Vancouver Sun

GUIDES GIVE SIGHTSEEIN­G GREATER DEPTH

Hiring a guide is a splurge that is often well worth the cost

- RICK STEVES

For the past 30 years, whenever I’ve been asked to state my occupation at a border crossing, I’ve said, “teacher.” People may find my TV shows to be entertaini­ng or my guidebooks practical, but my passion has always been to teach, whether it’s about art, culture, or nuts-and-bolts travel skills. My fundamenta­l cause is that good travel teaches people to better understand the world they live in.

In order to be a good teacher, I need to be a good student. That’s why I frequently hire local guides. It’s basically like renting a friend who’s really smart. Then, everything I do, I’m doing with a coach and partner. I always learn something. Last summer, my Portuguese guide Alex took me on a little scavenger hunt through Lisbon’s castle town — built back when nobles needed a safe place within the castle walls — and showed me things I’d never noticed even after 20 years of visits to Lisbon.

Nearly every city in Europe has great guides who are independen­t businesspe­ople scrambling to fill their calendars and earn a living. Private guides charge about $100 to $300 US for a half-day. They tend to cost more in big, touristy cities and in Western European countries. Sure, it’s a splurge. But so is a nice dinner. And if you can split it with a group of people, your cost goes down.

Guides meet you wherever you like and tailor the tour to your interests. I encourage travellers to use guides not only for sightseein­g, but also for cultural experience­s. For example, after a two-hour Uffizi Gallery tour in Florence, take a coffee break in a café, and follow it with an old-town walk featuring Roman, medieval, and modern aspects of Florence. Recently, my Amsterdam guide Frank and I spent an hour enjoying a Reypenaer cheese and wine tasting that was just as educationa­l (and frankly, more fun) than a tour of the Rijksmuseu­m.

If you’re spending a while in a destinatio­n, hire a guide early in your trip. You’ll get an orientatio­n to the city, and you’ll learn time- and moneysavin­g tips. Guides can point out good restaurant­s, give shopping advice, and provide transporta­tion and sightseein­g tips. In St. Petersburg, I learned how to avoid ticket lines at the Hermitage by buying them at the machines in the courtyard. In Istanbul, my guide took me to a local market to shop for spices (instead of at the touristy, overpriced Spice Market).

With its many ancient sites and fine art, Italy is a great place to hire a guide. I love the ancient Roman port city of Ostia, but the descriptio­ns posted throughout are worthless. I commented on this to my wonderful guide Francesca, who taught me the Roman concept of aria fritta — literally “fried air.” The phrase describes any wording that’s, like these descriptio­ns, greasy and heavy but contains nothing of value.

I find that much of what tourists read and hear in Italy is aria fritta. There it’s especially important to be selective about guides. Random guides cluster outside major sights like Pompeii and the Colosseum, but quality varies. I prefer to book a reputable guide in advance (look for recommenda­tions in guidebooks or online, or ask your hotelier), but if you decide to choose a guide at a site, first talk to him or her for a bit to make sure you connect.

In Europe, the farther east you travel, the cheaper it is to hire a guide. In places like Prague or Poland, for about $35 an hour, you can get a guide and companion who is expert at giving meaning to your wandering. And if, like me, you are forever fascinated by slice-of-life stories from people who had to live through the Cold War in the Warsaw Pact, it’s even more engaging, as guides artfully weave their personal memories into their time with you.

One Czech guide talked of how, in her youth, she could only dream of drinking a nice cold Coca-Cola. She said, “We couldn’t drink Coke, but we could collect the cans that tourists threw away. I had five cans. My friend had 10.”

Another reminisced about how, with the arrival of freedom and the fall of the Iron Curtain, Russian-language teachers suddenly had to teach English. There were no textbooks, and teachers took cram courses in English so they could teach their students sentences like “Deez eez my bruder” (“This is my brother”). During those first few years, school kids knew more English from watching Rambo movies than their teachers did from taking cram courses.

No matter where I am, local guides make my trip much more fun and educationa­l. This is one of my favourite travel luxuries, as every minute spent with an expert, translator, and friend at my side is filled with learning and insights.

Nearly every city in Europe has great guides who are independen­t business people scrambling to fill their calendars and earn a living.

 ?? CAMERON HEWITT/POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? At some major ancient sites, such as the Colosseum, you can hire guides on the spot. Good ones can bring these thousands-of-years-old places to life.
CAMERON HEWITT/POSTMEDIA NEWS At some major ancient sites, such as the Colosseum, you can hire guides on the spot. Good ones can bring these thousands-of-years-old places to life.

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