One for the Road: Whatever You Do, Don’t Run

Australian Peter Allison is a safari guide who has spent much of the last twelve years leading eco-tourism trips in Africa. This past summer, The Lyons Press published his memoir, a collection of hilarious True Tales of a Botswana Safari Guide: Whatever You Do, Don’t Run recounts Allison’s stories of “…face-to-face encounters with big cats, angry elephants and the world’s most unpredictable animals — herds of untamed tourists and foolhardy guides.”

Allison set off for Africa at the age of nineteen and had originally planned to stay for only a year. After six months he was broke, but found work tending bar at a game reserve. He eventually became a guide and taught others how to do the same. More than a dozen years later he’s still leading tours and educating folks about life in the bush. Allison’s book shares insight about the difficulties of keeping tours minimally invasive for the animals, as well as humorous tales of tourists gone wild. Read with caution and remember — only food runs!

Travel writing tips from around the web

Lately, I’ve been pretty slack with some of my self-imposed writing goals. It’s all well and good to say “I’m going to write that article” or “I’m going to draft that book proposal” — but we all know that actions speak louder then words. And words don’t mean anything to a freelance writer unless they are typed out, spell-checked and on their way to an editor!

So I was happy to come across two travel writing tips, posted today by some of our friends around the web. Tidbits like these often help me kick-start stalled writing projects: First up, Eva Holland’s 9 Things I Learned About Travel Writing at Book Passage is up at Brave New Traveler. Eva, who also writes for World Hum, has compiled a great summary of her conference experience — she shares valuable tips from travel writing pros that she met during the annual travel seminar hosted by the Bay Area bookstore. And at BootsnAll, I found a book review for Crafting the Travel Guidebook: How to Write, Publish and Sell Your Travel Book. Reviewer Norm Goldman gives high marks to Barbara Hudgins “nitty gritty” look at guidebook writing. Once I’ve got a few more articles and stories under my belt, I’ll have to get my hands on a copy. But for now, of course, I best get going with some writing!

One for the Road: Two new Costa Rica guides from Moon

Earlier this fall Moon released two updated guides to Costa Rica. The 6th edition of the handbook to Costa Rica was written by veteran travel writer Christoper P. Baker, an expert on both Costa Rica and Cuba. Baker won the 2006 Lowell Thomas Award for best guidebook for a previous edition of this book. At 650 pages, the latest version is bursting with valuable tips about traveling through this tropical jewel.

Another recent release is Moon’s second edition of Living Abroad in Costa Rica, written by Erin Van Rheenen, a writer who has lived abroad in Nigeria, Ireland, Ecuador, Mexico and Guatemala. She now spends time in both Costa Rica and California. One of Erin’s favorite things about CR: fresh squeezed o.j. costs about $.35 from a streetside cart. More information can be found at her website.

Guidebook publisher Moon was recently named Best Travel Series of the year by the ALA’s Booklist.

Enter to win a copy of Peter Greenberg’s “The Complete Travel Detective Bible”

You’ve read our interview with Peter Greenberg, The Travel Detective. You were fascinated by his explanation of the importance of travel as a “process” … but you want to learn more. No problem!

We’ve got 10 copies of Peter’s new book to give away to some lucky Gadling readers! Here’s how it works:

  • To enter, leave a confirmed comment below telling us your best travel tip.
  • The comment must be left before November 5, 2007 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time.
  • You may enter only once.
  • 10 winners will be selected in a random drawing.
  • 10 winners will receive a copy of “The Complete Travel Detective Bible” valued at $17.95
  • Click here for complete Official Rules.

Good luck!

Talking Travel with the Today show’s Peter Greenberg

When I was offered the chance to interview Peter Greenberg, author of The Travel Detective series, I took it without knowing what a large personality he is. Then I did some Googling, and was promptly in a nervous frenzy over having to talk to my first celebrity. His resume is more than impressive; it’s downright intimidating. Here’s what Greater Talent has to say about him:

“No one knows international culture and business like Peter Greenberg. With more than 11 million miles of direct experience under his belt, his perspective on globalization, trade and cross-cultural marketing–as well as travel, tourism, and all industries that feed off of them–is unprecedented.
Greenberg has covered literally thousands of stories in hundreds of countries across the globe in his many roles, including: travel editor for NBC, MSNBC and CNBC; best-selling author; radio host of a program syndicated nationally and broadcast on XM Satellite; contributing editor for America Online and Men`s Health; and regular contributor to Forbes and The New Yorker.” Yikes!

Thankfully, he was amiable and chatty. Here’s what he had to say:

Enter to win a copy of Peter Greenberg’s New book, “The Complete Travel Detective Bible.” Details at the end of the interview!

You’ve been traveling since you were an infant. Is there a particular trip from your childhood that influenced what you do now?

I was very blessed as a child because my parents wanted not only to introduce me to the world, but to the world’s processes. I was fascinated with how things work: how does a plane fly? How does a ship sail, or float? So that became a preoccupation at a very early age. When I was flying I was always asking questions. And I’ve always been crazy about boats. I’ve actually operated boats since in I was seven years old. I got my first boat at 14, and still have that exact same boat.

So you were always interested in the mechanics of it all, how to get from Point A to Point B? The actual physical journey?

