National
National
National
The
WEIRDEST
COUNTRY in
AMERICA
PAGE 84
50
CITY
October 2014
DIVING
WITH
SHARKS
NAMIBIA
SAFARI CAMPS
THE SPIRIT
OF COLOMBIA
POETRY
IN PRAGUE
COSTA RICA
WITH KIDS
SURPRISES
CLASSIC TO CUTTING EDGE
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A 46-mile trip
to watch
your daughters
soccer game.
EPA-estimated range of 567 mi.; 44 city/41 hwy/42 combined mpg, 13.5-gallon tank. Actual mileage will vary. EPA-estimated range of 492 mi.; 22 city/33 hwy/26 combined mpg, 16.5-gallon tank, available 2.0L EcoBoost FWD.
Actual mileage will vary. Range calculation based on fueleconomy.gov. Actual range varies with conditions such as external elements, driving behaviors, vehicle maintenance and lithium-ion battery age.
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An 86-mile trip
to watch
your sons
basketball game.
A 123-mile trip
to watch
your other daughters
sofball game.
A 151-mile trip
to watch
your other sons
lacrosse game.
A 12-foot walk
to the couch, because
free weekends
dont come that ofen.
Its not about how far you go. Its about how you go far.
2015 FUSION + HYBRID.
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O C T O B E R 2 01 4
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CONTENTS
Bogots Renaissance Period
DOWN
UNDER
50
58
The Traveler 50
BY CARRIE MILLER
PHOTOGRAPHS BY
MICHAEL MELFORD
84
76
D E PA R TM E N T S
4
8
10
EDITOR'S NOTE
TRAVEL TALK
INSIDE NAT GEO TRAVEL
13
16
18
20
22
24
27 SMART TRAVELER
28
32
32
35
35
36
36
37
38
MY CITY: PRAGUE
CHECKING IN
STRANGE PLANET
PROBLEM SOLVED
BOOKSHELF
TRENDING
LOCAL FLAVOR
ADVENTURE 101
TRAVELING WITH KIDS
MICHAEL MELFORD
ON THE COVER:
VIEW OF PARIS FROM
NOTRE DAME, BY
TRAUMLICHTFABRIK/
GETTY IMAGES
Shark encounter
in Port Lincoln,
Australia
PAGE 76
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chase.com/sapphire
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EDITORS NOTE
in 1982 i left new york city for a long stint in Knoxville, accommodate the physical dictates of cities. That is changing
Tennessee. It was about to host the Worlds Fair in an attempt fast. Our cities increasingly are reflecting the architecture and
to increase its global profile, still smarting from the Wall Street aspirations of tomorrow in their buildings, street life, social
Journals dismissive opinion of it as a scruffy little city on the connectivity, technologies, transportation systemseven how
Tennessee River. Which it was. Today, this place once eager they welcome and entertain travelers. From creative lighting and
to become more citified has grown comfortable with its simple green spaces to living buildings and the repurposing of once
livability, its state leadership in green energy, its proximity to abandoned structures, were making our cities work harder for
astonishing natural beauty, and its Appalachian cultural and us and, in the process, reshaping them to better accommodate
musical roots. (In fact, it recently announced the
our evolving lifestyles. By 2050, its predicted,
first annual Scruffy City Comedy Festival, to be
70 percent of the world will live in cities. Today
Traditionally
held this November.)
hotbeds of innovation and imagination, cities
we have molded
There was a time when I could not wait to
in the future also will be easier, more nurturing
our lives to
leave Knoxville; today I would love to return there
accommodate the places to live and work. On page 58 we offer a
to live. It symbolizes how cities, and what we
of how cities are changingand how the
physical dictates glimpse
value in them, are evolving: All of the cities I have
changes might change us.
of cities. That is
called homeincluding Montreal, London, San
Look for our new book, Worlds Best Cities,
changingfast.
Francisco, New York, and Washington, D.C.are
which celebrates 220 great destinationsfrom
Now we make
now preserving their essential character while
Portland and Paris to Miami and Mumbai.
our cities work
adapting to a changing world.
harder for us.
Traditionally we have molded our lives to
Keith Bellows
OUR
MISSION
National Geographic Traveler reports on destinations of distinction and character, and supports efforts to keep them that waybelieving that to enhance an authentic
sense of place will benefit both travelers and the locations they visit. For more information, visit travel.nationalgeographic.com/travel/sustainable.
4
National
Geographic
Traveler
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MAX GALLI/LAIF/REDUX
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Seduced
by Paris.
Inspired by Rome.
Delighted by the Germans.
Air travel
engineered
around you
LH.com/us/
nonstopyou
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PUBLISHED IN 17 COUNTRIES AND 12 LANGUAGES
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6
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Geographic
Traveler
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T R AV E L T A L K
Vaddey Ratners
article confirms my
impressions from
several trips to
Cambodia: It is the
land of survivors.
CYNTHIA BURDGE ON MY CITY:
PHNOM PENH ( JUNE/JULY 2014)
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Include address
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Letters we publish
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Subscriber
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8
National
Geographic
Traveler
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BIRD BRAINS
N O M A D N O M O R E As Travelers
Digital Nomad for the past five
years, Andrew Evans traveled to
all seven continentssometimes
in the span of a single yearand
shared his adventures in real
time in nearly 600 blog posts and
roughly 37,500 tweets. When he
recently announced that he was
going to stay home for a change,
blog fans gushed with support:
You opened all our eyes to the
joys of the beyond, praised one
reader, while longtime follower
Larissa Douglass of Canada said:
Ill never forget reading about the
dolphins swimming next to your
bus windows [on a ferry] at Cape
Horn. You entered a gateway to a
new world, bringing Nat Geo into
the next millennium.
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INTRODUCING
EddieBauer.com/Footwear
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I N S I D E N A T I O N A L G E O G R A P H I C T R AV E L
FIELD NOTES
PICTURE-PERFECT ISLANDS
In a biodiversity hotspot such as the Galpagos Islands, travelers
face a spectacular dilemma: how to capture its endless wildlife
photo ops (like the puffed-up frigatebird at left). Thats where
National Geographic photo expeditions enter the picture, with trip
experts revealing tricks for getting the best shots. Former Traveler
photo editor Krista Rossow suggests changing perspective to an
animals level. For iguanas or giant tortoises, that can mean lying on your belly or kneelingbring kneepads! Getting lower can also isolate a subject against water, sky, or foliage so it
stands out against the background. NATIONALGEOGRAPHICEXPEDITIONS.COM/PHOTOTRIPS
Q&A
JUST BACK
National Geographics
latest coffee-table musthave, Worlds Best Cities,
travels to 220 top metropolises, from Boston to
Bangkok. We checked in
with our Urban Insider,
Annie Fitzsimmons, who
wrote the books foreword, for a few city tips:
Whats your favorite way
to see a landmark? Find
10
National
Geographic
Traveler
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Its an Urban
Thing
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WHERE TO GO NOW
BEST OF THE
WORLD
Inside
New Canaan, Conn. 16
Paris, France 18
Upper Navua, Fiji 20
RICHARD BARNES/THE GLASS HOUSE
Qingdao, China 22
Swansea, Wales 24
In Connecticut,
an art installation fogs
over Philip Johnsons
Glass House.
