Meeting news from our branches around the world.
Tag: June 2003
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Physiotherapy – Matt Maddocks
Matt is a volunteer at the Old Boma, Mikindani, Southern Tanzania.
During a visit last year to Mikindani, I was informed of a physiotherapist
working in Nyanguo mission hospital and having now started my degree in
this subject I decided to try and gain some experience. Arriving I was
happy to find the hospital staff willing to have me for the day.Physiotherapy is a treatment supplementary to medicine and aims to bring
people back to as high a possible level of recovery. In its simplest form
it is finding out what a patient wishes to achieve and working towards
that by doing things differently or using treatments. I had the opportunity
to go on the ward rounds at the hospital and saw many patients and got
to see the differences of practices here in Tanzania compared to the UK.The cause of hospitalisation can be more bizarre here: one patient had
been washing his hands in a river when a crocodile bit his arm. Although
he was severely wounded there was no loss of nervous tissue, so exercises
could be done to help him regain hand movements. Another patient had fallen
from a coconut tree and broke his back so was regaining strength in his
upper body after prolonged traction.Physiotherapists can have time to sit and talk to patients, which allows
you to find out a lot more about them, their problems, and local life.
A female road worker suffering from ‘good old lower back pain’
revealed that she had visited a witch doctor, which had resulted in infection
and incidentally, increased pain.The most rewarding part of the day was spending time with one small
girl who had fractured her femur, trying to get her to use small crutches.
She was very active and enthusiastic, and after some effort she could
manage alone. We also visited the paediatric ward to play ball games with
the kids to keep them active. Here the physiotherapist had done a great
job building relationships with the children, which made it easy to fit
in and create conversation with them.The sight of a child overwhelmed by cancerous growths or a victim of
major burn injuries was not pleasant but obviously these sorts of things
are expected in hospitals. However, unfortunately all of the cases were
affected by the patients' financial situation and therefore ability
to pay fro treatment. Without payment, treatments are not given and, this
being true of government hospitals also, many people are left to suffer.
I could only be left thinking how much luckier we are to have the British
National Health Service to fall back on.However having read several articles about hinting that only the ‘dark’
side of Africa it told, I always try to pick out the magical things here
of which there are many. A wedding is such a colourful and happy event,
and the end of Ramadan is always an event to remember with the children
dressed in new clothing and adults enjoying the night. Everything I have
experienced here thus far seems to be more enhanced than at home and I
encourage anyone to come and see things for themselves.For more information about Trade Aid, volunteers and their work, please
visit their website www.mikindani.com
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Meeting News from New York
For details of forthcoming meetings e-mail newyork@globetrotters.co.uk
or register for e-mail 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.
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Place Names
Same names: how many place names have you come across that are the same,
but different countries? There’s Paris Texas and Paris France. Other
place names include Versailles in Kentucky and Versailles in France; Naples
and Venice in Florida and Naples and Venice in Italy. Do you have any
favourites? Write in and tell the Beetle!
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Meeting News from Ontario
For 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.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.
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Guide Books
Recently, the Beetle was asked about Guidebooks – what is out
there and can she make any recommendations? Below is a commentary on a
selection of some of the guidebooks available:Eyewitness guides, published by Dorling Kindersley produce glossy
guidebooks with lots of pictures on cities and also countries. The city
guides are especially good although a little heavy and longer than most
of the others. The Beetle particularly recommends these for short city
breaks as they provide lots of background detail about certain sites or
attractions and exploded diagrams of the insides of churches or palaces
etc. They are not so great about telling you how to get to and from some
of the attractions, although the Istanbul guide was excellent and rated
better in a recent trip there than the corresponding LP on Istanbul. See
www.dk.comFodor’s used more by the North American market and for
slightly more wealthy travellers than backpackers, although they do have
shoestring guides too. They tend to be fairly slim volumes and are particularly
strong on North America, Mexico and the Caribbean. Take a look at www.fodors.com/Footprint guides have very good guides on South American countries.
