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Gwendolynn Jan 20th, 2020 04:14 PM

Favorite travel memory...
 
In an attempt to escape reality I watched a travelogue on Egypt last nite. It wasn't very good. But it reminded me of my time in Abu Simbel. This was 20 years ago. I found myself alone in the temple with just a shaft of light and a bird flying around.

Another indelible memory is from my first trip to France... about 40 years ago. My husband and I arrived in Chartres too late for lunch. So we ducked into a simple bar for a glass of wine. When I asked about food the bar maid slapped ham between two pieces of bread. I thought, oh well, at least it's food. One of the best things I've ever eaten. Then we went outside and a vendor was selling apricot sorbet. One of my most memorable meals.

So try to keep the memories down to two -:)

pja1 Jan 20th, 2020 05:17 PM

We stayed in Wengen mid October 1991. Beyond quiet in the evening. Just the sound of our foot steps. We walked down a paved path away from the village and above Lauterbrunnen valley. We came across a park bench. As we sat, the sun was setting. There we sat, surrounded, as if in the center of a bowl, by snow capped peaks, now glowing in array of yellows, oranges and purples. As the sun continued to set, lights across the valley in Muerren came on and began to twinkle, as did the lights in the valley far below us. We sat there, in total and utter silence, a silence broken only by the sound of distant cowbells. Absolutely magical. I’ll never forget that evening.

gruezi Jan 20th, 2020 05:27 PM

2? Okay 😏

Mass, complete with the botafumerio swinging in the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela, after walking the Camino.

Iona at sunset.

(The Panoramaweg in Muerren would have been a close second but pja covered that...)

xcountry Jan 20th, 2020 05:29 PM

The airport bus pulling up in front of the Forbidden City in Beijing. Never thought I’d make it there, let alone with three kids. Then walking a mile, eventually entering a hutong, to find our small hotel at the end of an alley.


MoBro Jan 20th, 2020 05:38 PM

Mother’s Day in Venice.
I had never been to Italy, and was touring with my darling daughter, who had just finished her semester in Florence.
Our hotel room windows opened above the intersection of two small canals.
As we were getting up, and ready to go to brunch at La Calcina, a gondolier was singing Ave Maria under our balcony window.
Magical moments.

Nikki Jan 20th, 2020 05:56 PM

Two related memories. Are they my favorites? Who knows. But they come to mind at the moment.

1. 1972. My friend Ellen and I are making our way through France and spend a couple of nights in Tours. It is hot and we think it would be nice to go swimming. So, having no knowledge of where we are going, we stick out our thumbs and are picked up by a priest. We ask where might be a good place to go swimming. He says he knows a place, “assez rustique”. He drops us off in front of a little church and says if we walk down the path next to the church we will find a little beach on a river. Which we do. We go swimming in the river. The way back is against the current, which is pretty strong.

Now it is time to go back to Tours. We go out to the road after snapping a picture of the little church and try to hitch back into town. It takes a long time to get a ride, so we start walking. There is a lot of boring, industrial stuff. Eventually we make it back to Tours. Young, stupid, and lucky.


2. 2005. My husband and I are driving through France. We are trying to find our way to our night’s lodging and have to pass through Tours. This is pre-GPS, and we are trying to navigate by following signs. We keep following the signs for “autres directions”, other directions, hoping they will eventually lead us around the city and out the other side. We pass a stretch of big box stores, but soon after we are on a country road that appears to be going our way.

We pass a sign saying “Larcay”. I spot a little church that looks familiar. Turn left, I say. There will be a little beach on the river. And there it is. There is a sign now that says the river is closed to swimming. There is a track for the TGV crossing the river here. Some kids are playing on a slip-and-slide. Some old folks are playing cards. The current still seems pretty fast, maybe even faster.

