All posts by The Ant

Meeting news from the London branch by Padmassana

The first meeting of 2008 was our usual 4 talks given by Members. Neil Harris took us to Bhutan, the land where GNH (Gross National Happiness) is valued higher than GDP. Though at a minimum of US$200 per day Bhutan is not a cheap place to visit. Drak Air is the only way in, so no cheap flights either. Neil showed us Bhutan’s national sport of archery and the spectacular Tiger’s Nest monastery. The Bhutanese wear their national dress because they want to, though Government employees have to. The Bhutanese seem to have a good standard of living compared to other Asian countries, though much of the work is done by Indian labour.

Tony Annis took us to Brazil, where he accompanied Ms Mitterand for part of his journey as she visited the indigenous people including the Ashanika tribe. Tony showed us the Indian villages, which are days away from civilization. Some villages do have a satellite telephone, so that the villagers can report logging raids from over the border, though they have to pay for any other calls. Despite the heat the, Tony’s helper still wore his national costume, which actually weighed over 7kg!

Janice Meek took us back to Asia where her son married his Indian bride in Hyderabad. Before the weeding Janice explored finding sights such as the “Black death Tower” a monument to the plague, though apparently you are not allowed to the top because Janice explained, people use the tower to commit suicide. The wedding itself took place over a number of days, with different ceremonies. This allowed time for Janice to be fitted with her own Sari and to choose appropriate jewellery. The wedding culminating in the happy couple picking a star, which will hopefully help to guide them through their married life.

Our last speaker was Dan Bachmann, who took us Goreme in Turkey’s Cappadoccia region. This fascinating area with its weird chimney shaped rock formations, out of which cave dwellings have been cut. Most have been abandoned, some are collapsing, but Dan was still able to show us the insides of many including caves made into Churches, another hill revealed a complete ghost town. Dan was surprised to find many Korean tourists visiting the area.

As is the custom the January meeting did not end with the last talk, instead Globies enjoyed their New Year’s party, many thanks to those who brought along food and drink and particularly to Jacqui Trotter for spending much of the afternoon in the kitchen.

London 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. There is no London meeting in August, but we will be back in September. For more information, you can contact the Globetrotters Info line on +44 (0) 20 8674 6229, or visit the website: www.globetrotters.co.uk


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.

Ontario 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.


Write in (1)… in small groups by Eleanor H. Borkowski

After January’s reading January’s edition of the eNewsletter, Eleanor wrote in asking a whole host of travel questions. Can you help with advice, tips and thoughts ?

ï¿Â½ With the dollar being so devalued what suggestions do you [the eNewsletter readers] have to travel to London, Scotland and Ireland ?

ï¿Â½ Where can I find places to stay in these countries that would not break my bank account? Are there home exchanges available and a list of Bed & Breakfast lodgings that are affordable ?

ï¿Â½ Do you have any suggestions on how to get to Altumura, Italy to work at the La Sabranenque Restoration site, which is south of Bari ?

ï¿Â½ Has anyone been to the Amazon ? How did you arrange the trip? By yourself or through a travel agency?

To quote Eleanor “As you can see, I am new to this world of travel, but really want to get started before time runs out !”

Send your information and replies to ehborkowski@adelphia.net


Write for the Globetrotters eNewsletter

If you enjoy writing, enjoy travelling, why not write for the free Globetrotters eNewsletter! The Ant would love to hear from you: your travel stories, anecdotes, jokes, questions, hints and tips, or your hometown or somewhere of special interest to you. Over 14,000 people currently subscribe to the Globetrotter eNewsletter.

To see your story in cyber print, email The Ant, theant@globetrotters.co.uk, with your travel experiences / hints & tips / questions. Your article should be up to 750 words, feature up to 3 or 4 jpeg photos and introduce yourself with a couple of sentences and a contact e-mail address.


