Thursday, April 29, 2010

Tianguis called a success


The Tianguis Turistico — Mexico’s biggest trade show — ended on Wednesday with Tourism Minister Gloria Guevara calling it even more successful than anticipated. More buyers arrived than had been expected. The Tianguis is organized so that foreign buyers of tourism services and domestic suppliers can meet together in one place. In 2009, the flu scare — which devastated the travel industry — had just begun. Restaurants and bars closed and, to make matters worse, a mid-day earthquake rattled the exhibition area, although it did no damage.

This year the recently-appointed tourism minister called for more promotion of what she calls cultural tourism, emphasizing that Mexico is more than a beach. Others have said this before, but according to tour operators, what most vacationers want is a beach.

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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Nayarit Riviera


A Grand Hyatt, a Park Hyatt, an Iberostar and a Capella are planned for the Nayarit Riviera, according to publicists for the area. This Riviera extends north from Puerto Vallarta all along the 200-mile-long coast of Nayarit state, taking in many individual destinations.

In all, according to the Mexican Hotel Association, $3.5 billion have been earmarked for building hotels not only in Nayarit but the Gulf Coast states of Veracruz and Tamaulipas as well as in such established destinations as Los Cabos and along the Mexican Caribbean.

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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Jilted


Puerto Vallarta, once the glamorous destination for the Love Boat now has only an affair to remember. One line after another has announced it soon no longer will be sailing along the shores of Mexico’s Pacific Coast. Princess Cruises has canceled 15 voyages to the area. Mariner of the Seas, Carnival Elation and Norwegian Star have found romance elsewhere. Carnival Spirit starting in December will offer five- and nine-day cruises in place of the current eight-day trips.

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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Tourism minister grilled by Senate


Tourism Minister Gloria Guevara met formally last week with the Senate Committee of Tourism. In response to her reply that more soon will be done to promote travel to Mexico, senators complained that these promises have been made for months. One asked whether the task of the newly appointed minister is to see to it that her ministry will be de facto non-functioning. Last year, her boss, President Felipe Calderon, proposed that the Tourism Ministry be abolished to save money for the cash-strapped government. While violence associated with enforcement of narcotics laws is said to have discouraged potential vacationers, the minister said earlier this month that this is a problem of perception.


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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Adventure’s name of the game in Boulder

Rock climbing in Boulder. I’m almost to the top.


By Stan Wawer

Pilot Dave Mencin pulled the release knob and off we went, banking to the left in search of thermals. We soared like a hawk high above Boulder, Colorado’s Flatiron mountain range. It was like floating on a cloud — if that was possible.

The two-seat glider quietly, gently soared at about 10,000 feet, occasionally catching a thermal, breaking the silence and reminding me that I was in an aircraft without an engine.

“Everything you like to avoid in a plane, you like in a glider,” Mencin said.

According to Mencin, Boulder is an ideal place to glide. “High, dry air is needed to glide and this area has perfect conditions.” Mile High Gliding flies all year round, including in snow and rain. As long as you have good visibility, says Mencin.

“Winter’s great from the pilot’s point of view,” he explained. “You get great altitude. But it’s not as good for passengers because you get lots of turbulence.”

Mencin is a physicist turned glider pilot. He received an undergraduate degree from the University of Missouri and a graduate degree from the University of Colorado. He did earthquake research for JPL in Pasadena, while centered at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder.

“JPL wanted me to move to Pasadena, but the work was boring,” Mencin said, laughing.


He trained by making 15 flights a week for 18 months. He has been flying passengers for more than a decade. “You can’t beat this for work,” Mencin said. “That’s when I decided to become a glider pilot.”

I had to agree with him, as I looked out the front cockpit canopy and at the mountains, downtown Boulder, the plains to the east and the University of Colorado football stadium, the field painted and awaiting its Saturday game against the University of Washington.

We took off from Boulder Airport, our tow plane pulling us skyward. “Most people don’t like the tow plane when they’re taking off,” Mencin said. “It can get really bumpy.” Not on this idyllic afternoon.

