Category Archives: Main article

July meeting news from the Chester, UK branch by Angela, Hanna & Eve

Hi to all Globetrotters again

We thought to send you a reminder of the next meeting on Saturday 21st of July at the Grosvenor Museum.  Doors open as usual at one for a 1.30pm start, see the attached poster.  The first talk will be by Kevin Brackley, entitled “Mysore- Yoga, sightseeing & chai”. Kevin has spent a few months practising his Yoga in India and has plenty to talk about !

The second talk will be by Derek Brown “Traveling by Boat”. Derek is talking about his journeys in Indonesia and Laos.

Hope to see you all there on the 21st, don’t forget to put it in your diary!!

Chester meetings are held at The Grosvenor Museum, 25 – 27 Grosvener Street, Chester, CH1 2DD.

Tickets £3 including refreshments.

For more information contact Angela, Hanna or Eve for further information of this & future events at Chester via email atchesterbranch@globetrotters.co.uk

Write in…Travel Photo Competition by the Chester, UK branch

Photos are a great way to record your favourite holiday moments and capture the beautiful locations and peoples you have visited.

We will be holding a best travel photo competition at our 17th November meeting and it is an opportunity for you to share some of your favourite memories with your fellow Globetrotters. All photos must be less than 3 years old and taken on holiday in the UK or anywhere around the world.

The subject can be Land or Seascapes, Wildlife, People Portrait, Famous landmarks or buildings. Photos can be Colour or monochrome prints only. No slides. No electronic. Each person is allowed two entries. Your name, a contact phone number and brief description of subject matter to be written on reverse.

Photos must be min size.7″x 5″Max 18″ x 12″

All entries must be in no later than 15th September you can hand in at the meetings or hand deliver to Flat 1 Langdon House 20/22 Hough Green, Chester CH4 8JA.

Taking perfect pictures every time isn’t easy so it is good that we will have Ron Thomas a local professional photographer to judge the competition and share lots of hints and tips with us during his Illustrated talk on the day.. www.ronthomasphotography.co.uk

There will be a 1st 2nd and 3rd prize.

Committee members are excluded from entering. Ask any of us for info, we are all willing to help!!

Good Luck!!!

July meeting news from the Ontario, Canada branch

Annual Meaford Picnic at Vera Blowers, 228 Eliza St., Meaford, ON.  Tel. (519) 538-5729.  2:00 p.m. to ?

Pot-luck supper, swimming in Georgian Bay, croquet, horseshoes, etc.

Bruce Weber will drive his van, with possible stops at antique car shows in Orangeville or Mount Forest.  Room for up to 3 passengers, leaving Union Station, Bay Street entrance of the GO Station 9:30 a.m.     Return to Toronto about 11:00 p.m. Call Bruce 416 203-0911.

Future Presentations on:                 Possible topics:

Friday, Sept. 21                                 Cycling in Cuba/Nicaragua by Mark Franklin, Career Cycles

Friday, Nov. 16                                 Northern Argentina by Eduardo Barnett and Svatka Hermanek

Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand with Friendship Force by Mort Sider and Marilyn Weber

Ontario meetings are held at 8.00pm on the third Friday of January, March, May (4th Friday), September and November, at Old York Tower, 85 The Esplanade, in downtown Toronto.

Everyone welcome especially visiting travellers J

For more information contact Svatka Hermanek at hermanek@yahoo.ca, Bruce Weber at bruceaweber@hotmail.com / on tel. 416 203-0911 or Paul Webb on tel. 416 694-8259.

July meeting news from the London, UK branch by The Ant

At the July meeting we held the annual “Around the world in eighty minutes.” Event, where we were given 10 presentations of 12 slides taking you on a fast paced journey around the Globe…by GTs members.  This time round we were entertained by the following:-

  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 the Tuaregs
  5. Dick Curtis – Nepal – less the trekking !
  6. Jacqui Trotter
  7. Phil Fergusson – Bolivia
  8. Sylvia Pullen – Around Rwanda by Bus
  9. John Pannell – Trans Siberian journey
  10. Neil Harris – Harbin Ice Festival

If you fancy speaking at future branch meeting, talk to Jacqui Trotter and explain your idea

The London branch’s future meetings are detailed at London Meeting Programme.  

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, unless there is a UK public holiday that weekend – then the meeting rolls forward to the next weekend.