Exactly, because if you can’t understand and appreciate the physical process, how are you ever going to understand the product? And that applies to just about everything you do. Every spa wants to tell you that they get their mud from Madagascar, and I say “Great. But how do you get the mud from Madagascar? Is it dug up, is it trucked thousands of miles?” And they say, “Oh, we’ve got a beautiful photo of a model wrapped in it.” But I don’t want to see that. I want to know how it got here, because then I can really appreciate what you do.

How has your travel style evolved over the years?

Well, remember I was a reporter for Newsweek for many years, so my travel style is really very much my journalism style. I’m always asking questions and always wanting to know about interior workings. We did a 2-hour special for CNBC that I hosted and co-produced on a week in the life of a the world’s largest airline. We had total access to the process. And it got rave reviews, because for the first time people actually saw how something worked! It wasn’t just somebody sitting in the plane putting their seatbelt on.

You’ve taken some pretty high-profile tours, with heads of state. I’m wondering how the insider’s view changes between a political figure and, say, a street vendor.

Well, I’ll tell you how that works: I have a certain M.O. when it comes to [The Royal Tour]. My goal is not to do Robin Leach work; my goal in life is to make sure everything I do is accessible to my audience. I will go to a head of state and get that head of state to give me five days of his or her schedule unencumbered, then we’ll send just about everyone else from the government home, because I don’t want them messing around in the kitchen, and for the next five days it’s really the two of us, on this wild magical mystery ride, as they give me a tour of their country through their eyes — with one important mandate, and that mandate which is nonnegotiable is that everything you see me doing with that head of state is has to be accessible to the audience. They get to do it to. They may not get to do with a head of state but they get to do it. It has to be accessible, or I’m not really helping anybody out.

What languages do you speak?

I speak Spanish, a little bit of French, and a little bit of Thai.

How important do you think it is to know the language of the country you’re visiting?

I think it’s even more important to know the culture. I’m not going to assume that somebody visiting the U.S. from another country is going to know English. Of course, the chances are much higher of them knowing English than me knowing their language. When you can appreciate, and do your best to assimilate, or at least insert yourself into the culture, that’s the greatest sign of respect you can give another culture — that you’ve done enough homework ahead of time, that you understand what’s important and valuable to them, and that you want to learn more. Do this, and you’ll get 10 times that amount of respect back.

When did you start writing about travel?

I started writing about travel when I was 17, as a student journalist at the University of Wisconsin, and Newsweek right after that. Every story involved travel, whether it was about travel or not. I was the guy with the suitcase in the trunk of my car jumping to be the first at the scene of something, and that’s when it dawned on me at a very early age that no one was covering travel as news. Nobody was covering it as a process. Travel was very much a reflection of the happy couple walking along the beach, the senior couple in their bathrobes on a balcony. It was basically a sales and marketing transaction. And I thought the public needed more, because more people started traveling after deregulation (in the 1970s), but they’re all getting abused. And they love to travel but they hate the abuse. There’s got to be someone out there telling them how to finesse the process. And that’s really where I got started.

How did you get the idea for the Travel Detective series?

It goes back to the process versus product idea — the audience doesn’t need me to tell them that the sun sets nicely in the Bahamas. That one they can figure out themselves. What they need me to tell them is that while the sun is setting in the Bahamas, and the airline lost their bag, and the hotel has no record of their reservation, and the cab driver took them on a 40-mile drive instead of two, how can I get them all that information ahead of time so they know what questions to ask, and to whom, so that never happens to them again.

You can tell you’re a bit frustrated with the travel industry, as we all are, but that being said is there any destination that you don’t ever want to return to?

Oh, the answer is none! I get very angry when I tell people where I’ve just returned from and they say, “that’s not on my list.” And I ask them, “who publishes that list? Are you nuts?” There are 314 distinct destinations around the world, and I’ve been lucky enough to go to 146 of them. That’s not even half! But it is 145 more than most Americans, because only 25% of Americans have passports. How embarrassing is that? So the answer is everything that’s on my list is every place I’ve never been to that I want to check out at least once.

I thought it was great that you included visiting Iraq in The Travel Detective’s Bible.

Absolutely. Because most people get propagandized into thinking you can’t go. Of course you can go, to Northern Iraq to a place like Arbil. There are places in Newark where I wouldn’t go, but that doesn’t mean I’m not going to visit New Jersey.

Anywhere you wish you could’ve stayed longer?

This is corny, but the answer is everywhere. Because the longer you stay the more you get surprised; your best travel experiences happen when your plans didn’t work — when your car broke down and you met somebody. You open yourself to being spontaneous and more adaptable.

So tell us, what’s in your pack?

I haven’t checked a bag domestically in 8 years; I FedEx them, but I’ll tell you what’s in my briefcase. I alway carry two additional phone lines, two additional extension cords, electrical adapter, two of every kind of battery, two small high-density mag lites, post its, extra rubber bands, an iBook, cigarette lighter plug-ins for my cell phone and Blackberry, extra glasses, three cell phones — my Blackberry is international, then I’ve got my regular cell phone and a backup, so I have three separate systems. You might not get a signal on one system, but you’ve got a one in three chance of getting a signal. I’ve got Sprint and Verizon. Also I have an Altoid tin with one of every kind of medicine I might need — Vicodin in case I’m in pain, a malaria pill.

You’ve got all those labeled, I hope?!

Each one is labeled, but I’ve never had to use any of them!

We’re giving away 10 copies of Peter’s new book, “The Complete Travel Detective Bible.” Enter to win by clicking here. You can catch Peter Greenberg on NBC’s Today show, or visit his website to get more information.