well-traveled
columns
- Eco-Touring in Honduras
What can we learn from the mysterious collapse of the Mayan civilization?
Elisabeth Eaves
posted June 6, 2008 - Baseball, Dominican-Style
Smoking cigars with a major league MVP.
Bryan Curtis
posted May 9, 2008 - The Mecca of the Mouse
Worshipping at the church of Disney.
Seth Stevenson
posted March 28, 2008 - The Mecca of the Mouse
Dispatches from the front lines of travel.
Seth Stevenson
posted March 27, 2008 - Vacationing in Hugo Chávez's Bolivarian Paradise
Venezuela's hottest fashion accessory? A T-shirt featuring Che, Fidel, and Hugo.
Andres Martinez
posted Feb. 8, 2008 - Search for more well-traveled articles
- Subscribe to the well-traveled RSS feed
- View our complete well-traveled archive
Flying Blind, Take 2
Updated Thursday, Aug. 15, 2002, at 5:09 PM ET

"Does the boat go to Europe, France?"
—Marilyn Monroe in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
When in 1871 James Gordon Bennett, owner of the New York Herald, sent Henry Morton Stanley to Africa to find the missing David Livingstone, who was suffering from that incurable disease wanderlust, a new type of serial travel journalism was born: the journey as journal. Stanley sent dispatches from the field that were received with great enthusiasm by readers, who got a rare glimpse into an unfolding adventure in a land far away and unfamiliar.
"Well-Traveled" brings the seed of Bennett's conceit to the 21st century, dispatching some of the world's finest writers to distill the spirits of places little known and pouring the concoction onto our digital pages. Today, thanks to satellite technologies and the Internet, we can stretch the bar of the imagination, break the tyranny of distance, and publish our correspondents' spontaneous musings, insights, images, and audio within hours. There is an honesty and rawness to this format not found in the well-tuned pages of travel magazines, and our hope is that we will inspire and illuminate travel in a uniquely satisfying way.
So, join us as we lace the boots, box the compass, and set sail for Europe, France, and ports betwixt and beyond, on the routes less-traveled by our well-traveled band.
And be sure to check out our trips to Kashmir, Zambia, and the Outlaw Trail.
—Richard Bangs, Producer

Scandinavia: Design and architecture.
Costa Rica: Exploring Eco-tourism with Natalie Angier.
"Mission to Galápagos": Ruffling feathers in paradise.
"The Blues Highway": Exploring the routes of the blues.
"The Outlaw Trail": tracking the robberies and roosts of Butch and Sundance from Wyoming to Mexico.
"Into the Heart of Africa": the source of the Congo, a journey through Zambia.
"The Road to Kashmir": a trundle through India's Ladakh region on the Tibetan plateau.

For our first "Well-Traveled" journey, we trundle through the Ladakh region of Kashmir on the Tibetan plateau. The 12-day trip takes us from Leh, a city of butter lamps and prayer wheels, to the hill station of Manali, to the plains city of Chandigarh. We negotiate an ancient caravan route billed today as the world's highest motorable road—18,380 feet at the pass—and traverse the sharp blade of territory adjacent to borders disputed by India and Pakistan. Bunkered between the world's great ranges, the Himalaya and the Karakoram, it is a land of monasteries and mosques, of lamas and mountain gods, of palaces and tea houses, and of giant glaciers and vast deserts. Often called "Little Tibet" or "Land of the Pure," this quarter of the high world has always been a hidden paradise for the well-traveled, but today even the cognoscenti are away. Join our team as it surveys this Shangri-La and shares the sights, sensations, observations, and interpretations of a frontier intersection of cultures, religions, and politics on the front lines of adventure travel.

Seth Stevenson, often found shopping for Slate, recently filed a "Diary" from Bangkok.
Jonathan Chester, our field producer, is an expedition photographer and author who has traveled extensively to report on extreme travel. His latest book is The Young Adventurers Guide to Everest, From Avalanche to Zopkio.
Stan Armington, our guide, is one of the pioneers of Himalayan trekking and the author of several definitive guides to the region. He is a director of the American Himalayan Foundation, a member of American Alpine Club, and a fellow of the Explorers Club and Royal Geographical Society.
Longitude: 77.40 E
Latitude: 34.10 N
Altitude: 11,550 feet
Today's audio update