Write in (2)… Around the World in 80 Poems by Graham Relton

“I’m going travelling whether you come with me or not!” Without this ultimatum from my partner I may never have stepped off the career ladder to circumnavigate the globe. In April 2006 my girlfriend and now wife took the plunge and left our comfortable jobs to travel the world for a year. It was the best decision we have probably made in our lives, so good in fact that we came back married.

I had never really written any poetry prior to my travelling but decided it would be a great way to document our trip, so I started writing poems in the first week from our hostel in the heart of Mexico City and I carried on until the last leg of our journey on the Trans-Siberian Express across China and Mongolia to Russia. Any way, we returned to the UK in March 07 and I eventually took the advice of my many travel companions and compiled my book which I self published through a online company (author house)

345 days, 16 countries, 4 continents, 3 hospitals, 2 wedding rings, 1 police station and a day lost forever. From burping Mexicans to BBQ rat in Laos, a leap of faith in Vietnam and an irate nun in Russia, my poems follow the ups and the downs of life of two novice travellers on the backpacker trail. I hope they make you laugh ? Make you ponder ? Make you cringe ? Or make you wonder… anyone would quit a comfortable job to circumnavigate the globe.

Let me take you on a taster trip around the world with some of my observations, the serious and the funny that will inspire you to either book the next flight to somewhere new or convince you to never go on holiday again. So whether you are a globetrotter or a ‘rather-not-er’, read poetry everyday or would rather play on the motorway, just sit back, fasten your seatbelt and enjoy the experience. Will these poems give you rhyming reasons to travel the globe…or not ?

Pop culture (Mexico)

The Indian people of Chamula
Say “Kushee” instead of “Hola”
And like many other people
They worship Coca-cola
It’s part of their culture
From the workers to the Chief
More than a fizzy pop
Rather a religious belief
In the colours of the corn,
From cans and bottles they slurp
The evil spirits are released
When they belch or burp!

Slow boat

Thailand to Laos on the slow boat
Was an ordeal, not to repeat?
Crammed in like tinned sardines
Bags and people at your feet
Not much to eat, not much to do
On wooden planks you’re sat
Occasionally someone jumps on board
To sell some barbecued rat!
It may take an age to get there
Hard going to say the least
But it’s safer than the speedboats
And you’ll get there in one piece

Leap of faith

How does the traveller cross the road?
With difficulty it would seem
In Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam
Motorbikes you will dream
Questions you may ask yourself…
Will I live until I’m old?
Or make it to the other side?
The future is untold
Forget what you have learnt before
Forget the ‘Green Cross Code’
Remember this survival tip
When you have to cross the road:
You must take a leap of faith
Your instincts must be ignored
Don’t try to make a dash for it
Or curl up on the floor
Keep an eye on the traffic
Don’t run, just have belief
Walk slowly as they steer around
That’s it…feel the relief!

Have faith (Russia)

Be careful when using a phrasebook
I found this out to my regret
I pointed to the wrong word
A moment that’s hard to forget
In a church in the middle of Russia
With a nun we couldn’t understand
I pointed to ‘atheist’ not ‘agnostic’
Ooops! The fires of hell I’d fanned
Horrified and shocked don’t come close
To describe the look of her disgrace
Thought I’d sent her to heaven early
I hurriedly tried to save face
With a lot of smiles and many nods
We tried to communicate
And patiently listened to her sermon
As it started to get late
If we hadn’t made our move
We would probably still be there
Let this be a warning to you
With your phrasebook do take care!

  If you like Graham’s poems and what to read more, his recently self published book ‘Around the World in 80 Poems: Rhyming Reasons to Travel the Globe… Not!’ is available from most online book stores or directly from his publishers www.authorhouse.co.uk.

You can find out more about the book by following the link http://www.authorhouse.co.uk

10% of any profits Graham makes will be donated to environmental charities.