PAGE 16
13
October
2014
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D R I V ING T H E
D I R T R OADS
O F MON T A N A
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PRESENTED BY 4RUNNER
N G A D V E N T U R E . C O M / M O N TA N A B Y D I R T
GO TO
TO SEE MAX AS HE
DRIVES THE DIRT ROADS OF MONTANA FROM BOZEMAN TO YELLOWSTONE
UP TO MISSOULA AND GLACIER PARK, AND ALL POINTS IN BETWEEN.
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BE ST OF THE WORLD
in the bedroom community of New Canaan, Connecticut, Philip Johnsons landmark Glass House
disappears and then rises from fog. Atop this wooded promontory where Johnson often retreated from
1949 until his death in 2005, Japanese artist Fujiko Nakaya choreographed 600 water nozzles for Veil,
a hide-and-reveal sequence that once each hour envelops the transparent house (pictured on page 13).
In the words of Glass House director Henry Urbach, Nakayas art installation transforms a timeless
icon into something ephemeral. ART 101 Coining the term International Style, Johnson mounted
the first U.S. exhibition of modern architecture in 1932. HOW TO VISIT Open for the season through
November 30, this National Trust for Historic Preservation property offers tours and, new in 2014,
self-guided walks. Visitors can explore the famed architects house, a sculpture gallery, a paintings gallery with rotating walls, and a whimsical structure known as Da Monsta. BEHIND DOORS In Johnsons
viewing platform, a brick cylinder bathroom is the only space without a view. JEAN LAWLOR COHEN
16
National
Geographic
Traveler
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ATLAS
New Canaan,
Connecticut
NY
MA
Hartford
New Canaan
Johnson is said to
have liked petting
his favorite corner
of the warped Da
Monsta building
to soothe the
monster.
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Capture it.
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DineInScottsdale.com 800.419.3601
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BE ST OF THE WORLD
GE
RM
Paris
Y
AN
the paris neighborhood around the Canal St. Martin was long known more for decaying
warehouses than for its wrought iron bridges. Then came the popular movie Amlie, with its title character skipping stones along the nearly three-mile-long canal, and the tree-lined waterfront in the 10th
arrondissement became a perennial up-and-comer. Finally, the tide has turned for the quartier, and
its rough edges have been smoothed out for picnics and promenades. Like Shoreditch in London, or
Williamsburg in New York, its where the new things are being created in Paris, says business owner
Mickael Benichou. SWEET SPOT Industrial-chic Libert bakery puts new spins on old favorites. Order
the bobo au rhum dessert, its name a nod to the neighborhoods hipsters, whom Parisians call bourgeois bohemians or bobos. SHOW TIME Take the pulse of the indie music scene at Point phmre.
SAVE THE DATE During the art-centric Nuit Blanche (white night) on the first Saturday of October,
Paris parties all night in gallery-rich districts such as Canal St. Martin. AMANDA RUGGERI
ATLAS
Paris, France
ITALY
SPAIN
Pariss former
state funeral parlor, which made
all of the citys
coffins in the 19th
century, reopened
in 2008 as a massive art space.
18
National
Geographic
Traveler
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photograph by
David Bacher
INTERNATIONAL MAPPING
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Fluent in
global coverage.
att.com/global
Compatible device w/domestic wireless service reqd. International data packages start at $30/mo. for 120MB for use only in select countries. If exceed package allotment, automatically charged overage
of $30 per extra 120MB provided. One month minimum reqd. Coverage not available in all areas. Included countries subject to change and listed at att.com/globalcountries. Pay-Per-Use Rate applies
without the package or when traveling in countries not included. Other chargesWorldMags.net
and restrictions apply. For rates and more details, visit att.com/global. 2014 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
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BE ST OF THE WORLD
Exploring Fijis
Upper Navua River
20
National
Geographic
Traveler
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Navua River
Suva
SOUTH
PACIFIC
OCEAN
NEW
ZEALAND
Fijis national
drink, made from
kava root, traditionally is served
in high tide
(full) or low tide
(half) portions.
on a raft floating down Fijis Upper Navua River gorge, under dangling 100-foot vines, time
stops. Like a tropical Grand Canyon, this gorge slices through the volcanic heart of Viti Levuthe
largest island of the Fijian archipelagoand redefines island paradise. GOOD CALL The Upper Navua
represents one of the most unique conservation cooperatives in the world, and one of the only protected rivers in the South Pacific. In 2000, an alliance of nine local leaders, two villages, a logging
company, and a government entity placed a ban on logging, mining, and road construction within 200
meters (656 feet) of either side of the rivers lapping waters. HIT THE SLOTS Take to one of the longest
navigable slot canyons in the world, at roughly 18 miles long. Sheer walls rocket 150 feet skyward as
green, Class 2 and 3 rapids rush through 20-foot-wide channels. Waterfalls and constant spray pour
from the jungle above, keeping this oasis teeming with life. HOW TO EXPLORE On day-trips led by Rivers
Fiji, laughing and singing local guides share legends of warfare and love. PETER M C BRIDE
ATLAS
Upper Navua
River, Fiji
AUSTRALIA
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EXPERIENCE
THE DIFFERENCE
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2014 W. L. Gore & Associates GmbH. GORE-TEX, GUARANTEED TO KEEP YOU DRY, Gore and designs are trademarks of W. L. Gore & Associates
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BE ST OF THE WORLD
blue skies prevail in Qingdao, a seaside metropolis that keeps topping livability lists in China,
with its inviting boardwalks, shaded streets and parks, and German colonial architecture. Just to the
east beckon the hiking trails of the Lao Shan Scenic Area, where chains of sapphire pools bubble with
springwater and natural mist shrouds granite peaks. In ancient times, Taoist priests deemed this the
home of immortal beings and the water sacred. DRINK THE WATER Tap the longevity well on Taiqing
Gongs grounds, a sprawling complex of temples and cypress trees. Or try the citys famed beer,
Tsingtao, made with water from the same source. LIQUID COURAGE At Huangdao Lus street market
in Old Town, order Tsingtao by the pitcher or bag, or green tea grown on the slopes of Lao Shan.
WRITTEN IN STONE Look for the ode to Qingdao carved into a rock in Lao Shan by celebrated poet Yu
Dafu. HARVEST TIME On the full moon around the fall equinox, families gather and share moon cakes.
Join the crowds hiking up Zhongshan Parks peak for the best view of the clear night sky. TIENLON HO
22
National
Geographic
Traveler
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ATLAS
Qingdao, China
RUSSIA
Beijing
Qingdao
INDIA
In the 1950s,
Tsingtao beer
marketed itself
as a health drink:
Not only is
it harmless, it
strengthens the
body!
