Posts Tagged ‘travel’

As if packing for chic Paris wasn’t hard enough

Thursday, 26th August, 2010

I’m going to Paris on Friday and I have no idea what to pack. The weather forecast is disappointing — my visions of hot, sunny days photographing the pretty streets of Paris in cute sundresses have been replaced by undetermined trousers and long sleeves and jackets flitting between galleries and cafes under an umbrella. It’s not a bad alternative, if I can figure out what the undetermined clothing should be.

This damp, cloudy, occasionally sunny, humid weather is so not chic. It’s difficult enough to dress for it at home with my whole wardrobe at my disposal. How am I supposed to narrow it down to four outfits? Once again I fail at packing any earlier than a few hours before I have to leave.

Having missed the two weeks of London summer while I was in the Middle East I’m taking this drab August weekend personally.

On the bright side I have a pretty decent list of places to track down gluten-free goodies. If anyone knows how to do gluten-free baking right it has to be the French.

Hard choices

Monday, 23rd August, 2010


I’ve had a difficult decision to make in the last couple of weeks. I’ve got just over two weeks of holiday time left to take this year, and thanks to my big mouth, I’m committed to a week in Morocco, so I was thinking to use the remaining time for a 10-day escape to Toronto, my “second home”.

After the hyperactivity of the Middle East trip, the appeal of spending time with old friends from my study abroad days, sleeping late, walking the familiar streets of downtown, eating good gluten-free vegan food and partying at night had me checking flight prices and drafting “I’m coming!” emails in my head. In my mind I was sitting down to eat at Magic Oven, strolling along the lakeshore and catching up with my girls. But eventually the nagging of my credit card balance won out. I’ve just paid for my DSLR, I’ll need spending money for this weekend in Paris, the Morocco trip will need to be booked soon, and the there’s a long anticipated and delayed trip to India tentatively planned for January. Seeing it written down like that I don’t know how I ever considered it.

This is what happens to me in summer. I long to spend time with Miss Ross and Marlie J and the rest of my Toronto family. To sit on a bench by the lake, watching the blazing sun reflect off the rippling waves, the island ferries moving back and forth. To wander through bustling, fragrant Chinatown. To gaze out of streetcar windows as the driver reels off the stops in wonderfully-named neighbourhoods like Cabbagetown and Sackville. To walk down streets shadowed by skyscrapers so foreign to this London girl.

But I have to be realistic. I want this card debt gone, so that I can finally feel in control and on top of my finances. So I can use the chunk of money that goes on past spending to save for future trips. So that I can go shopping in Toronto without guilt. It’s hard not seeing my friends and a city that feels like home. With the travel bug biting ever harder it’s painful to let an opportunity pass. But when I look at the numbers in my budgeting and account spreadsheets I know it’s the right decision.

Travel tip — visit an optician

Monday, 9th August, 2010


Glasses

It never would’ve occurred to me to buy glasses in Jordan — I was too busy climbing things — but my friend wanted to find some to replace a cool pair she got while on holiday in the Philippines that she’d sadly broken. She couldn’t find anything like them at home, because frames here are uniformly boring. When I last had an eye test, and switched to contact lenses, I couldn’t bring myself to spend £100+ on new glasses because the plain wire frames were completely uninspiring.

Turns out opticians abroad have far more interesting designs, and at a fraction of the price. She ended up buying four designer pairs, each in a different colour and style. I wasn’t going to get any at first because I wear contacts all the time now, but given that I didn’t actually have a pair with the updated prescription and was going to have to do something about that at some point, I was open to looking in case something caught my eye. The 25 dinar price tag — pretty much equivalent to £25 — for the black D&G pair (including lenses with anti-reflective coating) did the trick. I couldn’t quite walk away from the brown Escada pair, which my friend preferred, and I reasoned that even at 55 dinars I’d be getting two pairs of designer frames far cheaper than I would’ve at home.

We were able to pick up our shiny new glasses after only a few hours (the amount of time we spent glasses shopping is largely why I didn’t take photos in Amman) and I wore a pair when we flew home the next day. Over the last week or so they’ve more than proven their worth as fatigue has left my eyes too sore to wear contacts every day, so I’ve had the option of wearing glasses I can actually see with. I woke up with itchy, sore eyes this morning and there was no way I was going to even consider poking little pieces of plastic in them. Definitely the most useful souvenir I’ve picked up on my travels.

