Category Archives: Events

Saturday, July 5, 2025

Speaking on Saturday, July 5, 2025, we have :

1st: Stuart Bradford – Across Russia from Moscow to Kamchatka

Stuart Bradford lived and worked in Russia for over seven years, a period which was the inspiration for his book Caviar Vodka and Tears. He will share some of his travel experiences in this huge and varied country, from Moscow overland to Vladivostok, and also the magical and remote region of Kamchatka.

Find out more at:


2nd: Sophy Roberts – A Training School for Elephants

Sophy Roberts, author of ‘The Lost Pianos of Siberia’, will be talking about her latest Sunday Times bestselling book: ‘A Training School for Elephants’. Tracing a strange, 1879 journey made to Lake Tanganyika by four Indian elephants, her tale weaves history and modern travel writing in a fascinating journey that takes her to Congo, Tanzania, Belgium, India and Iraq. Sophy’s illustrated talk will feature both contemporary photography from her travels, as well as rare archive footage.

Find out more at:


The previously advertised talk by Laura Coffey – Enchanted Islands has had to be postponed until November.


Date & Time: Saturday 5th July 2025

Doors open at 14:15 in London and on Zoom with the talks starting around 14:45 (London see Event Time Announcer for local times), please arrive before 14:45 and switch your phone to “do not disturb” or silent.

We would ask that anyone with respiratory symptoms participate via Zoom.

Admission costs:

  • £7 for members. (Members can access a ticket code below or from the members area.)
  • £10 for non-members. (save £3 if you join at this meeting)
  • a recording to watch later will be available to members and non-member ticket holders.

Please sign up for meeting updates to get notifications for future meetings.


For in person Tickets at the hall:

For Zoom online tickets:

Saturday, September 6, 2025

Speaking on Saturday, September 6, 2025, we have :

1st: Russell MaddicksEl Salvador – Transformation of a Nation.

This tiny Central American country, known as the Pulgarcita de las Americas (Thumbelina of the Americas), has gone from being the most dangerous in the region to being the safest.

Travel writer and guidebook author Russell Maddicks explains why now is the time to visit and all the places you must not miss, including the volcanoes you should climb, the crater lakes you should bathe in, the quaint colonial coffee towns you should spend time in, and the Pacific beaches blessed with golden sands and warm shallow waves that await you.

He will also take you to the heart of San Salvador, the capital city that was once shunned by travellers due to its risky reputation but is now a delight to explore.

Russell Maddicks is a freelance journalist, travel writer, and guidebook author who focuses on Latin America and Spain.

A member of the British Guild of Travel Writers, he has spent the last 30 years exploring Latin America and has written guides to Cuba, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, Nicaragua and Venezuela.

He is currently researching and writing a series of articles about El Salvador, which he has visited extensively, witnessing firsthand the dramatic changes in the country’s security situation and honing his pupusa making skills to the point of near perfection.

Follow him on X and Instagram – @LatAmTravelist

2nd: Olivia McGregor – Guyana

Olivia travelled to one of the last biodiverse wildernesses on earth, commonly referred to as ‘The Lost World’ in Guyana. She spent a month living in an indigenous Makushi Amerindian village, as their first foreign visitor. She documented the profound changes that are radically altering their way of life in light of the transformation Guyana is undergoing. 

Guyana has been undergoing a transformation since the recent discovery of crude oil which has made it, by some accounts, the world’s fastest-growing economy. Olivia went to investigate the implications of this for the region’s unrivalled biological and cultural diversity, and specifically for Makushi people.

Since time immemorial Makushi people have been the caretakers of ‘The Lost World’ that has helped protect this vestige of the world’s biodiversity. Olivia went to find out whether that is changing in light of their changing ways of life. 


The talk Darran Rees – Love Letter to Romania has had to be postponed.

Date & Time: Saturday 6th September 2025

Doors open at 14:15 in London and on Zoom with the talks starting around 14:45 (London see Event Time Announcer for local times), please arrive before 14:45 and switch your phone to “do not disturb” or silent.

We would ask that anyone with respiratory symptoms participate via Zoom.

Admission costs:

  • £7 for members. (Members can access a ticket code below or from the members area.)
  • £10 for non-members. (save £3 if you join at this meeting)
  • a recording to watch later will be available to members and non-member ticket holders.

Please sign up for meeting updates to get notifications for future meetings.


For in person Tickets at the hall:

For Zoom online tickets:

Saturday, October 4, 2025

Speaking on Saturday, October 4, 2025, we have :

1st: Oliver Smith – On This Holy Island: A Modern Pilgrimage around Britain

Acclaimed travel writer Oliver Smith embarks on an epic adventure across sacred British landscapes – climbing into remote sea caves, sleeping inside Neolithic tombs, scaling forgotten holy mountains and once marooning himself at sea. Following holy roads to churches, cathedrals and standing stones, this evocative and enlightening travelogue explores places prehistoric, pagan and Christian, but also reveals how football stadiums and music festivals have become contemporary places of pilgrimage.

