Scheme, scheme, fantasize, perspective
Wed, Jan. 23rd, 2008 11:45 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
So I have this writer friend up in Vancouver, lovely woman, terrific writer, scary-good photographer. She and I have done a couple of writing things together but for several years now, we've talked about taking some photography classes together, maybe doing an expedition or two with instructors. Well, last night I sent her links to some prospective ideas, and she came back to me with an e-mail basically saying, "I like these but you pick."
::growl:: (in a good way)
So tonight I sent her e-mail back with my choices. A couple of the things I'm looking at are local workshops and very reasonably priced. One, however, is a fantasy with a capital "F": Easter Island and Maachu Pichu. Pricey as hell, between the travel itself and the instructor/guide fees but...it could be amazing. See? This is what happens once you've traveled to somewhere wonderful: You never want to stop. I don't know that I'm going to do another big trip a year after Kenya, but suddenly...it's a possibility, and I'm fingering my passport thoughtfully.
My first real travel adventure was my trip to Mexico, almost 20 years ago. Doesn't sound adventurish, does it? And when I describe the trip in its barest bones--a week at Club Med in Cancun--it sounds positively pedestrian. But I took the side trips that the club offered, so I got to see Chichen Itza, Tulum and Xelha, chock full of ancient ruins and monuments--and I was hooked. The next trip was Egypt and Israel: Pyramids! Temples! Ancient cities! (Sensing a theme?) Kenya was the exception for me: a trip about wildlife and culture rather than ancient history, but just as satisfying and exciting.
So here I am again, considering another adventure. I don't know that it's going to happen this year, but I find myself thinking more and more about Maachu Pichu and Rapa Nui, and all those hours with issues of National Geographic. At this rate, of course, France and Italy and Spain and Greece may never happen, what with Angkor Wat, Bali, Denali National Park, the Grand Canyon and, oh yeah, the rest of the African continent calling. Is life long enough to get to all these places? I dunno. Still wanna try, though.
And speaking of Kenya (I was, way up above), I received a text message from O, one of the guides I got to know while I was in Tsavo, the other day. He texted me to let me know that he and his family are okay in the midst of the riots and craziness there. I've really been worried about him and the other expedition leaders. I knew I was walking in a different world when I was in Africa, but I'm connected to it now in this little way, and it changes one's perspective. It feels much more real than merely another news story on NPR or in the New York Times. I worry about my friends there. And I fret about the reality of living with that sort of instability on a daily basis. So this is the tough side of adventuring: your perspective changes, the world gets a little smaller, and the scariness and strife all seems that much closer. Ultimately, I think this is a goodness, but it is challenging.
::growl:: (in a good way)
So tonight I sent her e-mail back with my choices. A couple of the things I'm looking at are local workshops and very reasonably priced. One, however, is a fantasy with a capital "F": Easter Island and Maachu Pichu. Pricey as hell, between the travel itself and the instructor/guide fees but...it could be amazing. See? This is what happens once you've traveled to somewhere wonderful: You never want to stop. I don't know that I'm going to do another big trip a year after Kenya, but suddenly...it's a possibility, and I'm fingering my passport thoughtfully.
My first real travel adventure was my trip to Mexico, almost 20 years ago. Doesn't sound adventurish, does it? And when I describe the trip in its barest bones--a week at Club Med in Cancun--it sounds positively pedestrian. But I took the side trips that the club offered, so I got to see Chichen Itza, Tulum and Xelha, chock full of ancient ruins and monuments--and I was hooked. The next trip was Egypt and Israel: Pyramids! Temples! Ancient cities! (Sensing a theme?) Kenya was the exception for me: a trip about wildlife and culture rather than ancient history, but just as satisfying and exciting.
So here I am again, considering another adventure. I don't know that it's going to happen this year, but I find myself thinking more and more about Maachu Pichu and Rapa Nui, and all those hours with issues of National Geographic. At this rate, of course, France and Italy and Spain and Greece may never happen, what with Angkor Wat, Bali, Denali National Park, the Grand Canyon and, oh yeah, the rest of the African continent calling. Is life long enough to get to all these places? I dunno. Still wanna try, though.
