All posts by London Meeting

Saturday, September 1st 2012

Speaking this month we have:

  • Darren Winwood — St Helena – South Atlantic Ocean

    Discover the most extraordinary place on earth! Well that's what their tourism page says.

    Darren Winwood talks about his life long dream to visit the island and to discover the hidden charms of an island lost in time. Darren is currently studying an MBA at the university of Liverpool and his dissertation topic is to examine what activities attract the tourist to remote Islands with a view to assist the locals (Saints) in their preparation for the opening of the islands first airport. He will be spending two weeks on the Island this August.

    Darren is well traveled and has worked overseas for over six years, the majority of that time in the Far East.

  • Nick Hunt — Across Europe on foot: Walking from the Hook of Holland to Istanbul

    October 2011 travel award winner Nick Hunt is a journalist and writer, who has written on subjects including melting glaciers in the Himalayas, the loss of indigenous languages in Finland, and the plight of migrant workers in Dubai.

    He is currently writing a book based on walking across Europe in the footsteps of Patrick Leigh Fermor, which will be published next year.Read more about this project at: afterthewoodsandthewater.wordpress.com .

Admission costs, £3 for Members and £6.00 Non-members. You do not need to be a member to attend, and we do not sell advanced tickets, please just come on the day, the doors open at 2:15pm and the program starts around 2:30pm with each talk lasting approximately 40 minutes.

There is no London meeting in August, but we start afresh each September.

 

Saturday July 7th, 2012

Members Slides : Around the world in eighty minutes.

8 presentations of 12 slides

This month we have a fast paced journey around the Globe..

Probably the best meeting of the year and your last chance to meet up before the summer.

Speakers are:

  1. Kevin Brackley – Signs in India
  2. Sue Learoyd- In Memory of Jean Clough
  3. Tony Annis – Tony’s Tasty Travelling Times
  4. Janie Butler – Tabaski-In the desert with theTuaregs
  5. Dick Curtis – Nepal – less the trekking !
  6. Jacqui Trotter – Venice & Verona via Paris
  7. Phil Fergusson – Bolivia
  8. Sylvia Pullen – Around Rwanda by Bus
  9. John Pannell – Trans Siberian journey
  10. Neil Harris – Harbin Ice Festival

Hope all of you remember we are organising picnic in Regent’s Park this Sunday 8th of July 12:00 – ‘Globies in the Park’!

Bring your own food and drink to enjoy the sunshine, hopefully!

If it is raining or too wet we plan to go to the Wetherspoons pub by Baker Street Station.. the Metropolitan Bar around 12.30

Map attached below

Globies in the Park
Globies in the Park

London branch meetings are held at The Church of Scotland, Crown Court, behind the Fortune Theatre in Covent Garden at 2.30pm the first Saturday of each month, unless there is a UK public holiday that weekend.

There is no London meeting in August, but we start afresh each September.

Saturday June 9th, 2012

Speaking this month we have:

  • Peter Cloudsley – The Magical World of Pablo Amaringo

    Pablo Amaringo (1938-2009) was an Amazonian shaman who became increasingly concerned by the disappearance of Amazonian ancestral knowledge and the destruction of the rain forest. He taught himself to paint and used this as vehicle to teach a new generation the value of indigenous ways and a new kind of spirituality free from dogma. This afternoon’s talk will be illustrated by Peter’s slides and recordings, and we will explore the stories behind Pablo’s pictures and what they aim to to transmit. We will delve into the world of Amazonian spirits and beings and see what they say about restoring balance to the world.
    Peter Cloudsley is a musicologist, researcher and writer who has lived in Peru since 1980. He founded the Amazon Retreat Centre in 2003 and coauthored ‘The Ayahuasca Visions of Pablo Amaringo‘ published last year.
  • Doreen Tayler – George Orwell’s Police Postings in Burma, & Doreen Tayler’s Burmese Days.

This meeting is taking place at 2.30 at the Dragon Hall, 17 Stukeley Street, London, WC2B 5LT as there is another booking at the Church of Scotland.

Dragon Hall
Dragon Hall

There is no London meeting in August, but we start afresh each September.

Saturday May 12th, 2012

Speaking this month we have:

  • Delia Cardnell – Madagascar, Along the Route du Sud and road to Morondava (RN34)

    Delia Cardnell takes us on a journey along the Route du Sud travelling straight through Central Madagascar, where the scenery is as stimulating and surreal as the culture.

