Tuesday, June 28, 2005

Toronto Hippo Tours: I Went On A Bus - In The Water.......

June 28, 2005

Toronto Hippo Tours: I Went On A Bus - In The Water.......

Some time ago I noticed these odd shaped colourful bus-type vehicles in the streets of Toronto, and I was wondering what they were. I caught a second glimpse and I saw "Toronto Hippo Tours", and I realized that these buses carry sightseeing passengers not just on the streets of Toronto, but also in the waters of Lake Ontario. Considering that this form of intermodal transportation is definitely unconventional, it just recently came to me that I should do an interview with this company and go on one of the vehicles myself.

They are definitely funny looking vehicles with a rounded snout, bright painting saying "Ride the Hippo", and an entry at the rear where you board walking up a set of retractable metal stairs.

Today I met with Drew O'Gilvie who is the Director of Sales and Marketing for Toronto Hippo Tours. Drew used to be a Director of Sales for Delta Hotels and obviously has a lot of tourism-related marketing experience.

1. Please tell us who came up with the idea of creating a company with a bus that floats? How long has the company been in business?

Geoffrey Lind founded Toronto Hippo Tours 5 years ago since he wanted to bring the "duck concept", the famous amphibian vehicle tours in Boston, to Toronto. Last year the company had 25,000 passengers and we expect to far surpass that number this year. Rather than calling ourselves a sightseeing company, we consider ourselves an "urban safari", a true urban adventure.

2. How many Hippos are there? What makes them special?

We currently have 2 vehicles in operation with a 3rd one that was just recently completed and is just waiting for final licenses, a complicated process that involves federal and provincial authorities and safety checks. The vehicles are Canadian-designed and built, based on a school-bus platform. Contrary to other places, they are not recycled WWII or Korean war amphibian vehicles. They are carefully safety-checked and greased every morning. We affectionately call our 3 amphibian vehicles Harry, Happy and Henrietta, our newest addition.

3. Please tell us about your route and your schedule. Are the tours narrated?

The Hippo tours are 1.5 hours long and spend about 1 hour on land covering the major Toronto sites, all professionally narrated by a tour guide who is also licensed in first-aid. We run tours from the beginning of May to the end of October every hour from 11 am to 6 pm.

4. Please tell us about the prices. Is it possible to book the vehicles for a private outing?

Prices are very reasonable at C$35.00 per adult, or C$30.00 for seniors or students, and C$23.00 for children 12 years and under. The vehicles can also be chartered and are frequently rented for special occasions both by business organizations and private individuals for birthday parties. At C$500.00 per outing, which holds 40 passengers, this can be an extremely affordable special event.

5. Please comment on the special training that your captains and tour guides receive.

Our guides are certified in St. John's Ambulance and CPR, and are all restricted engineers. They undergo strict testing with government authorities as marine captains and they have to obtain licenses to become school-bus drivers for operating the vessel on land.

After interviewing Drew, I had a chance to actually sample the Hippo experience myself and I got on board, plunking myself down right behind the Captain, who in this case was a sporty-looking lady by the name of Catherine. We had another tour guide who competently and entertainingly mentioned the major sights along the way and cracked some dry jokes in between. Another guide by the name of Dan also accompanied us. He is just finishing up his road licensing and has already completed the marine portion of the licensing process.

The vehicle passes through the streets of Toronto at a very leisurely pace. Our route included major sites such as the Royal York Hotel, Union Station, Yonge Street with the Bay, the Eaton Centre and Dundas Square. We then headed over on Elm Street and down on Bay Street past Old and New City Hall. I particularly enjoyed the gargoyle story about Old Toronto City Hall, where a famous architect took revenge on Toronto city counsellors who criticized him for his cost overruns by depicting their likenesses as ugly gargoyles. We then headed up University Avenue past Queens Park (the provincial government buildings) and on to the University of Toronto campus.

From there we snaked our way down through the Garment District, admiring all of Toronto's loft conversions and condo developments past the CNE grounds (the Canadian National Exhibition grounds) to a ramp near Ontario Place, where we were getting ready for THE BIG SPLASH- the Hippo's entry into the water .

