Traveling to India as a Woman – Episode 160

categories: asia travel

beth-whitman-india

The Amateur Traveler talks to Beth Whitman, author of Wanderlust and Lipstick for Women Traveling to India, about the joys and challenges of traveling to India, especially solo travel as a woman.

Learn what iconic image Beth has in her house, how she can go to the sub-continent with only the clothes on her back and how to fall in love with India.


click here to download (mp3)
click here to download (iTunes enhanced)

Show Notes

Wanderlust and Lipstick – Tips for Women Travelers
7 tips for hiring a driver in India
Amateur Traveler Episode 147 – Kerala, India
Servas International
5 tips on what to wear in India

News

Travel News – Blinded Pilot Lands Safely, Bus Hijacked to Disney, Ducked Taped Passenger

  • Pilot blinded by stroke is guided safely to the ground
  • Bus driver taken hostage at gunpoint; forced to drive to Downtown Disney
  • FBI: Airline passenger restrained with duct tape

Internet Resources

DiplomaticPassport.com

Community

Paul had problems with episode #158 on Zimbabwe, which is a shame as JT loved it!
Stephanie loved episode #159 on San Francisco

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Chris Christensen

by Chris Christensen

Chris Christensen is the creator of the Amateur Traveler blog and podcast. He has been a travel creator since 2005 and has won awards including being named the "Best Independent Travel Journalist" by Travel+Leisure Magazine.

3 Responses to “Traveling to India as a Woman – Episode 160”

Win a Trip to South America | Tripinator - Travel 2.0

Says:

[…] boards instead of in the blog, but Beth Whitman who was just on the Amateur Traveler talking about Traveling to India as a Woman s having a writing contest. Submit a blog entry to Beth and you could win a trip to South America. […]

Win a Trip to South America

Says:

[…] of in the blog, but Beth religionist who was foregather on the Amateur Traveler conversation most Traveling to Bharat as a Woman s having a essay contest. Submit a book entry to Beth and you could intend a alter to South […]

M. Nettles

Says:

Misinformation, astoundingly off…wonder if she actually even went there. To refer to a sprawling city of 500,000, one of the most famous royal cities in India, as a “lakeside village”? To act as if she was the first American to go to Rajasthan, the longest holdout from British rule, the fiercest warriors in northern India as “a western province”…is so appallingly naive. That she got a book published after her 3 visits is astounding. That the interviewer didn’t call her on her shallow knowledge is unforgiveable.

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