Oh, I see! moments
Travel Cultures Language

Travel Adventures with a Heartfelt Focus

by Meredith Mullins on May 29, 2017

A cheetah in Namibia, the result of Suzi Eszterhas wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

The beauty of a cheetah in motion in Namibia
© Suzi Eszterhas

Wildlife Photography that Makes a Difference

Focus is a word that comes to mind when talking about Suzi Eszterhas. Not just because it’s a clever— albeit overused—pun that pops up in photography circles, but because Suzi was focused at an early age on what she wanted in life.

Not too many six-year-olds know what their future will hold. Suzi did. Travel adventures were her destiny. She knew she would be a wildlife photographer.

Suzi Eszterhas, a master of wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

Suzi Eszterhas: Patience, Drive, and Passion
© Jak Wonderly

Obsession Can Be a Good Thing

Her family lived a suburban life in Northern California; and, she remembers, her parents weren’t that interested in nature, although they were devoted to rescue animals so the family had a menagerie of dogs and cats.

Since Suzi felt a magnetic and magical pull toward wildlife, she set out to find her own way.

Koala and baby, the result of Suzi Eszterhas wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

Who doesn’t love koalas?
© Suzi Eszterhas

She plastered her bedroom walls with pictures of animals (Ranger Rick décor). She hunted nature documentaries on television. She studied the behavior of squirrels and deer in the open space of her backyard and spied on the skunks and raccoons outside at night.

She became a serious bird watcher at age 8, with field guides in hand. She took notes, drew pictures, and kept journals of bird behavior.

Red-legged honey creeper in Costa Rica, the result of Suzi Eszterhas wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

An early love of birds turns exotic (Red-legged
honeycreeper in Costa Rica).
© Suzi Eszterhas

She started feeding the birds that came to her yard and collected books with different recipes for different species. She even convinced her mother to take her to local nature preserves to expand her natural world.

These early childhood obsessions taught her patience—waiting for animals to show special moments of their hidden lives. She also learned the importance of research to understand animal behavior.

Grizzly Bear in Katmai National Park in Alaska, a result of Suzi Eszterhas wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

Suzi quickly expanded her boundaries beyond her own back yard (Katmai National Park in Alaska).
© Suzi Eszterhas

Photographing the Beauty of Animal Family Life

Over the years, Suzi stayed true to her destiny, fueled by an innate drive. She soon became a successful wildlife photographer, specializing in the family life of endangered species, particularly the compelling behavior of the young animals.

“What I live and breathe is wildlife and the experiences I have with these animals,” she says. It’s much more about the wildlife than about the photography. Baby animals have always spoken to me.”

Why is she so passionate about documenting animals’ family life?

“There’s a pattern of vulnerability and innocence in what I’m trying to capture—the beauty and rawness of that innocence and vulnerability. There’s no better way to capture that than between mothers and their young or sibling relationships. I was always moved by the younger animals.”

A Sumatran Orangutan baby, the result of Suzi Eszterhas wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

Sumatran Orangutan: Innocence and Vulnerability
© Suzi Eszterhas

Africa . . . Here I Come

Suzi told her parents when she was a child that she wanted to live in a tent in Africa. They thought it was a passing phase. It was a phase, in truth—but a phase that lasted into her adult life.

The dream was realized when she lived in the Masai Mara in Kenya for three years photographing cheetah families, then moving on to lions, hyenas, jackals and bat-eared foxes.

Cheetah cubs in the Masai Mara, the result of Suzi Eszterhas wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

Patience was key in this portrait of cheetah
cubs in the Masai Mara.
© Suzi Eszterhas

She set up camp, built relationships with the locals, respected the culture, learned the language, and created unique opportunities for her photography, such as working with the anti-poaching team and the park officials.

Travel adventures became a part of her regular routine—in exotic locations and often unforgiving environments around the world.

She has fought her way out of an attempted kidnapping and has been stung by jellyfish, stranded on a deserted island, nearly arrested for poaching, and hobbled by a run through the jungle chasing chimps (foot injury).

A Ugandan jungle provided surprises every day, including bee swarms and being greeted one morning by a tick in her nose.

She rose to these challenges and let her passion be her guide.

Ugandan chimpanzee, the result of Suzi Eszterhas wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

The Ugandan chimps move quickly through the dense jungle.
© Suzi Eszterhas

A Modern-Day Explorer

“I think some of my trips where I rough it are really hard core, but then I read things about the early explorers and see how unbelievably harsh and unforgiving the environment can be,” Suzi says. “My life, my job, seems mundane, easy by comparison. I don’t even know what harsh is, what roughing it is.”

