Tag Archives: May 2010

Welcome to eNewsletter May 2010

Hello all,

time for another round up of the latest articles, information and interesting anecdotes I received lately. As you will read, stalwarts Mac & Tony Annis are back with adventures from their adventurous younger days… Also we have Doreen Tayler recounting the first leg of her GT funded independent adventure – see the section GT Travel Award 2010 to work out if you could find the club helping you fulfil a dream. And to conclude we have TrailBlazers Guides and Tick Alert preparing us for the trips ahead… All in all a proper travel edition J

ThatÂ’s all for now – but keep talking…its good to read through so many fascinating trips…

The Ant

theant@globetrotters.co.uk


April meeting news from the London branch

Martin Featherstone: Hyenas Ate My Water Container! Return to the London branch of one of our most popular speakers…this time leading us through his adventures in East Africa and in particular Tanzania. As many of you already know Martin has lively, unique style of presenting…deliberately cheeky & yet very knowledgeable about all his subjects. As IÂ’d visited the same a few years earlier, I was more than interested in his time at Kilimanjaro & going on safari.

Francesca Jaggs: Committee member Francesca showed us a short film of her impending visit to the former Yugoslavia, as part of the Healing Hands Network – http://www.healinghandsnetwork.org.uk/ The film detailed the immense pain that many people still endure as a result of the violent wars which the country broke up as a result of and how their small ground up charity tries to assist in the healing process.

Jeanie Copland: Legacy Officer Jeanie regaled us with the first part of her epic ten week trip to Patagonia & wider South America. Yours truly started with one of the clubÂ’s most adventurous members in heading from Buenos Aires, south into the Argentine Patagonia before trekking the epic Torres del Pine W circuit. We went our separate ways on the road to Ushuaia – me up to the Chilean Lake District and Jeanie into Bolivia, Peru before…..

Image courtesy of Lonely PlanetImage courtesy of Lonely Planet


May meeting news from the London branch

Jeanie Copland: continuing her odyssey through South America. Jeanie looped through the eastern side of the country, learning Spanish along the way, heading into the silver mines at Potosi and complete her circle via Brazil & Rio de Janiero.

Jacqui Trotter: Fellow Committee member and all round club stalwart Jacqui completed her own journey through the southern Americas…this time spending a number of weeks travelling by chicken bus through Central America. Armed with only two or three other travel companions plus there various talents of Wayne the driver, Jacqui headed from Mexico, through the myriad of nations to Panama and after her own year away, back to London.

Details of the London branchÂ’s forthcoming meetings, through to July 2010, can be found at https://globetrotters.co.uk/meetings/lon10it.html

The 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 in September. For more information, contact the Globetrotters Info line on +44 (0) 20 7193 2586, or visit the web site: www.globetrotters.co.uk.


Meeting news from the Chester branch by Hanna & Angela

The next meeting is on the Saturday 22th May at the Grosvenor Museum at the usual time of 1.0pm meeting for a 1.30pm start. There will be two lectures, the first on the Ukraine given by Barbara Dickinson, followed by refreshments then a talk by Dan Bachmann on the forgotten tribes of Karamojong people in Uganda.

Tickets £2 including refreshments

Contact Angela or Hanna for further information of this & future events at Chester via email at chesterbranch@globetrotters.co.uk


Meeting news from the Ontario branch

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.

The Ontario branch 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 (2)

An online device that helps travellers find out whether they might be at risk of potentially fatal Tick Borne Encephalitis (TBE) in Europe is now available at the Tick Alert website (www.tickalert.org). The ‘TBE Travel Check’ takes less than a minute to complete and asks users a sequence of simple questions about where they are going and any outdoor activities they are planning to determine their level of risk. A message at the end of the test advises whether a user should consider seeking medical advice ahead of their trip. A Tick Alert spokesperson said: “The TBE Travel Check gives people a better understanding of their risk before they travel so they can think about the need for precautions against the disease.

“Many of us heading into Europe often don’t consider seeking travel health advice so we hope this quick check will help.”

The ‘TBE Travel Check’ is one of a number of new-look features to Tick Alert’s website (www.tickalert.org), which now includes the latest updates on TBE risk, prevention measures taken by health authorities in various destinations and an interactive map showing risk areas of Europe.

TBE is a viral disease contracted via the bite of an infected tick which is endemic in 27 countries in Europe. It leads to an annual average of 10,000 cases needing hospital treatment. Two in every 100 TBE sufferers will die from the disease.

Email for more details: lisa@tickalert.org, sam@tickalert.org or richard@tickalert.org.

Notes:

  • The Foreign Office advises that travellers to TBE-endemic regions seek medical advice from their local surgery or clinic well before travelling.
  • TBE-endemic countries are: Albania, Austria, Belarus, Bosnia, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine.
  • TBE-infected ticks are found typically in rural and forest areas from late spring and throughout summer. At-risk groups include all visitors to rural areas of endemic countries, particularly those participating in outdoor activities such as camping, trekking, hiking, climbing and cycling/mountain biking.