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

For more information, contact the Globetrotters Info line on +44 (0) 20 7193 2586, or visit the web site:https://globetrotters.co.uk/local-meetings.html

Welcome to eNewsletter July 2012

Hello all,

Here in our very mixed British summer we’re having all sorts of fun 🙂  Besides our endless obsession with the weather, we’ve had the Royal Diamond Jubilee & we’re about to indulge in the Olympics…both events have combined to bring the world to us more than we’re used.  Reversal travel for us Brits and the world coming to see what we have to offer – I hope everyone enjoys their experiences 🙂

On to GTs in the world of travel and the main news being that we need a new editor of this eNewsletter !

As some of you have probably guessed, I’m struggling to get regular editions published on time and I think alternate editors could be better placed to take you forward.  Therefore I’ve decided to standard down after this edition L  I’ve thoroughly enjoyed the experience & have ‘met’ many interesting people over these years…  Thank you to everyone who has been involved & kept us all entertained – good luck in all your own adventures & keep in touch with the club 🙂

If you’re interested in helping out or have useful ideas on what the club can do next, contact them via https://globetrotters.co.uk/contact.html.

What else is happening across the wider travel world ?

That’s all for now and good luck with all your travels 🙂

The Ant     theant@globetrotters.co.uk

Meeting news from the Ontario, Canada branch

Future Presentations on & Possible topics:

  • Friday, May 25, 2012 – Northern Argentina by Eduardo Barnett and Svatka Hermanek
  • Saturday, July ? – Greece and Turkey by Jay Wopperer and Linda Schmieder
  • Friday, Sept. 21 – Cycling in Cuba/Nicaragua by Mark Franklin, Practice Leader,
  • Friday, Nov. 16 – Career Cycles Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand with Friendship Force by Mort Sider and Marilyn Weber

Ontario meetings are held at 8.00pm on the third Friday of January, March, May (4th Friday), September and November, at OLD YORK TOWER, 85 The Esplanade, Toronto; corner of Church St. and The Esplanade;  2 blocks east of Union Station.  Public parking garage beside Old York Tower at the foot of Church St.)

Everyone welcome especially visiting travellers J 

For more information contact Svatka Hermanek at hermanek@yahoo.ca, Bruce Weber at bruceaweber@hotmail.com / on tel. 416 203-0911 or Paul Webb on tel. 416 694-8259.

March meeting news from the Chester, UK branch by Hanna, Angela & Eve

Hallo to everyone again

We had a really great meeting again, with 2 fantastic speakers!  If you couldn’t make it we have written a short review of the talks so you get the gist of what went on!

Hope to see you for our next meeting again, Saturday May 19th and the talks are as follows:-

  • My time in Australia  speaker: Matthew Proe
  • From Kathmandu to Tibet  speaker: Dominique Schickele

See you on the 19th of May

Kind Regards

Hanna, Angela and Eve

Chester Globetrotters meeting on Saturday 17th of March 2012

The first talk was by Madeleine Anderson who had made a journey to South Africa to do the Garden Route by bike.  Madeleine has been a Globetrotter for many years and loves to travel off the beaten track.

Having arrived in Port Elizabeth, via Johannesburg, they transferred to Tsisikama National Park to commence the cycle ride, via Knysna to Mossel Bay.  The roads were well off the beaten track and bumpy at times but they had good mountain bikes which carried the small group further on to Cape Agulhas, the most southerly point of the African continent, next stop: Antarctica!

Back on the bike sharing the terrain with the local wildlife along the coast, over Chapman’s Peak onto Haut Bay where the cyclists shared an amazing sense of achievement to have arrived at their end point. On the way they stopped to include a whale watching trip but no whales to be seen at that time, they were rewarded later on in the trip off the coast in Simons Town where they saw whales and porpoise frolicking in the sea.

A visit was made to the Langa Township where a tour of the place gave some insight into the way of life there.  Madeleine felt that it could be seen as voyeuristic and different opinions exist on this subject.

The whole journey was a wonderful success and Madeleine met up with a friend who lived locally and together they had a helicopter flight over Cape Town before the moment that she had to return back to Blighty !

The second talk was by John Sunter about Lisbon, the cheapest city in Europe – John travels as much as he can and loves a good bargain trip!

John had £150 to spend and the first thing he did was going on the website Moneysaving flychecker to find the cheapest deal available to him, he managed to get a  flight and hotel for 3 nights for under £150.Planning is important for John and he visited the more important sights such as Baixa,  Avenida , Alfama in the morning so that gets the most out the trip. Mornings are cooler and you have more energy! John found that wherever  you are it always pays off to ask a builder for cheap places to eat so look out for a building site!

