We all have travel tales. Short and tall stories of what happened to us in various places at various times around the world. While each trip brings home a bag of useless souvenirs from far‐flung places, a memory card full of out‐of‐focus photos, credit card bills too huge to ever pay, it’s the imaginary journal full of interesting anecdotes that’s sure to entertain vulnerable family and friends for decades to come.
Some of us learn a lot when we travel. We quickly learn how to dress appropriately so we don’t have to strip like Josephine Baker each time we pass through an airport security screen. We learn how to entertain ourselves, squirting clouds of perfumes and aftershaves in duty‐free shops while waiting six hours for a delayed flight, and we even learn (eventually) that souvenirs always end up in the next garage sale for a fraction of their original price, even accounting for currency conversion. (That carved nameplate from the craft market in the hills of Borneo wasn’t a ‘must have’ after all.)
Some of us even learn a thing or two about the countries we visit. Unfortunately, some of us never learn the art of knowing when to shut up. Every tour group has one; every cruise ship has several, and every airline seat from row 21 to 46 is occupied by them – they’re travel educators (I trust you’re not sitting in one of those seats as you read this). These are an ever‐increasing and annoying breed of travellers who insist on educating their fellow passengers and tour guides on domestic matters with facts from ‘back home.’