Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Friday, January 28, 2011

Buenos Aires...

Pulled from my travel blog... my wonderful trip to Buenos Aires in December...

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Today was our last day in Buenos Aires and the last day of our trip. What starts well doesn't often end well but in our case, this trip has been truly wonderful from start to finish. BA is one of the major reasons for this.


Having first experiencing this city around 8 years ago I was shocked to find that it still lived up to my fond memory and in some ways surpassed my big expectations. BA is a graceful city filled with history, culture, contempory art and design. It is a city of forward thinkers and deeply rooted traditions. It is truly a city that all can enjoy. At times it can be a little overwhelming in it's vastness, but there are some wonderful pockets of peaceful traquility that can't be beat. Whether it be wandering the tree-lined avenidas in Palermo Viejo looking for the latest fashions, marvelling at the antique markets in San Telmo or quietly enjoying a cafe con leche in one of the many outdoor cafes spread throughout, BA should suit any traveller's style.

It is with great sadness that I leave here today but I have a sneaking feeling I may be back....








Thursday, October 21, 2010

mad for malta...

while cleaning out my SD card recently, i came across my photos from my June trip to Malta... after feeling the harsh chill of this mornings 3C.. i thought it might be nice to take a sunny stroll back to the Mediterranean...













Monday, October 18, 2010

the life journey...

"The World is a book, and those who do not travel read only a page"
- St. Augustine

Friday, September 03, 2010

mellowing out in mendoza..

anthropologie recently released their september catalogue and i have to admit, my heart skipped a beat when i discovered that it was shot in ARGENTINA (Mendoza, no less)!!

as if i needed any encouragement getting excited about my upcoming trip to the land of mate, gauchos and dulce de leche.. the last time i was there, i believe i was 15 or 16 years old so i'm curious to return after a decade of absence..

these images speak to the stunning, yet rugged, nature of the argentine landscape speckled with the famous Criollo caballos.. enjoy and be taken away...
(larger better quality images can be found on the anthropologie website)

Photos courtesy of anthropologie.com

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Oxford...

For a long time I've been considering a move to the UK...mainly because of my undying love for my mother's hometown of Oxford. To some, it may seem like a bunch of stuffy old buildings, but to me, there is such a great sense of history and academia.
Perhaps, one day...

 

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

eat. pray. dud

Photo courtesy of http://photogallery.filmofilia.com/data/media/207/eat_pray_love_11.jpg
There's been a lot of hype recently about India with the book "Eat Pray Love" becoming a best-seller. To top things off, they've recently released a film rendition which stars, Julie Roberts, as the author Elizabeth Gilbert. Having read the book, begrudgingly, after many months of avoidance, I wasn't particularly surprised that I was left with a feeling of meh...  Logistically, the plot had all the ingredients of something I would love (exoticism, food, travel, love), but for some reason, I found myself getting bored midway through India and found Indonesia painfully predictable and totally hypocritical to what I expected the novel to be about.

SPOIL ALERT!
The novel starts by introducing us to the author and narrator, Gilbert herself. It's supposed to be a biographical retelling of her divorce and how she decided to take a year off life to get to know herself. She would travel to 3 countries, beginning with the letter "I" (ironically) for 4 months each. Sounds great to me! But then, out of the blue in Indonesia, this love story blooms, and the rest sort of unraveled from there. I later learned that the man she meets in Indonesia, she ends up marrying (going against another one of her decisions; to never get married again). I started going back over the entire novel in my head and I couldn't help but just feel annoyed, and betrayed by the author.  
I read the book two months after I had returned from India and felt that the descriptions were somewhat overly-dramatized and not an accurate description of Indian culture and life. Gilbert, walks the reader through her firsthand experience in an Indian ashram just outside of Mumbai. In her telling, India is a mix of beautiful colours, smells, peace and calm. Having spent nearly a month travelling all over Northern India, the India she describes is not the India that one experiences when first stepping off the plane.