The routes walked are often ancient, the pilgrims he meets are always modern. But underpinning the book is a timeless truth: that making journeys has always been a way of making meaning. So often, Oliver finds, “the unravelling of a path goes in tandem with the unravelling of the soul.”


2nd: Lola, John & Danny – Wild Guide Morocco

Join the authors of Wild Guide Morocco for stories of wild swims, desert adventures and slow travel from their five-month campervan journey across Morocco. 

Lola Culsan, John Weller and Danny Weller are a London-based family of travel writers and wild swimmers, known for their immersive adventures and off-the-beaten-path discoveries.

Authors of Wild Swimming Spain, Hidden Beaches Spain, Outdoor Swimming London and now Wild Guide Morocco (March 2025), they spent five months exploring Morocco by campervan – uncovering hidden waterfalls, desert oases, and remote mountain villages. 

Lola is a Jamaican-born, half-Spanish writer and former stand-up comic; John is a photographer, writer and lifelong wild swimmer; Danny is a linguist, journalist and explorer. Together, they share a passion for freedom, nature, and meaningful travel.


Date & Time: Saturday 4th October 2025

Doors open at 14:15 in London and on Zoom with the talks starting around 14:45 (London see Event Time Announcer for local times), please arrive before 14:45 and switch your phone to “do not disturb” or silent.

We would ask that anyone with respiratory symptoms participate via Zoom.

Admission costs:

  • £7 for members. (Members can access a ticket code below or from the members area.)
  • £10 for non-members. (save £3 if you join at this meeting)
  • a recording to watch later will be available to members and non-member ticket holders.

Please sign up for meeting updates to get notifications for future meetings.


For in person Tickets at the hall:

For Zoom online tickets:

Saturday, November 8, 2025

On Saturday, November 8, 2025, we have :

AGM: The club AGM starts at noon (card-carrying members only)

Speaking at 2.45 pm, we have: 

1st: Toral Dixit – Journeys Through the Lens: 30 Years of Global Discovery

With a 30-year career in filmmaking, documentary filmmaker Toral Dixit has journeyed to some of the most remote corners of the world—living among indigenous communities and excavating 2,000-year-old Mayan ruins deep in the jungles of Guatemala. She will share insights from these extraordinary experiences in her upcoming talk.  


2nd: Richard Loosley – A Butterfield’s Overland to India in the 1970s by Public Transport.

Join lifelong traveller Richard Loosley, who will talk about his early experiences on the overland route to India that he took with his business partner, Ashley Butterfield.

Richard retraces his journey across ten countries to India—armed only with a backpack, a sense of humour, and public transport. In this vivid memoir of the 1970s, Loosley shares tales of border crossings, hashish-laced buses, and the raw charm of a bygone era of travel.

A celebration of spontaneity, grit, and the joy of getting gloriously lost.

You can review Richards book at https://richardloosley.com/


Date & Time: Saturday 8th November 2025

Doors open at 14:15 in London and on Zoom with the talks starting around 14:45 (London see Event Time Announcer for local times), please arrive before 14:45 and switch your phone to “do not disturb” or silent.

We would ask that anyone with respiratory symptoms participate via Zoom.

Admission costs:

  • £7 for members. (Members can access a ticket code below or from the members area.)
  • £10 for non-members. (save £3 if you join at this meeting)
  • a recording to watch later will be available to members and non-member ticket holders.

Please sign up for meeting updates to get notifications for future meetings.


Tickets go on sale just before the meetings.

Saturday, December 20th, 2025

Speaking on Saturday, December 20, 2025, we have :

1st: Shafik MeghjiSmall Earthquakes: A Journey Through Lost British History in South America

In his new book Small Earthquakes, award-winning travel writer and author Shafik Meghji uncovers the fascinating story of Britain’s forgotten connections with South America, from the Atacama Desert to Tierra del Fuego, Easter Island to South Georgia.

Focusing on Argentina, Chile and Uruguay, the book tells a tale of footballers and pirates, nitrate kings and wool barons, polar explorers and cowboys, missionaries and radical MPs.

From a ghost town in one of the world’s driest deserts to a far-flung ranch in the sub-polar tundra; rusting whaling stations in the South Atlantic to an isolated railway built by convicts; the southernmost city on the planet to a crumbling port known as the ‘Jewel of the Pacific’, Small Earthquakes brings to life the past, present and future of this remarkable continent.

‘Meghji has the true travel writer’s eye for the comic, pathetic and tragic, and for the places where they collide… This is writing full of rust, wind and sadness. It captures splendidly the air of South America and the long, withdrawing roar of an empire whose influence once reached far beyond its political borders.’ – The Times

‘Rekindles a sense of wonder and expands our idea of what travel can be… Combining the immediacy of a travel memoir with the depth of a scholarly history lesson.’ – BBC Travel

Shafik will be happy to sign copies of the book after his talk.


2nd: Justyna Hellebrand – Three trips to Paraguay.

Justyna will present her journey to Paraguay, a country often overlooked, this captivating nation is a hidden gem, offering a truly unique experience for those fascinated by rich biodiversity, or natural wonders such as the Monday Falls and Cerro Koi.

