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Archive for March 16th, 2012

St. Patrick’s Day: Free Dublin travel app and guidebook tips Mar 16

Lonely Planet often has limited-time offers for free downloads of their travel guides and apps. In honor of St. Patrick’s Day, the travel guide company offers its Dublin City Guide app for free along with an excerpt from its new Ireland guidebook.

The deal: The app usually costs $5.99. To get the app, folks with iPhones, iPads or iPod Touch can download the Lonely Planet Travel Guides from the iTunes store, open that app and select the Dublin guide. (Android and non-Apple tablet users are out of luck for this freebie.)

But here’s something everyone can access: a free excerpt from the company’s new Ireland guidebook (in an easy-to-download PDF) of 21 Top Experiences to have when traveling to the Emerald Isle. 

When: The free app is available until 1:59 p.m. PDT Saturday.

Details: Lonely Planet offers up more free advice for those with an armchair interest or soon to be going to Ireland:

How to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day in Dublin (um, they recommend drinking a lot);
Food and drink on the Emerald Island (they dare you to try the specialty Lough Neagh eel);
Ireland’s top 10 unusual places to stay;
The best Irish bars around the world (yes, Iceland and Chile each have one).

Contact: Lonely Planet Travel Guides on iTunes and/or 21 Top Experiences

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Mother’s Day Treats – Holiday Ideas From Direct Travel Insurance Mar 16

CROYDON, England, March 16, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ –
With Mother’s Day fast approaching (it’s 18 March if you haven’t already got it in the diary), what about a fantastic alternative to the usual flowers, chocolates or toiletries?

If you’re stuck for the perfect gift, here are some suggestions that will show mum you’re the best son or daughter in the world. Not that she ever doubted you.

With cheap travel insurance from the specialists as Direct Travel Insurance, you can save money yet still know that this special lady will benefit from excellent cover and great customer service.

Instead of a bouquet of flowers: book a weekend in Jersey, known as the Floral Island, to coincide with the annual June in Bloom flower festival (17 – 24 June 2012). There will be beautiful colours and aromas, fields swaying with lavender, tours of private gardens, wild orchid meadows, St Helier’s flower market and impeccable manor house lawns.

Instead of a scented candle: book a spa break. From Tuscan hot springs to Alpine resorts, from a wine-wrap in the Bordeaux region of France to a mud bath in the Canaries, a pampering long weekend spells indulgence and appreciation, big time. Direct Travel Insurance has Europe single-trip travel insurance from just £2.06.

Instead of a box of chocs: book a trip to Brussels to taste the best Belgian chocolates moments out of the confectioner’s kitchen, Paris for molten chocolate heaven at Angelina’s tearoom or a cookery course in Spain with lots of emphasis on desserts.

Instead of a Sunday drive: book a cruise. Options for a close-to-home trip could include the Scillies to Skye on a round-the-British-Isles cruise, a French vineyards-and-châteaux cruise or a mini-cruise for a long weekend in Amsterdam or Antwerp for relaxation, sightseeing and shopping. Holiday insurance for a cruise protects people and possessions onboard ship and during visits ashore.

DTI’s cheapest travel insurance policies are designed for those on a budget, with more options offering higher levels of cover. If the ideas above have whetted your appetite for more travel, annual travel insurance can be a cost-effective choice.

For a quick holiday insurance quote, visit
http://www.direct-travel.co.uk or call +44(0)845-605-2700.

Notes for Editors

Established in late 1992 and trading since 1993, Direct Travel Insurance specialises in travel insurance for individual travellers, couples and families up to the age of 75. Direct Travel Insurance offers a range of cover options and added benefits including cover for over 100 sports and activities enabling customers to tailor their policies for single trip, annual multi trip, backpacking and winter sports.

All travel insurance policies are underwritten by Chartis Europe Limited. Direct Travel Insurance is a trading name of UNAT Direct Insurance Management Limited, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority (FSA Number 312350). Chartis Europe Limited is also authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority (FSA Number 202628).

SOURCE Direct Travel Insurance

Copyright (C) 2012 PR Newswire. All rights reserved

Comtex

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Abandon perfection: Embrace ‘wabi sabi’ travel in the South Mar 16

 

Family travel is far from perfect, so embrace that imperfection with a 'wabi sabi' trip. Make it easier on yourself and go regional. In the Southeast, Chattanooga, Tennessee, and Huntsville, Alabama, are packed with activities for kids. The Tennesse Aquarium is a popular attraction in Chattanooga.Family travel is far from perfect, so embrace that imperfection with a ‘wabi sabi’ trip. Make it easier on yourself and go regional. In the Southeast, Chattanooga, Tennessee, and Huntsville, Alabama, are packed with activities for kids. The Tennesse Aquarium is a popular attraction in Chattanooga.

At the aquarium, ocean and freshwater exhibits provide entertainment for the whole family.At the aquarium, ocean and freshwater exhibits provide entertainment for the whole family.

Ruby Falls, a 145-foot waterfall, is situated deep under Lookout Mountain.
Ruby Falls, a 145-foot waterfall, is situated deep under Lookout Mountain.

