Colorado Podcasts Telluride Travel: Colorado Podcasts Telluride Travel
by maribeth
Comments Off on Service Travel: Two Different Approaches
Service Travel: Two Different Approaches
With all the flack recently about Greg Mortenson’s “Three Cups of Tea,” I thought it was due time to post the Travel Fun interview I conducted a couple of months ago on service travel. In it I discuss with Erin Guttenplan, founder of Edge of Seven, and Sharon Shuteran, local Tellurider and service travel worker extraordinaire, the merits of helping out in far-flung lands in a variety of capacities. As unfortunate as the news is regarding Mr. Mortenson’s supposed wrong-doings, I don’t think anyone wants to see those in need around the world suffer from this firestorm.
“I’m a firm believer in the power of travel and the power of educational travel,” says Erin, founder of Denver-based Edge of Seven. Their current focus is building a dorm in a rural part of Nepal, so that forty girls can continue their education. They take volunteers from every skill set on their two-week programs, one of which was completed by a friend of mine last June. “These experiences, while challenging, are incredibly rewarding,” Erin emphasizes in the interview. More projects are scheduled for departure the end of May and June; check out Edge of Seven to see how you can become involved in this unique form of voluntourism.
Sharon Shuteran, our judge here in T-ride, became involved in service travel, primarily in Bhutan and other parts of southeast Asia, through a personal contact. She has worked as a non-medical coordinator for the Bhutan Cleft Care Project for the past few years and organizes most of her travels herself. In our interview, she talks about how you can find volunteer positions by contacting organizations directly or on facebook and other forms of social media. Sharon, a “freelance service worker” of sorts stresses that you can create your own program without signing up for an organized trip. Wow, now that’s what I call an intrepid traveler!
“You connect more to people when you’re working there,” Sharon says. “I get more out of it than I give,” she continues. Clearly there’s a lot to be said for “getting outside of yourself.” Click on the link below to hear more from these two dedicated women.
Click to play the Service Travel program
Know that both Erin Guttenplan and Sharon Sharon would be happy to hear from you regarding service travel. You can reach Sharon through facebook.
French Life French Provinces Paris Podcasts: French Life French Provinces Paris Podcasts
by maribeth
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Bonjour Paris Talks with Bonjour Colorado
Ah, Paree. There’s nothing like Paris. And it’s true, the City of Light can be delightful in April.
But where does one begin? There’s so much to see and do in the French capital. And how about gaining more insight into zee French? I lived there eleven years, have written four shopping and touring guides to Paris and the French provinces, and I’m still looking to inform myself about France and its countrymen. So where do I turn for lots of helpful information and insightful stories about Paris and the French provinces? Why, BonjourParis.com, bien sur.
I interviewed Karen Fawcett, the driving force behind Bonjour Paris, this past fall on my Travel Fun radio show. Listen to our chat below to hear how Bonjour Paris has been the definitive guide to Paris since 1995. And the range and depth of their reporting doesn’t stop with Paris. (Although every bon parisien has believed for centuries that their fair city is the center of the universe. In truth, moi aussi for a while!) Thankfully Bonjour Paris gives the rest of France its due, another reason why this informative Web site has earned a leading presence on the worldwide web for all things French.
Karen is funny and insightful, so don’t miss this opportunity to hear more about this much-loved land from someone truly in-the-know.
Click to play the Bonjour Paris program
Thank you to DaliParis and Karen Fawcett for the above images.
Being Green Colorado Podcasts Telluride Telluride Festivals Travel: Being Green Colorado Podcasts Telluride Telluride Festivals Travel
by maribeth
Comments Off on Bag It and Green Travel
Bag It and Green Travel
In honor of Earth Day, next Friday, April 22, I wanted to once again draw your attention to “Bag It,” the award-winning documentary produced and directed by Telluride local Suzan Beraza. April is also an important month for this informative and highly entertaining film since this is when PBS has chosen to make it available to their viewers.
I sat down with Suzan last fall and interviewed her for Travel Fun, my talk radio show on travel. I highly encourage you to click on the link below to listen to what Suzan says about “Bag It” and why we should all pay more attention to our consumption and use of plastic. There’s no lecturing in this movie—or in the interview for that matter—but Suzan and her work (as well as my chat with her!) politely reveal that plastic doesn’t just go away. Where is away anyway? In honor of Earth Day, which I try to celebrate every day of the year, please listen to our interview by clicking on the below link.