A country with the remarkable story of a Catholic bishop who ascended to the presidency, a traditional “sopa paraguaya” that’s actually not a soup but corn bread  and the origin of mate drinking,(not a beer with your mates 😉 a practice first discovered by the indigenous Guaraní people.

She’ll tell the story of a sticky situation (for not having an entry stamp in her passport!) and talk about 2 Christian communities –   Mennonites, who, originated from a region of Poland occupied by Prussia, have played a pivotal role in flourishing Paraguayan agriculture and the Bruderhof community, with whom Justyna has maintained a personal connection for over 40 years.

Expect the unexpected as we weave in a surprising mention of origami and the intriguing tale of how she met the “German Super Papa” – a man who adopted many children in Paraguay and faced a 30-month prison sentence. She’ll also talk about ñandutí lace and the enchanting melodies of the Paraguayan harp.

This talk will be an unforgettable adventure into the soul of Paraguay – a country waiting to be discovered!


Date & Time: Saturday 20th December 2025

Doors open at 14:15 in London and on Zoom with the talks starting around 14:45 (London see Event Time Announcer for local times), please arrive before 14:45 and switch your phone to “do not disturb” or silent.

We would ask that anyone with respiratory symptoms participate via Zoom.

Admission costs:

  • £7 for members. (Members can access a ticket code below or from the members area.)
  • £10 for non-members. (save £3 if you join at this meeting)
  • a recording to watch later will be available to members and non-member ticket holders.

Please sign up for meeting updates to get notifications for future meetings.


Tickets go on sale just before the meetings.

Chester Globetrotters Meeting – 15th November 2025

Speaking on Saturday, 15th November 2025, we have :

10 minute talks

  • How to make adventure travel out of a package holiday – John Sunter
  • A weekend in Verona – Nikki Young
  • Prague – Marion and Mike Round
  • Borneo, third largest island in the world – Barbara Brooks
  • Wild Africa – Pamela Davies-Ratcliffe

Followed by a travel quiz hosted by David Redford – with prizes


Doors open at 1pm for 1:30pm start until 4:00pm
Entrance fee £5 (£4 Globetrotters members*) refreshments included (cash only)
info@chesterglobetrotters.com – www.chesterglobetrotters.com

Chester Globetrotters Meeting – 20th September 2025

Speaking on Saturday, 20th September 2025, we have :

  • Kevin Jones and Hanna Bastiaansen – Canada Ride East and West
    A trip to Eastern Canada covering 3000 miles in 3 weeks in 2024 and in 2007, Western Canada from Banff to Jasper during November, one of the most beautiful landscapes.
  • Bill Powell – Ramblings of a Tour Manager
    A tour of Bill’s most and least favourite European destinations visited during ten years of escorting groups overseas. Hear about little known holiday destinations, mad dictators, magnificent scenery and disastrous developments.

Doors open at 1pm for 1:30pm start until 4:00pm
Entrance fee £5 (£4 Globetrotters members*) refreshments included (cash only)
info@chesterglobetrotters.com – www.chesterglobetrotters.com

Chester Globetrotters Meeting – 17th May 2025

Speaking on Saturday, 17th May 2025, we have :

Christine Stockton – Armenia

Armenia today is a democratic nation with an ancient cultural heritage and was the first
country to adopt Christianity as the state religion. It has 3 UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
This was a 10 day tour organised by the Chester Civic Trust.

Brian Anderson – South Georgia

Brian has visited South Georgia three times, the last trip was in October 2024. Through his
stunning images, he looks at the island’s history, geography and incredibly rich flora and
fauna that survives’ and in some cases, flourishes in this harsh place.


Doors open at 1pm for 1:30pm start until 4:00pm
Entrance fee £5 (£4 Globetrotters members*) refreshments included (cash only)
info@chesterglobetrotters.com – www.chesterglobetrotters.com

Chester Globetrotters Meeting – 19th July 2025

Speaking on Saturday, 19th July 2025, we have :

  • A Botswana Safari. Speaker: Nikki Young.
  • India (part two) – from Agra to Mumbai by train, bus and plane. Speaker: John Brinkley.

Doors open at 1pm for 1:30pm start until 4:00pm
Entrance fee £5 (£4 Globetrotters members*) refreshments included (cash only)
info@chesterglobetrotters.com – www.chesterglobetrotters.com

Chester Globetrotters Meeting – 15th March 2025

Speaking on Saturday, 15th March 2025, we have :

  • Anna Manning & Howard Jennings – Christmas in the Caribbean with a tandem
    The talk covers two Christmas periods spent in the Caribbean with our tandem. The first was 2022/23 in Barbados and the second was 2023/24 in Martinique and Guadeloupe
  • lan O’Neill – India — Street Life
    Ian spent many weeks travelling around the northern states of India, where he’s been lucky to meet many people who work hard to survive, but always with a smile on their faces

Doors open at 1 pm for 1:30 pm start until 4:00 pm
Entrance fee £5 (£4 Globetrotters members*) refreshments included (cash only)
info@chesterglobetrotters.com – www.chesterglobetrotters.com