Vacation Dreams

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  • Fave Websites of the Month

    worldtravelguide.net

    Gives you stacks of info on countries, cities, weather,
    airports – most things you’d like to find out about a country.



  • Globetrotter Travel Award to the under 30s!

    Under 30? Been a member of the Globetrotters Club for
    2 years – or want to take out a 3 year subscription? 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? We have just made the first award to Mike Dodd, a 22
    year old mechanical engineering student at Warwick University, to help
    him with his trip to Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.

    Seeour 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!!



  • Free London Museums: The Museum of London

    Last year, the British government announced that it would
    drop the entrance fee to many of the larger museums in London.

    The Beetle’s favourite London museum is funnily enough
    called the Museum of London. It is about 15 minutes walk from St Paul’s
    Cathedral and the closest tube is the Barbican.

    You could combine a visit starting at the Barbican, visit
    an art exhibition, grab a bite to eat or a coffee or wander around the
    Barbican complex, which is interesting in itself. Then walk down Aldersgate
    (about 5 minutes) towards St Paul’s to the large roundabout road where
    the Museum of London is situated.

    It’s a great museum which looks at the early Roman remains
    in London, all through the ages to the modern skyline of the City. And
    it’s free!

    Weekends are the busiest time since the admission fee
    has been scrapped, so try and visit during the week, if you can. Take
    a look atMuseum of London
    or tel: 020 7600 3699



  • Five Things You Didn't Know About Tourism

    (From Tourism Concern)

    1. According to the UN, 13-19 million children are working
    in the tourism sector all over the world. More than 1 million are forced
    into tourism’s sex industry.

    2. 5,200 people were given 12 days’ notice and then forcibly
    removed from their homes in Pagan, Burma to make way for a tourism development.
    The military junta said they were an eyesore to tourists.

    3. Spain’s 12 million visitors a year leave behind 100,000
    tonnes of rubbish.

    4. In destinations with beautiful beaches, especially
    the Caribbean, local people are often barred from beaches by hotel security
    and prevented from carrying on their livelihoods, such as fishing.

    5. The UN calculates that a tourist uses as much water
    in 24 hours as a Third World villager would use to produce rice in 100
    days.

    Tourism Concern is a charity that works to ensure that
    local communities get a fair deal. Seetourismconcern.org.uk



  • Kenyan Proverb

    “The Earth was not give to us by our parents, it
    was lent to us by our children.”



  • Tibetan Women's Uprising

    If you were in London on March 12th,
    you may have joined the Tibet Vigil for prayers and speeches from 5pm
    to 7pm opposite the Chinese Embassy in Portland Place.

    This special vigil was in memory of 3,000 women who met
    in Lhasa in 1959 and the many thousands of women including nuns who are
    still suffering or in prison for declaring that Tibet should be free and
    refusing to denounce the Dalai Lama.

    There are regular weekly meetings in London to protest
    on behalf of Tibetans. For details, call +44 (0) 208 771 1822 ore-mail or see the web site:www.tibet-vigil.org.uk



  • Not to be Seen Dead In?

    Madagascar travel advice by the FCO: we advise against
    all holiday and other non-essential travel to Madagascar for the time
    being. The demonstrations and strike, which followed the presidential
    elections on 16 December 2001, have stopped.

    However, there are still outbreaks of violence around
    the country. Martial law was declared in Antananarivo on 28 February,
    and a curfew was imposed from 2100-0500.

    Curfews have also been imposed in other cities around
    the country. Barricades are still in place at points around the capital
    and those situated on the main roads linking Antananarivo to the provinces
    have been strengthened. This has made road travel around the country dangerous
    and difficult.

    Air Madagascar is not offering flights to Europe and
    Asia at the moment. Air France is providing one flight per week. Flights
    to and from South Africa are severely disrupted. Flights around the country
    are also subject to disruption. There is no aviation fuel for commercial
    use at Ivato, the main airport in the capital.