And speaking of Kenya (I was, way up above), I received a text message from O, one of the guides I got to know while I was in Tsavo, the other day. He texted me to let me know that he and his family are okay in the midst of the riots and craziness there. I've really been worried about him and the other expedition leaders. I knew I was walking in a different world when I was in Africa, but I'm connected to it now in this little way, and it changes one's perspective. It feels much more real than merely another news story on NPR or in the New York Times. I worry about my friends there. And I fret about the reality of living with that sort of instability on a daily basis. So this is the tough side of adventuring: your perspective changes, the world gets a little smaller, and the scariness and strife all seems that much closer. Ultimately, I think this is a goodness, but it is challenging.
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Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 08:57 am (UTC)The other day, I saw an interesting travel article in Smithsonian magazine: "The Smithsonian Life List (http://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/lifelist.html)". It's only 28 places, which makes it a list one could reasonably get all the way through, and also a list of really cool stuff. I've seen a few of them:
The Taj Mahal, the Great Wall of China, the aurora borealis, the Louvre, Fallingwater, Venice, and I saw Mount Kilimanjaro out an airplane window.
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Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 09:16 am (UTC)no subject
Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 07:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 09:15 am (UTC)It does if you live in England! I know you're closer, but even so. I've never been to Central/South America - would love to give it a try. Africa has never really appealed for some reason (I think one is either an Asia or an Africa person, in my experience, but I may be quite wrong).
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Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 03:47 pm (UTC)Heh. Fair enough. Growing up in New York, and living in Seattle, Mexico feels like a default vacation destination if you don't have a lot of money but want to go somewhere warm, sunny, and cheap. But I loved doing it the way I did it. When you live in New York, the Caribbean Islands feel the same way.
Interesting, your thought that one is either an Africa person or an Asia person. I haven't done Asia yet, but I do have a couple of places I'd like to go see. More of my destinations are sort of southeast Asia, I suppose (see above re: Angkor Wat and Bali); Japan and China haven't really been on my radar. I would never have guessed I'd develop an affinity for Africa but there it is. The more I go, the more I want to go. (I do want to see the great migration someday.)
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Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 11:34 am (UTC)I'd say go for it. But then, you knew I'd say that, didn't you? *grin*
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Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 03:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 02:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 03:39 pm (UTC)National Geographic Travelers:
http://ngtravelerseminars.com/digital.cfm
Best of the Northwest Photo Workshops:
http://www.nwphotoworkshops.com/index.php
John Shaw Photographic Expeditions:
http://www.photosafaris.com/Tours_2008/EasterIsland/EasterIsland.asp
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Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 03:37 pm (UTC)The card you sent with it was *gorgeous*. That was a lovely photo you turned into the notecard.
::hugs::
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Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 03:41 pm (UTC)The magnet was the result of a spree on Cafe Press; I may yet go back and do more. :-)
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Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 03:56 pm (UTC)So very true. I went to Maachu Pichu in 1997. Amazing place. The altitude can be a bear, though.
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Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 06:03 pm (UTC)Anyway, this is all still vaporware, but it's fun to think about, isn't it?
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Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 05:50 pm (UTC)------------
The trips all sound amazing. I can't wait to see the pictures. Color me absolutely green with envy -- I really want to get to a point where I can afford to do all the traveling I want to do. This will probably not happen until after the doctorate, though! So, I shall enjoy your exploits and live vicariously. :-D Ooh...Egypt. ALWAYS wanted to go there. [drool]
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Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 05:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Thu, Jan. 24th, 2008 09:54 pm (UTC)This year I will likely be terribly boring and go to France after a week or so in the UK. I am aware that with a solid month off I could do something more exotic than Europe. . . but
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Date: Fri, Jan. 25th, 2008 04:05 am (UTC)Easter Island's one of my fantasy places. It'd have my vote.
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Date: Fri, Jan. 25th, 2008 06:54 am (UTC)I just got home from an information session about the Mexico trips sponsored by Portland Community College. For $600 you get two weeks of homestay lodging, most meals, and 4 hrs/day of small-group language instruction at an established language school in Guanajuato. Gonna do it in June while David's at a writer's thing. I've never been to Mexico.
I'm looking forward to next time we see you -- Potlatch, yes? -- want to hear lots about Kenya.