Vacation Dreams

Tag: July 2003

  • Austravel Fair, London

    Austravel, the Australia and New Zealand travel specialists
    are holding a fair in London Saturday 30th August 2003.

    Lonely Planet will be at the Austravel Fair, where they’ll
    be offering advice on the top 10 most frequently asked questions they
    receive about Australia and New Zealand.

    Where: London Commonwealth Institute, Kensington
    High Street, London When: Saturday 30 August 2003 More info:
    visit http://www.austravel.com


  • Luggage Complaints

    The UK's Air Transport Users Council, the passenger
    watchdog organisation reports that complaints about baggage problems continue
    to increase more than in any other category. Almost a quarter of all complaints
    registered last year related to lost luggage. There was a 44 percent increase
    in written complaints, with mishandled baggage at the top of the list
    followed by complaints about delays, cancellations and ticketing problems.


  • Padmassana Travels To Japan . Part 2

    Padmassana went travelling around Kyushu in June/July time. Here is the
    second of three extracts from his travel journal.

    I left Beppu in more torrents of rain after a night of storms and went
    to Miyazaki. Miyazaki was a staging post on the way to Kagoshima and is
    famous for the Haniwa figures, clay statues that were found in burial
    mounds, similar to the Xian terracotta warriors. These were all items
    the Shogun would need to take with him to the other world. Some are funny,
    some threatening, some are mysterious, and include boats, carriages and
    horses. I found a local moggie asleep in one of the carriages, taking
    shelter from the rain!

    After finding my nice hotel I decided to go to Heidawa Park and promptly
    got lost. There is a Peace Tower in he park, built in 1940. It started
    to hail so I ended up sheltering under a bridge. There was a Mini Mart
    near by so I went in for a sausage on a stick and found I was actually
    very near the park.

    From Miyazaki, I did the 2 hour ride down to Kagoshima. I was immediately
    impressed with Kagoshima – it is a lovely city, has a very nice
    Ryokan, a KFC and a McDonalds all within a short walk, so I wont be starving!

    It’s now lovely and warm and the sun occasionally comes out. The
    Nakazono Ryokan in Kagoshima was superb, tatami mat floor with futon.
    The owner is very knowledgeable about the city, such as knowing where
    the free internet cafes are and says the weather is going to be good for
    the next few days! Had lunch by the port looking towards the volcano Sakurajima.

    I took the 24 hour ferry from Kagoshima, a 5 minute boat trip ($3.50,
    £2 return) across the sea between Sakurajima and the volcano. Once there,
    you take the tour bus that picks you up from where the ferry docks. It
    runs twice a day and costs 1,700 Yen, about £10 or $15. I did a tour,
    10 Japanese people and me! The guide didn’t speak any English so
    she gave me a book with numbers. She would be gabbling away in Japanese,
    then she’d shout “Number 21” and I’d read the book
    while trying to look out of the window! Really enjoyed the island, where
    I saw all the different layers of lava and the lava fields which you can
    see from the viewing platforms is in wave shapes. The tour includes a
    village that has been buried and a ceramics workshop where you can buy
    pottery glazed with volcanic ash.

    I also went to Ibusuki to try out sand bathing. You go upstairs, pay
    900 yen about £6, and are given a big cotton bath robe and walk across
    the beach which is so hot on the feet to lie down in a body shaped hole
    already dug. You are then covered in this volcanic steaming sand for 20
    minutes. After this, you feel nice and warm, but don’t do as I did
    and go and wash your toes in the sea, because it is too hot! Instead you
    wash yourself off under the tap carefully placed for visitors to clean
    off. It is supposed to be good for you!

    If you would like to contact Padmassana to ask him about his time in
    Japan, he can be e-mailed on: Padmassana.
    A good web resource, says Padmassana is: http://www.seejapan.co.uk/fseedo.html


  • SARS

    There is huge relief among Asian airlines after the World
    Health Organization declared that the SARS virus has now been contained
    in all affected countries.

    Taiwan was the last area to be removed from WHO’s
    warning list.

    Taiwan's tourist authorities are also planning a
    USD$8.72 million publicity drive to tempt tourists back to the island.

    In Singapore, a TV channel dedicated to SARS information
    will close. In all, SARS was responsible for more than 800 deaths worldwide
    and there were a total of 8,400 cases in 30 countries.

    The SARS virus started in China’s Guangdong province,
    on February 21 this year, when an infected medical doctor from Guangdong
    checked into a Hong Kong hotel. Other guests were infected and spread
    the virus when they travelled to their next destinations.


  • Bangladeshi Bus Bust

    Police in Bangladesh have announced new measures to combat
    the organised gangs who are terrorising transport owners, workers and
    passengers into handing over money at many of the capital, Dhaka’s
    bus terminals. The Bangladesh Rifles have combined with a newly formed
    Rapid Action Team in an attempt to bring the practice to an end. 72 people
    have been arrested so far, accused of terrorising drivers and passengers
    into handing over money to criminal organisations.


  • The World.s Most Expensive Countries

    1. Tokyo, Japan

    2. Osaka, Japan

    3. Oslo, Norway

    4. Hong Kong

    5. Libreville, Gabon

    London came 7th in the list.

    Source: http://www.aneki.com/lists.html


  • LAX Airport

    Los Angeles’ mayor, Jim Hahn has revealed plans
    to make LAX “the safest and most secure airport in America.”
    This involves knocking down three of the nine terminals and introducing
    radical transportation ideas.