Graham can be contacted about his book or any travel related matter at garelton@googlemail.com


Spotlight on… Chris Hampden’s travel blog

“I have just got back from nearly 8 months travelling, having visited Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia and Malaysia. I’ve written a little anecdote about the slow boats you take from Huay Xai to Luang Prabang in Laos…

Travelling on a local bus full of chickens in Thailand, journeying the length of Vietnam by train without another Westerner in sight, clinging on to the back of a moto-taxi in Cambodia – all great experiences to be had travelling around South East Asia. However, there is one journey to beat them all hands down – a 2-day slow boat journey in Laos! It’s an epic journey well-discussed by many a backpacker, including myself, who brave the slow boat as a means of getting from North-East Thailand (Chiang Khong) into Laos, and on to its charming former capital of Luang Prabang.

This mother of all journeys begins with an early start to beat the crowds at immigration. After a quick pay-and-stamp at Thai Immigration, everyone jumps onto long-tail boats that race you across the river to Huay Xai, Laos. After 3 attempts at a highly uncomplicated immigration form everyone is herded along to the ‘boarding platform’ (a mud-bank with wooden planks reminiscent of something out of Pirates of the Caribbean).

Now let the games begin. The boat itself is an old wooden number, apparently with a capacity of 75 people. I’m not too sure what Health & Safety would say about the boat ending up with about 110 people on it, but I guess that just makes the trip all the more ‘interesting’. As rumours swirl around about the length of the boat trip, the general consensus was about 7 hours on Day 1; the big question being whether the 2 hour loading process (yes 2 hours!) was part of those 7 hours. It wasn’t. Any images of nice, comfy seats should now be dispelled; the people last onto the boat make do with the floor whilst the early-birds have the perceived luxury of park benches big enough for half a cheek. Over the two days I had the ominous pleasure of both options, and in fact I recommend the floor!

After 7 hours meandering down the mystical Mekong taking in the beautiful scenery, muddy waters, jutting rocks and watching the people of Laos going about their daily business, you arrive in Pak Beng. What can be said about this mid-way stopover? Well I guess it can be summed up by the fact that every guesthouse owner warns you of the local thieves, then they themselves act as unorthodox chemists that offer herbal remedies not available being the counter in a town near you!

Day 2 is much the same as Day 1, with beautiful scenery becoming repetitive, jutting rocks becoming the speed-bumps of the river, and the constant drone of the engine becoming as painful as listening to a McFly record. Another 7 hours of this and the final destination is reached, albeit with a rather numb derriere.

This does indeed sound like the journey from hell, but it’s actually a rather enjoyable experience in a twisted way. The painful journey alongside random people makes conversation a must, and friendships inevitable. Also, there is definitely something about the Mekong, a vital artery that runs the length of SE Asia. Maybe it’s watching all those Vietnamese War films or something, but does have a certain charm. And then there are the blagging rights amongst travellers. Have you survived the Mekong slow boat? No? Well I have…

See Chris’s travel blog at www.travelpod.com/members/c-hampden


News from the travel industry – Ryanair unveils major expansion at Birmingham airport, United Kingdom

Ryanair will fly 20 routes from Birmingham Airport, United Kingdom from April 2008 using two Boeing 737-800 aircraft. It is starting flights to five destinations in France, five in Italy , three in Poland, two in Spain, and one each in Denmark, Norway, Portugal, Slovakia, and Sweden. The airline said this will be followed by a further eight Boeing 737-800 aircraft.

Read the full article at http://www.travelmole.com/stories/1125565.php


Travel shows in 2008

Not quite travel but a worthy crossover…

Missoula, Montana — From February 14 – 20, 2008, the Big Sky Documentary Film Festival celebrates its 5th year by showcasing 98 films from 40 countries. The official selections represent a broad array of filmmaking styles, formats and production dates, from classics to World Premieres. The 2008 films were selected from nearly 1000 submissions from across the globe.