It sure was a weird feeling, being on a bus whose windshield is all of a sudden fully submerged by water. But the vehicle straightened itself out pretty quickly and we started chugging slowly into the waters surrounding Ontario Place. "Happy the Hippo's" top speed is about 5 knots, and the vehicle has a single engine that propels the bus' transmission on land as well as the propeller in the water. At 20 tons it's a pretty heavy vehicle and a special ramp had to be built to give it access to Lake Ontario.

We took a little spin over off the west end of the Exhibition Grounds where we had a good look at Toronto's only wind turbine (we are finally making baby-steps towards greener energy production....) where we turned around and headed back towards Ontario place.

While Dan was driving during the water portion of the trip, Catherine, the other captain, and I stood at the back of the vessel and had a great conversation. Catherine is a former insurance sales expert and after being laid off she went into a completely new career - first as a Hippo tour guide, and she has also become a fully certified and licensed Hippo captain. Catherine also knows lots about fixing the vehicle and doesn't mind getting her fingers greasy when she performs maintenance duties on the bus on a daily basis. In her off -months from November to April Catherine does some cool things, such as volunteering her services to an animal conservation area to protect sloths in Costa Rica, or travelling extensively to Cuba. As a matter of fact, Catherine is a pretty cool and interesting individual herself and I will be doing a follow-up intereview with her in the near future.

Back on land we passed by Harbourfront and headed back up towards the famous Royal York hotel. Shortly after we made a quick turn left and headed back to the Hippo Tours parking spot at 151 Front Street, just a tiny bit east of the CN Tower and the Rogers Centre (formerly called the Skydome), Toronto's multi-purpose stadium with the retractable roof.

Catherine and I had a chance to catch up for about 10 minutes after the tour was over, and we briefly talked about doing a language study trip to Cuba, something that Catherine was interested in. I shared some information with her since I have had the opportunity to study Spanish at the University of Havana earlier this year.

It seems to me that Catherine is a bit of an adventurer and I am really looking forward to catching up with her to find out more about her new, unconventional lifestyle that went from corporate sales to being a road/lake captain for 6 months of the year, and doing some other cool stuff in the months between..

Thanks again to Drew and the whole crew at Toronto Hippo Tours for spending their time with me and for giving me the opportunity to explore Toronto on a bus - on land and on the water.......

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For more travel articles, advice, photos, interesting interviews &
the opportunity to win a cruise on the Amazon River
visit my website at www.travelandtransitions.com.

Coming Up: An Interview with Mony Dojeiji who walked 5000 km from Rome to Jerusalem - For Peace

June 28, 2005

Coming Up: An Interview with Mony Dojeiji who walked 5000 km from Rome to Jerusalem - For Peace

Since I started this website I have had an opportunity to connect with many fascinating people and Mony Dojeij is certainly one of them. My good friend Sue Kenney connected me with Mony, and when I first talked to her by telephone in her new home in the beautiful Atlantic seaside town of Cadiz in Spain I knew I had connected with another kindred spirit.

Mony has an interesting background. Born of Lebanese parents she came to Canada at the age of 10 and grew up in Ottawa and Toronto. Mony also experienced some early mid-life questions and realized that her career and stressful lifestyle as a Microsoft sales executive were no longer satisfying for her.

Mony quit and decided to walk the Camino de Santiago, another pilgrim on this ancient, often life-transforming journey. While walking the Camino, Mony realized that she wanted to do something for peace and the idea germinated that she would go on a long journey from Rome to Jerusalem to promote peace.

She is going to tell us about her story on this 5000 km long walk that took her 13 months through 13 countries. Along the way, the universe protected her and many amazing coincidences that in effect weren't coincidences at all, came together to lead her life in a completely new direction. This long walk taught her many lessons about people, about herself, and about life in general.

Soon you'll read about these extended journeys that completely transformed one woman's life and about Mony's big plans for the future.

www.textronics.com

For more travel articles, advice, photos, interesting interviews &
the opportunity to win a cruise on the Amazon River
visit my website at www.travelandtransitions.com

Monday, June 27, 2005

The Joys of Summer

June 27, 2005

The Joys of Summer

For me there is no better time of year than late spring, early summer. From about the middle of May to the middle of July I am totally in my element. It's finally warm, the weather gets better, the days are really long. The summer solstice for me is a magical time, you're out until 9:45 pm and there is still light on the horizon.

