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a country you can walk around in 3 hours

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  Nauru is apparently the least-visited country in the world; according to their tourist office (who are involved in processing the visas) most years see around 100 visitors.  Although it would surely be a useful source of income, they don’t do much to help this situation – the only island country in the Pacific for which a visa is required, and this the state of the swimming pool at our hotel (the best hotel on the island). We did though get given a tour of the parliament building, including into the debating chamber itself, where we sat down in the MPs' seats and idly flicked through the draft bills in front of us.  Until someone came into the chamber in a panic, telling us that we shouldn't have been allowed access to those seats ... very unprofessional but quite interesting! The country was first sighted by a European in 1798, and was named Pleasant Island.  It has a total land area of just 21.2 square km, with a circumference of some 19km – a few of us walked al...

visiting 11 countries in a month

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Finding myself in a very comfortable resort in the Cook Islands, watching Man Utd beat Wigan on the bar TV – sound down, but they are playing an Afrobeats playlist, with four Burna Boy tracks during the last 45 minutes, so I’m not complaining!  & then a Wigan player named Aasgaard gets booked which seems so appropriate given the very camp male staff serving me After the match I go for a swim, followed by a walk in the sand alongside the turquoise sea.  What am I doing here??! Well, I’m in the last week of a month-long group tour around the islands of the Pacific.  Changes to flight schedules meant that Vanuatu was dropped (although many of us fly there after this tour ends) with the Cook Islands slotted in as the replacement, en route from Tonga to the Solomon Islands.  A flight cancellation meant that we missed Micronesia (but had extra days in Palau), and weight restrictions meant that five of us had an extra day in Samoa but one less in Tonga … it’s a cra...

and there are many other things to see and do in the Philippines

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Whilst the mummies were the highlight, there was much more on my itinerary for my 30 days in the Philippines.  I was grateful that I no longer scuba dive, as that shortened the list somewhat, but there were still UNESCO-listed churches, rice terraces, old (Spanish colonial era) cities, and subterranean cave-tunnel, not to mention the natural wonders of Bohol island and the karst coast of El Nido.  Too much to fit in, really, but who knows whether I will have the time/money to visit the Philippines again? The churches were impressive, as was the old centre of the city of Vigan (although the latter was pretty touristy), but the natural wonders were my favourites.  I paid for a guided day tour of the island of Bohol, to save time, and this included a visit to the Tarsier Sanctuary.  The tarsier - see picture to the left - is the smallest (and cutest) primate in the world, with a head around half the size of its body.  It's nocturnal, but thankfully this one opened ...

Filipino mummies

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A 30-day visa for a country made up of more than 7,000 islands … what to see and do in the time??  One thing I HAD to see (although it meant a different itinerary for two days for my friend and I) was the mummies of the Benguet region.  I’d read online that their location is no longer publicised, since one of the mummies was stolen in 2017 (why??!), but was able to find out how to get to the Timbac mummy cave.  This trip started with an early morning two-hour shared minivan to a small town in the mountainous interior.  I was directed towards a group of local men, who asked where I wanted to go.  As I referred to my hand-written notes on a scrap of paper (copied from a response to a facebook post), one of the men struggling to understand my pronunciation looked at the paper … and he saw the bracketed PHP500+, being the price I’d been advised to pay for a taxi from this town to the mummy cave at Timbac (some £7, for British readers).  He couldn’t help but rea...

understanding how I travel

For some time I’ve reflected on needs I’ve already identified to travel more slowly and with less baggage.  But having spent a great deal of time over the past few weeks trying to devise an itinerary for 30 days in the Philippines I’ve learnt a lot more.  I’ll be spending the month with a friend, who asked if she could join me there but then said she did not have the energy at that time to do any of the planning (the Philippines being made up of some 7,000 islands and thus not a place where you can casually just get on buses to travel around but rather one where you have to book seats on flights, ferries, etc). So I got to work, spending many days researching places to go and how to get to them, and came up with a whole list of ideas to fit into an itinerary.  I shared this with my friend, who responded that she doesn’t do early morning starts doesn’t do hostel dorms but needs her own room doesn’t do long distance bus trips (by which she seems to mean anything more than t...

the final part of my Afghanistan trip

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The final leg of our trip took us on to Kandahar - the founding city and spiritual centre of the Taliban. Despite the capital of the country being Kabul, where the government administration is based, Kandahar is the seat of power, as the supreme leader and his spiritual advisers are based there. There we visited a couple of mosques and a mausoleum, and climbed the very steep Forty Steps up to a shrine on a small mountain outcrop. From Kandahar it was on to Ghazni, the capital of the great Ghaznafid empire that ruled the region 1000 years ago.  As with much of the country, it was visited by people such as Alexander the Great and Ibn Battuta, and has been inhabited over the centuries by Zoroastrians, Buddhists, Hindus and Moslems.  The history of this country is really so rich!  The main sight is the two elaborately decorated Ghazni Minarets, built during the period 963–1187 and sadly reduced to half their original 44m height by an earthquake in 1902 - the metal rooves...

and on into the centre of Aghanistan

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From Bamiyan we set off on an 18-hour drive along unmade roads through the centre of the country, mostly dry and rocky terrain, passing the occasional sheep, goats or donkeys with their accompanying herders but very few other vehicles.  We finally got to the small town of Chagcharan where we spent the night, before continuing the drive along similar roads the next day.  Roads that were not safe to travel on until the Taliban took over and imposd their strong rule over the country.  We went through numerous checkpoints, in some cases just waved through, in others they insisted on seeing our passports and temporary local ID cards, as well as the permission documents carried by our guide.  But eventually we made it to one of the highlights of the trip - the Minaret of Jam. Built around 1190, probably to commemorate the victory of Mu'izz ad-Din (of the Ghorid Empire) over Prithviraj Chauhan, it is believed to be all that is left of the lost city of Turquoise Mountain, wh...