Official selections for the 2008 Big Sky Documentary Film Festival are now on-line at: http://www.bigskyfilmfest.org/


Globetrotters Travel Award – update

Our 4th Legacy winner, Katie Fahrland, will leave the UK on Thursday, 31st January, for the first leg of her journey to Bamako city. She plans to take a pinasse downriver to Segou to participate in the Festival sur le Niger, a celebration of West African music and arts “seeing the colour of African dance, film, crafts and music bursting to life in front of me – (meeting) Burkinabes, Senegalais, Maliens, Ivoriens, Guineens, Ghaneens – all the people and nationalities of this wonderful West African world”.

Katie will return to the UK on 14th February. We look forward to her reporting back to us – in person, via an article in the Globe magazine and, of course, her illustrated talk to Globies – to be planned soon after her return. We hope she travels safely and has a wonderful trip.

A member of Globetrotters Club ? Interested in a £1,000 travel award ? Know someone who is ? We have up to £1,000 to award twice a year for the best submitted independent travel plan.

See the 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, as the next Legacy deadline will be April 30th, 2008 !!


Mac says…

error-file:tidyout.logRegular contributor Mac had some thoughts on travel signs that he has seen or heard off during his lifetime and thought you might like to share a smile or two !

  • Not to step on any crocodile whilst barefoot
  • No ugly or spotty children to frequent the pool
  • In Denmark in hotel where the Queen was to stay they took down warning sign on their elevator which read I Fart (think if meant the elevator is in motion) as they thought the Queen might be offended.
  • Simla, India – spitting on the road is an offensive punishable up to 50 rupees under HPMC… an Indian was urinating next to the sign !
  • Coffee House in India – If convenient please speak slowly
  • Puri India – Gods Blessings of Lord Jagahnath with hearty offerings. All offerings to Lord are free income tax.”

Mac goes on to reveal that “I will be 84 next month and because of health problems about the only travelling I do now is to the bathroom several times a night. I enjoy reading of others travel adventures however.”

Feel free to reach Mac at macsan400@yahoo.com with any stories…


Have you got a tale to tell?

If you have a travellers tale that your aching to tell. Then why not visit the “Travel Sized Bites” section of the Website and share it with the world. Travel Sized Bites


Happy 2008 and a return of the Globetrotters eNewsletter

Welcome to 2008 to all of you – wishing you an enjoyable year of good health & fulfilling travels !!

In response to a number of readers asking what had happened to editions of the eNewsletter during the second half of 2007, the Beetle has temporarily handed over responsibility to The Ant. The Beetle is off on a number of adventures, that weren’t necessarily planned at this time last year, and even with her very visible talents is being stretched to meet a large number of commitments.  That means that a very nervous Ant is now appreciating the efforts that go into producing the eNewsletter.

Over the next few months or so, depending on when the Beetle returns, I will try to publish an edition of the eNewsletter at least every other month.  This should allow the Globetrotters Club ensure one of their newsletters appears in print every month, on an alternating basis. For the first few editions I will continue with the well known format that you are familiar with, but over time I will attempt to incorporate any feedback that you send through.

Enjoy your eNewsletter and let me know what you think…

The Ant


Meeting news from the London branch by Padmassana

At our last London meeting before Christmas, we were treated to two excellent talks.

David Waldman told us about his trip to visit the Nandi of the Rift Valley in Kenya. Inspired to visit by athletes such as Kip Keno, David wanted to discover why this pocket of Kenya has produced over 50% of the long distance running world championship and Olympic medal winners since the 1960’s. David discovered that running is not just a hobby or a sport, but an occupation, a possible escape from the poverty where those not gifted to run do jobs like breaking rocks or selling tomatoes for $3 a day. Despite having no facilities at all, David found whole families who can all run world class marathon times. The runners do a 20km run in the mornings and another 10Km at night, their gym if you can call it that is a rock attached to either end of a metal bar. “Train hard, win easy” is their motto. Those that make it to Europe can make more money from one race than the average Kenyan makes in a lifetime. They return to buy some land, build a house and farm, though once their running days are over many unfortunately descend into alcoholism. David had set out with the idea that there is a genetic reason for the running dominance, without doubt the altitude helps, but from early on they are out rounding up their cattle, they are doing the sheepdogs job. And when a neighbouring village come to steal cattle they literally run after them with bows and arrows. There seems to be some degree of natural selection too, those that can run get the girls and produce more runners, the rest remain on the shelf.