Well, it's finally warmed up in Toronto. After a long winter (isn't winter always long here?) and a patch of rain and cool weather in May, June has brought the "3 H's" to Toronto: hot, hazy and humid. As a matter of fact, I don't mind at all. I love being outside at night when it's 25 degrees (above 80 Fahrenheit) and I don't even need a sweater to protect myself against the nightly chills.

The last few days have been fabulous. Starting on Wednesday, I took a nice little walk downtown with my sister-in-law and we walked down Church Street, heart of the Gay Village, where everybody was getting ready for the big Pride Parade and the other events associated with Pride Week.

We then crossed over to Yonge Street, past Dundas Square, and we both commented on how this area is starting to increasingly remind us of Times Square in New York City. There are so many stores, flashing neon signs, outdoor musicians on the square, thousands of people walking and window shopping.

The week kept getting better. Last weekend was our 5th wedding anniversary and my husband and I had a weekend long of celebrations. It's amazing, we now know each other for 10 years and we've been married for 5, and we still get along......;) As a matter of fact, my husband's solid, rational temperament is the perfect counterpoint to my mercurial, always curious, easily excited nature. When I get too up or too down, he safely brings me back to earth.

We started off on Friday, where I came out to watch him play tennis and then we had a lovely dinner on the outdoor patio at Spacco's, a place where all the young, chic people congregate before they hit the club scene. Quite frankly, I felt a little out of place, I haven't been to a dance club probably for about 10 years. But the food was great and the people were interesting to watch.

We continued our celebration with a fabulous outdoor picnic in Burlington on Lake Ontario on Saturday. I love the water and we had picked a beautiful shady spot right next to the lake in a public park and spent a few leisurely hours sheltered from the sun before we headed off for a golf game at Chippawa Creek just outside Hamilton, Ontario.

Ontario is a real haven for golf enthusiasts, with many hundreds of golf courses close to Toronto and many of them very affordable. We played a round for C$38 each including cart and with a score of 104 on a full-size course, I had one of my better rounds. I am really more of a hacker in golf, but I do enjoy being outside with the birds and the bees....

Sunday I had a little spin on my bike, again down to the waterfront, where I ended up chatting to a fellow who was coaching a group of rowers in different types of boats, racing kayaks, canoes and similar vessels. Their club is also preparing for the upcoming dragon boat races in Toronto, always an exciting event.

After a competitive tennis match in the sweltering afternoon sun I headed home yesterday for a snooze on the balcony and after my husband's baseball game we capped off our weekend of celebrations with a tasty barbeque in the backyard.

As I said a couple of months ago when I came back from Cuba, I was going to try to reduce my working hours and spend more meaningful time with my husband, as well as spending more time with friends and family and doing sports. So far I've managed to restore a little bit of that balance, and I have to say it's fabulous. I enjoy and appreciate every moment that I get to go outside to soak in this fabulous time of the year.
www.textronics.com

For more travel articles, advice, photos, interesting interviews &
the opportunity to win a cruise on the Amazon River
visit my website at www.travelandtransitions.com


Presenting: Dan and Judith Talk About Their Fabulous Two-Year House-Swapping Experiencein Provence

June 27, 2005

Presenting: Dan and Judith Talk About Their Fabulous Two-Year House-Swapping Experiencein Provence

Through a friend of mine I met Dan and Judith, a professional couple in their 50s who spent two fabulous years in Provence, having traded their lovely Toronto home against a country house in the south of France. Here is the story of the two most exciting years of their lives, how they prepared for this experience, where they lived, how they integrated with the locals and the expatriate community. This adventurous couple also started a special project: documenting their local French town and its history, eventually turning it into a book. Dan and Judith also talk about what it felt like coming home after these 2 years, their recent trip back to Provence, and what foreign ventures may lie ahead for their retirement.

1. Please tell us a bit about yourselves, your interests, your personal and professional backgrounds.

Dan: I was born and raised in India. My family is Anglo-Indian (of mixed European and Indian descent), and culturally more British than Indian. In 1960, my family moved to England. I studied at the London College of Graphic Arts.

In 1967, I moved to Canada with my first wife. I worked in graphic arts in advertising for the next twenty-some years, in a variety of positions. By the mid-1980s I was Director of Client Services for a design studio. In 1992 I left to go out on my own as a graphic arts design consultant.

I have a daughter and step-daughter from my first marriage. Judith and I met in 1974 and married in 1981.

