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Tuesday, December 8, 2009

The 5 biggest myths about travel today

Christine Balderas

Christine Balderas

It’s hard not to be a Chicken Little these days. The weak dollar has translated to higher prices abroad for everything from hotel rooms to bottled water. Gas is at $3.33 per gallon at last check, according to the Department of Energy, up almost 20% over a year ago. Never mind that being an American abroad isn’t what it used to be. “Ugly American” may be among the nicer terms hurled at tourists these days. But, much of the grim news surrounding travel these days overshadows a rosier truth. Example: the market woes mean resorts are desperate for your business, and are willing to lower their prices to prove it. True, it’s likely fewer travelers will hit the road this summer. But that will result in fewer tourists obstructing your view or elbowing you in line. Herewith, we refute the biggest myths about traveling today.

1. MYTH: Everything's so touristy - there are no genuine experiences left.
REALITY:
Frustrated by the masses? Then get off the beaten path! Check out Wikitravel.org, which offers plenty of user-generated suggestions of far-flung locales untainted by lime-green Crocs and Starbucks. Some of their tantalizing suggestions include traveling the storied, but oft-overlooked Silk Road in Azerbaijan. There’s a single dirt road that leads to Cape Maclear, a mind-blowingly pristine fishing village in Malawi. We bet you won’t spot any Crocs there.

2. MYTH:
I don't have enough time off work to go somewhere.
REALITY: Relative to our neighbors abroad, Americans are practically caged animals. We average 16.6 paid vacation days a year. In France, the average worker has a whopping 39 days of vacation! Yet 36% of Americans don't even use all of their vacation days. So until you can relocate to France, might as well turn off the computer, ditch the blackberry and hit the road already!

3. MYTH: My travel-induced carbon footprint is bad for the environment and the economy.
REALITY: Tourism accounts for 8% of the world's jobs. A falloff in travel will result in job losses for many nations that rely on vacationers to support their economies. As for the environment, apply the greenie mantra, "Reduce what you can, offset what you can’t." Consider public transportation for local trips. Rent a hybrid instead of an SUV. If you can afford to, fly non-stop.

Continue reading 5 Biggest Myths About Travel Today

By Sarah Wexler, Travel Blogger - Marie Claire

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Reprinted with Permission of Hearst Communications, Inc.
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From the Community…

Comments 11-20 of 48
  • John's Avatar
    Posted by John Tue Feb 17, 2009 2:52pm PST

    3 myths and then a link that doesn't lead to anything worthwhile.

    Report Abuse
  • Dot Rat's Avatar
    Posted by Dot Rat Tue Feb 17, 2009 2:59pm PST

    Kind of like all those 'articles' about online education... they are all attached to ads for online schools.

    Report Abuse
  • shawn's Avatar
    Posted by shawn Tue Feb 17, 2009 2:59pm PST

    the slide show, if you took the time to look, is the top 5 list... starting with the two that are missing from this page, then it goes on and plainly lists the other 3 we've already read.

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  • Anna's Avatar
    Posted by Anna Tue Feb 17, 2009 3:15pm PST

    This article pretty much sucks.

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  • Ashley K's Avatar
    Posted by Ashley K Tue Feb 17, 2009 3:15pm PST

    i'd definitely say excess travel increases your carbon footprint and is bad for the environment. www.earthday.net/footprint/flash.html

    Report Abuse
  • eckinator's Avatar
    Posted by eckinator Tue Feb 17, 2009 3:19pm PST

    this was just stupid. who in the heck puts an article 9 monthes old online.

    Report Abuse
  • Brian's Avatar
    Posted by Brian Tue Feb 17, 2009 4:25pm PST

    Too bad it's such a slow news day. This article is from July 23, 2008?!? Nothing more current for us to waste our time rerading?

    Report Abuse
  • cm's Avatar
    Posted by cm Tue Feb 17, 2009 5:23pm PST

    gas is cheaper here in mo 1.79 or less we do travel once a year and on a fix,s inome don,t stop us ,we go to family,s -n-travel to 8oo,oo hunderd mile,s from home ,, so injoy what you have!!!!!!!

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  • Dan F's Avatar
    Posted by Dan F Tue Feb 17, 2009 5:36pm PST

    If you can afford to fly-nonstop?? I could give a damn what my carbon-footprint is. I'll try to get a direct flight b/c it's more convenient not for any other reason. Rent an SUV, eat what you want, and leave your lights on back at home so some poor eco-hippie doesn't steal your TV.

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  • Mark Assenmacher's Avatar
    Posted by Mark Assenmacher Tue Feb 17, 2009 6:01pm PST

    Wow... after flying on a jet across thousands of miles where you get "x gallons per mile" not "x miles per gallon" you really thinking getting a hybrid will put a dent in your carbon footprint? That's like eating a Big Mac without ketchup because ketchup has too many calories. Stupid article, out of date.

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