Vacation Dreams

Author: The Ant

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  • Mac says&

    Regular contributor Mac ruminates on the world of travel & some of his adventures along the way  This time round he’s reading and enjoying A Sense of Place , Great Travel Writers, Talk About their Craft, Lives and Inspiration by Michael Shapiro.

    Here are some of Mac’s favourite excerpts when the author is interviewing english writer Eric Newby of A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush fame:-

    • We had an interview with Mr Nehru, India’s first Prime Minister. He gave us a wonderful letter … [however] At Christmas time … most places were closed. They went to the Kanpur Club to see if they could be put up for the holidays showing them Mr Nehru’s letter. They were told Mr Nehru is not a member of the club !

    • The Libya Embassy told them they could not go to Libya. Newby’s Wife Wanda suggested he write Kaddafi … He received back from Kaddafi a huge envelope saying “Please be our guest.” But when they wanted to go there was an assassination attempt on Kaddafi and a Libyan assassinated a police woman in St James Square, London !

    • Newby in WWII spent thirteen months as a prisoner of the Germans in Italy before escaping in Sept 1943. A sympathetic Italian commandant let him go and the Germans beat to death the commandant. A Slovenian couple with anti fascist sympathies sheltered Newby, who in turn became infatuated with their daughter Wanda who was trying to teach him Italian ! When it became unsafe for him to stay there he found shelter in the maternity ward of a nearby hospital. When the Germans closed in, Wanda’s father risked his own life taking Newby to a mountain hideout. Ultimately Newby was recaptured and returned to prison but survived war. After the war Newby returned to thank the family, court Wanda and they were married & settled in England !!


  • Write for the eNewsletter

    If you enjoy writing and travelling, why not write for the free Globetrotters eNewsletter! The Ant would love to hear from you: your travel stories, anecdotes, jokes, questions, hints and tips, or your hometown or somewhere of special interest to you. Over 14,000 people currently subscribe to the Globetrotter eNewsletter.

    Email The Ant at theant@globetrotters.co.uk with your travel experiences / hints & tips / questions. Your article should be approximately 1000 words, feature up to 3 or 4 jpeg photos and introduce yourself with a couple of sentences and a contact e-mail address.


  • News from the travel world

    ** Charity biker goes long way round ** A Scottish biker sets off on a charity trek to Kathmandu to raise funds for child welfare in Nepal.

    Read more at http://news.bbc.co.uk

  • Ryanair voted least favourite airline for third year running

    Read more at http://www.travelmole.com


  • From our travelling yogi Padmassana

    One of my teachers, Eunice Laurel, has gone to Rwanda for 6 months to teach yoga and try to bring some light into the lives of the people of that war torn country. She has started writing a blog about her experiences over the last couple of months – http://www.eunicelaurel.blogspot.com. Drop in have a read and leave Eunice any comments & feedback you want to send…

    Maybe Rwanda is a next stop for Padmassana as part of their efforts to experience yoga worldwide


  • GT Travel Award

    A member of Globetrotters Club and interested in winning a £1,000 travel award ? Know someone who fits these criteria ? We have up to two £1,000 awards to give out this year for the best independent travel plan, as judged by the club’s Committee.

    See the legacy page on our web site, where you can apply with your plans for a totally independent travel trip and we’ll take a look at it.

    Get those plans in, as the next Legacy deadline will be 31 October 2008 !!


  • Web sites to blog:-

    From Dick Curtis – what do you do just months after retiring from rugby union ? http://www.warrensmith-skiacademy.com


  • Welcome to eNewsletter September 2008

    Hello all,

    Welcome to the new season of the Globetrotters Club at its London branch. As you can see below we’ve kicked off the new season with a good couple of speakers and a new voice on the lectern !! I’ve also included plenty of input from regular contributors such as Mac, Harold Dunn and Padmassana…these guys are the main stay of the eNewsletter. And whilst I am in contact with a regular pool of contributors, I’m always looking for new material including photographs – see feel free to try your hand and get in touch.