In comparison with the early explorers, what she says is true. But she perhaps underestimates her bravery, her drive, and her ability to adapt to foreign cultures and rugged lands. Her life is anything but mundane.

Adelie Penguin on Paulet Island, Antarctica, the result of Suzi Eszterhas wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

Unforgiving environments around the world
(Paulet Island, Antarctica)
© Suzi Eszterhas

She often travels alone, but depends on local guides and researchers to help her learn about the animals and environment where she is photographing, as well as to spot the animals.

She is also experienced enough now to know that an investment of time is paramount, whether she’s in a remote forest, a tangled jungle, or a sweeping savanna.

A California harbor seal and pup, the result of Suzi Eszterhas wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

A California harbor seal and pup
© Suzi Eszterhas

She knows that in-depth work yields the best results and makes her images unique in the competitive world. She often devotes her time to a single species, for example working three seasons photographing harbor seal pupping.

Or she invests the time needed to wait for the birth of the young, to watch the young animals grow up and learn the ways of the world, or just to gain the trust of the animals.

Lion cub meeting his father, the result of Suzi Eszterhas wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

A seven-week wait for this image of a lion cub meeting his father for the first time.
© Suzi Eszterhas

“In most of my work, the animals know I’m there and have accepted my presence,” she says.

“I would never intentionally harass an animal. Ever. They are individual beings with feelings. I need to work with them in a manner that they no longer pay attention to me and they trust that I’m not going to hurt them. ”

Sometimes this takes a while to achieve. Her record is 17 days—the time it took her to acclimate a jackal family to her presence. She moved closer and closer to the den, all the while being sensitive to how the animals were responding. She took no photos until the 18th day.

She knows that, if the animals are stressed, they might move their babies, which could be dangerous to their health and safety.

Jackal pups in the Masai Mara, the result of Suzi Eszterhas wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

Black-backed jackal pups in the Masai Mara
© Suzi Eszterhas

Oh, I See

For Suzi, the “Oh, I see” moments are born from the amazing behavior of the animals she is studying, particularly the powerful family interactions. She adds to those experiences her ability to capture the power and beauty of nature.

“Nature makes it easy to bring art into the photographs. Nature itself is painting with light and color and texture. It makes people feel something.”

A mountain gorilla in Rwanda, the result of Suzi Eszterhas wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

A nature painting: Mountain gorilla in Rwanda
© Suzi Eszterhas

She supports several conservation groups by raising funds and awareness and offers free photography workshops for teen girls to encourage them to enter the male-dominated field of wildlife photography.

She has also created a nursery print series and books for children—Wildlife Rescue series, Moto and Me, and Baby Animals (coming this fall)—so that children (even babies and toddlers) will have access to these special moments.

California sea otter and newborn baby, the result of Suzi Eszterhas wildlife photography and travel adventures. (Image © Suzi Eszterhas.)

A California sea otter and her newborn
© Suzi Eszterhas

Her overarching mission is to bring these amazing animals into people’s homes so that future generations can be empowered and inspired by the beauty of the wild and the exhilaration of dramatic travel adventures. The imagery is a powerful tool. The ultimate goal is to bring awareness to the importance of protecting these rare treasures and their habitats for years to come.

With Suzi’s focus, drive, and passion, this mission (and the story of her destiny) continues to unfold. We are fortunate that the story has the promise of a good ending.

Follow Suzi Eszterhas’s work and workshop schedule on this site and Facebook page. You may also wish to follow the organizations she supports: the Cheetah Conservation Fund, Wildlife Conservation Network, Tiger Time, Sloth Conservaton Foundation, Orangutan Foundation International, and The Center for Animal Protection and Education. 

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here.

Best Trips: Zagreb

by Joyce McGreevy on May 22, 2017

The beautiful entrance of the Moderna Galerija in Croatia’s capital shows why one of the best trips you can take is in one of Europe’s most underrated travel destinations, Zagreb. (Image © Joyce McGreevy)

Zagreb’s details delight the eye.
© Joyce McGreevy

Lingering in Croatia’s Capital

Do your neighbors include dragons, Romantic poets, and the ghost of Nikolas Tesla?  If so, you must be in Zagreb—one of Europe’s most underrated travel destinations.