My husband isn’t nearly as impressed as he should be.

sundowner Jan 20th, 2020 06:00 PM

Botswana, 2007. Driving along the Chobe River, we stopped to watch a some giraffes drinking in the golden light. A herd of ellies came to drink. They didn't stay long but another herd was coming. We ended up sitting there for hours until long after dark and listened to 500-700 elephants walk through the water. We were all completely silent listening and watching in the moonlight. And it's quite surprising how quiet 500 or 700 elephants can be. Some were as close as 10-15 feet away. I've thought of that evening many times through the years. Magical. Without a doubt.

carolyn Jan 20th, 2020 06:36 PM

Seeing the temple of Aphaia on the Greek island of Aegina with only a very few other people around. It is a beautiful ruin standing on a hill with most of its pillars intact. That was the most clear feeling I've ever had of witnessing an example of a civilization "gone with the wind."

Driving in Edinburgh at night and seeing the lighted castle perched on its black rock with a full moon rising behind it.

natylou Jan 20th, 2020 06:58 PM

Arriving in Avignon for the first time, we walked around the town in the chill dark and came into the square where the Palais des Papes was all lit against the blackness.

As we took time to appreciate the hugeness and starkness of the Palais, a gentleman came along and began to sing opera. The acoustics of the place and the beauty of his voice was stunning. We listened for a long time because, when will this ever happen again? And in all our travels, with many fine moments, it has never happened again.

basingstoke2 Jan 20th, 2020 07:01 PM

In 1974 we were camping in the Sinai on the shore of the Gulf of Aqaba. We could see the red mountains of Saudi Arabia across the gulf with the green mountains of the Sinai behind us. Far down the beach 3 couples had set up a semi permanent camp using a sand dune as an anchoring back wall and hanging carpets to create rooms. They had been there for 3 months. Early every morning they would spear fish and then trade what they could not use for supplies at a Bedouin camp further in the Sinai. They told us of a restaurant a few miles down the shore run by a couple of Australians and located behind another Bedouin camp. We found the restaurant. It was completely outdoors, a grill and some tables and chairs. The menu was simple. Grilled fish - that was all. We ordered and the owners walked down to the shore, pulled in a net. What was in the net became our dinner. I recall the fish as sweet with blue bones. It was not only a delicious meal, but an adventure as well.

Another outstanding moment was our first visit to Venice and first view of the city as our boat turned on to the Grand Canal. It was breathtakingly beautiful.

Underhill Jan 20th, 2020 08:05 PM

Mine is the week we were in London at Christmas, complete with snow and chestnuts roasting on an open fire.

kureiff Jan 20th, 2020 08:19 PM

For the last six or seven years I get some continuing Ed classes at Big Sky, MT over Martin Luther King weekend. Sometimes our daughter joins us and sometimes we meet family and sometimes we meet friends.

Two years ago there was at least two feet of new snow, and it was just my husband and me. We skied the bowl all morning making six minute laps in thigh deep powder. Took a break for lunch and a “nap.” And then skied six laps on a two mile mogul run in the afternoon. It was just the perfect day of snow and fun.

Two years ago in Venice: quiet, full moon, wandering around and dead ending into walls and canals with nowhere else to be.

curiousgeo Jan 20th, 2020 08:20 PM

Early 60’s, my first plane ride and trip to Disneyland and Knott's Berry Farm. Loved the Matterhorn bobsleds, got sick on the teacup ride, enjoyed the chicken dinner at Knott's, great fun at 9 years old. Oh and got a coonskin hat like my idol Davy Crockett.

kureiff Jan 20th, 2020 08:22 PM


Originally Posted by curiousgeo (Post 17049844)
Early 60’s, my first trip to Disneyland and Knott's Berry Farm. Loved the Matterhorn bobsleds, got sick on the teacup ride, enjoyed the chicken dinner at Knott's, great fun at 9 years old. Oh and got a coonskin hat like my idol Davy Crockett.


We took our daughter when she was seven (8! Years ago), and we rode the Matterhorn at least five times; her favorite along with the river ride in CA Adventures).

starrs Jan 20th, 2020 08:34 PM

Seeing Delicate Arch for the first time. It was the top of my bucket list for me.
Being the only ones at Delicate Arch. Magical.
Hiking on the trail with pockets of snow on it.
Sitting in the quietness and stillness, soaking everything in.
Laying on my back to get that "sun behind the arch" shot.
Not such a great memory = my feet slipping on the sandstone due to ice crystals in the rock. My first experience with panic, thinking I may slip and fall and imagining the slow slide down into the amphitheater.