The Creative Discovery Museum is fronted by a 2½ story play area.The Creative Discovery Museum is fronted by a 2½ story play area.

The Shuttle Pathfinder, with solid rocket boosters and an external fuel tank, provides a popular photo opportunity at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center.The Shuttle Pathfinder, with solid rocket boosters and an external fuel tank, provides a popular photo opportunity at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center.

The Saturn V inside the Davidson Center for Space Exploration is another imposing testament to U.S. space exploration.The Saturn V inside the Davidson Center for Space Exploration is another imposing testament to U.S. space exploration.

The Huntsville Botanical Garden's Nature Center is home to thousands of creatures including native butterflies, frogs and turtles.The Huntsville Botanical Garden’s Nature Center is home to thousands of creatures including native butterflies, frogs and turtles.

The two-acre Children's Garden includes a dinosaur attraction, a maze and a real Space Station node.The two-acre Children’s Garden includes a dinosaur attraction, a maze and a real Space Station node.

 

(CNN) — Traveling with young children is an imperfect art. Sure, there are urban myths about parents who tour Europe with their silent, serene baby in an organic backpack. But that’s just folklore peddled by luxury retailers selling couture children’s clothing. Real kids are loud, smelly and fidgety.

Traveling only ups the ante. Exhibit A: The Brangelina brood traipsing through an airport. If that glamorous couple can’t mask the hot mess of family travel, what hope is there for the rest of us? Maybe the answer lies in embracing the messiness. It’s what the Japanese call ‘wabi sabi,’ a perspective that celebrates the imperfect, the impermanent and the incomplete. It’s an apt metaphor for modern American family life, especially when you’re planning spring break on the road with young children.

Regardless of your destination, there are three critical factors that help soften the sometimes harsh realities of spending quality family time together. The “Big Three” virtually guarantee a good time for the little ones and relative peace of mind for parents: a hotel with an indoor pool, free breakfast with a do-it-yourself waffle maker and access to OnDemand cartoons. When stripped to these bare essentials, family vacationing morphs from the frenzy of plotting the perfect escape to enjoying a simpler and more satisfying adventure.

Who says you can’t create your best family memories over free food and drink at a hotel happy hour? Just consider the $100 tab to feed a family of four at a big-name amusement park and the beauty of a ‘wabi sabi’ vacation comes into clearer focus. The next step to a more mindful — not to mention budget friendly — family trip is to look local. Here in the Southeast, Disney World reigns supreme, but there are other regional gems worth a second look. Two to consider are Chattanooga, Tennessee, and Huntsville, Alabama.

CHATTANOOGA, Tennessee

Scenic City USA

Nicknamed the scenic city, Chattanooga, Tennessee, lives up to its billing. Perched invitingly on the banks of the Tennessee River, the city offers abundant natural attractions, including whitewater rafting, hiking and hang gliding.

More surprising, perhaps, is Chattanooga’s rich cultural scene, including the Hunter Museum of Art and the historic Bluff View Art District. With literally dozens of attractions packed along the city’s downtown riverfront alone, it’s little wonder Chattanooga was named one of the country’s top places to travel in 2012 by The New York Times. Narrowing down the list of family-friendly attractions can be difficult. Here’s a kid-centered cheat sheet to help:

Where to go

Creative Discovery Museum. This three-story, hands-on museum will delight young children. Fronted by a 2 ½ story river-play area, complete with ceiling-high climbing structures, working water cannons and a lock-and-dam system, the museum also houses a series of interactive art, music and theater exhibits. Budding scientists take heart. There’s also an inventor’s clubhouse for aspiring engineers and an excavation station for digging up dinosaur bones.

Tennessee Aquarium. Somehow, aquariums just seem better in cities defined by their proximity to water (sorry, Atlanta), and so it is with Chattanooga’s Tennessee Aquarium. Sure, the kids will love the ocean-themed wing of this double-sided attraction, with its friendly penguins and imposing sharks, but the river-side exhibit is a wonder, too. Giant catfish, river otters and alligators roam the exhibits, offering plenty of opportunities to get lost in the dimly lit corridors of the freshwater building. No matter where you start, there are plenty of spots to dip little fingers in icy water and delight in the slimy creatures that swim by.

Ruby Falls. Modern childhood is a torrent of gadgetry and engrossing virtual reality, but at Ruby Falls there are no electronic escapes, there’s something better: marvel-worthy natural wonders. Traveling from Chicago on a recent Disney-bound trip, Yuji Tamura, 32, was eager to see what he’d heard described as one of the “100 things to see before you die.”

“It didn’t disappoint,” Tamura said. (His 11-year-old son Christian agreed, although he wasn’t willing to rate it better than the Magic Kingdom. Still, points for Mother Nature!)

