Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Cave Diving



Running underneath the rolling hills of Tennessee lies a still-mysterious and remote network of caverns. Home to more than 8,000 caves, much of the state is considered karstland. This means the layers of rock under the soil are easily hollowed out by ground water through a slow dissolving process.

Many of those caves shelter fragile ecosystems. Biologist Jerry Lewis and Cory Holliday of The Nature Conservancy are helping to discover and protect some of those ecosystems from man's destruction.

The allure of Tennessee's subterranean world has led to many amateur expeditions. Some of those journeys have ended in tragedy -- either from loss of human life, or destruction and disturbance of fragile cave ecosystems. For this reason, Lewis, his fellow biologists and serious cavers are reluctant to reveal the locations of some of their favorite spots.



Exploring Tennessee's Caves for New Species
By David Kestenbaum

Saturday, October 28, 2006

"Craftsmen Build a Medieval-Style Castle"



Once upon a time, deep in the forests of Burgundy, a man was haunted by a vision. He dreamed of building a castle, with turrets, great walls and a moat. Some people wondered if he was mad.

This was, after all, 1996.

And yet Michel Guyot set out to build his castle the hard way - the medieval way. With only hammers and chisels to carve the stones. With only horses to cart the rock. Without power tools.


By: Angela Doland, AP
Photos: www.newyorkcarver.com

Friday, October 27, 2006

Rafting in the Yukon at Age 70


Traveling to the Yukon Territories is ambitious enough. Doing it at age 70 is certainly blog worthy. GoNOMAD just published a new story about rafting down the Tatshenshini river. This story shows that today's 70 is yesterday's 60, and that the thirst for adventure never slows down. Linda Ballou writes:

"When my mother told me that at the age of 70 she was going to raft the Tatshenshini River, I didn’t think much about it.


She didn’t mention that the headwaters of this river in the Yukon Territory of Canada flow free for 140 uninterrupted miles through a 24-million-acre roadless wilderness that encompasses the largest non-polar ice field on earth.


Nor did she hint that ursus horribilis — big honkin’ grizzlies — thrive on these salmon-choked waters. Not a whisper about the apartment-building-sized icebergs calving off the twenty glaciers that descend into the river that can explode into a thousand sparkling shards causing waves big enough to tip a rubber raft.

She didn’t chatter on about sucking holes and monster hydraulics where the Tat merges with the Alsek River to form one massive river four times the size of the Colorado. What she did say was that the guides were real good cooks!"

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

"Eco-vacations"


Why fritter away the hours just lying on a beach somewhere when you can have yourfun in the sun -- and help save the planet.


Written by Jeff Greenwald
October 24, 2006

Monday, October 23, 2006

Play Ball!


St. Louis is on the upswing. Approximately $3.5 billion dollars have been lavished on the downtown area over the past decade, with new entertainment districts, parks, condos, posh hotels and restaurants sprouting in their wake.

By Pauline Frommer
Special to MSNBC.com

Sunday, October 22, 2006

Top Fall Destination: The Great Smoky Mountains



On a postcard-perfect Saturday at the Heffner Gap Overlook, Anne Mitchell Whisnant reads from one of the scores of informational signs — known as "gun boards" for their frontier rifle logos — posted along the 470 miles of the Blue Ridge Parkway.

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Next Stop: New Zealand


Train spotters and history buffs from around the country are steaming their way into Dunedin this weekend for the centenary of its famous railway station.

Dunedin Railway Station has been named one of the top 200 must-see attractions in the world and the city will be celebrating all Labour Weekend.

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Follow the Green Line to Coolidge Corner

I spent this past weekend visiting family and friends in Boston, Massachusetts, also known as Beantown to us locals. Taking the lazy and inevitably expensive route via cab, I was lucky enough to make my way safely over to Coolidge Corner in Brookline, despite a fatigued driver and rush hour traffic. I arrived at my favorite corner, 446 Harvard Street, home to Anna's Taqueria. This famous Mexican Taqueria lies in the heart of Coolidge Corner. This unique urban downtown location maintains the largest concentration of independent boutiques in America and is a quick subway ride, on the T's Green Line, from well-known attractions such as Fenway Park and Boston University. After checking out the sights and doing a little window shopping in Brookline's Coolidge Corner, Anna's fresh lemonade and big burritos are sure to hit the spot.



The Burrito War
Two wildly popular restaurants are locked in competition. So are the battling brother and sister who own them.

By John Wolfson

Most evenings, sweltering or frigid, the line at Anna’s Taqueria backs out onto Beacon Street near Brookline’s Coolidge Corner. The burrito chain’s three other locations elsewhere in Brookline and in Cambridge and Somerville are crammed at lunchtime, too. The hungry and the frugal queue up here for one reason: cheap, filling, reliably delicious Mexican food. That combination has proved so successful that Anna’s burritos have earned this magazine’s annual Best of Boston honors no fewer than five times. Anna’s customers have even set up fan sites on the Internet.

