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Biography

Crawley

Simon Calder owes his love of travel to his parents - and in particular their decision to move to Crawley, a new town in Sussex. He was born beside the A23 on Christmas Day, 1955. By the time he was six, he realised that there was likely to be more to life than this. Fortunately, that summer he joined the Crawley branch of the Woodcraft Folk (www.woodcraft.org.uk). They promptly organised a camping trip to the Lake District, and Simon was hooked.

Later that same year, the USSR decided to send some nuclear warheads to Cuba. President Kennedy threatened retaliation and Simon's parents realised that Gatwick airport, two miles away, was in the line of Soviet fire. So they took the family to Gatwick, and boarded a plane to Guernsey in the Channel Islands, where they stayed for a week before the superpowers stepped back from the brink of nuclear war. Simon has been grateful to Fidel Castro ever since.

Dieppe

The next significant age was 13, when he (Simon, not Fidel) travelled abroad for the first time, on a school day trip to Dieppe in northern France; unfortunately, learning Russian, not French, was compulsory at his school, so communication was tricky. This was also the year when he started to learn the fine art of free travel by starting to hitch-hike. Four decades later, he is still thumbing his way around the world, augmented by cycling.

Simon's first job

Simon's first job was a cleaner for British Airways at Gatwick airport. He later worked as a security guard frisking passengers. It was during the long gaps between flights (this was a while ago) that he began to write budget travel guidebooks, starting with the Hitch-hiker's Manual: Britain.

More jobs

When not frisking or writing, Simon was reading Mathematics at Warwick University. He graduated in 1978. After a brief stint teaching Maths in Crawley, and a longer stint as radio engineer at the BBC in London, Simon became travel editor for The Independent in 1994. Soon afterwards he began presenting for BBC2's Travel Show. In 2003 he became a regular presenter for the Holiday programme on BBC1, and in 2007 presented the last film in the final programme of the series, which had run for 37 years. He now presents Simon Calder's Travel Clinic on London's news station, LBC 97.3, and contributes regularly to BBC Breakfast News and GMTV. He also shoots a weekly travel blog for Sky.com. Not much sleep there, then.

Marriage

In 1997 Simon married Charlotte in Las Vegas. Their first daughter, Daisy, was born in 2000; their second, Poppy, arrived in 2003. They live in London.

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The Best in the World

Favourite countries
Scotland, France, Cuba
 
Favourite cities
Mexico City, Mumbai, Vancouver
 
Favourite islands
Mallorca, Spitzbergen, Easter Island
 
Favourite views
Waterloo Bridge in central London; the Alhambra in Granada; Old Quarter, Panama City
 
Favourite airports
Singapore, Amsterdam, Barra
 
Favourite travel songs
Can't help but wonder where I'm bound (Tom Paxton); Barcelona (Freddie Mercury and Montserrat Caballe); Rainy Night in Georgia (Tony Joe White)
 
Favourite train journeys
Machynlleth to Pwllheli in Wales; Saltaire via Skipton and Ribblehead to Carlisle in England; every line north of Perth in Scotland.
 
Top travel tips
learn a language, but make it a useful one - French, Spanish or Mandarin; wherever you go, people are kind and will care for a stranger; smile

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