FALSE
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BE ST OF THE WORLD
24
National
Geographic
Traveler
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ATLAS
Swansea, Wales
ENGLAND
Swansea
Cardiff
FRANCE
Contrary to myth,
Bob Dylan did
not give himself
the Welsh poets
name, but actor
Pierce Brosnan did
christen his son
Dylan Thomas.
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NAVIGATING THE GLOBE
SMART
BJRN STEINZ
TRAVELER
Tn Church looms
over Pragues Old
Town Square.
PAGE 28
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S M A R T T R AV E L E R
A guitarist plays
at Pragues John
Lennon Wall.
MY CIT Y
A Metamorphosis in Prague
ATLAS
Prague, Czech
Republic
GERMAN
on an animated
film in Los Angeles in 1982 when
I was ordered back to Prague by
the communist Czech government. I wanted to finish my film
and was tired of the government
telling me what to do, so I decided
not to return even though I knew
this meant I might not see my
family again. Then, in 1989, I
became a U.S. citizen, and a few
months later the Berlin Wall fell.
I could once again go home.
Whenever I visit, I try to swim
against time, not to recall the
oppressive fortress that used to be
Prague but to reconnect with the
favorite places of my childhood.
Our family home is located on
I WAS WORKING
POLAND
Prague
HUNG
AR
ITALY
Washington
Irving, whose
1820 short story
The Legend of
Sleepy Hollow
echoes Pragues
ages-old tale of
the Headless
Templar, visited
and sketched the
city in 1837.
28
National
Geographic
Traveler
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photographs by
Bjrn Steinz
INTERNATIONAL MAPPING
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B Y J E F F R E Y T AY L E R P H O T O G R A P H S B Y R AY M O N D P A T R I C K
Im an impatient museumgoer, not big on jostling with others in hushed halls to see
paintings that look, to me, just as good in a book as on canvas. But for one artist I make an exception:
Fernando Botero, the most Colombian of Colombian artists, as he styles himself. It may be asserted
that Botero has single-handedly put Colombia on the world map of art. It is a fact that he put the
home of the Museo Botero (Botero Museum), in Colombias capital, Bogot, on my personal radar.
From the lookout atop 10,341-foot-high Monserrate this
summer evening, Bogot resembles a glittering crazy quilt
tessellated with flickering lights and obsidian shadows. The
vista, magnificent in scale, awes. My eye searches for the Botero
Museum, somewhere directly below, in the Candelaria quarter,
the citys colonial heart.
Only 15 years ago Bogot was being convulsed by a decadeslong civil war. Left-wing guerrillas, many from Colombias
working class, were gunning down officials and seizing government buildings; right-wing paramilitaries were killing leftists.
And, of course, revenues from narcotics enriched a few beyond
all imagination; think Pablo Escobar, the now deceased chief
of the Medelln cartel, with his Learjet, submarines, and zoo.
Things are different now, very different, says my Bogot
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with horselike haunches and a mane of reddish hair, he paleskinned and rotund. We find the artwork in a room devoted
to Botero (the museum also shows works by other modern
artists, including Pablo Picasso and Robert Motherwell). Like
most Botero subjects, the two appear obese. However, the artist
wouldnt term them so: For him, theyre possessed of a volumen
hinting at a surfeit of sensuality, a Colombian trait. All appears
normal in the scene. Then I notice that neither figure is reflected
in the mirror behind thema vampiric portent of perdition?
and that the man is unshaven, suggesting this may be a brothel.
Things are only superficially as they should be, intimating layers
invisible to a casual observer.
In his work, Baquero says,
Botero hints at the problems in
our history, the corruption, the
falsity in our private lives, the
violence beneath the surface.
We stop at Una Familia, a
portrait of what appears to be a
normal family, though the wife,
husband, and two children look
humorously corpulent. (They
cant be obese, Baquero notes; no
folds crease their body fat, confirmation, perhaps, of Boteros
explanation of volume.) Then
Baquero points to telling details.
The man has two wedding
rings, which suggests he may be
cheating. The woman seems to
have a wandering eye, which for
some Colombians means she
cant be trusted, so she too may
be cheating. And look at how ugly
the family dog is; we think a
dogs character reflects that of its
master. I notice a scarlet snake
in a tree behind them, poised to
bite the woman. Thats Catholic
iconography, Baquero observes,
another implication that the two
are sinners. Bogot, Botero gives
us to think, is, like the rest of Colombia, Catholic yet sensuous.
Much is concealed for religious proprietys sake.
Yet gazing at his lighthearted Man on Horseback (the man
looks as heavy as the horse), I sense a playfulness, a Colombian
passion for outsize moments and distrust of seriousness. Botero
paints so deftly, even daftly, that his oeuvre, like Bogot, occupies
a middle area between beaux arts and pop art, or, in culinary
terms, between an elegant tarte tatin and Pop-Tarts.
I HAVE ALWAYS FELT BOGOT was in my blood. Maybe its
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mirrors, or the neoclassical gardens abounding with such
regional botanical curiosities as Andean blueberries, and you
may understand Carla Baqueros feelings about the place.
Im always overwhelmed by the Quinta, she tells me. I think
of Bolvar and his Manuelita, and how happy they were here. But
it didnt last. Bolvar would depart for self-imposed exile, and
Manuelita eventually was exiled by the new government.
and rum, says Yolima Herrera, one of two Bogotanas who join
me for dinner at the neighborhood restaurant El Patio. Today,
people also can order wine, gourmet cheeses, and hams.
We toast the evening with a South American Cabernet
Sauvignon as good as any from France and pore over a menu of
Europe-inspired dishes. Tourism has been vital to our revival,
adds my other dinner companion, Angela Garzn, who works
in city government. We were on the blacklist of nations.
put on the map. The ride in from the airport had whipped me
HOWEVER MUCH LA CANDELARIA is changing, reminders of
down an expressway toward Bogots phalanx of skyscrapers,
Colombias turbulent past remain. As light floods down from
their windows aflame with the midday sun, set against the green
a sun burning brighter here in the tropics than anything Im
mass of Monserrate. As we shot beneath bridges streaked with
used to, I walk, still a bit short of breath from the altitude, across
graffiti, I felt short of breath from the 8,660-foot altitude. But
Plaza de Bolvar. On this spot in 1817, Spaniards put to death
the clarity of the light washing over the scene, enriching all the
Policarpa Salavarrieta, a seamstress who spied for the movecolors, infused me with optimism.
ment for independence from Spain. Now honored by a plaque,
One morning I have a meeting with a young man who, from
she is her countrys revolutionary heroine; at her execution, she
what Ive read, is doing all that he can to change Bogot for
refused orders to kneel and turn away. Instead, she defiantly
the better. On my way to our appointment I manage to get lost
stood and faced the riflemen as they fired.
