Travel blogs by Travellerspoint

By this Author: katekendall

15 Amazing Pink-Themed Photos

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1. Photo Competition Winner: Angkor Wat Sunrise, Cambodia. Photo by Jazmin81.

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2. Photo Competition Runner-up: Looking to the light in Benderloch, UK. Photo by trish54.

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3. A Harari bride the day before her wedding, Harar, Ethiopia. Photo by kiwilara.

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4. Paper lamps at the Loi Krathong Festival in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Photo by Jazmin81.

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5. Sunset from Phnom Bakheng, Angkor, Cambodia. Photo by Jazmin81.

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6. Noosa Surfer, Marcus Beach, Australia. Photo by lilpixines.

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7. Tulips in full bloom in the Skagit Valley, Washington State, USA. Photo by Grgoddess.

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8. Flamingo, San Diego, USA. Photo by ctheworldnow.

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9. Burano decor, Venice, Italy. Photo by david.byne.

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10. Roadside hair salon, Chipata, Zambia. Photo by Ofelia.

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11. Pink Moss, Takinoue, Japan. Photo by Tiddy Wallapa.

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12. An ageing hippy watching some street performers in Sydney's Inner West. Australia. Photo by AineGeoghegan.

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13. A nice kid at Tibet, Namling, China. Photo by Tiddy Wallapa.

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14. Matador practice, Valenza, Spain. Photo by ErinDriver.

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15. Mother's treasure. Photo by mfarrulla.

Every two months, Travellerspoint holds a photo competition for our members. The photos above are the best photos from the Pink Photo Competition.

Congratulations to Jazmin81, who won the competition. She takes home a $100 Travellerspoint accommodation voucher.

Second-placed trish54 wins a $50 Travellerspoint accommodation voucher.

We have a fresh Adventured-themed competition kicking off next week.

Check out the results of past competitions:

Posted by katekendall 17:09 Tagged photography competition Comments (3)

Going Pink for Dutch Cancer Research

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French Alps photo courtesy of KoalaGirl.

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Jack de Bokx

For our photo competition this month we're bringing awareness to a great cause that helps raise funds for the Dutch Cancer Foundation. We're doing this by supporting a cyclist, Jack de Bokx, who will ride up the Alpe d'Huez six times for a fundraiser dubbed 'Alpe d'Huzes'.

To find out more, we asked Jack a few questions:

What is 'Alpe d'Huzes' and what's involved?

Alpe d’Huzes is a volunteer-organisation that raises money for the Dutch Cancer foundation in a hands-on and supportive way. Participants must try to climb the Alpe d’Huez six times in one day, hence the name (in Dutch 'zes' means six)!

The Alpe d’Huez mountain is known as the ‘Dutch mountain’. Several Dutch bikers have won an etappe in the Tour de France on this mountain and many Dutch people climb this mountain every year (mostly just the once).

About 4,000 people are riding the Alpe on the day so I won't be doing this alone. I am biking with two teams of friends totalling 16, including men and women. The reason we started this was because our most inspiring and supportive friend died of cancer about a year ago after fighting it for five months. At his funeral we promised each other to take part.

How fit do you have to be to ride up the Alps six times?

The answer to this question will be found out on 9 June. I've been biking for many years, but only on Sundays with friends and sometimes during the week. Last winter we started to build up our condition on mountain bikes. Since April we went back on the road bikes and intensified training with as many long rides as possible in Limburg, where there are small hills. In Breda there are no hills so we just ride fast and long. I try to bike as much as possible. My wife does too, and is also going to ride the Alpe three times. We have two children who need attention, so the opportunity to get on the bike isn't always there. Nevertheless I feel in good condition now and there's still a few weeks to get some more power - I am still going for the six times!

Where will the funds raised go to?

The funds raised will all go to the KWF Cancer Foundation. All the money that is donated by people goes directly to the foundation.

How can people get involved?

There's a website where people can sponsor us and the KWF Cancer foundation. My online donation page is here.

***

Voting for the pink-themed photo competition closes this Friday 20 May.

Posted by katekendall 18:50 Comments (0)

Industry Interview with Sue Gough Henly

Sue Gough Henly

Sue Gough Henly

Aside from our ongoing posts in the Talking Travel series, we're now profiling industry insiders and leaders. This month we chat to Sue Gough Henly – an award-winning photojournalist and writer. We also feature some of her best photography throughout the piece.

What’s your background and where can we find your work?

