Vacation Dreams

Category: Main article

  • Deep Vein Thrombosis

    DVT poses a threat to some airline travellers. In the UK, DVT used to
    be called economy (or coach) class syndrome, but this is very much a misnomer.
    DVT can happen to any one of us, whatever our style of air travel.

    It is now possible to take a blood test to determine your vulnerability
    for blood to clot.

    This test examines the number, type, form of your red and white blood
    cells, platelets and includes the genetic (inherited) tests including
    Factor V Leiden. It is estimated that 2 million people in the UK alone
    are at risk through the Leiden V Factor.

    By identifying travellers who are predisposed to thrombosis they can
    be given pre-travel advice or treatment in order to reduce the risks of
    clot formation and it's consequences.


  • International AIDS Candlelight Memorial

    “We must make people everywhere understand that the AIDS crisis
    is not over; that this is not about a few foreign countries, far away.
    This is a threat to an entire generation, that it is a threat to an entire
    civilization….” United Nations Secretary, General Kofi Annan

    On May 19th, 2002, thousands of individuals in over 500 communities in
    75 countries will participate in the world's largest and oldest annual
    grassroots HIV/AIDS event. The International AIDS Candlelight Memorial
    is designed to honour the memory of those lost to HIV/AIDS, show support
    for those living with HIV/AIDS, raise awareness of HIV/AIDS, and mobilize
    community involvement in the fight against HIV/AIDS. There are at least
    three ways you can become involved in the International AIDS Candlelight Memorial.
    We invite you to consider participating in one or more of the following
    ways:

    • Organize a Candlelight Memorial
    • Become a Sponsor or Partner
    • Attend a Candlelight Memorial

  • Costa Rica Volunteer Programme

    Rachel works for a non-profit conservation organization in the US, The
    National Save the Sea Turtle Foundation. She is are offering Volunteer
    positions at our field station in Costa Rica where we have a sea turtle
    conservation project. Any volunteers would be doing nightly beach patrols
    to look for turtles as well as participating in a nest protection technique
    study. In the mornings we do nest surveys on horseback. The cost is $600US
    per month and this includes your room and board. All transportation is
    separate and must be covered by the individual. But I can help with arrangements.
    This opportunity is for the hearty, as it includes a lot of walking on
    soft sand late at night plus we need people for the complete month. We
    also have ten-day ecotour packages; Deluxe and Economy. If any of this
    sounds interesting to your group, please contact me. I hope to hear from
    you soon.

    Pura Vida, Rachel Silverman National Save the Sea Turtle Foundation

    http://www.savetheseaturtle.org


  • March for Children, New York

    On May 8-10, the UN will be hosting the most important children's
    event since the 1990 World Summit for Children. We will gather at 4pm
    to start the march at 4:30pm on May 8 and converge on the United Nations
    Headquarters in New York. This will be followed by a rally and candlelight
    vigil, to end around 7:30pm. For detailed information on the march, please
    visit our website. The event will be a memorable experience
    for everyone involved and a clear message to the world. We hope that we
    can count on your participation and support to make this event a stunning
    success. If you have any questions, are planning to participate, or would
    like to help out in the final preparations for the march, please click here to contact us.

    For those who cannot attend the New York rally, you can sign a petition
    against the use of child labour, to help kick Child Labour out of the
    world. Particularly timely, this petition asks that no child is employed
    in the football industry and the production of other FIFA-licensed goods
    and all children removed from child labour are rehabilitated and given
    opportunity to receive education. Please take a couple of minutes to read
    and sign our World Cup Campaign
    Petition.


  • Letter from Mikindani, Southern Tanzania, edited by Cherie, Projects Manager from England

    This is the first time I have written an article for this publication
    and I should like to tell you all a little about the charity Trade Aid.
    It was set up in 1996 by a group of people headed by Brian Currie, a Salisbury
    businessman. The aim of the charity it to create sustainable employment
    in a village called Mikindani, a deprived and desperately poor part of
    Tanzania.

    The first phase of the project was to renovate a badly decayed but very
    beautiful German fort, situated on the side of a hill and overlooking
    the spectacular Mikindani Lagoon. With the help of European experts, local
    people have restored this building to its former glory, and it is now
    open as a 6 bedroom, country-house hotel. All the staff are Tanzanian
    nationals and most are local people from Mikindani and Mtwara, the local
    town.

