Vacation Dreams

Category: archive

  • Globetrotter Travel Award

    Under 24? A member of Globetrotters Club? Interested
    in a £1,000 travel award?

    Know someone who is? We have £1,000 to award each
    year for five years for the best submitted independent travel plan. Interested?

    Then see our legacy page
    on our Website, 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!!


  • Travel Tips

    When the Beetle wants to say thank you and money is
    not appropriate, she gives postcards from her hometown, London, to people
    as small gifts. Take some with you!

    Got a travel tip you would like to share
    with the Beetle? Then e-mail them to: the Beetle


  • Strange but True!

    Both the Paris and Hong Kong metro systems regularly
    use air freshener. Apparently studies reveal that if the system smells
    good, customers feel more positive about the travelling experience. London
    Underground, with over 3 million passengers a day, has started to trial
    a fragrance called Madeleine to see if fragrance will make a positive
    difference. If customers like it, it will become a permanent item. Sound
    like the sweet smell of success?


  • Have you got a tale to tell??

    If you have a travellers tale that your aching to tell.
    Then why not visit the “Travel Sized Bites” section of the Website and
    share it with the world. Travel
    Sized Bites


  • London:

    This report of the last London meeting on the 1st December is written
    by Padmassana.

    John Hornbuckle’s wonderful slides took us around Chile. He showed
    us the wildlife and landscape of the country. Though John began with a
    slide of an owl, this was a topical Harry Potter joke, he went on to show
    us photos of birds that can only be found in the Andes and animals like
    the Vicuna. He went on to tell us about Arica, which until recently was
    the driest place on earth, Lauca National Park in northern Chile. We saw
    photos of snow-capped mountains and volcano’s. John’s slides then showed
    us the salt area of Salar de Uyuni and down to the far south via the hot
    springs of El Tatio.

    After the break, Denise Heywood showed us Vietnam, without too
    many references to the war. She explained that over 60% of the population
    were born after 1975 and showed us photo’s of the children, who are Vietnams
    future. Denise showed us colonial French architecture, such as the Opera
    House, which is a copy of the one in Paris and towns like Hoi An and Na
    Trang. She also showed us the Cu chi tunnels left over from the war, which
    are difficult for westerners to enter. These tunnels led into underground
    schools, hospitals that the Vietnamese operated in during the war, there
    are hundreds of miles of tunnels going as far as the Cambodian border.

    Coming on 5th January: Four Mini-Talk Presentations
    and New Year Party –
    a programme of four twenty minute talks, offering
    a format that aims to offer the opportunity for different, specialist
    and off beat subjects and first time speakers.

    After the meeting we will be having our annual New Year Party, please
    bring a contribution of food and non-alcoholic drink

    London meetings are held at The Church of Scotland, Crown Court,
    behind the Fortune Theatre in
    Covent Gardenat
    2.30pm the first Saturday of each month. For more information, you
    can contact the Globetrotters Info line on +44 (0) 20 8674 6229, or visit
    the website: www.globetrotters.co.uk


  • Meeting News

    Meeting news from our branches around the world.


  • Ontario:

    The next meeting will be on January 18th at the the Woodsworth Co-op
    : Ann Dohler will talk about her recent trip to Peru, the Galapagos and
    the Amazon.

    For further 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.

    Toronto GT 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.


  • New York: A message from Laurie, the New York chair:

    Hello Globies! Hope you all had a good Thanksgiving. Due to holiday
    parties, travel and cheer, we will not be holding a December Globies meeting.
    We WILL resume on 5th January with a treat!
    Matt Link, an Associate Editor from Arthur Frommer’s Budget Travel will
    be our guest speaker.

    Matt will be giving a slide show and discussing the sites and culture
    of Ghana (the most popular country for American tourists in West Africa),
    with notes on spending time with the Muslims who live and work there,
    as well as important sites i.e., visiting a mud mosque and much more.
    He plans to make us feel a part of the Ghanaian culture and will be bringing
    some special props to help with our immersion! Matt has been travelling
    since the age of twelve, when he boarded his family’s boat for five years
    and sailed around the Pacific including the Philippines, Papua New Guinea,
    Micronesia, the Solomon Islands, and New Zealand, where he attended high
    school. He hasn’t stopped since, having visited dozens of countries in
    Eurasia and living for a number of years in both Hong Kong and Hawaii,
    where he ran kayak tours and published the guidebook Rainbow Handbook
    Hawaii. He now lives in New York where he works with Arthur Frommer as
    Associate Editor of the magazine Budget Travel. Keep an eye out of this
    Sunday’s (12/16) travel section of the LA Times and Miami Herald and a
    few other regional papers – Matt’s account of his trip to Ghana will appear
    in Frommer’s column! On January 4th, he’s a guest on The Early Today show
    (and they mean early – 4:30-5:30 AM!) on NBC.

    I hope you all have a safe and happy holiday. See you all soon!

    New York meetings are held at The Wings Theater, 154
    Christopher Street
    (btw Greenwich Stand
    Washington St), to the right of Crunch Fitness, in
    the Archive on the first Saturday of each month at
    4 pm.