  • John Pilkington – Georgia to AfghanistanAfter his last talk for us, ‘A Stroll through the Axis of Evil‘, John promised a sequel and here it is. From the Caucasus he followed a spectacular branch of the Silk Road across the Caspian Sea to Samarkand, then turned south-east to the High Pamirs of Tajikistan and Afghanistan (a region well-known to Marco Polo and possibly one or two Globies), before finishing at the source of the Oxus where Afghanistan, Pakistan and China meet.

    See http://www.pilk.net/update1.centralasia.html more information about John and his adventures.

London branch meetings are held at The Church of Scotland, Crown Court, behind the Fortune Theatre in Covent Garden at 2.30pm the first Saturday of each month, unless there is a UK public holiday that weekend. There is no London meeting in August, but we start afresh each September.

Saturday April 14th, 2012

Speaking this month we have:

  • Marion Bull – Upper Mesopotamia and Kurdistan

Marion is a London-based travel writer and photographer, published in the Sunday Times, Guardian, Independent, Mail on Sunday, Observer, magazines and books.

She has a special interest in early civilisation, Neolithic art and artefacts, and is known for solo expeditions to deserts, especially in Africa and the Middle East.

She has appeared on BBC Radio 4’s Excess Baggage and in a TV documentary. Highlights of her career so far include meeting Nelson Mandela, being the first UK journalist to record and exhibit rock painting images from the Tassili N’Ajjer, Algeria, and the first to photograph the remote off-limits Northern Skeleton Coast of Namibia, which became a touring exhibition.

She is currently writing a book about her journeys.

  • John Kenny – Sub Saharan Journeys: 6 years of visiting Africa’s remotest communities

John Kenny is a fine art photographer living in London.

Since 2006 his focus has been on Sub-Saharan Africa, highlighting the pivotal role that traditional communities play in humanity’s survival in places where the earth’s resources are minimal. His work emphasizes the positive role that Africa and Africans play in the 21st Century and also highlights the threats to traditional ways of life today.

John’s work has been exhibited worldwide through international art shows and has been featured in The Times of London, The Telegraph, and the international art and photography press. John actively supports organisations that work within traditional African communities and has been a guest on BBC Radio and at the London International Documentary Festival. Last year John donated works in support of Survival international, Concern Worldwide, and his work was auctioned at Sotheby’s New York in aid of ‘Art for Africa’.

John has been visiting tribes across the African continent for six years as part of an ongoing photography project and will be talking through his will be accompanied by a slideshow featuring some of the remarkable people that he has met on this journey, and why these people and their communities matter to him in the 21st Century.

To get an idea of John’s work you can see his Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/johnkennyphoto

London branch meetings are held at The Church of Scotland, Crown Court, behind the Fortune Theatre in Covent Garden at 2.30pm the first Saturday of each month, unless there is a UK public holiday that weekend.

There is no London meeting in August, but we start afresh each September.

Saturday March 3rd, 2012

Speaking this month we have:

  • Neil Rees – In the Footsteps of King Zog of Albania Neil Rees researched King Zog of Albania and his exile in Buckinghamshire, England during the war. He has retraced his footsteps from his birth in rural Albania in 1895 to his death in Paris in 1961. He wrote a local history book called “A Royal Exile” about the story which has been translated into Albanian, and he is reliably informed that it is probably the first Buckinghamshire local history book ever to be translated into Albanian. It was launched at the national museum in Tirana in November 2011.
  • Nadine Horn – Grateful for a spoon and getting trousers sewed by an Icelandic – Mission Spain What if you know that you like to travel, but simply don’t know where to start? Every day is the same and you feel that time is simply passing by? The talk is about the journey of creating unplanned adventures around you such as walking the Grand Union Canal from Birmingham to Northampton, walking from the heart of Edinburgh until encountering hills – discovering the motivation for the travel bug and ending up organising the first expedition in 30 days: Cycling around Spain solo – exploring a country you think you know but as a famous saying points out – it’s the journey that makes the difference. And then the stories follow…from being grateful for a spoon and getting your trousers sewed by an Icelandic.

    Find out more at www.nadinehorn.com / http://missionspain.wordpress.com/

London branch meetings are held at The Church of Scotland, Crown Court, behind the Fortune Theatre in Covent Garden the first Saturday of each month, unless there is a UK public holiday that weekend. 

Admission costs, £3 for Members and £6.00 Non-members. You do not need to be a member to attend, and we do not sell advanced tickets, please just come on the day, the doors open at 2:15pm and the program starts around 2:30pm with each talk lasting approximately 40 minutes.

There is no London meeting in August, but we start afresh each September.

Saturday February 4th, 2012

Speaking this month we have:

  • Neil Harris – “Ethiopia: A country of two halves; history in the north, tribal Africa in the south.”

