Archive for March, 2004

Travel Quiz: Tibet

Saturday, March 27th, 2004

The winner of last month’s guidebook on the Azores is:
Joan Haladay, congratulations!

This month, win a Trailblazer guidebook on Tibet
Overland. See "http://www.trailblazer-guides.com/">www.trailblazerguides.com
for info on Trailblazer Guidebooks.

Some people have said the quiz is difficult, we say do
some research: try "http://www.google.com/">google.com or "http://www.ask.com/">Ask Jeeves, if you need help with
the answers.

1. What is the more usual name for the mountain known in
the Tibetan language as Quomolangma?
name="q1" />

2. In which city would you find the Potala Palace?

3. What religion is predominantly practiced in Tibet?

4. Which religious leader is exiled in Dharamsala?

5. The Yangtse runs through Tibet – true or false?

Your Name:

Your e-mail address:
"email" />

value="Enter Quiz" name="submit" />

Discus this article and give feedback in our online forum



Have you got a tale to tell?

Saturday, March 27th, 2004

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. href="http://www.globetrotters.co.uk/bites/">Travel Sized
Bites



Mutual Aid

Saturday, March 27th, 2004

Need help? Want a travelling buddy or advice about a
place or country - want to share something with us - why
not visit our Mutual Aid section of the Website: "http://www.globetrotters.co.uk/forum/">Mutual
Aid



Know Your Riyals from Your Kwatcha

Saturday, March 27th, 2004

Need to convert currency?

Take a look at "http://www.globetrotters.co.uk/converter.html">The
Globetrotters Currency Converter
— get the
exchange rates for 164 currencies "http://www.globetrotters.co.uk/trav_cheatsheet.html">The
Globetrotters Currency Cheat Sheet
— create and
print a currency converter table for your next trip.



Airline News

Saturday, March 27th, 2004

National carrier Air New Zealand announced it would cut
average airfares on routes to the Pacific Islands by up to
50 percent as it unveiled the final stage of its revamp of
short-haul services.

Air NZ has already introduced a no-frills model on
trans-Tasman and domestic flights, stimulating demand as it
fends off competition from Virgin Blue and Qantas. The new
Pacific Express service would see fares across both
business and economy classes between New Zealand and
Australia and the islands of Fiji, Samoa, Tonga and the
Cook Islands reduced by up to 50 percent, the company said
in a statement. The cheapest one-day flight between
Auckland and Fiji, excluding taxes and levies, would cost
NZD$229 and NZD$289 to the Cook Islands.

An airline pilot, reported by passengers for flying his
Boeing 737 erratically, was fined 1,500 euros (USD$1,845)
after a breath test showed he had been drinking, German
police said. The pilot worked for a north African airline
and was flying from Morocco to Düsseldorf in western
Germany. Police declined to name his airline. Police
launched an investigation against the pilot for
“endangering air traffic” and the civil
aviation authority had confiscated the plane’s flight
recorder. “Several of the 108 passengers complained
about the pilot’s ‘erratic’ flying style,” Düsseldorf
police said in a statement.

New European low-cost airline WIZZ Air secured its third
base in Gdansk, Poland. The airline plans to start
operations from May to coincide with European Union
enlargement. Low-budget airlines are emerging across
Central Europe, where treaties protecting national carriers
must be scrapped after several countries in the region join
the EU.

WIZZ Air said it planned to become central Europe’s
third-biggest airline this year after Poland’s LOT and
Czech CSA

JetBlue has announced its intention to begin nonstop
service from its hub in New York to Santiago and Santo
Domingo, both in the Dominican Republic.

Privately owned Spirit Airlines, which currently flies
to Mexico, recently won federal approval to fly to 11
countries: Aruba, the Bahamas, Canada, Costa Rica,
Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras,
Jamaica, Nicaragua and Panama.

America West announced nonstop service from Los Angeles
to four new international destinations in Canada and
Mexico.

British Airways plans to introduce a new Russian
regional route and increase the number of flights on its
existing routes to Russia. "Buenos Aries">BA franchisee British Mediterranean
Airways will operate three flights a week from London to
the Urals city of Yekaterinburg from May 10.

