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-   -   Do men travel to Europe in groups? Are they afraid to ask for directions? (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/do-men-travel-to-europe-in-groups-are-they-afraid-to-ask-for-directions-803378/)

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 03:11 PM

Do men travel to Europe in groups? Are they afraid to ask for directions?
 
I am struck by how often I see on this message posts that begin:

"Three ladies traveling to..."

"Four grandmothers but young at heart headed for ...."

"We are five women in their early 60s looking to explore..."

etc etc, but NEVER have I seen a post that began:

"We are 3 guys in the early 60s planning a trip to..."

"We are four grandfathers, interested in beer, some museum going and willing to rent a car..."

"We'll be three men spending 3 nights in London before ..."

What accounts for this? Anyone know?

I know gay couples who travel, and some may travel in small groups. Do they post on different message boards?

Does anyone personally know any men over 50 who have decided to go off for a European adventure without women in tow?

WillTravel Aug 27th, 2009 03:15 PM

This may sound bizarre, but I have heard feedback from men (I am a woman) that indicates they are afraid that going to an event with another guy (say a festival or opera), let alone a trip, might cause them to be perceived as gay. That, of course, is too scary a thought.

cheryllj Aug 27th, 2009 03:16 PM

I know men over 50 who have gone golfing in Scotland without any women in tow. But they aren't the kind to come here and do their own planning and research. They have people to make plans for them, like secretaries and travel agents.

macanimals Aug 27th, 2009 03:20 PM

Our women won't let us go without them! (At least my wife won't!)

bobthenavigator Aug 27th, 2009 03:20 PM

I beg to differ ! Here is my trip report from 2000

http://www.slowtrav.com/tr/tripreport.asp?tripid=104

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 03:21 PM

WillTravel

No, I don't think it sounds bizarre, given what American culture is. It reminds me of a hilarious sequence in Planes, Trains and Automobiles where Steve Martin and John Candy are forced by circumstances to travel together for several days and go into full panic mode when they wake up in a motel room and discover they've mistakenly snuggled up in their sleep to each other in their sleep. Actually, the entire movie is about the comedy and poignancy of men being kept from developing friendships with other men after a certain point in life.

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 03:24 PM

cherylj,

That's interesting. I do know women executives who go to travel planners.

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 03:26 PM

Bob, are you differing with me or macanimals? Can't tell. From looking at your trip report, it looks like you were able to succeed in being allowed to go where macanimals has thus far failed!

Bob, do you know any men who go traveling where it doesn't involve sports? Just curious.

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 03:30 PM

macanimals,

I wouldn't mind if my husband traveled without me. And he does go to visit longtime friends in other countries without me, even though I like his friends and their wives. I'm invited, but don't always feel like making the trip.

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 03:31 PM

But doesn't anybody else notice the disproportionate number of posts of women travelers who identify themselves first and foremost as women travelers?

bobthenavigator Aug 27th, 2009 03:32 PM

Yes, see above. And, why are you up so late?

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 03:32 PM

Also -- why so many mother-daughter trips but not father-son or father-daughter or mother-son?

Is it a difference in who travels or a difference in who posts on Fodor's?

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 03:33 PM

bob, what's it to you?

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 03:35 PM

PS, bob: Do you think it was unusual that you took a European trip with a male friend? Do you have male clients who do the same?

logos999 Aug 27th, 2009 03:46 PM

The answer to this is sooo simple - Men don't ask those questions, because being practical, down to earth folks, they already know the answer to all those questions beforehand. No need to ask, for advice on a message board, when the answer is already crystal clear :D

Women otoh...

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 03:49 PM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kCqcMOB6STc

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 03:49 PM

logos, right. That's why I asked!

november_moon Aug 27th, 2009 03:52 PM

I think it might be the type of travel as well - most of the men I know who go on trips without their immediate families go on camping, fishing, and/or golfing trips.

macanimals Aug 27th, 2009 04:02 PM

Zep--

I guess I deserved your "allowed" comment as my comment was done "tongue in cheek". I have traveled extensively alone when necessary and never consulted this forum as it was mostly on legal business and I had adequate resources. My wife has traveled at least as much w/o me and we are comfortable with that but when it comes to pleasure, we like to do it together. I wouldn't consider a trip with male friends as a "success".

As to your original query--perhaps the women inquiring feel vulnerable or need assurance as to their plan or itinerary--just a guess. Perhaps women outlive men and are more likely to have opportunities to travel with others in similar situations. But it is all conjecture, isn't it.

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 04:04 PM

Most of the men I know don't do any of those things (I'm probably unusual in the kind of men I know.)

It's interesting to me that I know more than one woman who has announced to her family she was going abroad for a vacation, with friends, and would not have allowed family objections to stop her, but I do think men have a harder time saying that unless it involves something women are certain they don't want to do.

I was interested that Bob's fishing trip involved going to the Amalfi coast and Taormina. Some women might have complained about being left behind on such famously romantic destinations.

