| Hey Eric and Nancy! As a fellow Traveling Boy journalist, 
          and as a confirmed WW2 aficionado, just wanted you to know how much 
          I loved your story on Arnhem. Really great stuff, and truly brilliant 
          riveting writing. Ive been there twice and covered it on my KNX 
          radio show when I was on LA radio, and your story and evocative photos 
          brought back a ton of wonderful and poignant memories. This could have 
          been an amazingly brilliant military operation  as you both know 
           that might well have ended the War in Europe maybe a year earlier. 
          However, allied misreading -- and in my view disregarding certain aspects 
          of the situation in Holland -- plus the fact that they dropped the paras 
          over 3 days and not in one huge assault at night (and not in the day 
          as they did) doomed the mission to failure. Your clever words and great photos brought all this 
          graphically to life, and it should be required reading for anyone interested 
          in any aspect of WW2, and certainly should be read by todays teenagers. 
          Again Bravo and well done!!!! John ClaytonTravel with A Difference
 
 We just couldn't leave your website before saying that 
          we genuinely enjoyed the high quality information you offer for your 
          visitors... Would be back frequently to check up on new stuff you post! Raanana * * * * * What a fantastic write-up! I could almost copy and paste most of your narrative 
          verbatim as it reflects our fantastic experience with Fantasy Cruises 
          almost to a tee. It was truly one of the greatest vacations my girlfriend 
          and I have ever experienced. Cheers!Mike Richard, Editor, Vagabondish.com
 * * * * * One of my dreams is to go to Alaska by way of cruise. 
          This article very much intensifies the longing for that dream to come 
          to fruition. I simply cannot wait much longer. And I will never again 
          be able to think of a waterfall without picturing myself "nosing 
          up" to it. Thank you for this intriguing, virtual journey. Sandra Mines, Seattle, WA Thank you for writing, Sandra. Alaska really is 
          a wondrous place. Re "Nosing up" to a waterfall: we have a different 
          article up at Physician's Money Digest on the same cruise (Small Ship 
          Cruising: Alaska by the Back Door). The third last set of images there 
          shows a crew member filling a jug of ice water from a waterfall while 
          standing in the bow of the ship! Best wishes. Get there! To Alaska one 
          day. Eric & Nancy 
 Loved your photos from Alaska! Because I am the Director 
          of Sales & Marketing for Westmark Hotels, I am up in AK and the 
          Yukon quite often to visit our hotels and staff! But your pictures were 
          so enjoyable-love to see the "real" Alaskans! Heidi Howeiler, Seattle, WA Hi Ms. Howeiler, That was kind of you to write and 
          yes, you do see real people in Alaska, don't you? Alaskans always remind 
          us off rural Texans or Australians in the isolated Red Centre of their 
          country: hard working, sensible, rolled-up-sleeves people with no affectations. 
          We love your Westmark hotels and we take our hats off to the person 
          who started your company, Chuck West. What a great guy! Eric & Nancy 
 Enjoyed your realistic and practical comments on Provence. 
          Always wanted to go there ever since reading Peter Mayle's 2 books on 
          Provence. But the two times I went to France, time was always short, 
          so we spent our days in Paris. And now you say, it is losing its unique 
          charm to tourism. (Sigh). It's always a choice between sharing beauty, 
          and keeping it hidden. The world lurches on. Thanks for your thoughts. Dette, Iligan City, Philippines Hi Dette, (Would love to see all your waterfalls), 
          Thank you for writing. Provence is busy in the tourist season but it 
          hasn't lost all its charm or the quirkiness Mayle talks about in his 
          book Provence A to Z. It's still a place to visit. Appreciate hearing 
          from you. Best wishes. Eric & Nancy 
 What a great article, especially regarding Louis XIV. 
          I was not aware there was a contemporary account of his execution. It 
          was fascinating. Thank you! Celtic fan, Nashua, MA Dear Celtic fan, Thanks for writing. I didn't know 
          about the account of his execution either till I stumbled upon it. Sad 
          to think that the French revolutionaries thought they could be both 
          judge and jury. We are lucky to have a more elegant system today. Thanks 
          for writing. Eric & Nancy 
 Nancy and Eric, Enjoyed reading your article on Santa Fe, 
          NM. I was in AZ travel nursing in 2008 and 2009 and made it to Santa 
          Fe. Took a lot of pics and really loved walking around the old town 
          while I was there. Hope to be able to take the wife there in the future. Brett Eidson, Soso, MS 
 Hi dude! Nice to see your site. It's beautiful. My congratulations. New York Hi New York, Thank you for writing. Best wishes. Eric & Nancy 
 Hi www.travelingboy.com! Your web-site is very interesting 
          and I want to tell www.travelingboy.com G'night. New York Dear New York, Thank you for writing. Glad you find the site interesting. 