in La Candelarias tapestry of streets, and soon am hurrying
Just steps away, on pedestrian-only Carrera 7, I find an
down sidewalks, sidestepping manholes, dodging roaring
example of Bogots more ludic spirit. A man is playing, simulbuses. Miguel Uribe greets me in the courtyard caf of the
taneously, a drum on his back, a flute attached to his chin, and
peach-colored Hotel de la Opera, a throwback to
colonial times. At 28, Uribe is the second youngest
IVE ALWAYS FELT BOGOT WAS IN MY
deputy on Bogots City Council. He also happens to
be a grandson of former Colombian president Julio
BLOOD. MAYBE ITS ASCRIBABLE TO
Csar Turbay Ayala. Uribe knows more than most
about Colombias grievous past. In 1990, drug lord
MY MOTHER, WHO SPENT A FEW YEARS
Pablo Escobar ordered the kidnapping of his mother,
HERE AS A TEEN IN A CASA SEORIAL,
television journalist Diana Turbay. Five months in
captivity ended with a botched police rescue attempt
WHERE SHE WAS NEVER HAPPIER.
and, in 1991, her death during a firefight. (Colombian
novelist Gabriel Garca Mrquez immortalized the
tragedy in his nonfiction masterpiece, News of a Kidnapping.)
a guitar hanging from his neck. He manages, with contortions,
Uribe, who was four at the time, professes no bitterness; he
to produce a salsa tune that couples dance to, skirting concrete
prefers to focus on the encouraging changes hes seen recently.
flower planters painted with wry sayings such as Si eres sabio,
In the 1990s, we were prisoners of narco traffickers and
reIf youre wise, laugh and Los feos tenemos ms estiloWe
guerrilla groups in our own city. Now, its no more dangerous
ugly folks have more style. Just south of the square, at the
here than in other urban areas. He sips a soda before adding,
artisanal market Pasaje Rivas, vendors greet passersby with
Bogot has been modernizing, but La Candelaria has kept its
figurines of the Virgin Maryand the Simpsons.
identity, with its houses restored, security improved, excellent
Then there is Bogots resurgent, and spirited, caf life.
bars and restaurants opening, and lots of good new hotels.
Im immediately drawn to Mitho Caf, a wood-paneled space
Hes right about hotels. Im staying at the Abadia Colonial,
warmed by a freestanding fireplace, which I nestle next to one
a sleepy inn fashioned out of a colonial home, with an Italian
drizzly afternoon with a crema de whiskey and a crusty picada
restaurant in the courtyard. The Italian owner, Paolo Rocchi,
of chorizo sausage and baby potatoes. Another afternoon I
proudly describes to me La Candelarias burgeoning artistic
experiment with absinthe at El Gato Gris, which dubs itself
community and the French and Italians who are moving here
Bohemia in Bogot. El Gatos menu of cocktails features,
to enjoy it. It is like living in the center of San Franciscothe
appropriately, a sketch of surrealist Spanish artist Salvador
San Francisco of South America.
Dal with his signature pencil mustache. Sitting at a small table
La Candelarias revival has incorporated touches of the
under a wrought iron chandelier, watching a failing sun gild
cosmopolitan, which are welcome in a Colombia that has only
rococo church belfries, I sip from my chalice of absinthe, which
recently ended its relative political isolation.
has been sweetened with chocolate and a stick of cinnamon.
A night out in Bogot was once about arepas [flatbreads]
My favorite drink, however, will turn out to be a Colombian
standard: a shot of aguardiente (fiery water) preceded by a
Clutching a puppy, a young girl (top left) pauses by a store
quick chomp on a slice of lime.
selling hand-knit woolen wares. Bursts of color spruce up old
My final night in Bogot, I return to a nocturnal haunt in
buildings in the Candelaria neighborhood (top right), Bogots
La
Candelaria
Ive come to love above all. The night is chill and
historical center. The cable car ride down Monserrate (bottom)
rewards riders with eye-filling views of Colombias capital city.
Continued on page 96
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World
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emirates.com/us
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THE TRAVELER
PHOTO CREDIT
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ESSENTIAL PLACES, PEOPLE, TRENDS, AND IDEAS
PHOTO CREDIT
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B Y G E O R G E W. S T O N E
Pedaling Paris
Bike-share for les enfants? But
of course! New rental stations
in pedestrian zones opened
in the city this year, geared
toward city cyclists in training. Petits Parisiensand
visitorsages two to eight
can choose from four models
equipped with helmets,
including balance bikes or
training wheels, to ride in
parks or along the Seine.
Classes also test stability and
teach cycling etiquette, since
good habits start young.
Passage to India
Travelers might spot the
peacock feather motif
throughout terminal 2 of
Mumbais Chhatrapati Shivaji
airport. This and other lofty
designs were unveiled earlier
this year at the Jaye He
Museum, now Indias largest
public art program. Some
7,000 works pack the fourstory museum. Considering
that 40 million people pass
through the airport each year,
the exhibit rivals the Louvre
in number of visitors.
Innovation is always in
fashion in San Francisco,
including wearable tech.
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EXPERT
OPINION
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TONI ANZENBERGER/ANZENBERGER/REDUX
Common Threads
Paducah has us in stitches.
This small Kentucky town
was recently named a
UNESCO City of Crafts and
Folk Art for its efforts to sew
together world-class fiber
arts assets (the National Quilt
Museum is located here) and
to attract creatives (potters,
painters, jewelry makers) to
its LowerTown Arts District.
WHAT MAKES YOUR CITY SMART? CHIME IN ONLINE USING HASHTAG #NATGEOSMARTCITY
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EXPERT
OPINION
PHOTO CREDIT
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7
EYE IN THE SKY | TOSS THE GRAPEFRUIT-SIZE PANONO
PANORAMIC BALL CAMERA INTO THE AIR, AND ITS 36
LENSES WILL SIMULTANEOUSLY SNAP WHEN THE BALL
REACHES PEAK HEIGHT; SOFTWARE THEN CREATES A 360DEGREE, 108-MEGAPIXEL IMAGE OF, SAY, TIMES SQUARE
OR ANGKOR WAT THAT YOU CAN DOWNLOAD AND SHARE.
PHOTO CREDIT
Up on the Roof
URBAN FARMING IS GAINING GROUND. FAIRMONT
HOTELS PLACED ROOFTOP HIVES AT PROPERTIES IN
TORONTO (ABOVE), BOSTON, SEATTLE, AND OTHER CITIES
WORLDWIDE. FIVE YEARS AGO, MANHATTANS BELL BOOK
& CANDLE STARTED GROWING GREENS IN AEROPONIC
ROOFTOP GARDENS; ITS SIMILARLY HIGH-MINDED SISTER
RESTAURANT, BIDWELL, RECENTLY OPENED IN D.C.
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9
Beyond Bier
After years of resting on its
hops, Germany is embracing
the microbrewery trend.
Berlin brewmasters lead
the charge by tweaking the
reinheitsgebot, the Bavarian
purity law dating to 1487.
Floral Belgian-style beers and
chocolaty British stouts now
froth up at Berlin bars such
as Heidenpeters.
Londons Royal
National Theatre,
on the South Bank
10
Data Streams
11
Swedish Synergy
By 2030, the in-development
Stockholm Royal Seaport
plans to be free of fossil fuels
and a showcase for sustainable city design.