But you'd think with all the freedom to mix it up these days, and obviously so many men enjoying Europe when they go with their wives, that at least some would get into their 50, 60s and 70s and be unattached and want to go to Europe.

Perhaps they always find women willing to go with them if they pay? I do know some men who've done that.

annw Aug 27th, 2009 04:07 PM

Now that you mention it, the only men traveling together groups I know or hear of are organized around an activity such as golf, baseball games, hunting/fishing treks, and the like, or maybe a weekend in Las Vegas. I don't think it's just a Fodors board phenomenon.

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 04:09 PM

macanimals,

We were posting at the same time.

It's interesting you wouldn't consider a trip with male friends a "success." I honestly don't think about it one way or the other.

I don't think it's just posting habits. Plenty of men come here to ask questions about their family trips. But there are scads and scads of tour companies offering tours to women -- and almost none to men. I know women feel less safe -- for good reasons. But I am surprised how often women come on here and ask questions about a perfectly safe and conventional itinerary -- like, a week in London -- and feel compelled to identify themselves as females.

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 04:10 PM

annw,

Yes, that's my impression. Although I do know a great many men who would and have traveled culturally by themselves, before they were married. And a few who traveled with one other bud. But that usually ends with marriage.

colduphere Aug 27th, 2009 04:11 PM

Why would men travel together if it wasn't for sports. To go to museums?? Oh guys, come over here and look at the pickasso. =;

If we're going, were going for sports. And beer. And we can find those without asking here. =; =; =;

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 04:16 PM

Almost all my male friends are artists of one sort or another: paint, sculpt, musicians. None play sports other than fitness activity. None drink beer. All drink wine. All of us have spent the majority of our time together in museums, and it would be very common for them to meet another male friend in the cities where they live in the US to go to a museum exhibit.

But I would be surprised if four of them decided to pick up without their wives and go cultural sightseeing for a week. Although a few of them who no longer live in the same city will sometimes arrange get togethers in one of their homes for long weekends, etc., just to sit around and catch up with each other's work -- and often some of the wives skip those get-togethers.

But almost all the women have traveled with other women for cultural sightseeing abroad.

colduphere Aug 27th, 2009 04:17 PM

Although I suppose we could go to a sports museum. Or a beer museum. We are not against museums per se.

zeppole Aug 27th, 2009 04:22 PM

All my male friends save one choose museums and concerts or in some cases theatre over sports events. (The one exception is British soccer maniac, in addition to being a maniac for art museums, historic churches, concerts, theatre etc in London).

I may be unusual in knowing so many men who prefer cultural activity to sports and beer. But it's plain to me reading travel reports written by men on Fodor's that many men do not travel for sports and beer, and wouldn't ever, even if they were traveling with other men. But they don't travel with other men, not even to do the cultural activities they enjoy doing when they aren't traveling (and often enjoy with male friends).

bobthenavigator Aug 27th, 2009 05:22 PM

Bingo !

We have a new record by Zeppole--breaking her own record.
Would you believe 15 posts in the same thread in just over one hour--and all well after midnight in Italy. When do you sleep, and are you taking your meds?

My trip with Ed was not a " fishing" trip. It was a trip to see and visit fishing villages on the coast--much different.

Peter_S_Aus Aug 27th, 2009 06:03 PM

Male DNA is configured in such a way as to NEVER ask questions. Men NEVER ask directions.

They just buy a GPS instead, get lost, and then request their female travelling companion to ask for directions.

I speak with authority here - I NEVER ask directions.
But I've seen some interesting sights while lost.

janisj Aug 27th, 2009 07:20 PM

bobthenavigator: "<i>We have a new record by Zeppole--breaking her own record.

Would you believe 15 posts in the same thread in just over one hour</i>"

That's the middle distance record. She also set a sprint record - 5 consecutive posts in 10 minutes 7:21-7:31. The old record was 4 set on 256 different occasions . . . . .

Cowboy1968 Aug 27th, 2009 09:40 PM

Women need advice and tour guides.
Men give advice and are tour guides.

Women will walk down Champs-Elysees and ask for directions to the Arc de Triomphe twice. Just to be on the safe side.
Men will stand in front of a building in Salzburg and tell their family that that was the place where Mozart played the piano in public first time - next to an inscript on the wall saying "erected 1810".

alanRow Aug 27th, 2009 09:48 PM

Only 2 groups of men go on holiday together - stag parties & golf parties.

The only directions they need is "where's the bar"

swandav2000 Aug 27th, 2009 10:33 PM

What alanRow said. On the Munich boards at Trip Advisor, there are often posts about where to go/where to party for a stag party in Munich.

s

spaarne Aug 27th, 2009 10:33 PM

Do you remember double dating when you were in college? Neither girl would go to the WC without the other one. Why do they do that? It must be a mammal gender thing. Cows can graze in the same pasture but bulls gotta fight.

