HPTravel: You must have seen some amazing places. What were your favorites, and your least faves?
JP: I absolutely loved Malta--it's like you stepped back into a film. Turkey is a beautiful place to sail. The Portuguese Azores is simply a magical place. I would put money on the fact that it’s the sunken Atlantis of lore. Maybe I say that because when we arrived there on our Atlantic crossing, we’d been at sea for days (and were at sea for days after we left to reach our next pit stop), but it really did seem to rise out of the ocean in the middle of nowhere. The views and climate were very reminiscent of Scotland to me, with its foggy mountain tops, lush and verdant. It truly is a spectacular place. As for least favorites, perhaps I read too many Frances Mayes books (she can make any destination sound like paradise), but I have a hard time tossing any destination off as not being to my liking when I really can’t take the time to explore it in full. From a “passing through” vantage point, Naples wasn’t what I pictured. But since then, I’ve ready Frances Mayes’ account, and now I’d love to go back and dig deeper. Otherwise, to me, it was a big, smelly city where—despite the great pizza—was more like a Miami that you pass through on your way to more remote destinations. For us, the Isle of Capri and Positano were a stone’s throw away, and were our next stop for a two week trip. I was also a bit let down with the ports we visited in Sicily. Again, that’s very much due to the “large city, touristy and dirty” feel. I would still go back there, too. The U.S. and British Virgin Islands also seemed a little boring to me when compared to St. Barts and St. Maarten. I suppose I just like it when things were extremely foreign—and the U.S. & British influences couldn’t top the French and Dutch.