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Voting for finalists in the categories of world's most romantic resort, best honeymoon all-inclusive, most romantic cruise line, and more categories is open until March 21, 2012. 

Vote at 2012 Romantic Readers' Choice Awards.

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(appears originally on Conde Nast Traveler's "Truth in Travel" blog):


It’s been hard to miss recent headlines shrieking about Norovirus, a gastro-oriented flu bug, especially after an outbreak on Princess Cruises’ Crown Princess proved so severe that the company took the unusual step of canceling a cruise in mid-voyage. The ship returned to Port Everglades, its Fort Lauderdale homeport, two days early and debarked passengers (offering refunds and compensation) so its crew could spend a few days supersanitizing the ship (and the port terminal) before it took off for its next regular sailing.
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(as published in Cruise Critic) In light of the capsizing of Costa Concordia over the weekend – a disastrous event in which 13 people have died, more than a dozen are still missing and its captain is under house arrest on manslaughter charges — it’s not an unfair question to ask: Is cruising safe?
It certainly wasn’t for passengers and crew onboard the ill-fated ship. On Friday night Concordia was sailing well off-course off Italy’s Tuscan coast when it hit a rock that tore a hole through the left side of its hull. In circumstances we’re not likely to understand for some time, the captain was unable to save the ship as it first lost power, was swamped by seawater, then began to list and capsized. Emergency evacuation efforts were haphazard at best, report those who were on the ship, and communication was next to nil. And the captain may have violated every rule in the book – officially and morally – when he allegedly hurried off the doomed vessel before passengers and crew were safely rescued.
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Where and how to photograph the rock arches near Lone Pine in the eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains. http://gregvaughn.com/blog/2012/01/15/alabama-hills-arches/


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Memories of Chocolate and Love

 
A recent story in The New York Times Travel section about Brussels and its history of chocolate making brought me back to my first heavenly encounter with real chocolate and the man who introduced me to it.

I called him Uncle Shamsheh but, in fact, he was really my mother's first cousin. Shamsheh had emigrated to Brussels in 1932 in hopes of a better life than the one he had left behind in Chrznow, Poland. In Brussels, he fell in love, married, and had a daughter. Then Germany invaded Poland and, in short order, The Netherlands and Belgium. One day, while he was off working to earn a little bread, there was an [more]


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No kidding: some rivers are considered male; some female. From San Francisco Chronicle, Dec 2, 2011

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/12/02/TRJD1M0A3E.DTL
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