Baixa and Avenida are in the centre of Lisbon and close to the water, there is a lovely atmosphere with the old buildings and some of the time of the Moors. You can sit by the water and relax, there is always something going on there.

Alfama is the very old area with all the alleyways, very steep and many houses still with the blue/white tiling as decoration.  The top of the hill houses  Castle Sao Jorge, which was build originally in 1147 and rebuild a few times over the years, the latest rebuild in 1938.

John talked about the history of the city, the spice trade and ships sailing from there to the Cape of Good Hope, which is a link with Madeleine’s talk. He managed to visit the maritime museum which was worth it and enjoyed every minute of his stay in Lisbon!

The info he got from one of the builders in the city paid off, Burger and Chips £ 2.80, Pizza enough for 3 people £8 and a Chinese Buffet £ 3 each, so a lot of good advice and tips to spend a great time in Lisbon.

We had a good turn out again and lots of stories to share in the tea break. We went to the Golden Eagle afterwards where we shared a pint and more stories and friendships were made.  Chester Globetrotters gets better every time!

Chester meetings are held at The Grosvenor Museum, 25 – 27 Grosvener Street, Chester, CH1 2DD.

Tickets £3 including refreshments.

For more information contact Angela, Hanna or Eve for further information of this & future events at Chester via email at chesterbranch@globetrotters.co.uk

February meeting news from the London, UK branch by The Ant

As I’m way behind on eNewsletters and there have been a number of London meetings since my last edition, I thought I’d just highlight February’s meeting, as both talks were fascinating from different perspectives:-

  • 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 talked about and showed 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, travelled the world in search of the best send offs. She described 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.  We joined Sarah for an engaging and highly personal discussion in which she talked 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).

See http://makinganexit.net/sarah-murray-biography/ for more details of Sarah’s remarkable interests !

The London branch’s future meetings are detailed at London Meeting Programme.  

 

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, unless there is a UK public holiday that weekend – then the meeting rolls forward to the next weekend.

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

For more information, contact the Globetrotters Info line on +44 (0) 20 7193 2586, or visit the web site: https://globetrotters.co.uk/local-meetings.html

Welcome to eNewsletter March 2012

Hello all 🙂 ,

Welcome to this very late, first edition of 2012 !  I’ve been too caught up in family life & working and so now I’m trying to catch up with many a missed travelling tale/Globetrotter story !!

In this edition we’ve got plenty of club news, including a fantastic trip by long term Globie Gavin Fernandes and plenty of news from Chester & Toronto branches.

Hopefully you’ll find the wait on my slow editorial efforts worth it.  In the meantime I will endeavour to get back to a more regular output, so keep those stories & news items coming,

The Ant

What is happening across the wider travel world ?

  • October 2011 travel award winner Nick Hunt’s,  “…exploration in the footsteps of Patrick Leigh Fermor…across Europe from Holland to Istanbul.” http://afterthewoodsandthewater.wordpress.com/
  • Sony World Photography Awards Exhibition and World Photo London.  Marking the 5th Anniversary of the Sony World Photography Awards, the winners’ exhibitions will be on show inside the Embankment Galleries. In this vast photographic exhibition, you will find some of the best contemporary images taken by photographers from across the globe. Mixed media installations will include traditional print, video, moving image and 3D, with subjects spanning all genres, including fine art, fashion, portraiture, sport and photojournalism.Alongside the exhibition at Somerset House, World Photo London (27-29 April) is returning for its annual weekend of events. The programme is for anyone who enjoys photography, from photography fans to practicing enthusiasts, including; City Project Workshops, Business of Photography Seminar, Blurb Drop-In Workshops, Critique Sessions and Winners Tours.

    Many events are free and students receive 20% discount on most ticketed events.

  • Frommer’s publish a list of global events that have plenty of ideas for travellers – enjoy at http://events.frommers.com/sisp/index.htm
  • follow the progress of the “It’s on the meter team” and their round the world journey by London taxi at http://www.itsonthemeter.com/
  • follow the progress of Sarah Outen’s “London2London” adventure at http://www.sarahouten.com

That’s all for now, enjoy the read and keep sending me more of your stories, adventures and articles 🙂  Happy 2012 to you all… The Ant     theant@globetrotters.co.uk

Write in (1) Travel Editor on a Small Greek Island by Jennifer Barclay

You’re living a life that many of us would dream about, said Matt. It’s a life I dreamed about myself for long enough. Especially in the grey of winter I had a recurring dream of walking across the hills of a small Greek island, the deep blue sea down below. It got so familiar that I knew my way around it. I suppose it was based on all the Greek islands I’d been to, from family holidays when I was a teenager to the year I spent in Athens after university, to the places I’d discovered in recent years on late summer trips.

