I checked the Baby Boomer Trips website to see what
is happening there these days. Last month, I mentioned the feature, Ask Nan.
This time I browsed the Interviews section. Christopher Elliot is one of the
interviewees. As a person who writes for National Geographic Traveler, the U.S.
News & World Report and who is a columnist for the New York Times, I'd say
Elliot knows a thing or two.
One of the interview questions asked him for his
top 5 travel destinations. Except for Anchorage, Alaska, Elliot seems to like warm climates.
Sanibel
Island is listed as #1,
then the Florida
Keys, then
Sonoma, California, and then Bermuda. Anchorage is last.
Here's the briefest of brief rundowns of each of
these places. I don't know what Elliot likes about each, but this is what
appealed to me. Each place's website is filled with details meant to capture a
wide range of interests. Sanibel Island is a shell collectors' dream spot and there is the
National Wildlife Refuge & Bird Sanctuary. The Florida Keys is as far south as you can get and still be in the
U.S. Plus, it just happens to be the dive and sports fishing capital of the
world. (At least that's what the website says.) One of my friends is in love
with the Key West Literary Seminar held there every
January.
Sonoma trades the tropical paradise for wine country.
Instead of driving yourself from winery to winery, you can take a wine country
tour. Good idea since wine tours can make a person tipsy in no time.
Bermuda is a place I'd go to see the architecture. There
are 785 historic houses that are listed on the National Register.
Anchorage is a place to go if seeing a wildlife abundance is
your fancy. Within a short distance of the city you can see bears, whales, moose
and more--a lot more.
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