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We were delighted to see this enthusiastic review from Eric Gauger's Notes from the Road, another great travel website.
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GoNOMAD editor Max Hartshorne got prominent mention in a story about travel blogs by MSNBC travel columnist Christopher Elliott:
Seven tips for blogging your way to a better trip
The Recorder in Greenfield Massachusetts, published an article in January 2009 about editor Max Hartshorne's trip to Iran: DEERFIELD-- Max Hartshorne became the envy of his traveler-friends when he spent eight days in Iran around Thanksgiving. Everyone else thought he was crazy. While there is widespread anti-American sentiment, he suggests Iran is quite welcoming to Americans. "Nothing bothers them more than the perception that they hate us," he said. GoNOMAD.com, a travel website published in South Deerfield, has announced that they will be among the more than 500 exhibitors at the annual New York Times Travel show, held in late February 2009 at the Jacob Javits Convention Center in New York City. This will be their second time exhibiting at the NY Times Travel show. The travel show is considered the biggest event of the year in the travel business, with tour companies and tourism board reps traveling from all over the world to exhibit. From the Argentina Tourism to Zagreb Tourist Board, the list of exhibitors gets longer each year as thousands of restless travelers flock to the show to get vacation ideas and to learn about travel. GoNOMAD.com plays an increasingly important role as consumers use the web to find experiences that will make memorable vacations. They want updated and detailed information about where to go and what to do around the world. GoNOMAD.com publishes the kind of detailed guides, feature stories and photos that travelers are looking for to plan their trips. To find out more about the show, visit http://www.nyttravelshow.com/ or www.gonomad.com\
The prestigious Paris-based International Herald Tribune recently included GoNOMAD's article on freighter travel on the list of resources in Roger Collis's travel advice column:
Published: June 21, 2007 Where can I find information on trans-Atlantic lines, schedules and fares on passenger or merchant ships from France, or a neighboring country, to New York, in August or early September? Jean-Pierre Gernay, Boulogne-Billancourt, France Posting to Greatness Max Hartshorne, who owns the alternative travel Web site GoNomad.com as well as the GoNomad Café in South Deerfield, is blogging about Starbucks coffee and bad karma this week at ReadUpOnIt. Morriss Partee, owner and ‘chief experience officer’ of EverythingCU.com, a business based in Holyoke that provides marketing support and services for credit unions, has broached the topics of brilliant Super Bowl commercials and Burger King Frypods on his blog, Everything CU Brand Adventure. And Tish Grier, a freelance editor, journalist, and media consultant, is talking about the advent of ‘Webisodes’ — videos produced for Internet viewing at The Constant Observer, her own blog, but one of five to which she contributes. All three are the principals of their own businesses, and even with such a wide array of topics posted this month, each views blogging as a key part of their growth strategy. Indeed, blogs are moving to the forefront of many a marketing plan at companies of all sizes — sole proprietorships, major corporations, Web-based firms, and small niche businesses alike...
Sunday, January 08, 2006 Like somebody you'd like to go on a long trip with, the alternative-travel web site GoNOMAD at www.gonomad.com is both no-nonsense knowledgeable and packed with a giddy enthusiasm about the trip it's going to help you take. On top of that, this web site tells great stories. More than just a vast clearinghouse of travel nuts and bolts (which it is) of flight price comparison calculators, huge vacation/cruise package lists, find-a-car/rent-a-car links, and hundreds of hostel sites, Go Nomad provides off-the-beaten track themes that run the inspiration gamut from French ethnobotanic culinary vactions and pink Brazilian river dolphin tending, to nude hiking and freighter hopping advice that make this site worthy of being a home base from which to launch even the most improbably foray. Like a good traveling companion, it's tidy. Easily navigatable: even the Special Interest vacation search engine Booleans you through 14,000 vacation packages and 1300 top travel suppliers. You can imagine the editors and interns giggling manaically as they add yet another Bike Togo link or more guidance on riding Javanese ponies in Lesotho; whooping it up as they find ways to help you reserve beds on trains, barges, organic farms, castles, join wolf and grizzly bear safaris, or (way off the beaten track) build trails through Siberian taiga. Like a unflagging travel companion, its very url eggs us on with its frolicing feature articles. "Go, nomad," it calls. Go! You can do it,' it says in David Rich's report from beyond-remote Kashmiri valleys full of strange and stunningly beauty on "knees past their 'use by' date" (Spiti Valley: The Middle of the Mystic Himalayas). Those stories and amazing photos call us to loll in the rose-scented bathtubs of Tuscan spas, storm the ramparts of thousand year old Syrian fortresses, and meander through Croatian Zinfandel vineyards. Go Nomad! posted by Liz y Brian @ 6:11 PM
Liz Kirchner received a Master's degree in Botany and Agronomy from the University of Maryland, and dashed from the stage, gown flying, straight to the airport and off to Asia where she spent several years in Korea and China collecting data describing organic Asian home gardens and wild food gathering. That meant roaming the countryside buttonholing surprised Chinese peasants who were hoeing their peppers to ask them how things were going, or popping out from behind mossy oaks to interview Korean mushroom gatherers. Most travel e-mail newsletters are delivered weekly, though a few go out monthly. To sign up for them, just go to the company's Web site listed below; the e-mail signup feature is usually obvious. You can cancel your subscription at any time. Here are a few faves: GoNomad, www.gonomad.com: Delivered monthly, this letter delivers editorial articles about adventure travel. The site itself includes both articles and booking links, but the emphasis is on information. WheretoGoNext, www.wheretogonext.com: Delivered every business day, this letter draws together press releases from the travel industry. Though oriented to the trade, if you're a travel junkie, you'll be interested in hot deals, new hotels and other newsy tidbits. Farealert, www.farealert.net: Will zip you a note when there's an outrageously good fare available, such as $51 from Los Angeles to Fiji.