And then I had a particularly bad winter: my boyfriend left me unexpectedly, and a lot of plans and hopes crumbled. Just two months later, someone else I’d started seeing suddenly remembered he ‘didn’t do relationships’. I collapsed, a weeping wreck. I realised I needed to do something for myself, give my life a shake and find out whether I was living the life I really wanted. I booked myself a month on a tiny Greek island called Tilos where I’d spent a week before. It seemed a good place to spend time alone and refocus.

Tilos, in the hot and rugged Dodecanese in the southern Aegean Sea, is eight miles long by three miles wide. The population is about 500, the people far outnumbered by goats which roam wild. Rocky hillsides are dotted with chapels and bee hives. That month, every morning I glimpsed blue sky and hills and sea when I woke up and brushed my teeth. I held octopus and starfish in my hands. The joy of connecting with this wild place brought me back to life.

I also experimented with working from the island. I could do a lot of my job by email, and Tilos, in spite of being slightly remote, has good internet access. I felt better at my work when I could swim at lunchtime and walk off any stress in the evening. I started to think about a way to move here.

My work is finding, commissioning and editing books for an independent publisher based in a creaky, leaky Georgian house in Chichester. When I explain to people what I do, it sounds like the most amazing job in the world, and of course it can be, though like any work it has its share of headaches. Summersdale publishes all sorts of non-fiction books: gift, humour, health, stories about dogs and gardening and – well, as we like to say, ‘something for everyone’; but what originally drew me to the company and what inspires me most is the travel writing. We publish entertaining, informative and inspiring personal accounts of life-changing travel experiences. It has warped my perspective a little, because our authors are continually doing extraordinary things. Right now one is cycling and rowing around the world (Sarah Outen) and another is setting off on a solo expedition across Antarctica (Felicity Aston). I know people who have walked the Amazon and skateboarded across Australia. The idea of working from a Greek island doesn’t seem that strange if you look at it that way.

For almost seven years I’d been working from that office but I’d also been doing more and more travel writing myself, and it felt like time for a change. I told my boss I’d like to demote myself from Editorial Director and become a freelance Commissioning Editor focusing on travel and other quirky non-fiction: a job that can be done by email and Skype from a home office on a Greek island. And my lovely boss said yes.

So now I’m renting a pretty stone house next door to a little honey factory on Tilos, and I work from my kitchen table with a view of the mountains and the sea, amid the sound of bees and cockerels. Goats walk past my window. I buy vegetables straight from the farmer, and of course have an unlimited supply of delicious thyme honey. At night I can see the Milky Way. In spite of the Greek economy going to hell in a hand basket, I am blithely becoming more ensconced in island life. I’ve started teaching English to the schoolchildren two evenings a week, so when I walk through the square there are cries of Kyria! Hello Miss! I’ve therefore committed to staying here all winter, which has raised a few eyebrows. From November to April, most things shut down and many people leave. Some say it’s terribly quiet, others say it’s wonderfully tranquil. There’s only one way to find out. I am hoping for lots of time to read and to look after the winter vegetables in the garden.

I’ve been keeping a blog about life here (www.octopus-in-my-ouzo.blogspot.com), and a friend said many of the experiences have a timeless quality: going out on a fishing boat, dancing with the villagers at traditional festivals. There is certainly plenty to write about.

A few years ago I published a book called Meeting Mr Kim (http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=Meeting+Mr+Kim) about how I travelled around South Korea and fell in love with the country. I’m still blogging about the country via CoolstuffKorea on Facebook and Twitter. But now I’m writing a new book about my love of Greece, and about love and Greece. It’s tentatively entitled Greek Honey, and it will be out in July 2012 (I’ll be updating my blog page with information, so please sign up!).

If you’ve had an extraordinary adventure yourself and are thinking of writing a book about it, please check out our list at summersdale.com and drop me a line at Jennifer@summersdale.com. If you’re simply interested in travel books, I’m on Facebook as Summersdale Traveleditor and have started a group called Great Travel Reading. If you prefer to tweet, I’m on Twitter at @SummersdaleGO so please say hello there.