EXPERT
OPINION
13
14
12
Tot Tracker
HAS YOUR KID GOTTEN LOST IN
LISBON? FILIP IS A WATCHLIKE TWO-WAY
COMMUNICATOR THAT TAPS INTO GPS,
CELL TOWERS, AND WI-FI NETWORKS TO
LOCATE YOUR WANDERING COMPANION.
AN EMERGENCY BUTTON TRIGGERS A
LOCATION BEACON AND ALARM, THEN
DIALS FIVE CONTACT NUMBERS.
15
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BRUNO PROUSSE (THEATER), FILIP (DEVICE), CHINEASY (ILLUSTRATIONS); PREVIOUS PAGES: ROBERT MORA/ALAMY (CONCERT), PANONO (CAMERA), FAIRMONT ROYAL YORK (BEES)
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18
Fast Track
The East Coasts congested
business corridorthe 438
miles from Boston via New
York to Washington, D.C.
could see the rst U.S. tryout
of Japans electromagnetically
propelled high-speed railway.
Tested at 310 miles an hour,
aerodynamic Super-Maglev
trains could dash from
Baltimore to Washington in
15 minutes.
19
Locavores Unite
The bar at Gastn
Acurios La Mar in
Lima, Peru
EXPERT
OPINION
ENRICO FANTONI/REDUX
16
20
Droning On
A Detroit company is designing lightweight autonomous
aircraft capable of carrying
12 pounds of goodscapacity
enough for a Chicago pizza
party or a Brooklyn bagel
breakfast.
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21
Harbin, China
POPULATION 10 MILLION
A Dozen
Smart Cities
To Visit
Right Now
22
Tallinn, Estonia
POPULATION 400,000
23
Halifax,
Nova Scotia
POPULATION 375,000
24
Lexington,
Kentucky
25
Groningen,
Netherlands
Detroit,
Michigan
POPULATION 305,000
POPULATION 192,000
POPULATION 689,000
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Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma
POPULATION 600,000
31
Santander, Spain
POPULATION 180,000
27
Vancouver,
British Columbia
28
Buenos Aires,
Argentina
29
Bogot,
Colombia
POPULATION 580,000
POPULATION 3 MILLION
32
Haifa, Israel
POPULATION 267,000
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Vatican Museum
MOST POPULOUS
MEGACITIES
Tokyo
34.8 million
Guangzhou
31.7 million
Shanghai
28.9 million
Jakarta
26.4 million
Seoul
25.8 million
1. Barcelona, Spain
2. Lyon, France
3. Mexico City, Mexico
1. Portland, Oregon
4. Prescott, Arizona
-11%
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3. Washington, D.C.
4. Seattle, Washington
MOST INSTAGRAMMED
CITY PLACES OF 2013
600
5 BEST BUZZES
How the cost of the daily grind stacks up in the worlds hip sipping spots
CITY
PLACE
NEIGHBORHOOD
DRINK
COST (U.S.D.)
Addis Ababa
To.Mo.Ca.
Wavel Street
Espresso
$0.50
Amsterdam
Espresso Fabriek
Westerpark
Drip brew
$3
New York
Stumptown
Chelsea
Macchiato
$2.80
Singapore
Nylon
Everton Park
Flat white
$3
Sydney
Coffee Alchemy
Marrickville
Cold drip
$4
SOURCES: VATICAN; BEIJING TOURISM; UNITED NATIONS POPULATION DIVISION; UNITED NATIONS, WORLD URBANIZATION PROSPECTS: THE 2007 REVISION; THOMAS BRINKHOFF: THE PRINCIPAL AGGLOMERATIONS OF
THE WORLD, 2013-10-01; AMERICAN LUNG ASSOCIATION; INSTITUTE FOR TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENT POLICY; LEAGUE OF AMERICAN BICYCLISTS; INSTAGRAM
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+180%
2. Minneapolis, Minnesota
*Particle pollution
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Amsterdams wintry
Museumplein square
EXPERT
OPINION
PETER DEJONG/AP IMAGES (ICE SKATERS), BROWN, SIMON/THE FOOD PASSIONATES/CORBIS (PASTA)
Arty Amsterdam
34
35
36
Pasta Park
Desert Rose
37
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EXPERT
OPINION
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39
Green Acres
New Yorks celebrated High
Line keeps growing. A $76
million extension to the
elevated park is expected
to debut this year. And at
the Dallas Arboretum, the
new Rory Meyers Childrens
Adventure Garden, an eightacre, $62 million experiential
ecosystem, hosts some 150
kid-friendly exhibits.
FRANK HEUER/LAIF/REDUX
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Samba Simpatico
Fresh from the World Cup
and poised to host the 2016
Summer Olympics, Rio de
Janeiro will open in 2015
the Museum of Tomorrow,
a forward-thinking science
and tech hot spot designed
by Santiago Calatrava. Open
now: the Cidade das Artes, a
modernist arts hall dedicated
to music and lm.
EXPERT
OPINION
New Yorkers
maintain their
High Line fidelity.
Small Is Beautiful
41
Museo Jumex, in
Mexico City
42
Mexican Mix
ONE OF THE WORLDS MOST
POPULOUS CITIES NOW ADDS A
SMALL BUT WEIGHTY VENUE FOR
CONTEMPORARY ART. MUSEO
JUMEX, A 40,000-SQUARE-FOOT
SPACE IN MEXICO CITYS NUEVO
POLANCO DISTRICT, FURTHER
ASSERTS THE CAPITALS
STANDING AS THE PLACE WHERE
NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICAN
AESTHETICS COLLIDE.
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The City to Watch in Africa
43
An acrobatics event
in Taipeis Huashan
Creative Park
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Volcanoes National
Park, Rwanda
EXPERT
OPINION
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45
46
47
ALEX ROBINSON/JAI/CORBIS
Holodeck Holidays
Heart in Seoul
Electric Slide
Ban in Colorado
EXPERT
OPINION
48
As autonomous
vehicles become
more prevalent and
increasingly replace traditional
automobiles, the urban landscape
and travel experience will change
in profound ways. Imagine a world
in which driverless car software
makes traffic obsolete and parking
garages unnecessary, and sends
taxi drivers the way of the Pullman
porter. Autonomous cars are a less
chaotic urban experience, which
with companies like Google and
Uber perfecting the softwarewell
begin to see take shape within the
next decade. PATRICK DOWD, founder
and CEO, the Millennial Trains Project
50
Neighborhoods
on the Rise
VILA MADALENA SO PAULOS STYLISH,
BIKE-FRIENDLY NEIGHBORHOOD (ABOVE)
MERGES THE IMAGINATIVE CHARGE OF
PORTLAND, OREGON, WITH THE RELAXED
CHEER OF BRAZIL.
TAI PING SHAN HONG KONGS LEAFY
CONTRAST TO THE CACOPHONY OF THE
BUSINESS DISTRICT IS A FASHIONABLE
BASTION OF BOUTIQUES AND GALLERIES.