Situated 1,120 feet below the surface of Lookout Mountain (think of an inverted Empire State building and you get a sense of the depth), Ruby Falls is actually a series of caves leading to a stunning 145-foot waterfall named after the wife of Leo Lambert, the chemist and cave enthusiast who made the original 17-hour round-trip trek (mostly wriggling on his stomach) to view the falls. Today, it’s an easy round-trip walk (less than a mile, upright). One caveat: there are no strollers allowed so be prepared to carry younger kids or distract them by throwing pennies into the countless underground pools along the guided path.

Family-friendly restaurants

When to go

During March and April the city plays host to a spring break safari, with special behind-the-scenes tours such as the keeper kids program at the Tennessee Aquarium and the junior explorer’s scavenger hunt at Rock City gardens. Many local hotels, including the Doubletree and the Chattanoogan, offer spring break promotions that include bundled room and attraction rates through April.

In June, families can head to the banks of the Tennessee River for Chattanooga’s nine-day Riverbend music festival. Featuring five stages with more than 100 bands, the festival also has a children’s village, interactive exhibits and marketplace. This year’s headliners include The Band Perry, Eric Church and Lauren Alaina. General admission is $40; kids 10 and under are free.

HUNTSVILLE, Alabama

Rocket City is worth the ride

What’s more Southern than German rocket scientists and the smell of frying wiener schnitzel? In Huntsville, Alabama, the answer’s not much.

Known as rocket city, modern Huntsville retains its antebellum aura (the National Trust even named it one of America’s “distinctive destinations”), but the city’s skyline is defined by the Saturn V rockets developed there in the 1960s. Led by Wernher von Braun and his team of German rocket scientists (spirited into the United States after WWII through a covert CIA effort codenamed “operation paper clip”), this team of former Axis-allied scientists paved the way for modern American space flight.

Today, their legacy can be felt everywhere from the city’s convention center (named the Von Braun Center) to the U.S. Space and Rocket Center, which Von Braun helped establish. If you’re lucky, museum volunteer Dr. Georg von Tiesenhausen, an original member of Von Braun’s team, will be on hand to provide a firsthand account of the heady days of America’s race to the moon.

What to do

U.S. Space and Rocket Center. The centerpiece of this sprawling space oasis is the 68,000-square-foot Davidson Center, housing an original Saturn V rocket, an Apollo cockpit trainer and a 67-foot curved-screen IMAX theater featuring five daily showings. Outside, kids can explore numerous rockets up close; experience a simulated space launch (for those under 54 inches, there’s a mini-version in the cosmos play area); and stomp around a faux lunar crater. If you’re planning to make a day of it, pack a lunch and picnic in space shuttle park. The perfect follow-up? A week spent at the center’s famous space camp.

EarlyWorks Children’s History Museum. This charming, mid-sized children’s museum welcomes visitors under a canopy of 8,000 fabric leaves that comprise a sprawling imitation evergreen in the museum’s atrium. Inside, this hands-on learning space is packed with fun features, including a replica blasting exhibit (complete with dry ice) that teaches kids about local mining history; a 19th-century general store; and a special space for infants and young children to safely explore. If you have extra energy, the Huntsville Museum of Art is across the street, and kids 6 and under are free.

Huntsville Botanical Garden. Located just a mile from the U.S. Space and Rocket Center, this 100-acre natural retreat is a world away from the high-tech wonders of aerospace engineering. Kids will enjoy the two-acre children’s garden and mini-railroad. (The open-air Bridge Street shopping center is also nearby and has a kids’ carousel and gondola rides.)

Kid-friendly eateries

When to go

Summer in the south can be brutal, so it’s better to go during the explosion of color that defines Dixie in the springtime. During April, the Huntsville Botanical Garden host its annual festival of flowers with thousands of blooming dogwoods and azaleas on display, with average temperatures topping out at just 75 degrees.

Another spring standout in Huntsville is the 19th annual NASA Great Moonbuggy Race, April 13-14, at the Space and Rocket Center. The race pits high school students from around the world against one another in a feat of engineering to see who has the math and science skills to reach the finish line first.

No matter where you’re headed this spring break, if you go there in the spirit of wabi sabi family fun you’re guaranteed to find unexpected delights.

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Travel tech: See the sights on your next vacation with these apps Mar 16

It’s easy to get lost in a city you’ve never been. Luckily you have a tour guide with you at all times: your smartphone. Here’s how to use it to navigate any city, find the sights, make your way using public transportation, and hail a cab with ease.

City Sightseeing
The City Sightseeing app lets you hop on and hop off tours by either booking an actual tour bus or downloading guides. Learn about history and other fun facts as your guide leads you along the path of discovery.  

Start by searching for a tour using your current location by GPS or choose a city. Then easily tap to select the tour of your choice and you will be directed to information including places of interest along the route, images of the sights, and more suggestions of things to do within that city. Once you pick a tour, click “download guide,” then you can check to see if there is more than one route to take.

If you want to book an actual tour, go through the same process, and select the date of travel, number of tickets and fill in your billing information. Your voucher will be emailed to you, to present at your chosen tour location.

While seeing the sights create a “postcard” with signs, uploaded pictures, and text then send it to family and friends or upload to your social network. You can also take notes of your experience and save memories with diary entries within the app.

