Vacation Dreams

Category: archive

  • FAST Changi Check In

    Singapore's Changi Airport has introduced immigration
    kiosks that read fingerprints and facial features and double
    as automated check-in counters, in a bid to cut flight
    check-in times. The project, known as Fully Automated
    Seamless Travel or FAST, cuts the time needed for passengers
    to register for flights and check passports on arrival to
    from 15 minutes or longer, two minutes.

    The system, which began trials in November 2004 at Changi,
    Asia's sixth-busiest airport, requires users to lodge
    facial details and thumb prints as biometric data on an
    identification card the size of a credit card.
    Passengers insert a card into a kiosk and then look into a
    camera and press their thumb onto a plate to check their
    details.

  • Travel Tips from Mac and Stanley

    Stanley: I recently (September 2004) visited my friends in
    Veliky Novgorod, Russia and stayed in their flat for about
    a week. There is a requirement to submit a entrance
    document as well as an exit document upon departure.
    The exit document must be stamped on the back to be valid.
    My host in Novgorod took me to the local Russian
    Government office to take care of the necessary exit stamp
    and we were told that we must register at a local hotel
    where they will affix the necessary stamp on the back of
    my exit permit. The one night at a local hotel cost me 310
    roubles for a room I did not need or use just to get the
    required exit stamp.

    I discussed this procedure with my host who just shrugged
    and I understood that it does not make any sense but this
    is Russia! It’s best to be forewarned for
    tourists travelling to Russia. I had a Russian accompany
    me on two trips to the local government office to
    translate for me otherwise I would not have understood the
    procedure to acquire the necessary stamp on my exit
    permit. E-mail: Smsagara2@aol.com

    Mac: Retired Military 81 year old Stanley Matachi Sagara
    has passed on to me these military tips and experiences.
    He has visited 66 countries. “I like to take capped
    ball point pens when I travel. It protects ink from
    accidentally soiling my shirt pocket (it ruined several
    shirts before I switched). Someone is always lacking
    a pen when its time to fill out arrival cards. I loan them
    my ball point pen but retain the cap so that I have some
    assurance of getting my pen returned. If not the borrower
    will have an ink stain in HIS shirt pocket.

    Carrying buttoned and folded clothes to eliminate wrinkles
    in clear plastic zip lock bags makes it easy to locate an
    item of clothing and makes it easy to pack and repack when
    necessary. The air in these plastic bags kept his suitcase
    afloat when his suitcase onetime fell in ocean but did not
    sink. (In asking what travellers carry I find that zip
    lock bags is one item that is mentioned again and again)
    Sagara carries a suitcase with roller blade wheels with
    nylon bearings the one type that is dependable for easy
    movement over rough services.

    He gave me a nylon bath body cloth that he likes. It is 14
    inches wide and about '30 inches (l meter) long. It
    removes dead skin and is invigorating, comes in hard,
    medium and soft. He says it is long enough to scrub the
    back completely without having to shower with a friend. In
    Japan about US$6.00. In Taiwan and China for about half
    that price. Since it is made of nylon it can be packed
    damp in another one of those zip lock bags and it will not
    mildew.

    I did not get this from Sagara but read elsewhere that
    some of the French policemen along Boulevard St Germain in
    Paris are now on rollerblades (roller skates) and that all
    trashcans in Paris are now plastic (zip lock?) bags.

    Happy Travelling. Mac

  • So You Think You’re Well Travelled?

    Here’s a little Beetle quiz based on capital cities.
    See how many you get right! Go on, have a guess!

    What is the capital city of the following countries:

    1. Bahrain
    2. Japan
    3. Saudi Arabia
    4. Somalia
    5. Burundi

    For the answers, see at the end of the e-newsletter.

  • MEETING NEWS

    Meeting news from our branches around the world.


  • Travel Quiz: Western Canada

    The winner of last month's Moon Guide on the
    ArcadiaNational Park is Traechsel, congratulations! And the
    winner of our Peru quiz was Jane Thomas, again, well done!

    This month, win a Moon guidebook on Western Canada. See http://www.moon.com/ for
    info on this excellent series.

    Some people have said the quiz is difficult, we say do
    some research: try google.com or Ask Jeeves, if you need help
    with the answers.

