The Travelers’ Century Club is an international nonprofit social organization founded in 1954 for travelers who have visited one hundred or more of the world’s countries and territories. Click here to learn more »

Azores 2024: The sold-out TCC International Conference in the Azores takes place from May 30 to June 2. Download the Conference Agenda here »

  • A Message From the President

    A Message From the President

    I ❤️ travelers! There’s so much to love about the Travelers’ Century Club. I love my Northern California chapter’s quarterly luncheons. I love Virtual Explorations and the breakout rooms that follow the presentation. I love our international and regional meetups. I love our new Travel Book Club! Most of all, I love travelers.

    Travelers come in all shapes and sizes, all races and ethnicities. It doesn’t matter the size of your pocketbook or whether you travel to a place for three months or overnight. I don’t care whether you travel once a year or all the time. Whoever you are, I love travelers.

    Travelers have a certain way of looking at the world; a certain curiosity that demands to know what’s around the corner, what’s beyond the headlines. By acquiring first-hand knowledge about a place and its people, travelers gain a unique perspective on the world and the issues that matter. I am reminded of TCC’s motto: World Travel: The passport to peace through understanding. True, the world seems torn at the moment. But having visited many of the hotspots during calmer times, I have a better understanding of the conflicts and their backstories.

    For me, at least, leaving one’s safe zone and embarking on a journey is when self-discovery begins. I know things about myself and my ability to figure things out when plans fall apart because I’ve been thoroughly tested in this regard. Tourists panic; travelers persevere. Travelers figure out how to carry on and part of my strategy is reaching out to you and seeking your guidance thanks to TCC on WhatsApp.

    Travelers have capabilities not shared by the public. Travelers can enter a hotel room and immediately assess the potential for doing laundry (and getting it dry). Travelers can operate any set of controls to turn on the water in a hotel’s shower no matter how obscure. Travelers can turn all the lights off in a hotel room even when it means unscrewing the bulb in the middle of the ceiling. Travelers can aim at the hole of a squat toilet and exit the washroom without comment. Travelers know these things.

    Travelers respect the importance of time. Being on time means making connections, seeing the places you intend to visit and respecting your fellow travelers by not delaying them. Regarding time, travelers also have a higher level of patience than the public. Ticket counters may not open for several hours but travelers will wait patiently understanding that checking in to the next flight is the next step of the journey. Time between flights is time for rest, for planning, for catching up and for taking stock of one’s surroundings. This can be time well spent while others regard these hours as wasted.

    Are you a planner? I strive to be a good planner not because I like it, but because I like to optimize my time while traveling. I like to hit the ground running so I can see and do as much as possible in the time available. When I leave a place, I like to feel that I saw what I came to see and learned what makes the place special. Planning the next trip is my favorite way to end a trip. Where will the next adventure take me and the one after that? These are characteristics of travelers.

    I’ll conclude with a quote from Betty Knudson, a long-time TCC member from the NorCal Chapter: “Travel as much as you can for as long as you can.” I take her words to heart because I know that someday, I won’t be able to power walk from one terminal to the next, and I won’t be able to climb the 700 steps without shoes to see the temple at the top of the hill. But while I can and for as long as I can, I’m proud to be a traveler and I want to surround myself with all of you TCC members because “I ❤️ travelers.”


  • June 2024 Photo Contest Winner: Bill Datema, St. Louis, Missouri, USA

    Congratulations Bill! With over 60 photos to choose from, yours received the highest rating among members. You’ve not only brought honor to the St. Louis TCC Chapter, but you have won a year of free dues for yourself. Thanks to everybody who submitted their wonderful “Remote Island Life” theme photos for the June contest. They can still be seen and commented on by visiting https://pollunit.com/en/polls/tcc-2024-june »

    The theme for our September 2024 contest is “Waiting.” Click for contest details »

    Photo: Bill Datema

    On a glorious November day in 2022, while most of my group wandered up the hill to view the enormous king penguin colony, I stood alone on a beach of pebbles at St. Andrews Bay, South Georgia. Of approximately 2.2 million breeding pairs worldwide, approximately 150,000 live at St. Andrews Bay, making the area home to one of the largest colonies on Earth. As I stood alone, large waddles of penguins trundled toward me and were completely unfazed by my presence. I spent the next hour enraptured by the scene of penguins, elephant seals, skuas, and other wildlife framed against the background of the alpine spine of the South Georgia archipelago.

    HONORABLE MENTIONS

    Lana Skeet, Calgary, AB, Canada

    Photo: Lana Skeet

    Blissful, tropical and the feeling of being remote, Fernando do Noronha has it all! This stunning sunset view was enjoyed while sipping a Caipirinha at the Bar do Meio. Overlooking Morro do Pico (the unique mountain) and Praia do Meio (the sparsely populated beach below), pause for a moment and take in how remote this island feels on the northeast tip of Brazil. You must go here!


    John James Banogon, Pearl River, New York

    Photo: John James Banogon

    In the Faroe Islands, spotlighted by the sun that was barely visible that day, these highland cattle appear to be watching over a salmon farm from a cliff. Fishing is the top industry in the Faroes. Drangarnir, one of the most photographed sea stacks, can be seen on the far right.


Travelers’ Century Club®
8939 S. Sepulveda Blvd., Suite 102
Los Angeles, CA 90045
Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 2297
Cupertino, CA 95015
Tel: (888) 822-0228
Email: info@travelerscenturyclub.org

TCC Forum is a private social networking site for members only. Registration is required. More info here »


Margo Bart
President
Jeffrey Houle
Vice-President
JoAnn Schwartz
Secretary
Christopher Hudson
Treasurer


Steven Fuller
Michael Sholer

TCC PINS & NAME TAGS

Lapel pins featuring the TCC logo cost $10 (choice of pin or tie tack backing). Award level pins ($8) are available for members who have achieved Silver (150 countries), Gold (200), Platinum (250) or Diamond (300) level status.

Engraved name tags with the TCC logo and magnetic backing cost $13.50. When ordering, tell us exactly how you want your name to appear on the tag.

These items are available exclusively to full TCC members. Order online (see link below), or mail your request to TCC headquarters with a check for the appropriate amount in U.S. currency. Shipping is included.

Click to order »

Travelers' Century Club