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The Local Travel Movement: How to make your vacations more meaningful

The Huffington Post logoNo doubt you’ve heard of the “locavore” movement – the idea of eating food that is grown or raised close to home, sometimes within a 50 or 100 mile radius – but have you heard of the Local Travel Movement? Despite its name, LTM is not, I repeat not, a staycation, the recently coined word designed to make us feel better about not venturing beyond our own cities while taking time off. (Don’t get me wrong – feel free to explore your own city but just don’t call it a staycation – call it a weekend.) No, LTM is similar to the locavore movement because its goal is to go back to an older, more natural way of travel – before travel books galore that purport to share with us secret tips about places off the beaten path; before the internet let us find out absolutely everything about our destination, including the time of the sunset; before an entire television channel devoted to only travel, airing half-hour shows about Walt Disney World or eating challenges; and before travel was corporatized into the “tourism industrial complex,” a multi-billion dollar industry.

LTM asks you simply to travel to learn and experience more about different places, people, and cultures. Sounds easy but with the rise of all-inclusive resorts, organized tours, satellite tv, and a Starbucks on every corner, traveling like a local is becoming more and more difficult.

But after all, why travel 7,000 miles across an ocean just to sit around and look at a beautiful yet dime a dozen beach? Why spend all your time in a museum when that same culture’s current artists are right outside the door?

Continue reading this article on The Huffington Post

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4 Responses to “The Local Travel Movement: How to make your vacations more meaningful”

  1. The locavore movement should have

    “Eat local, think global”

    Posted by David Gregory | July 23, 2010, 3:15 pm
  2. Local Travel Movement will hopefully get more involved into locavore movement.

    Posted by Jerome | July 28, 2010, 1:22 pm
  3. Yes. It’s worth to explore nearby places as it ensures your money mostly goes to the people who needs most, not to agents, brokers, etc who sometimes takes more than the locals who actually provide what you need during the trip.

    Think global. Think ahead. Go local.

    Posted by Endro Catur | July 28, 2010, 6:47 pm

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