We’ve Been There: Budapest

Earlier this year our CEO Vivien Godfrey visited Budapest. Here’s what she got up to:

September is a great month to visit Budapest. We had calm sunny days to wander the streets and enjoy riding many street cars. However if we had visited just a week earlier we would have endured heavy rains and before we arrived, the Danube had burst her banks and several streets and Metro stops were flooded and closed.

We stayed in a great Marriott Courtyard that was very central and had good public transport nearby. Our favourite way to get around was using the street cars. My husband who is over 65 rode free and for me the cost of each ticket was very reasonable.

 The highlights of our 3 night visit were in no particular order the St Stephen’s Basilica which holds the mummified right hand of King Stephen. Peering into the casket that holds the hand you can certainly see a thumb and two fingers. The interior decoration of the Basilica is magnificent and the view from the towers over Pest is very good.

St Stephen’s Basilica

 The Dohany Synagogue was also impressive and our visit was enhanced by having an excellent guided tour. When you enter the synagogue you will observe a sea of flags of various nationalities among the pews. Head for the flag which signifies the language of the docent who is waiting there to provide your free tour. The history of the location, the building and the ghetto is very moving. Also having recently seen the film “One Life” starring Anthony Hopkins about the bravery of the Englishman Nicholas Winton in helping hundreds of Jewish children escape from the Nazis it was amazing to find a lovely memorial to him in the garden.

Memorial to Nicholas Winton,
Dohany Synagogue

My favourite stop was the 2 hours we spend in the St Gellert thermal baths. It is not expensive to visit the baths and you have the choice of 2 swimming pools (only one if you forget your swimming cap) and 5 thermal pools ranging from medium warm to very hot. There are two steam baths, one extremely hot and the other so excruciatingly hot that you might only last 2 minutes inside. Outside each steam bath is a very tiny and cold plunge pool. The swimming pool that does not require your cap is outside along with one of the thermal pools and there are a huge number of loungers to bask in the sun.

St Gellert thermal baths

Quite by accident we walked by the impressive Central Market Hall which was filled with purveyors of fruits, vegetables, cheese, pickles, sausages, honey, nuts and many other delicious items. The market also has vendors of traditional embroidery and other decorative items. Definitely worth a visit.

Central Market Hall

Your visit would not be complete without a visit to the New York cafe which is an elaborately decorated restaurant attached to the New York hotel. There is a queue to enter at all hours of the day (reservations only available for dinner). I have no idea why the hotel and cafe are called New York!

New York cafe

Vivien recommends:

Budapest Marco Polo Pocket Travel Guide – with pull out map

£9.99

The Intrepid List

The Intrepid List is not a bucket list; it’s almost the opposite. This is a curation of precious moments experienced by our travellers that have never been forgotten. It aims to inspire you to explore a little further and delve a little deeper, to engage with communities, look below the surface and open yourself to new learnings. This is the way to find the kinds of experiences that will stay with you forever so you can form your own personal Intrepid List.

Within the 10 themed sections are experiences from more than 55 countries worldwide. They range from daring to caring, wild to mild. Change the way you travel with The Intrepid List; discover local secrets and experience the eccentric, the rare and the astonishing.

5 travel experiences that will stay with you forever:

Continue reading The Intrepid List

Three Enchanting Islands to visit in the Mediterranean

Travel with Laura Coffey through Greek Myth with Enchanted Islands, a magical story of love, loss and the real-life islands that inspired the oldest travel story of all time… 

A lyrical odyssey about love, loss and Greek myth, Enchanted Islands is a new book that weaves together Laura’s experience navigating heartbreak and grief with her quest to map the real-life islands that inspired the wanderings of Homer’s epic hero, Odysseus.  Stephen Fry called it “magical and captivating – hugely recommended” It’s not remotely academic, and you don’t need to know anything about Greek myth to enjoy it.

“If you love memoir and Greek mythology this is a delight. Coffey escapes a grim and lonely pandemic for volcanos and orange-blossom brioche, kingfishers and tales of Circe. But life lies ready to sting, like the Medusa jellyfish she encounters on her evening swims. A spellbinding book about growing up, grieving and the Gods” ― Clare Pollard, author of Delphi

Stanfords fans will love this book because it blends together travel and maps, two of our favourite things.  And interestingly none of the islands Laura visited were in modern-day Greece. You’ll need to read the book to find out where she went… 

Continue reading Three Enchanting Islands to visit in the Mediterranean

Tips for Successful Family Adventures

Family Adventures is a practical guide to involving babies and children in all sorts of adventures, whether it be cycling, camping, paddling, hiking, swimming or outdoor holidays.