My interests are music (listening to and playing jazz, blues, and old-time rock ‘n’ roll), travel, photography, and golf.

Judith: I was born in Toronto and grew up in Peterborough, Ontario. I studied English at Queen’s University, was a high school teacher for three years and then became a computer programmer.

For the next seventeen years, I held a variety of IT positions. By the mid-eighties, I was Director of Corporate Systems at a large insurance company.

In 1987 I quit my job, wrote a romance novel (never published) and then became a free-lance corporate trainer, writer, and instructional designer/developer. My company, The Idea Interpreter®, makes complex business ideas – concepts, processes, systems, and methodologies – easy to understand, learn and use.

I love reading, logic puzzles, watching competitive figure skating, walking, golfing (badly) and travelling.

2. From 1993 to 1995 you had an opportunity to spend two years in France. Please tell us about the unique circumstances about how that came about.

Judith: I was teaching a three-day course. At lunch on the second day, one of the participants happened to mention that she’d just moved to Toronto from Washington D.C, but had lived in France for many years.“Wow! France! My husband and I dream of living there!” I told her. “I need a house here for a year or so, and I have a house in France,” she said. “Why don’t we swap?”

Dan: When Judith came home and told me what Roxanne had said, I was both excited and doubtful. How could we take a year or more off? Could we afford it? But we both loved the idea, and wanted to explore it further. We set a date with Roxanne to come to dinner, see our house, and talk about the swap.

By the night of the dinner, we had pretty much made up our minds. When Roxanne walked in the door and said, “I could live here,” we knew we were on our way, even though we had no idea what her house was like or what part of France it was in. Exactly three months after that night, we arrived in France. We thought we’d be there for a year; we ended up staying for almost two.

3. Moving to another country for a substantial time away from home involves numerous preparations, practical, financial, emotional and otherwise. How did you prepare yourselves to get ready for your extended stay in France?

Judith: It was a hectic three months. Even before meeting with Roxanne, we’d consulted our financial advisor who encouraged us to go for it. Next, we had to apply to France for long-stay visas. To get them, the RCMP [Canada's federal police force] had to investigate us and confirm that we’d never been in prison or in trouble with the law. We had to supply proof that we had enough money to support ourselves, get a signed certificate from Roxanne that we had a place to live while in France, and all kinds of other stuff. Then we discovered that, as a British citizen, Dan didn’t need a visa, just his British passport. So he got his passport and – after several visits to the French consulate – I got my visa. Our two cats had to get their shots, certificates of health and new travel cages. We talked to OHIP [Ontario's provincial public health insurance authority] and got a one-time exemption from the 6-month out-of-country rule, and we took out additional health insurance.

Meanwhile, we packed all our personal things. We shipped a few things to France – our golf clubs, Dan’s bass, winter clothes, some favourite books and CDs – and put the rest in our basement. We had the house cleaned and painted. We arranged to do our banking by phone and fax. (In 1993, we hadn’t even heard of e-mail, there was no such thing as a web browser, debit cards weren’t available in Canada and bank machines didn’t always work internationally.)

We told our clients we were leaving and wound up our current projects. We had a busy social whirl, seeing friends and family to say our farewells. We were very excited about this adventure, reading everything we could about France, and planning what we’d do with this unexpected, but very welcome, self-granted sabbatical.

4. Please tell us a bit about the area and the little town in the south of France that you moved to. Please describe the house that you moved into.

Dan: Roxanne’s house is located just outside the perched village of Le Bar-sur-Loup, in the back country of the Côte d’Azur, about 10 minutes north-east of Grasse, the perfume capital of France, 30 minutes due north of Cannes, and about 45 minutes north-west of Nice. It is about an hour to Monaco and just a little further to the Italian border. This area, the French Riviera, has the most temperate climate in France, and is one of the world’s glamour destinations. And we were going to live there!

The house is named Mas Ste. Anne. It is a 250 year-old mas, or French farmhouse, with a modern wing that Roxanne and her first husband added when they bought it in the mid-’70’s. On the ground floor is a big entrance hall, a powder room, a kitchen, and a large living / dining room with lovely old furniture and a baby grand piano. Upstairs, there are three big bedrooms, a small single bedroom we used for storage, and two full bathrooms. Off the landing, half-way up, is a storage and laundry room. There is a balcony off the master bedroom and a covered patio just outside the front door.

