More pics for your viewing pleasure (scroll down for newest images). Don’t miss the corn dogs encrusted in french fries.
Tag: Travel
Hello from Seoul
Quick note. I arrived in Korea last night. Trip went fine. Am hanging with my brother. Here’re some pics. Explanation to come soon.
Excellent India Travel Blog

I’ve pointed out Micronomicon Abroad before, but it’s worth a second look. An American woman named Maya is traveling through India (after visiting China and Nepal). Good photos and interesting observations. And if that’s not enough for you, check out her scanned in journals (not trip-related).
Luxury Tourism in Cambodia

Don’t miss Matt Gross’s fascinating piece in today’s New York Times detailing the rise in luxury tourism in Cambodia and elsewhere in Southeast Asia:
In almost every part of the country, you can find a conceptually and architecturally ambitious hotel: In mountainous Ratanakiri, there’s the Terres Rouges Lodge, a former provincial governor’s lakeside residence that has, Time Asia said last July, “the best bar in the middle of nowhere.” On the Sanker River in Battambang, Cambodia’s second-largest city, there’s La Villa, a 1930 house that in October opened as a six-room hotel filled with Art Deco antiques. And sometime this summer, you should be able to head south to Kep and stay at La Villa de Monsieur Thomas, a 1908 oceanfront mansion that’s being transformed into a French restaurant ringed with bungalows.
And then there is Angkor Wat. Foreign visitors are flooding in – 690,987 paid entrance fees last year, up from 451,046 in 2004. And while there are no official figures as to how much each spends in Siem Reap, the town’s dizzying array of luxury hotels – at least 10 by my count, ranging from the Raffles Grand Hotel d’Angkor to quirky boutiques like Hôtel de la Paix – testifies to the emergence of a new generation of high-end travelers, who not only demand round-the-clock Khmer massage but are also willing to pay $400 a day to hire a BMW L7 or $1,375 an hour for a helicopter tour.
Cambodia is not alone in its luxury revolution. Since the mid-1990’s, the former French colonies of Southeast Asia have made enormous leaps in catering to tourists who prefer plunge pools to bucket showers. From the forests of Laos to the beaches of Vietnam to the ruins of Cambodia, you can find well-conceived, well-outfitted, well-run hotels that will sleep you in style for hundreds of dollars a night.
SNP:
Bottles in Translation is a company that takes Nalgene Bottles and prints foreign language translations of popular words and phrases.
If you’re travelling in a foreign country and you’re embarrased of having to pull out a little translation book, you can pull out your drink bottle instead and look up foreign language translations while maintaining your cool.
The company offers translations in Spanish, French, and Italian, and offers bottles in six stylish colors.
$15.99 per bottle.
Interesting idea, but I have to say their tag line seems rather ridiculous: “Don’t stand out like a tourist; fit right in with…BOTTLES IN TRANSLATION!”
Because, you know, when you’re hiking Machu Picchu or bumming around Vilnius or eating banana pancakes on Khao San Road, no one will know you’re just a tourist when, confronted with a sticky situation, you turn to your custom-inscribed Nalgene instead of a phrase book.
Off to the South Carolina sLowcountry
I’m leaving DC later today for Xmas at home in Beaufort, South Carolina. Posting will be light or nonexistent next week; great things await after the new year, fine friends. Great things, I tell you. Stay tuned.
And Godspeed and happy holidays and all that stuff. Give yourselves a big hug and a kiss from ol’ Uncle Newley.
Hasta 2K6, mis amigos.
“Authentic” Travel Experiences

Matt Gross has a thoughtful essay in today’s New York Times about notions of experimental travel and the search for “authentic” experiences.
(Via World Hum.)
A Medical Tourism Tale
Vanity, Thy Name is Newley
I’m delighted to see that my recent articles have been cited in some of my favorite blogs:
— Rolf Potts mentioned “Beating the At-Home Blues” (and a long-term traveler named Andrea chimed in, leaving a comment about her current yearning for the road).
— Mike Yessis at World Hum also linked to the piece.
— The new Indy Travel blog not only mentioned “Beating the At-Home Blues” but appealed to my vanity by calling me “a rising star in the travel writing world” and posting an image of my mug.
— Michael Turton, of the excellent View From Taiwan blog, linked to my scootering misadventures article.
— And, as I mentioned before, Chris Mohney at Gridskipper also linked to my scootering article.
“To Be Young and Hip in Bangkok”

The NYT’s Matt Gross has a great article in today’s paper about currrent fashions and trends in Bangkok.


