Why You Should Trash Your First Page Of Travel Writing

30 Apr 2007 in Travel Writing by Ian MacKenzie

crumpled paperLast week I read a concise post from Brian Clark over at Copyblogger about the effectiveness of telling a story – no matter what medium you’re using to communicate.

It could be a powerpoint presentation, testimonial, brochure, or in our case, a travel article.

The part that caught my eye was at the end of his post, where he urges you to skip the beginning and leap right into the middle of your story:

Pick things up with the action already in full swing, preferably at a dramatic or tantalizing moment, and let things unfold from there. When you open strong, people will generally read more supporting detail than otherwise, which allows you room to properly establish your point.

This technique has been around for centuries. Don George in the Lonely Planet Guide to Travel Writing called it “in medias res” which is Latin for “into the middle of things.”

Continue reading this post >>

And The Winner Is…Lee LeFever

30 Apr 2007 in Travel News by Ian MacKenzie

a monkey on a camelThe results of the 5 Hilarious Travel Photos contest are now in. Based on your votes, Lee LeFever secured his title as the winner! (It appears the ‘monkey on the camel’ was the clincher).

I’ll be sending him a brand new copy of the Lonely Planet’s Guide to Travel Photography — not that he’ll need it, but I’m sure it’s chock full of useful photography tips and advice.

Thanks to everyone who participated in the contest, as well as the judges (Kris, Pam, Timen, Ethan, and Pia) for making the final nominations from so many great entries.

Have any ideas for more contests? Let me know in the comments!

BNT’s Best Of The Week 04/28/07

28 Apr 2007 in Best Of The Week by BNT Editors

Best of the WeekIt’s time to wrap up the week now with our favourite links from around the web. Enjoy!

Have you voted in the 5 Hilarious Travel Photos Contest yet? Deadline is Sunday at midnight, so click to to vote now!

Every journey begins with a single step. Good thing Lighter Footstep rounded-up the ten easiest ways for you to start moving toward a lighter lifestyle.

For those wanting to get a bit more dirty, Treehugger’s archive of 20+ Go Green Guides offer tips on everything from greening your pet to your travel.

Beautiful and oddly compelling, the Strangest Statues From Around the World will suck you in for hours if you’re not careful.

Food poisoning? Terrorist attack? It turns out the most likely cause of death while traveling is bad driving. (via World Hum)

The Ethical Volunteering Guide offers ideas to help you work out how you can be an international volunteer and find a valuable placement.

Lastly, Road Junky put together a comprehensive guide on How To Travel For Free that’s worth a read if you’re strapped for cash.

Enjoy the weekend!

All Roads Lead To Home

27 Apr 2007 in Spiritual Travel by Helgi Einarsson
This process of becoming lost in the world, the process of growing up, is repeated as a pattern throughout one’s life.

shadow of camels

Lately, I have been busy with things. I’ve had my attention occupied with things coming, things going, things changing – all the while feeling this vague sense of discomfort and absence, for lack of a better word, that comes with having your attention consumed by the world of form for too long.

It is a draining sense of being away from home somehow, so I guess you could say I’m feeling a little road weary.

When you’ve been away from home like this, the return is so welcome and comforting that you wonder why you ever went away in the first place. But this is what we do.

Continue reading this post >>

Book Review: Buddha Or Bust

26 Apr 2007 in Book Reviews by Cameron Karsten

buddhaThe Buddha once said, “All living things, whether they know it or not, are following this Path.”

The enlightened prince 500-some years before the birth of Jesus knew what he was talking about.

He spoke of the path of life; a winding tumultuous trail of crags, thorns, mountains and exquisite vistas that all creatures must travel on Earth.

New York Times contributor Perry Garfinkel was on the path, though he didn’t know it when National Geographic accepted Perry’s pitch to travel around the world documenting the chronology of Buddhism and its revival as the 21st century’s “engaged” Buddhist Movement-all expenses paid.

It was a dream job for any writer — a “cosmic bailout” of constant movement, interviews, hours of taxi rides and plane flights, with swarms of luggage, language barriers and a precarious lumbar structure. The journey would land Perry a 24-page spread in one of the world’s most renowned periodicals and the book, Buddha or Bust.