Click to play the Suzan Beraza interview
If you tuned in to the interview, you should now be on your way to realizing that buying water in a plastic bottle is a silly concept. Suzan started “Bag It” by making a short film about the plastic bag challenge between Aspen and Telluride a few years ago. Her project grew in scope as she discovered to what extent plastic impacts our environment. “Bag It” began with plastic bags and then expanded to reveal how single-use items such as plastic forks wreak havoc in our world. It follows one man’s journey, played byTelluride local, Jeb Berrier, as he learns more about plastic, how it’s unhealthy for us and the environment.
Cutting down on our consumption of plastic and being green overall can sometimes be challenging. The task often becomes an even taller order while traveling. But in all cases, the reward is great and isn’t it our duty to at least try to be better stewards of our environment? In our interview, Suzan chats about her experiences traveling the world, promoting “Bag It.” Be sure to tune in to hear some of her observations about how other countries are faring in their efforts to be green. We also share how all of us can become more eco-friendly travelers.
Colorado Podcasts Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride: Colorado Podcasts Skiing & Snowboarding Telluride
by maribeth
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Why Telluride
Here it is the last week of the ski season here at Telluride, the ski resort where I work and play. It’s hard to believe—it always comes way too fast. And we’re going out in full glory since it’s been snowing lots this past week and there’s more in the forecast. That’s always how it goes it seems. If you have the chance, take those extra vacation days off from work and hit the slopes as many days as possible. If not, start planning your stay for next year since Telluride Ski Resort truly is tops in the country.
I sat down with Dave Riley, the ski area’s CEO, during the height of the season and interviewed him for my Travel Fun radio show. Click on the link below to listen to that program and to hear both of us chat about why T-ride is so great.
Click to play the Dave Riley interview
I’ve also composed a list of my top ten reasons why Telluride Ski Resort has so much appeal. Believe me, it was hard limiting the selling points to ten and if you’re lucky enough to experience our mountain, you’ll understand why.
My T-ride Top Ten
You’ll be dazzled by the scenery.
The mountain boasts a great variety of terrain for all levels of skiers.
Telluride Ski & Snowboard School consistently rates as one of the top ski schools in the country. It’s a great teaching mountain.
You’ll be in awe of some of the longest and steepest groomed runs in America.
Telluride Ski Resort dazzles experts with some of the best hike-to and side-country skiing in the country.
Lift lines are practically nonexistent.
The lifties are both super friendly and cool. In fact everyone that works at Telluride Ski Resort sports an incredibly welcoming and service-oriented attitude.
In T-ride, you’ll discover a strong ski culture that makes it anything but a cookie-cutter resort. Indeed, the dining, lodging and shopping experiences in the town of Telluride and Telluride Mountain Village are both world-class and authentic.
Chairlift rides here offer spectacular ski shows, punctuated by stellar skiers and boarders carving up the hill.
A free gondola links the historic mining town of Telluride to the base of the ski resort and the town of Mountain Village.
Check out this video for a lovely glimpse of winter in Telluride.
For more of my own impressions of Telluride Ski Resort, check out Telluride Ski Resort is Tantamount to Fun, Winter in Telluride: Loving the Snow, Training and Turns, Family Fun Facilitators, Snowboardcross World Cup: Telluride Goes International, Playing Tourist in T-ride, Ski Instructors in Training: Precision Skiing 201, Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!
Thank you to the Telluride Ski Resort, Brad Foley, Gus Gusciora and Ben Eng for the above images.
Please note that as of fall 2012, Dave Riley is no longer involved with the Telluride Ski Resort. The information presented above, however, is still quite accurate.
Art & Culture Colorado Four Corners Hotels & Lodging Podcasts The Rockies: Art & Culture Colorado Four Corners Hotels & Lodging Podcasts The Rockies
by maribeth
Comments Off on Durango, the San Juan Skyway and the Western Movie Culture of the Four Corners Region According to Fred Wildfang
Durango, the San Juan Skyway and the Western Movie Culture of the Four Corners Region According to Fred Wildfang
Writer and historian Frederic B. Wildfang has made Durango and the outlying area his passion for nearly two decades. Author of a handful of books about this colorful corner of southwestern Colorado, Fred clearly loves the San Juans, the most striking mountain range of the Rockies. “It’s an interesting area historically and scenically,” Fred says in a recent Travel Fun interview. And certainly its geological richness has left an indelible mark on the region from mining and ranching to tourism and western-movie making and much more.
