{"id":3715,"date":"1972-12-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1972-12-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1972-vol-53-no-12-the-pleasures-and-benefits-of-travel\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:38:10","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:38:10","slug":"december-1972-vol-53-no-12-the-pleasures-and-benefits-of-travel","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1972-vol-53-no-12-the-pleasures-and-benefits-of-travel\/","title":{"rendered":"December 1972 &#8211; VOL. 53, No. 12 &#8211; The Pleasures and Benefits of Travel"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">People travel because they want                     to go somewhere else, to see something different, to have                     an experience in recreation, to delve into history, or to                     study people.<\/p>\n<p> Travelling, whether to absorb the sun on a Caribbean beach                     or to examine antiquities on another continent, is mind-broadening.<\/p>\n<p>To cruise the Trans-Canada Highway is to experience contact                     with many cultures, many ways of life, and to enjoy scenery                     of lake, prairie and mountain unsurpassed anywhere else.<\/p>\n<p>To hike, motor or camp in one&#8217;s own province, or to cross                     the boundary into an adjoining province, is to experience                     the thrill of seeing new places and new ways of doing things.<\/p>\n<p>To join a tourist sight-seeing bus for a trip through a                     city &#8211; even a city where one&#8217;s home is &#8211; is to find                     beauty spots, historical sites and eye-opening glimpses of                     life one did not know were there.<\/p>\n<p>Travel is relatively easy in an affluent society. Higher                     incomes, paid holidays, leisure, pension schemes, new plans                     of savings accounts at higher interest rates, and greater                     facility in using credit cards and credit: all these combine                     to make a travelling vacation easy to come by.<\/p>\n<p>There is nothing new about travelling for pleasure. Tourists                     visited the pyramids in Egypt, then 3,000 years old, in the                     time of the writer Herodotus, who was born in 484 B.C. Tourism                     is not new, but newly easy, and it has become one of the largest                     and fastest growing industries in the world.<\/p>\n<p>People are taking advantage of the recently-gained ability                     to travel swiftly from any part of the world to any other.                     There were 102 passengers on the &#8220;Mayflower&#8221;. They came from                     Europe to see America, and their voyage took more than two                     months. Today, hundreds of jet aircraft carry up to nearly                     500 passengers at a time from America to see Europe and they                     make the crossing in 6 hours.<\/p>\n<p>Young people know the ease with which journeys can be made.                     They grow up with a desire and the opportunity to travel to                     an extent unparalleled by any previous generation. They find                     it exciting to go to far-away places on a shoe-string. They                     hike from hostel to hostel, or are given car lifts by kind                     drivers.<\/p>\n<p>Moving around is not the complex undertaking it was when                     their grandparents were young. For example, the relaxing of                     fuss about clothes means that a tote bag will substitute for                     a trunk.<\/p>\n<p>Hostelling provides them with an attractive world travel                     service. The Canadian Youth Hostels Association arranges five-                     to eight-week tours in Europe. The Canadian hostels have sleeping                     quarters, a recreation room and a kitchen. They supply blankets,                     pillows, cooking utensils and cleaning equipment. The service                     is self-service.<\/p>\n<h3>World&#8217;s greatest travellers<\/h3>\n<p>Canadians are, on a per capita basis, the world&#8217;s greatest                     travellers, but many of them have never visited in any province                     but the one in which they live. This situation is improving                     steadily as people realize that the attractions that bring                     millions of visitors to this country are here for Canadians                     too.<\/p>\n<p>The pleasures, the cultural and the recreational advantages                     of travel are becoming available to more and more people in                     Canada. All across the country they are invited to enjoy parks,                     forts, restored villages, exciting caves, the Badlands where                     dinosaur skeletons are dug up, world-famed mountains, waterfalls,                     lakes and scenery.<\/p>\n<p>Since 1968, ten new national parks have been opened, bringing                     the total to nearly 50,000 square miles. The Canadian Government                     Travel Bureau, Ottawa, publishes a booklet called <em>Something                     Different in Canada<\/em>. It lists sights and attractions in                     every province &#8211; 36 pages of them.<\/p>\n<p>Canadians should be interested in expanding tourist services                     that will be attractive to visitors from abroad. Here is a                     way to bring foreign money into the country without using                     up natural resources.