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
I just helped send 25 of our European guides on one of my favorite tours — the Best of Turkey in 13 Days. (I wanted to join them so badly!)
It’s been a lot of fun to hear about everything they learned and experienced, and to see the beautiful photos and videos they all captured along the way. But there’s one guide that I’m particularly proud of — and that’s my son, Andy Steves. Andy just capped off a year as an Apprentice Guide by lead guiding his first Rick Steves tour. Check out this wonderful clip that he put together while he was enjoying Turkey with his colleagues.
Let’s say you have a tour company with over a hundred amazing guides. What’s a fun way to make their off-season a bit more exciting? Offer to send them to Turkey on tour! They learn about an amazing country. They experience what it’s like to be tour members rather than tour guides. They bond and amp up their esprit de corps. And they have lots of fun. That’s why we organized and subsidized a Rick Steves Best of Turkey in 13 Days Tour for 25 of our guides. Everyone who goes on our Best of Turkey Tour comes back raving about the food, and this group was no different. Enjoy a peek at some of our guides’ most tasty adventures.
Cristina DuarteApostolos Douras
Thanks for the photos, Lale Aran and Cristina Duarte!
I have long considered Turkey one of the most rewarding and exciting places I’ve ever been. I first visited in the 1970s, and I went back every year through my twenties. For me, Turkey was always the natural cherry on top of all my European adventures. But the predictable question I’d always get from loved ones was, “Why are you going to Turkey?” With each visit, my thoughts were: Why would anyone not travel here? Good travelers strive to get out of their comfort zone. When we travel, like a balloon lifting off a wild Anatolian field, we are — at least for a while — free from the bonds of our culture and ready to experience our world with a different perspective. People-to-people travel is more important than ever, and I am proud to have offered tours in Turkey for almost 30 years through my company, Rick Steves’ Europe Tours. Our Best of Turkey in 13 Days Tour connects Americans with Turkish culture in intimate ways other tours do not. From artisans to imams, our travelers experience legendary Turkish hospitality firsthand, all under the guidance of Turkish tour guides. Together, they marvel at Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia, Topkapı Palace, and Grand Bazaar, Cappadocia’s “fairy-chimney” landscape, the azure water of the Mediterranean, and the ancient Greek sites of Ephesus and Aphrodisias…and come home with a broader perspective of our beautiful world. This tour is one of my personal favorites — and truly the travel experience of a lifetime. And that’s why I subsidized the trip for 25 of our European guides. They just wrapped up their 13-day adventure, and by all reports, the trip was a huge success. There’s no doubt that our guides really know how to have fun — and they love to travel, even when they are off the clock. But for many of them, this was more than just a fun vacation. They got to experience a country many of them didn’t know before, while actually being tour members themselves — an important and valuable learning experience for any guide. In these photos, you’ll see 25 Rick Steves guides (from about a dozen different countries) enjoying our Best of Turkey tour under the leadership of their fellow guide, Mert Taner. If you are a Rick Steves tour alum, see if you can spot your own tour guide — and be sure to say hi to them in the comments below.(Thanks for the photos, Lale Aran, Andy Steves, and Cristina Duarte!)
Åsa DanielssonAndy StevesCristina DuarteSašo GolubCaterina MooreJorge Román
BTW, all of these guides — and about a hundred more — will converge on Edmonds, a town just north of Seattle, later in January 2019 for our annual tour guide summit, tour alumni reunion, and Test Drive a Tour Guide event. Want to come along? We’ll be teaching free travel classes all day on January 26, and we’d love to see you there.
A highlight for our crew was filming the Midnight Mass at the Vatican on Christmas Eve in 2004 — which happened to be Pope John Paul II’s last Christmas. The vast basilica was packed, the pope seemed radiant, and our cameraman put our viewers right in the front pew.
The Vatican is generally a very difficult place for visiting film crews to get permission to do anything. But for some reason, their welcome warmed at Christmas, and we found ourselves with a prime spot in the center of St. Peters — midway up the central pilaster, under Michelangelo’s magnificent dome, with a front-balcony perch to catch the action. In this extra, you’ll see just a bit more of Pope John Paul II’s final Christmas Mass.
My favorite feature of the show’s structure is how in each culture, we stop just before Christmas arrives. With this clip, Christmas Eve is finally here — and all across Europe, people are celebrating in their own unique ways. In England, families await the arrival of Father Christmas; in Norway, friends join hands in song; in Burgundy, a toast starts the celebration feast; at the Vatican, people pack St. Peter’s to attend a glorious Midnight Mass; and, as Christmas Day dawns, a joyful chorus heralds the birth of Jesus. Merry Christmas!