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12 Offbeat Travel Ideas For 2013
My annual New Year's Eve tradition is to reflect on all the places I visited during the year and plot out where I want to go in the New Year. 2012 was a banner travel year for my family because we put all of our things in storage for five months and traveled extensively in Europe and North America. We gorged ourselves on donuts and thought we got scammed in Western New York's Amish Country, learned how to flatfoot on Virginia's Crooked Road, were heckled and intimidated at a soccer game in Italy, and drank homemade wine with the only two residents of the village of San Michalis, on the Greek island of Syros.Gallery: 12 Offbeat Travel Ideas for 2013
For those of you who have made resolutions to hit the road in 2013, here are 12 travel experiences and destinations, most of them a little or very offbeat, that I highly recommend.
12. Donut Crawl in Western New York's Amish CountryUnlike Lancaster County and other more well known Amish areas around the country, Cattaraugus County's Amish Trail is a place where you can experience Amish culture, and let's be honest here – candy and donuts – without all the tourists and kitsch. I love the Amish donuts so much that I went in January and again in July. Because there aren't many tourists in this region, you'll find that many of the Amish who live here are just as curious about you as you are about them.
11. Soak Up Colonial Era History in Marblehead, Massachusetts
I've been visiting family members in Marblehead for nearly 20 years and I never get tired of this beautifully preserved, quintessential New England town. Marblehead gets a steady trickle of day-trippers from Boston – but don't make that mistake – book a B & B in this town and dive into one of America's most historic towns for a full weekend.
10. Save The Turtles, Eat the Fish Tacos and Ride The Waves in Safe, Scenic San Pancho, Mexico
If you want a low-key beach vacation in Mexico but aren't into big resorts or large cities, look no further than San Pancho, which is only an hour from the Puerto Vallarta airport. It's about as safe as Mayberry, and you can volunteer to help preserve marine turtles, eat the best fish tacos you've ever had and surf and frolic on a huge, spectacular beach.
9. Visit Gangi, Italy's Most Charming Hill Town You've Never Heard OfItaly is filled with enchanting hill towns, but many of them are besieged with tourists. If you want to check out a lovely hill town in Sicily's interior that hasn't changed much in centuries, check out Gangi, where you'll find everything you could want in an Italian hill town: a perfect central piazza, a medieval street plan you will get lost in, and perhaps the world's best gelato at the Seminara Bar (no relation to me).
8. Eat the Real Black Forest Ham in Historic Freiburg, GermanyFreiburg is a gorgeous, highly underrated city in Germany's Black Forest region that is a pedestrian and gourmand dream. Here in the U.S., companies can get away with calling any old ham "Black Forest ham" but in Freiburg, you can sample the real deal and you will taste the difference.
7. Discover Old Time Music on Virginia's Crooked Road
Southwest Virginia has a 253-mile music heritage trail that's a glorious little slice of Americana where you'll find terrific homespun music played by passionate locals who have Old Time Music in their blood. Don't miss venues like the Fries Theater and the Floyd Country Store and bring your dancing shoes.
6. Check Out Evita Peron's Ride at Italy's New Ferrari MuseumI'm not even a car buff, but I loved visiting the new Enzo Ferrari Museum in Modena, a picture-postcard small city in Emilia-Romagna, near Parma, that doesn't get nearly as many tourists as it deserves. The museum pays tribute to the founder of Ferrari, who was born in the house next to the museum, and the automotive heritage of the Motor Valley, home to Ferrari, Maserati, Lamborghini, Ducati and other companies that make vehicles suitable for rap stars, professional athletes and others who like to be noticed.
5. Eat at the World's Best Greek Restaurant in San Michalis, Syros, Population:2
Syros is just a short ferry ride away from Mykonos but it gets only a tiny fraction of the tourists and I'm not sure why. It's a gorgeous little island, with a thriving port, great beaches and To Plakostroto the best Greek restaurant I've ever been to, located in a striking, end-of-the-world village where you can see six neighboring islands.
4. Experience Bluegrass Nirvana at the Rosine Barn Jamboree in Kentucky
Every Friday night from March through early December, local musicians gather to jam at an old barn and general store in Rosine, Kentucky, the tiny little town where Bill Monroe, the father of bluegrass music was born. This might be the best free music jam in the whole country and best of all, the regulars are the sweetest people you will ever meet.
3. Patmos & Samos Not Santorini and MykonosI'm obsessed with the Greek Isles. If I could spend my holidays in just one place anywhere in the world, it might be here. But I get a little frustrated by the fact that most Americans visit only Santorini & Mykonos. Both places are undeniably beautiful, but there are dozens of less expensive, less crowded islands that are just as nice. Patmos and Samos, in the eastern Aegean, are absolutely gorgeous and aren't as crowded or expensive. Samos is known for its wine & honey, while Patmos is home to one of the most interesting monasteries in Greece.
2. Eat an Obama Pasticciotto in Italy's HeelThe fact that Salento, a peninsula in Italy's heel, has a chocolaty, gooey desert named after President Obama is just one reason to visit this very special but relatively off-the-radar part of Italy. Lecce is a baroque dream, a lively place with a great passegiata, unforgettable food and wine, very friendly people and fine beaches in the vicinity.
1. Make Friends in Valletta, Malta
I had but one day in Valletta and I spent a big chunk of it trying to track down a retired Maltese civil servant who chided me for misrepresenting the country at a school model U.N. in 1986, but I saw enough of this city to want more. Valletta is a heartbreakingly picturesque port, with gently decaying sandstone buildings, warm people, dramatic Mediterranean vistas and artery-clogging pastizzis, which were my favorite treat of 2012.
Filed under: Europe, North America, Germany, Greece, Italy, Malta, United States













Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Shellie Leete Jan 2nd 2013 6:31PM
We are #7!
Come on out and visit The Crooked Road: Virginia's Heritage Music trail which begins here in Rocky Mount Virginia. Franklin County has more wing dings than any other along this trail. We also have more moonshine... or so it goes (see the movie LAWLESS about our claim to fame)
Your innkeeper at The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast, yes and "Joe Wilson Slept here" creator of this music trail, and recommended us in his Guide to the Crooked Road. Pg 43
http://www.claibornehouse.net/sites-of-interest/area-music-events
Nickiope Jan 3rd 2013 5:44AM
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phuket sailing Jan 3rd 2013 5:31AM
Very nice photos and videos you have picked ... Also I like your information Thanks for sharing such a beautiful article....
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Walking holidays in Europe Jan 3rd 2013 8:31AM
Abstraction of a place means external view of any place becomes a first matter of attraction in holidays. thanks for providing a nice abstract view here.
Anthony The Travel Tart Mar 8th 2013 8:08AM
Cool travel tips, and I'm keen to try these out myself. But I've got 52 Offbeat Travel Tips ;P Check them out here! http://www.thetraveltart.com/52-perfect-offbeat-travel-tips/