Taipei Personality
SOME CALL TAIWANS CAPITAL HUMBLE HIP FOR ITS
SUNNY DISPOSITION AND CREATIVE SPARK. BOTH TRAITS
SHINE AT HUASHAN CREATIVE PARK, A ONCE DERELICT
1914 FACTORY RECAST AS AN ARTS CENTER. THE LITTLE
ISLAND OFF CHINAS COAST IS NOT JUST HOME TO THE
WORLDS MOST FAMOUS COLLECTION OF ANCIENT
CHINESE ART; NOW ITS A MODERN ARTS PLAYER, TOO.
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FACE-TO-FACE WITH THE GREAT WHITES OFF SOUTH AUSTRALIAS NEPTUNE ISLANDS
BY CARRIE MILLER
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I drop my forkful of eggs and bolt out of the lounge,
pinballing off the carved wooden pillars of the
Princess II as the boat rolls gently in the open swells
of the southern Indian Ocean. I am desperate for any sighting of the creature that has obsessed me since
childhood and lured me to the remote and rugged Neptune Islands, 20 miles off the coast of South Australia:
the great white shark. Jumbos back! yells Tom Pagano, an American expat living in Melbourne and one
of eight passengers on a four-day journey with Rodney Fox Shark Expeditions. When I reach the upper
deck, Pagano is grinning. On this ship, the shout of Shark! ignites thrill, not panic. Jumbo, a female
more than 17 feet in length and named for the number on her tracking tag, 747, is circling our ship. From
where I stand on the upper deck she looks like a bronze airplane, her pectoral fins the wings. Pagano leans
over the railing, cup of tea in hand. Were gonna need a bigger boat.
Shark on!
ITS THE LINE ALL ON board have been waiting to say, from the
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NOT EVERYONE SHARES Foxs affection for sharks, and many
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INTERNATIONAL MAPPING
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A low hill of rock and scrub, the island offers the only
ON OUR LAST EVENING, I join others for a round of
HOW TO
BOOK
protection from the ten-foot swells of open ocean.
Shark Dice, a baffling game with rules we passengers
The Neptunes are home to one of Australias largsuspect the crew make up as they go. I can see the
Reservations are
est populations of New Zealand fur sealsa favored
ships stern, illuminated by a halo of floodlights, and,
necessary for Rodney
Foxs multiday
food of great whites. So its no surprise that a rotating
beyond, the tarnished silver of the evening sea. Sharks
shark expeditions.
population of sharks resides in these waters. Our task
are out there. Does our carousing draw them closer?
Adventure Bay
Charters and Calypso
this afternoon is to check on the population of sea lions
Life would be pale indeed without our dragons.
Star Charters offer
and seals: On every trip Fox likes to estimate numbers
Rodney Fox understands this better than anyone.
one-day cage diving
excursions out of Port
and evaluate the general well-being of the colony.
I owe everything to the shark that bit me, hed
Lincoln (surface cage
A healthy seal population means a healthy shark
said
when we met in Adelaide, where he lives. Sharks
only). You dont need
population, he says.
are our monstersours to protect and ours to love.
a dive certicate to
view sharks from the
Thirty minutes earlier I was in the water in the
That night I dream of a shark, a lone shape, sussurface cage.
surface cage, with Maulder circling me aggressively.
pended in the blue, swimming away from me. I wake
Rather than feeling drawn to this shark, I instinctively pulled
feeling bereft, knowing the next day will be my last among the
away from it. Above me, Fox was lowering the tender boat into
powerful creatures. Then something Rodney said returns to me.
the ocean for our visit to the seal colony. Suddenly, Maulder
The mornings and nights out here, you realize youre alone
disappeared, his perfectly adapted coloring allowing him to
in a wilderness, on the edge of a huge ocean, and youve been
vanish in eight feet of clear water. My eyes strained to find his
allowed a glimpse of something otherworldly.
form in the blue. Then, abruptly, I spotted himrising at a steep
Ive had that glimpse, and will always carry it with me. My
angle directly under the tender boat. He bit at the propeller,
hand strays to the talisman tooth hanging around my neck and,
bumping the vessels underside.
within minutes, a peaceful sleep overtakes me.
Now Im out of the surface cage and in the boat, cruising
an area littered with shipwrecks, fully aware of what swims
C A R R I E M I L L E R is a New Zealand-based writer and former
beneath. Rather than looking for seals, Im scanning the water
Traveler staff member. Frequent National Geographic
for triangular dorsal fins. It is the only time during the expedicontributor M I C H A E L M E L F O R D photographed Jamaica,
tion that I feel nervous.
Gently in Travelers October 2008 issue.
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ADVERTISEMENT
ESCAPE TO KAUAI
From lush valleys that look like something out of a movie to more than 50 miles of sparkling
white-sand beaches, Kauais captivating landscapes make it hard to keep an itinerary.
Read these outdoor activity highlights to give you a head start.
WITNESS A LEGENDARY COAST
EXPLORE WATERWAYS
TRY WAVE-RIDING
GO OFF-ROADING OR ZIP-LINING
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THE
WEIRDEST
COUNTRY
IN AMERICA
PHOTO
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PHOTO
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BY ANDREW NELSON
P H OTO G R A P H S B Y K R I S D AV I D S O N
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two-week celebration. Tourists wait for Mardi Gras, which is at
the end; almost no one comes for the beginning, but thats when
you see something really crazy. Then follow the French settlements up to the Cane River. Thats where Creoles of color built
their own world. On your way back to New Orleans, explore
the Atchafalaya, Americas biggest swamp, by getting out on
the water with the local Cajuns. Youll be glad you did.
As we emerge from Killer Poboys, blinking, into the French
Quarters afternoon light, Chamberlain adds, Louisiana is
another country. But you better see it soon; who knows how
long its going to last.
The reality is that Creoles and Cajuns, cowboys and costumers,
shrimpers and plantersreally, all who make life and art out of
this watery landare threatened as their world is digitized,
outsourced and submerged. Literally. Low-lying Louisiana
loses a football field an hour to, among other things, rising seas.
NEW ORLEANS
and the sense of eccentricity here, and you have one of the most
deliriously creative communities in the U.S., says Kevin Farrell,
who, with his partner, Nick Vivion, opened Bootys Street Food,
an eatery now considered a staging ground for a new culinary
sensibility in a state where gumbo still rules.
I glance out the window and spot a woman in silver boots
and a sparkly red tutu skittering into a secondhand store across
the street. She illustrates his words perfectly.
A few weeks later, tit Rxs 26 floats and three marching
bands gather on oak-shaded St. Roch Avenue. The marchers sip
tequila and kombucha tea as they admire their tiny assemblages.
The theme this year: Wee the People. Each float is a witty set
piece on contemporary society, from selfies to senatorial sex
scandals. Meadows and Detweiler arrive together but wont
march together. Some couples have separate bedrooms, says
Detweiler. We keep separate floats.
Suddenly, a pace marshal, in a blue sash, shouts, Lets roll!
One band starts in with an all-brass version of a Beastie Boys
song. Haltingly, the floats tiny wheels begin to jounce along
the pavement. The route is lined with smiles, but Chamberlain
is right: The spectators are locals, not tourists. Theyve set up
dioramas of their own as homages to the minuscule march. One
depicts a Lilliputian Velma, Scooby, and Shaggy.