    If approved, the plan to rebuild the airport would be
    completed over 11 years and allow for an increase in passenger numbers
    of more than 20 million.

    Amongst the proposals are a passenger check-in linked
    to the terminals by people mover trains.


  • So You Think You.re Well Travelled?

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

    Which cities are served by airports with the following
    codes:

    1. MUC
    2. GOA
    3. YTZ
    4. SGN
    5. AEP

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


  • An Insight into the Culture of Mikindani, Tanzania by Len Coleman

    Tanzania has a multi-ethnic and multi-racial population that practices
    a wide variety of traditions and customs. In Mikindani, the influence
    of Shirazi Arabs from Persia and traders from the Indian subcontinent
    combined with the movement and mixture of different ethnic African groups
    have complemented each other to form a rich cultural heritage. This is
    something that is not always evident as people go about their daily tasks
    with invidious alacrity, but on joyous or sorrowful occasions such as
    weddings and funerals one realises how deep and fascinating the culture
    here actually is.

    One of the most significant differences to European culture is how the
    concept of extended families and kinship works to benefit the people of
    Mikindani. It is common to find people living with and depending upon
    distant relations (“this is my brother’s wife’s uncle
    etc.), and kin ties through ones parents or by marriage appear to define
    one's rights, obligations, and opportunities. For example, educated
    members of the extended family are frequently held responsible for the
    education and welfare of younger siblings. This concept is a source of
    strength for the people of Mikindani, and provides a sense of belonging
    and togetherness that is lacking in our own society.

    It is often the case that, in the face of a limited presence of science
    and technology, an individual person in Africa cannot achieve much without
    enlisting the support and efforts of others. In most aspects of Mikindani
    life, the role of men and women is vastly different. There is a clear
    and ingrained streak of gender inequality, which has dampened the potential,
    but definitely not the spirits, of the younger women here. Despite this,
    women remain by far the more jovial and animated members of the community,
    going about things with a grace, good humour, vigour and vitality that
    says much about the way in which they share their tasks.

    At home, the women work so smoothly and quietly that when you are around,
    you sometimes wonder how water had arrived, the fire was started, or how
    the food materialised. Regardless of religion, it is rare to see men and
    women walking together, and almost non-existent to see a couple holding
    hands or making displays of affection.

    Walking around the dusty back streets of Mikindani, it is possible to
    see groups of old men playing bao, women plaiting each others hair and
    younger girls skipping with a piece of twine. It is, however, the talking,
    shouting and singing that catches my attention. A typical Swahili conversation
    begins with multiple greetings followed by general banter; often these
    discourses are held purely for enjoyment rather than purpose. Here, talk,
    as pure entertainment is the equivalent of the Western vices of television
    and games consoles.

    In Swahili society, much of the knowledge is shared and passed down to
    descendants encoded in stories, poetry and songs. This is the literature,
    art, law and science of Mikindani; the libraries and museums are in peoples’
    heads. The Swahili language has proven to be a unifying factor in Tanzania,
    uniting more than one hundred different ethnic groups and forging a common
    identity. There is, however, a second language spoken in Mikindani –
    the tribal dialect of Kimakonde. The Makonde people represent one of the
    five largest ethnic groups in Tanzania, with a population of around one
    million. The tribe originated in Northern Mozambique, from where people
    migrated to the higher lands of the Makonde plateau (120km inland from
    Mikindani).

    Many people in Mikindani still use Makonde, and the Makonde culture remains
    an enormous influence upon the traditions, customs and lifestyles of much
    of the local population. It is, however, their excellent woodcarvings
    for which the Makonde are internationally renowned. The skill is passed
    through the generations from father to son and some carvings provide an
    insight into the culture of the artists. Inland, many Makonde still practice
    their traditional religion even though they have been in contact with
    Muslim traders for hundreds of years. Their religion centres around the
    veneration of their ancestors, which ties in with the family tree carvings
    that depict the older generation on the bottom symbolically supporting
    later generations.

    Today, the culture of Mikindani is changing faster than ever. Western
    influences upon such things as fashion and music are increasingly obvious.
    In particular, many young men are frustrated, it seems, with the limitations
    of their grandparents’ culture. The poverty trap and the phenomenon
    of Americanisation have hit each other head on. Younger children whose
    parents can barely even afford to buy them a pair of flip-flops draw global
    brands such as the Nike tick on the walls and doors of houses. Despite
    this, there is still a strong bond between the people and their cultural
    heritage; hopefully, as living standards improve and development takes
    place, that will always remain the same

    The UK charity Trade Aid was founded 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
    is complete – the renovation of a badly decayed but very beautiful
    German fort, situated on the side of a hill and overlooking the spectacular
    Mikindani Lagoon. The Boma, as it is called 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. All of the rooms
    have been lovingly decorated and fitted out by local craftsmen. It’s
    an easy flight down to the south of Tanzania from Dar es Salaam, and the
    Beetle can vouch for the hospitality and effort that has gone into creating
    and running the Boma.

    For more information on the work carried out by Trade Aid in Tanzania,
    see their website www.mikindani.com


  • US passports to carry digitally signed Images

    US citizens will be issued with “smart” passports
    carrying a digitally signed photograph by late 2004.

    The new passports will include an embedded microchip
    that stores a compressed image of its owner's face. These microchips
    will be designed to prevent tampering and each digital image will be cryptographically
    signed to guarantee its authenticity.

    Civil liberties groups fear that the introduction of
    such international identity schemes could permit governments to monitor
    the activities of citizens in unprecedented detail.