They also do Canada, (not the US), selected European and African countries,
Middle East and a good range of SE Asia. At the time the Beetle was backpacking
around South America, the Footprint individual country guides were a lot
better than the LP guides, in particular that awful huge tome LP produces
on all S American countries! For more info, see footprinttravelguides.comFrommer’s – used more by the North American travel market
and appear to be aimed at a slightly more affluent market than backpackers
– unless anyone would like to write in and disagree! The maps are
generally good, and a lot of emphasis is placed on reviewing pubs, restaurants,
hotels, bed and breakfasts etc. A quick look at a guide on Ireland, Jury’s
Court Inn in Cork is described as inexpensive at $61 and up for a room.
Otherwise they offer slightly pared down info on LP and RG. Frommer’s
also do portable guides that you can download onto your palm pilot or
similar not to mention a magazine and an e-newsletter. They are strong
on the number of Caribbean titles. For more info on Frommer’s guides,
see www.frommers.comInsight Guides publish over 200 titles, again quite glossy, good
photos – more of a coffee table book than a guidebook to take with you
on a trip. This kind of book may be useful for planning a trip as it has
the glossy pictures, but I would not take it on a trip to use as a guidebook.
For more info, see http://www.insightguides.comLonely Planet – see also the Lonely Planet Thorn Tree
website for sources of travel information. Lonely Planet, or LP is the
granddaddy of modern guidebooks. People tend to either love LP or they
hate it, and if the latter, their usual choice is Rough Guide (RG). The
Beetle prefers the LP because it usually has good maps, (some colour pictures!)
and she likes to know about every single restaurant and hostel available
at the time of writing and feels quite aggrieved when only a selection
are given (as in the RG)! Whilst prices change, you can always work out
the ratio of increase so that you still have a rough idea of potential
prices. See www.lonelyplanet.comMoon has been going 25 years and produce guides covering Americas,
Asia, and the Pacific. They are slightly biased to the US market but do
nevertheless produce good guidebooks with good maps and lots of detailed
information. The Beetle finds that Moon Guide distinguish themselves on
regions, particularly US states rather than entire countries, for example
excellent guides on New Mexico, Kauai, Mexico City etc. If I were to visit
a US state, then this is the book I would take with me – lots of
good maps, and local info. They also have city guides called Moon Metro
and include San Francisco, New York, Paris. For more info, see www.moon.comRother guidebooks are about walking. They are a very handy size,
good for slipping into a pocket, they usually have around 50 walking routes
per guidebook, with fabulously detailed maps, giving you all the info
you need such as grade of walk, approximate time to take, refreshments
available en route, how to get there and return. The Beetle likes these
books very much – if you are a walker, then these are for you! Destinations
covered include many different parts of the Mediterranean, and Norway
and Iceland. For more info, see www.cordee.co.ukRough Guides – as discussed above, we tend to find that
people either love these or hate them. They have just as good a range
in titles as LP, and they are very popular. They are just as comprehensive
in terms of information as the LP, but in a very different format. Both
LP and RG publish language guidebooks and a newsletter. Rough Guide tends
to place hotels, hostels, restaurants etc in price brackets, but nonetheless
give you enough info to make a decision re restaurant or hotel. For more
info, see www.roughguides.com/Trailblazers a small UK based company that do excellent guides
particularly on walking and trekking, so if this is your thing, then these
books will give you very details routes with distance, estimated times,
danger points, and a whole load of walking or hiking – even climbing
activities. For more info, see: www.trailblazerbooks.co.ukUlysses publish two series of travel guides and are strong on
Canada, the US and Central America. The Beetle bought Ulysses guides on
Panama, Honduras and El Salvador when there was nothing else available,
and they were really very good. They also do language guides. For more
info, see www.ulyssesguides.comDo you have a favourite guidebook, or one that was just terrible? E-mail
the Beetle
and let us know about it!