    Now that this phase of the project is complete, we are concentrating
    on promoting the hotel and attracting visitors to this beautiful and unspoilt
    part of Tanzania. Mtwara has an airport and there are scheduled flights
    six days a week. The airport is 20 minutes from the hotel and guests are
    collected by the hotel staff.

    There is a range of guest activities available such as a guided tour
    around the historic village of Mikindani, a trip to the Ruvuma River on
    the Mozambique boarder, snorkelling in the crystal waters of the Mnazi
    Bay Marine Reserve, or a two-day excursion to the fascinating Rondo Forest
    Reserve. Some guests may prefer just lazing by the pool at the Old Boma.

    Each month we produce a newsletter written by our volunteers working
    in Mikindani, and I will include some of their news and activities in
    the next article. This is an item from our January Newsletter written
    by one of our Gap Year volunteers, Matthew Maddocks.

    “Our Christmas at the Boma and in Mikindani was one I will never
    forget for a number of reasons. In George’s (a fellow volunteer)
    absence we awoke and had an exquisite breakfast of fresh bread rolls,
    jam, marmite and English tea. Eggs would have been a choice if Tanesco
    had been festive and let us have some power! But our palette treats were
    immediately withdrawn when Mtipa came through with a traditional soup
    he’d prepared that morning. His present to us was the intestines
    and internal organs of a goat he had slaughtered that very morning, stewed
    together! Ian and myself managed a tiny taste but we were all shocked,
    and playing ‘guess the organ’ was fun, but also highlighted
    the fact we simply couldn’t eat it all!

    The day’s events didn’t really pick up until just after lunch
    when I slipped into the grotto we had put up in the courthouse and dressed
    myself in the mock up Santa’s outfit we had made. Dennis had said
    that it would have been the first time Mtwara region had been visited
    by Father Christmas and as I expected a few of the visitors were scared
    silly and ran out again given one glimpse of me! However, overall it was
    a big success and after asking names, ages, if they had been good, each
    child was given a gift (including George who had just returned and came
    to sit on my knee and tell me what a good boy he’d been.) One small
    Indian boy did ask me for a car however giving that he was 5 and perhaps
    not ready for such things I gave him 'the even better thing' from
    my sack!”

    I hope some of you will visit The Old Boma, and see this hidden treasure
    of Southern Tanzania for yourselves. There is more information about the
    Hotel, the Charity and the project on our website www.mikindani.com
    The Beetle would just like to add that she visited the Boma, chatted with
    the staff, had tea by the pool at the Boma, and it is not only fantastic
    what the charity has achieved, but also the fact that they are genuinely
    giving something back to the community.


  • Altai Ethnomusicology expedition seeks sponsorship

    This summer, three students from Imperial College, London will travel
    on horseback to the remote and beautiful valleys and mountains of the
    Altai Republic in south Siberia. The expedition will leave the UK on the
    21st June and return in mid-August.
    Here they will work with Altaian colleagues to record and map the ethno-musical
    landscape of this unique area, where Islam and Buddhism have met and mingled
    with the indigenous animist Altaian culture.

    This exciting expedition will be the first ethno-musical study ever carried
    out in the region, and will provide us with a window on this little-known
    world. The music the team encounters and record will be placed in the
    sound archives of Altai and Britain, to provide an enduring record of
    the unique and colourful Altaian culture.

    The expedition has the approval of and is part-support of the Royal Geographic
    Society, the UK National Sound Archive and Imperial College

    The team invites sponsorship from any interested parties, and can offer
    interviews, photo opportunities, articles and coverage for sponsors.

    For more information contact team-leader:
    Richard Scrase, 129C Sterling Place, South Ealing, London, W5 4RD
    E-mail: Click Here
    Web: Click Here
    Tel:+44 (0) 207 852 1879 / 0778 779 4250


  • Mardi Gras, Belgium Style by Krys from London

    On Mardi Gras in good old Carnival style some 800 identically dressed
    men go to the streets of Binche in south Belgium to fight for their freedom
    from feudalism like they used to some 400 years ago. In colourful uniforms
    with padded bellies and hunchbacks individual Gilles walk chaotically
    up and down the town stamping their clogs rhythmically to the sound of
    their personal drummers to pick up some fellow Gilles from their homes.
    After a while small groups of them form and along with their personal
    drummers trot their clogs on the cobblestones from one drinking establishment
    to another.

    There doesn’t seem to be any age restrictions so they start from
    the clog wearing age to wheelchair ones capable to stamp their feet. Although
    there seems to be some distinctions in the ranks. Novice Gilles get up
    early in the morning and wearing identical masks march straight on the
    Town Hall. “Approved” ones are allowed to trot through all the
    bars and tavernas till the early afternoon when the real battle starts.