I don't think I want to return and have to share Delicate Arch with other people.

kureiff's post reminds me of getting off the water taxi after a late night tour and walking into the fog, neither of us really knowing where we were. Followed footsteps and then the fog cleared a bit and we were in St Mark's square for the first time. Made even more special was it felt like the water taxi/ fog description goddesstogo had so beautifully written about.

My birthday morning on the Grand Canal. Standing at the window, eating a peach croissant that was brought to the room on a silver tray, and watching the early morning worker boat traffic. Truly a dream come true (the Grand Canal room also thanks to gtg's descriptions years before).

hetismij2 Jan 21st, 2020 12:28 AM

1. Serengeti: Having left camp early and watched the hyenas playing (I love hyenas!) we continued with not a single sighting, not even a bird. We met another jeep and the driver guides chatted and agreed that area seemed to have nothing around at that time. We drove on a bit, intending to move to a different area when I saw movement, and we had three beautiful cheetah brothers to ourselves for maybe half an hour.
Watching a gnu give birth on another day, waking up to a lion in the camp in the night another day. So many great memories from that trip.

2. My first Hurtigruten trip. After lots of grey and snow we had a day of rare delight, starting with an amazing dawn as we sailed south toward the Lofoten. The sun staggered up eventually and we had the perfect weather for going through the islands. At the end of the day we had hours of northern lights display.

3. Seeing the Grand Canyon for the first time. Not only the beauty of it but enjoying the condors and the quiet. It was early March and had snowed frosting it all with white. No crowds that trip unlike later trips.

mama_mia Jan 21st, 2020 02:41 AM

Standing in front of the house in Abruzzo Italy where my grandfather was born (he was born in 1884 and I don't think the house has changed much in the interim). A clerk at the city hall personally escorted us there when we tried to locate it.

That first glimpse of Venice from a boat. This was our first trip to Europe with our sons and, mamma mia! Is there any other place in Europe that says to the same degree that you're not in Kansas (or, in our case, Pennsylvania) anymore?



starrs Jan 21st, 2020 03:22 AM


Originally Posted by hetismij2 (Post 17049885)
It was early March and had snowed frosting it all with white. No crowds that trip unlike later trips.

I love all of yours and am jealous of #2, but the first time I saw the Grand Canyon was like you. In March. Snow was falling and fell for three days. Nothing like seeing the GC with snow on the layers and the quietness without the crowds around. We were young and stupid and had no idea we needed reservations. As we drove in, a steady stream of cars were leaving. They had heard the snow forecast and we were leaving. We had the time, no matter the weather and thanks to their exodus found a room on the rim. It was the same trip as the Delicate Arch stop.

marlib1951 Jan 21st, 2020 04:01 AM

Riding an old train from Lausanne to Interlaken and as we gained elevation it started to snow big glorious flakes. By the time we got to Interlaken, it was Christmas card perfect.

It seems that that many of these memories involved snow but what is more magical?

OO Jan 21st, 2020 05:19 AM

My best has always been, and now more than ever, our first trip to Paris, arriving Christmas Eve and going to Notre Dame for Christmas Eve mass. Walking across that plaza in the dark and cold to the cathedral, beautifully lit, the big bells tolling, people approaching from all directions—it was a very emotional moment for us both. Then leaving in the mass of bodies, worried I’d get separated from my husband and reaching behind me to take his hand. When we got to the edge of the immense crowd I turned to say something to him and realized I was holding the hand of an elderly woman...who just smiled wanly at me as I died a thousand deaths. :). Happily my husband was still there too. I’ve told this a bajillion times, so my apologies to those who have heard it all before.

Gardyloo Jan 21st, 2020 05:28 AM

Many...

- Traveling with my parents from Los Angeles to New York City when I was eight. It was October, and I was overwhelmed with the cold air, the smells, the sounds, everything...

- Standing on the frozen Arctic Ocean on one of my first trips to Alaska.

