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Here at Amazing Journeys, we’re lucky have the best jobs in the world—and we think our good fortune is worth sharing. So, when your next journey seems like a distant dream, take a few minutes to explore our WANDERLUST blog—it’s chock full of engaging tales and helpful tips from our travels around the world. Check out the most recent entry (at the top) or search by your preferred criteria. Consider it motivation for your next embarkation.

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Do you work to live…or live to work? Part 4

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

We continue the series on reasons why taking a vacation is not only good for your health, it’s good for your productivity, creativity and overall well being. One should not under-estimate the importance of recharging one’s physical and mental health:

 
Reason #4: Vacations Make You Smarter A study found a positive relationship between taking vacations and increased intellectual functioning. The mere act of immersing yourself in a new environment is a learning experience. You can take that benefit to the next level by signing up for a class while you’re away. Many resorts offer activities as a fun way to expand your mind and soul without taxing your brain. Culinary classes, motivational speaking engagements, health & wellness seminars…even surfing lessons, photo workshops and amateur talent shows where you can strut your stuff can be part of a vacation that enhances your–and others’-mind, body and soul.
 
Reason #5: Vacations Make You a Better Family Member and Friend A survey of steel workers who took an extended vacation found that time off had a huge impact on family and work life, with workers reporting more shared experiences as well as an increase in feelings of efficiency and interest at their jobs. The more time you can spend with your family and friends, the better…as long as it doesn’t break the break. Camping, especially at national or state parks, is a great way to spend extended time with your loved ones without maxing out your credit card. For example, you can pitch a tent at Michigan’s beach-front Grand Haven State Park for a mere $16 per night…and when you’re done enjoying nature, you can walk into the charming ‘burg in less than 15 minutes to explore the stores and restaurants.
 
To be continued….(one more blog with reasons why taking vacations should be a priority in life)

Do you work to live…or live to work? Part 3

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Our annual Amazing Journey to Alaska is always filled with excitement, adventure, unpredictability and lasting memories. This year’s 10th journey to “Mother Nature’s Showcase” however, having just ended a couple days ago, took the word “amazing” to a whole new level. I could spend a few minutes typing a generalized testamonial compiled by the many positive comments that are beginning to filter into our office, but I’ll just let the following text as received via email from one of our passengers do the talking.

Just another example as to why taking a vacation (and especially one with Amazing Journeys) is not only fun, but good for your health, productivity and creativity:
Dear Malori and Bill
…..I have just been home about a day, and cannot stop thinking about this fantastic trip. I want to thank you for the most amazing trips I have ever experienced. Talking about this Alaska trip…well, besides the fact that this state is unbelievable and beautiful, I know the whole trip could not have been this fantastic if it wasn’t for you guys. You guys went out of your way to make sure everything was perfect and beyond perfect. I thank you for that. You encourage me to stay single forever so I can always be on your trips..LOL!!

I appreciate all you did to make this trip something to talk about and to remember for a life time.

To be continued….(see the next blog for more reasons why taking vacations should be a priority in life)

Do you work to live…or live to work? Part 2

Sunday, July 5th, 2009

Eagles and Whales and Bears..Oh my!

Its an exciting time at Amazing Journeys – we are heading out this week on our 10th Annual Alaska Cruise & Tour. We are excited and proud to host 74 passengers on this year’s journey; folks traveling from 16 states and three different countries will all join in Vancouver for a truly amazing journey. We wouldn’t, after all, still be taking groups to Alaska after 10 years if it wasn’t one of the greatest shows on earth.

Whale watching, hiking, wilderness adventures, glacier tours, sea kayaking and white water rafting are just a few of the adventures that await our group. We’ll even sail on our cruise ship to the face of a massive glacier, in a body of water that was created by this glacier over hundreds of years. Our group of 74 are about to embark on a vacation that will be etched in their minds forever as they experience a world that most people only dream of.

Over the past decade, Amazing Journeys has taken nearly 1000 passengers to Alaska (some of them even twice!) and we are proud to be a leader with the Jewish single population in showing off what’s known as Mother Nature’s Showcase.

We’re also proud to announce our most recent “success story” as a result of a recent Alaska cruise; Martin Katz and Nicki Berlyn, who both met on our Alaska cruise in 2007 will be married later this summer.

So, for those of you who are working to live…..there are so many reasons to plan an Amazing Journey. Missed Alaska and want to join us next year? No worries; stay tuned to our website for details on our 11th annual Alaska Cruise & Tour in August, 2010.