Croatia’s capital is one of the best trips you can take without dreaming. A place where you exit a museum on a three-story slide, check the time by the noon cannon, and stroll through a traditional market that featured in a Jackie Chan movie.

Zagreb is not your average city.

Not average for Europe, or even Croatia. In a country the size of West Virginia, yet adorned by fantastical islands, parks, and villages, Zagreb is a singular sensation—a zany, zingy experience that specializes in zest for life.

St Mark’s Church in Croatia’s capital shows why one of the best trips you can take is in one of Europe’s most underrated travel destinations, Zagreb. (Image © Joyce McGreevy)

Often rebuilt and renovated during its 800 years, iconic St. Mark’s Church outlasted
fire, earthquake, war, and 18th century plans for demolition.
© Joyce McGreevy

Zigzagging to Zagreb

Many travelers bypass Croatia’s capital for Dubrovnik or Split. For others, it’s a layover. But you’ve opted to linger.  Never mind that you’ve been told you could easily do Zagreb in a day.

Superficially, that’s true, given Zagreb’s compact scale. No sooner do you set out from your elegant but affordable apartment than an avenue as broad and welcoming as a hug guides you into the heart of Ban Jelačić, the city’s central square. No GPS required.

Iconic blue trams glide by. The red umbrellas of the Dolac Market blossom like poppies. You are encircled by an architectural timeline of Zagreb’s tumultuous history:  its medieval emergence, its flowering under the Austro-Hungarian empire, the decadent charms of Art Nouveau.

The Dolac Market in Croatia’s capital shows why one of the best trips you can take is in one of Europe’s most underrated travel destinations, Zagreb. (Image © iStock/ paulprescott72)

“The Belly of Zagreb,” Dolac Market has been feeding locals and visitors since 1926.
© paulprescott72/ iStock

History at a Glance

The panorama from a nearby skyscraper fills in many gaps. You see Communist functionalism and the shimmer of new hotels, contrasts separated in time by the breakup of Yugoslavia, five years of bitter conflict with Serbia, and Croatia’s optimistic entry into the European Union.

Returning to street level, you still have time to wander the cobblestone streets of Gornji Grad (Upper Town) before first nightfall.

Yes, you could see Zagreb in a day—the same way you could see “all” of New York from Times Square or the Empire State Building.

But for one of the best trips, take your time. Because as Zagreb becomes more familiar, it also becomes more fascinating.

Oh, I see:  The longer you explore Zagreb, the more there is to discover.

The Botanic Garden in Croatia’s capital shows why one of the best trips you can take is in one of Europe’s most underrated travel destinations, Zagreb. (Image © Joyce McGreevy)

Hidden in plain sight, Zagreb’s 11-acre Botanic Garden is a downtown paradise.
© Joyce McGreevy

Here Comes the Sun

See that big bronze orb on Bogovićeva Street? Many tourists take selfies beside it, or alas, scratch their names on it. This is Ivan Kozaric’s 1971 sculpture, “The Grounded Sun.”

Fewer know that 30 years later, Davor Preis quietly placed nine models of planets around Zagreb to complete the solar system. He even stayed true to scale. “Earth,” for example, is ¾ of an inch in size and 4.78 miles away from Kozaric’s sun.

Ivan Kozaric's "The Grounded Sun" in Croatia’s capital shows why one of the best trips you can take is in one of Europe’s most underrated travel destinations, Zagreb. (Image © Joyce McGreevy)

It’s always sunny on Bogovićeva street.
© Joyce McGreevy

Against All Odds

Likewise, photographers flock to Zagreb Cathedral. Some even step inside. If they lingered, they might learn something surprising.

Zagreb Cathedral in Croatia’s capital shows why one of the best trips you can take is in one of Europe’s most underrated travel destinations, Zagreb. (Image © Joyce McGreevy)

Zagreb Cathedral has a surprising connection to “Sin City.”
© Joyce McGreevy

High above centuries of artwork hang three massive chandeliers. Donated by Croatian American Stefan Stankić, those lights once illuminated the Gold Coast Casino in Las Vegas.

The story goes that when parishioners expressed concern about mixing the glitzy with the godly, a senior clergyman suggested they install the lights “temporarily.” Years later, that story is a testament to the miracle of a safe bet.

