Articles Tagged ‘Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses’
Saturday, March 9th, 2013
I left Adana by plane for Antalya.  Outside the Arrivals Hall I asked a gentleman if he spoke English. He didn’t but another one with a very busy 4-year old in tow, overhearing me, asked if I needed help. The city  was a considerable distance from the airport. “Do the Red buses leave everyone off at the same place in the city?”  Yes, he said, but my friend can give us a ride into town. Oh my, I thought!  Ever since I arrived the Turks have been friendly and generous everywhere! He even gave me a Turkish pastry to eat on the way!

I am staying in the Kaleiçi (KAH-leh-ee-chee) a castle ruins at the center of the sprawling modern city which was a Roman town, then the Byzantine, then the Seljuk Turkish, and finally the Ottoman town.  There are oodles of shops, boutique hotels, guesthouses and restaurants along the narrow winding walking streets. I am staying at the Sabah Pansiyon…with breakfast…very friendly and helpful staff. And wifi in my room!  It’s a short distance to both the city center and the many coffee houses that line the beaches.  So the easy walking has been a pleasure.
I had to laugh today at an outdoor cafe with a view of the Taurus Mountains. About 40 German guys took nearly all the tables and chairs and ordered beer. The first one took a taste and made a face! lol. Turkish beer not so good?! ha! Then a Turkish guy tried to sell them all cologne and perfume. They had great fun with that!
I’ve been corresponding with a woman in Germany. When she read my blog and saw that Antalya was full of Germans she said:
The place where you are staying sounds very romantic. I know I would enjoy it there. The pension inside the ruin makes it even more romantic. I wish I could join you, but I don´t think I would like meeting so many Germans. I hope they behave and respect the country and the customs. There are reasonable ‘packages’ for a vacation in Turkey, so that must be the reason, why so many Germans are there now. We had a very tough and long winter . The sun has been out for the last two or three days, but next week, winter will be back again.
I assured her the Germans here were very well-behaved and gracious. lol I told her I felt sorry for these Germans. Cold in Germany and it’s been damn cold here!

Taurus Mountains
I have never seen so many stray cats in a country. The people put food outside their doorways to feed them. Dogs too. The surprising thing is they are so mild and gentle and approachable. Never seen an approachable cat before! I think this says a lot about the people here. They treat animals with love and care and it is a joy to watch.
I called another couchsurfer and a food writer, Tijen, whom I had had lunch with in Bangkok a couple of years ago. I was delighted to find that she lived only about a 10 minute walk to my pensyon in the Castle.  She cooked a lovely vegetarian lunch for me…steamed artichoke hearts with oil and lemon and a lentil salad. Says she:
“Green lentils with dried eggplants, wild leeks and dried tomatoes (I just soaked green lentils in water for few hours, then add all of them in the pot with some water and cooked it down. Of course there is salt, pepper, cumin seeds and olive oil. You can use normal leeks or onions, doesn’t matter. Buon appetite!”
The next day we had a breakfast of Borek, a wonderful Turkish pastry made by an old Borek Master in his tiny three-table restaurant. He learned it from his older brother and his uncle, Tijen said. Watch the video below showing how Borak is made:
Making Borak


