Kurt Russell’s connection to the Western genre is legendary. But before he captivated audiences in Tombstone, Russell played the earnest role of Jaimie McPheeters in TV’s The Travels of Jaimie ...
The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters is an American western television series based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same name by Robert Lewis Taylor. The show aired on ABC in the 1963-1964 ...
THE TRAVELS OF JAIMIE MCPHEETERS (544 pp.)—Robert Lewis Taylor—Doubleday ($4.50). For 2,000 miles and half a thousand pages, the Redskins keep coming. “We’ll stand them off,” says one embattled ...
In this case "travels" is likely correct, and possibly more so than the singular version. The implication is that the person being addressed is (or will be) engaged is some sort of extended traveling (method does not matter) and hence more than one "travel". For the case of a simple trip, however, "Have a safe trip" would be more idiomatic. And note that using the plural of "travel" is ...
I believe you should use Travels for your root folder name. The folder is a photographic chronicle of your travels, as you would say, and the pluralization reflects the further division into different locations. I think this would be more correct than calling the folder travel, although travel could also work if you looked at the collection of pictures as a single entity.
I suspect "globetrotter" might fit, even though the provided definition "a person who travels widely" doesn't specifically call out air travel. The set of people who are likely to be called "globetrotters" who do not travel by air on a regular basis is likely vanishingly small.