Travel bug?  Find out how bad you have it.

The travel bug will take you to Kaieteur Falls in Guyana.

Ever wondered how seriously you are afflicted with the travel bug?  Although there is no grading,  this  test will make the answer very clear.

You met your spouse:

    1. In grade school.
    2. During Happy Hour at Applebee’s
    3. While being held hostage by the Taliban.

You lost your virginity at:

    1. Seventeen.
    2. A fraternity party.
    3. 30,000 feet.

You have considered converting all your assets to:

  1. Gold
  2. Bit coin.
  3. Frequent flyer miles.

The first words you learn in any language are:

  1. Hello
  2. Thank you.
  3. I’d like a  room farther from the gunfire.

You would be least willing to give up your:

  1. Money.
  2. Life.
  3. Passport.

The place you’ve lived longest is:

  1. The town where you were born.
  2. The town you settled in after college.
  3. Chicago O’Hare, Terminal 5.

You’d never rent a car:

  1. Without getting collision coverage.
  2. In Afghanistan.
  3. You couldn’t sleep in.

Trusting your gut is:

  1. Almost always the right decision.
  2. Usually safer than trusting your government’s Travel Advisories.
  3. A mistake you’ve made in restaurants that cater to backpackers.

Your favorite souvenirs are:

  1. T-shirts.
  2. Refrigerator magnets.
  3. Conversations with strangers.

You always carry:

  1. A spare tube of moisturizer.
  2. About 5 extra pounds, 10 if a buffet is offered.
  3. A list of countries that have no extradition treaty with your own.

The bills and coins tucked away in your underwear drawer add up to:

  1. A tidy nest egg.
  2. Evidence.
  3. A total of $2.34 in 17 currencies.

You would like your obituary to say you died:

  1. In your sleep.
  2. Surrounded by a loving family.
  3. Aboard a flight that went down between Tahiti and Bora Bora.

Your favorite travel companions:

  1. Always pay their fair share.
  2. Don’t mind taking the middle seat.
  3. Are imaginary.

Your most memorable experience at a tropical beach resort involved a:

  1. Romantic interlude.
  2. Luxury spa.
  3. Tsunami warning.

You immediately recognized the photo at the top of the blog, which Bobcarrieson.com editor in chief Bob Payne took in 2009, as:

  1. Niagara Falls, New York
  2. Sioux Falls, Iowa
  3. Kaieteur Falls, Guyana

 

 

The most worthwhile souvenir? Old license plates.

Virgin Islands license plate

While it is true that I own the world’s largest private collection of McDonald’s placemats in foreign languages, I’ve always felt that the only souvenirs worth collecting are conversations with strangers.

More than anything else you can bring back from a journey, conversations in far places help answer the two questions every traveler should ask: How are the people here different from me? How are they the same? When you know the answers, you have begun to help diminish the lack of understanding that is the source of much of the trouble in the world, and perhaps even unlock the mystery of why knock-knock jokes are nearly universal.

I now realize, however, that there is one more souvenir that can prove worthwhile to many returned travelers: the old license plate.

Perhaps with a dent or two in the metal, perhaps with a bit of rust, old license plates are available in the markets of many nations. Seldom costing more than five or ten dollars, and often thrown in for free if you buy a hand-decorated bong pipe or a life-size wooden carving of a horse, they make interesting keepsakes to hang on the wall above a garage or basement workbench in place of the auto parts calendar, featuring scantily clad “sales reps,” that does not seem as appropriate as it once did.

An old license plate’s value, though, goes far beyond it’s worth as an unusual keepsake. For many Americans, what they are really good for is avoiding parking tickets.

In 19 of the U.S. states, license plates are required only on the rear. In those states, you can put whatever you want on the front. Which is why when I lived in Massachusetts my front plate was from Aruba, and now that I live in Arizona it is from the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Originally, I put on the Aruba plate just for the novelty value. But then, after driving down to New York for a few days, I got a parking ticket that I discovered, to my delight, listed the Aruba plate, but made no mention of the Massachusetts one.

I’d parked in front of a church on East 88th Street (who knew that the fines were double in front of churches?), and had apparently wedged in so tightly that the meter maid couldn’t read the rear plate. So, perhaps in a hurry, perhaps to get to church, she just wrote the ticket on the front plate.