    Clans of Gilles turn to the streets with long baskets full of blood oranges
    to start defending themselves. Crowds of friends and relatives follow
    them with massive sacks of ammunition. It is not clear why oranges have
    been originally used as offensive weapon or how XVI century paysans managed
    to import some 6 tonnes of them from Sicily. Nevertheless they start marching
    through the centre of the town throwing them more or less violently into
    the crowd. Oranges get squashed, splatted, caught, eaten or collected
    for later. Interim result is that most people look like Sissy Spacek in
    Carrie horror movie. Ambulances get busy and the battle goes on for a
    coupe of hours till even the senior Gilles wearing some 2 meter hats of
    ostrich feathers get to conquer the Town Hall.

    Slight drawback is that the locals keep spraying some sticky foam all
    over people and with complete lack of public conveniences there is little
    one can do to clean it off. Also serving good old Belgian beer traditionally
    in relevant glasses and in large quantities leaves the cobblestones scattered
    with broken glass and mainly blood from oranges running down the streets.

    My score was: caught two oranges, got badly hit by one on the forehead,
    was handed one while licking off my face after the first hit and apart
    from two badly dislocated fingers I really enjoyed the event.

    Take a look at Krys’ web site: www.krystyna.com/Gilles.html


  • Diving in Oman

    Oman is a fascinating country. For anyone who has been to Zanzibar, there
    are striking architectural similarities, but it is not all about modern
    or ancient towns, there’s desert, mountains and, of course, the
    Arabian Sea! Most of the dive operators are attached to hotels. There
    is one dive operation, called Dive Oman which is about 45 minutes drive
    south from the airport at Muscat Dive Oman is run by Bernard and Stephanie,
    a lovely couple, (French and Dutch) and is part owned by the poshest hotel,
    which is close by, called the Al Bustan. Bernard can be contacted on:
    diveoman@omantel.net.om

    Here, you can stay right on the beach in a range of accommodation, from
    air con rooms to a shared dorm. The bay from here is superb, not much
    to see snorkelling, but it is very pretty, and a short boat trip away,
    you will be able to see dolphins.

    The diving is very good for the novice and intermediate diver: there
    are no currents to speak of, you’ll find it difficult to get deeper
    than 20m and the visibility is generally 15m +. The corals are not as
    colourful as say the Red Sea, but this is more than made up for by fantastic
    amounts of fish! Great for macro photographers too! You get loads of them
    and they are so unafraid! The Beetle did not see anything particularly
    large, but there were lots of turtles, and the occasional docile reef
    shark, and in the right season, there are whale sharks. Visibility ranges
    from 15m+ and the water temperature is around 25 degrees C.

    Dive Oman is a very safe dive operation, not run by cowboys, good air
    – reasonable equipment although the Beetle has her own. A proper briefing
    preceded each dive and although few dives were guided, it was very safe
    and almost impossible to get lost!

    If you stay at Dive Oman, they are stuck out in the middle of nowhere
    and only have food at weekends i.e. Thursday and Friday, so you'll
    have to hire a care and go off and find something yourself the rest of
    the time.

    If you are British, you can buy a visa at the airport, around £16
    or $23. If you have an Israeli stamp in your passport, forget it, you’ll
    have a hard time getting in. Also, the Omanis are the worst drivers the
    Beetle has ever seen, even worse than the Egyptians! And that takes some
    doing! So driving can be fraught! The Beetle drove as a female over there,
    which is possible but a major novelty, so she had cars overtake and then
    sit on the other side of the road just staring in as she drove! The dress
    code is long and baggy: don't wear shorts outside the dive centre
    and females should wear long baggy trousers and long sleeved shirts or
    long short sleeved T shorts.

    Other dive operators include Blue Zone and Ecodivers bluzone@gto.net.om

    Dive Oman have a web site: http://www.diveoman.com.om/

    Next month: more on the sites of Oman


  • MEETING NEWS

    Meeting news from our branches around the world.


  • Readers comments: best airport nominations – from Stuart, London

    Skagway, Alaska is quite impressive – one shack and a runway!

    Pyongyang, North Korea – loads of staff servicing very few flights!

    Canaima, Venezuela, says the Beetle, is quite funny, a tiny strip cut
    out form the surrounding jungle with a wooden café close by with
    tens of stalls operated by companies all offering trips to the Angel Falls.

    Write in and tell us your best airport nominations! the Beetle