Well, Tijen surprised me this morning and came by my pensyon to see if I needed anything. So I walked her back to her apartment and on the way we stopped and bought a bus ticket for tomorrow at noon to Bodrum. Thank God! I would have gone to the bus station not knowing there was only one bus a day and might have missed it! I told her she was my angel! She is leaving in the morning for Morocco. She is lucky she can travel all over the world for her work…writing food articles.
This morning in the breakfast room I talked again with a tall blond Danish guy…about 50. A former journalist, he is enraged by the lack of transparency and the corruption in Denmark! And the stupidity of the EU. Of all places! That should tell you a lot about all the other countries! When he described his Prime Minister I told him she sounded like our Sarah Palin. “Worse!” he said! She’s never worked…just always been a politician/bureaucrat. He actually said a lot of other things too I won’t repeat here.
I’ve always said that people running for government office should be required to have some time in the workplace first. He’s been aggravating government officials with letters and questions he doesn’t get answers to. He is afraid they will find a way to nail him and shut him up. So he is writing a book. He’s supposed to be here resting from all the controversy but it’s so cold he has been miserable…and we’ve both gotten chest colds…we think from the unclean air con/heating units in the rooms. I told him I was sorry to get him revved up again but he said no, it’s all just going round and round in his head anyway and that it was good to talk. I hope so.
I caved in this afternoon and had my first Burger King in 5 months!
Posted in Antalya, Europe, Food, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Lodging, Turkey | No Comments »
Wednesday, May 14th, 2008
Bought plane tickets a month ago to go to Burma with a Thai friend. But Air Asia won’t let us cancel our tickets without losing the money. So I spent all afternoon in the embassy office with a few others waiting for the official to appear at the window. But don’t know if I’m going to get a visa or not…you are retired? What was your last job? What organization did you work for? He really looked over my passport closely…too many stamps in too many countries? Maybe I am a journalist traveling around the world? We are only offering visas on a case by case basis, he said. Your application will have to go up to headquarters, he said. And instead of the usual one day turnover, it wouldn’t be available for another 10 days. So I gave him my phone number and he will call and let me know if my application has been accepted. I doubt it. But my Thai friend who wants to go with me has two students at Kasetsart University that are from Burma and whose parents work for the government. They are going to call the embassy on my behalf. We’ll see.
Then on the way back to my hotel I was surprised by an exhibit at the Phrom Phong BTS station. There in front of the Emporium Mall were the same Herd of Cows that we saw in the plazas in the center of Prague in 2004. The life-size fancifully painted cows were culled however. Most of the most suggestive and political cows were missing…the humorous ones probably not translatable.
BTW, I highly recommend new friendly Som’s Guesthouse on a little soi next to Queen’s Park Hotel on Sukhumvit 22. Beautiful large room with wood parque floor, refrigerator, TV with scads of channels, free breakfast and best of all free WiFi…all for 800 baht ($25) a night!
Posted in Burma (Myanmar), Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Lodging, Visas | No Comments »
Wednesday, April 9th, 2008
I arrived on Samui, an island in the south of Thailand, from Bangkok on tuesday. Doug, my son and his Thai wife Luk found me a lovely quiet hotel with a pool right in the middle of Lamai but ...
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Posted in Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Internet, Koh Samui, Lodging, Thailand | 3 Comments »
Sunday, March 30th, 2008
You hardly find a mention of Soi 22, where I usually stay in Bangkok, in the travel guides. Interesting. Not anything here for sightseers really. But good if you live here long term.
The well-dressed tourists in the ...
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Posted in Bangkok, Expats, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Motorcycles, Thailand, Trains | 7 Comments »
Tuesday, February 26th, 2008
Last Saturday (your Friday) I flew to Bangkok...carrying on a nice conversation with a Malaysian man sitting next to me. He says Thaksin did help the rural farmers...but the system takes time to change. And he says Thaksin began ...
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Posted in Bangkok, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Thailand | No Comments »
Tuesday, February 26th, 2008
Joe, a gregarious Dai tour guide who hangs out at the tourist haunts looking for business invited me to join him and his family and friends, including a young French couple, at the new BBQ restaurants on the road along ...
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Posted in China, Conversations, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Minority Groups, Xishuangbanna, Yunnan | No Comments »
Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

Hard to believe I was in Beijing for two weeks. But you know what they say about stinking guests if they stay too long. So today I flew to Kunming in
Yunnan Province in the south ...
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Posted in Beijing, Food, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Kunming, Taxis, Travel Tips, Worst Experiences, Yunnan | 2 Comments »
Friday, June 8th, 2007
When Barbara and I were in Mexico City last week it almost felt as if the resistance had moved to that city. We stayed in a Quaker guesthouse about two blocks behind the Monument To The Revolution. A ...
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Posted in Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Mexico, Mexico City, UNESCO World Heritage Sites | No Comments »
Thursday, May 4th, 2006
Just so you don't think I drowned in the Sangkren waters of Thailand, I spent the next few days in a great new 38 bed hostel called HI Sukhumvit in an upscale Bangkok neighborhood about 50 yards down Sukhumvit 38 ...
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Posted in Bangkok, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Thailand | Comments Off
Sunday, April 2nd, 2006

Luang Prabang is an outstanding example of the fusion of traditional architecture and Lao urban structures with those built by the European colonial authorities in the 19th and ...
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Posted in Conversations, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Lao, Massage, Minority Groups, Restaurants, Transportation, UNESCO World Heritage Sites | No Comments »
Wednesday, March 29th, 2006
At the Smile Guesthouse I attend cooking school. A Dutch couple and a German girl and I each have our own "station" with a wok sitting on a gas burner. O (pronounced O?...the voice rising up at the ...
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Posted in Chiang Mai, Food, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Thailand | Comments Off
Saturday, March 25th, 2006
I have changed hotels. I am now at the brand new Bau-Tong Lodge with free WiFi that is down little soi 3 off Loi Kroh...for half the cost of the Galare Guesthouse where I was for the last three ...
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Posted in Chiang Mai, Conversations, Expats, Food, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Thailand | Comments Off
Saturday, March 4th, 2006