“Once we’re on our own, I tend to stay under 110 knots, about 122 miles per hour,” Dave explained. “When you’re thermaling, you want to go about 40 knots.”

I didn’t care how fast he went; I felt like Jonathan Livingston Seagull.

Boulder’s mild climate makes it a perfect place throughout the year for outdoor activities. The average winter temperature is 46 degrees, with a nighttime low of 26 degrees. The rest of the year, the average daytime temperatures run from 62 (spring) to 83 degrees (summer).

“Don’t look back,” Melissa shouted as I reached the halfway point of my first rock climbing experience. I’m not a very good listener. I turned and looked out and down as I heard the roar of the crowd. I thought it was for me, but it turned out the roar was coming from the football stadium where the Buffaloes and Huskies were carrying on a rivalry on a clear, warm early September Saturday afternoon.

As I gazed at the little people below me, I suddenly realized I had climbed higher than I really wanted to go. I had entered gut-check territory. “You’re doing great,’ said Duncan, one of my two instructors, guide and confidence booster. I later found out that Duncan lies a lot.

Behind me was a hysterical football crowd; to my left were the impressive Flatirons, Boulder’s trademark; above me was blue sky and rock. I took a deep breath, grit my teeth and continued my ascent to the summit. I made it in what seemed like an eternity.

Courtney, a twentysomething from Miami, was the next climber. She was having trouble getting high enough to dunk a basketball. “I’m climbing at the pace of an anemic turtle,” she said, forcing a smile as she held tightly to the rock.

I made it to the top because I put my confidence in Duncan and Eric and my equipment (the rope and the rubber-soled shoes). About halfway up, I couldn’t find a spot for my right foot. About five minutes later, the stubborn foot found a crevice and from there, it was all up hill. The repel down was not unlike one I made at Air Force basic training 46 years ago — exhilarating.

Duncan and Eric are instructors with the Boulder Rock School, considered one of the nation’s premier climbing schools and accredited by the American Mountain Guides Association.

I attempted one more climb at a higher degree of difficulty. I ran out of arm strength about three-quarters of the way up. I blamed it on my mountain biking trek earlier in the day.

I worked out a breakfast of granola, with strawberries and soymilk by mountain biking down the Boulder Creek Path. I started four miles up in the mountains on a gravel path, which eventually turned into a paved road that’s shared by runners, bikers, hikers and roller bladers. It’s considered a novice ride. I don’t know what they call it if you turn around and make the four-mile trek back up hill. I made about two and a half miles of the return ride before my legs begged me to lighten up. I recommend mountain biking one day and rock climbing another day.

Park Ranger Burt on Stoner, a biologist from Bradley University, was my hiking guide in Boulder Mountain Park. We started the hike

at 5,400 feet and went to 7,200 feet where I had a breathtaking view of Longs Peak, the Continental Divide, the Flatirons and the town of Boulder. We started the hike at the Gregory Canyon Trailhead, up Gregory Canyon to Green Mountain Lodge and looped back to Saddlerock. Bring lots of water on any hike in higher altitudes. You get dehydrated fast.

Stoner pointed out the fauna and flora of the area. Western tanagers, magpies and a variety of plants can be seen along the trail, which is a former road used for travel to gold mines near Central City.

I “cast” all my cares away on my final adventure — fly-fishing in Boulder Creek with guide Mike Mansfield of Kinsley Outfitters/The Orvis Shop. Boulder Creek is Boulder’s main recreational artery, running through the middle of town. Mansfield picked out a pair of waders for me, handed me an Orvis fly rod and reel and took me down by the bridge where the water was running swiftly downstream.

I don’t want to brag, but I caught the only trout in our group. OK, it weighed about an ounce and I didn’t know I had it on my hook until I started to cast again. I spotted what looked like a sinker at the end of my line. I practiced the catch and release method of fly fishing, tossing “Big Ben” back into Boulder Creek.

