Vacation Dreams

Tag: September 2003

  • TrekAmerica Discount

    TrekAmerica has offered Globetrotters readers of this
    e-newsletter a 10% Discount on all of their tours.

    TrekAmerica offers a range of over 60 adventure camping,
    lodging and walking tours in small groups (13 passengers maximum) in Canada,
    the USA (incl. Alaska) and Mexico.

    In 2004 we will also be offeringfamily tours and various
    specialty tours (e.g.- biking and birdwatching tours).

    To claim your discount, you need to book direct and
    mention membership of the Globetrotters Club. For more information, see
    www.trekamerica.co.uk or
    call 0870 444 8735.


  • Padmassana visits Berlin

    Continuing our recent theme on visiting Germany, we had the Beetle’s report on Munich, and now Padmassana has sent us this trip report from his recent visit to Berlin. This is how he found Berlin since he was last there, before the wall came down in 1989.

    You have got to visit Berlin – this now has to be the best city in Europe. There is so much to do – Berlin has changed out of all recognition since I was last here. Shops are open on Saturday afternoons, but I think even the Beetles credit card would go sick at the thought of shopping on Kudamm!

    I did a walking tour (www.berlinwalks.com) for 5 hours one day, just walked into “Mitte” the heart of the city that used to be in the East. It is a vibrant place now, not the dour way it used to be. The ghost stations are open again but have been left with their 1930’s decoration. Checkpoint Charlie is still there, but on the east side where you went through all the stuff to get in to the east are shops and cafes, it is unrecognisable now. Also the air is not full of the exhaust fumes from the East German Trabants; now the east has BMW’s and Merc’s, as well as McDonalds!

    I was the only one on the walk who had been into the East pre 1989, I had to describe to an Aussie couple what it was like, it was hard to remember where the big shed was at Checkpoint Charlie and the chicane in the road. They couldn’t believe the palaver involved back then in getting into the GDR.

    I never dreamed the last time I was here that I would be able to walk through the Brandenburg Gate, but I did yesterday. Where the wall was taken down they have replaced it with bricks in the road to show where it was. The biggest change is Potsdam Platz, I remember it as a concrete wasteland, with barbed wire and tank traps and towers with machine guns and massive flood lights, now it is an area of new modern buildings like the Sony centre. I like the public art in Berlin, it’s fun, there are lots of bears, doing various things as adverts for local businesses.

    There are lots more places to eat than I remember, and apart from my daily milkshake, I haven’t eaten any burgers, rather I paid a daily visit to the excellent Kamps bakeries, which do hot sandwiches and the Turkish Imbiss stube, which do good kebabs.

    I visited the Pergamon museum on Museum Island after the tour, lots of fab stuff from Pergamon, Iran and Babylon. Went to visit the Reichstag next, but the queue was a joke, so I walked up Unter Den Linden to the TV tower (aka The pope’s revenge), so called because when the sun shines a cross appears on this communist, atheist piece of 60’s architecture, only 6 Euros to go up for great views of the city.

    Back to the Checkpoint Charlie museum (7 Euros), which has been greatly enlarged and is now very interesting. Had a look round Potsdam Platz, and bought a then and now postcard as a reminder, which they stamp the back with a GDR customs stamp. Went via the Topography of Terrors which is an exhibition about the Gestapo in their former dungeons, unearthed when the wall was dismantled. You can borrow a commentary tape in English, which guides you along the exhibit in about an hour. Nearby a bit of the Berlin wall is left, which now ironically has a fence round it to protect it from people stealing bits!

    Wandered back to the Reichstag the line had shortened, queued for 30 minutes, then you get the lift up to the glass roof, best views of Berlin possible and it’s completely free, which is why the lines are so long. The idea is that people can look down on the German parliament, and the politicians can look up and be reminded as to who really has the power.

    I had planned on going to Potsdam itself to see the palaces. I found out that it’s best to book Potsdam in advance because UNESCO limit the number of visitors who can go around the palaces and it doesn’t take many coach parties of 50 or 60 to fill it up. So abandoned this idea. Potsdam lies at the end of the S2 line. It’s really weird going through the stations now they are open as I remember the dark ghost stations. You can tell the old ones because they have green tiles. Instead I visited the East Side gallery. This is a bit of the wall next to the river in the east. It has the famous mural of a Trabant coming thru the wall with Honecker and Brezhnev kissing on the back seat, and another brilliant mural like a cartoon of the wall and people trying various means of escape.