The interior of Zagreb Cathedral in Croatia’s capital shows why one of the best trips you can take is in one of Europe’s most underrated travel destinations, Zagreb. (Image © Joyce McGreevy)

What happened in Zagreb stayed in Zagreb . . .
© Joyce McGreevy

Croatia’s Workplace Creatives

Zagreb invented many emblems of office life, including the necktie. In the 17th century, Croatian soldiers serving in France sported elegant red scarves. Fashion-conscious Parisians dubbed the accessory cravate, a corruption of Croate.

Zagreb made its mark in other ways, too.  The mechanical pencil and fountain pen are named for their Croatian inventor, Eduard Penkala.

A Guard of Honor of the Cravat Regiment inspired a fashion in Croatia's capital, Zagreb, one of Europe's most underrated travel destination. (Image © The Zagreb Tourist Board/ Marko Vrdoljak)

From officer’s cravat to office staple: Honor Guards
of the Cravat Regiment started a trend.
© The Zagreb Tourist Board/ Marko Vrdoljak

Croatian Coffee Culture

Don’t look to Zagrebians for workplace efficiency in coffee culture. Croatians pity us Americans as we rush along toting our outsized paper cups, or isolate ourselves in public behind the barriers of our laptops.

In Zagreb, coffee is about social connection and savoring time.  Allow 2-3 hours per cup and Never sip alone are the unspoken rules.

On Saturdays coffee culture is elevated to a social ritual known as Špica. You dress fashionably to do your errands, then meet your friends and hold court, choosing from hundreds of cafés. Some streets, like Tkalčićeva, are almost entirely comprised of cafés, each one a buzzing hive of conversation.

The cafés of Tkalčićeva Street in Croatia’s capital show why one of the best trips you can take is in one of Europe’s most underrated travel destinations, Zagreb. (Image © csfotoimages/ iStock)

Tkalčićeva, like many streets in Zagreb, is lined with cafés.
© csfotoimages/ iStock

Statuary Citizens

Watching over these proceedings are the statuary citizens of Zagreb, so numerous they’ve got their own walking tours. Dragons, lions, and gargoyles abound, enough stone animals to rival the city’s zoo.

There’s even a tribute to a stray dog.  Adopted by a construction crew in 1897, “Pluto” died defending the site from thieves. Workers were so grief-stricken they commissioned a memorial. Hidden in a private courtyard for over a century, the plaque was moved to a central location in 2013.

A moving memorial to a stray dog is beloved in in pet-friendly Zagreb, one of Europe's most underrated travel destinations. (Image © Joyce McGreevy)

Architect Josip Vancaš’ memorial to a stray dog is beloved in Zagreb,
where pets are welcome in many establishments.
© Joyce McGreevy

Then there’s Nikola Tesla. Born during a Croatian electrical storm, the “Inventor of the Electrical Age” brought alternating current to the world. Tesla also conceptualized—in 1901—what eventually became the smartphone.

Tesla’s spirit lives on as a secular patron saint of Zagreb’s intellectualism. You encounter his likeness throughout the city.

Ivan Meštrović's statue of Nikola Tesla in Croatia’s capital shows why one of the best trips you can take is in one of Europe’s most underrated travel destinations, Zagreb. (Image © Sergio Delle Vedove/ iStock)

“Meeting you has been a burning desire of mine ,” wrote Tesla to artist Ivan Meštrović
in 1924. Croatia’s greatest scientist & most celebrated sculptor became friends for life.
© Sergio Delle Vedove/ iStock

Every bookstore has a Tesla section. (Oh yes, in a city of free wifi, bookstores remain popular.) There’s also a technology museum named for Tesla.

Zagreb in Miniature

Speaking of museums, compact Zagreb boasts 37 of them. Mycology fans cluster in the Mushroom Museum. Kids walk upside down at the Museum of Illusions. There’s even something for the lovelorn, the Museum of Broken Relationships. Launched in Zagreb, it has added an outpost in Los Angeles.

The honor of most lovable  museum goes to the Backo Mini Express, tucked away on Gundulićeva Street. Painstakingly created by model train enthusiasts, it is best seen after you explore the city. That way you’ll experience a sudden thrill of recognition—the modelers have re-created Zagreb locations in miniature.

A model railroad at Backo Mini Express in Croatia’s capital shows why one of the best trips you can take is in one of Europe’s most underrated travel destinations, Zagreb. (Image © Joyce McGreevy)

Backo Mini Express is the biggest model railway in southeast Europe.
© Joyce McGreevy

Never  Long Enough

Yet even in miniature, Zagreb defies the mind’s ability to take it all in. Yes, you could “do” Zagreb in a day, but a lifetime would never be enough.