To be continued….(see the next blog for more reasons why taking vacations should be a priority in life)

Do you work to live…or live to work? Part 1

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

The sun on your face, the sand between your toes…it doesn’t take a genius to figure out that being on vacation makes you feel better. But in case you need some proof —for the boss or for yourself—that a vacation is not only good for your health, it’s good for your productivity and creativity, the next few blogs will be dedicated to showing you a compiled list of reasons (as if you really need an excuse) to better your life with vacations.

 
According to a recent study by Expedia.com, over 50 million Americans do not take all the vacation they earn. What a travesty! Studies show that a vacation can lower blood pressure, increase intellect and even reduce the risk of a heart attack. A delightful quote from the book, Go Away, Just for the Health of It says, “Taking a vacation is one of the best ways to break the pattern of daily stress.”
 
But don’t take my word for it. Read up in this and the next several blogs about many pertinent reasons why getting away is just what the doctor ordered.
 
Reason #1: Sweet sleep
Travelers report they get three times more deep sleep after their vacation and sleep almost 20 additional minutes after their vacation, according to a National Travel Leisure Monitor survey. Remove yourself from the stresses of home and work, and you’re almost guaranteed to get a better night’s sleep. Maximize on that advantage by booking a room in a hotel that prides itself on high-quality mattresses.
 
Reason #2: Heart healthy
A variety of medical studies show that vacationing is good for your heart. Believe it or not, simply taking a vacation every year can cut your risk of heart attack by a whopping 50 percent! Evidence suggests that where you go is less important than simply taking the time to go. Start planning your vacation by sitting down and choosing a date for a trip. Keep your stress level low by working with a qualified travel professional.
 
Reason # 3: Instant benefits
While on vacation, travelers rate their overall health one full point higher on a scale of 1 to 5, according to a survey by a marketing firm that focuses on entertainment and leisure travel. Increase that feeling of good health by being a healthy traveler. See the sights of a city by walking instead of cab-ing to destinations, take the stairs at your hotel/cruise ship rather than the elevator, be mindful of what you eat….and take advantage of more active ways to tour–such as a bike tour in Alaska, swimming with the dolphins in Cozumel, or snorkeling at The Great Barrier Reef.
 
 
To be continued….(see the next blog for more reasons why taking vacations should be a priority in life)

The Frozen Chosen – Part 2

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

We continue a look at some of the unique people who make up the Jewish population in Alaska:

Chaim Cohen is a tall, burly man wearing a neon-orange safety vest and a cap with a construction company logo. He walked into Beth Sholom one day last July and asked to buy a tzedaka box. Cohen, 40, who claims to be the only Jewish pile driver in Alaska, had just bought a house near the synagogue and needed the box so his children could keep the congregation’s tradition of weekly donations at home. Cohen had come to Alaska from Los Angeles the year before in search of a job. An Orthodox Jew, he refuses to work on the Sabbath, but his unusual background more than makes up for what employers might have considered a limitation: He had lived in Israel and had served in the Israel Defense Forces for nine years, running fuel and supplies throughout South Lebanon

Bob Loeffler, 53, a consultant in land-use planning and natural resources, was in the synagogue the day Cohen came in, having arrived by bicycle from his home eight miles away. Loeffler grew up in California and came to Alaska as a college graduate looking for adventure, especially outdoor sports. Thirty years later, his enthusiasm has not waned.In his job with the Department of Natural Resources, which manages Alaska’s 100-million acres of state land, he created the first land-use plan for Prince William Sound, home to spectacular glaciers and a stunning array of wildlife.

Joel Zipkin and his wife, Barbara, knew nothing of Alaska before arriving from San Francisco in 1974. Fresh out of law school and frustrated by the dearth of jobs in his hometown, Zipkin accepted an offer from an Anchorage law firm, thinking he would try Alaska for a year. Today, he is a senior partner at the same firm. Among the things that kept him in Anchorage were the close friendships he made through Beth Sholom. “We are so distant and in some ways still so isolated and forgotten that living here binds us”, said Zipkin, who has twice served as congregation president. “Friends became as close as immediate family”, he added.

The Lubavitch Jewish Center which houses Shomrei Ohr and its educational facilities, a Chabad House and Judaica shop—also offers a sense of family to an eclectic group; some 40 of whom dine with the rabbi and his family on Friday nights. One regular is Jerry Green, 74, son of legendary Anchorage furrier David Green. Jerry Green and his brother, Perry, are among the few Jews in the community who grew up in Alaska. Together they run the family business; their factory and fur shops line 4th Avenue downtown and attract both tourists and locals. A fourth generation of Greens is already growing up in the city. But Jerry Green never wanted to be a furrier, and in 1965 he left. Green wanted to become a doctor, but did not have the grades. He returned and channeled his passion for learning into collecting books, which line the walls of his study at the factory, and into his devotion to Greenberg;

Alaska has been good for the Jews; with a presence since at least since 1867, when they were active in the fur trade. Jewish merchants in San Francisco who imported furs from Alaska influenced the United States purchase of the territory that year. More Jews came later in the century with waves of prospectors responding to the lure of gold, and especially during the great Klondike Gold Rush of 1898. In 1908, Congregation Bikkur Cholim was formed in Fairbanks, but the Jews and their congregations tended to come and go. The town of Anchorage started out in 1915 as the site of the headquarters of the Alaska Railroad. Leopold David, a Jew, was its first elected mayor when it was incorporated in 1920.

