The Sun Herald (Sydney, Australia) Sunday Georgia and Armenia; THE TRIP NAME Bob Cumming, Centennial Park, NSW THE TRIP Georgia and Armenia THE ITINERARY My wife and I spent three weeks travelling independently in Georgia and Armenia. All arrangements were made while on the road and everything worked out well. We started with two days in Tbilisi, Georgia's capital. Tbilisi's old town is a delight, full of 18th-century houses and medieval churches. Tbilisi feels like a European city, albeit strongly influenced by centuries of contact with Persia, Turkey and, more recently, Russia. One thing that Tbilisi is not is "undiscovered". The city was full of tourists, even in October. From Tbilisi we travelled by overnight train to Zugdidi and then by minibus to Mestia in Georgia's Svaneti region in the Caucasus Mountains. We walked for four days from Mestia to Ushguli, staying each night in small guesthouses. The mountain scenery was magnificent, with peaks more than 5000 metres high. Many houses in the magical little villages we walked through still had their own centuries-old towers built for protection from enemies - a bit like Tuscany's San Gimignano. Back to Tbilisi and then up to Kazbegi, where we splurged on Rooms Hotel, the best in Georgia. The classic Georgian photo is of Kazbegi church with the Caucasus in the background. From there we spent a day travelling south by private taxi and then a dangerously fast minibus to Yerevan, the capital of Armenia. The beautiful twin peaks of Mount Ararat greeted us to Yerevan. Sadly, Mount Ararat is in Turkey and the border is closed because of continued disagreement between Turkey and Armenia about the 1915 Armenian Genocide. A visit to Yerevan's Genocide Museum is a must. Like Tbilisi, Yerevan has many great restaurants and wine bars. Georgia and Armenia argue about who invented wine more than 6000 years ago but there is no doubt they both now produce excellent wine. A highlight of our trip was the day spent at the Areni Wine Festival, part of a four-day trip around central Armenia we did with a car and driver following an itinerary we designed ourselves. We visited medieval churches, a 14th-century caravanserai and a 1st-century classical temple. THE TRIP TELL US ABOUT YOUR TRIP Send 350-word submissions for The Trip to [email protected] with THE TRIP in the subject line. Use the same format as above and attach a high-resolution headshot. Published entries win a Lonely Planet guidebook. BEST BITS Four-day trek in Svaneti, Georgia. WORST BIT Crazy drivers. BEST TIP Learn to say hello and thank-you in Georgian and Armenian. WHERE TO NEXT Torres del Paine trek in Chile's Patagonia.