I am an Australian freelance photojournalist and travel writer who writes for about 15 different publications around the world including Travel & Leisure, Fairfax (The Age, The Sun Herald, Melbourne Magazine), News Ltd, Nine MSN, Vacations and Travel, Luxury Travel Magazine, Royal Auto, The Toronto Star, The UK-based Australia and New Zealand Magazine, The Wine Enthusiast (US) and several airline magazines. I am also just about to finish my first iPhone App on Australia’s Best Places. In addition to travel I write general features as well as profiles and stories about culture, food and wine.

I lived in the United States for 18 years where I was the editor of The Best Places guidebook series to the west coast of the United States and Canada as well as an editor at Workman Publishing in New York, publishers of The Food Lovers’ Guide to France, The Silver Palate Cookbooks and 1000 Places to Visit Before You Die. I am fluent in French and also worked for several years as the press attaché for the Bordeaux Wine Trade Council.

Blue Canoe at Nusakelo atoll

Blue Canoe at Nusakelo atoll

Why travel?

To find out what is around the next bend, to give full reign to one’s curiosity, to escape stultifying routines, to feel alive and engaged with the world. It is also important to remember that you can also ‘travel’ in your own home town, go on safari in your local neighbourhood, if you are observant and open to new encounters and experiences.

Sega musicians and dancers on the beach

Sega musicians and dancers on the beach

What’s your most memorable travel story?

This is difficult as there have been so many. One that always makes me smile ran as an essay in the New York Times (first result here). For me travel has always been about making connections.

What advice or insights would you share with budding travel enthusiasts wanting to break into the industry?

Show don’t tell. Use words that evoke what you see, smell, hear, touch and feel when you are discovering a new place or even exploring a well-known haunt so that I, as a reader, can go on that journey with you.

Village children on Ungalik atoll, PNG

Village children on Ungalik atoll, PNG

As for the industry, it is changing in front of our eyes as new media evolves. As a result there are loads of exciting opportunities for travel enthusiasts, especially those who fight the good fight for inquisitive, adventurous, and free-spirited writing and against fairy floss, flabby solipsism and other forms of somnambulant drivel.

Three star Michelin chefs, Sebastien and Michel Bras, working in the kitchen of their restaurant, Michel Bras, France

Three star Michelin chefs, Sebastien and Michel Bras, working in the kitchen of their restaurant, Michel Bras, France

Posted by katekendall 00:35 Tagged industryinterview Comments (5)

Talking Travel with Tracey (TTG)

This month, our featured member is Tracey (aka TTG), a New Yorker who never met a beach, a cheeseburger, or a frozen drink she didn’t like! Whether she’s babysitting a wiener dog in Key West, crashing a gala in the Hamptons, curing her heat exhaustion with rum punch in Anguilla, or walking a pet chicken on a leash in Delray Beach, Tracey’s travels are never boring, and are relayed with witty, self-deprecating humor and beautiful photographs. A few weeks ago, I chatted with her about her beachy outlook, her favourite cocktails, and what’s next on her travel agenda.

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One of the quotes on your Travellerspoint profile reads: "The cure for everything is salt water - sweat, tears, or the sea." How does this affect your travel philosophy?

I am definitely a water baby! My favourite destinations are always those where I can get my toes in the sand. On the East Coast I love the salty smell of the ocean, the roar of the waves, the reedy dune grasses, and even the squawking seagulls. In the Hamptons, the beaches aren’t too built up and you can walk for miles without seeing any hotels or houses. It’s wild and pristine and soothing. Just last weekend we drove out to the beach there (yes, in March!) and my husband and I both dug our shoes in the sand to make sure we’d track some into the car – just the sight of it is enough to make me happy!

The beaches in the Caribbean are even more beautiful to me, but in a different way: I can’t get enough of the powdery white sand and clear, turquoise water. I also love the isolated feel of the islands – for me, they are the ultimate escape, a way to just drop out of society for a while. My idea of heaven is an afternoon at a beach shack with a rum punch in my hand, the smell of fried shrimp and boiled lobster in the air, a steel-drum band playing in the background, an uncrowded white-sand beach, and calm blue water as far as the eye can see.

You mention you work crazy hours in Manhattan and spend your limited free time travelling. What travel tips would you recommended to other time-poor urban dwellers?

I’m a big fan of the three- or four-day weekend. Although the traffic leaving the city can be brutal, within an hour or two of arriving somewhere new I feel as though I’ve been gone for half a day, and by Saturday afternoon I’ve forgotten all about the stresses of life back in the city! My office is typically closed on federal holidays, so I also try to schedule my trips around them; that way, I need fewer days off and am gone when everyone else is. I’ve read that people derive nearly as much happiness from planning and looking forward to a trip as they do actually taking it, and that’s certainly true for me – knowing that I’ll be away even just one or two nights can definitely make a tough week a little easier!