The patrons at another well-known local burrito joint, Boca Grande, are equally loyal, and the cash registers at that restaurant’s three locations in Brookline and Cambridge cha-ching long past the dinner hour.

It’s no surprise that a rivalry exists between these two hugely popular chains whose Coolidge Corner branches are just three blocks apart. They share the same basic menu, the same general prices ($3.75 for the large burrito at Anna’s, $4.25 at Boca), the same overall strategy of fresh food, fast. Oh, and, unknown to most of their customers, the owners share a last name (and are not Mexican, but Japanese).

Mariko and Michael Kamio are brother and sister, as it happens, and former coworkers, and they don’t much like each other. Their split as business associates about a decade ago was bitter; as brother and sister, it’s been worse. They haven’t spoken to each other in a very long time, which is not to say they don’t speak about each other. They’re known, in fact, to launch into tirades over who treats employees better, whose food is better, and, when you get right down to it, which restaurant is better. Mariko, who owns Boca, agreed to discuss the feud, which is so bad that she wouldn’t get into the more personal elements to spare her mother the anxiety. As for Michael, who owns Anna’s, he’s not talking to us at all.

Sibling rivalries are the fiercest of rivalries, of course, and this one began in 1986 (unless you believe that all sibling conflict originates in childhood) after Mariko opened her first Boca Grande, in Cambridge. Her younger brother later came on board to manage her stores until they parted ways and he founded AnnaÂ’s.

Mariko, who says she’s in her late forties, worked in marketing until she decided that the corporate world was not for her. She is something of a bon vivant, passionate about food, entertaining, and travel, a "Big-Idea" sort who likes to make the rules. So she opened the burrito shop. "I had access to a lot of marketing data," she says. "At that time, it showed that Mexican was going to be the fastest-growing ethnic food." She modeled her restaurant on San Francisco’s successful Gordo’s Taqueria chain, which is owned by her cousin. In the beginning, she created the recipes, did the cooking, even rolled the burritos.

Mariko says she brought her brother in from San Francisco to manage Boca Grande, freeing her from day-to-day responsibilities. She says the business relationship was rocky. She won’t get into specifics, though she suspects that some of the problems lay in lingering little-brother resentment. She acknowledges, however, that Michael may have felt constrained by her firm ideas of how he should do his job. "We eventually didn’t get along," she says.

In 1995, Michael opened his first Anna’s Taqueria, in Coolidge Corner. In newspaper interviews, he cited his cousin’s Bay Area restaurants as his model, never mentioning the five years he spent with his sister.

"He carries a grudge," Mariko says. "He definitely considers me competition." Then again, it was Mariko who opened a Boca in Coolidge Corner in 2000, just a few blocks from her brother’s restaurant.

"My brother does a very good marketing job," Mariko says. "The difference is he appeals to the very young kids who want a fast meal. Originally, I’m a cook. All of the decisions are made based on recipes and flavors. He’s not a cook." She believes that "spies" from Anna’s come to Boca and try to buy samples of her secret sauces. "We know who they are now," Mariko says. "We won’t sell to them." Oh, yeah, she says, and at her brother’s restaurants, "I hear the help is a bit surly." Those who have spoken with Michael about it say he has similar sentiments about his sister’s business.

The last time Mariko and Michael spoke to, rather than about, each other was in 1996 at their father’s funeral. "My father was the nicest man," Mariko says. "I said, Mike, let’s put this behind us.’ I’m always hopeful that he’s going to come around."

She says Michael may have been better served by starting out on his own, getting out from under his big sister’s shadow. The way things were, she says, "It wasn’t doing me any good. It wasn’t doing him any good." In any case, she says it’s time for her to move on from the drama. "I don’t want that type of misery in my life and being aggravated by it. He’s not important."

Originally published in Boston Magazine, February 2005.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Introducing Daryl Our Newest Blogger on GoNOMAD


We have a new member of our blogger team at GoNOMAD. Daryl Popper is our new intern and she will be taking over the duties for the all important Travel Reader blog. She is a journalism major at UMass and hopes to travel all over after she graduates.

But for now she has to be content with following the travels of others, and so she will be selecting the best travel writing from the web to share in this space.

Monday, October 16, 2006

The End of the Road

We're at the end of the road here, it's time for a change of the guard at Travel Reader. A new intern will be taking over writing and posting on this blog. Good bye to Kristy and Sarah, hello to our newest scribe, to be announced very soon.

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Johnny Jet Has Fun with Videos


Perusing the 'net and came across our old friend Johnny Jet's site. He's redesigned it so it looks much slicker, and as we advised him a year ago, he's emphasized the Johnny, which is the most fun part of the site. He offers videos that are a mix of music, still photos and videos, a good way to save bandwidth and keep the presentation moving. Here's a link to a neat 2 minute clip he put up about a trip to Sardinia.