Editor's note: Yesterday a mixture of altitude-addled brains and shaky satellite uplinks caused the team in Kashmir to transmit an incomplete, abandoned draft of the first dispatch (click here for Seth's explanation). Slate duly published that version, but we are now able to remedy the error. Below is the complete dispatch. I am currently trying to write through a mortar blast headache born of altitude sickness. Yet I am grateful. We are lucky to be here at all. Our plane left Delhi yesterday without a hitch. But after a long, ear-popping ascent, we found ourselves stuck in some Himalayan valley, circling through a bowl of impenetrable clouds, unable to land. So we turned and went back to Delhi, collected our checked baggage, shuttled to the airport hotel, and vowed to do it over again the next morning. This is quite common on the flight to Leh—the northern Indian village I'm writing to you from now—which is home to one of the highest airstrips in the world. Pilots fly up through the mountains with great hope, but when they fail to find a hole in the clouds to pop back down through, they just turn around and fight another day. No instrument-only flights here—our guide, Stan, tells us "IFR landing" stands for "I Follow Road." It's an annoyance—facing the fuss of airports and planes only to end where you started. But for my girlfriend, Rebecca, whom I've dragged along, despite her intense highly specific fear of flying into a mountain, it is a nightmare: circling blind as Himalayan peaks loom invisibly in all directions. When we board the plane this morning to try again, Rebecca is armed with a triple dose of sedatives and scotch. And though we make it to Leh this time with no problems, I must admit it's a shrewd bit of self-medication—quite appropriate. For this is the pants-soilingest landing I've ever seen. Our approach calls for weaving through hunks of massive mountain—one narrow, winding passageway after another—as snow-dusted crags tower over our fragile wings. When we touch down and ease to a stop, the burst of applause from the passengers' cabin is loud and clearly heartfelt. We move quickly through the airport, which boasts a heavy military presence. (The deadly battle for Kashmir rages on not far from here. But these men seem mostly charged with stopping us from taking pictures.) Within half an hour, we find ourselves sitting in a garden of yellow chrysanthemums, shaded by a sun umbrella, drinking tea. From our hotel, which tends this lovely spot, we can see a gorgeous palace perched on a hilltop, with Buddhist prayer flags flapping from its towers. At the edge of the hotel grounds, a canal of fast-flowing glacier melt is bubbling and washing downhill with a powerful rush. The tiny village of Leh is a magical place. OK, it could well be light-headedness from the thin air (so thin I swear I can see discrete oxygen molecules). Or perhaps it's an interaction between my anti-malarial drugs and my anti-altitude-sickness drugs. But there's no doubt I'm getting a wonderful feeling here. This region, Ladakh, is more Tibetan than Indian, and Tibetan Buddhism flavors everything we see. A giant prayer wheel is next to the road, waiting to be spun, so we spin it, and with each turn it rings a melodious bell. Everywhere monks walk in pairs, and one young monk buys a Walkman at a street-side stand. The women have beautiful, sun-reddened skin, and long black braids, and shawls in colors so bright they look lit from within. The light is so intense here (at 11,500 feet—more than two miles above sea level) that all colors seem more vivid than in other places. My brain feels like an overexposed roll of film. And the town is all the better for the lack of tourists this summer. All those travel warnings from the India-Pakistan standoff have scared your average traveler away. There are still a few backpackers around—particularly Israelis, many of whom motorcycle fearlessly into the mountains all the way from Delhi (reminding us that when you come from Jerusalem safety is a relative concept). After watching a woman shoo a giant, lazy cow from her vegetable stand, it is time to walk back to our rooms. You can only do so much this first day before the thin air gets to you. Stan tells us we can expect to wake up gasping in the middle of the night, desperate for oxygen. "It feels like you're dying," he says with a friendly laugh. Tomorrow, with luck, I'll have adjusted to the altitude (with help from the pills), and this headache will be gone, and I will tell you all about Stan. He's one of the pioneers of Himalayan trekking, having first toured Nepal in the 1960s, and he now lives in Katmandu, which I think is really cool. And I'll tell you more about Ladakh, known as Little Tibet and only opened to foreigners starting in the mid-1970s. And I'll tell you about whether we're insane to be traveling in India at all, given the always-present threat of Pakistani nukes. But for now I must sleep and pray for the throb in my skull to slowly subside. I look forward to waking up gasping, fearing death. Check back tomorrow for the next dispatch from Kashmir.
Flying Blind, Take 2
Updated Thursday, Aug. 15, 2002, at 5:09 PM ETfeedback | about us | help | advertise | newsletters | mobile
User Agreement and Privacy Policy | All rights reserved
- Today's Real Deals
- » More from BudgetTravel
- Today's Headlines
- Man Returns To Place Of Birth To Mate
Sat, 19 Jul 2008 11:00:00 -0400 - [audio] Earth Explodes
Sat, 19 Jul 2008 01:00:31 -0400 - 'Time' Publishes Definitive Obama Puff Piece
Fri, 18 Jul 2008 11:00:00 -0400 - » More from the Onion
Sliming Michelle ObamaSophia A. Nelson | Black. Female. Accomplished. Attacked.
: Michelle, Meritocracy and Me
- Today's Headlines
- ICC: What Next in Case Against Sudan's Bashir
Fri, 18 Jul 2008 23:26:29 GMT - Repairing the Tomato's Rotten Image
Fri, 18 Jul 2008 21:41:11 GMT - Controversy Over a Calendar of Mormon Men
Fri, 18 Jul 2008 21:08:52 GMT - » More from Newsweek
- Today's Headlines
- Celebrating a Centennial
Thu, 17 July 2008 21:57:33 GMT - Unpacking It In
Thu, 17 July 2008 21:18:16 GMT - The Obama Man Crush
Thu, 17 July 2008 16:26:20 GMT - » More from The Root

well-traveled