You document your travels beautifully through photography. What advice do you have for other travel bloggers wanting to share their travels?

The main thing I try to do is make it fun. No one wants to read about how your flight was delayed, or how dirty your hotel room was, or how that waitress got your order wrong. Those things happen to all of us, but if someone is going to take the time to read my blog, I want them to have a good time! (Hopefully the fact that I have a good time, both travelling and blogging about it, comes through, too.) I also try to capture the spirit of a place – what makes it unique? What are the “don’t miss” places to go or things to see? And of course I take lots of food pictures. I once posted a report about Christmas in New York and people actually emailed me and said, “Yeah, that was great... but what did you eat?!” My poor husband has learned not to touch his meal until I’ve photographed it, no matter how delicious it looks or smells!

Your travels and favourite places appear to be luxurious and warm destinations, where's next on the agenda?

I tend to get a little depressed when we return from a trip (particularly when we go somewhere warm and return to freezing cold or pouring rain here in New York), but I’ve discovered that the cure is to have the next trip planned before I return from the first one! So I always try to have a few in the pipeline. This year it’s back to Key West in early April, and then we’ll be in the Hamptons most weekends through September (we are extremely fortunate to have a tiny cottage there). In October we’re headed to Charleston, South Carolina – I’ve never been, and with all the talk lately about their excellent restaurant scene, it was definitely time to give it a try.

On your blog, there's the odd photo or two of cocktails on exotic beaches – what's your favourite drink?

Wow – that’s like asking someone to pick their favorite child! But I do like a good rum punch when I’m in the Caribbean (made the right way, with a sprinkle of freshly-grated nutmeg on top), and I wait all year for the watermelon margaritas at B. Smith’s in Sag Harbor. They use only fresh watermelons, so the margaritas always taste a bit different from one year to the next. Sometimes I’ll find myself thinking, “Ah, 2008 – now that was a great vintage!”

What inspires you about travel?

Meeting new people. I love seeing how other people live, what their houses look like, how they spend their days, what they like to eat. Mark Twain said it best: “Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness.” I’m always pleasantly surprised to see how small the world is and how much we all have in common. We were in Italy once and my husband, Angel, who speaks no Italian, was haggling over the price of some linens with a shop owner, an older gentleman who spoke no English. Back and forth they went, writing numbers on a slip of paper, until finally the shop owner had reached his final offer, which he indicated by pointing at his wedding ring, then running his finger across his throat: My wife will kill me! That makes me laugh to this day, and it shows that while we may come from different places, and we may not look the same or speak the same language, the desire to be friendly and helpful and find some human connection is universal. That connection is what motivates me. Why else would anyone endure yet another airport pat-down and countless hours in a cramped aluminum tube?!

***

Check out these recent interviews in the Talking Travel series:

Posted by katekendall 21:36 Tagged talkingtravel interviews Comments (2)

Talking Travel with Zero Dean (zerodean)

We have another great interview for the Talking Travel series, this time with Zero Dean (aka zerodean). Zero is a real-life adventurer and has travelled continually since he quit his job last year in May. He's also an artist, writer and photographer. And yes, Zero is his real name.

One of his favourite quotations is:

"Men spend their lives in anticipations, in determining to be vastly happy at some period when they have time. But the present time has one advantage over every other, it is our own. Past opportunities are gone, future have not come. We may lay in a stock of pleasures, as we would lay in a stock of wine; but if we defer the tasting of them too long, we shall find that both are soured by age." ~ Charles Caleb Colton

You can follow Zero's journey through his popular blog ZeroDean.com or on his Flickr. His Travellerspoint interactive trip map is also viewable here.

Zero Dean

Zero Dean

Why did you quit your job, terminate your lease and sell everything?

I looked at where I was in life, what I'd been doing, and where I would likely end up if I kept doing the same things I'd always done. I realised that if I didn't make a significant change, I would likely miss out on many of the things I wanted to do in life.

I started thinking about potential solutions and considered a lot of options. Everything basically came down to having to make sacrifices in order to start getting my life in line with the one I imagined.

I wanted an adventure – while I was still young – and an experience that was uniquely my own. I figured that even if I attempted to do what I wanted and failed, my actions would still push me to a different place than where I'd been – and that sounded... refreshing, actually.

But I was still somewhat surprised when I actually took the bold steps necessary to get my life on a different track.

What advice would you give for anyone considering a dramatic lifestyle change?

