X

Get FREE Email Updates

Sign Up

Dave's Travel Corner

Seeing the World One Step at a Time

  • Home
  • Blog
  • Guides
  • Journals
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Links
  • Interviews
  • About

journals

Visitor submitted travel journals. Submission guidelines


The Skyclad Jain Monks in Kundalpur

August 6, 2006 by Manuela Pop4 Comments

During our four months trip in India this year, my husband and I stopped in Khajuraho to visit the Erotic Temples. There, we heard of a small village Kundalpur, where hundreds of Jain Monks will gather in a two-day festival to celebrate fifty women becoming Jain mothers. We left Khajuraho together with a local Jain couple and their family car for Kundalpur to take part in the festival. Kundalpur turned out to be a very enriching and deeply … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Asia · Tagged: Animal Rescue, Backpacking, Beach, Bicycle, Festival, Food and Wine, India, Journey, Monks, Naked, Village, Walking tour, Wildlife

India: Sixty million villages and still counting

February 22, 2006 by Solomon Rastagar2 Comments

How on earth do you cover one billion people and more than five thousand years of history in one short article? I am afraid I won't be able to answer that question in regard to writing something about India. I can do no more than give you my week's worth of roaming about in northern India, a country which I found as diverse as it is huge and old. Just to get primed for the speed at which life proceeds in much of this country, our train to … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Asia · Tagged: Animal Rescue, Asia, Bicycle, Bridges, Bus Travel, California, Culture, Fashion, History, India, Markets, New York City, Sand, Taxi, Traffic, Train Travel, Village, Walking tour, Wildlife

Mt. Fuji Climb

February 21, 2006 by Frank KobayashiLeave a Comment

mt-fuji japan

Our trip to Mount Fuji began at 7 AM last Friday when Kathy and I left our apartment to catch our early morning bullet train to Japan's most famous mountain. After nine hours of traveling via taxi, bullet train, and bus, we arrived at Fuji-san's 5th station (7562 feet) at 4:30 PM. With our high tech graphite walking sticks and backpacks filled with rice balls, water, and winter clothes, we began our ascent up the mountain at 5:30 PM. The … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Asia · Tagged: Bus Travel, Food and Wine, Hiking, Japan, Mountain Climbing, Sand, Taxi, Walking tour, Wildlife

Afghanistan: More bakeries here than anywhere else in the world

February 8, 2006 by Solomon RastagarLeave a Comment

I have always been asked about the safety situation in Afghanistan and, by now, might have a word or two to offer. During our stay there, we were limited mainly to Kabul and its immediate surroundings, such as valleys or canyons that could be reached within a couple hours of driving. Keep in mind that right now is also the height of winter and many roads become impassable for extended periods of time. While I can't personally speak for the rest … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Asia · Tagged: Afghanistan, America, Art, Asia, Bakeries, Culture, Europe, Music, Pakistan, Vietnam, Walking tour

Eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth…the code of the Pashtuns

February 8, 2006 by Solomon RastagarLeave a Comment

Peshawar, Pakistan December 2005 Some of you have wondered what has happened to us in the wilds of Pakistan and Afghanistan, since it's been a while that I wrote. Well, we have since made our way across Pakistan into the Northwest Frontier Province. If there is any "Wild West" left in the world, then this frontier area of Pakistan and Afghanistan is it. And the town of Peshawar has got to be the "Dodge City", then. Far larger and spread out … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Asia · Tagged: Afghanistan, Asia, Canals, England, Fashion, Gun, Pakistan, Shopping Mall

Afghanistan: Some children only live to beg

February 8, 2006 by Solomon Rastagar3 Comments

The day before it started snowing in Kabul, the shopkeepers had the wooden snow shovels out for sale, knowing that they would come in handy. And it snowed with a vengeance, massive flakes the size of large coins came down. Kabul is a city of flat roofs and everyone, young and old, got busy climbing up and shoveling the white stuff off onto the sidewalks, where passersby played cat and mouse games with heaps of snow crashing down on them. Pretty … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Asia · Tagged: Afghanistan, Sand, Ski Trip, Traffic, Walking tour

The Land of Men with Flaming Orange Beards

February 8, 2006 by Solomon Rastagar5 Comments

As soon as we stepped out of the shiny terminal of Lahore International Airport in Lahore, Pakistan, my uncle Waheed and I were overcome by the smell of kerosene. I thought at first that there must be a spill nearby, because it was so strong. Eventually we found our ride among all the cabbies and rickshaw drivers, who were jostling among themselves for customers. It was a twenty or thirty minute slog to get into the city from the airport. It was … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Asia · Tagged: Afghanistan, Airport, Asia, Bangladesh, Britain, Bus Travel, China, Drinking, England, Fashion, Food and Wine, Garden, India, Jet lag, Pakistan, Paris, Restaurants, Shopping Mall, Traffic, Vietnam

Where is the Ho Chi Minh Trail?