One of the congregation’s three Torahs is a treasure from Alaska’s gold rush, brought from Lithuania to Nome in 1900.

The Frozen Chosen – Part 1

Friday, June 19th, 2009

The marvels of nature – snow-capped mountains, massive glaciers and evergreen forests– surround Anchorage, Alaska’s largest city and home to the state’s largest Jewish congregation. Last September, the 200 families of Beth Sholom—who call themselves The Frozen Chosen–celebrated their 50th anniversary as a congregation.

 
At the same time, Alaska was preparing to celebrate its 50th anniversary as a state, and Governor Sarah Palin was in the running to become the country’s first woman vice president. It was a time filled with anticipation: Alaskans looking forward to the prosperity that will come with the building of a planned natural-gas pipeline, and synagogue leaders looking forward to a growth in both membership and finances.
 
Today, Alaska has between 3,000 and 6,000 Jews, about half of whom live in Anchorage. (The lower figure reflects a 1995 study; the higher one is the estimate of the local Chabad.)The Reform Beth Sholom (907-338-1836; http://www.frozenchosen.org/) is about to renovate and enlarge its premises so it can increase the number of classrooms and accommodate the hundreds of worshipers who attend High Holiday services. Congregation Shomrei Ohr – Chabad in Anchorage (907-279-1200; http://www.chabad.org/ )– is also expanding as they plan to move from midtown to a nearby $5-million campus that will include a synagogue, community center, religious school and museum…even a new mikve.
 
Like most Alaskans, nearly all the Jews in Anchorage hail from the Lower 48. A diverse group, they are bound together as a community not only by dreams of adventure and freedom but also by the vastness of the state and their distance from family and old friends. Distance from the Lower 48 also means that religious lines are not as clearly drawn as they might be elsewhere. This is, after all, Alaska, where sheer size (more than twice that of Texas), 100,000 glaciers, innumerable lakes and whales, bears, moose, sea otters, bald eagles and puffins shred any prior assumptions, even about its Jews. “Eclectic is much too mild a word to describe members of Beth Sholom”, says Executive Director Robin Dern.
To be continued….(see the next blog for some personal tales from several folks who make up this diverse Jewish Alaskan population).

An Oasis at sea; a destination unto itself

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Despite the fact that Royal Caribbean annoucened last week that its much-ballyhooed Oasis of the Seas wouldn’t be visiting Jamaica next summer after it debuts, few fans gave it a 2nd thought (a port in Falmouth, Jamaica is being custom built for the record size vessel but it won’t be ready in time for the inaugural sailing of the 5,400-passenger ship).

But does it even matter? More than any other ship, the 220,000-ton Oasis, which will be nearly 40% larger than the largest ship currently afloat, is a destination unto itself. Split into seven “neighborhoods,” the massive vessel will be chock full of once unthinkable attractions including Central Park, an open-air atrium with live trees; Boardwalk, a family-friendly amusement area; Royal Promenade, an indoor mall-like zone; a record size Vitality at Sea Spa & Fitness Center; an epic Pool and Sports Zone; and Entertainment Place, a sprawling nightclub district.

Who needs Jamaica–or any Caribbean island for that matter–when you have a virtual island (“city” really) as your own home on the water. This vessel will take cruising to a new extreme and we here at Amazing Journeys are excited to see it. Will we offer a cruise on it sometime in the near future? You tell us!!