<\/p>\n<p>Every community, however small, can benefit by persuading                     tourists to visit it. If a town or a village can attract two                     dozen more tourists a day throughout the year, that will be                     economically comparable to acquiring a new manufacturing industry                     with an annual payroll of $100,000.<\/p>\n<p>There are, of course, hospitality duties to be done. When                     a tourist crosses a border, wide-eyed in anticipation of adventure                     and pleasure, he has his pen poised to sign travellers cheques,                     but he wants to be sure that he gets value.<\/p>\n<p>People who cater to tourists, and that includes stores as                     well as hotels and motels, should know their jobs so as to                     give efficient service; they should know their environment                     so as to help tourists to find entertainment, culture, history,                     or whatever they are specially interested in; they should                     go out of their way to give smiling help.<\/p>\n<p>Courtesy and thoughtful personal help above and beyond the                     techniques of catering to travellers&#8217; needs are individual                     good qualities that contribute mightily toward enhancing the                     image of Canada as a nice place to visit.<\/p>\n<h3>Embarrassment of riches<\/h3>\n<p>One of the most exciting things about the world is its variety.                     Everything is offered that is necessary to enable human beings                     to avoid monotony and boredom.<\/p>\n<p>This variety has an embarrassing feature for the would-be                     traveller, because the more there is to select from, the more                     difficult it is to choose. He has to make sure that he knows                     clearly what he wishes to obtain through travel. Some people                     like climbing mountains or scuba diving or surfing: others                     prefer less strenuous physical experiences and would like                     to visit a casino, examine ancient ruins, or tour art galleries.<\/p>\n<p>Vacations are looked upon as the time for recreation, and                     recreation means to revive, to refresh, to reanimate and to                     delight.<\/p>\n<p>The person is cheating himself of the benefit of travel                     if he plays truant from his job and then chides himself for                     not being at work. The recreation he chooses must be interesting                     enough to hold his attention.<\/p>\n<p>Pleasures diminish unless they are varied, and for variety                     we must move. It is unrewarding, as the proverb tells us,                     to row a boat with one oar in the water and the other on land.<\/p>\n<h3>Peace of mind<\/h3>\n<p>Travel is prescribed for ills of both the body and the mind,                     because new sights and new ideas divert you from old emotions.                     When you travel for rest or convalescence after illness, set                     out with the idea of making time an annoyance to be brushed                     aside like a nagging fly. Let go your worries, your tensions,                     your conflicts and your disappointments.<\/p>\n<p>How free you are when travelling! Free because the people                     you meet know nothing about your affairs: you are incognito.                     At home you are John Doe, bricklayer or salesman, living on                     Crumbling Street, driving a four-year-old car, a charter member                     of the Old Tyme Service Club doing civic good turns, a member                     of the Bridgeside Church. You are tabbed, ticketed and pigeon-holed.                     But here, on the beach at a resort in the Bahamas, or strolling                     a street of whitewashed houses in the Canary Islands, or sitting                     on one of the marble blocks outside the Senate in the Roman                     Forum &#8211; perhaps the very rostrum from which Mark Anthony                     made his oration &#8211; here you are a person, John Doe, world                     citizen.<\/p>\n<p>Some people seek solitude. Sitting on a hill alone is to                     some healthy-minded men and women a cure for worry, a breeder                     of peace, and a source of inspiration. &#8220;If anyone hates to                     be alone with himself&#8221;, wrote R. H. Schauffier in <em>The Joyful                     Heart<\/em>, &#8220;the chances are that he has not much of any self                     to be alone with.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The solitude that helps is not isolation from humanity but                     separation from the stress and turmoil of accustomed life.                     From that sort of solitude one always comes back refreshed.                     Adam said to Eve in Milton&#8217;s <em>Paradise Lost<\/em>: &#8220;Solitude                     sometimes is best society, and short retirement urges sweet                     return.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Search for differences<\/h3>\n<p>What makes travel interesting is the differences one finds.                     One is likely to be first shocked, and then fascinated, by                     the small departures from conventional patterns.<\/p>\n<p>If you are going to travel in a strange country, take soundings                     as a sailor does when entering a strange port. Except where                     morals and health are concerned, the traveller will enjoy                     himself more who adopts the ways of the countries he visits.