As for Durango, a dynamic town where Fred lives and works, Fred feels it’s a very friendly place filled with a great mix of the old and the new from weather-worn cowboys to fresh-faced outdoor enthusiasts from the nearby college. He hikes everyday in the Weminuche Wilderness, the largest road-less area in Colorado, which lies just outside his door. Fred also loves to use Durango as a base for visiting other great western destinations such as Creede, Colorado and Lake Powell, Utah. In his most recent book, “Images of America: The San Juan Skyway,” Fred features this unbelievably scenic 236-mile loop that wends through glacial valleys and over high ice-sculpted peaks, traversing the old mining towns of Silverton, Ouray, Telluride and Durango. It’s one of the most renowned drives in America and one that you’ll want to take with Fred’s book in hand.
With such spectacular scenery and a wealth of remnants from the Old West, it’s no wonder so many western movies were filmed in the Four Corners area. Fred’s wife, Diane, and her son, Kirk, took over The Rochester Hotel, an historic hotel in Durango a number of years ago and renovated it to a heartwarming place to stay, one of my favorites in this fun-loving western town. A must-see tribute to the history of western movie making in the region, the rooms and hallways of this cozy enclave showcase western movie memorabilia from Fred’s collection. Each of the rooms is named after the movies filmed in and around the San Juans, beginning with “A Ticket to Tomahawk,” a western classic made in 1949 starring Marilyn Monroe. Fred talks about this movie and others in our interview. You’ll discover that most of the westerns were filmed in the fifties and many boast a connection with the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railway, a national treasure that provides reason enough to travel to Durango.
Click on the play button below to hear my interview with Frederic Wildfang.
The Rochester Hotel, 721 East Second Avenue, 970-385-1920 or 800-664-1920, RochesterHotel.com
Book Picks
In addition to “Images of America: The San Juan Skyway,” mentioned above, if you’re going to Durango, you’ll also enjoy “Images of America: Durango,” authored by Frederic B. Wildfang as well. Go to ArcadiaPublishing.com to find out about these books and more.
Food & Wine Podcasts Restaurants The Rockies: Food & Wine Podcasts Restaurants The Rockies
by maribeth
Comments Off on Top Chef’s Kelly Liken: Making Colorado Proud
Top Chef’s Kelly Liken: Making Colorado Proud
I chatted with cheftestant extraordinaire, Kelly Liken, yesterday, during a Travel Fun interview. It was the day after Bravo’s Top Chef finale and Kelly was finally able to breath a sigh of relief and talk openly and candidly about her Top Chef experience. Right off she revealed to me that Bravo’s newest Top Chef, Kevin Sbraga, was her choice for winner—aside from herself of course. Throughout the interview, Kelly sounds exhilarated by her whole Top Chef experience. And why wouldn’t she? She emerged from a pool of seventeen cheftestants to make her way among the final four (and the only woman to boot!) to the penultimate episode in Singapore. Indeed she has made Colorado proud.
Back in April I had the pleasure of dining in Kelly’s namesake restaurant in Vail. I was told at the time that she was away. When she showed up on Top Chef D.C., I realized that that’s where she was, a T.V. adventure that lasted over thirty days, concluding with some ten days in Singapore. When asked what she liked most about the experience, Kelly expressed her contentment with working so closely with the other chefs, revealing to me that they actually got along quite well. As for what she liked least, it comes as no surprise that she felt sleep deprived for the better part of the month.
Click on the play button below to hear more about what Kelly has to say about her Top Chef participation and her special relationship with Colorado.
If you’re anywhere near Atlanta next Friday, September 24, consider attending the Celebrity Chef Tour, an exciting event benefiting the James Beard Foundation. Kelly will be putting on a fine meal along with Kenny Gilbert, another Top Chef contestant that also has ties to Colorado. Go to Likin’ Kelly Liken to read more about Kelly and Kelly Liken, her Vail Village restaurant.
Podcasts Travel Writing & Books: Podcasts Travel Travel Writing Writing & Books
by maribeth
Comments Off on Terrific Travel Advice from Everett Potter
Terrific Travel Advice from Everett Potter
I recently did a Travel Fun interview with top travel writer, Everett Potter, and boy did we have fun trading stories about the travel world. Everett, a travel writer for over twenty-five years, may easily be considered one of the country’s foremost authorities on travel. He’s a regular contributor to many illustrious travel publications including Ski Magazine, Forbes Life and Travel & Leisure. He launched an online newsletter and blog, Everett Potter’s Travel Report, a handful of years ago, a logical outgrowth to all the information he amasses from his freelance assignments.
