Amazing Race 12, episode 6 recap

Here we are again, starting out this time in Vilnius, Lithuania. Karma really caught up to the blondes last week when they were eliminated after leading to the demise of Lorena and Jason. Will the same fate await Jen and Nate, the couple who can’t stop shrieking at one another? Only time will tell.

So, onto the recap. TK and Rachel came in first last time, so they were the first to leave — To Dubrovnik, Croatia! Dubrovnik has been on my list of must-see places so I am oh-so-jealous, but at least I get to experience it vicariously. When they arrived at the airport, TK and Rachel found Internet right away and waved Kynt and Vyxsin over. I thought this was a nice thing to do, and TK and Rachel talked about how their laid-back style isn’t a tactic — they are really like that. I believe it.


Once the rest of the teams arrived at the airport, it became a war of line-ups — TK and Rachel lined up in front of one ticket office, while Kynt and Vyxsin ended up at another. Other teams lined up behind TK and Rachel, but then most went over to join the goths — a move that they ended up regretting because TK and Rachel and Nick and Donald ended up on the first flight out. But in a stroke of bad luck, the first flight out ended up being delayed to the two teams ended up missing their connector flight in Prague. My heart totally sunk for them.

Another stroke of bad luck? Azaria and Hendekea ended up getting booked into business class on their flight out of Lithuania. According to the rules, they’re only allowed to take economy. They tried to change it at the last minute but since the flight was leaving in 10 minutes, they were out of luck. Bummer.

Here’s something that got me thinking: Christina and Ronald got ahead by calling and reserving tickets on the first flight before they left their hotel. Once they arrived at the airport, they gave the phone number to Azaria and Hendekea, saying that they were the only other team they trusted. If I was in this race, I don’t think they’d be the team I trusted — they seem like the type who would do anything to get ahead, hard feelings be darned. My trusted team would be TK and Rachel — they seem like the type who would play fair, regardless of whether it cost them the race. What do you think?

Once in Croatia, Ronald and Christina were in first. Their first task was to fit a rock into a damaged wall, then they headed to the Fort of St Lawrence, where they had to take a zipline-type thing across the harbour. Once again, I was so jealous — it looked like a blast. Hmph.

So once at the Fort of St. Lawrence, teams have a choice between doing a task that is low on physical exertion but takes some brains (navigating the city) (I would so have rocked this since I have a killer sense of direction); or a task that requires little thought but lots of physical exertion (rowing around the city in a traditional fishing boat, complete with skinny little oars.) Ronald and Christina, who were in first, chose the physical task, which I thought was odd because of the whole hernia thing. In any case, they still beat second-place team Nate and Jen, so I guess it worked for them.

Speaking of Nate and Jen, here’s a recap of their interaction this episode: fight fight fight fight shriek I hate you fight fight yell fight scream fight. You get the point. There was a funny little scene where Ronald and Christina were talking about how important the team relationship is to the game, and then it cut to Jen telling Nate that she hates him with a passion. Okayyyyy, then. For me, they’re the couple I love to hate — they provide some great drama to the show, but I always let out a squeal of delight when they experience some sort of setback.

The pit stop was the stone cross on the outskirts of the city. After the rowing adventures, Ronald and Christina and Jen and Nate were fighting for a taxi simultaneously. The taxi driver refused to take Jen and Nate because they were a bit wet from the boat, but he took Christina and Ronald. Which, of course, led to Jen having a breakdown — not just about the game but about her relationship with Nate. She even went on to say that she didn’t know if they would be together after the show. I can’t say I blame her though — I don’t know if I could be with a man who called it Dubrovneeeak either. When they arrived at the pit stop, even Phil couldn’t keep quiet — he remarked on their lack of affection when they shared a handshake rather than a hug. Yikes.

Ronald and Christina made it to the pit stop first and won a catamaran. Jen and Nate came in second and–get this– had to go back because they took an illegal form of transportation (I guess it wasn’t a real taxi?) So Kynt and Vyxsin got second place in their matching hot pink cowboy hats, while Jen and Nate ended up with third place. As Ronald and Christina were claiming first, TK and Rachel seemed to just be arriving in Croatia, followed by Donald and Nick and Azaria and Hendekea. TK and Rachel claimed fourth place after mastering all of the tasks.

The last five minutes were wrought with suspense — Azaria and Hendekea were right on the tail of Donald and Nick. Then the taxi encountered a traffic jam and I screamed at the TV. But after the traffic jam was fixed, it was apparent that Nick and Donald were going to make it in under the wire, and Phil had to break the news to our favourite over-achievers, Azaria and Hendekea, that they were being eliminated. To be honest, I wasn’t really sad to see them go, but I was surprised — they were certainly one of the strongest teams.

But it was Dubrovnik that was the real star of this show — every team commented that it was the most beautiful place they’d visited. I’ve heard this before and it’s only heightened my desire to go. Next summer? Anyone?