    Neil Harris is a keen photographer and since retirement an avid traveller. He will talk about and show photographs of Ethiopia. A country of two halves. The north contains many historic monuments, it was one of the first countries to embrace Christianity, while in the south tribal peoples live a lifestyle largely unchanged since before the arrival of Europeans. The building of a large dam across the Omo River threatens this way of life, this, along with ongoing extensive improvement to the road system throughout the country means Ethiopia is about to change forever.

  • Sarah Murray – From the Magnificent to the Macabre: Send-Offs for the Dead.

    Sarah Murray, author of Making an Exit, traveled the world in search of the best send offs. She will describe her encounters with everything from a spectacular Balinese royal cremation and a chandelier in the Czech Republic made entirely from human bones to the American death care industry’s biggest road show and a ghoulish Sicilian crypt where mummified corpses line the walls.Join Sarah for an engaging and highly personal discussion in which she talk about some of the extraordinary rites and monuments she found on her travels (she might even tell you about the plans for her own eventual send off).

London branch meetings are held at The Church of Scotland, Crown Court, behind the Fortune Theatre in Covent Garden at 2.30pm the first Saturday of each month, unless there is a UK public holiday that weekend.

There is no London meeting in August, but we start afresh each September.

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Speaking this month we have:

  • Phil Coley – Japan
  • and two mini talks from
    • Kevin Brackley – Mysore
    • Gavin Fernandes – Across Kashmir by bus, bike and jeepLong-term member and frequent traveller Gavin A. Fernandes can often be found visiting family and friends in Goa. On each trip there he also tries to visit another region of India – somewhere he hasn’t been before. In 2011 it was…Across Kashmir by bus, bike and jeep

      From a houseboat on Lake Dal to the Himalayan foothills of Manali, travelling on some of India’s craziest roads, including the world’s highest motorable pass – on a mountain bike…

By tradition we follow this meeting with a New Year Party post-meeting everyone is invited to bring food and drink and participate! (Update: We have permission from the church for you to bring wine, but beer, cider and spirits are not allowed)

London branch meetings are held at The Church of Scotland, Crown Court, behind the Fortune Theatre in Covent Garden at 2.30pm the first Saturday of each month, unless there is a UK public holiday that weekend.

There is no London meeting in August, but we start afresh each September.

Saturday, Dec 3, 2011

Speaking this month:

  • James Willcox — Impressions of Afghanistan After a varied career including selling rugby programs at Twickenham, putting in the stoppers in a hot water bottle factory, being a postboy for Channel 4 and even a stint as aHealth and Safety Manager he set off from Istanbul a few years back heading for an Indian beach. He got delayed however in Pakistan and Afghanistan. After a chance meeting with Hussain and a mutual love of an area that they both want the rest of the world to come and see they set up Untamed Borders.When James is not guiding people around Central Asia he can be found either in Peshawar drinking tea, in Amsterdam with his girlfriend or in London where he is slowly coming to terms with owning a flat with negative equity
  • Chris Weston  â€” Animals on the edge Wildlife Photographer Chris Weston will be giving a digital audio-visual presentation of images and background stories from the Animals on the Edge photo-documentary project. Animals on the Edge is the most up-to-date visual survey of our worlds rare and endangered mammals, combining spectacular imagery with a wealth of factual information, For more information see  http://www.chrisweston.uk.com

London branch meetings are held at The Church of Scotland, Crown Court, behind the Fortune Theatre in Covent Garden at 2.30pm the first Saturday of each month, unless there is a UK public holiday that weekend.

There is no London meeting in August, but we start afresh each September.

 

Saturday, Nov 5, 2011

Speaking this month:

  • Andrea Orban and Laurence West — An Independent Travellers Guide to Libya
    Libya is a country about which everyone knows one or two things but very few people know much. So we are fortunate to have two speakers who between them spent over five-years living and working there and left Tripoli on one of the last scheduled flights in February this year.  Many of the things they thought they knew about Libya turned out to be less clear-cut on the ground than they seemed from afar and they also discovered many new things that came as wonderful surprises.In their talk, an Independent Travellers Guide to Libya‚ they will discuss their experiences of five UNESCO World Heritage sites, some of the best-preserved and least-visited Greco-Roman settlements anywhere in the world, and also touch on their trips to the Great Sea of Sand and the Acacus desert.
  • Jacqui Trotter — Summer in Southern Scotland

London branch meetings are held at The Church of Scotland, Crown Court, behind the Fortune Theatre in Covent Garden at 2.30pm the first Saturday of each month, unless there is a UK public holiday that weekend.

There is no London meeting in August, but we start afresh each September.