The app could even be fun to use in the city you live in, to discover new things you never knew were in your backyard!

Download City Sightseeing: Apple iTunes

MetrO
Take the fear out of maneuvering public transportation with MetrO. Find the best route from your current location by subway, bus, tram, or railway. The app has transportation information for over 400 cities around the world.  As routes change and evolve, so does MetrO, with updated information and expected travel delays.

You can also check out your surroundings to see what restaurants, parks, historical monuments, and so on are in the area.

Download MetrO: Apple iTunes
Mobilewalla Score: 86 out of 100

Cabulous
And don’t be late—Cabulous makes it easy to hail a cab with one-touch dialing and a map showing you where taxis are available. The app will give you local cab company numbers so you can dial direct and request an exact location for pick up and drop off. Then save your favorite driver’s contact info for future rides.

Download Cabulous: Apple iTunes
Mobilewalla Score: 82 out of 100

Here’s how it works:

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Travel Postcard: 48 hours in Seattle Mar 16


Fri Mar 16, 2012 12:05pm EDT

(Fixes typo in ninth paragraph)

By Elaine Porterfield

SEATTLE, March 16 (Reuters) – Set between two major
mountain ranges, the Olympics and the Cascades, with the Puget
Sound’s fjord-like waters to the west and massive Lake
Washington to the east, Seattle has one of the most dramatic
settings of any city in the country.

The frequent moody cloud cover can hide those jagged
mountains but on clear days 14,411-foot (4297 meter) Mount
Rainier can be seen from the city.

Reuters correspondents with local knowledge help visitors
get the most out of a short stay in the northwestern U.S. city.

Friday

6 p.m. – If the clouds have lifted even a bit, there’s no
better place to watch the sunset over Elliott Bay than from the
Seattle Art Museum’s nine-acre Olympic Sculpture Park on the
downtown waterfront.

Besides wandering about the 20 sculptures from major artists
like Alexander Calder, Louise Nevelson and Richard Serra, you
can enjoy further views of the changeable bay by strolling along
the paved trail through nearby Myrtle Edwards Park.

7 p.m. – Head up to the Capitol Hill neighborhood and start
the weekend with cocktails at Tavern Law, named by GQ Magazine
as one of the 25 best bars in America.

There are plenty of handcrafted cocktails to enjoy in the
Prohibition-era surroundings, but celebrate the start of your
getaway with a custom champagne cocktail. Peruse the menu. The
oxtail banh mi sandwich, based on Vietnamese tradition, will
give you a taste of the Pacific Rim influence that figures in so
many Seattle menus.

9 p.m. – Seattle takes its jazz seriously and there’s no
better spot than Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley downtown to hear it.
With any luck, a musician like Grammy Award-winning Arturo
Sandoval will be holding court. Or maybe you’ll catch the funky
horn-driven Tower of Power.

Saturday

9 a.m. – Fortify yourself for the day ahead with one of the
best Mexican breakfasts anywhere at Senor Moose in the lively
Ballard neighborhood. The crowded restaurant offers breakfast
specialties culled from regions throughout Mexico. Try the
outstanding huevos motuleños with black beans inspired by the
Yucatan breakfast staple. Even though it’s early, go ahead and
get an order of the flawless guacamole and chips. It’s
surprisingly good with a cup of Senor Moose’s strong coffee.

11 a.m. – Get a sense of Ballard’s historic status as
Seattle’s Scandinavian neighborhood at the Nordic Heritage
Museum and at stops such as the shop Scandinavian Specialties,
where you can pick up house-made cured meats, homemade Swedish
meatballs and a bowl of traditional yellow split pea soup.

Ballard also has a lively shopping scene. KAVU, a local
Seattle clothing and gear company, offers the quintessential
Northwest look, with hip interpretations of outdoorsy style
clothes. Stop at The Secret Garden Bookshop which has a
carefully chosen selection of books for children and adults. For
lunch, head to the nearby Ray’s Boathouse Cafe with views for
which Seattle is famous, along with the seafood.

3 p.m. – Spend the next two hours absorbing more of Asia’s
influence on Seattle at the Seattle Asian Art Museum. The
museum, which is situated in lovely Volunteer Park, showcases
exquisite art from various centuries and numerous counties in
Asia.

5 p.m. – Continue your exploration of Seattle’s hot cocktail
scene at the Zig Zag Cafe tucked away behind the Pike Place
Market. Try the One Legged Duck, a blend of Rye Whiskey,
Dubonnet, Mandarine Napoleon and Fernet Branca. Order a plate of
marinated olives to go with it, or try the cheese plate. Much of
the food on the menu is sourced at the Pike Place Market.

7 p.m. – Since you’re already at Pike Place, head to Matt’s
in the Market on the third floor of the Corner Market Building,
where the food matches the view. Meat lovers can try the Pork
Belly Confit with kimchi broth. For those who prefer seafood try
the clams with chorizo and cava or order anything with Dungeness
crab or perhaps some oysters on the half shell. For a larger
plate try the seafood stew.