India for me was an experience like no other.  A mad mess of movement, sounds, smells and smoke. In a country of over a billion people, there is an almost choreographed movement that you can only truly understand once you have witnessed it. Everything had an extremeness to it. This extremeness extended to the people we met in that the poor were extremely impoverished; and those who showed us kindness, expressed an almost overwhelming kindness. Subtlety is not a word I would use to describe India.

The word ashram in Sanskrit means a spiritual hermitage. Gilbert never really leaves the walls of the ashram during her time in India, giving her only part of the whole picture. Part of the ashram experience is to participate in the Indian rituals and practice, such as meditation, yoga, etc., however, it is also to participate in the cultural heritage of the land. India is more than just rice fields and Om, it is a country rich in heritage, history and creativity. For me, this aspect was missing from Gilbert's novel and rather, was replaced by a drawn out "spiritual search" that felt contrived and self-indulgent (maybe that's the point?).

That being said, Gilbert's experience has inspired a movement in North American with a dramatic increase of individuals seeking India as a destination for their spiritual retreat. Am I one of them? Probably. Having only traveled in the North where the majority of tourist attractions, and therefore, the richer density of people are, I think it would be nice to take a glimpse at the "softer" side of India. Hopefully it will be more "spiritual" than my experience in the spiritual capital of Varanasi!

City of Death, Varanasi...


Now i only call this the city of death as it has become famous for the religious cremations which, to this day, take place on the banks of the Ganges River... it was also the place where i felt deaths toll knocking on my door...


"The Ganga" or Mother Earth is where Hindu people believe life begins and ends... every morning hundreds of people come to the shores to bath in the (rather filthy looking) waters which just down the river, will be the cremation site for another.. these cremations take place throughout the day and people travel from all over India to have their loved ones cremated here.. bodies are wrapped in cloth and placed on a pier of wood... the kind of wood used is indicative of the wealth of the individual... there, the bodies are burned and the remains are washed back into the land where they once came...


it's hard for us to understand wanting to bathe in what is so obviously unhygienic water, but it only speaks to the strength of the religion of some...


i had heard a lot about Varanasi and the Ganges before coming to India, so you can imagine my disappointment in being relatively ill for this portion of our trip... unfortunately, my illness was not the only disappointment as with the interests of foreign tourists have grown over the years, the once sacred Varanasi has become a quite commercialized locale... the once peaceful boat rides available along the shore have become more of a novelty tourist trap where your boatman does double duty as a salesman... and wandering holy men are nearly indistinguishable from common beggars.. evening rituals have armed security and friendly conversations have turned into forced donations on skeptical charities...


so much for my spiritual awakening...
 
14 January 2010

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Remembering... Scotland

a bonnie bonnie time with my lassie heather!


Glasgow University

so i guess i should mention that I'm now in Scotland with heather and chad in their Glasgow home... so far I've been lucky enough to have some really beautiful weather.... started off my Scotland experience by checking out Edinburgh, the city upon the city... literally, there are bridges in the city over top of the city.. if that makes any sense... google Edinburgh and you will know what i mean.. beyond that, it's hard to get over the history here... every thing is so old and so many things have happened that it's kind of overwhelming... walking down the street you are constantly noticing plaques where someone was burned at the stake or where a famous person lived or was born... it's incredible... we wandered around for most of the day, venturing to Arthur's Seat to try and get a better look of the entire city... the weather held up and we managed to have a lovely day!!


yesterday we attempted to walk around Glasgow and take in it's sights however, weather was not on our side and we ended up catching up on some other cultural things... such as shopping!!! i also got to see heather's school and even met a Scotty class mate!! fun!


today we bused out to St. Andrew's (St. Andrew being the patron saint of Scotland) where Prince William went to school and where the protestant church was first formed in Scotland... it was a beautiful little town with again, SO MUCH history... St. Andrew's is also the birthplace of golf which obviously thrilled heather and i... we were going to play some holes but were slightly deterred by the year long waiting list to get on the green and the 600 pound fee... maybe next year... tomorrow we're off to Fort William over night to check out Glen Coe and Ben Nevis (Scotland's highest mountain).. looking forward to it!
 