I would have put the experience down to the happy outcome of a freak occurrence, except that a few months later, in Boston, the same thing happened again. I suspected I was on to something, and, over the next few years, by parking as close as possible to the bumper of the car behind me, I saved myself probably a half dozen parking fines.

After a hiatus of a dozen years, from living in New York, which requires plates on the front and back, I recently moved to Arizona, which only makes you have the one in the rear. So when I was in the Virgin Islands a few months ago, while my companions were buying “Don’t bother, I’m not drunk yet – St. Thomas” tee-shirts, I purchased a used license plate that reads: “U.S. Virgin Islands — America’s Caribbean.”

And long after my companions have stopped wondering whatever possessed them to buy their souvenir, I will remember, every time I rip up a ticket and scatter it to the winds, exactly why I came home with mine.

I do admit that attempting to avoid tickets in this manner can have certain drawbacks.

In Arizona, I have noticed, for instance, that every so often, when I back in tight to the car behind me, and then return from whatever errand I have been running, my rear bumper has been banged up by dents that appear to be about the size of  the heel of a cowboy boot.

And once, when I still had my Aruba plate, and was returning to Boston from a weekend in Toronto, U.S. Immigrations detained me for hours while they questioned me, in great detail, about what exactly my connection was with Aruba.

Those drawback, though? Let me tell you, they can result in some very collectible conversations with strangers.

Budget travel group Arthur Frommer Rocks: 2013 Top Ten Places Not to Look For Free Rocks

Economy minded travelers have long known that one secret to staying within your travel budget is to limit your souvenirs to free rocks.

“In addition to the financial savings, the great thing about free rocks is that you can collect them almost anywhere, except of course Plymouth Rock and Ayres Rock, and probably Mount Rushmore, and the Grand Canyon, and the Petrified Forest, and Stonehenge” said Bob Payne, a spokesperson for the rock group Arthur Frommer Rocks.

“Adding to the popularity of collecting free rocks is that unless you employ a jack hammer the environmental impact is relatively small, and it is a low-risk activity, just as long as you don’t fill your pockets and then immediately take an over-water journey,” Payne said.

But recently a problem has arisen for rock-collecting travelers, the Arthur Frommer Rocks spokesperson said. “Unscrupulous tourism promoters have been bringing in rocks from China and trying to pass them off as local.

“Often, the only way you can tell a counterfeit rock is if it has the words ‘For Foreign Tourists’ stamped on it in Chinese characters,” Payne said. “And most vacation travelers are just not interested in exercising that level of scrutiny.”

So for several years now, Arthur Frommer Rocks has been helping those travelers by producing a Top Ten list of places where free rocks are not likely to be the genuine article. Here’s the list for 2013:

Rock City, Tennessee

Warning enough should be that the claim made that seven states can be seen from atop this natural tourist attraction’s well-known lookout point, Lover’s Leap, has been amended to read “seven states and the Great Wall of China.”

Hard Rock Café

Even if you do find a local rock here it is likely to have been chiseled into an arrowhead, which the entertainment chain’s current owner, Florida’s Seminole Indians, may well put a curse on you for removing.

Rocking Horse Ranch

The sight of rocks wearing saddles tells you all you need to know.

Rocky Mountains

Now that recreational use of marijuana has been legalized in Colorado many, visitors to the Rocky Mountains often have trouble distinguishing free rocks from a bag of Jalapeno Cheetos, to the delight of local dentists.

Rock of Gibraltar

The problem here is that there is only one rock, and it is 1,400 feet high, making it much too big to slip inconspicuously into a tote bag.

Rockefeller Plaza

The television comedy series 30 Rock, named after a Rockefeller Plaza address, is scheduled to air its final episode on January 31, 2013, so any authentic rocks that may have been lying around were long ago used as skit material by the show’s head writer, Tina Fey, who is said to be working now on a similar show for the Chinese, tentatively named 30 Lock.

Rock Resorts

Be careful at this group of seven luxury resorts because it’s the old story of the room rates being so high that the free rocks hardly matter

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

When rocks have their own hall of fame, expect poseurs, wannabes, and Chinese counterfeit artists to be everywhere. That said, even a fake Neil Diamond can sometimes make a nice collectible.

When not heading the budget travel group Arthur Frommer Rocks, travel humor writer Bob Payne is the editor in chief of BobCarriesOn.com

Dean Franklin/Wikipedia photo.

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