9 p.m. – For a great evening head to the Triple Door in the
heart of downtown Seattle, which offers music ranging from pop
chanteuse crooners to Apple Jam, a group presenting a critically
praised tribute to the Beatles. A great wine list is available,
along with excellent cocktails and Southeast Asian inspired
plates. The satays are a perennial favorite.

Sunday

10 a.m. – For brunch try Salty’s at Alki in West Seattle. It
can be crowded, but the views and lavish assortment of Northwest
foods on offer more than make up for it, including piles of
Dungeness crab and smoked salmon, along with brunch staples like
Eggs Benedict and Belgian waffles.

Afterwards walk for miles along the waterfront through Alki,
Seattle’s premiere people watching neighborhood and beach scene.
Seals often pop their heads up here, and you’ll see ferries
chugging off to local islands.

1 p.m. – Seattle is a book lover’s town, and readers have
many fine bookstores to visit. Seattle Mystery Bookshop in
historic Pioneer Square is one of the best and offers both new
and used books. Passionate, friendly staff can help you find the
perfect read.

For an excellent general selection, Elliott Bay Book Company
on Capitol Hill has the goods, many with staff recommendations,
plus a great selection of unique cards. It’s easy to lose
yourself in the stacks, so keep an eye on the clock if you need
catch a flight.

(Reporting by Elaine Porterfield; editing by Patricia Reaney)

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Guestmob Challenges Online-Travel Incumbents Mar 16


(This story was originally posted on sister blog Venture Capital Dispatch.)

Guestmob offers deals on hotel rooms at discount prices in 20 cities.

Online travel upstart Guestmob, which gives travelers deals on 3- to 5-star rated hotel rooms at prices that are 20% to 50% lower than what’s available from other major travel sites, is rolling out its service to 20 U.S. cities.

Last year, Guestmob raised $800,000 in seed financing led by angel investors including Eric Chen of UJ Ventures and Ron Rofe of Vaizra Investments.

With just seven full-time employees, the San Mateo, Calif. start-up takes on longtime incumbents in online travel, including Priceline, Hotwire, Expedia, Orbitz and Travelocity, as well as relative newcomers like Kayak, or deal aggregators Groupon and Living Social.

Chen says, “If you look at online travel agencies, nobody has funded one in years, because for the most part it’s a pretty mature market. Most of the action in travel is about discovery and search like Kayak or GogoBot. But it is a tremendous market, full of slow-moving incumbents that can be disrupted.”

Drawing on years of research about travel, hotels and cities, Guestmob employs sophisticated, proprietary algorithms to predict occupancy in and demand for hotels for a given date. Using its high-tech crystal ball, the company negotiates with hotels to book rooms when the owners would otherwise risk wasting inventory.

This lets Guestmob offer rooms for a price below everyday rates, but high enough to make a profit. The start-up is not a consolidator, however. They lock in what is essentially a bulk rate on behalf of a virtual group (its customers) at hotels in a desirable area. But they sell first and buy later (with their own cash, if prices are higher than their technology had predicted).

The company’s CEO and founder Yann Ngongang (pronounced as the painter’s last name, Gaugin) admits, “In reality, sometimes we will take a hit and pay at the delta. Our users won’t take that hit, though.”

Users go to the Guestmob site, log in and select a destination, a date range and the number of rooms they want to book. The site shows them collections of 3-, 4-, and 5-star hotel rooms in the neighborhood where they want to stay, along with available pricing for their dates of travel. Users know they’ll get one of the hotels in a “collection” if they book it. They won’t know which one of the four to eight rooms they’ll get until a few days before they travel.

This is more straightforward than Hotwire, where users have to book before they see what they’ll get. It’s also simpler for users than a bidding system where they are expected to set their own price. Additionally, Guestmob allows users to cancel a room for a full refund as long as they do it three full days in advance.

“Our belief is that most travelers have some flexibility around locality, and a small basket of hotels they’re willing to trade on,” Ngongang says. “We follow their mental model. We’re also more than a reservations system for hotels. With a pricing engine, we make sure the market is efficient to bring everyone value.”

While Ngongan and his co-founders, CTO Alan Kaiser and director of market management Damien Keller, are obsessed with auctions, they’re focused on using their systems and brains to disrupt the discounted hotels market. The team views this as a $5 billion to $10 billion opportunity in North America annually. Priceline, a leader in this market, represents about 5% of total North American hotel bookings, and is a $30 billion company.

The list of cities where users can book hotel rooms through GuestMob now includes Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Houston, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis, New York, Orlando, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Portland, San Diego, San Francisco, San Jose, Seattle and Washington, D.C.

Reach Lora Kolodny via email at lora.kolodny@dowjones.com and follow her on Twitter at @lorakolodny.