August Šenoa, lover of all things Zagrebian, knew this all too well. Shortly before the Romantic poet and novelist passed away, he declared, “But I have so much more to write!” Leaving Zagreb on a Saturday morning as locals gather in cafés, you understand how Šenoa felt.

Because Zagreb—one of Europe’s most underrated travel destinations—is not your average city.

A statue of poet August Senoa in Croatia’s capital shows why one of the best trips you can take is in one of Europe’s most underrated travel destinations, Zagreb. (Image © Joyce McGreevy)

Portrayed standing nonchalantly on the street where he was born,
August Šenoa is credited with inspiring Croatians’ love of reading.
© Joyce McGreevy

Ride the slide at Zagreb’s Museum of Contemporary Art, here

Relive Jackie Chan’s 1987 “tour” of Zagreb, here

See Zagreb’s Backo Mini Express, here

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here

Travel Adventures in the Friendly(?) Skies

by Meredith Mullins on May 15, 2017

Plane flying through clouds, offering travel adventures and air travel stories of the memorable kind. (Image © Artem Tryhub/iStock.)

Travel adventures of the aerial kind
© Artem Tryhub/iStock

Air Travel Stories to Remember

Air travel customer disasters have peppered the news lately.

A passenger was dragged off an overbooked United flight, a fist fight erupted between two Southwest Airlines passengers, a woman was hit with her baby’s stroller as an American Airlines flight attendant tried to wrestle it away from her. The flight attendant later said “Bring it on” to a passenger who tried to intervene on the woman’s behalf.

We tend to remember the horror stories—the headline makers as well as the travel adventures we have suffered through personally.

Man yelling at checkin, showing that travel adventures are not always pleasant and air travel stories do not always end well. (Image © Eyecandy Images.)

Haven’t we all felt this way at one point in our air travel lives?
© Eyecandy Images

There is no shortage of such tales in a world where millions of people fly each day. There are bound to be some hitches.

What comes to mind when you’re asked to recount your worst air travel stories?

For me . . .

  • The time I was captive at Chicago’s O’Hare for three days (sleeping on the baggage claim conveyor belt) because a storm had halted all air traffic (and, for that matter, all traffic to and from the airport) and the airport hotels were full.
  • The time I raced for a connection on Christmas Eve only to see my plane slowly backing out of the gate without me.
  • Or the time I was halfway across the Atlantic from Europe to the U.S. when a passenger fell ill and the medical decision was made to retrace our path back to Europe. “What about Iceland?” I thought. “Why go backwards, not forwards?” But I could not argue with the idea of making a sick passenger the priority.
Flight Departures Board, showing the potential for travel adventures and air travel stories. (Image © AdaptDesign Advertising/iStock.)

The departure board that strikes fear in the heart
© AdaptDesign Advertising/iStock

The travel truth is that we depend on the magic of the airplane to take us to far-flung corners of the world. It is often our chariot to great travel adventures. And quite often the adventure begins on the plane.

The Glass Half Full

Instead of remembering the nightmares, let’s remember the best of times—the “Oh, I See” moments that have lasting meaning.

Girl by mother looking at pilot, showing how travel adventures and air travel stories begin. (Image © David De Lossy/Photodisc.)

There are many ways that airlines make children feel at home.
© David De Lossy/Photodisc

For example, the crew who went out of their way to make the children on board feel comfortable, the steely-eyed pilot who greeted us at the door whom we know will get us to our destination safely, the awe-inspiring moments looking out over the majesty of the planet, and the sheer miracle of human flight.

As comedian Louis C.K. put it, “Everybody on every plane should be going OMG! Wow! We’re sitting in a chair in the sky!

View of Alps from airplane window, offering travel adventures and air travel stories that inspire us. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

The grandeur of our planet (flying higher than the Alps)
© Meredith Mullins

Favorite Air Travel Adventures

What comes to mind when you think of your favorite air travel moments?

My most treasured air travel adventures span the globe—from Nepal to the Seychelle Islands to the California Coast.

On a Wing and a Prayer

When flying out of the Lukla airport, the nearest airstrip to the Everest Base Camp in Nepal, you learn the meaning of fear. (If you’re trekking into Lukla, you must step over the wreckage of a plane embedded in the land; but, in reality, plane accidents have been rare.)