    I tried to go to the Documentation museum, but it was closed: Lonely Planet failed to mention it’s only open Wednesday – Sunday!

    The weather was incredibly hot, so I went on a river trip for an hour (7 euros) which is nice as you get a different perspective of the city. The commentary was in German, but luckily could remember enough German to understand most of it including some of the jokes levelled against the German politicians who have moved from Bonn, they are now called “Gastarbeiters”.

    So that was Berlin, I hope its not another 15 years till I get here again. I strongly recommend it – give it a go and visit!

    If you’d like to contact Padmassana, click here: Padmassana


  • Top 5 Things to Do in a Lifetime

    The BBC recently showed a programme outlining the results
    of a viewer’s poll stating the top 50 things they thought everyone
    should do in their life.

    The top 5 things were as follows:

    1. Swim with dolphins
    2. Dive the Great Barrier Reef or Coral Reefs
    3. Fly on Concorde
    4. Whale watching
    5. Dive with sharks

    What would your top 5 things be? Write in and tell the
    Beetle.


  • Busiest Airports

    Number one passenger airport of 2002 is: Atlanta Hartsfield!

    Atlanta retained its title as the world's busiest passenger airport
    last year as passenger numbers rose to 76.9 million, an increase of 1.3
    percent over 2001.

    Chicago O'Hare was the second busiest with 66.6 million passengers
    and Los Angeles LAX was third busiest with 56.2 million passengers.

    London’s Heathrow was the busiest outside North America with traffic
    of 63.3 million.

    Figures released today by Airports Council International-North America
    showed that although more than 1.3 billion people boarded planes last
    year, passenger numbers were down by 2.6 percent.

    Source: Airports Council International-North America


  • Concorde Auction

    Aviation enthusiasts, get ready! Air France is set to
    auction 200 parts from its retired Concorde fleet at Christie’s
    Paris auction room in October. After 27 years of service, everything from
    the famous nose cone to smaller pieces of memorabilia will be for sale.
    The proceeds will go towards children's causes supported by Air France.
    As a price guide, the famous drooping nose cone is estimated at EUR10,000
    (USD$11,000) to EUR15,000 but prices for other mementoes, such as photos
    and models are as low as EUR20. There are no reserve prices, so everything
    must go.


  • Volunteer Programme: Ghana

    Save the Earth Network is a Ghana based organization, founded in 1998
    and dedicated to promoting sustainable development, agro-forestry, environmental
    conservation, international solidarity through voluntary work and cultural
    immersion in Ghana.

    We aim to positively contribute to help reduce poverty, hunger, malnutrition,
    disease, illiteracy, drug abuse, unemployment, and environmental degradation,
    which are increasingly becoming the order of the day in most parts of
    the developing world. We are a networking tool for environmental, social
    and economic development activists from Ghana and worldwide. We offer
    volunteer placements in Ghana in areas that includes renovation and construction
    of school buildings for poor rural communities. Teaching children English
    language, mathematics and Christian religion at schools for under-privileged
    communities. Caring for orphans, destitute and abandoned children in foster
    homes and orphanages and providing them education; HIV/AIDS education,
    reforestation (environmental conservation), agro forestry and rejuvenation
    of degraded farmlands through tree planting; organic farming, primary
    health care and other community development programs.

    Volunteers can participate in most of the volunteer programs all year
    round. Volunteers mostly work alongside staff and volunteers from the
    local community. Special skills, professional qualifications or previous
    experience is not required of volunteers in most of the programs. What
    is required is motivation, charisma, initiative, drive and the compassion
    to assist the underprivileged overcome their challenges and their struggle
    for dignity. Volunteers work four days a week, (Mondays to Thursdays)
    and they will work a minimum of four hours a day – it depends on
    the volunteer. We arrange for the volunteers to stay with good host families.
    Piped water and electricity are mostly available. Meals, a private room
    and bed are provided to each volunteer. Volunteers can participate in
    most programs from a period of 4 weeks to 52 weeks or more.

    If you are interested in participating in any of our programs or would
    like to contact past volunteers, please contact: Eben Mensah at Save the
    Earth Network, P.O. Box CT 3635, Cantonments, Accra, Ghana. Tel: 233-21-667791,
    Fax:233-21-667791 or e-mail: ebensten@yahoo.com


  • Globetrotters Travel Award

    Under 30? 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!!