The grounds consist of nearly an acre of terraced hillside just outside and above the village, on the side of the mountain on which Le Bar is perched. There were thirteen olive trees, a laurel (bay leaf) tree, and many fruit trees that provided us with lemons, oranges, apples, pears, peaches, cherries, crab-apples, and – courtesy of the overhanging branches from a neighbour’s tree – even figs. Rosemary hedges lined the driveway and the steps below the house; over the walkway and steps was an arbour of grapevines. We had flowers all year round -- mimosas, magnolias, bougainvillea, wisteria, roses, oleanders, daffodils, violets, iris, and many more we didn’t recognize. We even had a few date palms, yucca trees and a small stand of bamboo.

5. What were your impressions and feelings when you first arrived? How did you spend your first few weeks?

Judith: We arrived in France in early August, exhausted from all the months of preparation and the last-minute flurry of leave-taking. It was very hot. For the first few weeks, we cleaned the house from top to bottom, something it really needed. We spent hours every day outside, wearing as few clothes as possible, doing nothing: sipping chilled rosé and pastis on the patio, enjoying the view, sleeping in the garden swing. We walked down to the village and did our grocery shopping, then puffed our way back up the hill (a 25% grade) to the house. We spent hours finding the French words for things we needed to buy (litter boxes for the cats, printer cables for the computer), looking for the right stores in Grasse and Nice, and explaining what we needed in our very rusty French. It sounds mundane, but we found it very exciting.

Dan: First impressions and feelings were basically pure sensory overload: the spectacular setting of the village 380 metres (1,200 feet) above sea level; the view looking north up the Gorge du Loup, with Gourdon – the next village, 15 minutes by car – perched on top of a mountain 760 metres (2,500 feet) above sea level; the “chirping” of the cicadas that began around 9 each morning, building as the heat increased through the afternoon, subsiding around 6 as it got cooler; the ubiquitous smells of Provence – rosemary, thyme, bougainvillea, jasmine; the intense taste sensations of local produce, cheeses, and wines. And on top of all of that, there was an air of unreality about it all. It was hard to realize that this wasn’t just a short vacation; that we were actually going to live here.

6. Once you settled in, did you have a certain routine for spending your days? What types of activities did you pursue?

Dan: Yes, we did develop certain routines. At first, though, they didn’t fit with the customs of life in France. Time and again, after breakfast on the patio, we’d get ourselves together to go shopping – and find ourselves arriving at the stores just as they were closing for a two to three-hour lunch. We did eventually learn to adjust to the French routine. Shortly afterward, the larger grocery stores began to stay open all day. It was convenient, but not nearly as quaint – and we missed the excuse to go for lunch and a half-bottle of wine while we waited for the stores to open!

In the evening, after dinner, we’d make a point of watching the eight o’clock news on TV. At first we didn’t understand anything at all; it was just a wave of unfamiliar sound. Gradually, we began to distinguish words and phrases, even if we didn’t know what they meant, and eventually we understood most of what was said.

Judith: The days, though, were quite varied. I don’t recall much of a daily routine. I’m an early riser, and I liked to sit out on the patio in the mornings. Dan would join me there when he got up. Some days we spent at home. I would write and clean the house; Dan would cook and do laundry, play the piano (he taught himself to play while we were there), and take photographs. We’d let the cats in to use their litter box and let them out again. We both read a lot. And, especially in the spring and fall, we mowed the terraces.

Other days we’d go out shopping or exploring. We did pretty much everything together: We ate out a lot – you could call wining and dining our major hobby! We golfed occasionally. We went to every event in our village. Later, when we had more social life, we went visiting and to parties. Once a month, we went to a club where Dan played in a jam session that lasted till 3 or 4 a.m.

Dan: Our routines were interrupted when family and friends came to visit. The first spring we were there, we had guests almost every week from the beginning of March until well into June! We loved every minute of it, showing them all the places and things that we had been discovering and learning to appreciate ourselves.

7. The area you moved to is gorgeous. Please tell us about your regional explorations and excursions, your favourite places.