Discus this article and give feedback in our online forum



Cycle Sri Lanka

Saturday, March 27th, 2004

Your chance to see Sri Lanka, get fit and help raise
money for disadvantaged children.

Cycle Sri Lanka 2003 was a great success, raising over
£80,000 for ICT and all of the participants considered it
to be one of the most memorable experiences of their lives.
As far as we know, ICT is the first charity to cycle up
into this virtually unexplored part of the island! After
our 5-day cycle, we will unwind by spending a well deserved
day snorkelling or relaxing on Nilaveli beach, which is
notorious for being one of the most beautiful beaches in
the world!

The entry fee is £250 for the cycle and minimum
sponsorship (which covers flight, hotel accommodation,
provision of bike, etc) seems too good to be true.

The double challenge is: are you- or can you get- fit
enough? And can you raise enough for ICT?

If you are interested, please visit: "http://www.cyclesrilanka.com">www.cyclesrilanka.com or
contact us by email at "mailto:cyclesrilanka@ict-uk.org">cyclesrilanka@ict-uk.org
or local rate phone call: 08453 300 533.

Discus this article and give feedback in our online forum



Fave Website

Saturday, March 27th, 2004

Take a look at Globetrotter Tom Freemantle’s href="http://www.mini-mule.co.uk/about.html">website.
He is a regular speaker at the London Globetrotters Club
and has been on British TV talking about his recent
exploits crossing the US to Mexico by mule.


Moonshine Mule: On the Hoof from...

His latest
book,
The Moonshine Mule
, focuses on the 2,700 mile walk from
Mexico to New York with Browny, a cynical but heroic
pack-mule. He lives in Oxford, where he still rides a
bicycle, but never a mule.

This site outlines Tom Fremantle’s’ extensive
journey though West Africa, through bleak, pale deserts
with scrub to lush, meandering swampland where monkeys
screech from behind mangroves: from bustling, urban casbahs
to tiny, mud-brick villages on the banks of the River
Niger.

Tom hopes the expedition will raise £30,000 for Hope and
Homes for Children, a charity which provides homes for
orphans and abandoned children, particularly in war torn
areas, including parts of West Africa. The journey will
also raise money for The Ark Charity in Milton Keynes,
which helps homeless teenagers to find lodgings and
employment.

Discus this article and give feedback in our online forum



Busking All Over The World

Saturday, March 27th, 2004

29 year old Nigel Ashcroft, a musician from Wales is
setting off on a trip trying to busk his way around the
world in 80 days. He plans to tour 18 countries without
carrying any money at all. He’s in confident mood and
said: “I’m going to have to sing, perform, charm and
maybe blag my way around the world - but I think I can pull
it off.” He is a full-time busker and one of the
first to be licensed under a new scheme by London
Underground. They are also making a documentary of their
trip to raise money for a charity for the homeless.

Discus this article and give feedback in our online forum



Spelling Error Raises Eyebrows

Saturday, March 27th, 2004

Spotted by Bretislav in the Czech Republic, this is from
the Canadian National Post: “A spelling error on
several hundred government envelopes mailed from Nunavut’s
capital last week added an extra ‘u’ to the spelling of
Iqaluit, changing the meaning of the word from “the
place of many fish” to “dirty bum.”.

”About 200 envelopes containing T4 income tax
slips were marked with a stamp that mistakenly referred to
Iqaluit as Iqualuit. [A linguist], who consulted with a
fluent Inuktitut speaker … said whoever made the stamp
appears to have used a prefix meaning faeces adhering to
the anus. Seventy-one percent of Nunavut’s population speak
Inuktitut… yet the public service does its work primarily
in English because bureaucrats from outside the territory
hold key positions in government. Government translators
trying to turn English documents into Inuktitut reports,
posters and street signs are overworked and the final
products are often rife with spelling errors and literal
translations that make no sense to the Inuit
majority…”

Discus this article and give feedback in our online forum



Globetrotters Travel Award

Saturday, March 27th, 2004

Under 30? A member of Globetrotters Club? Interested in
a £1,000 travel award?

Know someone who is? We have £1,000 to award each year
for five years for the best submitted independent travel
plan. Interested?

Then see "http://www.globetrotters.co.uk/legacy.html">our 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!!