`Konichiwaaa` Part 2 – From Japan

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

 Konichiwa from Kyoto! We are in the throes of this amazing journey to the land of the rising sun and from our final stop, Kyoto, here just a few bits of some of the strange and wonderful experiences we have shared:
*Respect is the ultimate common denominator. Everyone bows, smiles, helps and cares. One can`t help but fall in love with the Japanese people.
*It is truly one of the most expensive experiences on earth. From upwards of $40-$140 for a meal, to $2000 to rent a bus for a group excursion…to $8 for coke (one glassful, with ice)…to souvenir prices that make you want to not bring something home for your friends, this is a destination you have to really save for in order to take advantage of.
*Tipping is an insult. Everyone does their job–and does it wonderfully…. because its their job. What a concept! (at least the tourist can save a few bucks this way)
*Shrines Shrines and more Shrines…
*Vending machines are everywhere. With a few coins in your pocket, you can buy yourself a soft drink, water, whisky, a toothbrush, hot coffee in a can….even a car! Yes…a car.
*Geishas do take a taxi from time to time.
*If someone bows to you, you bow back. So they bow again..and you bow…so they bow….
*We have yet to ascertain the proper moment to stop bowing, so we just keep bowing and walking away until someone is out of sight.
*A Japanese baseball game is like a college football game on steroids. Only more spirited! Bands, chants, songs and cheers…but NOT `The Wave` (there`s a sign that says so).
*Rules of respect: no talking on the subway, no eating while walking, no honking your horn, no talking on cellphone in public….and no tatoos in the hotsprings.

And there ya go! Life in Japan is different…but so wonderful.
Our `rising sun` is setting soon here in Japan. Tomorrow we head home with a lifetime of memories, new friends, new experiences and stomachs full of sushi and udon noodles.

Siyanora…

"Konichiwaaa" Part 1

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Amazing Journeys is off again..this time to The Land of the Rising Sun, Japan! We’re very excited to be experiencing all the rich legacies and ancient treasures that this land will bestow upon us. Its been only 140 years since the Japanese opened their doors to embracing the West, but they have done so with a flare for adopting things in their own way.

From having two cities listed as the most expensive cities in the world to having customs of etiquette that challenge the western ways of thinking, there’s no doubt that this journey will open some eyes by defining the words ‘new’ and ‘different.
 
Why is Japan so expensive? There are so many reasons, but here are a few:
*The Anti- Monopoly Law that hurts consumers by allowing high-priced boutiques and mom-and-pops to block the establishment of big stores and discount stores which increase competition. Sort of the opposite extreme of what we have here in the US (hear that, WalMart?).
* Japan has 392,000 wholesalers — a staggering number. Yet two-thirds of them sell to each other and not retailers or producers. Distribution channels in Japan are extremely exclusive — usually an arrangement to carry your goods also means only your goods and no competitors.
*Japan has highly taxed foreign products for so long that ANY good that sells from the West immediately has a halo of luxury around it. The higher the price, the higher the demand for it. So don’t be surprised to hear about $30 lipsticks or $300 Nike Air-Maxes. And when Johnny Walker Whiskey tried to raise demand by cutting prices on it’s JW Black, demand went DOWN, not up. Even a $5 memo pad from the US is going for $21 in Japan.
*While in the west people are taught to think critically and analyse, Japanese are taught to put up, shut up, and do what they’re told. Charity and grassroots movements are nearly unheard of in Japan. The ideas of personal growth, individual liberty, and privacy are not well defined in Japan. In fact, there is no real Japanese word for “privacy” at all. Standing up for yourself is another new concept to Japanese. So whatever retailers charge, the Japanese just pay, no questions asked. A lot of Japanese media and TV also use sensationalism to sell, and objective reality is often trampled over; “What’s that? Don’t you pay $25 for a melon and $18 for a bottle of aspirin??”
 
Stay tuned in our next blog on some of the strange rituals of etiquette seen in Japan. In the next blog we’ll share some of them like this one:
*Don’t wear the toilet room slippers outside the toilet room.
 
Until then…Siyonaraaa

Extra Extra..Read All About It

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

The summer travel season is upon us and we here at Amazing Journeys are feeling the buzz. As single travelers search for the destination-of-a-lifetime, planning it can be as cumbersome as a day in the office…and then, what’s the point in planning a vacation? One could always fend for themselves and put together a personalized tour to most anywhere, if doing all the leg work isn’t a bother. But, it can be a bother if you don’t have the expertise or wherewithall and patience to plan for you and a travel partner or two.

If however, you just want to “vacate” and let someone else do the work for you, there are some reputable services out there that can meet the needs of most any single traveler. If you have the travel bug–or the love bug for that reason–all you gotta do is make a phone call or two, click a mouse a couple of times, or check out the following article for a few good ideas on places to go and groups with whom to go:

Amazing Journeys is definitely an outstanding choice to consider and we hope that if you haven’t traveled with us before, you’ll consider one of our upcoming journeys. If you have traveled with us before, well, we know you had an awesome time and hope that you’ll make some plans to join us again soon. If…you’re one of the 186 people currently enrolled on one of our upcoming 2009 trips, well, we can’t wait to see you!
In any case, on any trip rest assured that we’ll do all the work so that you can play. We sweat the small stuff so that you don’t have to and we’ll be with you the entire way to ensure your good & welfare.
Just one of many reason why traveling with Amazing Journeys is, well…Amazing!