Travel
Related: About this forumRick Steves on the Return of Travel and Why It Matters
The travel writer and TV personality is back in Europe, planning itineraries for next year. Travel, he says, can help us understand the world. Heres how he recommends doing it.
'On a recent morning, Rick Steves was wandering around the ancient Tuscan town of Volterra with a new crop of tour guides. His companys trips to Europe are set to resume in February after a nearly two-year pandemic hiatus, and the guides were midway through a nine-day trip around Italy to learn what makes a Rick Steves tour a Rick Steves tour. One of the stops on their itinerary was Volterra, a medieval hilltop town whose stone walls are 800 years old. Mr. Steves who has been to Tuscany many times for his popular public broadcasting show and YouTube channel was relishing being back.
Were surrounded by the wonders of what we love so much, and it just makes our endorphins do little flip-flops, he said during a phone interview.
That unabashed enthusiasm has fueled Mr. Stevess empire of guidebooks, radio shows and TV programs, as well as tours that have taken hundreds of thousands of Americans overseas since he started running them in 1980.
Along the way, Mr. Steves has built a reputation for convincing hesitant Americans to make their first trip abroad and that first trip is often to Europe, which Mr. Steves has called the wading pool for world exploration. But he also speaks passionately about the value of travel to places like El Salvador and Iran, and hes open about how his time in other countries has shaped his views on issues like world hunger and the legalization of marijuana.
But Europe remains Mr. Stevess bread and butter, and hes back on the Continent now both to prepare for the return of his tours and to work on a six-hour series on European art and architecture that he hopes will be broadcast on U.S. public television next fall. As he wandered through Volterra, we talked about why he doesnt count the number of countries hes visited, why his tour company will require vaccinations and why a world without travel would be a more dangerous place.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/30/travel/rick-steves-europe-tours.html
bahboo
(16,953 posts)I'm not the type to take a tour, but I would at least consider one of his. I would imagine there is quite a bit of freedom involved...
llmart
(16,329 posts)I have watched him on PBS ever since he started. I have several of his DVD's and rewatch them again and again. I especially love the one about celebrating Christmas around the world. I have never taken one of his tours, but I may consider it in a year. Italy or Spain would be my first choice. I just wish I could have him be the actual tour guide. He seems like a lot of fun.
Thanks for the link, elleng.
cilla4progress
(25,820 posts)husband and I are going to Greece with a Rick Steves tour in June!
Not experienced world travelers and never been with him.
Might be a bit chancy. Would LOVE to get another booster between now and then.
But he's so careful and well-regarded. We share his travel ethic and views. At 67 we arent getting any younger. No one knows what the future holds..
Funny because we are on the very cautious end in our whole dealing with this pandemic...
Why Greece? First off, so much of European history is based on Christianity and war, which does not speak to us. We did travel to France and Normandy in 2018. We want to go back to the cradle of Western civilization and then, on a later tour, move forward through history!
Have you toured with Steves' groups, elleng?
elleng
(135,794 posts)Keep us informed, please.
I haven't toured with his groups, 'just' Road Scholar, and I haven't been to Greece.
cilla4progress
(25,820 posts)to travel on our own. Esp. now with COVID!
Thanks, elleng. Trying to access NYT article now!