Some men I know also go hunting and fishing together. I guess they don't talk until they start drinking.

I go solo on my trips to Europe. I meet locals and other travelers, have a good time, and adios. A partner, male or female, would just slow me down. I go to Europe to experience the place, not to yakky yak with someone I already know.

saacnmama Aug 28th, 2009 12:03 AM

spaarne, you made me laugh! I swear I was 30 yrs old before I realized that I had, for decades, been missing out on clues that it was time for a pee party.


I used to travel solo, couldn't imagine doing it differently. If I was feeling uncertain, I'd read or pack a guidebook, then mostly go look around and see for myself.
Since becoming a mama--another adventure I'm undertaking on my own--I haven't traveled that way. My son and I have always communicated constantly, and if I would've had to figure out a place to stay or even where to go for an afternoon nap or when the museum was closed when he was a baby/toddler, it would've been a disaster. I would've been stressed, forgotten something or missed him dropping an item on the street. He would've felt my tension and raised it by getting upset... He's older now (just started 1st grade!) so I can certainly tell him to hang on a minute, let me figure this out, but I still am more comfortable traveling with him after having done too much research, generally start a file 3 to 18 mos in advance, throw things in as I come across them, then sit down and map them all out a few weeks before the trip. It's also fun these days to involve him (a bit) in trip planning--after I've done my groundwork and can offer a choice of 2 or 3 options that take similar amounts of time, energy and money--space museum or cultural history. Having done the research also lets me offer him choices on the fly--don't want to go to the restaurant? There's a park right over there with food vendors or whatever.

If other folks feel the same about their joint childcare/trip leader responsibilities, and if women are more involved in childrearing than men, then it makes sense that more women would be trying to plan trips.

Bob and Janis, thanks for your joking comments re: p. I won't wonder any more what's with her or if it's just me!

zeppole Aug 28th, 2009 01:31 AM

Peter, but you are here posting on Fodor's -- although when I think about it, you mostly direct others about Venice. Did you ask questions on Fodor's before you went?

Cowboy, most of the tour guides I have seen everywhere I've traveled are women. But I think you're on to something with the rest your post.

alan and swandav, I don't know any men who go to stag parties, but I do think there is something about travel that makes men who otherwise frequently get together with male friends to attend concerts, see art exhibits, have dinner in a gourmet restaurant, etc. NOT do exactly the same thing if it involves spending nights out of town.

spaarne, whenever I've needed to use the WC, I just went, alone if need be, even in college. And the men I know don't fight with each other or compete much. But I also think solo travel is fun -- and I think there are plenty of men who feel the same.

saacnmama, what is WITH bob and janisj? -- other than I contradict their terribly conformist travel advice all the time? And what is with you for turning as mean-spirited and sneering as them? Both of them are Fodor's addicts who are on Fodor's every single night and day recycling the same Americanized tour information over and over and over -- bob with cut and paste cliches and janis with energizer bunny nattering about Priceline and carryon -- and no one who wants to do something differing is spared their slapdowns.

I haven't had somebody try to set a bedtime for me since I was 11. But that's who bob and janis are as Fodor's posters -- everybody's clucking parent, telling them not to do anything that isn't done by them and the older generation. Looks like, saacmama, you're now identifying yourself totally as a mother, right down to your screen name, and headed the same way, building a world view consumed by parenting. Don't be surprised if your kid rebels, stays up late and races far ahead of your small world view.

Yes, bob and janisj: I think more and faster than you, and engage more directly with what's in front of my nose. And I guess I don't need as much sleep. Do you two really ever get out of the house -- or even out of your own heads for a second? People aren't all the same -- and they are not crazy if they're not like you. Why do you travel, I wonder. Never mind -- I'm not that interested.

zeppole Aug 28th, 2009 01:33 AM

By the way, living in Italy, it is striking how often you see groups of men socializing in fine restaurants or cafes, especially groups of men who are apparently related to each other. But also just male friends catching up. I have no idea if they travel together.

zeppole Aug 28th, 2009 01:42 AM

And in France, it's mostly couples.

zeppole Aug 28th, 2009 01:42 AM

I'm putting up separate posts here so bob and janisj have something to marvel at.

zeppole Aug 28th, 2009 03:07 AM

You couldn't get any of my male friends to go on a trip like that either. I think one would go for Cricket or Soccer (although in that case, his wife would be quite sad to be left out of the soccer trip, and they'd probably want her along since she's so knowledgable.) Some of my male friends, when on business-type trips, will take time with male colleagues to go to the local art museum or historic church. In Milano, I've often seen groups of men in business suits stopping to marvel at the facade of the Duomo and discuss it before hurrying on to lunch. And they didn't look embarrassed to be doing it.

But for sure, the all-male trips you describe don't sound like the type to inspire the travellers to come on this board and ask "How many pairs of socks should we pack and any good restaurant recommendations?"

PS: I think of some of the fair-sex who post censoriously on this board as the Old Fallopian Tubes.


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