You can take plenty of photographs on your vacation, even digital video is fairly easy, but those things won't help you record the little incidents that give meaning to your vacation. That is why keeping a travel journal is so helpful. The journal of your vacation is the place to keep notes of the small things that give color to your trip. It is also the place to keep the details of the big things that make a vacation memorable. If you don't usually keep a journal, that's okay. There is just one rule in journaling: it's your journal and nothing else matters. It isn't necessary to go into great detail if your don't want to. You shouldn't worry about your spelling or grammar. The important thing is to record those things that will trigger the memories of the vacation. For example, what did you feel like when you found out that the gentleman who gave you directions in Washington, DC was the Ambassador from France. You discovered that when you saw him being interviewed on the national news. The photograph of the outdoor food court in Singapore was nice, but what did the place smell like; what kind of food did you try and what was it like; and how did the other patrons react to seeing an American tourist away from the usual tourist places. That is the kind of experience that everyone has at one time or another, but only those people who keep a travel journal will be able to savor the memory long after the trip is over. Keeping a journal can also be a learning experience. The longer you keep the journal the more you will find yourself mentally noting the small things that should be recorded. A young girl's eyes when she first sees the Grand Canyon can only be properly described by a parent who keeps a journal. The teen age boy, who considers himself too cool to be seen with his parents even on vacation, can't stop talking to you about his first ride on the Powell Street cable car in San Francisco. There is no way to keep that memory except in your travel journal. It is your journal and that allows you to keep your thoughts on all of the things that are important just to you. Your mother-in-law met your father-in-law in New York City fifty years ago. They always meant to go back, but something always came u
George Barnett keep several journals and is a frequent traveler. He has collected much of his travel knowledge at http://www.familytravelhelp.com/