- Walking through Princes Street Gardens in the fog on one of my first mornings in Edinburgh, watching the castle emerge through the mist.

- Meandering through the Grand Bazaar in Isfahan, Iran.

- Sailing at last light under the Golden Gate Bridge after crossing the Pacific on a freighter.

starrs Jan 21st, 2020 05:32 AM

That is wonderful, OO. I have not heard it. I loved your story.
I love the first time and last time I see her on each trip. If taking a taxi in from the train station, I take a shaky video out the window. On my last morning, I always go to see her and to light two candles if the line is not too long. If it is, I go to another church. Usually the one next to Le Bonaparte.

One of my favorite memories is taking photos of my first night (on a return trip) around Le Bonaparte and taking a photo of a dog being walked. When I posted it on FB, you commented about the shop and I returned when it was open to buy a tapesty pillowcase. On my Easter trip last year, the shop was closed and I was sad. But when I was in Sainte-Chapelle, I glanced at the gift shop and there was a Jules Pansu pillowcase! I bought a rabbit pillowcase as my souvenir that year. Every time I walk that street and every time I look at my pillows from Paris, I think of you. :-)

gail Jan 21st, 2020 05:42 AM

April 2001 standing inside the Great Pyramid with husband, 11 and 15 year old kids. Something spiritual came over me - the history, the spirits, the power. Never felt anything like that before or since.

OO Jan 21st, 2020 10:56 AM

Nice memory Starrs, and one we share fondly! The pillow in the window that drew me in was a tapestry featuring a large red apple, and the words, “Ceci n’est pas une pomme” which appealed to my sometimes weird sense of humor. It’s not what I bought, but love it too. It’s a great shop and I’m so glad you went back! It is without a doubt my all time favorite souvenir, and still makes me smile every time I make the bed.

https://e5h6h9q8.stackpathcdn.com/wp...9649494299.jpg

starrs Jan 21st, 2020 11:49 AM

Love it!
I have one from each of my last three trips. Love the pillowcases. Love the memory. :-)


Rich Jan 22nd, 2020 08:10 AM

In Moscow, just prior to the dissolution of the Soviet Union at the offices of the Government Oil Company which is just across the river from the Kremlin. Stepped out to wait for the driver and looked across at the Kremlin with snow flakes the size of basketballs and could not believe that I was actually there with the "evil empire"

jacketwatch Jan 22nd, 2020 05:01 PM

Great topic.
We were on the Star Princess in the Baltic in June, 2007, white nights. One night around 0230 we were having drinks at the bar all the way astern up around the 16 th deck and looking at the horizon you could see the break between night ending and daybreak beginning.

billirandall Jan 24th, 2020 04:26 AM

Mine is when i visited Nepal last year. It's a beautiful country with fresh air and kind people.

schmerl Jan 24th, 2020 04:47 AM

We were in Israel for both their Memorial Day and their Independence Day. The entire trip was incredible, however, on each of these days a siren is sounded and everything just stops. The siren is heard all over the country and lasts for one minute, during which Israelis stop everything, including driving on highways, and stand in silence, commemorating the fallen and showing respect. It was an amazing experience.

ammarairvine Jan 27th, 2020 11:53 PM

It's really odd that what I can clearly remember is the one where I experienced an extreme fear and it's none other than my first flight experience lol! I am getting used to it now since I always travel solo.

MyriamC Feb 16th, 2020 04:03 AM

1) How I stood in awe when I first saw the temple complexes of Luxor and Karnak. So Huge, and to know that mankind built these around 2000-1700 BC.
2) Maybe not a favorite, but one I will never forget. The happiness in the eyes of our security guard in our resort in Kenya (1996) when my husband gave him three pairs of Nike socks. How such a small thing can make a huge difference to someone who has so little.