In the meantime, if you’re looking for a travel-related book, I’ve pulled together many of my favourite inspiring words from great travellers from over the centuries, and found interesting snippets of information about the lives of legendary people like Patrick Leigh Fermor, Freya Stark, Isabella Bird and Bruce Chatwin, and have recently published them in a book beautifully illustrated by Kath Walker called The Traveller’s Friend: A Miscellany of Wit and Wisdom. It might be a good gift for someone you know. (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Travellers-Friend-Miscellany-Wit-Wisdom/dp/1849531897/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1318776568&sr=8-3)

Jennifer

www.octopus-in-my-ouzo.blogspot.com www.coolstuffkorea.blogspot.com http://www.twitter.com/CoolstuffKorea www.twitter.com/SummersdaleGO

November meeting news from the London, UK branch by The Ant

With Jacqui at the lectern, we had two contrasting talks geographically & politically:-

  • Andrea Orban and Laurence West – An independent canter through Libya. Andrea & Laurence spent four years living & working in Libya, right up to the point that the recent overthrow of Gaddafi & his regime engulfed the country and this talk led the audience chronologically through its history. For example did you know Libya is 99% desert and is three times the size of Texas ? Or that the country has no rivers that drain into the sea ? Waves of peoples have forced their imprint onto Libya – Phoenicians, Greeks, Romans, Arabs, Islamists, Ottoman Turks, Italians & the World War II conflict. Many have left monumental traces, such as the Cyrene & Leptis Magna. The country is famed for oil but also the best Olives in the Mediterranean countries.Our speakers couldn’t totally avoid the modern day troubles of Gaddafi, even though they enjoyed their lives. Travel was only made easy through the use of letters of introduction by government officials, discussing politics was taboo (people were never sure who was listening !) and our speakers were working with organisations approved of by the regime.

    Overall Andrea & Laurence’s talk was well received and gave many of us a good context of Libya & its continually changing history 🙂

  • Jacqui Trotter – Summer in southern Scotland. As a last minute stand in for the published second speaker, Jacqui leapt to the aid of the audience with a whistle stop tour of southern Scotland ! En route to a friend’s wedding, Jacqui fulfilled a long held travel wish to visit a swathe of key destinations – Glasgow, Stirling, Glencoe, Oban & Inverary. Scottish National Trust properties came & went at a rapid rate of knots & Jacqui attempted to soak up as much detail as possible in a few days And she still made it to the wedding on time !! Well done, as ever Jacqui 🙂

Welcome to eNewsletter December 2011

Hello all,

A bumper edition to savour – make sure you leave plenty of time to enjoy this eNewsletter, in between the many festivities that you might be enjoying 🙂 Included this month is:-

  • a stunning article by Jennifer Barclay on her new life on a Greek island ! Jennifer has spoken previously at the London branch and based on this article we’ll be keen to ask her back in the near future
  • a write up by Hanna of the Chester branch on how their November meeting went, in celebration of two years of being an active branch. Congratulations & well done to all involved 🙂
  • Extra 🙂 The London branch are looking for volunteers again to help with the travel advising stand at the Adventure Travel Show (http://adventureshow.com) on Saturday January 28th and Sunday January 29th 2012. If you would like to volunteer again please follow this link below and fill in the form to register…a member of the organising team will be in touch:- https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dHBOZng0MHFNbzZDNHVCaHZHOFlvWnc6MQ
  • Extra, extra 🙂 If you would like to attend the Adventure Travel show but not as a volunteer travel advisor, you can buy advanced tickets at a 40% discount…yes that’s £6.00 rather than £10 ! Send an email to theant@globetrotters.co.uk, stating your membership number and ask me for the reduced price ticket code.

What else is happening across the wider travel world ?

Update from The Ant – the boys & Hannah have now reached Australia & are wondering whether to continue round the world I know which one I voted for on their Facebook page !

  • follow the progress of Sarah Outen’s “London2London” adventure at http://www.sarahouten.com

That’s all for now, enjoy the read and keep sending me more of your stories, adventures and articles 🙂 Happy 2012 to you all

The Ant theant@globetrotters.co.uk

November meeting news from the Chester, UK branch by Hanna, Angela & Eve

Hi The Ant,

It was great to actually meet you on your meeting [Note from The Ant…Hannah & partner joined us the November London branch meeting], we enjoyed it all immensely and have told everyone about in our meeting. We had a good turnout this time, about 40 people all in all and 35 paying from that number, so we are getting there

I have done a ditty for the E Newsletter and hopefully you could include that in your next issue