<\/p>\n<p>Foreign customs are not the same as Canadian customs, and                     it is not well to make yourself a self-appointed ambassador,                     teacher, critic or proselytizer to change them. They have                     come about through age-long adaptation to the pressures of                     environment and the necessities of life.<\/p>\n<p>It is all very well to look with indulgent eyes on your                     native land or province, but no one experiences the best joy                     in travel if his principal aim is to live precisely as he                     lived at home. It is a waste of time and money for a vacationer                     to travel to a far country and there spend his days talking                     about the comforts of home sweet home.<\/p>\n<p>If the narrow sidewalks in some European cities annoy you,                     and you contrast them with Canadian sidewalks on which four                     or five persons may walk abreast, consider this: the narrow                     sidewalk in Florence leads to Giotto&#8217;s Campanile, in London                     to the birth-place of parliamentary government, and in Paris                     to the Cathedral of Notre Dame.<\/p>\n<h3>Touching hands with history<\/h3>\n<p>Travel gives you the opportunity to associate for a week                     or two with the greatness of statesmen, warriors, scientists                     and pioneers through their buildings, their monuments and                     their writings.<\/p>\n<p>There are occasions when, wherever you walk, you set your                     foot on history: the Appian Way out of Rome, the Royal Mile                     in Edinburgh, the Chilkoot Pass into the Yukon, and Plymouth                     Rock in the United States of America.<\/p>\n<p>The visitor will try to see not only the stone and brick                     but the hopes, aspirations, doubts, loves, and hates that                     moved those who walked here. What amused and vexed them, gladdened                     and saddened them?<\/p>\n<p>As the guide tells you that here is the beach on which Columbus                     first landed in the Caribbean, or here is the pass in the                     Alps through which Hannibal led his elephants to invade Italy,                     let your imagination roam. See the great adventurer pushing                     the prow of his little ship into the lonely sand where thousands                     now frolic; people the mountain pass with 50,000 soldiers                     and the elephants. It is by pictures reflected in the imagination                     that we realize ourselves as part and parcel of the long reach                     of history.<\/p>\n<p>Myths are a sort of history. Tales that seem strange today                     had their origin in events of the past. Many colourful stories                     survive in every country. It does not matter that today&#8217;s                     scholarship says that they have no basis. They represent beliefs,                     hopes and fears that have coloured the culture of the people.                     What does it profit anyone to destroy the exciting legend                     of Helen of Troy by lowering the Trojan war to the level of                     a minor tribal war? Certainly not the holiday-maker pacing                     the walls where Hector walked.<\/p>\n<p>Beauty has its big place in a vacation. On whatever continent                     you travel you are surrounded by sights about which poets                     have had many things to tell.<\/p>\n<p>When you gaze upon a beautiful scene on an ocean beach or                     from a mountain top, make the most of the occasion, for here                     is the experience of a moment of time that may give a new                     aspect to your life.<\/p>\n<h3>It is easy to travel<\/h3>\n<p>If you were wealthy in the 18th century you travelled in                     your own carriage, with running footmen to prop you up at                     dangerous places in the road. Today, the travel agents and                     their representatives abroad are constantly by your side to                     make your journey pleasant.<\/p>\n<p>The first thing is to know where you are going and why you                     want to be there. The explorers did not fumble around an ocean                     in the hope of hitting a continent.<\/p>\n<p>Do some reading about your destination. If you go to a place                     cold, without having found out what to look for, whether it                     be Crossroads, Quebec or Paris, France, you will fail dismally                     to find anything memorable. There is no more sense in travelling                     with an empty mind than with an empty purse.<\/p>\n<p>Annual festivals or special events should be noted and your                     vacation arranged so that you take in one or more. Examples                     are: the Gaelic Mod and the Antigonish Highland Games in Nova                     Scotia, the Quebec Winter Carnival, the Calgary Stampede,                     the Canadian National Exhibition, and Indian Days at Banff.                     There are regattas, carnivals and rodeos, music and drama                     festivals, concerts under the stars, sportsmen&#8217;s weeks, and                     blossom weeks. Every country has its own specialties, like                     the Joust of the Saracen at Arezzo, Italy, and the Mardi Gras                     carnival in New Orleans, U.S.A.