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Travel Picks: Top 10 Best Non-Art Museums Mar 16


NEW YORK |
Fri Mar 16, 2012 1:31pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) – When you mention the word “museum,” most travelers imagine the steps of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, or the throngs of people trying to sneak a peek at the Mona Lisa in the Louvre. While art may be the first thing to come to mind, many other subjects can be found in museums around the world. To help you culture vultures plan ahead, the members and editors of travel website VirtualTourist.com (www.virtualtourist.com) have compiled a list of the “Top 10 Best Non-Art Museums.” Reuters has not endorsed this list:

1. The Egyptian Museum – Cairo, Egypt

This museum houses the greatest collection of Egyptian art in the world, including the treasures from the Tomb of King Tutankhamun and the world’s largest collection of Pharaonic antiquities. There are over 120,000 artifacts on display, from small statues to the actual mummies of Egyptian royalty, and widely recognized iconic pieces like The Gold Mask of Tutankhamun. VirtualTourist.com members agreed that it was virtually impossible to take in everything in only one visit, so go twice if time permits. Also, no photography is allowed inside the museum; in fact, you must leave your cameras outside the museum.

2. National Air Space Museum – Washington, D.C., USA

The National Air and Space Museum, part of the Smithsonian, is both the world’s largest collection of historic aircraft and spacecraft, but also one of the most visited museums in the world. It houses landmark pieces from scientific history, including the original Wright brother’s 1903 Flyer, Charles Lindbergh’s Spirit of St. Louis, and the command module from Apollo 11. It’s also a safe bet that you can get astronaut ice cream here. As with all Smithsonian museums and the zoo in Washington, D.C., admission is free for all.

3. Lower East Side Tenement Museum – New York City, NY, USA

Although Ellis Island reveals that immigrants’ hardships continued upon arriving in America, few museums or landmarks illustrate the plight of immigrants in major metropolitan cities. The Lower East Side Tenement Museum is such a place. It is housed in an original tenement building that was discovered intact in the late 1980s. A guided tour through the dark, cramped quarters shows what living conditions could be like in New York City before housing laws were established. Ironically, the Lower East Side is experiencing a great resurgence, due to its proximity to popular Soho and trendy East Village restaurants – the contrast between the inside of 97 Orchard Street and what’s occurring outside the museum’s walls is truly remarkable.

4. Musical Instrument Museum – Brussels, Belgium

The Musical Instrument Museum (now known as ‘mim’) was originally created to show instruments to the students of the adjoining Brussels Royal Music Conservatory. More recently, the museum attracts visitors with both its outstanding collection of instruments and the building which houses it. The Old England building on Montagne de la Cour is an art-nouveau gem, built in 1899 to the design specifications of architect Paul Saintenoy. VirtualTourist.com members noted that the museum’s restaurant, located on the top floor and with a terrace around the Old England’s dome, is a great place for a quick bite and a spectacular view of Belgium’s capital city.

5. The VasaMuseet – Stockholm, Sweden

In 1628, the Vasa commenced her maiden voyage, but heeled over and sank in the middle of Stockholm harbor, sailing less than one nautical mile. After three hundred and thirty-three years underwater, the ship was finally recovered in 1961. Now, the Vasa is safely ashore and on display at the VasaMuseet, the most visited museum in Scandinavia. While a large part of the museum’s focus is on showing visitors the ship, an even greater effort has been expended on the preservation process itself, which visitors can explore through permanent exhibitions.

6. Museo Nacional de Antropología – Mexico City, Mexico

Many visitors to Mexico walk the ruins at Chichén Itzá and Xochicalco, but few realize there exists a central location to admire Olmec, Mayan, and Aztec relics within Mexico City. The Museo Nacional de Antropologia is considered one of the world’s finest archaeological museums, with an incredible display of pre-Columbian artifacts, including the Piedra del Sol, or the “Stone of the Sun,” the Aztec calendar stone found in Mexico City’s main square.

7. Anne Frank Museum – Amsterdam, Netherlands

The second most visited museum in Amsterdam (to the Van Gogh museum), the Anne Frank Museum is the only literary-focused museum on this list. More importantly, the museum is on the list due to its focus on remembering and acknowledging the Holocaust. Located along a picturesque canal, it is difficult to imagine the original use of this house and the events that took place there. The museum is also very accessible to children, as The Diary of Anne Frank is a commonly -read book for young adults, and a great way to gently expose children to a very important event in world history.

8. The British Museum – London, England

Established in 1753 through an Act of Parliament and a bequeathed gift from a physician’s estate, the British Museum does contain art pieces, but it’s more famous for its impressive collection of archeological finds. The museum’s high profile acquisitions include the Rosetta Stone and the Parthenon Sculptures, more commonly known as “the Elgin Marbles” after the Ambassador who brought the sculptures back to Britain from Athens. Equally impressive is the museum’s architecture – the Queen Elizabeth II Great Court, designed by Sir Norman Foster, is the largest covered public square in Europe.

9. Tokyo National Museum – Tokyo, Japan

Located in Tokyo’s Ueno Park, the Tokyo National Museum was the first museum established in Japan, curating a collection of Asian art and archaeological objects, with a focus on Japanese artifacts. A complex containing five exhibition buildings, the collection includes traditional archeological finds like samurai swords and armor, as well as decorative objects like screens and sculptures. On March 20 – June 10, 2012, the Tokyo National Museum will be hosting a special exhibition of Japanese Masterpieces on loan from the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Mass.