The timing for my Sunday morning massage, at Boulder College of Massage Therapy, was perfect. My muscles couldn’t thank me enough.

Where to Stay

Boulder Marriott — 2660 Canyon Blvd. At the base of the Flatirons in downtown Boulder and within walking distance from the University of Colorado. It is in the heart of Boulder’s shopping and restaurant district. 155 deluxe guest rooms. Indoor pool, whirlpool and fitness room. Call for rates. For reservations, call (303) 440-8877.

Historic Hotel Boulderado — 2115 13th St. It opened New Year’s Day 1909. It is Boulder’s first luxury hotel and listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Meticulously restored to its original turn-of-the-century grandeur. Special packages available. For reservations, call (866) 600-2224.

Briar Rose Bed & Breakfast — 2151 Arapahoe Ave. Jessika Kimes and Gary Hardin (a Zen monk), innkeepers. They are the first members of the Green Hotel Association from Boulder County. Each of the 10 rooms has its own distinctive character, but all rooms have private baths, personal phones and organic cotton sheets from Coyuchi. For reservations and information, call (303) 442-3007 or toll free at (888) 786-8440. Web site: www.briarrosebb.com.

If You Go

Gliding — Mile High Gliding, Accessible to those with disabilities. Open seven days a week, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Reservations recommended. (303) 527-1122.

Hiking — Chautauqua Ranger Cottage, (303) 441-3440.

Fly Fishing — Kinsley Outfitters/The Orvis Shop, guided fly-fishing in Colorado’s Rocky Mountains. Full- and half-day trips. Includes Orvis rod and reel, waders, transportation from the shop and picnic lunch. (303) 442-7260.

Mountain Biking — The Boulder Bikesmith. Only minutes from the bike path. All kinds of bike rentals. Rentals include a helmet, lock, map and protector pads. (303) 443-1132.

Rock Climbing — Boulder Rock Club. Programs for children and adults. Indoor climbing wall. Offers an incredible array of classes for beginner to expert, both indoors and outdoors, summer or winter. (303) 447-2804.

Boulder College of Massage Therapy — 6255 Longbow Drive. (303) 530-2100 or (800) 442-5131.

(All information is accurate at the time of publication but prices, dates and other details are all subject to change. Confirm all information before making any travel arrangements.)

New address for Sheraton


Sheraton plans to open a hotel inside the Latin American Tower across Avenida Juárez from the Palace of Fine Arts in Mexico City. This brings Sheraton back to the Historic Center of the capital, a neighborhood it was obliged to leave when owners of another nearby hotel changed flags, running up the Hilton banner. According to the Mexico City Tourism Office, more than $25 million will be invested in converting a dozen floors in the 44-story Latin American Tower into a hotel. The tower, completed in 1957, no longer is the tallest skyscraper in the city, but remains a landmark.

According to the same source, Marriott also will open a hotel in the Historic Center as well as inaugurating a Hampton Inn in the area.


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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Pre-clearance at airports urged


According to Javier Arranda, director of the Riviera Maya tourism office, efforts continue to be made to win approval for establishing at the Cancun airport customs and immigration pre-clearance for U.S. bound travelers. This would allow planes to fly to any airport in the United States, international or not. Since clearance already would have taken place, on arrival passengers could simply pick up their luggage and head for home. Preclearance is available at several airports in Canada and the Caribbean. According to Arranda, objections have been voiced by nationalists in Mexico who do not want foreign authorities operating on Mexican soil.


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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Acapulco worried


Troops are being sent into Acapulco in an effort to tighten security there. On Sunday, the biggest annual trade show, the Tianguis Turistico, is scheduled to open in Acapulco. This is regarded as the most important event of the year for the hospitality industry. Last week, a mid-afternoon in the main tourist area of Acapulco, a gun battle between cops and narcos left six people dead, three of them uninvolved civilians.

Last year the Tianguis began just as warnings about a Swine Flu epidemic cautioned Americans to avoid Mexico. Most restaurants in Acapulco and the rest of Mexico were told to close rather than risk spreading the disease. On the first day of the Tianguis, an earthquake rocked Acapulco, but did no significant damage.