As soon as Bex Band, founder of the UK’s largest women’s adventure community, Love Her Wild, announced she was pregnant with her first child, the sympathy began. ‘Enjoy your adventures while you can’, ‘It’s going to be a big shock not being able to travel as much’, and ‘Aren’t you going to miss adventuring?’It seemed as though having children was a death sentence when you’re an outdoor adventurer.

But it really doesn’t have to be that way. Yes, it’s a scary prospect – how do you keep them safe? Where do they sleep? What equipment do you need? – but it’s totally doable.

This guide is full of useful information (such as what to pack when camping with an infant or how to keep children safe in open water), invaluable tips (family games you can play around a campfire or how to keep morale up in bad weather) and plenty of honesty around things going wrong (poo-explosion on a wild camp, anyone?). Experiences from adventuring families also provide a plethora of insights so that you’re well equipped to make your family adventuring dreams a reality.

Here, Bex Band offers some tips for successful family adventures:

Adventuring with children is very different from when you are managing a trip with just adults. Packing, logistics, managing distances and food intake – it’s all different. It took us a while to get the balance right and to realise where the struggles would come from and what to let go of.

Continue reading Tips for Successful Family Adventures

Never leave home without these 5 backpacking items

-by Martyn Howe, author of Tales from the Big Trails

Over the years, my kit list has evolved from my early days of carrying almost everything I could need, to a honed collection of lightweight items, often with multiple uses. I spend the most on the big four: tent, sleeping bag, backpack and boots – balancing durability, weight and cost, but these five items will always be with me on a long backpacking trip:  

Continue reading Never leave home without these 5 backpacking items

Following Nellie Bly

GLOBETROTTER NELLIE BLY’S ADVICE FOR THE ADVENTURER

Six top tips 

By Rosemary J Brown

Trailblazing journalist Nellie Bly circled the world faster than anyone ever had in 1890. She travelled alone — literally with the clothes on her back and a Gladstone bag – to beat the fictional 80-day record of Phileas Fogg.  When she won her race around the world in 72 days, it was called “the most remarkable of all feats of circumnavigation ever performed by a human being”.  

Continue reading Following Nellie Bly

Lucy Richards: Where to Go When: Stanfords Travel Writing Festival 2020

Dreaming of your next adventure? Whether you’re looking for festivals and culture, an unforgettable journey, natural wonders, rest and relaxation, or active adventures, Lucy Richards talks to Paul Blezard about the most amazing places in the world and the best time of year to visit them. Discover when to explore Costa Rica’s rainforests, journey into the clouds in Nepal, sail between Croatia’s cypress-clad islands, or gaze at the saw-toothed crags of Canada’s Rocky Mountains.

Continue reading Lucy Richards: Where to Go When: Stanfords Travel Writing Festival 2020

5 types of advice to ignore when you travel solo by Amy Baker

If you’ve ever set off of on a solo adventure you’ll be no stranger to the hoards of advice, warnings and cautionary tales that get thrown at you. In Amy Baker’s debut book Miss Adventures: A Tale of Ignoring Life Advice While Backpacking Around South America she shares her often hilarious experiences of solo travel and sifts through what advice is actually worth listening to. We managed to pin her down long enough to tell us what advice you should ignore to ensure you get the most from your trip. Continue reading 5 types of advice to ignore when you travel solo by Amy Baker

We’ve been there // Yucatan

The Yucatan peninsular is an amazingly flat spur of land from the south east coast of Mexico. It comprises the entire country of Belize  together with three Mexican States; Quintana Roo, Yucatan and Campeche. That meteor fell 65 million years ago off its coast, in the Gulf of Mexico, which wiped out the dinosaurs. I will come back to that later. Continue reading We’ve been there // Yucatan

Travellers’ Wisdom: How to Save Money and Stay Safe // Stanfords Travel Writers Festival

Join holiday bargain-hunter Andrew Fraser, travel safety guru Lloyd Figgins and Author and Wanderlust Magazine Editor Phoebe Smith as they talk to Julia Wheeler about how to fly further for less, and how to stay safe as you explore the world.

Continue reading Travellers’ Wisdom: How to Save Money and Stay Safe // Stanfords Travel Writers Festival