So here we are—two bloggers that have been published in various outlets aside from the worldwide web. You’ve got to hear what we say about this new world of travel writing, a world largely dominated by the Internet where anyone can self publish their thoughts and opinions without the careful eye of an editor. “A lot of the blogosphere has stories completely unedited, not fact checked,” Everett points out. Facebook and Twitter are mentioned in the same breath as remarks about the constant changes of travel writing online and off.
We discuss TripAdvisor in far greater detail, weighing the pros and cons of this Internet phenomenon that often leaves hotel G.M.s and other hospitality industry heavyweights cringing with every other posting. Of course many of the critiques ring legitimate, others not so much. “There’s an awful lot of English people lamenting the fact that there’s not a tea kettle in their room,” Everett says. I chuckle and sympathize with these complaints since being a tea drinker myself, it’s truly awful to make tea in a coffee pot.
Everett also talks about how and where to find the most value for your travel dollars, how to book hotels and flights, today’s lodging and airline cutbacks and much more. Don’t plan your next trip without listening to this interview!
I bet Everett would be tons of fun to be with on a trip, especially to a place such as England. You can do just that September 26-October 3 on a Dartmoor to Exmoor Walk, a soft adventure walking tour, organized by The Wayfarers. There are still some places left, but act fast!
You’ll find a wealth of stories on food and wine, culture, adventure travel and more at Everett’s blog. There you can also toss your hat (or e-mail address) into the ring for a variety of contests he offers on a regular basis. They’re downright giveaways, in fact, where you can snag a hotel stay, cruise and more.
Sit down with a good cup of tea or a glass of wine and listen to all that Everett and I have to say about today’s wonderful and crazy world of travel. Click on the play button below to begin.
New York Podcasts Telluride Writing & Books: New York Podcasts Telluride Writing & Books
by maribeth
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Dear Money: An Interview with Martha McPhee
Oh dear, I need money. Such is the plight of all writers, unless you’re independently wealthy or you’re among the few to achieve John Grisham-like success. There isn’t a writer on this earth—published or nonpublished—that couldn’t identify with the struggles of India Palmer, the main character and narrator in Martha McPhee‘s recently-released novel, “Dear Money.” And I’m one of them!
In this beautifully crafted fourth novel, Martha reveals the travails of India from the angst over paying bills, to the challenges of “keeping up with the Jones,” to the long hours a dedicated writer must log at her desk (sunny days and all) and much more. Clearly Martha, a highly-acclaimed writer that happens to live in New York city like her protagonist, has drawn from personal experience to spin this exciting tale of a cash-strapped writer that’s tempted by the allure of a more high rolling life in the Big Apple. India ends up doing the unthinkable: She trades her artist’s life to become a bond trader. Funnily enough the idea behind the novel comes from a real-life offer. A legendary bond trader did claim that he could transform Martha into a booming Wall Street success in eighteen months; fortunately for us she declined and wrote “Dear Money” instead. It’s not surprising to learn from the intricately-detailed passages written about the highly competitive and adrenaline-charged life among New York’s financiers that Martha shadowed a bond trader to learn the ins and outs of mortgage-backed securities during the height of its rise. I found the contrasts between the writer’s life and the financier’s life to be one of the most compelling parts of this book.
You may be wondering why I’ve taken such an interest in Martha and her work. As usual, serendipity played a hand in our connecting with each other. I actually skied with her, her family and some friends of hers last March in Telluride. We both shared that we were writers but little else about our work was discussed. Since it was the height of the busy season, I didn’t find a moment to Google her. I feel as though I really came to know Martha after she sent me “Dear Money” later on in the spring, especially because it’s a book that has resonated so much with my writer’s life (sans the bond trader dimension, of course). Now perhaps the next time we ride the chairlift together we’ll shed our squirrel-y shyness about our work (seemingly a classic character trait of writers) and get down to some real exchanges about the creative process.
It looks as though that just might happen since plans are in the works for Martha to give a presentation at the Wilkinson Public Library in Telluride next March. I’m vying for that program to include a writer’s workshop, too!
If you’re a writer, you must listen to the Travel Fun interview I conducted with Martha earlier this summer. Avid readers will love it as well. And how’s that pile of summer reading doing at your bedside? I bet it has dwindled but if you’re like me, you feel like you’re just warming up. Keep adding to the stack and continue that summer reading mode all year long. I provide some great reading suggestions at the end of this interview that will steer you toward more excellent book picks, both fiction and nonfiction.
Click on the play button below to listen to my interview with Martha.