Our second speaker was Jo Huxster, who should have been joined by Antonia Bolingbroke-Kent, who was ill. “Tuk to the road” was the story of Jo and Ant’s 12,500 mile, 12 countries in 14 week trip by Tuk Tuk from Bangkok to Brighton in aid of the Charity MIND. Anyone who has taken a ride in one of these vehicles around an Asian city will know it can be a bum numbing experience. Jo got the idea a couple of years previously while on holiday in Thailand. This was not going to be any old Tuk Tuk though, this was a custom built bright pink Tuk Tuk, which they christened Ting Tong, which actually means “crazy” in Thai. They had decided on the northern route, via Laos, China, Kazakhstan, Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Germany and Belgium. So on 28th May 2006 they set off from Bangkok, crossing the Mekong into Laos, once the paperwork issues had been resolved. Once in China a slight hitch occurred when they discovered they were not allowed on the nice fast dual carriageways, instead they had to use what amounted to cart tracks which ran frustratingly alongside the main roads. They had to race across China, as they only had a set amount of visa time, Jo particularly enjoyed the drive across the Gobi Desert. They had been fretting about the Kazakh border, but two girls in a pink Tuk tuk got taken to the front of the queue and they were soon crossing the green Kazakh countryside, one day they had to cover over 700Km as there was nothing in between. On their map the Kazakh M36 road to Russia was a nice fat red line, however the reality turned out to be one a track dirt road through fields. The Russian police broke all records for pulling them over, they were stopped 35 times in 2 weeks! Ting Tong stood up to its journey quite well, however the shock absorbers that had taken 10 Chinese all night to repair broke again, but luckily a Ukrainian mechanic was able to do the job on his own in a couple of hours, so they were soon on their way again. Once they crossed into the EU it was a case of pedal to the metal and head home, via the Channel Tunnel, arriving in Brighton on 3rd September.

Antonia & Jo with Ting Tong, enjoying a brief moment in the Asian sun

Antonia & Jo with Ting Tong, enjoying a brief moment in the Asian sun

(Image courtesy of www.tuktotheroad.co.uk)

Globies raised in excess of £100 in a collection for MIND at the meeting. If you want to learn more about their trip, buy the book or donate to the charity you can visit their website www.tuktotheroad.co.uk

By Padmassana

London 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. There is no London meeting in August, but we will be back in September. For more information, you can contact the Globetrotters Info line on +44 (0) 20 8674 6229, or visit the website: www.globetrotters.co.uk


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.


Write in… Yingge, a Taiwanese Ceramics Town by Hal Swindall

Though of no great size, the town of Yingge (pop. 84,000) is about thirty minutes by train and a couple of hours by bus south-southwest of the capital. After visiting it twice and staying the night both times, I would describe it as a good day trip out of Taipei; otherwise, it would be an interesting stop for a few hours if you are on the move along Taiwan’s western plain. A ceramics centre for the past two centuries, its main attraction is as a place to buy gifts.

Yingge is situated on the Dahan River, which runs north to Danshui (Tamsui), a port on the northwest coast from which its products used to be exported. Its name means something associated with an eagle-shaped rock, which, according to legend, used to hinder passersby with a miasma. This wicked spell was broken by none other than Koxinga, the last Ming Dynasty emperor, who fled to Taiwan with his army before the Manchu hordes in the mid-seventeenth century with the same intention as Chiang Kai Shek : using the island as a base from which to recapture his kingdom. Later, a mainland ceramics artisan established his industry there in the first decade of the nineteenth century. The local economy peaked in the 1970’s and 1980’s, but declined at the close of the last century. I was last there on a summer weekend, and the crowds were not too enormous. Judging from Yingge’s websites (the official one is www.yingge.tpc.gov.tw, plus minor entries on Wikipedia and Wikitravel), it tries to drum up business with cultural delights such as ceramics festivals.

