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IT—Inside Traveler
By Jessie Johnston and Emily King

November 7, 2006:

Wired Wanderlust: Top Travel Blogs

The days of recording your travels in a worn leather journal in a sidewalk café on the streets of Amsterdam are not obsolete; it's just that you'll likely be typing away on your MacBook instead. As cyber cafés continue to sprout up all over the world, travel blogs have become a staple for keeping in touch with those stranded at home, posting a picture of that Seattle coffee shop's frothy cappuccino, and recording the name of the oh-so-cute bed-and-breakfast in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

Let IT be your guide to a few travel blogs that have caught our collective eye by being inspirational, informative, or just too interesting to ignore. And keep your eyes peeled for future Wired Wanderlust updates. We'll be back.

A Taste of Europe: Tammy and David, a thirty-something wanderlusting couple sold their house and decided to spend a year in Europe "slow traveling"—spending two to three months in each country. Tammy writes, "As a last fling by ourselves, the conversation began as an idea to go to Europe for a two-week vacation. Where to go? England? Ireland? Italy? …The idea turned from spending two weeks in Europe to six months to possibly a year." This extensive travelogue is filled with beautiful photographs, local history, and personal experiences. By the end of each posting, you will begin to wonder why you are still sitting at your desk.

Jeremy Wang in Taiwan: Jeremy Wang of Brooklyn, New York, took a ten-day trip to Taiwan, the birthplace of his father and the destination of his mother's medical mission trip as a young nurse. As a 24-year-old, his perspective on the country and his family are vastly different than his hazy memories of visiting as a curious five-year-old. Follow Jeremy as he musters the courage to try "stinky tofu," navigates the Taipei subway, and comes to the conclusion that family transcends language.

Notes from the Road: Erik Gauger has combined his love of journal writing and photography with blogging technology. "Notes from the Road" is a collection of entries taken from his handwritten journal and photographs taken with a traditional print film camera that he layers together to create evocative place descriptions of the West Indies, the Iberian Peninsula, the Great Plains, and more.

What travel blogs do you love? Send them to assistant online editor Mary Beth for inclusion in future Wired Wanderlust posts.

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Snap, Crackle, Croatia!

Last week, chief researcher Marilyn Terrell tantalized us with her stories of swimming in the Adriatic Sea and wandering down the narrow streets of Zadar. We wanted more, and so did our readers—one e-mail in IT's inbox (which may have been from Marilyn's brother) read, "What a wonderful description. I was transported. Give me more!" So, this week, we post more of Marilyn's insights into Croatia, its thriving capital, Zagreb, and the highlights that have her jonesing for a return. (Be sure to click on the underlined links to see Marilyn's Flickr pics.)

"A 15-year-old country with a 5,000-year history, Croatia's popping with the exuberance of youth. Skaters are jumping their skateboards blithely over Roman antiquities and Austro-Hungarian opera house steps. Artisans are rebuilding castles and churches, and archaeologists are uncovering Greek and Roman antiquities. Streets and plazas overflow with tables and chairs and convivial coffee drinkers who would disdain the cardboard cup. Streets are for people (and dogs), not cars. Wherever you look, there are kids in the streets, chasing balls, exploring, riding bikes, walking home from school, and playing with their grandparents. 

"Zagreb, the capital, is home to the country's largest university (50,000 students), and the entire city feels like a college campus. Art, poetry, theater, farmers markets, public sculpture in whimsical places, soccer, music in the streets—it's all here—and everything looks freshly painted (sometimes with graffiti). On an ordinary weekday evening, Jelacic Square, the great central plaza in Zagreb, reverberates with sound, but it's human, not automotive: All you hear are people talking, children chasing each other, plates and glasses clinking, and the occasional clack of an approaching blue tram.
Unlike much of Old Europe, where children seem oddly missing, Croatia feels very much alive and happening, with an irresistible, pulsing energy. A Croatian cabdriver in New York told me wistfully that Croatians know how to enjoy life. From what I could tell on a recent trip from Zagreb down to Split, he's right."

How Marilyn enjoyed life in Croatia:

1. Drinking a latte in Zagreb's main Jelacic Square on a sunny Sunday morning as rock music blared from giant speakers and hordes of young athletes gathered to run a marathon.

2. Buying walnuts and apples in Zagreb's Dolac Market.

3. Eating decadent kremsnita (cream cake) at an outdoor café in the pastel-colored town of Samobor.

4. Waking up in the World Heritage site of Plitvice Lakes National Park, with its 16 interconnected lakes of otherworldly green, and listening to the distant roar of waterfalls, which a suburban brain (or at least Marilyn's) might initially mistake for highway traffic.

5. Walking the streets of the tiny walled town of Trogir, another World Heritage site.

6. Taking a ferry from tantalizing Split— with its medieval city built within the still-standing walls of Emperor Diocletian's palace (yet another World Heritage site)—to the dreamy, lavender-scented island of Hvar.

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Emily King, Traveler's assistant to the editor, wants to visit the pyramids of Giza before they're just a suburb of Cairo. Researcher Jessie Johnston hopes to see Machu Picchu before it becomes an Angkor-style jungle gym.


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