Mac says

Mac Regular contributor Mac ruminates on the world of travel & some of his adventures along the way

This time round heÂ’s reflecting on his Hong Kong experiences with tailors:-

I was stationed in Japan five and one half years in the military and my outfit made many trips to Hong Kong during this period. I think everyone should visit Hong Kong at least once. It used to be that planes were not allowed to land except in the day time because the landing was tricky but we were allowed to land at night. It always seemed that all the tailors in town knew we were arriving, how long we would be there, the name of our outfit and its commanderÂ’s name.

They always said he brought a suit off them on the last trip and was very happy with it. In the early days one could get a tailor made suit with an extra pair of pants, a shirt and tie thrown in and sometimes a free sightseeing trip of the city.

We stayed at a hotel that was used to our odd arrival and departure times and they would be there to greet us. On one trip there was a buddy of mine that had not been on these trips before and when we opened our room door there was already tailors inside. He said to me Mac who are these people ? I replied, I donÂ’t know I thought they were with you…Ha.

They would take you to their tailor shop where they promised a tailor made suit in 24 hours.

They would hand you a drink and a crew of tailors would surround you taking measurements. One asked me if I dressed left or right. I looked perplexed and my buddy said Mac they want to know which way you ding dong hangs so they can add extra cloth to hide it. I said I would have to look to see if I could find it and everyone laughed. We had had several drinks by that time.

It was a little disturbing that they knew so much about our arrivals and departures. It is possible the hotel let them know for a commission. When we were to depart that hotel desk would phone our rooms to tell us what time we should have our luggage outside our doors to be picked up to be taken to the airport. One time we got a second call and told to put our luggage out an hour earlier that first told and they added it would be picked up. Our luggage certainly was picked up but by con artists/thieves that were perhaps in connection with the hotel. There went our twenty five dollar suits, souvenirs we picked up and some military uniforms.

Then again some of the tailors used thread that was not strong and our suits sometimes fell apart before we even left town (we caught on to bring strong American thread to give them and hope they would use same).

I had one pair of tailor made shoes made. Before I left town I was walking down the street and the soles fell off my shoes.! They had glued them on instead of sewing.

Hong Kong was not only beautiful but it was fun for us GIs…


Write in (3)

HereÂ’s an update on how the very useful & uniquely well written guide books are coming along…you may have seen the stand at the Adventure Travel show in London, earlier this year… The Ant

I expect you know Trailblazer guides but if you don’t we publish route guides for the adventurous traveller. Our particular strengths are:

Our mapping. We firmly believe that a good guidebook must have good maps, specifically tailored to the reader’s needs. For our trekking guides we create our own maps to the most useful scale and show the kind of information such as walking times, and places to stay or eat, not usually found on maps.

Our authors have a voice. Our authors are travellers first and authors second. These books are opinionated; we let the authors’ voice show through. They tell it like it is – bad as well as good.

Recently published

Kilimanjaro, the trekking guide 3rd edition by Henry Stedman. This is THE guide to climbing the mountain, now in its third edition so it contains everything you need to know about the climb. Price £12.99

Azerbaijan – with excursions to Georgia 4th edition by Mark Elliott. £14.99 The ONLY dedicated guide to the country.

Coast to Coast Path 4th edition

West Highland Way 4th edition

Forthcoming

Adventure Cycle-Touring Handbook 2nd edition by Steven Lord. The bible for planning a trip with your bike. Publishing due in May.

The Silk Roads 3 edition by Paul Wilson, due late June.

For more details contact caroline.gray@trailblazer-guides.com or visit http://www.trailblazer-guides.com


Write for the eNewsletter

If you enjoy writing & 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.

Email The Ant at theant@globetrotters.co.uk with your travel experiences / hints & tips / questions. Your article should be approximately 1000 words, feature up to 3 or 4 jpeg photos and introduce yourself with a couple of sentences and a contact e-mail address.


GT Travel Award 2010

Next award – I believe that the deadline for receiving applications for the first award in 2010 was 30 April, but I will confirm ASAP once I have heard from the busy organisers J

Background – A member of Globetrotters Club and interested in winning a £1,000 travel award ? Know someone who fits these criteria ? We have up to two £1,000 awards to give out this year for the best independent travel plan, as judged by the clubÂ’s Committee.

See the legacy page on the clubÂ’s web site, where you can apply with your plans for a totally independent, travel trip. If your idea catches our eye we’ll take a closer look at what youÂ’re proposing !!


Web sites to muse about travel to:-

Web sites to muse about travel to:-

  • From Matt Doughty about an epic car journey in a Hillman car –www.travelblog.orgl
  • From Paul Roberts about travels to Mongolia – www.hovdtour.mn/
  • From Tony Annis about a festival in London celebrating Brazilian culture – www.southbankcentre.co.uk
  • From Matt Doughty about an expedition to relive Polynesian migration – news.bbc.co.uk
  • From Matt Doughty on a very informative travel blog –www.travellerspoint.com