Getting to Yingge can be done via train from Taipei’s main station, but I am less certain about trains from elsewhere. There are ones from Yingge to Taichung and Gaoxiong, however, which are major cities to which you might be continuing (you can try www.railway.gov.tw). Bus transport is also available from Taipei, but you must ask for a bus going to Sanxia, an adjacent town. The distinction between these two fair cities is quite unclear, as the information on such websites as there are and the township’s online map are all contradictory. Welcome to Taiwan (www.taiwan.net.tw), on which you can search the name of either Yingge or Sanxia, is reasonably clear, but be warned that oriental websites, maps and street signs often contain confusing or incomplete information. The best thing to do is follow my directions with your fingers crossed. Furthermore, if you come by bus from a southern point, you may have to go to the city of Taoyuan, wh ich is just east of Chiang Kai Shek airport, and there change buses; on my first trip to Yingge, I found this a rather big pain. Buses to Sanxia stop in front of the Yushan (Jade Mountain) Hotel (228 Wenhua Rd.; tel. 02-8677-6060, fax 02-2678-5487; 02 is Taipei County’s area code, and be sure to drop the 0 if calling from abroad), which is apparently the only place to stay.

Once you are there, finding Old Street, on which most of the ceramics shops are situated, is your next task. There appears to be only one sign in either English or Mandarin that points the way, and it incorrectly indicates a U-turn with its arrow. During my first visit, I had to wander around the streets for some time before finding my objective ! The city government’s website does provide a map in Mandarin and some English with numbered arrows for Yingge’s main attractions, but you must enlarge the right side to read it clearly. Therefore, if you are exiting the train station, turn right at the bottom of the steps and walk several hundred metres to Wenhua Rd., which is overarched by the railway bridge on your right. Across Wenhua Rd. and to your left is the ceramics museum. Cross Wenhua Rd. to the same side as the museum, then turn right and go under the bridge, turning left to go up a small pedestrian lane. Follow the lane about 30 metres, veering continually to the left, and you will find yourself at the base of a small hill. (If you arrive by bus, you will get off it on Wenhua Rd. in Sanxia (?), in which case merely turn right once you alight and walk past the museum, which will be about 200 metres further along and on your left; follow the same lane underneath the bridge, arriving at the base of the hill). In both cases, of course, turn left and ascend the hill, and you will find yourself entering the Old Street zone within a hundred metres.

The Yingge Ceramics Museum is a good place to visit before looking at the goods the town produces today. It can be explored in less than an hour and has a nice little gift shop. Its website is www.ceramics.tpc.gov.tw. It does offer a mock-up of the interior of a kiln, complete with glowing red-orange walls and canned burning sounds, through which you can walk. There are many artefacts related to old-time ceramics production and relics of Yingge artisans’ workmanship on display. The museum also tries to host ceramics competitions and other events.

Old Street itself is in fact a series of several streets, about 80% of whose venues sell ceramic vases, tea sets, plates, bowls, mugs and anything else that can be fashioned from clay. There are also cafes where you can buy an iced latte, street musicians to fill the air with music and various other crafts for sale, such as baskets and leather goods. Of particular interest are the “DIY” (“do-it-yourself”) establishments, in which a visitor can make a clay artefact and, presumably, have it fired. These streets could be basically negotiated in about an hour, but ceramics aficionados will linger longer. Most of Old Street’s shops do indeed have high-quality ceramics in styles ranging from traditional to avant-garde, with the colour red predominating; the relentless ceramics connoisseur can, nonetheless, find items in many other shades.  