    Quiz



  • Meeting News from London by Padmassana

    6th November 2004 London meeting

    A bumper attendance for the November London
    Globetrotter’s meeting, with not a chair, table or
    bit of floor space left. The audience included Globies
    from overseas including Brie Kelly from Colorado. The
    crowds had come to hear Globies President Janet
    Street-Porter’s
    talk on the Larapinta Trail that
    starts from Alice Springs and the Bay of Fires walk in
    Tasmania. Special mention due to Paul Robert’s who
    burned the midnight oil to scan Janet’s photos so
    that we could see them digitally. Janet did this 8 day
    -walk with a group and they were supported by a vehicle
    carrying their camping, cooking and other equipment, which
    left them free to enjoy the scenery and swat flies. We saw
    Janet in a full nylon head net to stop these annoying
    critters and later she explained a new use for toilet roll
    to stop the flies entering every orifice! It was all worth
    it for the great Aussie scenery, the reds and pinks of the
    rocks and greenery you wouldn’t normally think
    exists. The Bay of Fires walk in Tasmania is mainly on
    sand and again we saw some great pictures of her walk.
    Janet added on some pictures of a walk she recently did
    near Christchurch in New Zealand, where she stayed in some
    quirky buildings, one of which enjoyed an outdoor bathtub,
    where the water was heated by lighting a fire under the
    tub! The forty minutes went way too fast as we listened to
    Janet’s commentary.

    After the break it was over to Christian Tyler who
    gave us another interesting talk this time on the Taklamakan
    Desert
    and Xinjiang Province in China. His five-week
    trip began in Dunhuang, famous for its cave paintings.
    Christian’s group travelled in the ubiquitous Toyota
    Landcruiser and trekked by camel, supported by a Chinese
    army lorry. Christian’s journey took him to Miran
    and to abandoned cities in the desert. Some of these towns
    have been dug out of their sand tombs, we saw parts of
    wooden structures which had once been homes and shops.
    Christian explained that the cities had been abandoned as
    the underground rivers had either dried up or changed
    course. We saw other examples such as forests that were
    now just tree trunks. Christian’s talk gave us a
    rare insight to an area well off the beaten track.

    Mark your diary for forthcoming meetings:

    Sat. 4 December

    Amar Grover – North Pakistan – Kailash Valleys of Chitral
    to Gilgit via Shandur Pass

    Matthew Leeming -Afghanistan OR Iraqi Marsh Arabs

    Sat. 8th January – Four Mini-talks and New Year Party

    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. There is no
    London meeting in August, but we will be back in
    September. For more information, you can contact the
    Globetrotters Info line on +44 (0) 20 8674 6229, or visit
    the website: www.globetrotters.co.uk
    Admission: Members £2.00 Non-members
    £4.00.

  • Answers to Flag Quiz

    Find the answers

    '

    '

    '

    '

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    1. Argentina

    2. Bosnia- Herzegovina

    3. Cook Islands

    4. Estonia

    5. Honduras

  • Airline Responsible for Death

    A US appeals court ruled that an airline that forced an
    elderly woman to check a bag with her medical devices must
    bear responsibility for her subsequent death after losing
    the bag. A lower court ruled in 2002 that Americans
    Airlines parent company AMR and BWIA International Airways
    should pay USD$226,238.81 to Caroline Neischer's
    relatives because she died soon after her bag was
    lost. Mrs Neischer’s said it was the first
    case of its kind. “The significance of the case is
    that never before has an airline been held liable for the
    death of a passenger caused by delayed or missing
    baggage.” Mrs Neischer, who spent most of her life
    in her native Guyana, died at age 75 after flying from Los
    Angeles to Guyana in 1997. After Mrs Neischer transferred
    from an American Airlines flight in New York, a ground
    agent forced her to check a bag that contained a breathing
    device to treat her respiratory problems. The agent
    promised she would be given the bag immediately upon
    arriving in Guyana. However, the bag was lost and Neischer
    died days later.

  • Meeting News from New York

    New York meetings will resume in January – subject will be TBD.

    Please contact me (Laurie) if you’re interesting in speaking or know of someone who is! For details of forthcoming meetings email newyork@globetrotters.co.uk or register for email updates, click
    here at our website.

    New York meetings are held at The Wings Theatre, 154
    Christopher Street (btw Greenwich St and Washington St),
    to the right of Crunch Fitness, in the Archive on the
    first Saturday of each month at 4 pm. Admission:
    $8.00 for members and $10.00 for non-members.