    There have been cases of armed robbery in some National
    Parks. All independent travellers intending to visit National Parks should
    seek advice from a tour operator, or from the park administration.

    There has been an increase in the number of travellers
    being pick-pocketed at the airport. Visitors should exercise caution on
    arrival and departure and should not leave bags unattended. Keep money
    and passports separate.

    There is a danger of mugging in urban areas. Do not carry
    excessive money or wear prominent jewellery. Take sensible precautions
    in crowded areas such as markets. It is wise to avoid walking at night
    in city centres. Visitors are advised to carry a copy of their passport
    and to keep the original safe (e.g. a hotel deposit box).

    Avoid travelling outside urban areas at night, if at
    all possible.

    Visitors are advised not to wear military style clothing.
    It is disapproved of locally and could lead to detention.

    Medical supplies are becoming increasingly scarce in
    Antananarivo and around the country. The shortage of medical supplies
    together with lack of fuel is limiting the medical evacuation services
    available.

    www.fco.gov.uk/



  • Readers comments: best airport nominations – from the Travelling Stoat

    Changi, Singapore: large, efficient, clean (good duty free) and looks
    great, what with the orchids and the waterfalls inside the airport

    Aruba: clean, quiet and uncrowded

    Denver: looks nice but crap shops

    Landing strip at Kavak, Venezuela: a charming field – minimal environmental
    impact!

    Heathrow: good shops for last minute forgotten item purchasing, can fly
    almost anywhere from it – downside it is horrible to get to and
    from, especially for early morning flights

    The Stoat’s worst airports include:

    Dar es Salaam – dirty, not many shops, expensive, sells 6 month
    old copies of the Economist

    Local airport at Honiara: fly ridden, filthy and decidedly dodgy

    Local airport at Vanuatu: same as Honiara

    Write in and tell us your best airport nominations!Beetle@globetrotters.co.uk


  • More Funny Signs

    In a Nairobi restaurant: CUSTOMERS WHO FIND OUR WAITRESSES RUDE OUGHT
    TO SEE THE MANAGER.

    On the grounds of a private school: NO TRESPASSING WITHOUT PERMISSION.

    On an Athi River highway: TAKE NOTICE: WHEN THIS SIGN IS UNDER WATER,
    THIS ROAD IS IMPASSABLE.

    On a poster at Kencom: ARE YOU AN ADULT THAT CANNOT READ? IF SO,WE CAN
    HELP.

    Write in and tell us your funny sign! Drop a line to the Beetle!Beetle@globetrotters.co.uk


  • London Underground Travel – the low down

    This is not for the faint hearted: if you are a regular traveller on
    the London Underground, here are some facts that you are going to wish
    you hadn”t read.

    During Autumn of 2000, a team of scientists at the Department of Forensics
    at University College London removed a row of passenger seats from a Central
    Line tube carriage for analysis into cleanliness. Despite London Underground”s
    claim that the interior of their trains are cleaned on a regular basis,
    the scientists made some alarming discoveries.

    The analysis was broken down. This is what was found on the surface of
    the seats: 4 types of hair sample (human, mouse, rat, dog) 7 types of
    insect mostly fleas, mostly alive) vomit originating from at least 9 separate
    people human urine originating from at least 4 separate people human excrement
    rodent excrement human semen

    When the seats were taken apart, they found: the remains of 6 mice the
    remains of 2 large rats 1 previously unheard of fungus It is estimated
    that by holding one of the armrests, you are transferring, to your body,
    the natural oils and sweat from as many as 400 different people. It is
    estimated that it is generally healthier to smoke five cigarettes a day
    than to travel for one hour a day on the London Underground.

    It is far more hygienic to wipe your hand on the inside of a recently
    flushed toilet bowl before eating, than to wipe your hand on a London
    Underground seat before eating. It is estimated that, within London, more
    work sick-days are taken because of bugs picked up whilst travelling on
    the London Underground than for any other reason (including alcohol).