Comments made last Wednesday by the new Tourism Minister, Gloria Guevara, have been ridiculed in the press. The minister said Mexico’s reputation for being unsafe is merely a result of what she called “perception.”

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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Friday, April 16, 2010

Guide regulation promised


The Tourism Ministry has announced it will take a more active role in licensing and supervising tour guides. Ordinary guides are licensed after completing 160 hours of training and a 40-hour refresher course annually. Of concern are specialized guides conducting river rafting expeditions, kayaking, hiking and the like. There have been complains that their training and abilities sometimes are limited.


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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Spring breakers many but tame


According to reports from Acapulco and Quintana Roo (Cancun, Riviera Maya and Cozumel), the number of students spending their Spring Break in Mexico is back to old levels. It fell last year, the result of economic conditions. But this season there was a difference. Many kids arrived with their parents.

“All of them were very well behaved,” reported Ana Mari Ibabien, public relations coordinator for the Riviera Maya. “Of course, they were warned prior to arrival to excessive rowdiness or worse could land them in jail. That may be why parents came along.”


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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Bay Area workday event


Tourism Cares
, the Phoenix Award-winning travel industry charity dedicated to preserving the travel experience, is targeting Angel Island State Park in San Francisco Bay for a massive, workday event. Hundreds of volunteers will gather together on June 4 to roll up their sleeves in this eighth annual event and come to the assistance of California State Parks, a system hit hard in recent years by a sagging economy and budget shortfalls.
Registration is now open at www.tourismcares.org/tourism-cares-for-america/tourism-cares-for-san-francisco-bay-2010. The registration fee is $99 and includes admission to all event functions including the Thursday night cocktail reception and Friday after-work barbecue celebration, as well as the official work shirt, hat and other event merchandise.
For more information, contact Jessica Ahern at jessicaa@tourismcares.org or (781) 821-5990. (Submitted by Society of American Travel Writers member Laurie Armstrong)

Tequila Express


Negotiations are underway to have the Tequila Express operate on Thursdays and Mondays as well as Friday, Saturdays and Sundays. And, if this were to come to pass, the train would actually go to Tequila (the town) for a visit to Cuervo Centro, the Tequila Cuervo visitor center.

The train goes to Amatitlán, where Herradura (Horseshoe) Tequila is distilled. The train is operated by the Guadalajara Chamber of Commerce, which hopes this is a way to keep visitors in Guadalajara one more night. The Tequila Express features all the tequila (or beer or soft drinks) a passenger can consume. Mariachis stroll through the cars. On arrival, there is a tour of the distillery followed by lunch, a show, and more free booze on the trip back.

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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Monday, April 12, 2010

Forgetting about China


Mexico has closed its tourism office in Beijing and apparently given up hope of luring in hordes of Chinese visitors during the years ahead. Five years ago, Mexico was listed among the countries that Chinese tourists would be permitted by their government to visit. At the time, it was said there were five million potential tourists in China who might want to visit Mexico. Last year, 16,000 arrived.

Budget cutbacks in Mexico are said to be the reason that the Beijing tourism office was closed. Critics have argued that the project was not realistic from the start. Chinese travelers allowed to leave their own country are more interested in visiting other parts of the world.

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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Friday, April 9, 2010

Minister outlines program


Tourism Minister Gloria Guevara told business leaders that her three main aims are to increase competitivety in the industry, promote sustainable tourism and to increase investments in the field. Guevara, who seemed to have disappeared after her appointment, addressed the National Chamber of Commerce in Cancun this week. She emphasized the importance of recovering Mexico’s role in the world tourism industry.

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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Sales to Baby Boomers fall


Sales of retirement homes to retired foreigners declined between 60 and 70 percent last year, according to studies released by Colwell Banker. The market is expected to recover somewhat this year. The worldwide economic situation is blamed for the fall.