Thanks very much for your help

Kind Regards

Hanna


We Had our meeting this Saturday and it was a great success ! We had about 40 people attending and we reminded ourselves of the fact that it was 2 years ago that we had our first meeting. To celebrate the occasion we had mince pies and chocolates for everyone in the break and there was an exciting buzz about the place

The first talk we had was by Eve and Don McPherson who had made a trip to Cambodia in March of this year, the title was : Impressions of Cambodia after Polpot. Eve and Don told us about the wonderful trip and showed us some fantastic photographs. Temples of Angkor, especially Angkor Wat are without a doubt one of the most captivating sights in South East Asia. There are still many temples not yet renovated and are covered with tree roots and branches draped around the walls. We had a background on Polpot and the Killing fields and soon moved on to a delightful group of young people living in the many orphan homes in Cambodia. Eve and Don have made many friends there and enjoyed the simple but very good accommodation there. We have got a wonderful impression of the Khmer people, a welcoming and warm nation!

Then it was break time, many travel ideas and cups of tea were exchanged, some were still asking many questions about Cambodia and others were making plans for their next trip It was a busy time

The second talk was by Derek Brown who after he retired got the sailing bug and after buying a boat in Holland motored it down the Rhine and on the Danube all the way to Istanbul. He showed us some impressive photos of the various locks that had to be negotiated and a fantastic entrance into Budapest by boat. The Houses of Parliament look very different from the river. Some very pretty places he visited along the Danube, especially some of the towns in Austria. Derek had even a few video clips to give us an idea of moving along the river and how that felt. Romania and Bulgaria seem to have still a long way to go, but some of the towns again were very pretty. On to the Black Sea and from there along the coast line to Istanbul with its Blue Mosque and lots of boats on the Bosporus.

Both talks drew a lot of attention and many questions were asked with several trips being planned. We closed the meeting just after four and some of us went to have a drink in the pub the Bear and Billet afterwards

Our next meeting is Saturday 21st of January 2012 and we will have a talk about Borneo with the second talk on Kilimanjaro

Kind Regards

Hanna

Chester meetings are held at The Grosvenor Museum, 25 – 27 Grosvener Street, Chester, CH1 2DD.

Tickets £3 including refreshments.

For more information contact Angela, Hanna or Eve for further information of this & future events at Chester via email at chesterbranch@globetrotters.co.uk

December meeting news from the London, UK branch by The Ant

With Dan at the lectern, we had two surprisingly entertaining & different speakers who both spoke about quite new subjects:-

  • James Willcox – Impressions of Afghanistan. A more exotic travel adventurer than most, James ended up working as a travel guide in Afghanistan, after falling in love with the country on overland trip via Pakistan many years ago. Yes his early days across the country were scattered with the detritus of numerous wars but it is not as uniformly throughout the country.Whilst Kabul & Helmand province endure much, Bamian & the Central Highlands still have so much to offer the brave visitor cultures reflecting the millennia of trade & conquest, a network of teahouses to rival Nepal and an incredibly friendly cross section of peoples.James still works regularly in Afghanistan and you can understand more via his company’s web site at http://www.untamedborders.com/.
  • Chris Weston – Animals on the edge. Another traveller who has undertaken what seems a nonstop & ever changing journey, Chris Weston started out as a photographer, after getting bored, and has ended up as a well-regarded specialist on eco tourism. Chris’s main message, delivered passionately but not preaching, is that human / animal conflict over valuable resources is the main cause of species’ threatening extinctions.But Chris doesn’t stop at using his excellent photography to deliver the big stories & pictures he also works at delivering thoughtful solutions – his message is that we can only effectively conserve if we economically value the animal & plant worlds on a meaningful &interactive human level. Visit http://www.animalsontheedge.org/ to see how Chris & his team enjoy gorilla trekking in Rwanda or searching for Tigers in their last remaining strongholds of India & Russia.

The London branch’s future meetings are detailed at London Meeting Programme.

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, unless there is a UK public holiday that weekend – then the meeting rolls forward to the next weekend.

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

For more information, contact the Globetrotters Info line on +44 (0) 20 7193 2586, or visit the web site: https://globetrotters.co.uk/local-meetings.html.