This Associated Press story appeared in newspapers all over the country: ![]() August 8, 2005 SOUTH DEERFIELD, Mass. (AP) — Far from the world of all-inclusive resorts, motorcoach tours and standard top-10 itineraries is a totally different type of travel. Here you’ll experience places and cultures through activities, interactions and tourism that involves doing instead of just seeing. To help you plan such a trip, check out www.gonomad.com, which bills itself as being committed not just to alternative travel, but to participatory travel. You’ll find a searchable database of unusual lodgings, events, tours, activities, and opportunities for working, studying and volunteering around the world, from weaving courses in Guatemala to staying with a family in Africa to helping a community in Nepal. Even in places as familiar to many travelers as western Europe, GoNOMAD’s miniguides recommend unusual experiences like horseback riding tours of Ireland and a pilgrimage along El Camino de Santiago, in the Basque countryside. Other recommendations from the Web site include a relatively affordable trip to Antarctica — $3,000 — and a trek to Bolivia to hunt down the legend of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, who may have ended their days there (depending on which legend you believe). GoNOMAD also also offers links to Web sites where you can obtain air tickets, visas, passports, travel insurance, rental cars, and lodging. And while you can use it to explore exotic and unusual places, the Web site is edited and run from a small New England town — South Deerfield, Mass.
For a different take on travel, browse www.GoNomad.com, a searchable database that rounds up untypical info and links. Subjects include lodging (with options including monasteries, farmsteads, boat hotels, rock caves), modes of transportation, destination mini-guides, and women's travel. The info is for various budgets. One article, for example, explained driveaways, the term for companies that match insured, responsible drivers with cars that need to be transported from one U.S. region to another. You basically agree to pay the gas, put down a deposit and arrive at the destination on time.
New Sunday Express The New Sunday Express in Chennai, India, has more than 1,000,000 readers. On July 1, 2005, in a review of travel websites Colin Todhunter writes: www.gonomad.com "One of the best all round sites on the Internet. A US-based magazine, offering good, informative articles on global destinations, lodgings, getting there and organised tours. There are special sections on travel for women and for travelling with the family. This is a free-to-access site but, unlike most sites, actually offers payment for articles and ensures only quality pieces make it onto the site. GoNomad has a very guide-book feel in terms of offering specific information about destinations. It also offers information on alternative travel and encourages travellers to gain a deeper understanding of cultures and places by taking part in activities such as volunteering."
But the site also offers details on an historical weekend in Richmond, Va., and of an English garden tour. Having kick-started his business after the tourism industry, and in many ways the U.S. as a whole, suffered its most devastating blow in September, 2001, Hartshorne is indeed an expert on the fragility of the travel and tourism industry.
American Way, Trends for the Modern Traveler (American Airlines) March 3, 2001. Click it: GoNOMAD.com "You decide: Go back to the office, or gonomad.com, a web site devoted to alternative travel. Gonomad is loaded with creative, uncrowded destinations, from treehouses in Thailand to cooking classes in Europe--far away from your working world."
Daily Hampshire Gazette, Northampton, MA April 1. 2002. "It's packed with articles, practical tips, links, and a searchable database of 1300 travel resources all geared toward people who want to see the world, but not as typical tourists. These are people looking for rare, inexpensive, personally enriching, often adventurous and socially responsible travel experiences off the beaten path all over the world."