13 August 2008

Edinburgh
St. Andrews
Ben Nevis
Glen Coe

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Remembering.... India (Part I)

Smoke

if i could describe mine and Jeff's arrival in India this morning after nearly 20 hours of travelling and jumping forward 11 hours in time... i would say "wow"....
India so far is everything i expected and completely different than i imagined... to start off with, what's with the smoke?!?!?
like any well prepared traveller, i thought it would be a good idea to check the local weather a few days leading up to my departure... on more than one occasion i found the odd description of "smoke" for Delhi.. figuring this was just some Indian terminology for fog or mist i dismissed it when our plane began it's decent into the Indian capital under a blanket of white... it wasn't until we actually gasped our first breath of the white stuff that i realized.. wow, they really meant smoke.... hmmm.. i wonder if this will haunt my lungs in years to come..

other than that... India has been crazy drivers, TONS of people, crowded streets full of every kind of shopping delight, honking cars, scooters, bikes, screaming children, urinating in the streets, colours... and SMOKE...

tomorrow we're off to Jaipur, the pink city, to see if we can start seeing some of the culture beyond the big ugly city... (14 January 2010)


Wednesday, July 28, 2010

So I bought me a ticket
I caught a plane to Spain
Went to a party down a red dirt road
There were lots of pretty people there
Reading Rolling Stone, reading Vogue
They said, "How long can you hang around?"
I said "a week, maybe two,
Just until my skin turns brown
Then I'm going home to California"
California I'm coming home
Oh will you take me as I am
Strung out on another man
California I'm coming home

- Joni Mitchell, California

Wednesday, May 05, 2010

please pay attention while we demonstrate the safety features of this aircraft...

so... i've been doing some serious soul-searching over the last few months... well, let's be serious.. i've been soul searching my whole life! But the other day, while walking my dog to the park, i passed a Porter flight attendant walking home...

I seriously have to stop and pause, as I was momentarily transported into another time! There she was, in her navy pillbox hat and slick Pink Tartan (you heard right!) pencil dress... it took my breath away!

For a number of years now, I've joked about the idea of going to flight school and working as a flight attendant for a major airline. There are a number of reasons why I never really persued this dream.

1) Flight attendents are Perfect! - Seriously people! These dedicated workers strut themselves up and down the aisles serving tv dinners and mini bar contents while soaring at 13,000 feet! And they do this with a smile on their face and not a single hair out of place!!! I'm not sure about you, but when I'm on a plane, I'm either fast asleep, deeply absorbed in the inflight movie, or gorging down my meal like it's the last supper! My hair always takes on this 3-day old greasy look while my skin seems to burst with acne from the increased pressure of the cabin.

2) Aren't they just a bunch of glorified waitresses there for our viewing pleasure?
- Let's be honest, you don't expect you flight attendant to be a doctor, literary professor or even College graduate. Why is that? Have we simpley deemed these men and women the "models" of the sky? Working in the service industry is HARD, and often takes intellegence AND common sense (can't say the same of some of my doctors or lit professors).

3) Do you need school for that?
To be honest, I've been a student nearly 90% of my life. The thought of going back to school for something that I may only do for a year or a couple of months is extremely unappealing to me. Isn't my combined serving experience and great smile enough?!

4)The airport is a pain to get to.. and expensive!
This is true of Pearson Airport, unless you have a car and live in Mississagua (neihter of which apply to me).. but now there is PORTER!! Not only do they have cute outfits but they also fly from the Toronto Island airport which is conveniently located in downtown Toronto!!!!!! GENIUS!!!

Anyways, despite all of the reason's I've outlined above, I once again find myself wanting to persue this career. So, I've reformatted my resume and submitted it to Porter... Hopefully you'll be seeing me on a flight near you very soon!