Photo Friday – Seven Pillars of Wisdom

Friday, 6th August, 2010


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I’m currently reading Seven Pillars of Wisdom by T. E. Lawrence (aka Lawrence of Arabia). I’d bought it to read before the trip, but actually I think it’s more vivid having been to Wadi Rum and seen the stark, dramatically beautiful landscape he describes in so much detail. This rock formation rising formidably from the hot sand, seen from road into Wadi Rum, is known as the Seven Pillars of Wisdom.

Desert shadows

Thursday, 5th August, 2010


It wasn’t until I was sorting through and uploading my Mideast photos that I realised I had what appeared to be a cleverly composed shot but was in fact a fluke of positioning. When we were in Wadi Rum, Jordan, I scrambled up an arch formed by the rock (while my travel buddy, who prefers her feet firmly on the ground, stayed below).

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Standing on top of the arch I took photos of the view in all directions, including with the sun behind me. And so I ended up with this, which is one of my favourites from the day — me and the Bedouin guide in reflected in shadow on the surrounding rock face (I’m on the right):

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Eating my way around the Middle East

Wednesday, 28th July, 2010


Or, Variations on a theme of veggies and rice

One of the things I love most about the Middle East (and Morocco for that matter) is the quality of the vegetables. Ripe and vibrant and so thick they’re amost meaty. In this chilly, drizzly, frost-prone island I call home a large percentage of food is imported, and consequently picked early for processing and transport, force-ripened and often watery. So it’s a treat to travel and sample food from better climates.

One day in Jerusalem we picked up a few mangoes in the souk on our way to the Holocaust Museum. As vividly as I’ll remember the images and stories I saw there I’ll remember the ripest mangoes I ever tasted, fragrant skin so soft we peeled them with our teeth as we walked up the hill to catch a bus back to the Old City.

I’m surprised as I look back through my photos that I didn’t take many of the food — maybe my firing tastebuds were obscuring my photographic eye. Although I neglected to take photos of the array of fruit and vegetable stalls in the markets, I did whip my camera out a few times before tucking into meals:


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Unbelievable roasted and salted aubergine in Caesarea, Israel


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Dinner buffet at a Bedouin camp in St Katherine’s, Egypt, before climbing Mount Sinai. Delicious. And yes, I was naughty but the bread was irresistible


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Clear vegetable soup in Aqaba, Jordan…


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…and yes, more rice and veggies


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The remnants of dinner laid out for us at a Bedouin camp in Wadi Rum, Jordan. This was perhaps my favorite dish…the seasoned rice was amazing


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A rich red tomato dish in the rose red city of Petra, Jordan
(The bread wasn’t mine this time!)


The noticeable lack of pictures from Israel is mostly down to the fact that I didn’t have much of an appetite there… perhaps adjusting to the heat. Still, I’m not quite sure how I ended up with no shots of falafel and hummous… or watermelon for that matter, which I ate every day for breakfast… a lesson learned for future trips, I hope.

A photographic journey

Monday, 26th July, 2010


I didn’t do a Photo Friday post last week because I was still in the process of uploading my trip photos to Flickr and was overwhelmed by the idea of choosing the first picture to post here. So I decided to approach it differently and pick one from each stop we made. Even that proved difficult — I did after all upload more than 1,700 photos! So let me take you on a little photo journey, featuring just a handful of my favourite snaps:

Jerusalem

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View of the Old City from the Mount of Olives


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Spices in the Old City souk


Caesarea

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Ruins of coastal city built by Herod the Great


Bethlehem

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What stuck me about Bethlehem were the stunning views…

… and the steep, narrow winding streets
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Herodium

(also spelled Herodion)

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Palace and fortress built by Herod the Great c.26 B.C.E. in the Judean hills just south of Jerusalem, with spectacular views out to the desert and the Dead Sea

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Jericho

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Sea of Galilee

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Jordan River

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Ein Gedi

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Male ibex fighting in the cliffs of the nature reserve

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Mount Sinai

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Wadi Rum

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Petra

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Amman

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I include this purely because strangely it’s the only photo I took in Amman. I was tired and preoccupied with the last-minute shopping we needed to do before flying home, but it’s still hard to believe I didn’t think to take shots of the vibrant downtown area with its clothes shops and fruit markets and street stalls selling everything from pens to hair products to prickly pears.


This was such a hard edit to do, but it was a great exercise in picking out photos to print and enlarge for my walls. I can’t wait to put together a large framed collage. The rest of the photos are up on Flickr, here.

Savouring a taste of life on the road

Monday, 19th July, 2010


Bold tan lines. Loose waistbands. Unkempt braids. Piles of dusty laundry. Bone tiredness.

I got back from the Middle East a week ago but I haven’t quite emerged from the post-trip daze of an active two weeks quasi-backpacking through three countries.

