Travel
Adventures for 2007
10 Great
Global Getaways That Won’t Break the Bank
Steenie
Harvey - Freelance Travel Writer
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Jauary 2007
| Dreaming
of taking a Big Trip in 2007? Finances a bit tight? Well, take a look at
the following destinations.
Magic, thrills and adventure, yes.
But for the budget-conscious globe-trotter, what’s equally important is
that these are places where your dollars will stretch a long, long way.
As a travel writer, I’m lucky enough to have experienced all 10 --- but
I’d love to revisit every single one as a vacationer.
Vietnam
Vietnam packs a lot into its borders.
Highlights include misty Halong Bay with its fairytale seascapes of limestone
outcrops and islands; the Mekong delta with its floating markets; the old
Vietcong tunnels at Cu-Chi near Saigon --- now officially known as Ho Chi
Minh City. (Don’t worry about getting stuck: one tunnel has been specially
widened for westerners.)
Backpacker beds are exceptionally
cheap, but decent hotels often cost less than $40. A filling bowl of pho
bo beef noodle soup or six seafood spring rolls is less than a dollar.
In local hangouts, Saigon Export beer costs 40 cents a bottle.
For the ultimate traffic tale to
tell the folks back home, head for Hanoi’s old quarter. Any attempt to
cross the road turns into a heart-racing adventure. Not only are you contending
with psycho-cyclos (rickshaw bicycles), there are thousands of motorbikes
and scooters whose riders regard a red traffic signal as a suggestion rather
than an instruction. Best place to experience the utter chaos is from within
a cyclo rickshaw. |
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Lithuania,
Eastern Europe
The southernmost
of the Baltic States, visitors usually couple Lithuania together with Latvia
and Estonia. However, you can easily spend a week in Lithuania alone. Quirky
cities like Vilnius and Kaunas are steeped in art, music and historical
curiosities...there are the windswept sands of the Curonian Spit where
you can beach-comb for amber...mushroom-scented woods and farmers riding
on haycarts...mysterious sites steeped in pagan traditions.
Mid-June would
be a great time to go. A national holiday in Lithuania, the old pagan festival
of Rasos marks the summer solstice. It’s an all night affair with singing,
dancing, bonfire-leaping, hunting for ‘magic’ ferns and floating garlands
down rivers. Despite some serious alcoholic partying, most people manage
to stay awake to greet the sunrise. As for prices, how about $2.54 for
three potato pancakes with smoked salmon and sour cream and $1 for a glass
of Svyturnys beer?
Granada,
Nicaragua
From the laid-back
colonial city of Granada, you can do a lot in a week in Nicaragua: tackle
volcanoes...take Spanish lessons...visit Masaya craft market and also the
villages where rocking chairs, hammocks and pottery are made...explore
the Selva Negra’s cloud forests and coffee plantations...chat with expats
in the beach surfing town of San Juan del Sur...go to colonial Leon, where
you might get to meet indigenous Indians.
Settling into
a rocking chair with a cold Victoria beer is a pleasure that generally
costs under $1 and spending more than $7 on a meal is difficult. The Alhambra
Hotel on Granada’s main square costs a mere $30 a night.
Goa, Southern
India
India is beyond
fascinating, beyond anything you’ll ever experience elsewhere. The easiest
introduction to this teeming country is the seaside state of Goa. Baking
below a tropical canopy of banana, coconut and mango trees, this drowsy
world of Arabian Sea beaches, backwaters and spice-laden breezes is stamped
with more than a few reminders of Old Portugal. You’ll find sunrise yoga
on the beach, full massages for $8, dolphin trips for about $6, and colorful
hippie markets.
Including four
beers, two people can eat in a beach shack for under $10. And if you want
to cut your expenses to the bone, there’s accommodation in simple beach
chalets for as little as $8 a night.
Porto &
Northern Portugal
Famed for
its port wine lodges (yes, they do offer free samples), Porto is Portugal’s
second city. An historic Atlantic trading port, its warren of laundry-hung
alleys plunges down to a waterfront of boats, nets and fish restaurants.
Sheets of cod (bacalhau) hang outside grocery stores with original Art
Nouveau tiled facades; the church of Sao Francisco has a gold leaf interior
that would make King Midas salivate. Don’t miss the Bolhau food market
or the Torre dos Clerigos, Portugal’s highest belfry tower. From the top,
you’ll get great views over the jumbled cityscape of churches, bridges
and red-roofed houses.
By EU standards,
the price of dining, accommodation and public transport throughout the
region is astounding. Trains and buses are an affordable way to make exploratory
day-trips along the coast and into the interior of terraced vineyards and
green river valleys. Don’t miss Braga and the thousand-stepped stairway
of Bom Jesus church. On holy days, some pilgrims tackle these steps on
their knees.
