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Theresas last blog post..The Countdown Begins
As last blog post..Stroll through Seoul
If that's the general mindset, though, I think two things happen. First, the anticipation of the next place (as well as the anxiety of simply getting there) gets in the way of appreciating the current site. Second, people will miss out on the smaller, more intricate details (like the ones you wrote about in your article about traveling slowly) that make for good stories.
Daniels last blog post..When a writer gets confused
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Theresas last blog post..The Countdown Begins
Nomadic Matts last blog post..Cornwall
- Traveling with a different mindset -for publication vs. just visiting
- Best stories coming from your backyard, in this case, Madrid
You've got some upcoming trips that are prime for stories
- La Tomatina in Valencia (but from a different angle)
- The Perfect 48 Hours in the Canary Islands
- Undiscovered Morocco (focusing on some place/culture/tradition, etc)
That said, you can still mine information from the shortest of trips. I once wrote a dispatch about a weekend cruise to Riga. Though my time there was short, I was able to center the piece around the cruise experience itself.
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MarkHs last blog post..The Aquamarine Necklace (Plitvice Lakes, Croatia)
We got familiar with our surroundings and going back to the same hostel I stayed in eight years earlier with the same owners made me feel at home in my four days in Madrid. Like I've read before, when you try to do too much, you see less. It'll be good to see what's up in Lisboa.
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That being said, I'm a fly by the seat of my pants kind of gal, so my style is closer to the way you did Paris. :)
Kyles last blog post..Exploring Santiago
I really think it depends on what you are trying to accomplish. I find that living in a country other than your country of birth (as I have done in the USA and am now doing in England) provides more than enough deep immersion in another culture, and sometimes it is nice to just travel some place to skim the surface of it.
Greg
Greg Wessons last blog post..Sorry... excuse me... sorry... excuse me... sorry... sorry..
Turners last blog post..My Troubles Pay Off
The Champs-Elysee? Eiffel Tower? Louvre? I guess you've got to see them, pay the admission and take a few snapshots, but that's just a been-there-done-that checklist that the locals have only ever done once or twice most likely. That isn't really Paris. Hostels? Cute, but what the heck are you going to learn there that a zillion other travelers haven't already written about?
Get rid of your "The Essential Fill-in-the-Blank-With-Next-City Guidebook".
I am starting to begin the planning piece of this adventure. My big question I have for you or anyone that reads this is the opinion of picking several "home base" spots and travel from there or do more of the "back packer" mentality and just go?
Thanks a lot and again...GREAT SITE!