Tag Archives: Adventure travel

Everything about Alaska is big, bold and sensational

Bald Eagle in flight with mountains in backgroundAlaska. The Last Frontier. The Great Land.

Glaciers calving with thunderous roars. Eagles soaring with fierce grace. Whales breaching with enormous power. Endless forests. Massive mountains.

If you have been, your mind colored in those words. If you haven’t, you don’t yet know Alaska’s awesomeness.

Either way, the place the a powerful pull. At Expedia CruiseShipCenters we know how to get the most out of Alaska, whether it’s your first time or a repeat visit.

There are choices. Cruise. Cruise Tour. Denali. The list goes on.

Been there, done that? Not so fast. Have you Explored the Kenai Peninsula? Canada’s Yukon Territory? Fairbanks and the Arctic Circle?

Want to take the family or explore with like-minded travelers? Multiply your enjoyment and savings with our group program.

Our travel consultants are expert at guiding you through your choices in Alaska and around the world. Whether you are making your first journey to the 49th state or going back for more.

We can help you compare cruise and land, categories of staterooms, shore excursions, every detail.

JOIN US FOR ON STAGE ALASKA

We even are offering “On Stage Alaska,” an entertaining live show that will educate and prepare you to make your Alaska journey absolutely awesome. Please join us at 2 pm, Saturday, Jan. 21 at Brandman University, 16355 Laguna Canyon Road, Irvine, CA 92618.

This presentation is one of the ways Expedia CruiseShipCenters aims to insure that your vacations are always spectacular. With Expedia prices and concierge service, you will always have the very best value for any kind of travel anywhere in the world. We guarantee it.

Contact us anytime. Call (800) 745-4015. Click cmeyer@ocglobetrotter.com. Come in to 24321 Avenida de la Carlota, Suite H-3, Laguna Hills. In Oakbrook Village center between Trader Joe’s and Woody’s Diner.

The Wonders of Wyoming and the Value of Being There

Taking a ride at the Ranch at Ucross.

Yeehaw: Taking a ride at the Ranch at Ucross.

Travel is nothing if not learning about people and places. Sure, you can soak up a lot of information about Wyoming from Wikipedia. But  there truly is nothing like being there to gaze at the wide open landscape under the big sky, mount a horse, watch a bison lounging by the parking lot,  and hear a cowboy’s drawl.

 

In all honesty, I had not given much thought to Wyoming or South Dakota before this trip. Oh, I knew Mount Rushmore was in South Dakota and I had long wanted to visit Yellowstone National Park, but its location in Wyoming made little difference to me.

 

I was looking forward to this journey from Rushmore to Salt Lake City in a general way. I hoped to see buffalo and geysers, but had not fully anticipated the immersion into cowboy culture I would receive. Cultural immersion is something we often mentally reserve for travel to foreign lands.

A buffalo lounges near the Lake Yellowstone Hotel parking lot.

A buffalo lounges near the Lake Yellowstone Hotel parking lot. (click to enlarge)

 

But we live in a big country with distinct subsets of American culture.  Our visit to South Carolina and Georgia a few years ago exposed us to the courtly ways of the South. Granted, this was not as different from California as, say, Germany, but it was clearly different.

 

The Western culture of the plains also is distinct.  We had not left the country, as evidenced by the singing of the national anthem prior to Cody’s rodeo, but the display of patriotism was considerably lengthier than at an Angels game.

Flags flying at the start of the Cody rodeo.

Flags flying at the start of the Cody rodeo. (click to enlarge)

Plus, it was accompanied by prayer for country and the safety of the athletes. Between the play-by-play and corny jokes, the announcer invoked the cowboy code in asking for applause as consolation for riders whose efforts had fallen short and prayer for a young girl who sustained an injury.

You can read about such things for academic knowledge, of course, but being there gives you the feel of a competition that is at once violent, with riders being thrown of bucking broncos and raging bulls, and kind of genteel, with the crowd bowing in prayer and giving it up for those who had fallen short on this day.

 

While these are not huge contradictions,  I find them in a way symbolic of the complex web that continues to forge the great American West. As we traveled through breathtaking and diverse landscapes, we learned of overcoming  extreme hardships, betrayal and reconciliation, and difficult balancing environmental stewardship with economic needs. We heard of the collisions between native peoples and the Euro-descended from a tour director with blood from both camps.