February 7, 2006 by Solomon RastagarLeave a Comment

Saigon, Dec. 14, 2004 Director Francis Ford Coppola's 'Apocalypse Now' is a movie about the Vietnam War. Nowadays it is also a swanky bar in the heart of modern Saigon, Vietnam. I have yet to visit it, after having arrived in Saigon today from Hanoi, but I have heard that it enjoys a locally notorious reputation for fast cars, fast drugs, and fast women. It might be wiser to start with the tamer entertainment establishments of this utterly … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Asia · Tagged: Animal Rescue, Art, Bus Travel, China, Culture, Drinking, Farming, Fashion, Fishing, Halong Bay, Japan, Korea, Markets, Oyster, Paradise, River Rafting, Sailing, Seafood, Shopping Mall, Ski Trip

Swiftboating the Mekong River

February 7, 2006 by Solomon RastagarLeave a Comment

Pnomh Penh, Cambodia Dec. 19, 2004 After a hot and sweaty bus ride south from Saigon, I thought we reached the South China Sea when we first came across this open body of water. Then the driver filled us in that this was the Mekong River, still sixty kilometers inland from the sea. It is a truly massive river, a good deal wider than the Mississippi River down by New Orleans. From its headwaters in Tibet it has traveled about 4300 kilometers … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Asia · Tagged: Angkor Wat, Asia, Border Crossing, Burma, Bus Travel, Cambodia, China, Colorado, Culture, Drinking, Farming, Fishing, Food and Wine, Laos, Mississippi, Monks, New Orleans, Palm Trees, Rainforest, Restaurants

Malaysian Malls & Singaporean Housing Estates

February 7, 2006 by Solomon RastagarLeave a Comment

Although now deposed from their reign as the tallest buildings in the world by Taiwan's "Taipei 101 Tower", the Petronas Twin Towers of Malaysia's capital Kuala Lumpur still command an attention and respect. Like the late World Trade Center, they are identical twins, but unlike the World Trade Center, they are shaped almost round and taper to two mighty sphere topped spires at a lofty height of 452 meters (1483 feet). Day and night they gleam and … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Asia · Tagged: Africa, America, Art, Asia, Bangkok Thailand, Beach, Bicycle, Bridges, Bus Travel, England, Food and Wine, History, Indonesia, Malaysia, Monks, Mosque, Paradise, Passport, Rainforest, Restaurants

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 33
  • 34
  • 35
  • 36
  • 37
  • 38
  • Next Page »
Dave's Wines Logo

The Official Wine Club of
the Napa Wine Project!

Your personal membership to the
finest Napa Valley artisan wineries.
Learn More
Follow @DaveDTC

Get FREE Email Updates ▶

Categories

Journals — Home

  • Africa
  • Antarctica
  • Asia
  • Australia
  • Caribbean
  • Europe
  • Middle East
  • North America
  • South America
  • South Pacific
  • Other

Latest Posts

  • Urbiztondo Beach La Union BeachTop 10 Beach in La Union 2026: A Smart Traveler’s …
  • Mei Zhang, Founder of WildChina
  • Sangkaew Teahouse, Chiang Rai – May 2026
  • The Nazis of… Indonesia?
  • Ronni Abergel, Co-Founder of The Human Library

Explore

  • Above the Clouds
  • Guides
  • Highlight of the Month
  • Interviews
  • Journals
  • Press Releases
  • Videos

Prepare

  • Book Reviews
  • Pack List
  • Quiz: Geography
  • Quiz: Travel
  • Tour Booking
  • Travel Insurance
  • Travel Products

Share

  • Contribute
  • Forums
  • Links
  • Photos

About

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Contributors
  • Email Dave
  • Media Coverage
  • Media Kit
Hi I'm Dave. After a life changing trip in 1996, I began this site as a creative outlet to educate, inspire and share travel experiences. Read more...
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • Vimeo
  • YouTube

Return to top of page
Copyright © 1996–2026 Dave's Travel Corner · All Rights Reserved · Log in

7ads6x98y