Summer 2013
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Southward Flight: The Coconut Milk Run
I always wonder why birds choose to stay in the same place when they can fly anywhere on the earth. Then I ask myself the same question.
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Summer 2013 Tales from the Trip
Our essay contest winners share some humorous and insightful travel tales. Enjoy!
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Building Hope in Peru
Ruth was kidnapped when she was nine years old. She had been poor—an orphan child who had spent much of her life scavenging for food in the littered streets of Cusco, Peru. Yet she longed for that life after she was towed five hundred miles away to a brothel outside of Lima. Forced to live a life of horror and condemned to physical and emotional abuse, Ruth was held hostage for more than six years.
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Wanderlust with Words
Drinking fountains, civilian firearms, ethnic diversity—I remember every detail of that first day back in the United States after I had spent 18 months in Eastern Europe. It was the most patriotic day of my life. A month after my return I started school again, and a month after that I got engaged. Another year passed and I was itching to travel the world again. My new wife and I left our desert home for an island vacation in Oahu and then took a 6,000-mile road trip across this sweet land of liberty and back. But that still wasn’t enough. We needed to get abroad! We booked a flight to Moscow and stayed there for four months. And while we were there, we visited Scandinavia and the Baltics.
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Sweden's Midsommar Dream
When most Americans hear about Sweden, they think of Swedish fish, the Muppet chef, and IKEA—but the response from those who have actually been to Sweden is much different. “The word that came to my mind was pristine,” says Leslie Barnts of her first trip to Sweden. “I will never forget it because it was absolutely, hands down, the cleanest of all the countries I saw, and I think I saw 23 European countries that summer. Whether in the city or out in the little villages, it was like being on the earth 300 years ago. . . . Absolutely breathtaking!”
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Kicking the Stereotype: English Food
There’s a saying that goes, “Hell is where the cooks are English.” Some people describe England’s food as bland or icky; others claim that the English eat only fish and chips. You may have heard these rumors, been turned off by dishes like blood pudding, or heard horror stories about Marmite.
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Fire in the Sky
Ever since the Chinese invented pyrotechnics some time before the seventh century, fireworks have been used to celebrate summer holidays and festivals all over the world. But fireworks sometimes scream and burst throughout the sky purely for the thrill of competition.
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