Flew from Koh Samui on Bangkok Air (the only airline off the island because Bangkok Air built the airport) and then on to Chiang Mai on budget Air Asia.
I guess Bob is in ...
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Posted in Chiang Mai, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Markets, Reading, Thailand | Comments Off
Saturday, February 25th, 2006
We're back on Samui and I have rented a brand new furnished one bedroom house for $12.00 a night at "Solitude Resort" on a mountainside about a mile from Doug and Luk's bungalow.
The first evening we were welcomed by our ...
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Posted in Conversations, Culture, Expats, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Koh Samui, Thai Culture, Thailand | Comments Off
Monday, January 23rd, 2006
Visitors, to the south of Thailand, including foreigners, will soon have an opportunity to experience muslim life in a village in the province of Yala. A "Widower's Village" is being built in Rotanbu Village under a resettlement project funded by ...
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Posted in Bangkok, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Thailand, World Watching And Politics | Comments Off
Friday, November 4th, 2005
Taking a fast sleek train, we are visiting our country's capitol city for a few days. "Taxation Without Representation" is written at the bottom of D.C. license plates here in the District of Columbia. Don't know why DC's ...
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Posted in Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Trains, USA, Washington D.C. | Comments Off
Friday, April 1st, 2005
I had to check out of Thailand...thought my visa was 90 days that I got in Kunming in December but it was only 60 days. So at the end of March I had to pay a hefty fine at ...
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Posted in Conversations, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Music, Viet Nam, Visas | Comments Off
Monday, December 13th, 2004
Photos
While I was in Guizhou Province, Bob headed off for Putuashan Island and then circled back to Shanghai via Hangzhou...then flew to Jinghong to meet me at the Banna Hotel. We picked ...
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Posted in China, Climbs & Walks, Excursions, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Yunnan | Comments Off
Friday, December 10th, 2004
Video
Was really fun to spend time in the Camellia Hotel compound in Kunming, familiar from our 2002 visit to China, and fraternize with all the Western travelers and trade street-stories at the Mieli ...
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Posted in China, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Kunming, Videos, Visas | No Comments »
Friday, October 15th, 2004

The last time I was in China it was freezing cold in January 2003. The weather is fantastic this October day in 2004.
After slogging it out across Russia and Mongolia, we soak ...
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Posted in Beijing, Best Places, China, Conversations, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Trans Siberia | Comments Off
Tuesday, October 5th, 2004
Video
Terelgj National Park, an hour by car outside of Ulaan Baatar, is a spectacular valley surrounded by high eroded rock formations, pine covered mountains and steppes carpeted with sheep, Mongolian horses and ...
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Posted in Excursions, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Mongolia, National Parks, Videos | Comments Off
Saturday, September 25th, 2004

The next morning we are picked up at our homestay in Irkutsk by a sullen driver who drives us five hours over pot-holes, through the taiga and across a bay of the beautiful blue ...
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Posted in Best Places, Conversations, Excursions, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Russian Federation, Trans Siberia | No Comments »
Tuesday, August 31st, 2004
Video
We take local electric trains three hours north from Warsaw to Ostroda where we book into the Park Hotel on a lovely lake that caters to German-speaking tourists many of whom ...
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Posted in Ancestors, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Poland, Trains, Videos | Comments Off
Tuesday, August 24th, 2004

We are out of the unusually hot and humid Czech Republic. After an all night train we are in cool Krakow Poland. We accept an offer by a young English speaking man ...
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Posted in Culture, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Poland, Trains, UNESCO World Heritage Sites | 4 Comments »
Wednesday, January 8th, 2003

Bob and I said goodbye to Jana who would leave later in the day on a train to Shanghai and then home from Hong Kong. The next day we took a train to ...
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Posted in China, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Hunan, Lodging, National Parks, Touching Experiences, Trains | No Comments »
Wednesday, January 1st, 2003

An early morning one-hour ride on Sam's Guesthouse bus took us south of Chengdu to the Panda Research Base where China is trying to keep the Giant Pandas from disappearing into extinction. It ...
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Posted in Best Places, Buses, China, Excursions, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Sichuan, Touching Experiences, Videos | No Comments »
Tuesday, December 31st, 2002

The sleeper train from Kunming to Chengdu takes about 18 hours and passes through more than 200 tunnels. It took 10 years to build the railroad...mostly by political prisoners...and looking through the train ...
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Posted in China, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Sichuan, Trains | Comments Off
Saturday, December 28th, 2002

Coming down out of the mountains we were happy to see Ruili lying in the green lush valley below...a larger city than I thought...a Chinese/Burma border town with a mix of Han Chinese, minorities ...
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Posted in China, Conversations, Festivals & Ceremonies, Food, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Sichuan, Touching Experiences, Trains, Yunnan | Comments Off
Tuesday, December 24th, 2002

We went to Re Hai Hot Springs..a short half-hour bus ride from Tengchong.
The Asian and European continental shift also resulted in over 80 crystalline hot springs...grand Boiling Hot Cauldron...age-old Toad-Mout Hot Spring...Drunk Bird Hot ...
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Posted in Best Places, Buses, China, Christmas, Conversations, Hotels,Hostels & Guesthouses, Internet, Yunnan | No Comments »