The Adventures of Travel Penguin
Thursday, April 23, 2026
The Thursday Ramble: Culturally Open Minded Travel
About three months ago, Angus in Scotland posted a link to an article about first impressions of life in the United States. The article talked about how visits to the United States impacted the thoughts of visitors from Iran, China and Russia. Reading the article made me think, about how travel changes us. Timely as I am headed out on a grand adventure.
People live differently in different places. The biggest differences are in international travel, though even from region to region within your country you will find differences. Differences in culture, in norms of behaviour, differences in language, the way homes are built, in the way that people live.
There is much to be learned from the differences in culture. To benefit from travel, I need to be culturally open minded. To expect that things will be different. To accept that what is different is normal.
When I travel I suspend judgement. I remind myself that no one way is inferior or superior. This is the hardest thing for most people to do. When I judge another culture against my norm, I fail to understand the culture.
I have learned many things when traveling, that have improved my life. I have tried not to try to change cultures, when I travel. I suspend judgement, and travel with a culturally open mind.
What will I learn on this grand adventure?
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
My World of Wonders April 22nd 2026
Where have I been this week? If all has gone to schedule, we flew to Ft. Lauderdale over the weekend, and went to sea on Monday, we should be nearing Bermuda.
What have I been up to? Exploring the ship, relaxing, reading, taking a few photos.
Who I have I talked to? My sweet bear and strangers. I always talk to strangers.
What am I enjoying? A change of pace, a change of scene, the grand adventure of travel.
What can I see out of my window? Water-Water everywhere.
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Travel Tuesday: Sea Views
Monday, April 20, 2026
Monday Mood: Retreat from a hyper connected world
Today the easiest way to reach me is email, text is a second choice, I am hard to reach by phone as I often leave my phone in the other room and don't hear it, and if you don't show up on caller ID, I don't answer. I check email on my desktop computer, my phone, an Ipad, and a couple of Chromebooks. I spend several hours a day connected to the web, YouTube is my primary media for entertainment.
I probably spend far to much time being connected. And it is hard to get away from.
Starting late this afternoon, I will be disconnected to varying degrees for a month, a retreat from my hyper connected world. In the first couple of weeks there will several days of complete retreat, interspersed with four days when I will be connected for a few hours, but only a few. After that I will have phone service, and WiFi in hotels. Last year we did WiFi at sea and found it disappointing, the service was really not very good, and it didn't provide a break from the connected world, it just moved it a new venue with crappy service. We are not doing that this year. I will have phone and email when we are in Port (my phone plan includes 36 days of year of international service) and on the land based part of the trip.
Just before the sun sets today, my retreat from the hyper connected world begins. Worry not, there are posts scheduled for your reading enjoyment. I will reply to comments when the retreat is over.
My digital detox.
Our Sunday in Ft. Lauderdale
Sunday, April 19, 2026
The Sunday Five: Travel Dreams
1: If there were no limits, where would you go today?
2: Where have you long dreamed of going, that you have not gone to?
3: Apart from where you live, where do you feel most at home?
4: Where have you traveled to the most times?
5: How would you like to travel across the continent?
My answers:
1: If there were no limits, where would you go today? Italy - that is where we leave for tomorrow.
2: Where have you long dreamed of going, that you have not gone to? Japan.
3: Apart from where you live, where do you feel most at home? London.
4: Where have you traveled to the most times? Florida, several times a year when my parents were alive.
5: How would you like to travel across the continent? I would like to drive it, but in very short travel days, maybe 100-150 miles a day average.
Please share your answers in the comments.
Saturday, April 18, 2026
The Saturday Morning Post: Let Change Feed Your Creativity
There are few things that bring more change to our lives than travel, I use travel, and the changes it brings, to feed my creativity. I try to travel with an open mind, looking for what is different, or new to me, and letting that feed my creativity.
This is most notable on grand adventures, but it applies equally to every time we get out of the house, or out of the place we work. Examine what is around you, look for what is changing, what is new, and what is disappearing. Pause for a few minutes and watch a building being torn down, and you will develop new understanding of how buildings are built. What elements stand the strongest, what elements are the most fragile.
I am headed to the airport today, off to feed my creativity.
An update
35000 feet and headed south this afternoon, check in and security were a breeze. Lots of lakes and rivers down there.
Friday, April 17, 2026
Friday Features: Dinosaurs
This is not written by AI. Any mistakes or misstatements of material fact are my own. I was recently asked to provide a statement of AI usage for a book chapter that I wrote on identity theft and cybercrime (the book should go to print this summer.) Other than spelling and grammar tools in Google Docs, I used none. The editor seemed surprised by this. Maybe I will learn to use those tools, but I learned to write the old fashioned way.
I struggled with this post. The Muses seem to have left on the grand adventure a few weeks ahead of me. Inspiration has been hard to find. I had this post written, and left it to fester for a couple of days, and it hit me that the best part of it, was what was buried in the middle. I can hear a long ago editor shouting across the room, "don't bury the lead, put it first." I am so glad I learned from writers who knew how to write, even if it took 50 years for me to apply some of the lessons. (Dave Snoffer, you made a difference in your far to few years.)













