blackpool — Party with Brits in a low-end Coney Island way
Harry Ramsden’s is a fixture in Blackpool. It’s considered the place to eat mushy peas with fish and chips – surrounded by families who actually get excited about good mushy peas.

If you visit any time but summer weekends or during “The Illuminations” festival (September through October), there are plenty of rooms, and prices are soft. But during those crowded times, you’ll pay a premium to sleep in Blackpool.

Blackpool is accessible to Brits who can’t afford to vacation in Spain. During a soft drizzle, take a photo of families on the beach pretending it’s actually sunny.

If Blackpool is too far north for your travel plans, Brighton (two hours south of London) provides a similar, Coney Island brand of tacky fun.

Dating Christian Churches

Our new PBS special, Mediterranean Mosaic (named with help from readers of this blog), is now airing all over the USA. In it we tackle subjects a bit more challenging than you’d see on a typical travel show. For instance, in the episode on Greece’s Peloponnese, I was determined not only to show a Greek Orthodox church in action, but to explain how that brand of Christianity differed from Roman Catholicism and Protestantism. It’s a challenge in a short script to write both accurately and clearly. It brings positive and negative comments like these:

I just finished watching “Rick Steves’ Europe: Peloponnese Greece” on PBS in Atlanta. As a Greek Orthodox Christian living in America I wanted to thank you for including an excellent summary of Orthodoxy in your show. Rather than gloss over this element of Greek Culture you choose to educate your viewers to the roots of Christianity and how it’s a part of traditional Greek living. It was an excellent reminder of why I enjoy watching your program. Jerry D. Odenwelder

Hi Rick, I was watching your Mediterranean Mosaic PBS Special when you were speaking about the History of the Orthodox Church. I thought I heard you state that the History of the Orthodox Church went back much further than that of modern day Protestantism and Catholicism? If you perform a simple Google search you’ll find the list of Popes dates back to the Apostle Peter. Many Churches and Religions in this day and age that want to lay claim to the origins of Christianity, but the historical facts indicate that all present day churches are indeed an off-shoot of the Catholic Church. Of course former Catholic Priest, Martin Luther didn’t appear on the scene until the 16th century. He was excommunicated from the Catholic Church due to his Heretical Theology. God bless, Michael.

Here was our response to the last comment:

Dear Michael, Thanks for your interest in our TV shows. Here is the line that you’re thinking of, from our Peloponnese show: “Orthodox churches follow the earliest traditions of the Christian faith — these date from a time before the reforms created today’s Roman Catholic and Protestant traditions.” As you can see, we did not suggest that the Orthodox Church actually predates Catholicism, but that the liturgy and other facets of the Orthodox faith reflect the earliest traditions of organized Christianity. In fact, today’s Orthodox people carry on many of the same traditions that Roman Catholics once did, before Catholicism changed over time. I hope this helps clear things up. And thanks for watching! Happy travels.

Edumotion But No Nitty-Gritty, Please

A recent interview about my travel writing caused me to consider my work in a fresh way. I thought you might enjoy the questions and answers:

What one word makes a great travel story?
Edumotion. I needed two words, so I made up that word from “education” and “emotion.” As I travel to learn, I write hoping to inspire others to learn. A good travel article needs to teach and show worthwhile lessons in a destination. A good article also hits the reader emotionally. (For example, “The Iranian woman poked her finger into my chest and said, ‘We just don’t want our children to be raised like Britney Spears.'”) Emotions illustrate how a travel experience is real, matters, and can carbonate your life.

What’s the one thing you avoid when sharing a travel story?
Guidebook-type data. A newspaper or magazine article needs to inspire someone to travel. It’s designed to be read by a travel dreamer on a couch at home — not weighed down by data to navigate by. A guidebook, on the other hand, is filled with the nitty-gritty data that gets you efficiently from A to B on the road.

What are the similarities between the stories you tell for a living and the travel stories you share with friends and family back home?
I used to talk like Hans Christian Andersen about my travels with friends and family. As my work life dominates so much of what I am, I no longer talk travel with friends and family. If you walked into my living room, there’s no indication that I’ve ever been to Europe.