First, I think it's very important to know what you want to get from the change. You need to have a specific goal (or goals) in mind. Dramatic lifestyle changes almost always require significant sacrifices to make them a reality. But for everything you give up, you gain something – will what you have to give up be worth whatever it is you want to gain from the change? – that's the question you have to ask yourself.

I think in cases where one is thinking about making particularly large lifestyle changes, passion has to play a primary part – either by being passionate about the process or what the process will provide. I think G.W.F. Hegel is right, "Nothing great in the world has been accomplished without passion".

And then there's belief – belief in what you're doing and why you're doing it – it's vital. Because it's your belief in what you're doing that helps you face the inevitable resistance that pops up along your path – obstacles or a lack of support. When things get rough or don't go as planned, you are your own most important and significant source of motivation.

Your attitude about what you're doing and your belief in it is everything. You have to be the one who keeps your own fire lit.

What photography tips do you recommend for aspiring travel photographers?

My first tip to aspiring travel photographer is:

Don't be afraid to take a lot of photos – in fact, I recommend it. Digital storage space is cheap. Document everything! When the years have passed, we forget details – nothing brings them back like a photograph, it doesn't even have to be a good one.

I don't think anyone will ever regret taking a lot of photos of the places they've travelled to. And you can do so without obsessing about it, so long as you're not trying to capture a perfect photo every time you snap the shutter. In fact, if you're truly documenting your travels, it's impossible. But sometimes that random photo you took out of your sunroof or a bus window ends up being one of the best.

And if you're an aspiring photographer, nothing improves your skills like practice.

And my second tip is:

Now that you're taking lots of photos, try to tell stories with them – either through a single image (which is often the biggest challenge) or a series of images. In my opinion, the best photos always tell a story.

What's been your favourite destination in the US to date?

It's always difficult for me to pick favourites. I find beauty everywhere. And if not physical beauty, then beautiful moments.

I can name a few of my favorite places and moments though:

  • Spending a morning swimming alone in the Firehole River in Yellowstone National Park (Wyoming). Only part of it was planned...

I had a set of backup keys tied around my neck. I realised after my first dip into the river that the familiar weight around my neck was gone. My keys! So I grabbed some goggles and jumped back into the water, searching the river for several minutes. I came up empty, but walked away with an interesting experience and no regrets.

  • Sitting on a dock in Key West (Florida), drinking my morning coffee and watching waves crash in the distance. Then spending an evening on the same dock watching the sun melt into the horizon.
  • Spending a quiet night in Mojave National Preserve (California) and having a sense of belonging – that it is exactly where I was supposed to be at that time, doing exactly what I was doing.
  • Watching the sun rise through the hole of the 'Delicate Arch' in Arches National Park (Utah). It is an amazing park and some moments like that are ineffable.
  • Locking eyes with a bobcat in Olympic National Park (Washington) and just having a moment of 'mutual understanding'.

One of your life goals is to visit all seven continents and swim in all five oceans – how are you tracking?

Not too poorly, considering that is a recent goal. I've hit three out of seven continents, but I've only swam in two of the five oceans. But these became goals during my current trip/adventure, which has been USA centered, so far.

Do you think more people will adopt the nomadic on-the-go lifestyle in the future?

Location independent working is getting a lot of buzz on the internet – so it's certainly on people's minds – but I'm not sure that's a truly nomadic lifestyle as much as it is finding a place you like and living there, and working by remote somewhere else.

To me a real nomadic lifestyle is traveling and working at the same time – and I think that's a pretty difficult thing to accomplish outside of travel-related jobs. The thing you lose with a truly nomadic lifestyle is stability. I think it's possible to adopt this lifestyle and make it work, but I think it takes a lot of dedication and support.

What are some of the challenges you've had to deal with on your journey?

My biggest challenge, by far, has been a lack of support, understanding and encouragement from the people I expected it from – it's been a difficult thing for me to understand, but I think it's also been a very important obstacle for me to overcome.

I think true 'self-confidence' means being the source of your own motivation and being able to push forward when you believe in something – even when those you have meaningful relationships with do not.

Other challenges, have not been so unexpected – staying clean, connected, focused, and conserving money and resources. As a social person travelling solo and by car (while also deliberately avoiding active couch-surfing for the first year), I've battled with a sense of loneliness at times, too. I've spent more time alone in the past 10 months than I think I have in my entire life combined – at least it feels that way.

***

Check out these recent interviews in the Talking Travel series:

Posted by katekendall 18:25 Tagged talkingtravel interviews Comments (2)

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