<\/p>\n<p>There is an important supplementary value to planning so                     as to take in noteworthy events: you have something special                     to talk about when you return home.<\/p>\n<h3>Making plans<\/h3>\n<p>After imagining the sort of journey you want, you come down                     to the hard-headed planning. The fact that you are so eager                     to make the best of every day requires you to plan your main                     activities in advance. You must be selective. Do not feel                     compelled to visit a place that has nothing of interest to                     you, even if it has four stars or a whole galaxy of stars                     opposite it in the guide book.<\/p>\n<p>You need a master plan for the whole operation, with smaller,                     more flexible, plans for its parts. A tiny investment in planning                     will make the journey smoother, save hours of mental effort,                     avert many troubles, and leave you carefree to enjoy yourself.                     Allow everyone participating in the holiday as much voice                     as possible in the planning of it.<\/p>\n<p>You will be compelled by newly developing circumstances                     to modify your plans. Some will have to be re-edited in the                     light of changed conditions or of things you learn. Chatting                     in the hotel with other tourists may alert you to attractions                     of which you did not know.<\/p>\n<p>Something is bound to go wrong once in a while, but even                     if a speck of hardship should intrude upon a holiday it can                     be taken with calmness. People facing hard times together                     seem to get some fun out of it. When a strike paralyzed meal                     service on the Orient Express, the passengers seemed to enjoy                     the experience. The most nimble leaped from the train at station                     stops, bought up everything edible from the food barrows,                     and shared the booty.<\/p>\n<h3>Making things easy<\/h3>\n<p>The person who is accustomed to bearing a load of decision-making                     at home hopes to be relieved of it when he goes on holiday.                     He is willing to leave the details to the travel agent and                     his representatives.<\/p>\n<p>There is a growing demand for pre-packaged tours offering                     well-organized trips at reasonable cost. To many persons these                     make the difference between a dream and a nightmare.<\/p>\n<p>When you book through a travel agent for a pre-packaged                     tour you know for certain what the trip will cost you; you                     wash your hands of all the bother of lining up for tickets,                     planning your itinerary in detail, booking hotel rooms, getting                     from the airport or the dock or station to your hotel: in                     some cases even tipping is taken care of by the agency.<\/p>\n<p>Cost is the first item to be considered by most people.                     Many believe it is better to see other places and other lands                     on a small budget rather than never to leave their own cramped                     environment, but that is something for the individual to decide.<\/p>\n<p>The distance one may go and the style in which one lives                     are dictated by the availability of funds to pay the way,                     but this is a decreasing handicap. New resources have been                     opened for payment, new attractions to save in advance are                     offered, and ways to travel now and pay later are available.<\/p>\n<p>Everyone will wish to be as provident as is consistent with                     his resources and his having a good time. A couple can spend                     two weeks in a resort in the Barbados or Jamaica in the spring                     for an outlay of about $600, covering air transportation,                     transportation to an hotel, a luxury room, and many fringe                     benefits. A one-week stay at Monte Carlo, including these                     same services, can be enjoyed for about $700 per couple.<\/p>\n<p>For those who seek a really rugged holiday, a news item                     in the <em>Montreal Star <\/em>in October reported that the cost                     of a three-week expedition to the Mount Everest base camp,                     at 19,000 feet altitude, is less than $1,000, including air                     fare from New York to Delhi and light airplane to Kathmandu.<\/p>\n<p>To rest and recreate is not necessarily to cease all activity.                     To go for a walk is rest from a desk or workbench job. As                     to how far to walk, here is the opinion of John Ruskin, written                     before the days of motor cars and airplanes: &#8220;To any person                     who has all his senses about him, a quiet walk along not more                     than ten or twelve miles of road a day is the most amusing                     of all travelling.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There are places like Delphi in Greece and the provincial                     and national parks in Canada where the traveller is tempted                     to make his walk as long as possible, because there are new                     sights or old memories at every turn.