10. The Istanbul Archaeological Museums – Istanbul, Turkey

Few areas have been controlled or inhabited by as many different cultures as the region of modern-day Turkey. Therefore, the Istanbul Archaeological Museums serve an important role: not only do the museums offer a broad sample of the country’s archeological treasures, but they also manage to cover the intertwining cultures that share a role in the nation’s history. One of the museums’ three buildings, the Tiled Kiosk Museum, is pictured here and houses antique Ottoman and Anatolian tiles, along with other Islamic objects. VirtualTourist.com members noted that the museums are conveniently-located in the Sultanahmet area of the city and are very well-organized. They also noted that the museums and the shaded parks around them provided a nice change of pace from the crowds at nearby Topkapi Palace and Istanbul’s other crowded landmarks.

(Created by Paul Casciato)

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Broncos’ Turn: Elway, Fox Travel to See Manning Mar 16

Denver Broncos executive John Elway and coach John Fox traveled to North Carolina on Friday to watch Peyton Manning work out at Duke, while the Miami Dolphins dropped out of the running to sign the NFL’s only four-time MVP.

The Broncos officials landed at Raleigh-Durham airport about 1:15 p.m. EDT and got into a white van near the plane. They arrived at Duke about 30 minutes later and drove through a gate outside the football team’s practice facilities.

A person told The Associated Press that Manning was going to work out at Duke facilities Friday afternoon for the Broncos. He was seen leaving the Blue Devils’ indoor facilities wearing blue shorts, a gray t-shirt and no helmet heading to the outdoor practice field followed by Elway and Fox.

The view of the practice field from the parking lot where reporters were gathered is partially obscured by a building that houses the visiting team’s locker room and a nine-foot, black gate.

Manning has been rehabilitating in North Carolina after a series of neck surgeries.

Another person confirmed to the AP that Manning phoned the Miami Dolphins on Thursday to advise them he’ll sign elsewhere. The team has now turned its attention to free agent quarterback Matt Flynn.

The people spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because Manning’s workouts have remained private and the Dolphins haven’t talked publicly about their negotiations.

Duke coach and longtime Manning friend David Cutcliffe told The Tennessean that Manning has made good progress throwing the football following operations that forced him to miss the entire 2011 season.

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Manning’s uncertain health led the Indianapolis Colts to balk at paying a $28 million roster bonus to the 35-year-old quarterback, which in turn started a race for the most prized free agent of the offseason and maybe ever.

Along with the Broncos, the Tennessee Titans and Arizona Cardinals remain in contention for Manning.

But not the Dolphins, who met with the record-setting QB for several hours Monday in Indianapolis and made signing him their top priority. Now the Dolphins will court Flynn, who visited the Seattle Seahawks on Thursday. Flynn was the backup last year for Green Bay and has a good relationship with new Dolphins head coach Joe Philbin, the Packers’ offensive coordinator the past five seasons.

Time is a factor for the Cardinals, who must decide by 4 p.m. EDT on Friday whether or not to release quarterback Kevin Kolb. He’s due $7 million if he is on the roster Saturday.

Manning’s whirlwind free agency tour officially kicked off soon after he bid farewell to the Colts in an emotional press conference last week.

The Broncos had the first crack at wooing him, rolling out the red carpet for his visit. Team officials flew him in and he spent the spent the day chatting with Elway, the Hall of Fame QB turned team executive. Manning also was escorted around the team’s building by coach John Fox and general manager Brian Xanders as he listened to their sales pitch.

After that, Manning journeyed to nearby Castle Rock, Colo., and spent the evening with good friend Brandon Stokley, who played catch with Manning the next morning and spoke highly of his former teammate in an interview on a local radio show.

Manning’s next stop was Arizona, where he met with the Cardinals for nearly 6½ hours.

Then Tennessee entered the picture. Manning has a big fan in 89-year-old Titans owner Bud Adams, and the former Tennessee Volunteer spent nearly eight hours with team executives on a plane and at the club’s headquarters.

The NFL Network reported that Manning was expected to work out for the Titans, but there was no immediate confirmation from the team or word on when that would happen.

———

AP Sports Writers Steve Wine in Miami and Pat Graham in Denver contributed to this report.

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ACPT 2012: How Far Would You Travel? Mar 16

SPECIAL POST — For Mangesh Ghogre, it started with a desire to get into a good graduate school. In his case, the road to the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament has been especially long.

Mr. Ghogre, at a crossroad in 1997 when he decided to earn an M.B.A. and change careers, went in search of a reliable resource to help the (then) non-English speaking engineer learn the daunting vocabulary he would need to know in order to score well on the G.M.A.T.

Now a 32 year old investment banker living near Mumbai, Mr.Ghogre happened upon the syndicated Los Angeles Times puzzle in the Times of India and kept track of every word he learned from the puzzles. Crosswords opened up a whole new way of seeing the English-speaking world for him, and at the same time, showed him how Americans looked at Indian culture, given the frequent references to words like rupee, rajah, rani, sari, and others.