  • Japan by the Wandering Weasel from London:

    In general travel and accommodation are expensive whilst food can vary
    hugely in price from noodle bars both cheaper and considerably more nutritious
    than MacDonald’s to city restaurant where the prices would flex anyone’s
    credit to the limit. Most other activities are pretty reasonably priced.

    Firstly, Japan is a country where the infrastructure works, if the timetable
    says a train or bus will arrive at a given time, it will. Transport is
    effective though expensive, buses and trains are clean, safe and regular
    though mountainous terrain in many areas can still make journeys lengthy.
    The language may be intimidating but most younger people can speak some
    English and it is not difficult to learn a few important signs (numbers,
    entrance, exit, toilet, place names etc.) or indeed the syllabary alphabets
    (hirogana and katakana) which are widely used on signs for place names
    (so are romaji in Tokyo and some major towns)

    Tokyo: Like most large towns, expensive, cosmopolitan, polluted
    and overcrowded Tokyo still retains a number of small temples and a few
    other small historical buildings wedged between the skyscrapers. It is
    worth visiting a few for the paintings and statuary, interesting architecture
    and some insight into Japanese culture and rituals. I particularly like
    the traditional Japanese and Chinese gardens, which are cheap to visit
    and charming and beautiful to see, the imperial palace and gardens around
    it are also a must see.

    Kyoto and Nara, easily reachable from Tokyo, preserve
    a lot more in the way of historic buildings, a reconstructed old castle
    and a herd of tame, fat and diabetic deer at Nara are good places to visit.

    Onsen: blessed or cursed with a great deal of geothermal energy
    there are a large number of hot springs in Japan, these can definitely
    be worth a visit, whilst I didn’t notice any health benefit I had the
    rather beautiful experience of lying outside in a hot bath able to look
    up at the moon and the stars between the clouds during a gentle snowfall.
    Getting out was a little on the cool side however.

    Kyushu: less developed than Honshu thus preserving more tradition
    and a few pieces of undeveloped countryside. Also warmer if that interests
    you and with much volcanic activity, some stunning crater lakes with brightly
    coloured poisonous looking water and a number of opportunities to breath
    some pretty poisonous air near the volcanoes. Pity the concession holders
    at these places, I can stand breathing sulphuric acid for an hour or so
    but how they manage it all the time I don’t now. Down at the Southern
    tip of the island, at Sakurajima ash from the volcano can be taken
    home in a small phial if you wish to relive the experience of grit with
    everything. The other thing which is omnipresent here is daikon, these
    giant white radishes are apparently very important to the locals’ diet
    being a major source of vitamin C, and accordingly they make a remarkable
    range of products from them, from simple shredded radish (OK), to Daikon
    Schochu (a sort of whisky) and daikon jam, both of which are best avoided.

    One of the most beautiful sights I remember from Japan is Takachiho
    gorge. A slot canyon deep enough that the sun can rarely or never is seen
    from the bottom. You can walk down to the river that flows through it,
    hire a rowing boat and paddle up to the head of the gorge where a waterfall
    enters. The water is crystal clear and the sides of the canyon are stunningly
    vertical hexagonal columns of black basalt.

    The Beetle says if you are thinking of travelling to Japan, you should
    investigate buying a rail pass in your own country that gives you a considerable
    discount. They are only available outside Japan.

    To get in touch with the Travelling Stoat,
    Then e-mail them to: the Beetle


  • Texas:

    If the first six meetings of the Texas Branch of the Globetrotters Club
    are an indication of the future, it is going to be bright, rosy, fun,
    informative, exciting, and a great success! Since the first meeting in
    July of 2001, the Texas branch has had 38 different people attend and
    Christina, the Texas Chair has received countless E-mails! Thank you,
    all you Globetrotter e-newsletter readers – if you live in the area, why
    not drop Christina a line and come to the January meeting!

    A message from Christina, the Texas chair.

    For me, the Texas Branch of the Globetrotters is a monthly support group
    to help me with my travel addiction. I’m glad to meet others who like
    to talk about travel and share their stories.

    The agenda for the December meeting was to share travel stories from
    2001 and state travel plans for New Years Resolutions 2002. We politely
    shared our stories, and had no time to state our resolutions. It was a
    great meeting.

    The agenda for the first meeting of 2002 (Saturday, January 12) will
    be to share our travel plans for 2002. I’m working on mine – a cruise,
    a train trip, a new continent, a retreat, and a national park – see –
    this is why I need a support group.

    How about you? What are your travel resolutions for the new year? Come
    prepared to share.

    The next meeting will be Saturday, January 12, New Braunfels Library,
    3 p.m. Mark your calendar. Everyone is invited!

    The meeting will start promptly at 3 p.m. and end at 5 p.m. Bring a
    favorite travel magazine or brochure to contribute to the door prize.
    Plan to arrive by 2:30 for extra networking time.

    Following the Jan 12 meeting we will adjourn to the Hoity Toit for more
    talk and tales.

    Christina’s advice is to come early so you won’t be late! Anybody
    who wants to help Christina or enquire about meetings, please contact
    her on: texas@globetrotters.co.uk