          We are here for you. Keep visiting. Eric & Nancy * * * * * This is all genuine. I will return to scan. Keflavik Hi Keflavik, Thank you for writing. We are happy 
          you will return. Eric & Nancy 
 Good article. On Behalf Of Diane, Port Ludlow, WA Thanks for writing from Port Ludlow. We hear that's 
          a beautiful place. Best wishes. Eric & Nancy * * * * * When I was hurt in a boat accident my life would be 
          changed totally. I really don't post much but thanks for the good times 
          I have here. Love this place. Long time lurker, thought I would say 
          hello! Miami Dear Miami, Thanks for writing. It's nice to hear 
          from you. Hope you are getting better. Glad you get some good times 
          at Traveling boy. Good luck. Eric & Nancy * * * * * Dear friends, My name is Adelina. I am a 22 years girl from Italy. 
          I was looking for a free translation software and I found one. Program's 
          name is Babel Fish and it supports 75 languages. I installed it but 
          I could not understand how to use it. I am not a computer expert. Can 
          someone help me please on how to run this.The link is here :http://access.im/3/babelfish. 
          I thank you very much for your help. Adelina, Celaya Adelina, I didn't want to download it but I saw 
          examples online. It seemed easy. You select the page you want translated, 
          copy it and paste it into the box. You then click on the button to translate. 
          You may have to do one page at a time. You can also use Google to translate 
          a page; that's what I do because I don't want to load too much software. Eric & Nancy * * * * * Amiable brief and this mail helped me a lot in my college 
          assignment. Thanks you seeking your information. WordPress Themes, Gray Mountain We are glad to have been of help. Best wishes. Eric & Nancy * * * * * What's up everyone? Great forum. Lots of lovely people. 
          Just what I need. Hopefully this is just what i'm looking for. Looks 
          like I have a lot to read. Spanish John, Benidrom Encouraging to get your feedback. Glad to hear from 
          you. Thank you for writing. Eric & Nancy 
 Nice dispatch (http://www.travelingboy.com/travel-eric.html) 
          - and this enter helped me a lot in my college assignement. Thank you 
          as your information. Gray Mountain Hi Gray Mountain, Thank you for your comment. Your email reminds us 
          all at TravelingBoy how important it is to be accurate in what we write. 
          Good luck with your studies and have a great life. Eric & Nancy * * * * * Hello people, I just signed up on this splendid community 
          forum and wanted to say hey there! Have a wonderful day! Jacksonville Hi Jacksonville, We are pleased to hear from new 
          readers at TravelingBoy. Your feedback encourages us all to do better. 
          Thank you for writing. Eric & Nancy * * * * * What a fascinating bit of Russian history you wrote 
          about! How sad to learn that 100,000 churches were reduced to create 
          skating rinks and such during the revolution, after seeing the photo 
          of the interior of a magnificent church filled with art! War is so devastating 
          on so many levels! The art of their culture is so beautiful as is shown 
          in the image of the painted box! Thank you, Yoka, Westlake Village, CA Dear Yoka, Thank you for writing. Nancy is originally Lutheran 
          and Eric is a dour Scot, more used to the frequently cold and often 
          cheerless churches of his native land so we were both overwhelmed to 
          see the beauty of Russian churches. It was kind of you to write, Yoka. Thank you,Eric & Nancy
 
 Interesting observations.... Very informative and thought 
          provoking. Questions.... What would be the best way to get from Moscow 
          Airport DME to boat dock? taxi? prearranged limo? prepaid Viking Tours 
          transfer? Any idea on cost and travel time for taxi or limo or Viking 
          Cruise pickup from airport to boat? We shall be flying to Moscow on 
          our own. Do you happen to have an address for the river boat dock that 
          Viking Cruises uses in Moscow? I would be nice to Google map the situation. 
          Thanks, Robert Hopwood, Ottawa, Canada Hi Bob, Excuse the delay; we were on a trip. I do understand 
          your question and will try and get you an answer. The Viking river dock 
          in Moscow was for us in the north part of the city but once we were 
          on the boat it was an easy ten minute walk to the Metro station that 
          had us downtown within 30 minutes. I'm a lot more relaxed at the end 
          of a trip than at the beginning and therefore I always feel taking the 
          cruise-line sponsored trip from the airport to the dock makes sense: 
          What starts right usually ends right. Eric & Nancy Anderson  Hi Bob, Im back with more information. The river ports 
          address is Northern River Boat Station Leningradsky Prospekt, Khimki. 