September meeting news from the London, UK branch by The Ant

With Jeanie Copland at the lectern, the London branch started into its new season with two contrasting speakers:-

Mary Kinipple – ‘Tapestry & Tibet’: 

Mary Kinipple
Picture courtesy of Mary Kinipple

First time speaker Mary showed how travel influenced & developed her professional career as a craft weaver.  Whilst Mary was always interested in textiles & design, it took an independent journey twenty years ago through Nepal & onto Tibet to provide her with a deeper appreciation of weaving as a craft & as a potential niche industry in the modern world.  Starting in Kathmandu Mary came across traces of yak hair weaving by local trading families and as she headed up to Lhasa, the lessening of 20th century demands allowed space for a more varied & widespread weaving industry.  Across wider Tibet she found traders operating out of small, family or village run factories…harnessing manual skills to produce intricate & practical objects such as traditional outfit, animal harnesses & small art objects.  Mary was fascinated by how a skill so manually based could produce so much detail & colour…

Read more about Mary’s UK life at http://www.goring-gap.co.uk/artists.htm

Jonny Bealby – Pakistan as a travel destination

Jonny Bealby
Jonny Bealby – Picture courtesy of Tony Annis

Second up saw the return of a club favourite, Jonny Bealby!  Many of us have come into contact with Jonny…either via the club, travel shows or in the wide travel industry and we’ve all found him to be very engaging & welcoming J

Anyway this time round Jonny spoke, in warm details, about Pakistan and that despite its well documented struggles, there is so much to enjoy in that exuberant & vivid country.  Since the mid 2000s Jonny’s main engagement in Pakistan has been through the development of his Wild Frontiers company & adventure tourism in the wider region.  We saw & heard how local relationships could work to produce strong connections that would benefit tourists, business people & non-governmental organisations alike…adding power to the philosophy of “trade not aid”.  Jonny & Wild Frontiers have lately taken this one stage further via their Wild Frontiers Foundation…see http://www.wildfrontiers.co.uk/wildfrontiers/responsibletravel.jsf for more details.

Enjoy 🙂

Picture courtesy of Tony Annis

October meeting news from the London, UK branch by The Ant

With Simon Banks at the lectern, the London branch was introduced to two new speakers:-

First to entertain us, on a country that is often in the news for negative reasons was Russell Maddicks who spoke about Exploring Venezuela: A Land of Natural Wonders.  Russell highlighted how much variation in the country can be enjoyed…from stunning geographies, complex cultures & histories through to sociable peoples who know how to enjoy themselves!  In fact Russell’s many visits over a number of years have enabled him to author Bradt Travel Guides’ Venezuela edition J

Read more about Russell’s adventures at http://www.blogger.com/profile/03762827239193581989

Rona Cant in the second half of the afternoon gave the audience quite a different talk…Rona came to adventure travel later in life but since undertaking the BT Global Challenge Round the World Yacht Race, she has changed her outlook on her life & career.  Rona is convinced the she and many other people can benefit from the positive energy that independent travel can create.  Read more for yourself at Rona’s web site – http://www.ronacant.com/index.htm.

The London branch’s future meetings are detailed at London Meeting Programme.  

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, unless there is a UK public holiday that weekend.

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

For more information, contact the Globetrotters Info line on +44 (0) 20 7193 2586, or visit the web site: https://globetrotters.co.uk/local-meetings.html

November meeting news from the Chester, UK branch by Hanna, Angela & Eve

Hello to everyone again,

It is 2 years ago this coming meeting that we started the Chester Branch of Globetrotters!!!  (Happy Birthday & congratulations – The Ant J)

We would like to send you an early reminder again for our next meeting of Globetrotters, which will be on Saturday the 19th of November in the Grosvenor Museum in Chester, starting as usual at 1.30pm.  The talks look very exciting again:-

· the first talk is by Don & Eve who will be telling us about their time in Cambodia in Impressions of Cambodia after Pol Pot

· the second talk is about a journey through Europe by boat by Derek Brown, entitled Travels around Europe by boat

We will have our usual refreshments in the interval where everyone can meet up and have a chat again.

Don’t forget we now also meet in the Bear & Billet pub (very close to the museum…read for more details http://bearandbillet.com/), after the meeting for a drink & another good natter.  We usually book a table upstairs and as it was quite successful last time, we will have to book a couple of tables more for November.

You can always get in touch if you have any ideas for future talks, we will need to fill a few more dates for next year again and if you aren’t sure on how to go about it, we can always help you get started with a presentation.

We look forward to seeing you all again on Saturday the 19th of November !

Cheers

Hanna, Angela and Eve

Chester meetings are held at The Grosvenor Museum, 25 – 27 Grosvener Street, Chester, CH1 2DD.

Tickets £3 including refreshments.

