A week in the life of a travel writer

Friday, January 23, 2009
David meeting the locals
"I feel like crying and wonder if there are any shops open that might sell big coats and furry hats. There aren't."
Topics:
View Weird listWeird

Ninemsn contributor and travel journalist David Whitley gives his own version of a week in the life of a travel writer…



Sunday

Day spent trip-planning. Have articles to write on Spain, France, Monaco and Morocco and somehow have to pull them all together in one trip. This involves interminable negotiations in three languages I don't speak with five separate tourist boards, booking flights from odd airports at ungodly hours and praying that it all comes off. Please let the tourist boards offer me free hotel rooms and please don't let them fill every minute of the day with guided tours of really boring places that no-one would want to read about.

Monday

Currently researching a guide to James Bond film locations across the world. Getting the info on where is easy enough, the problem is needing to know what happens in each film. And that means watching every single bloody Bond movie, all 21 of the buggers, in the space of a fortnight. Today it's Licence to Kill and The Living Daylights.

Conclude that Timothy Dalton was a somewhat underrated 007, then set about finding out exactly which place doubled as the Mujahideen hideout in Afghanistan. It's Morocco, apparently.

Google my own name, partly to see if anyone's printed my stories yet and partly out of sheer vanity.

Tuesday

I've been putting it off for ages, but at some point I'm going to have to write that 2500 words on a stunningly average Italian city that I felt about as much affection for as I do for rocket salad.

Just a few vitally important things to do first ... like read every newspaper on the Internet, do some shopping, clean the bathroom, watch the entire fourth series of Peep Show on DVD, Google my own name seven times, book a random flight to Lithuania. Damn. How did it get to 7pm?

Watch Roger Moore mug his way through Octopussy and The Man with the Golden Gun.

Wednesday

My editor wants a piece on wacky theme parks around the world. I hate theme parks, haven't been to one since I was 12 and don't know of any suitably crazy ones offhand. This, naturally, means a whole day of typing vaguely useful phrases into search engines and hoping something good comes up.

This is our dirty little secret — half the time we're not jaunting off around the world seeing weird and wonderful places, we're hunched over a computer, copying everybody else's lists.

Bear this in mind next time you see a piece on the world's Top 10 Beaches or Luxury Hotels. The writer has probably been to two or three of them at best. And on the menu tonight, Moonraker. No, I just can't do it. There's a line and that line is Moonraker.

Thursday

Just about finish writing about a place I went to six years ago, have virtually no memory of and took no notes about. It's a triumph of vague, flowery description, cheap jokes and meandering tangents that really have nothing to do with the place.

Pack in a blind panic and rush to the airport. Once there, realise I've left my coat, gloves and hat at home and my flight and hotel details in my coat pocket. Desperately phone a friend, begging him to hack into my e-mail account and tell me the names of the hotels and the e-ticket reference number.

Finally arrive in Bratislava at about 11pm. It's minus six degrees, with a wind-chill factor of minus 13. Feel like crying and wonder if there are any shops open that might sell big coats and furry hats. There aren't.

Friday

Wake up at 6am in the hotel that still thinks it's 1962 and the Communists are still in charge. It really is the most ugly, repulsive Soviet-era monstrosity imaginable and has service to match. But it's cheap and so am I.

Powerwalk aimlessly in the direction of the train station in order to get to Brno in the Czech Republic. Get there with seconds to spare, internalising my anger towards whoever makes Slovakian signposts.

Spend much of the day in Brno looking for the technology museum, which appears to be hidden behind a barrier of tower blocks and dual carriageways. After three hours of fruitless hunting, I give up and retire to an Internet cafe. Have been offered a freebie jaunt to a hotel at a business park in Rotherham, South Yorkshire. That's as glam as it gets...

Spend a bit more time Googling my own name. Anything to avoid having to go back outside into the Siberian blizzard for a look around the castle. This is my karmic payback for that freebie villa in the Cook Islands, isn't it?

Saturday

Arrive in Vienna, a city I've never had any previous affection for. Haven't lined up anything in advance for once, so I'm freestyling like a proper traveller. Decide to go and annoy the woman at Tourist Information by asking if there's anything "weird" I can go and see. She looks puzzled and then suggests the Haus der Musik, while handing me a mountain of leaflets.

This is part and parcel of the job. It's no good writing about Vienna's musical heritage, lovely architecture or famous dancing horses. They've all been covered in staggering depth before. My job (well, it is if I want to make any money out of it) is to find a new slant.

Mercifully, the leaflets are far more useful than the woman. How can you possibly respond to a request for weird attractions and forget to mention a Funeral Museum? There are a few more along the same absurd and bizarrely specific lines, too, so the whole day is spent hopping between wacky museums. And a more fabulous, career-affirming day I couldn't wish for.

Check out RALPH's related story, Do all travel writers go to hell?

MORE ON TRAVEL

Nudist holidays

Nudist holidays

Take a walk on the wild side and check out Australia's best clothing-optional beaches. No need to pack the togs!
All aboard the Queen Mary 2

All aboard the Queen Mary 2

The largest ship to ever visit Australia,
North Korea's top hotel

North Korea's top hotel

The Ryugyong Hotel opens, 23 years behind scheduleI just love North...
World's hottest CBD bars

World's hottest CBD bars

Raise your glass! These bars are right in the heart of it. You can't get...

advertisement
Want the latest deals delivered straight to your inbox?

Sign up now

FEATURES
travel videoKeen to see the latest topless hostie, disgruntled passenger or otherwise ridiculous travel video? Watch 'em here!

POPULAR ARTICLES

  Most viewed today
 Take it all off! Australia's best nudist resortsForget about your troubles and get back to the way nature intended at these great holiday retreats.
 Top nudist beachesNaturist holidays are not a new phenomenon, but they are taking the travel world by storm as more and more nudists take their clothes-free lifestyle to the road, leaving luggage behind to catch rays on their ... behinds.
 The 20 best travel blogsIf there's one thing the web is not short of, it's people blogging about their travels. So how do you sort through the vast fields of chaff to get to the good stuff? Well, these 20 blogs are an excellent place to start.
 50 must-see places: 1-10With our 50 must-see places of the world - we'll start with our top 10 most popular destinations as voted by you.
 Which is the world's safest airline?Every other day we seem to hear reports of commercial airline failures — planes diverted to make emergency landings after in-flight dramas, aircraft grounded due to shonky equipment, near collisions and crew strikes over safety standards — and these are just to name a few from this week.
 Best time to travelHead for the snow in winter and the islands in summer... But to get it right, you may want to check out when the perfect time is for you to travel.
 Bali Girl's ItineraryBali Girl flew into Auckland, a short three-hour flight from the east coast of Australia.
 The top five beaches in NSW you never knew existed!A hidden gem is something many people don't know about, but should. NSW's 'hidden beaches' are certain to make those who discover them feel as though they have been let in on a fabulous find.
 Finding a Valentine in DublinThose on the lookout for love in this traditional month of romance could do worse than head for Whitefriars Street Church in Dublin. Who better to consult on matters of the heart than the patron saint of love himself, Saint Valentine?