          If you Google that you will see it is about 15 minutes walk from 
          two Metro stations. http://www.aptouring.com.au/files/documents/17/29022_Moscow2.pdf 
          . I spoke to Nancy at customer relations at Viking 
          Cruises at the new LNR Warner Center in 5700 Canoga Avenue, Woodland 
          Hills, Calif. She was very helpful and advises you to take the 
          Viking transportation service. She is biased, of course, but shes 
          right. Moscow DME airport is 40 miles away on the opposite side of the 
          city, at least two hours driving time. The airport has no Metro station; 
          youd have to take the Aeroexpress train to Paveletsky station 
          then change to the Metro and go to Rechnoy Vokzal station then take 
          a cab to the port. A cab all the way from DME would cost at least 2000 
          rubles (more than $70). Thats less than the $60 each that Viking 
          would charge
but
I think youd be ill-advised to do it 
          on your own. Why start the trip where the potential to screw up is so 
          likely? Moscow taxi drivers are as dishonest as most tourist city cab 
          drivers and probably yours wont speak English. I think the address 
          in Russian is
 
 BUT... I strongly discourage you from economizing on this 
          and doing it on your own. Buy the transfer and save money somewhere 
          else. We have other Viking Volga web articles up at http://travelingboy.com/archive-travel-eric-russia.html 
          and at http://www.ericandersonsworld.com/story.php?id=6LvDg. Good luck. Great show Canadas putting on for the 
          Olympics! Eric & Nancy Anderson  
 Your blog keeps getting better and better! Your older 
          articles are not as good as newer ones you have a lot more creativity 
          and originality now keep it up! Reseller Hosting, London Hi, Is it Britni Freeman? Thank you, we think... We suspect your comments 
          are valid. In fact we think all of us writing for TravelingBoy are starting 
          to get into the swing of things and do a better job -- and your encouragement 
          spurs us to do even better. Thank you for writing. Have a good 2010, Eric & Nancy Anderson  
 Dear Nancy and Eric Thank you so much for the wonderful article on statues 
          in Europe. Statues are my favorite art form and your descriptions were 
          delightful to read - knowledge and fun together. I do still wonder about 
          that foot in Rome... Peggy - Pasadena, CA Hi Peggy, Thank you for writing. We appreciate your comments. 
          We used to be critical of people who can't identify the persons on statues 
          in foreign cities -- until one day a tourist stopped us in our own San 
          Diego and asked us, in vain, for details on a statue we'd never noticed 
          before! We wonder about that Roman foot too. If Eric had stood any closer 
          he'd be in his typical foot-in-mouth position. Eric & Nancy Anderson  
 I live in Santa Fe and see and delight in it every day, 
	  but your writing makes it sparkle even more. How nice to see Santa Fe through 
	  your eyes. Great photos! Cynthia Whitney-Ward - Santa Fe, NM 
 Dear Dr. Anderson: I have followed your writing career for as long as I can 
		remember, and I think the thing I enjoy the most about your travel writing 
		is the sense of joy and discovery that leads the reader to anticipate ever 
		corner you turn in your travels.What a delightful traveling companion you are, 
		and I know have always been, with that wonderfully eternally youthful joie 
		de vivre...I wonder:do you feel that East, West, home is best? And where IS 
		that place you have never been, but want to go most of all,yet? Bring we, 
		your devoted readers ever along!
 CAT --  
          San Diego (Scrips Ranch), CA
 
 Dear CAT,
 Thank for taking the time to write to 
		TravelingBoy.com. You are very kind. We don't know that travel writers make the best 
		companions; we suspect they may be obsessed with getting the best photograph or may 
		monopolize the guide with questions so that others don't get to ask what interests 
		them. What place is best? Well, it may be fun to sit in a rickshaw in Beijing or try 
		to master the Metro in Moscow, but -- as you imply -- it is good to get home
        after trips. Home is as comfortable as a pair of old 
		shoes and home for many of us fortunately contains family. We've never been to Easter Island and 
		may have missed the boat (no pun intended) there. The island is losing its innocence; 
		we've seen that happen at Machu Picchu or, closer to home, at Lake Powell in Arizona. 
		So maybe the best travel advice is: Go when you are fit and healthy, before rising 
		prices make a destination inaccessible -- and before hordes of tourists ruin any 
		destination's mystique. With best Holiday Wishes from Traveling 
		Boy, Eric & Nancy Anderson  * * * * * What a fantastic primer on New York City. I think you have really 
		captured   its essence with this exciting overview of its offerings. Well done! 