Perry Garfinkel began as another American seeking answers to the insatiatable materialism of the West. He sets out from his mother’s New Jersey home eastward in search of the modern world’s Buddhism.

The cold reality of Auschwitz is Perry’s first hard awakening. Dug within the shallow grave of his Jewish lineage, he comes face-to-face with his own denial. From the start, the ego continues its play, dominating the truth, meaning, happiness and true healing.

Perry’s experiences undermine his ability to remain on the meditation cushion in the face of such suffering and horror.

He continues into the heart of the East. India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Hong Kong and China, Tibet, Japan’s Kyoto and Tokyo, exploring how Buddhism has confronted the daily suffering in the world.

Through the directions and words of various Eastern philosophies, Perry Garfinkel’s questions are never answered. He is instead filled with ponderings of possibility.

The Buddha has as many faces as he does sutras. He exhibits as many ways to smile upon the world as the number of steps in which Gandhi trekked. If one thing is true today, it’s that citizens continue to strive for a more compassionate world.

Engaged Buddhism continues to hold the one true purpose: a means to look inward upon one’s Self. After the months of movement, Perry recognizes his own inner light, where his questions have been leading him all along.

Here, only in the present moment, beneath all judgment and self-righteous assurance of who he thinks he is, does the simple joy of being reside. He is Perry Garfinkel: writer, author, world traveler, and spiritual practitioner.

With keen observance, Perry believes the Buddha’s message continues to thrive. The question is: are we willing to stop and listen?

Cameron Karsten writes a weekly spiritual travel column for Brave New Traveler. He left his formal classroom studies to indulge in dreams of travel at 19 years old, and has been wandering ever since. Visit his personal website.

5 Hilarious Travel Photos Contest: Voting Now Open!

25 Apr 2007 in Travel News by Ian MacKenzie

The last splashAfter a few days of sweating and debating over their choices, the judges in the photo contest have named their top 5 finalists.

Thanks to everyone who participated and sent in their entry. I hope the opportunity provided you at the very least with a trip down memory lane, through photographs you hadn’t seen in a while and hoped to forget.

The Final Nominations
(in no particular order)

So now it’s up to you, dear reader.

From the list of final nominations above, YOU must vote on the top winner. The polls will be open until midnight April 29. One vote per person.

Please note: I’ve added an optional first page to the voting that asks a few demographic questions about you.

I repeat: it’s optional – though I would appreciate the extra few moments to answer the questions because it helps me better understand our audience and in turn, publish a better blog.

What Is An RSS Feed And Why You Should Use Them Now

24 Apr 2007 in Travel News by Ian MacKenzie

There are two types of Internet users, those that use RSS and those that don’t. This video is for the people who could save time using RSS, but don’t know where to start.

Lee LeFever and his wife Sachi over at CommonCraft (and TWINF fame) have created a short little instructional video finally demystifying RSS. He writes:

In my opinion, RSS has been too geeky for too long. I have friends who use the web as much as I do and have no clue about RSS. It’s a minor travesty.

I’d have to agree with him. I’ve been on the RSS bandwagon since early last year and my ability to keep track of blogs and skim headlines has increased 5000 fold. Every person I show how to use RSS has a bewildered look on their face…until it clicks. Then they’re instantly hooked.

So enjoy Lee LeFever’s “RSS In Plain English” video above, and when you’re done, feel free to subscribe to Brave New Traveler’s feed. You’ll be glad you did.

Beginner’s Guide To Teaching English In China

23 Apr 2007 in Travel Tips by Sharon Lockwood

students in China

Teaching English overseas is the dream job of many – just make sure you do your own homework first.

Within minutes of departing the plane in Shanghai, I realized I was in trouble. English was no longer the predominant language, my connecting flight to Wuhan, central China, was sixty miles away, and I could not speak a word of Chinese.

Like many setting out to teach English overseas, I had abandoned my Canadian way of life, traveling thousands of miles away.

The magnitude of being in such a situation is incomprehensible until you are actually in it. Although I had traveled and lived in other countries around the world, I had idea of what to expect.

Continue reading this post >>

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