Monthly Archives: June 2012
Paradise for Sale
My sweet little Kona condo is on the market. I calculate that if I get my price, I can travel for about 6000 days. Or maybe get a place with a guest room and a garage. Wanna visit? All are … Continue reading
Having the guts to break even.
One afternoon in 1988 I took a wind-surfing lesson at Anini Beach, on Kauai’s north shore. Except for body-surfing, I’d never surfed before. I did okay – only ran over one swimmer. You should have heard the mouth on that … Continue reading
The Garske Awards
At the end of our ten-month, seventeen-country trip around the world in June, 2008, Joy and I created this list to summarize our observations. We called it the Garske Awards. These awards only cover the countries we visited on that … Continue reading
Talking Turkey
Arriving in Turkey for the first time feels a lot like arriving in Italy, Spain or Greece. Old-world Mediterranean. After Asia and Africa, the cobblestoned streets and cafes, vineyards and olive groves all seemed to whisper “…you’re back in the west, now. … Continue reading
Swiss Cheese
In Switzerland, I kept thinking about Yosemite. Switzerland has much better chocolate than Yosemite, though. Clocks, banks, cheese, and charming villages, too. On the other hand, Yosemite is a park. Switzerland is full of Swiss people. I was almost broke, … Continue reading
Sex ed in Sweden.
My Swedish host, a banker, surprised me. “We Swedes have a reputation for promiscuity that is overblown, but it is true that for us, sex is not such a big deal. It’s just something everyone should do a few times … Continue reading
Homage to Greece.
On one hand, modern Greece is a picturesque nation on the periphery of Europe, distinguished for its excellent food, lively music, poverty, corruption and economic troubles. On the other hand, ancient Greece is the still-echoing explosion of genius that overshadows … Continue reading
The top 100 books…
…according to people who should know. A Norwegian outfit contacted 100 top writers around the world and asked each of them for their list of the ten best and most important books – this is the resulting compilation. In one of … Continue reading
Learning to love the French.
It was the last day of a 5-month trip, and I was down to my last $4. In those days I always arrived home flat broke. It was May, 1980. I was 24. My all-night train from Switzerland rolled into … Continue reading
The Killing Fields
Angkor Wat in Siem Riep, Cambodia- the largest religious monument in the world. There are around 1000 other temples nearby, moldering in the jungles. Everyone goes to the four most spectacular ones, so that leaves 996 others, mostly empty of … Continue reading