Consultants say that as many as two million pensioners in the United States might be lured to Mexico. Attractions are the climate and value. Home buyers would get more for their money, promoters insist. There are drawbacks, of course, starting with language, bureaucracy and concern that Mexico is not safe.

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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Africa Adventure launches new green Mozambique Eco-Adventure Safari


Denver-based Africa Adventure Consultants Inc. announced a new green safari itinerary in Mozambique to compliment National Geographic’s new film “Africa’s Lost Eden — Gorongosa National Park” television debut April 12 on National Geographic’s Wild Channel.

AAC’s new 11-day safari, Mozambique Eco-Adventure, follows in many of the same footsteps as the film in celebrating the diverse wildlife and mythical landscapes of Mozambique. It includes Gorongosa National Park and the country’s remote and unspoiled coastline and deserted beaches. See http://www.adventuresinafrica.com/adventures.trips.aspx?trip_id=210.

This is one of several carefully crafted, low-impact “green” safaris utilizing small-footprint camps and lodges that have innovative eco-friendly programs and social projects that AAC will launch in 2010, noted owner Kent Redding.

Another new eco-friendly program is the Tanzania Green Safari, a 10-day eco/socially responsible safari to Tanzania’s best parks. See: http://www.adventuresinafrica.com/adventures.trips.aspx?trip_id=204.

The National Geographic film produced by James Byrne is all about Gorongosa National Park, a fragile and very special national treasure of Mozambique that after years of ruinous civil wars is now being restored to its former glory. The film debuted at the Berlin Tourism Film Festival where it was honored as the Best Film in all categories. The Berlin Tourism Film Festival is considered by many as the most important tourism film festival and its awards are the equivalent of the Hollywood Oscars for this kind of film.

“As a responsible travel company Africa Adventure Consultants wanted to introduce travelers to the wonders of Mozambique but in a sustainable way by incorporating innovative eco-lodges and tent camps that have minimal impact to the environment and benefit the surrounding communities,” Redding said.

The all-inclusive ground rate for the Mozambique Eco-Adventure is from $5,012 per person, double occupancy (Low Season) and includes internal transportation, accommodations in tented eco-camps and deluxe eco-beach lodges, all meals, guide services and park fees. In addition, ACC will offset 100 percent of all carbon emmissions through the purchase of carbon credits.

Park explorations are on foot, by boat and on game drives with the region’s top guides. Guests are introduced to the Carr Foundation who has teamed with the government of Mozambique to protect and restore the ecosystem of Gorongosa National Park and to develop an ecotourism industry to benefit local communities. The rehabilitation of Gorongosa represents one of the greatest conservation projects active in the world today.

The first of two beach experiences is at Varanda, a privately owned nature reserve with dunes, beaches and mangroves. Varanda lies at the tip of a peninsula and is only a short distance from Mozambique Island, the former capital of Mozambique and a UNESCO World Heritage site. The second is at the Guludo Beach Lodge on one of the top rated “deserted beaches” on Earth. The Lodge was created as an innovative and sustainable model to relieve poverty and to protect the environment. The Lodge’s foundation, Nema, is funded by the Lodge’s donation of 5 percent of all profits and works with 12 local communities funding and administering various projects including hunger relief, clean water, mosquito net distribution and funding local schools.

Denver-based Africa Adventure Consultants Inc. organizes exclusive, customized, 100 percent carbon-neutral safari adventures throughout East and Southern Africa. The company conducts business only in destinations they know intimately and offers Africa’s best local camps, lodges and guides. AAC offers full service trip planning, from flights and safaris, to travel insurance and safari gear.

AAC organizes safari adventures in 13 countries across East and Southern Africa: Tanzania, Kenya, South Africa, Uganda, Namibia, Botswana, Malawi, Mozambique, Rwanda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Ethiopia and The Seychelles.

For more information, go to: http://www.adventuresinafrica.com/ or call (303) 778-1089, toll-free at (866) 778-1089 or e-mail info@adventuresinafrica.com.