For more information contact Angela, Hanna or Eve for further information of this & future events at Chester via email at chesterbranch@globetrotters.co.uk

Meeting news from the Ontario, Canada branch

Tentative future presentations:

  • Fri., Nov. 18 – “Guatemalawith Horizons of Friendship” by Bruce Weber along with “Studying inAntigua,Guatemala” by Ilse Cloer

Ontario meetings are held at 8.00pm on the third Friday of January, March, May (4th Friday), September and November, at Old York Tower, 85 The Esplanade, in downtown Toronto.

Everyone welcome especially visiting travellers J

For more information contact Svatka Hermanek at hermanek@yahoo.ca, Bruce Weber at bruceaweber@hotmail.com / on tel. 416 203-0911 or Paul Webb on tel. 416 694-8259.

Write in (1) …Home Exchange – the holiday alternative? by Brian Luckhurst

Home Exchanging or Home Swapping is when you agree to swap homes, and often cars, with someone; you stay in their home and they stay in yours, without any money changing hands. It is such an economical way to holiday and such an exciting way to travel, to experience other cultures and see other countries differently, through local eyes, not as a tourist.  Home and Hospitality Exchange for holidays is not a new idea, indeed it was started in the 1950s by some teachers, however more and more of us, from all walks of life, are now doing it, not least to save money in these financially difficult times.

Not surprisingly, we seniors, baby boomers, silver surfers (whatever name we are given) are becoming great fans of Home Exchanging. We tend to be more flexible on dates with more free time available, we don’t normally have to worry about school holidays as we are often empty nesters, and cost savings are very important to us. I also think we are of an age when we like the idea of seeing things from a different perspective, we no longer like being seen just as tourists and often prefer to live more like a local when on holiday.

My wife was horrified when I first mentioned Home Exchanging, “I can’t have someone staying in my house, anyway who would want to, it needs too much doing to it” or words to that effect. She wasn’t worried about the security or privacy aspect, simply, that our house wasn’t smart enough to let others stay in it.  Many potential exchangers have similar thoughts, with others having more concerns over the security aspect of having strangers staying in their home, which to a degree is understandable, but don’t forget you are staying in theirs. Which is better, leaving your home empty whilst you are away on holiday or having someone staying in it and looking after it as if it were their own?

Home Exchange is built around trust. Trust in those you exchange with to describe their home and location honestly and trust that, when they visit, they don’t damage your home and belongings. Home Exchange is often the beginning of lasting friendships which are built around this trust.  Home Exchanging can take several forms. A traditional Home Exchange is when you exchange homes at the same time. A non-simultaneous exchange, which can offer more flexibility, is when one or both of you have alternative accommodation, often a second home, meaning the dates for the exchange do not have to link and the exchange happens at different times for each party. One exchange takes place in the holiday home whilst the owner remains in the main residence, and then that owner visits the exchange partner’s property at a later and more convenient time.

Hospitality Exchange is the third type and this is when you take turns staying as guests in each other’s homes. This form of exchange appeals to those who are used to entertaining and I think works particularly well for singles, who are often worried about travelling alone in a different city or country and it also helps to avoid the dreaded supplements that single travellers often have to endure. Providing space and the number of bedrooms aren’t an issue, you may also consider Hospitality Exchange if you have someone else staying at home, like a lodger or older offspring, where a traditional exchange may not be appropriate as you can’t provide an empty home.

It is normal and good practice when exchanging to leave a welcome pack with lots of interesting information about the property but, more especially about the area and what can be done and seen locally, where to shop and eat, some exchangers even arrange for the neighbours to pop in to introduce themselves. Often with Hospitality Exchanges this local info is taken to the next stage with the home partner acting as a local tourist guide taking you sightseeing, for a meal out and even perhaps for a round of golf at their club.

Home Exchange – what are the benefits? Saving money is the obvious benefit – with no accommodation costs, the savings can be substantial. Imagine how much more you will have to spend by not paying hotel bills or villa rental! Other major savings can be achieved by swapping cars, sports equipment and even boats, by not having to dine out every night, even by playing as a guest at your host’s sports/golf club.

You have the freedom to do what you want, when you want, armed with the more intimate local knowledge from your exchange partner rather than just a guide book.

Well, is Home Exchanging for you? Why not try it and see? Once you have tried it, I am sure you will want to do it again.

Although our website is still ‘young’, we have members around the world in 35 different countries. However, in order to give our members as wide a choice as possible, we are currently offering free annual subscription. Please visit our website and join us today – it’s FREE.

Brian Luckhurst – www.homeexchange50plus.com