One of the ceramics shops streets in Yingge

One of the ceramics shops streets in Yingge

(Image courtesy of Hal Swindall)

Hal can be contacted about Taiwan on templegazer@ekit.com


Write for the Globetrotters eNewsletter

If you enjoy writing, enjoy travelling, why not write for the free Globetrotters eNewsletter! The Ant would love to hear from you: your travel stories, anecdotes, jokes, questions, hints and tips, or your hometown or somewhere of special interest to you. Over 14,000 people currently subscribe to the Globetrotter eNewsletter.

To see your story in cyber print, email The Ant, theant@globetrotters.co.uk, with your travel experiences / hints & tips / questions. Your article should be up to 750 words, feature up to 3 or 4 jpeg photos and introduce yourself with a couple of sentences and a contact e-mail address.


Mac says thank you to the Beetle

error-file:xhtmlTidyOut.logRegular contributor Mac had some thoughts on hearing that The Ant is stepping into the Beetle’s very large shoes…

First there was the Beetle that for years kept the E Mail Globetrotters Letter going and what a job and now there is the Ant. I had to smile at the names.  The Beetle has for years been over kind to me printing travel nonsense and stuff from suitcases of travel notes from 83 years… in and out of the military service. It is an end of an era unless you can persuade her to contribute some in the future about her travels when she has time to travel and you can use anything she gives you.  I am grateful for all the kindnesses she has shown me. At my age I am constantly losing friends but usually to death, this time it is to a kind of retirement. Never let anyone else use the title The Beetle. I don’t know what I am saying but golly she sure kept the Globetrotter going for years. Maybe we could make a statue of the Beetle or something.

For all your kindness and good stories Beetle… a plenty. Mac

macsan400@yahoo.com  


News from the travel industry ‘Ryanair, travel websites”

“MADRID, Dec 11 (Reuters Life!) – A charity calendar sold by Ireland’s low-cost airline Ryanair showing its air hostesses in skimpy bikinis demeans women and breaks the law, a Spanish consumer group said on Tuesday. The Ryanair 2008 calendar called “The Girls of Ryanair” has photos of air hostesses posing in and outside of planes, dressed in bikinis rather than their normal blue suits. April’s hostess is Nicola from London Stansted, who is wearing only bikini bottoms, with her breasts covered by a lifejacket. “Miss July” — Edita from Marseille — reclines backwards over a wheel with a wrench in her hand and grease on her body.

“The company is attacking the dignity of women workers in general and especially of cabin crew members, by presenting stereotypical images of these professionals which they have spent years struggling against”, Spanish consumer group FACUA said in a statement. Ryanair, which is selling the calendar for five 5 pounds ($10) and giving the proceeds to the children’s charity Angels Quest, was not immediately available for comment.

FACUA has complained about the calendar and its promotional material to Spain’s Women’s Institute, which is part of the Labour Ministry, and to the National Consumer Institute.”

Read the full article at http://in.reuters.com/article/lifestyleMolt/idINL1111819420071211

“Ryanair has come bottom of an online Irish shopping survey, despite being named one of the most efficient airlines in Europe by the Association of European Airlines. On Friday, the airline topped the European organisation’s newly released league table, which assessed airlines based on punctuality and the number of bags lost. Despite this good performance in Europe, Ryanair’s website, Ryanair.com, finished in last place in a separate survey of consumer practises at 25 online firms by Irish internet consultancy firm AMAS.”

Read the full article at

Travel websites are among the worst for online customer service, according to new research from Transversal. The travel industry came joint worst along with telecoms, insurance, consumer electronics, grocers and utilities in a survey of 10 sectors. Although travel websites have improved their ability to respond to holidaymakers’ basic questions in the last year, 60% of questions remain unanswered. Travel websites that offer email customer service options took an average of 58 hours to respond, which is only eight hours better than corresponding research carried out in 2006. Transversal monitored 10 leading UK travel companies by phone, web and email as part of its third annual customer service research.

“Despite the enormous growth in the online channel, across all sectors, our research shows that consumers are still suffering from substandard online service”, said Davin Yap, CEO, Transversal.

Read the full article at http://www.travelmole.com/stories/1124662.php?mpnlog=1