(All photos from the Amazing Race’s official website)

Indie travel guides – pipe dream or way of the future?

With all due respect to my generous client Lonely Planet, without whom I’d still be an obscure, broke, moonshine junkie in a forlorn corner of Romania, guidebook authors wallowing below the Sushi Line are increasingly probing new “Screw the Man” applications for their hard-won expertise – namely their very own online travel guides.

There’s certainly something to be said for a trusted brand name guidebook, but equally independently produced, digital travel guides allow authors to toss in all kinds of wacky content in addition to the usual sights/eating/sleeping content, uncorrupted by editors, guidelines, house styles and meddling lawyers.

A 2,000 word, absurdly detailed walking guide to Tijuana? Why not? A sidebar entitled “Top Ten Curse Words You Should Know Before Attending an Italian Football (Soccer) Match”? Bring it on! Why [insert your least favorite German city] sucks? I’m all ears.

This developing genre was recently augmented by the completion of Robert Reid’s online guide to Vietnam. As Reid rightly points out, the advantages of an independent online travel guide are numerous:

• It’s free – Guidebooks cost $25. Why pay?
• It’s fresher. Unlike a guidebook, turn-around time is immediate.
• You can customize it. The most common complaint guidebook users have is having to tote around 400 pages they’ll never use.
• It’s more direct, personalized. With my site I can ‘tell it like it is’.
• Anyone can talk with the author. [Just] hit ‘contact’.

In addition to this excellent resource, other free sites serving the online travel community include Croatia Traveller, Kabul Caravan, Turkey Travel Planner, Broke-Ass Stewart’s Guide to Living Cheaply in San Francisco, and (cough), the Romania and Moldova Travel Guide (now with extra moonshine).

For the time being, these independent travel guides are usually not money-making ventures (and boy do they take a lot of time to put together!), thus the current scarcity. However, as print media gasps to its inevitable conclusion – one decade, mark my words – the online stage is set for authors to leverage their expertise and provide autonomous, interactive, up-to-the-minute travel information for anyone with an internet connection.

Photo of the Day (11/2/07)

I love this photo for the way that it reveals a destination where a single glance at the colorful pixels means adding this locale to your “places to visit” list. Dammit! I have enough things on that list already!

We can thank Shadixpn for capturing such travel inspiration at Plitvicka Jezera National Park, in Croatia. While so much of the tourist focus is on Croatia’s scenic coastline, Shadixpn reminds us that this quaint country offers equally attractive treasures further inland.

If you’d like your photo considered for Photo of the Day, jump on over to our Gadling Flickr Pool and upload your very favorites.

Gadling on the Road Archives


Here at Gadling we pride ourselves in putting our money where our mouth is. In other words, we write about travel because we are all travelers. This is our passion, this is our hobby, this is our life.

Unfortunately, we can’t all travel 100% of the time. But, when we do hit the road, we tend to hit it rather well.

Over the last few years, our writers and correspondents have traveled the globe, absorbed their surroundings, converted what they’ve seen into zeros and ones on their laptop, and then digitally rearranged it for you right here on Gadling. Sometimes it might be a simple post, but other times we’ve built entire series around exotic locations. Sadly, as time passes, these features have died a lonely death, disappearing into the void of cyberspace never to be seen again.

As a result, we’ve decided to resurrect some of the very best and provide for them a nice, accessible home so that they may continue providing virtual sustenance to our readers. The link to this new home is just below our Gadling Writers on the Road section (which features our current writers on assignment). To explore our prior destinations, simply click on the Archives Button and you’ll soon be up to your knees in China, Beijing, Alaska, Haiti, Miami, St. Lucia, Tajikistan, the Balkans, and Trinidad & Tobago.

Enjoy!

Budget Travel’s 10 Best Undiscovered Locations

It’s that time of year again when Budget Travel reveals its Best Places You’ve never Heard Of.

Every year the editors of this fine magazine interview 10 travelers and ask them to “reveal the places they’ve recently discovered.” The underlying theme here is that these are very cool places which most people have never heard of before, but may some day become popular tourist destinations when word gets out.

True to form, nine of the 10 suggestions this year are places … I’ve never heard of! The lone exception is the city of Wroclaw, a rather nondescript Polish town I visited 12 years ago and found exceedingly boring. Things, however, have apparently changed — at least according to traveler Walter Lowry, who touts the city as having the “prettiest plaza in Poland and perhaps in all of central Europe.” He also applauds Wroclaw for its fine shopping.

As for the other nine cities, here they are. Click, discover, and enjoy!

Castelmezzano, Italy
Caraiva, Brazil
Baranja Region, Croatia
Estacada, United States
Yirgalem, Ethiopia
Puerto Angel, Mexico
Jura Region, France
Jomsom, Nepal
Sangkhla Buri, Thailand

Gadling’s own Leif Pettersen is traveling through another not-so-well-known location: Ia??i, Romania.

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