<\/p>\n<p>Travelling by ship has many values: rest, quiet, peace,                     and the opportunity to read favourite books without a sense                     of being rushed or of stealing time from something you should                     be doing. Travel on or with a donkey was described amusingly                     by Robert Louis Stevenson in 1879. People who seek a holiday                     free from the discipline of reaching hotels and motels at                     specified hours are turning increasingly to trailers, tent                     trailers, and camper units.<\/p>\n<h3>About getting ideas<\/h3>\n<p>Besides recreating the body, a holiday can enliven the mind,                     Wilferd A. Peterson, author of <em>The Art of Living<\/em>, reminds                     us that Newton was loafing under an apple tree when he saw                     an apple fall and got the gravitation idea; James Watt was                     loafing in the kitchen when the kettle boiled and he got the                     idea of the steam engine; Galileo was letting his mind wander                     from the sermon while he watched the lamp swinging in the                     cathedral at Pisa and developed the pendulum principle.<\/p>\n<p>The person who travels with his mind relaxed from the narrow                     circle of his daily pursuits is well on the way to thinking                     up new ideas and developing ideas that have been buried in                     his mind under the load of daily work.<\/p>\n<p>Travel contributes to our largeness of view and our breadth                     of mental vision, and gives us true perspective. By shifting                     our point of view we learn that we are members of a world                     society of human beings of all nations, colours and creeds.<\/p>\n<p>All this is the fruit of the habit of observation. An ideal                     vacation will store your mind with thoughts to be imaginative                     about in future months and years, if you are alert for the                     little out of the ordinary things and incidents, like the                     chance to talk with a man in Ireland who is driving an ox                     in a two-shafted cart laden with turf. Take note of the graces                     of the people as well as of the grandeur of their monuments.                     On the rickety bus that carries people from Florence to the                     ancient Roman amphitheatre on the hill at Fiesole, a teen-age                     girl gave up her seat to an elderly woman who had the maple                     leaf brooch on her jacket.<\/p>\n<h3>Anticipate happiness<\/h3>\n<p>To quote as authority one of Canada&#8217;s best-loved characters,                     Anne of Green Gables: &#8220;Looking forward to things is half the                     pleasure of them.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This requires imagination, one of the necessities of human                     life. Napoleon, one of the most ardent realists, said: &#8220;The                     defect of our modern institutions is that they do not speak                     to the imagination.&#8221; It was imagination that first suggested                     to you the possibility of getting away from everyday life                     to see and experience something new. It will be imagination                     that will make the holiday memorable.<\/p>\n<p>But one has to get rolling. Inertia, our school books told                     us, is that quality in virtue of which a piece of matter will                     not move from a position of rest until a force acts upon it.                     Anticipation should stimulate as well as brighten effort.<\/p>\n<p>All around is an horizon beckoning. Whatever path you take                     away from your front door leads, like those from the Golden                     Milestone in the Roman Forum, to the ends of the earth. The                     World is full of varied things that are beautiful, dramatic,                     comic, or bizarre; surprising things to attract every sort                     of person. To pass them up would be to forego one of the most                     delightful benefits that life has to offer.<\/p>\n<p>You will come back from your dream holiday measuring it                     not in hours or in miles travelled, but in its happiness-value.                     You will have satisfied your intellectual curiosity far from                     the limitations of textbooks and school curricula; you will                     have seen many aspects of life, passion, beauty and drama;                     you will have in your mind the making of stories, poems, paintings                     and music, as well as facts and theories.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[52],"class_list":["post-3715","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-52"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>December 1972 - VOL. 53, No. 12 - The Pleasures and Benefits of Travel - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1972-vol-53-no-12-the-pleasures-and-benefits-of-travel\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"December 1972 - VOL. 53, No. 12 - The Pleasures and Benefits of Travel - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"People travel because they want to go somewhere else, to see something different, to have an experience in recreation, to delve into history, or to study people. Travelling, whether to absorb the sun on a Caribbean beach or to examine antiquities on another continent, is mind-broadening. 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Travelling, whether to absorb the sun on a Caribbean beach or to examine antiquities on another continent, is mind-broadening. 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