As it often does, the solving hobby became an addiction, and now Mr. Ghogre lays claim to being the first Indian national to have a constructing byline in the L.A. Times, which has led to others in Games and World of Puzzles. This weekend, he will travel to the United States for the first time and get to see the A.C.P.T. up close and personal as an official, helping Will Shortz and what seems like a cast of many tens keep the tournament running.

Before Mr. Ghogre contacted me, I thought of the A.C.P.T., which runs March 16 through March 18 in New York, as an American tournament, the “Lourdes” of American crosswords for American crossword lovers. New York Times solvers travel astounding distances from all corners of the country to come to the Brooklyn Marriott for a chance to compete against their fellow puzzleheads.

But overseas travel? For a crossword tournament?

He’s not the only one. Peter Ritmeester of PZZL.com — the company that produces the Java applet for the online New York Times crossword and its leaderboard — makes the trek from Amsterdam every year to hunker down in his hotel room and monitor the software for the online tournament. When he can, he emerges to help out as a judge in the tournament ballroom.

Jeffrey Krasnick got hooked on the New York Times puzzle about 15 years ago, and after completing a set of A.C.P.T. puzzles in 2006, decided to make the trip from his home in Victoria, British Columbia to take part in the tournament.

“Victoria is not likely to hold a major tournament any time soon” he said, “so if the tournament won’t come West I have to go East! I have been at every A.C.P.T. since 2007. I first went for the experience, then for the trophies (Foreign Division 1st in 2010, 2nd in 2009 and 2011) and now I go to reunite with friends from far and wide.”

And that’s really what this boils down to: making like-minded friends, keeping company with other word nerds, comparing relative mechanical pencil lead sizes (I swear am not making that up), and delving into the best of the best crosswords the business has to offer. The competition becomes almost besides the point.

Oh yes, there’s the prize money, but that’s not why most of us travel to Brooklyn in March. We travel because, for one weekend in March every year, this is where our tribe lives.

Stay tuned for more updates as I bring you more news from the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament.

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Travel groups look east for 2012 bright spots Mar 16
Tourists look at a city map outside the Orsay Museum, which is closed to the public, as a strike by staff workers continues for the seventh day in Paris October 26, 2011. (REUTERS/Charles Platiau)

With a weak western European economy, fear of political unrest in North Africa and a cruise business hit by the Costa Concordia disaster, travel groups are looking to eastern Europe, China and corporate travel to brighten up 2012.

The United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) expects global arrivals of international travellers to increase by 3-4 percent this year, after a 4.4 percent increase to 980 million in 2011, with growth driven by emerging markets.

“The whole world is skewed to the East. This is the New World,” Taleb Rifai, secretary general of the UNWTO told Reuters in an interview at the ITB Berlin travel fair.

Officials from the tourism ministries of Tunisia and Egypt, which are struggling to encourage tourists back after uprisings, said Russian tourists were now the leading visitors to their countries, and that they were keen to attract Asian travellers.

China is expected to account for 100 million arrivals by 2020 as the country’s booming economy translates into corporate investments outside China and into rising wealth for the broader population, according to the UNWTO.

German travel group TUI AG, the owner of Europe’s largest tour operator TUI Travel, will bring its first groups of Chinese tourists to Europe in the summer on a package tour of Europe’s cities.

“We’re calling it the tour of the Museum of Europe,” CEO Michael Frenzel said, highlighting that TUI is the only European tour operator to have a licence to organize international travel for China.

Frenzel said spending on foreign holidays by travellers from Asia-Pacific was expected to reach 349 billion euros by 2020 as it grows at an average rate of 10 percent a year, compared with growth of 4 percent for Europe.

Spending by Chinese tourists is the fastest growing in the world, having jumped 38 percent last year, followed by Brazil, India and Russia, according to UNWTO data.

“If you’re a hotel owner in Berlin, you want the Chinese to visit,” said Hubert Joly, chief executive of hotels and business travel group Carlson.

BUSINESS IN PERSON

Business bookings are also expected to buoy demand this year as companies maintain their spending on trips in order to seek out new growth markets.

“One of the lessons from the crisis is that in order to conduct business you need to travel,” Carlson’s Joly told Reuters at the IHIF hotel fair in Berlin.

“Take the example of Athens. You couldn’t solve the Greek crisis on a conference call,” he said, adding that staff flying in from the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank had helped keep hotel occupancy rates strong in Athens.

German flagship carrier Deutsche Lufthansa said it expected business class bookings, on which airlines commonly make most of their profits, to remain stable this year.

“We know that the euro crisis and factors of economic instability have arrived in the real economy. But overall the current booking figures show that demand for business travel is relatively stable,” Jens Bischof told journalists at the ITB.

Frits van Paasschen, CEO of hotel chain Starwood, said the pipeline of new hotels reflected rising corporate travel to eastern Europe.

“We’re investing especially in the resource-rich countries, because that’s where much of business is travelling,” he said, citing new hotels in St. Petersburg in Russia, and Baku in oil-rich Azerbaijan.

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