Even though it was only two weeks, as I suspected when we got to Amman, Jordan, our final stop, returning home would result in a bit of reverse culture shock. After climbing and scrambling ancient ruins in 35+ degree heat, sleeping in the desert, striding through vibrant souks, haggling over everything, taking four hour coach journeys every couple of days… falling back into the home-Tube-office-Tube-home cycle has been jarring. My unpacked suitcase is still in the middle of the floor, a subconscious nod to my wish to hold on to the just-returned feeling, before the repetitious routine reclaims me completely.

I previously posted our planned itinerary, and it did in fact go largely as outlined, except day 7-8, when we got caught out by the Sabbath (carelessness on my part) in Ein Gedi by the Israeli side of the Dead Sea. Since there were no buses that would either take us to Masada or down to Eilat, it was fortunate that we’d made reservations at IYHA hostels in both Ein Gedi and Eilat — a quick call from the front desk allowed us to cancel the Eilat room and stay in Ein Gedi a second night.

We were staying in Ein Gedi because the Masada hostel was full and as usual when things don’t go to plan, it turned out even better, because we got to stay across the street from the Dead Sea — floating in its warm salty water and smearing on the thick black mud found in rocky crags on the beach rivals any expensive spa treatment — and next to the nature reserve, where we watched groups of ibex navigate their way down steep cliffs to drink water from the stream and cooled ourselves in crystal-clear waterfalls.

Obviously I’ve been asked repeatedly what my highlight of the trip was, and Ein Gedi was definitely a high point, but there were high points at every stop — in Israel I loved being in Jerusalem and by day 2 was joking about moving there to learn Hebrew; the ruins at Caesarea were impressive and the source of fun text message hints to friends back home that we ended up in a police car (the police generously gave us a lift to the train station at night when we couldn’t find a cab); the bustling streets of Bethlehem in the West Bank were wonderfully evocative; the panoramic views across Israel from the steep hill at Herodian took my breath away; the deep-blue Sea of Galilee was an unforgettable sight. In Egypt the wonder of following a Bedouin guide up Mount Sinai in the middle of the night, with only starlight and, when it emerged, the moon, to light the way was equalled by watching the sun rise over the mountains from a prime east-facing perch at the top. In Jordan both Wadi Rum and Petra surpassed my already-high expectations of the magical sun-drenched beauty of the multi-tonal rock.

And as well as having great company — an outgoing friend with similar travel interests, an easy laugh and a wonderful sense of humour — we met some kind, generous and fascinating people along the way, from the 19-year-old girl in the first of her two years of compulsory army service we met taking the train from Caesarea to Tel Aviv; to the Canadian couple we encountered in Wadi Rum who were approaching the end of a 6-month trip driving a jeep from Cape Town back to England; to the students at a camp in Sinai about to embark on a two-month trek studying biodiversity in the desert; to the American woman who approached us on the street in Amman having heard us speaking English and talked about her public health internship as we drank fresh sugar cane juice and haggled with market sellers over scarves.

Those two short weeks will stay with me for a long time, a goldmine of memories, emotions and well over 1,500 photos that are gradually making their way to Flickr.

Mideast adventure awaits

Friday, 25th June, 2010


It’s finally the night before and I’m packed and finishing up reading first-century historian Josephus’ account of the Roman-Jewish war. We’re flying into Tel Aviv and heading straight to Jerusalem. Hard to believe that 24 hours from now I’ll likely be sitting on a hotel roof terrace looking out on the Old City.

Back in two weeks!

Managing those expectations

Thursday, 17th June, 2010


Continuing along the lines of trips not unfolding as envisioned, the Warsaw trip wasn’t quite as I’d expected. My expectations for meetings didn’t quite come off, but part of the reason for that was other more informal meetings kept me busy. Once again proving that unmet expectations are not necessarily all bad.

I’m not one of those poeple who believes that planning travel is more enjoyable than the travel itself (that’s just crazy talk) a view that I’ve heard variations of several times recently.

But I keep thinking about the fast-approaching Middle East trip (which all of a sudden is at the end of next week, my goodness) and feeling the beginnings of a niggling anxiety. And then common sense, which knows that I will be full of wide-eyed wonder whatever we end up doing, takes over. I can’t wait for the trip to start if for no other reason than to silence the internal debating. That’s what happens when you’ve anticipated a trip for a long time. I know I’ll feel better about it once we’ve gone through the scrutiny of Israeli airport security and arrive in the historic Old City in Jerusalem, where we’ll be based for the first week. The excitement will be muted as I do that habitual scramble to get everything on my various lists done before we leave, but only 8 days to go — let the countdown begin…