This is so AWESOME! a boy shouts. It is.
The sun begins to set as the floats trundle along, glowing like
neon signs with their LED lights. The parade ends at the side
door of the Allways Lounge & Theatre, a cabaret bar serving
as the site of the post-parade ball.
Welcome, yall, to my place, booms proprietress Zalia
Beville in her best Liza Minnelli voice as footsore marchers head
for drafts of Pabst Blue Ribbon. Guest marcher Curt Schulz, an
Oregon schoolteacher, marvels at the gathering.
In Portland this would be sanitized and sponsored by an
organic sports-drink company, he says. The garbage would
get picked up and the sharp edges shaved down. But here its
all about sharp edges, and tit Rxraw, sexy, colorful, on the
edge of falling apartfits in just fine.
Two days later Im lunching with friends and describing the
march through the Marigny twilight, the happy crowds, and
the tiny homages lining the route.
I dont think Ive ever seen a parade like that, I say. Ever.
You missed the Chewbacchus krewe, with its twerking
Princess Leias, someone replies. That was something else.
C A N E R I V E R N AT I O N A L H E R I TAG E A R E A
88
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Geographic
Traveler
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Exceptionalism defines the Cane River area, home to Melrose (above), a plantation founded in the 1800s by freed slave Louis Metoyer.
Creole culture endures here: Metoyer descendant Betty Metoyer Roque and husband Charles Roque (below) visit his father's grave.
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Oakland, Melrosefront either side of this twisting waterway,
like base molecules attracted to a strand of antebellum DNA.
But here, a seemingly upside-down world evolved, where
plantation owners had African ancestryand owned slaves.
Among them was Marie Thrse Coincoin, slave and mistress
of Frenchman Claude Thomas Pierre Metoyer, who would free
her and their children, then deed her land. Their son Louis
established Melrose, modest by plantation standards but extraordinary for the change it represented. It was another AfricanAmerican woman, cook and self-taught artist Clementine
Hunter, who would bring Melrose renown with folk paintings
she began crafting in the 1930s, when she was in her 50s.
Wandering the plantations grounds, with its African- and
French-influenced outbuildings built by slaves, I feel dislodged
from the present day.
Natchitoches and the Cane River? Were in a time of our own,
asserts Tom Whitehead, the areas unofficial ambassador who,
if youre lucky like me, will ask you to his house for shrimp and
gritsoverseen by Clementine Hunter artworks, depicting daily
plantation scenes, on his wall. We appreciate differences.
Different this region is. Take the line of cars idling to buy
frozen daiquiris at Maggios, a drivethrough liquor store. Or the farmers
Cypresses surround
in muddy boots and Wrangler jeans
Hamilton Hall as he
searches Atchafalaya
sipping $15 glasses of Cab at Janohns,
waters for his kind
a restaurant in a renovated cotton gin
of buried treasure:
in nearby Boyce. The past is very pressunken cypress logs,
ent in Natchitoches. I encounter Lisa
felled decades ago
and now used to
and Michael Prudhomme at Mamas
fashion furniture.
Oyster House, on Front Street, where
the zydeco music is loud enough to
ripple your beer. Born along the Cane, Michael Prudhomme
returned home with Lisa after a big-city career.
Weve moved around a lot, but were done. Were in our
dying house now, Prudhomme says.
Our dying house. Prudhommes ancestors arrived here in
the 1720s. He and his siblings, heirs to Oakland, one of the major
Cane plantations, sold it to the National Park Service so it could
be preserved for a nation forgetful of its rural roots and ways.
To connect with that time, Prudhommes sister, Kathy,
tells me, visit St. Augustines, a Catholic church and the center
of local Creole life, in nearby Isle Brevelle. Its having a birthday celebration for Grandpre Augustin Metoyer tonight. Go.
The fact that Grandpre Augustinson of Marie Thrse
died in 1856 isnt affecting the party. Metoyer is revered along
the Cane River as the founder of the Creole community and as
the builder, with his brother Louis, of the original St. Augustine
church. It burned down in the 1800s and was replaced by
todays white wooden structure. St. Augustines parking lot,
when I arrive at 6 p.m., is as packed as its cemetery grounds
with generations of Metoyers, Balthazars, Roques.
Creole identity is complex. In this part of Louisiana it
describes a person descended from some mix of French and
Spanish settlers, Africans, and Native Americans. Tonight,
R E A D I T,
DO IT
Visit New Orleans, with a camera, on National Geographic Expeditions' Weekend Photo Workshop; ngexpeditions.com/neworleans.
90
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Geographic
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Boots scoot to live zydeco music each Sunday afternoon at Whiskey River Landing, a waterside dance hall in the Atchafalaya Basin.
AT C H A FA L AYA B A S I N
SWAMP ROMP
92
National
Geographic
Traveler
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Shreveport
Monroe
20
iR
Louisiana
M ississ i p p
THE INSIDER
iv
Jackson
i
dR
Re
Natchitoches
Cane River
National
Heritage
Area
Alexandria
49
165
55
Atchafalaya
River
Henderson
10
Lake
Charles
Baton Rouge
Lafayette
Atchafalaya
National
Heritage
Area
12
10
Lake
Pontchartrain
New Orleans
Mississippi
River
90
French Quarter W
distinguishes itself
with guest rooms
that channel New
Orleans through
wall-size prints
and mod lighting.
Birds of a different
color, the seven luxe
Audubon Cottages
PEOPLING AN IMAGE
This mural of the late New Orleans musician
Ernie K-Doe sums up the spirit of the city,
says photographer Kris Davidson. To make it
sing, I envisioned someone biking by; locals
often decorate their rides in creative ways.
When I met artist Sam Wedderburn, with a
bike he made, I had my image. He pedaled as
I ran behind snapping, focusing on the spatial
relationship of the elements in the frame.
KRIS DAVIDSON (BICYCLIST); INTERNATIONAL MAPPING
MISSISSIPPI
TEXAS
NEW ORLEANS
LOUISIANA
ve
50
0 mi
0 km
Gulf of Mexico
50
Melrose Plantation,
founded by freed
slaves two centuries
ago, brings the areas
unusual multicultural
legacy to life at its nine
historic buildings.
A highlight here:
the primitive-style
artworks painted
by onetime Melrose
cook Clementine
Hunter. Head to
Lasyones, in downtown Natchitoches,
for the citys signature
meat pie, a turnover
stuffed with ground
beef, pork, and onion.
For oysters, crawfish,
catfish, even alligator,
score a table in the
whimsically decorated
ATCHAFALAYA BASIN
Cajun-inspired hostel
where the music is
first-rate and the beers
ice cold. Sunday afternoons bring live music
and livelier dancing
to Whiskey River
Landing, a venue in
ATLAS
AR
MS
TX
Baton
Rouge
New
Orleans
Gulf of Mexico
93
reported by
Andrew Nelson
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October
2014
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Louisiana
Continued from page 92
Atchafalaya to harvest sinker cypress,
old-growth timber felled a century ago
that ended up sinking while being transported through the murky water.