 Gillian Abramson  - 
        New York
 * * * * * You describe a city on wheels - er, wings - and an absolutely 
          perfect way to travel. SHOWERS & FLOWERS! Amazing! I love that your passion 
          for all-things-aviation comes through in this story about an almost 
          unbelievable airplane. Thanks for breaking the news in such an engaging way! 
 Richard Frisbie - Saugerties, New York
 * * * * * Enjoyed your blog on Romania. Noticed you called Bucharest 
          "The Paris of the East." I wonder, is there any city not called 
          "The Paris of something." I've read San Francisco is 'the Paris 
          of the West,' Buenos Aires 'The Paris of South America,' and even Tromso, 
          Norway 'The Paris of the Arctic.' 
         Terry Cowan - Fresno * * * * * Hi Terry, Thanks for writing to TravelingBoy. And thanks 
          for educating me; I didn't 
          know that about Tromso, didn't even know there was a Tromso. I heard 
          Bangkok 
          called the Venice of the East when I was there and, in two weeks, I'm 
          heading for the Venice of the North, St. Petersburg, Russia.  It does become a bit silly, doesn't it? But 
          we are originally an immigrant 
          nation that was Eurocentric. Maybe it gave our forefathers confidence 
          even 
          courage when they took old names, old ideas to the New World with them. 
          I 
          know I feel nostalgic if I drive around Ontario, Canada and see all 
          the 
          British place names. I appreciate your email. Thank you for writing. Eric Eric -
 Enjoyed your article on Madrid. I noticed that you find it superior 
          to Rome. Most of the Spanish folks that I meet seem to prefer Barcelona. 
          How would you rate that city? Samuel KSeattle
 * * * * * Hi Samuel,  We loved Barcelona although driving around 
          the city was surprisingly complicated as our maps were inadequate. The 
          cathedral had scaffolding around it so I couldn't get the pictures I 
          wanted but we found the architecture fascinating and the Picasso museum 
          rewarding. We were anxious to get on the road to Costa Brava and didn't 
          have more than a couple of days in Barcelona. Thanks for writing.Eric
 
 Great article on Madrid. I've heard there is a rivalry between the people 
          of Madrid and Barcelona. In which city are the people friendlier? How 
          about for hipness? I noticed you were Scottish. I felt a similar thing 
          in Scotland, with a Glasgow v. Edinburgh vibe.
 GarySanta Monica
 * * * * * Thank you for writing to TravelingBoy, Gary. 
          We found Barcelona friendlier.
 Maybe that's because it's not the capital 
          and it's not so busy either. Maybe it's because the Gaudi architectural 
          influence is pervasive and -- to both its citizens and tourists -- comforting. 
          Maybe it's because Barcelona is the gateway to the work of artist Salvatore 
          Dali, and his spirit catches us. (I don't know much about art but I've 
          seen a lot of Dali's work enough to think he never took himself too 
          seriously and often painted tongue in cheek. Maybe fun people spring 
          for fun places?) Hipness? Madrid is more formal and dressy but Barcelona, 
          I believe, is more hip maybe, again, because it's more fun. Your points about Scotland are valid. It's 
          more than a joke. The Glaswegians are more down to earth. I think we 
          see it here in the belief that if you had a flat tire in Middle America 
          passers-by would be more inclined to stop and help than perhaps New 
          Englanders. - Eric 
 Dear Eric,
 I liked the article. As I read it, I was wondering how you as a physician 
          were influenced by Hippocrates. What influence did this historical figure 
          have on the practice of medicine beyond the obvious 'oath.' Why is Hippocrates 
          considered to be such a paragon of medicine? DWA - San Pedro, CA
 * * * * * Dear David,
 Thank you for writing to Travelingboy.com. Hippocrates is revered because 
          he believed his duty was to the individual patient, not to the community 
          at large. This is a very important premise. The Romans, whose empire 
          followed that of the Greeks, achieved much in health matters by emphasizing 
          clean drinking water and personal hygiene, and created great national 
          works like aquaducts and public baths but wealthy Romans apparently 
          preferred Greek doctors as their personal physicians. Hippocrates is also respected 
          because he brought intellectual thought to diagnosis. He taught his 
          students to use their five senses in assessing patients and was openly 
          critical of the junk science of his day as practiced by the priest-physicians 
          who preyed on the fear and ignorance of the ill persons who came to 
          them. It is true that not all medical 
          chools today require graduating doctors to take the Hippocratic Oath 
          but most conscientious physicians base their lifetime commitment to 
          the practice of medicine on the life and teachings of that one man. Or so I think. Perhaps if we 
          knew more about our heroes they would seem less heroic. But in Hippocrates' 
          case he did leave a record of his thoughts and some of his principles 
          are today as strong as ever. Thank you for writing, it is 
          appreciated. Eric |