The airport, which dangles on the edge of a mountain, is considered the most dangerous in the world. The runway is only 527 meters long (about six football fields).

Tenzing-Hillary airport in Lukla, offering travel adventures and air travel stories of a lifetime. (Image © Vernacht/iStock.)

The most dangerous airport in the world
© Vernacht/iStock

On landing, the pilots of the twin-engine planes must be perfect in their approach. On takeoff, you just hope that the engine doesn’t stall at the end of the runway, because it’s a Himalayan drop to the chasm below.

Plane landing at Lukla Airport, offering travel adventures and air travel stories to remember for a lifetime. (Image © je33a/iStock.)

Landings at Lukla must be perfect. There is no way to abort if something goes awry.
© je33a/iStock

When the weather clears for flying (a somewhat rare occurrence that high in the mountains), the small planes come in quickly from Kathmandu, one after the other. The landings and take-offs are orchestrated to take advantage of the narrow window of good visibility. Clouds, rain, snow, and fog can come at any moment.

The nervous crowd at the airport waits in anticipation, hoping that they will find a seat on one of the 14-seater planes of the day (and trying to keep their mind off the short runway).

Once the action starts, there is barely time for passengers to generate the appropriate amount of anxiety. Things happen quickly.

Runway at Lukla airport, offering travel adventures and air travel stories to remember for a lifetime. (Image © Photon Photos.)

All clear, for one brief shining moment
© Photon Photos

On the morning I was leaving, after a fog delay of several hours, the weather miraculously cleared. I was hurried to my plane, wrapped in a prayer scarf for good luck, and whoosh! We soared off the mountain into the sun and the glory of the Himalaya.

It was an experience of a lifetime.

The Himalaya from a plane to Kathmandu Nepal, offering travel adventures and air travel stories for a lifetime. (Image © Dutourdemonde/iStock.)

There’s nothing quite like soaring through the Himalaya.
© Dutourdemonde/iStock

Thumbs Up

Pilots can often be friendly, but when you’re on a six-seater hopping to the smaller islands in the Seychelles, you are part of a select crowd.

I have fond memories of my travel in those paradise islands, particularly a flight to Fregate Island. The check-in and boarding process was simple. It was all done by the pilot.

I was weighed (together with my luggage). I walked to the plane with the pilot.

Seychelles Island cockpit, offering travel adventures and air travel stories for a lifetime. (Image © Lehnhoff/iStock.)

Just me and my pilots on the way to Fregate in the Seychelles.
© Lehnhoff/iStock

I sat just behind the cockpit, so it was easy to keep tabs on him (and the co-pilot) as he went through the checklist. And just before takeoff, he turned to me and gave me a thumbs up and a smile.

I knew I was in good hands.

A Whale of an Adventure

I often make the trip on the smaller planes that fly from the Monterey Peninsula to San Francisco. These commuter flights are part of the normal rhythm of the area.

View of Monterey Bay, California, offering travel adventures and air travel stories to remember. (Image © Santalechuga/iStock.)

Monterey Bay, California
© Santalechuga/iStock

But on one of my travel days a few years ago in January, the pilot made an unexpected turn over the Monterey Bay. It appeared we were headed back to the airport. I cursed under my breath, immediately thinking of missed connections and everything else that follows from a delayed travel start.

Instead, the pilot was making a quick detour for a marine biology expedition. He had spotted a pod of whales in the Monterey Bay and wanted us all to take a moment to appreciate the grandness of nature.

Gray whale in the Monterey Bay, offering travel adventures and air travel stories to remember. (Image © Raingirl/iStock.)

A whale of a detour
© Raingirl/iStock

Travel Adventures of the Memorable Kind

The best travel adventures remain in our memory and heart for a long time. The details stay vibrant, even as time passes.

Flight attendant adjusting a pillow for excellent customer service, offering travel adventures and air travel stories worth remembering. (Image © Digital Vision.)

Is this a dream, or does this really happen these days?
© Digital Vision

Now, every time I hear of an airline customer-service disaster or experience one myself, I will let my mind visit for a moment the Lukla airstrip, linger with the smiling Seychelle twin-engine pilot, and imagine again the grandeur of a pod of whales swimming far below as the miracle of human flight unfolds.

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here.

Copyright © 2011-2025 OIC Books   |   All Rights Reserved   |   Privacy Policy