As I tuck into our lunch of cheese and
boudin, Louisianas trademark sausage,
I catch Hall staring at the vast swamp.
The rippling water reflects the dark sky.
A sense of timelessness, of deep serenity
is settling around us. It is at this moment
that I begin to grasp what living on the
Atchafalaya must feel like.
The area has long been home to the
Cajuns, descendants of French Canadians (Acadians) expelled from Canada
by British forces in the 1750s, who made
their way south to the more welcoming
French territory of Louisiane. Their
progeny kept the native language, and a
version is spoken to this day. Once here,
Cajuns thrived on the abundant wildlife,
from catfish, crawfish, and alligators to
otters, beavers, turkeys, and Louisiana
black bears.
The houseboat, rented from Houseboat Adventures, is being nosed through
the water by a tow piloted by Houseboat
Adventures owner Mitch Mequet. We
have hot water, a toilet, a generator, but
no motor. The very best feature, to me,
is the view gliding past our front porch.
The landscape is both familiar and alien,
Monets Water Lilies meets Jurassic
Park. Fish jump and bubbles roil the
floating vegetation. Herons and egrets
flutter and take flight through stands of
tapering cypresses rising from the mist
like Javanese dancers, branches akimbo
and draped with Spanish moss.
If you want, Mequet says, Ill get
my airboat and give yall a tour in it. It
can get way back in the cypress forests.
You can consider it a little lagniappe.
Lagniappe is the Cajun French word for
a little something extra.
When Mequet returns, we scramble
onto the airboat, the engine roars, and
soon were skimming the waters surface
at 25 miles an hour. We enter a murky
grove carpeted with duckweed. Mequet
cuts the engine. Around us, cypresses
soar in air the color of pewter.
All new growth, Hall tells us. Oldgrowth cypresses and tupelos were cut
80 years ago to fashion stately front
94
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Geographic
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Bogot
Continued from page 57
breezy, alive with sleekly attired young
women, and men sporting combed-back
hair. Every other car seems to be a taxi
disgorging couples for festivities that
are just starting. Its exciting to watch
all this, although, dressed in jeans and
a bomber jacket, Im feeling terribly
deficient in Latin flair. Im also at least
a decade older than most of those I see.
Then I remember where Im going:
the wood-beamed, umber-walled Casa
de Citas Caf Arte. I step into the jeansfriendly club with a Venezuelan friend,
Nelvis Navas, who does have Latina flair.
A liveried waiter, whom I recognize from
an earlier visit, motions to us. We cross
the tiled dance floor to a table and take
seats. The place echoes with warm-up
taps on bongos and tentative trumpet
toots as musicians on the small stage
prepare for the nights entertainment.
Patrons here appear to differ from the
partygoers outside. Many of the men
wear horn-rimmed glasses and cotton
scarves, rakishly tossed back; women
strut cloche hats and fingerless gloves.
They arent smoking but look as if they
should be.
Bohemians, says Navas. Bogot has,
of late, become one of her favorite cities,
mostly because of La Candelaria.
Walking around here, shed told me
earlier, I feel a sense of tranquillity, of
being taken into the past, nothing like
her native Caracas, an overbuilt modern
capital. In Bogot they take care of the
historical sights, especially the Bolvar
ones. In Venezuela, though Bolvar was
born there and was so important to Hugo
Chvez, we just let everything go.
In all my days in La Candelaria, Ive
felt most at home here, in Casa de Citas,
the house of rendezvous. Ive visited it
several times, to talk politics and books
over bottles of grapy Spanish tempranillo
with owner Carlos Adolfo Gonzlez.
Did it ever serve as a brothel, as the
name implies? I ask Gonzlez. Its easy
to imagine painted ladies beckoning to
boozed-up patrons.
He smiles. That is a fabrication. This
was a family house. However, he adds,
the association is in a way apt. Im trying
out a different concept of brothel here,
one involving men and women getting
96
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Geographic
Traveler
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THE INSIDER
O U T A N D A B O U T: M U S E U M S
La Candelaria
BOGOT GEMS
Bogots Museo Botero may be
one of the most entertaining art
museums anywhere, filled with
Colombian artist Fernando Boteros
works depicting oversize figures,
some with sly social commentary.
For all that glitters, visit the Museo
del Oro (Museum of Gold), where
the metal that lured Europes
explorers shows the workmanship
of indigenous peoples. Almost as
dazzling, but in service to God, is
the interior of the Museo Iglesia
Santa Clara, a church museum
filled with frescoes and paintings.
WHERE TO STAY
driest conditions
occur from December
into March. Many
newcomers feel the
effects of Bogots
altitude (8,660 feet);
common symptoms
include shortness
of breath, difficulty
sleeping, and mild
dizziness. Acclimation
usually occurs within
a few days; limiting
alcohol consumption
aids the transition.
WHAT TO KNOW
Temperate weather
reigns in Bogot; the
ATLAS
CUBA
Cerro de
Monserrate
CA
LL
E1
RE
0m
250
E7
C U NVA
LA
2
RA
Museo
Botero
CIR
CA
LL
LA CANDELARIA
RE
Plaza de
Bolvar
Museo Iglesia
Santa Clara
1,000
El Dorado
International
Airport
CA
R
Parque Tercer
Milenio
0 ft
BRAZIL
RE
LE
ECUADOR
cable ca
Quinta de Bolvar
CA
R
CA
L
th
Bogota
11
RA
3
16
RA
LE
CA
RR
ER
A1
0
LE
CA
R
CA
RA
CA
S
NI
DA
AV
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CA
L
CA
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LOS
MRTIRES
VENEZUELA
fo o t p
13
SANTA FE
19
VALA
UN
RC
LE
LE
CI
CA
L
CA
L
Caribbean Sea
Bogota
Chapinero
La Candelaria
0 mi
0 km
4
8
97
reported by
Jeffrey Tayler
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October
2014
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nal Geogr
tio
Trave
hic
le
r
ap
NEXT STOP
SIGNATURE EVENTS AND PROMOTIONS
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T H E H A L F-BU RIE D CA R S O F CA D IL L AC
RANCH MARK ONE STOP ALONG
AMERICAS MOTHER ROAD, OTHERWISE
KNOWN BY WHAT NAME?
1
A TIGER DECORATES THE NATIONAL
FLAG OF FORMOSA, A REPUBLIC THAT
EXISTED FOR ABOUT FIVE MONTHS IN
1895 ON WHAT ISLAND?
NAME THE
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106
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Make every trip an adventure with the muscular, versatile, all-new GLA. Its power liftgate opens to an expansive
cargo space and split-folding rear seats, making it the perfect companion for any excursion. With advanced
aerodynamics, striking design details and an exceptional starting price, its everything you could want and more
in a compact SUV. The 2015 GLA. An entirely new automotive experience from the company thats always been
known for pioneering them. Visit MBUSA.com/GLA
2015 GLA 250 4MATIC shown in Cirrus White metallic paint with optional equipment.