Retirement and Spontaneous Travel

I have been to all but three states in the U.S. I still need to get to the two Dakotas and to Alaska. Alaska, obviously, will need to be a specially planned trip. However, my husband and I recently considered taking a quick trip to the Dakotas. But at the pace we drive, it is a two-day journey from Kansas City to Rapid City (we’re not so rapid). We only had a week of free time, which meant if we drove we couldn’t see everything we wanted to see.

I looked into flying to Rapid City—over $1000/person for round trip tickets!

“We could go lots of places for a thousand dollars,” I said.

I typed “cheap flights” in the Google search engine, and up popped many possibilities, including several places in the Caribbean with beaches. I love beaches. We’d been to the Caribbean twice before—to St. Thomas and to Aruba—and enjoyed both trips.

Why not travel there again? I thought. We’re retired. We can go wherever we want.

We settled on the Bahamas—technically in the Atlantic, not the Caribbean, but close enough. We could fly round-trip to Nassau and get a great hotel room for six nights for not much more than flying to Rapid City. We might spend more on food and activities in the Bahamas than in Rapid City, but not that much more. And we’d experience another culture while staying in a hotel right on the beach. Did I mention I love beaches?

“All right, “ I said after I booked our reservation and clicked “submit” to charge our credit card. “Let’s go find our passports.”

My husband gave me a wild-eyed stare. “Mine might have expired.”

Now, mind you, he is an immigration attorney. He’s retired, but he still knows it is imperative to have a current passport to travel outside the U.S. Nevertheless, when he got out his passport, it had expired on May 6, just days before we booked our travel.

We turned to Google again. “Fast passport renewal,” he typed in. Google gave us several options, including “RushMyPassport.com.” Suffice it to say, the folks at RushMyPassport.com came through, for “only” $300. We had his new passport in hand by June 6 for a trip that began on June 15.

Whew! Disaster and embarrassment avoided. For a price.

After a two-hour weather delay in Atlanta, we arrived in Nassau late on the evening of June 15. We stayed at the British Colonial Hilton, which offered us a beautiful lobby, a small but lovely private beach, a room that looked out over the harbor (showcasing both beach and cruise ships), wonderful food, and a friendly staff.

Lobby at the British Colonial Hilton
View from our room. Note the beach straight ahead and the cruise ships docked to the right.
British Colonial Hilton beach at sunset
Fort Montagu from the harbor

As is our typical practice on vacation, we toured local military fortifications—in this case, Fort Charlotte and Fort Fincastle, and we viewed Fort Montagu on a harbor tour. The harbor tour also took us to the Sea Gardens (a protected underwater site). We went to the Bahamian Historical Society Museum, the National Art Gallery of the Bahamas, and the Pirates of Nassau Museum. At all these places, we learned about Bahamian history, from the Lucayan peoples to Christopher Columbus, to the Eleutherians (English Puritans), to the era of pirates such as Blackbeard, to the slave trade, to the abolition of slavery in 1834, through the independence movement that began after World War II.

Fort Charlotte, Nassau, Bahamas
A soldier’s 1840 graffiti at Fort Charlotte. Much like the carvings on Independence Rock along the Oregon Trail in the 1840s.
Some of the guns at Fort Charlotte
Gun at Fort Fincastle. The red roof above the gun is the roof of the Hilton. See fantail of a cruise ship to the right.

And we took a day excursion with Island World Adventures. They boated us over choppy seas to an uninhabited island in the Exuma chain to snorkel, fed us a fantastic lunch, then took us on to another uninhabited island to feed iguanas before our return.

 

Island World Adventures excursion boat
Beach on uninhabited island near where we snorkeled and ate lunch
Husband feeding iguanas

As retirees, we had the flexibility to make a spontaneous trip to a beautiful locale that also taught us about a different culture. I hope we take more such trips in the future. But next time I’ll check my husband’s passport before we buy our tickets.

Have you ever taken a spontaneous trip to a distant destination?

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Janet Sunderland
7 years ago

Yup. Beats the Dakotas! Lol.

Theresa Hupp
7 years ago

I still plan to get there sometime.

Irene Olson
7 years ago

I love the clicking on the Submit button only to find out a passport was expired. Good news? It’ll be valid for many years to come for other extraordinary travels such as what you completed.

Theresa Hupp
7 years ago
Reply to  Irene Olson

Irene, it was quite ironic. My husband is typically very aware of rules and regulations, so to let this big one past him was amusing . . . though exasperating at the time. But all’s well that ends well, and he’s good for ten more years! We’ll have to take advantage of it.
Theresa

Janette Gerritsen
Janette Gerritsen
7 years ago

Reading your post as I watch the Americas Cup in Bermuda. A beautiful place and a great result for New Zealand. I can recommend Alaska. We loved our trip there.

Theresa Hupp
7 years ago

Thanks for the recommendation. I do want to see Alaska. I was in Bermuda for a day on business once, which is why we didn’t choose there for this trip. Theresa

ralietravels
7 years ago

Living in Florida, we can often get last minute deals on a cruise and are on a spontaneous trip now. But I have to be careful about sharing your blog with Alie this time — she has been after me to renew our passports for six months now — and they have a year before they expire. On the other hand, perhaps I should not procrastinate…

Theresa Hupp
7 years ago
Reply to  ralietravels

You should not procrastinate! (On the other hand, I’m probably saying this because I’m so paranoid I wouldn’t plan an international trip when I had two months left on my old passport. I renewed mine then, and I’m good for nine more years.)
Theresa

trackback

[…] I wrote last week about the recent vacation my husband and I took to the Bahamas. That post focused on the beauty of ocean and beach and on all the things we saw and did. Today I am writing about what I learned from Bahamian history and art. Because that nation’s history and art developed through experiences of slavery and colonial dependence, it seems a fitting topic for this week in which we in the U.S. celebrate our own independence. […]

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