I don’t want my hotel towels washed every night, but they do it anyway

I don’t want my hotel towels washed every night, but they do it anyway

I travel a lot for work, and spend a lot of nights in hotels. I also spend a lot of time outdoors, getting dirty.

Just two weeks ago I spent a few hours wading through ankle-deep guano in a West Texas cave. Before that, I spent a day hiking into rock shelters near the Devils River looking for rock art.

Even so, I feel pretty clean after I shower. That’s why I always, per instructions that I find printed on cards or posted on the bathroom wall in most hotel rooms, hang up my towels after using them, instead of leaving them in the tub or on the floor. I don’t want them laundered after every use, and it drives me crazy to think of the resources spent doing that for millions of travelers around the planet.

Even when I put my towels on the rack, though – which is supposed to be code for “do not launder” – I often find my linens replaced with fresh ones. I’d estimate the compliance rate at a pathetic 50 percent.

I’m trying to make a better environmental choice. But as often as not, the hotel doesn’t keep up its end of the bargain.

According to a 2014 article on NationalGeographic.com, the American Hotel and Lodging Association estimates that people who ask staff not to launder their towels daily cuts the amount of laundry by 17 percent. That’s a lot, especially when you consider that the Environmental Protection Agency says that hotels and lodges are responsible for about 15 percent of the water used by commercial and institutional facilities in America.

But it could be way higher – if hotels did what they promise to do.

I try to remember to mention it at the front desk when I check out. Please do the same.

 

 

 

 

 

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Four epic places to ride a mountain bike next time you’re in Utah

Four epic places to ride a mountain bike next time you’re in Utah

Scott House pedals up a trail in Round Valley, near Park City, Utah, in September. Pam LeBlanc photo

In the last seven weeks, I’ve ridden my mountain bike all over Utah, careening down swooping, banked trails through aspen groves near Park City and pedaling like Wiley Coyote into sandstone canyons in the south. If you like big mountains opt for Park City. If you prefer dramatic desert landscapes, head for Saint George.

Here are some highlights:

  1. Round Valley, a few miles downstream of postcard-perfect Park City on the northern side of the state, serves up a spiderweb of smooth, rolling trails under a big sky, with lots of open terrain and views of distant mountains on all sides. You’ll feel like you’re pedaling inside an enormous bowl, and in a way you are. But don’t worry – it’s not all flat. You’ll work up a lather chugging up and down the mostly non-technical terrain.

    Cindi Lou Grant pedals down a trail at Deer Valley Resort in September 2019. Pam LeBlanc photo

  2. Head to Deer Valley Resort, just up the road from snazzy Park City, where you can hitch a ride on a ski lift to access nearly 70 miles of corkscrewing singletrack. Gravity Logic designed and machine-built many of the trails, but if you like it old school, the park offers plenty of twisty, narrow, hand-cut options too. It all flows like milk from a bottle, rolling and pirouetting through pines, skirting big boulders and oozing down hillsides. The park opened 25 years ago, before most ski resorts offered biking.

    Cyclists pedal the Bearclaw Poppy Trail outside Saint George, Utah, on Nov. 3, 2019. Pam LeBlanc photo

  3. If you’d rather bike in the desert, head to the southwest corner of the state, where canyons carve through the landscape and red rock walls rise to the sky. The Bearclaw Poppy Trail, part of a network of single-track routes on the outskirts of Saint George, unfurls like a dirt rollercoaster track. We pedaled into a small canyon, onto the desert flats and down some short, steep drops. Just beware of Clavicle Hill. I’m pretty sure I know how it got its name.

    Hudson Lindenberger and Todd Goss pose at the top of a ridge at Santa Clara River Reserve near Saint George, Utah. Pam LeBlanc photo

  4. The terrain at Santa Clara River Reserve, on a mesa top outside of Saint George, feels more like Austin, with rocky ledges and cactus to snag your shins. But when you see the view off the cliff’s edge at the top of the Barrell Roll trail, you’ll know you’re not in Texas. Expect more technical trickery, too.

Chris LeBlanc rides down a rocky trail at Slaughter Creek Preserve in South Austin on Nov. 10, 2019. Pam LeBlanc photo

When I landed back in Austin, I headed out to my favorite local mountain biking trail at the Slaughter Creek Preserve,where 5 miles of single track cuts through a 100-acre swath of land set aside to protect water quality. Expect nice stair-steppy drops and rock gardens, with a flowy, rolling section at the end. The trail is open from dawn to dusk daily, but closes after rain to prevent erosion.(Check here for closure information.) You have to drive through an automatic gate to get to the trailhead, which is next to the old Trautwein homestead at 9901 Farm-to-Market 1826.

If you go biking in Utah:  In the Park City area, White Pine Touring rents bicycles and offers guided mountain bike trips. For more information go to https://whitepinetouring.com.In the Saint George area, Paragon Adventures offers guided mountain biking trips. For more information go to www.paragonadventures.com.

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Best way to get around Cape Cod? Bicycle, of course!

Best way to get around Cape Cod? Bicycle, of course!

 

Cyclists stream along the Cape Cod Rail Trail on Aug. 7, 2019. Pam LeBlanc photo

The best way to get around Cape Cod?

By bike, of course, especially when a bike path connects a slew of small towns and provides easy access to bike shops, ice cream stores, kettle ponds and ocean beaches.

