Hello all. I have just got back from an 11-day tour with my boyfriend in the fantastic land of Georgia (the country, not the US state).A few details and some lovely pictures from this trip can be found in this post on his blog.
One of the things that really struck me as a reader is that although I brought books with me, the nest read for me throughout the trip were guidebooks. We had three guides: Lonely Planet Georgia, Armenia & Azerbaijan Travel Guide – highly recommended ; Bradt Georgia Travel Guide – which we found quite unhelpful; and Peter Nasmyth’s Walking in the Caucasus – a very good book to guide you through the many very worthwhile walks this country offers.
In the many hours we spent on buses, taxis and cars I found myself going back to these guides again and again. This has happened to me on other trips abroad as well. Maybe it’s the wish not to disrupt the spirit of traveling that engulfs you during such trips, the wish to be completely there and not wander anywhere else.
One of the interesting people we met on the trip was Cathy, a British woman living in the US for many years, who has decided to take early retirement and go on all the trips she wished she had and never got around to. In this post she also talks of the fascination of travel guides from a different angle.
If you don’t get to travel (which is very recommended), you can at least grab one of these books and walk into some place completely different and fascinating.
I’ll leave you with one picture from the beautiful land of Georgia:

Tags: Bradt, Georgia, Lonely Planet, Peter Nasmyth, Travel Guides, Walking in the Caucasus
2 Comments
It sure was an enjoyable trip. I also prefer diving more deeply into the country I’m traveling to, rather than sending my mind to a third place…
[...] The Mysterious Charm of Travel Guides [...]
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