SpaceCreation Feb 26th, 2020 10:35 PM

We spent 1.5 months in Portugal 3 years ago. It was the best thing that happened in our lives. I wish we could have stayed there.

vietnguyen0396 Aug 10th, 2021 12:25 AM

I picked up a group of 10 Italians at Danang airport then transfered to Hoian old town (30km south of Danang) in the evening in 2018 in the rainy season. The hotel they stayed was on the other side of Hoian center. By the time they arrived in the hotel, the flood water near leveled up the stairs at the lobby. The next morning when I came to pick up for tour, i was shocked as I could not reach the hotel as the flooding water was everywhere. I tried to call travel agent many times and I eventually hired a small boat to transport all of them step by step to stay in Danang. It was my sweet memory of being a guide.

HappyTrvlr Aug 10th, 2021 11:47 AM

Attending the Christmas Eve service at Westminster Abbey.
Walking outside of our Shanghai hotel at 6 am to see many elderly locals ball room dancing in the park across the street.
The first time I saw the snow capped Alps from our balcony.
My first view of the Pyramids from our hotel room right after we arrived in Cairo.
Attending the traditional Sunday Animal Market in Kashgar,Xinjiang Province, China.

janegun2595 Aug 18th, 2021 10:58 PM


Originally Posted by xcountry (Post 17049769)
The airport bus pulling up in front of the Forbidden City in Beijing. Never thought I’d make it there, let alone with three kids. Then walking a mile, eventually entering a hutong, to find our small hotel at the end of an alley.

:(

Underhill Aug 19th, 2021 06:50 AM

After some mental trolling through the past I think I've finally chosen my favorite travel memory: watching fireworks on Bastille Day in the meadow next to a small restaurant/inn in the Burgundy hamlet of Bouilland. The fireworks were courtesy of the chef/owner, who joined us for the celebration. The cows weren't bothered at all, nor were the sheep. It was a magical time.

zebec Sep 18th, 2021 09:09 AM

Oh Gosh Gwen. What a terrific idea for a post, especially during these trying times (crying times?--editor). Yeah, choosing just two is hard. So I'll just start with a travel memory which we actually listened to this morn.

As mentioned before, we finally got around to arranging for a tech outfit to digitize our entire travel audio collection. Mrs Z and I were once in the habit of bringing not just journals, cameras and art supplies, but also a tape recorder. We recorded all manner of sounds in a great range of nations.
So one of our fave memories was a Sahara jam session in the remote Egyptian oasis of 'Farfara' near the Libyan border. We played, danced and sang along with a tribal troupe of Bedu players, all of us cavorting by a bonfire. Songs included 'Manjana' ('he isn't coming'), the 'Wedding Song' plus 'Haila Ho' ('pull together and try harder'). The nay player was especially talented and hearing his skill again today sent a rush up our spines. I was on a darbookah hand-drum back then in '93 and propelled the jam into also adding 'The Immigrant Song', one of my fave beats.

A ton of extra-curricular activity surrounded that wonderful night, but all that will wait for some other post.

I am done. the musical memories





zebec Sep 18th, 2021 09:18 AM

Numero deux

We tend not to go for corny souvenirs while traveling, but one such exception serves as our second Fave Travel Memory. In Capetown 16 years ago, we posed for a pair of those silly digitized photos. You know the kind, Photo-Shopped images that make one appear as though they are say, about to barrel over Niagara Falls or whatever other improbable scenario.
Ours were: a) Mrs Z on the ground being licked by a friendly leopard and b) a hapless me pointing my Nikon at a Great White Shark as it rips through my small rowboat.

I am done. les deux

pdx Sep 18th, 2021 03:35 PM

Two memories, both in Florence, Italy.
1. A man in a beautiful camel colored suit, riding a bike through the crowd near the Mercato Centrale with one arm raised in the air holding a flat of eggs. I was in awe.
2. Also in Florence, being recognized, called to, and receiving a hug from two women who owned the pensione we had stayed in a couple of times on previous trips (we rented a house outside of town this trip) (Pensione Teti, anyone?). This was the best thing ever!

schmerl Sep 19th, 2021 05:44 AM

I have many wonderful travel memories.
My sister and I were just talking about one the other day.
We were in Jordan and I commented how strange it was that we were sitting in Jordan, eating Chinese food, while looking across the Dead Sea at Jericho.
That whole trip was filled with great memories.


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