    This time round we have some sadness to talk about as well. Another long distance cyclist, Ian Hibell, has been fatally injured by an unforgiving motorist whilst on the road and Fridgey has experienced the rough arm of AustraliaÂ’s customs officials. Whilst not comparable, both episodes show what the travelling community endures as it goes about its businessÂ…sometimes itÂ’s a tad too sad for words.

    To close on a happier note though, weÂ’ve also details on Rosie Swale Pope completing her round the world epic and news of the Independent Travel Show happening in London in 2009.

    ThatÂ’s all for nowÂ…stay safe whilst you travel,

    The Ant

    theant@globetrotters.co.uk


  • September meeting news from the London branch by Padmassana

    Picture courtesy of Jacqui Trotter : JeanieWith host Jeanie Copland at the lectern and with Jacqui Trotter reporting queues to get into the Church of Scotland venue, the new season got off to a fine start with:-

    The front cover of the last Globe featured Katie Fahrland and her Wm Wood legacy trip to Mali. The September meeting began with Katie giving a talk on her trip and the 3 day music festival that takes place at Segou on the Niger River – the legacy gave Katie the chance to make a dream come true and visit the festival. Katie was thrust into Mali life from day 1, pushing and shoving her way onto a bus to reach Segou. The music Picture courtesy of Jacqui Trotter : Katiefestival attracts 14,000 people, who enjoy the music from the stage that is almost in the river. The visual effects being provided by one box with a stream of wires coming out that just sits on a chair. After the festival Katie took the opportunity to see some more of the country, showing us sights such as the Great mud Mosque at Djenne, which has to be patched up after rainfall. She also made a side trip on a motorbike with a guide into Dogon country, seeing a village that makes pottery and fires its pottery by literally having a big fire. Katie’s trip has prompted her to enrol for a Masters degree at SOAS (School of Oriental and African Studies http://www.soas.ac.uk/).

    Picture courtesy of Jacqui Trotter : FranOur second speaker was Fran Sandham who talked about his walking trip across Africa. He explained the whole idea came during a drunken New Years eve party, when he decided that if he was going to make a New Year’s resolution it was going to be a big one ! January 1st dawned, despite the hangover and the cold light of day he decided it was still a good idea, so he spent the next year working every hour to save up the money to make it possible. His walk took him from the Skeleton Coast in Namibia via Zambia, Malawi and Tanzania, finishing in Zanzibar. The 3000 mile walk took him a year, it would have been quicker but for an abortive idea to get a donkey to carry his pack, the donkey refused, he then got a mule, but the mule arrived on a van that it had kicked to pieces, so Fran abandoned that idea as well ! He downsized his pack and carried it himself, avoiding Lions in north Namibia and narrowly avoiding treading on a lazy Puff Adder that was sitting in the middle of the road, surprising himself at how high he could jump carrying a 30kg rucksack ! He arrived in Zanzibar a year after setting off 3 stones lighter and wondering what to do next. He has written the book, so if you want to read more about Fran’s trip visit www.traversa.co.uk or check it out on Amazon.

    For details of the forth coming meetings of the London branch, September 2008 through to July 2009 – http://www.globetrotters.co.uk/meetings/lon09it1.html.

    London meetings are held at The Church of Scotland, Crown Court, behind the Fortune Theatre in Covent Garden at 2.30pm the first Saturday of each month, unless there is a UK public holiday that weekend. There is no London meeting in August, but we start afresh in September. For more information, contact the Globetrotters Info line on +44 (0) 20 8674 6229, or visit the website: www.globetrotters.co.uk.


  • Meeting news from Ontario

    For information on Ontario meetings, please contact Svatka Hermanek: shermanek@schulich.yorku.ca or Bruce Weber: tel. 416-203-0911 or Paul Webb: tel. 416-694-8259.

    Ontario meetings are held on the third Friday of January, March, May, September and November. Usually at the Woodsworth Co-op, Penthouse, 133, Wilton Street in downtown Toronto at 8.00 p.m.