The Saxon Hotel, Johannesburg
Arriving in South Africa: the Presidential Suite of the Saxon Hotel
Each New Day….
We're leaving Nantucket today after two fabulous weeks. Looking forward to going home. I've always believed that you should eagerly anticipate vacations, returns, and your career. Life is too short to dread daily existence,
New York, New York
I might have had the most perfectly cooked filet mignon in my life last night at the Hunt and Fish Club, then house seats at Carousel, and going backstage after to meet the Tony-nominated star. In other words, another average
Nevis
There are wild donkeys here. And I don't mean skinny, weak creatures. They are good-looking, healthy, and highly independent. They are smart enough to walk along the verge and not in the middle of the very narrow roads. We saw
On the Road Again
I'm hardly an analytic-type person, and my tendency is to deliberately place numbers outside of the boxes. But when I first started traveling in the 1970s I thought it would be cool to keep tabs on my airline miles (before any
Fiji Time
Fiji is a very calming place. It’s similar to Bali in many ways, though the beaches are nicer and it’s far less crowded—about 800,000 people. As in Bali, and Bora Bora (one of my top spots in the world), people
Fiji
We arrived at 7am in Fiji, 11.5 hours out of LAX. Our bags took ten minutes, the driver had us to the Shangri-La in an hour where our beach-front villa was ready for
Iceland the Myth
Trigger Warning to those in Ivy League schools: This might mess with your preconceptions of things you've never experienced. There are about 330,000 people in Iceland (Rhode Island, by comparison, has a million), and almost three million sheep, about 10 per
Iceland
The geomorphology of this country is fascinating. The earth seems to erupt without warning all around you. There are geysers and volcanoes, crashing waterfalls, geothermal wonders. Ice covers lava flows. Water percolating through the layers takes 100 years to reach
Scenes from Iceland
Scenes from Iceland. Not the salmon ladder up the falls, the "bees in a box" which come and go to pollinate indoor tomato plants grown with geothermally heated water, and walking thought the rift between the tectonic plates of Europe