I spent five days on the Cape last week with friends who have a summer house there. We pedaled our way from our home base in Dennis to destinations all up and down the 25.5-mile Cape Cod Rail Trail.

The Cape Cod Rail Trail stretches 25.5 miles along Cape Cod, connecting towns, beaches, bike shops, restaurants and ponds like this one, Seymour Pond. Pam LeBlanc photo

We zipped along the smooth, flat ribbon of asphalt on our way to explore Crosby Beach and stopped for ice cream in Orleans. I experienced my first biking round-about (cool!) and stopped for a dip in beautiful Seymour Pond, which abuts the trail. Every time we zoomed through a tunnel, we all hollered to hear the echo.

We also pedaled back toward the mainland in pursuit of Long Pond in Yarmouth, one of nine kettle ponds I dipped a toe in during my visit. The trail provides easy access to Nickerson State Park, home to some of the best ponds I experienced during my trip.

Shops, restaurants and ice cream stands are easily accessible from the trail. Pam LeBlanc photo

The trail follows the route of an old railroad line that went bankrupt in 1970s. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts bought the land in 1976, and started building the trail a few years later. The first 19 miles were unveiled in 1981, and additional sections have opened since. Most recently, a 5.7-mile stretch between Dennis and Yarmouth was added in 2018, and plans call for ultimately extending the path all the way from Barnstable to the west to Provincetown at the tip of the Cape.

It’s fun to yell when you pedal through the tunnels along the trail. It makes a nice echo. Pam LeBlanc photo

Trail users can park for free at 13 points along the route, which currently links Yarmouth, Dennis, Harwich, Chatham, Brewster, Orleans, Wellfleet and the Cape Cod National Seashore. The Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation maintains the route.

Need a bike? Rent one from one of more than a dozen bike shops along the way. (Check out the list at Cape Cod Visitors Directory.)

The trail is open from dawn to dusk. By law, children 16 and under must wear helmets.

 

 

 

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When in New Mexico, attend a feast day at a Native American pueblo

When in New Mexico, attend a feast day at a Native American pueblo

William Clark plays a flute during a performance at Hyatt Regency Tamaya on July 25, 2019. The Santa Ana Pueblo, which owns the property where the hotel is located, hosts a feast day each July 26 in its nearby village. Photos are not allowed at the event. Pam LeBlanc photo

The magic of travel unfolds when you get a glimpse into the lives of people from different parts of the world – or just the next state over.

Every July 26, the Tamayame people gather at their old pueblo village, about 30 minutes from Albuquerque, to celebrate their patron saint of St. Anne. I joined a small group staying at the nearby Hyatt Regency Tamaya in visiting the pueblo village today, expecting to see some traditional dances and learn a little about the culture.

I left with much more than that.

New Mexico is home to 19 pueblos, each with its own patron saint and calendar of feast days. At the festivals, community members dance, wear traditional costume, share food, celebrate the harvest and honor their patron saint.

But it’s way more than that. The feasts highlight friendships and family, and in a way they thank the world for taking you into its fold.

We arrived a little before noon, just as lines of dancers – women with long black hair wearing black dresses and moccasins, men with sashes, white leggings and fox tails strung from their hips – lined up to file into the small plaza and dance to the beat of drums and chanting. They all carried pine boughs; some had bells strung around their legs.

We watched for 45 minutes, then ducked into an alcove of greenery at the end of the procession to pay respects to St. Anne, the mother of Mary.

Afterward, in an unplanned stroke of travel nirvana, a man named Travis invited us into his home on the edge of the plaza to sit at his family’s dinner table and share in a traditional feast. We met his wife and children, and squeezed around a huge table while bowl after bowl of homemade food made the rounds.

I ate the best green chile chicken enchiladas I’ve ever tasted. I sipped posole spiked with chicken, nibbled rich, smokey carne guisada, tasted roasted corn dusted with something that tasted like cojita, and tried a dozen other dishes bursting with the flavors of New Mexico. I left with a crunchy sweet pueblo cookie tucked in my pocket.

We thanked our hosts, who told us all we could do to return the favor was sign the guest book. And now that we’ve been taken into the fold, we were told, we were welcome to come back every July 26 for the family’s feast.

I saw a coyote during a walk this morning, before heading to the Santa Ana Pueblo to celebrate St. Anne’s Feast Day. Pam LeBlanc photo

That kind of generosity just doesn’t happen every day, and it didn’t end there.

We stepped out of the little adobe home into bright sunshine, squinted our eyes and discovered that in our absence, the villagers had brought their feast day offerings out to share. A line of food – cookies, wedges of watermelon, home-made tamales tied in corn husks, cups of stew and piles of bananas – stretched for at least 25 yards down the center of the plaza. All this, set against the gorgeous backdrop of a rugged mesa wall.

We were told to partake, lest we offend anyone. So, of course, we did.

The pueblo’s feast dates to the influence of the Spaniards, who came here in the late 1500s to spread the Catholic religion. They assigned each community a patron saint, and each pueblo holds a feast day to honor that saint. The festivals combine the cultural influences of the Spaniards and the locals.

Many of the feast days are open to the public. If you go, respect the community you are visiting. Women should wear modest clothing, and don’t attempt to photograph or even sketch what you see.

For more information about feast days go to https://www.indianpueblo.org/19-pueblos/feast-days/. For more information about the Santa Ana Pueblo, go to http://www.santaana.org.

And look for more about my visit to Tamaya in an upcoming article.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

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