Savvy Blog

Entries for the 'Travel Tips' Category

03

This entry is really all about procrastination -- something I'm terribly good at. Thank you for enabling me by reading this entry...

This morning, I was asked by a young friend if i recall all the airline routes that I've flown on a 747 (including all models: 200, 300, 400 and SP). After checking the Savvy Navigator flight database, I realized that a bulk of this Boeing travel was in the Pacific, and I came up with these city pairs. Here's a stunning visual representation, for your viewing pleasure, courtesy of the Great Circle Mapper, a tool we simply cannot live without.

Savvy Nav's Pacific Flying

Most of this flying was back in my AA days, before I started creating and organizing gay tours and travel for Savvy Navigator. Someday I hope to return to the Pacific, this time leading my fellow gay travelers on interesting journeys.

Posted in: Travel Tips
02

Editor's Note: Fellow airline geek Dan Webb asked me to be a guest blogger on his Things in the Sky aviation blog. Here's my entry in its entirety. When the article was published last week, the Air France flight 447 accident had not yet occurred. Some readers might find this relevant as I made a similar trip in 2000, LGW-GIG, in which we experienced pretty extensive turbulence.   

With Dan heading to foreign shores for his long-overdue holiday, I’m pleased that he asked me to pen some musings about my own experiences as an airline geek and how this passion is still very present in my life – just as it was over 30 years ago when I was a make-believe-airline-creating child in a small Texas town, desperate to hop onto a jet and fly anywhere that was far away from the Lone Star State.

This month marks a significant milestone in my airline travels, in that I’m making my first roundtrip, South Atlantic crossing between South America and Africa. Over the years, I’ve crossed numerous times between North America and Europe, and unless I consult my flight log database, I’m unsure how many times I’ve actually crossed the North Atlantic.

Back in 2000, I was lucky enough to cross from Europe to South America on a BA 747-400 with a LGW-GIG-GRU routing. And in 2007, an SAA JNB-IAD trip on another A-340-600 filled in the “Northwest to Southeast” gap for me.

I’ve also made numerous Europe to Arica trips, so until this month, the only Atlantic crossing that eluded me was the coveted Southern routing.

This month, I did it! As I type this blog entry, I am on board SA222, an A-340-600 (ZS-SND), en-route from Johannesburg (JNB) to Sao Paolo (GRU), where I will connect on to JJ8004, TAM’s A-320 service to Buenos Aires (EZE). Our flying time on the Atlantic today is 9:58, and, sadly, I’m seated in the main cabin. The flight, however, is only about 2/3 full, so I have a window seat with an empty seat next to me. Two weeks ago, I arrived in Africa (JNB) from Buenos Aires, also on SAA in economy, but on a virtually-empty A-340-200, which afforded me 4 seats together for a poor-man’s-lie-flat experience.

I must admit that these flights don’t feel much different from similarly-timed US-Europe flights, but if I look around the cabin, I don’t see any Americans or Europeans. On this particular flight, it appears that most passengers are either African or Brazilian. And on the EZE-JNB flight, the passenger manifest consisted mostly of Argentine or Chilean football groups.

Now that this particular dream of mine is fulfilled, my friends and associates are asking, “What’s next, Jeff?” I’m pretty sure that next great crossing will be from Africa to Australia across the Indian Ocean (something like JNB-SYD), or it might even be a full Southern-Hemisphere circumnavigation, which will nicely complement my prior Northern routings.

But, for now, I’ll just bask in glory or my self-imposed, Savvy Navigator of the Southern Cross(ing) title!

 

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Posted in: Travel Tips
21

Savvy Navigator is happy to release these first photos from our gay tour to South Africa. More will be coming, but in the meantime, these should whet your appetite to join us on the next trip.

Many thanks to Savvy Stewardess Dirk for these terrific shots.

 

Posted in: Travel Tips
05

I'm sitting the in the JFK Admiral’s Club reflecting on the events that have transpired over the past year, and what lies ahead over the next 4 weeks. At 10:25 pm tonight, I’ll fly down to Buenos Aires, and after ½ day on the ground, I’ll connect on over to Johannesburg and Cape Town, thus fulfilling long-held dream #1:

Crossing the South Atlantic from South America to Africa

Savvy Navigator May 2009 Travels

After a few days of work in Cape Town with my partners, a terrific group of guys from the USA, Canada, and the UK will arrive on Saturday, May 9th to start the inaugural group trip of Savvy Navigator Gay Tours to South Africa. Over 10 days, we’ll visit the Cape Winelands, an authentic South African farm that harkens back (for better or worse) to the colonial times, Cape Town and its environs, and then on to the Sabi Sands Game Reserve’s Londolozi Tree Camp for the superlative safari experience. A few will continue on to Livingstone, Zambia to visit Victoria Falls.
 
Fulfillment of long-held dream #2:
 
Bringing life-changing travel experiences to my fellow gay men, in off-the-beaten-path locations that are favorites for me and Savvy Husband    
 
This past week, Savvy Navigator has been written up in the New York Times Style Blog, as well as both the print and online editions of the Washington Post Travel Section. Savvy insiders have known and loved the Savvy Husband’s passion for ink, so this attainment of “ink in my own right,” is the fulfillment of long-held dream #3:

Defining, building and bringing to market a new brand that redefines gay travel and gay honeymoon

Lastly, spending the entire month of May 2009 on the road, working by leading the Savvy Navigator gay tour, and then later in the month on vacation in Argentina, celebrating our 5th wedding anniversary, with Savvy Husband and Savvy Friends, is truly the fulfillment of another long-held dream:

Living my passion for global travel, every day, experiencing new events at every turn, all while getting paid for it

Please join me this month while I Tweet, photograph, video, and write about my experiences in South America and Southern Africa.

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Posted in: Travel Tips
07
While on our private little gay safari last summer, we witnessed one of the most amazing acts found in nature, a leopard kill! We were in the Sabi Sands game reserve, scoping out the Londolozi Tree Camp to make sure it was the right venue for Savvy Navigator's gay tours. (Yes, it passed muster and our May and November tours will go there). On our final day, we were invited out on a game drive with an experienced ranger and witnessed this amazing act of nature.
 
Our guide had us tracking a leopard for most of the morning. About an hour into the drive, we observed the leopard sneaking up on a herd of clueless impala. We drove around to the other side of the herd and waited to see if there would be an attack. Within minutes, the leopard sprang out of the bush, and we actually witnessed it killing an impala.
 
Sadly, the actual attack was not captured on video, as it happened so quickly. We do see, however, the leopard placidly suffocating the impala. Now, the real bonus of this video, as you’ll see, is seeing the leopard lose his kill to an aggressive hyena.
 
 
Oh yes, there’s another bonus at the end of the video – a ranger in another Land Rover, wearing shorts, showing us his legs.
 
Enjoy! 
 
Want to see this in real life? Please click here to book one of our tours, or receive more information.
Posted in: Travel Tips
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