Susan and I might have seen Rushmore and Old Faithful traveling by car and guidebook, as we had experienced other national parks and monuments,  and we surely would have witnessed their ingenuity and splendor. We would have missed some of the dramatic backdrop, color and context provided by Jan George, our Tauck guide, and filmmaker Ken Burns, via video aboard the coach that carried us across the Cowboy State.

Old Faithful: Dramatic evidence that you're Yellowstone is a camouflaged volcano.

Old Faithful: Dramatic evidence that you’re Yellowstone is a camouflaged volcano. (click to enlarge)

We would have snapped the requisite photos at Old Faithful and picked up a few interesting nuggets of information from our Lonely Planet guide book and visitors center exhibits. On our Tauck tour, we also were able to gain a deeper understanding of this land, its people, the battles of the past, and present-day issues. 

In future posts, I will share some highlights.

You can check out Tauck’s itinerary for this trip here. Simply comment on this post to request more information about any of your travel needs.

A National Park Milestone For Me

In 2009, I backpacked through Yosemite National Park. In 2013, I will explore Yellowstone National Park on a Tauck tour.

In 2009, I backpacked through Yosemite National Park. In 2013, I will explore Yellowstone National Park on a Tauck tour.

A big National Park milestone is approaching for me.

You see, I’m a big fan and participant in the National Parks. I’ve been to Yosemite repeatedly. And Grand Canyon, Sequoia, King’s Canyon, Zion, Bryce Canyon and Rocky Mountain.

But soon I get to make my first visit to the mother of them all, Yellowstone National Park.

The mode of this excursion will be as fresh for me as the location. My previous National Park encounters have been largely on the rustic, do-it-yourself side. A 50-mile backpack from Mammoth to Yosemite Valley. A rim-to-rim Grand Canyon trek. Family camps with Coleman stoves and S’mores. Priceless experiences and memories.

In late June 2013, I will roam Yellowstone – plus Grand Teton NP, Mount Rushmore and Wyoming cowboy country – with the professional guidance of Tauck.

Tauck is a touring company renown for digging deep and providing authentic experiences in style. Everyone I know who has experienced Tauck raves about the quality.

Backpacking Yosemite with the Reeds in 2012.

Backpacking Yosemite with the Reeds in 2012.

My good friend Mike Reed – with whom I have shared dirty, sweaty, exhausting and wonderful backpacking adventures – is a huge Tauck fan. A retired professor, Mike loves Tauck’s educational bent as well as the first class service.

“Yellowstone is a national treasure,” Mike enthused after I told him about the trip. “And to see it with Tauck will be exceptional.”

On this itinerary Tauck has partnered with PBS documentarian Ken Burns for narratives about the grand lands we will survey. Among Burns’ credits is his series about the National Parks. That tells me how serious this company is about delivering rich historical content.

Another partner is the National Park Service itself. Sure, the half-day volunteer project in which we will participate is a token, but it’s a way to involve us in the protection of these wonderful public resources.

Atop Half Dome in 2009. Hoping for another mountaintop experience in Yellowstone.

Atop Half Dome in 2009. Hoping for another mountaintop experience in Yellowstone.

In addition to my personal excitement about this trip, it will give me a broader range of experience to help our travel business clients think through the best way for them to see wild lands and National Parks. I will be able to draw on personal experience to discuss the pros and cons of virtually all of the different modes. Plus, personal experience with Tauck will equip me to clearly  discuss how Tauck compares with other tour companies and independent travel.

Experience your planet with all your senses

Do you travel to the beat of a different drummer? Do you prefer to explore at ground level? Do you crave the unexpected? Like to challenge yourself?

If you answered yes to any of these questions, you should talk to us about a great adventure with G Adventures.

You will learn about an array of travel opportunities you might not know about. Would you enjoy:

– Seeing Peru from the coast to the Amazon to the Inca Trail and Machu Pichu?

– Experiencing Costa Rica by bike, kayak, zipline and volunteering at a turtle preserve?

– Sailing the Greek Isles aboard a yacht that reaches remote spots not accessible to the mass market?

– Roaming Southeast Asia from Bangkok to Angkor Wat to Saigon?

– Seeing wildlife up-close on an East Africa camping or “comfort” safari?

– Stepping from a Zodiac onto the Antarctic continent to walk among the penguins with marine biologists?

Want to know more?

Call:  (949) 201-4246 or (800) 745-4015.

Click: cmeyer@cruiseshipcenters.com

or

Come in: Expedia CruiseShipCenters, 24321 Avenida de la Carlota, Suite H-3, Laguna Hills, CA 92653. Between Trade Joe’s and Woody’s Diner in the Oakbrook Village shopping center.