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- Tips to Enjoy Traveling Abroad
- By Dave Barry
- Delaware County Daily Times
-
- . Everyone should travel abroad. Traveling abroad is an excellent
- way to meet other Americans traveling abroad and learn interesting
- facts about foreign persons, such as how much they expect you to tip.
-
- . Many people feel they cannot afford to travel abroad, and as a
- result spend their vacations here in the boring old United States,
- usually at theme parks. Theme parks are places with names ending in
- "land," "world," "park," and so on, as in "Olde European Adventure and
- Animal Land World Park." Theme parks are supposed to resemble exotic,
- foreign countries, except that in these particular foreign countries
- everybody speaks English and the only visible industries are food
- concessions and mechanical devices that turn you upside down. The
- idea is that you're supposed to take the kids and spend the day eating
- and being turned upside down, then drive home with strong feelings of
- togetherness and stomach discomfort.
-
- . Well, for just a few thousand more dollars, you could travel
- abroad to a real foreign country with real foreign people and real
- foreign diseases. But you have to prepare. The best way to prepare
- is to not read travel articles in newspapers and magazines. The
- problem is that travel writers usually get everything free, so they
- almost never say anything bad about the countries they visit, even the
- real rat holes. They write stuff like this:
-
- . "If you're looking for an inexpensive vacation that takes you off
- the beaten track, consider visiting tiny Rhumba Tuan Wok, an almost
- unknown island paradise off the coast of Southeast Asia. Your
- romantic adventure begins the moment you arrive, when you discover
- your taxi to the hotel is not a car, but an elephant! In fact cars
- are banned from Rhumba Tuan Wok altogether, as the natives firmly
- believe in preserving the traditions of their ancestors. The
- unhurried pace of their centuries-old lifestyle is only one of the
- charms of this enchanting land."
-
- . This is all Travel Writers Code. If the travel writer had to pay
- for the trip personally, the way the rest of us do, the article would
- say:
-
- . "Are you fond of filth? Do you genuinely like the idea of
- stumbling into six-foot-high, insect-ridden piles of elephant dung
- whenever you venture outside? And how do you feel about people who
- serve you raw reptile heads for dinner and on religious principle,
- never wash the left sides of their bodies? I mean never. Well if
- these things appeal to you, then you'll love Rhumba Tuan Wok, but for
- God's sake take weapons and snake repellent."
-
- . But you'll never see this kind of honest travel article, so
- you'll have to do your own research. I advise you to consult a map of
- the world. First, locate England. England is a good place to visit,
- because you can usually find lots of Americans there and even the
- English people speak some English. These two factors pretty much
- compensate for the food. If you want to visit some other country,
- remember this rule: the farther east you go from England, the more
- dangerous and generally foreign the countries get. France is okay
- because the French are never there, and wouldn't talk to you even if
- they were. But not far past France, you run into Russia, which
- judging from the accounts in the New York Times, is the most boring
- country on Earth; and after that you have China and Japan, where most
- people cannot even write properly, let alone speak English; and after
- that you have California. So your best bet is to stay close to
- England.
-
- . Also, you should avoid tourist attractions, which tend to attract
- tourists. My wife and I once went to a tourist attraction: the Blue
- Grotto, which is a famous grotto on the Isle of Capri, in Italy. When
- we went there, we didn't even know what a grotto was, but all the
- guide books said we should go because the sunlight filtering through
- the water gave the Blue Grotto an air of unearthly beauty. What the
- books did not say was that the Blue Grotto is a dank dark cave, and
- the only way you can get there is in tiny boats controlled by squat,
- sullen men who have memorized incomprehensible guide speeches; and
- that whatever unearthly beauty the Blue Grotto possesses is very
- difficult to see when you are sitting in the dank, bluish gloom,
- terrified that you will capsize and drown and the last sounds you will
- hear will be dozens of squat, surly men simultaneously giving
- incomprehensible guide speeches.
-
- . Wherever you travel, you will have to trade some real money for
- some foreign money, because most foreign countries do not deal in real
- money. In England they use money the size of bedsheets, which is why
- so many English people wear bulky clothing. The most amusing foreign
- money is in Italy; it is called the lira, and it is the smallest unit
- of measurement ever conceived of by the mind of man. Under the
- official rules of international currency exchange, the number of lire
- in a dollar equals the number of protons, neutrons and electrons in
- the Washington Monument. A newspaper in Italy costs 14 billion lire.
- A car costs 156 trillion skillion lire. You cannot buy anything more
- expensive than a car in Italy, because nobody can figure out how much
- it costs. This is why their economy is in trouble.
-