National Geographic, February 2001: Recommended websites for Ecotourism: GoNOMAD.com "Gives information on alternative tourism projects and trips worldwide in both urban and non-urban destinations. Provides a small searchable directory of alternative tour operators, lodgings, learning and volunteer programs. Includes “how to” miniguides for the independent traveler. "
soul of America.com travel magazine. March 2001 One good source to tap into is Go Nomad at www.gonomad.com. Question: What exactly is "Alternative Travel?" Answer: Alternative Travel is usually unique travel experiences that are departures from the "typical" beach, island, or mountain hotel or resort sightseeing trips. They can be anything from sustainable and responsible tourism projects such as building artificial island reefs, to enrolling in a foreign language or cooking course in Greece, to volunteering with children in Indonesia, to community development in parts of Mexico, to participating in an archaeological dig. Adventure Travel is a rapidly growing segment of the Travel and Tourism industry, and Adventure Travelers definitely seek something out of the ordinary. These types of trips can be incredibly educational and enriching, and can be fantastic ways to provide children, not to mention yourself, with personal, hands-on, real-world experiences which can't be found anywhere else.
Local Internet Travel Site Hopes
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Renting a motorcycle to cross the Himalayas, spending a week manning a lighthouse in Rhode Island or going to cooking school in Tuscany are among the trips the site chronicles.
Besides stories and information on how to go on these exotic trips, the site includes cultural tips, listings for tour companies, listings for small hotels and youth hostels and links to sites to purchase plane tickets and tour companies.
Eventually he hopes to add travel book reviews, a traveler's discussion board, video and sound clips and more local writers.
“Right now, I'm just trying to throw things up and let them stick,” Hartshorne said.
Hartshorne, 43, took over the site started by Lauryn Axelrod of Vermont on March 1. He most recently served as managing editor for Transitions Abroad, a travel magazine based in Amherst. His daughter, Kate will be as assistant editor for GoNOMAD.com.
For Hartshorne, the business combines all his life's interests: travel, his experience, advertising and the Internet. “It's my first foray into my own company. I am really excited.”
He hopes the site will help turn around the downward trend in travel after Sept. 11. In fact, he says, traveling again is important after the attacks.
“We've got to say to heck with these damn terrorists,” Hartshorne said. “We need to travel to share our cultures. Travel is the great equalizer. You see the depths of poverty and the depths of ignorance. We can't be isolated in this global economy.”
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, Northampton, MA, April 1, 2002
Destinations off the Beaten track
By Judson Brown
Staff Writer
SOUTH DEERFIELD--Now may not seem like the best of times to be investing in an Internet site focused on adventurous travel to destinations off the beaten path.
But that has not deterred Max Hartshorne, a T-shirt and embroidered apparel salesman for a Holyoke, MA company, from purchasing GoNOMAD.com.
In fact, he thinks, as do some others, that the attacks awakened many Americans to their need to learn more about the world through travel.
A two-year old Web site started by Lauryn Axelrod, formerly operated from East Arlington VT, www.GoNOMAD.com is one of a growing number of "alternative" travel Web sites.
It's packed with articles, practical tips, links, and a searchable database of 1200 travel resources all geared toward people who want to see the world, but not as typical tourists.
These are people looking for rare, inexpensive, personally enriching, often adventurous and socially responsible travel experiences off the beaten path all over the world.
"At GoNOMAD, we define alternative travel as participatory travel, says a statement on the home page, "beyond passive sightseeing."
The participatory aspect of travel for some, as described in scores of articles archived on the site, involves organized educational experiences--like learning to cook in Mexico. For others, it may mean doing volunteer work as they go--teaching in Nepal, picking organic vegetables in New Zealand, doing dolphin research in Hawaii.
The site features "mini guides" to places such as Tasmania, Slovenia, and Zanzibar, and also unconventional approaches to travel, like a guide to home exchanges, for instance, and one on "travel as pilgrimage."
Hartshorne, 43, is a former newspaper reporter and editor who until recently was the managing editor of Transitions Abroad magazine in Amherst.
In additional to his affinity for the content and the mission of the site, he liked the numbers. A million hits and 61,000 unique visitors a month.
"That means the web site is seriously trafficked, and people are coming, so I won't just be waving a flag and nobody seeing it," he said. "It means you have a market, something people like."
And what about the world situation?
"Yeah, it's a scary world," says Hartshorne, "but I think that makes a lot of people more eager to travel."
If you see a mention of GoNOMAD while you are surfing the web or reading the paper, please send it to us. We will send you a reward!
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