Montenegro
After its
split from Serbia, Montenegro is Europe’s latest holiday hot spot --- and
also the world’s newest independent nation. Along with 3-course meals for
$7 and rooms in private houses for $10, you’ll find a land of craggy mountains
with a switchbacked Adriatic coastline of bays, beaches and villages of
pale gray stone. The sea sparkles like blue topaz and medieval walled towns
with crumbling fortresses and palaces are often emblazoned with the winged
lion emblem of the Venetian Republic.
Now paint in
monasteries slotted into mountain crevices and fishing villages of red-tiled
roofs and deep-green shutters. Roman mosaics...olive groves...water-lilied
lakes...deep canyons and the mighty Boka Kotorska, Europe’s southernmost
fjord...the border town of Ulcinj with its minarets and tales of pirate
slave-trading.
Austria
The Alps?
There’s no denying that Switzerland is one of the most scenically gorgeous
countries on earth. But unless you’re armed with an expense account, I
can promise you that exploring its mountains, lakes and medieval towns
will wreak havoc on your finances.
Winter or
summer, neighboring Austria has just as much of the alpine wow factor...plus
the city splendors of Vienna and Salzburg. And it’s a lot less expensive
than you may think. For example, in the Tyrolean village of Fendels, you
could rent a furnished apartment for 2 in a chalet next spring for as little
as €175 ($224) per week. Surrounded by hiking trails, Fendels village
makes an excellent base --- the Tyrolean Oberland is close to the borders
of Switzerland and Italy. (Go to the Austrian Tourist Board’s web site
at www.tiscover.at and you’ll find plenty more self-catering accommodation
at similar prices.)
Penang,
Malaysia
A melting-pot
of Malay, Chinese and Indian culture, Malaysia offers up powder white beaches
and virgin rainforest teeming with wildlife; the bustling capital of Kuala
Lumpur and the historic port city of Malacca; inexpensive seafood and inexpensive
spa pampering; sailing, snorkeling, diving, fishing, golf and island-hopping.
With a distinct
Chinese flavor, one of Malaysia’s star turns is Georgetown, capital of
Penang island. You come across snake temples, arcaded shophouses and tiny
workshops specializing in mahjong tiles and dice; kong-teik craftsmen who
make funerary paper artifacts; fish getting dried like laundry in the open
air. On the Weld Quay waterfront, around 2,000 fishing families live in
rickety wooden dwellings on the Clan Quay jetties.
Chania,
Crete
On the Greek
island of Crete, Chania is one town that it would be criminal to miss.
Crete’s former capital, its history goes back 5,000 years. In the Old Town’s
skinny alleyways you’ll find icon workshops...lyres hanging in dusty musical
instrument repair-shops...bursts of white jasmine cascading from archways...cats
snoozing on balconies...the unlikely sights of a pencil-thin minaret above
church towers and a mosque squatting on the waterfront.
Strung with
garlands of colored light-bulbs, Chania’s old Venetian harbor at dusk truly
is the stuff of romance. The water shimmers in waves of crimson, sapphire
and emerald, the Venetian lighthouse sends out its beady wink, and stalls
do a steady trade in pistachio nuts. Alleys that were afternoon-silent
become thronged with locals taking the volta - the evening stroll. Even
in July and August, you’ll find studio apartments here for under $40 a
night...plus you can eat well for $10.
Bohemia,
the Czech Republic
Prague teems
with tourists but few people realize what the rest of the Czech Republic
offers. One of its regions is Bohemia, blessed with a spellbinding mosaic
of castles, frescoed houses and Rapunzel-style turrets straight from a
sword-and-sorcery tale. At Cesky Krumlov you can peer into a medieval bear
pit complete with bears. Sedlec, a suburb of Kutna Hora has a chapel entirely
decorated with human bones, right down to its chandelier.
Many towns
have stoupas...lofty "plague pillars" adorned with chained devils. They
commemorate deliverance from the plagues, which swept Europe during the
Middle Ages. Then there’s Karlovy Vary, the oldest of Bohemia’s grand spa
towns. With spa water bubbling up all over town which visitors can collect
for free, it’s a gorgeous place of baroque buildings in sugar-plum colors,
flowery parks, and shops glittering with Bohemian crystal.
| Editor’s Note:
This February is your first opportunity in 2007 to meet freelance travel
writer Steenie Harvey in person. You can meet Steenie and five other savvy
travelers at the upcoming Lucrative Traveler’s Conference, February 16-18
in Fort Lauderdale. Click
Here for more details.
To read more
about how Steenie got her break in travel writing Click
Here |
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