Dan: You’re right; it is a gorgeous area. Our most favourite place was Le Bar-sur-Loup itself. It’s perched halfway up a mountain slope above the Loup River valley; from the village square you can look east across the valley to the Pic des Courmettes, the highest mountain at 1,248 metres (4,120 feet) near the coast, or north up the Gorge du Loup and see the pre-Alps in the background. Le Bar itself is a beautiful, non-touristy village. On the square are the 15th century church, the chateau (built in the 12th century with 18th century additions), and a modern Mairie (town hall) and boules court. Below the chateau are narrow, winding pedestrian streets and steep stairs, and remnants of the old walls that protected the villages from marauders.

Judith: Within fifteen minutes, we could be in Grasse, where Queen Victoria used to vacation, Valbonne, which was laid out by the Romans, Gourdon, a spectacularly perched but very touristy village high above Le Bar, or Tourettes-sur-Loup, another beautiful and well-known village. Antibes, Cannes and St. Paul de Vence were all about thirty minutes from us. And in less than an hour, we could be in Nice or the seaside resorts of Juan-les-Pins and Golfe Juan. St. Tropez was a little further, about two hours away.

Dan: One of our favourite excursions, when we had friends and relatives visiting us, was to drive to Nice, go to the flower market, then drive east along the Corniche Basse, the lowest of three roads along the coast through Villefranche, have lunch in the harbour at St. Jean, Cap Ferrat, and then drive around the rest of Cap Ferrat, past all the big estates, though many are hidden behind walls and hedges. Then we’d continue on to Monaco to see Prince Rainier’s palace and visit Princess Grace’s tomb in the cathedral. One day we saw Prince Albert. If we had enough time, we’d go to the casino at Monte Carlo, or continue on past Monaco to Ventimiglia, the first town past the Italian border. They have a great market there on Fridays.

By this time, it would be late afternoon, time for a drink or a cup of tea. Without telling our guests where we were heading, we’d drive back toward Nice along the Moyenne Corniche (the middle coast road) and stop at Eze, another famous and beautiful perched village. We’d park the car and climb up the narrow pedestrian streets to the five-star Hotel Chèvre d’Or, in the middle of the village. From the bar, we’d lead our guests out onto the terrace and watch their reactions as they first saw its breathtaking view out over the Mediterranean, east to Italy and west to Cap Ferrat and beyond. There, drinks in hand, sitting beside the swimming pool and admiring the view, we understood why this part of the world is the playground of the famous, the glamorous and the wealthy. And we were living there!

8. Please talk about your interactions with the locals. Was it easy to get to know them? What about local customs, local concepts of time, boundaries, hospitality?

Dan: At first, our only connection to the locals was in shops, at the bank, and in restaurants. Our conversations were limited to the transaction at hand and maybe a brief remark or two about the weather, especially since our limited French was very rusty. We soon learned that it was polite to greet everyone you passed on the street (Bonjour, monsieur/madame), and to say hello and goodbye to everyone in the shop as you entered or left.

The books we had read about living in France said that while the French are polite, they are not easy to get to know. They rarely invite people they don’t know well to their homes, and tend to limit their social lives to established friends and family. So if we wanted to get to know people, we’d have to reach out to them.

After a couple of months, we wrote a note to our next door neighbour, Madame Schmidt, who knew Roxanne and our house very well, and invited her for afternoon tea. Her visit followed all the rules of etiquette we’d read about. She arrived promptly 15 minutes after the appointed time and brought us flowers from her garden. (Never a bottle of wine! That would be insulting.) She remained in the living room and didn’t use the powder room, wander out to the kitchen or ask for a tour of the house. She drank her tea and kept up her end of the conversation, speaking very slowly so we would understand. After one and a half hours, she said her goodbyes and left.

A couple of weeks later, she in turn invited us to her place. We too followed all the rules – but, to our delight, she did give us a tour of her house!

Judith: Later on, our book project became the main way we met people and were first invited to their homes. Several friendships resulted. Some – though not all – were more formal and limited than we’re used to. We became friends with one couple who would invite us over for drinks and serve them on the patio – we’ve never stepped inside their house! We didn’t resent this at all; we just found it interesting!

The whole subject of cultural differences is fascinating. What time to arrive for things, for example. Provençals, like many southern people, are known for being relatively casual about time. We once watched guests arriving for a wedding twenty minutes after it was supposed to begin. It didn’t matter, though, as the bride was half an hour late! But we never got it right. We’d show up for a village event right on time, then sit around – sometimes for up to an hour – before it started. The next time, we’d deliberately be fifteen minutes late and it would be all over by the time we got there.

I had the same problem with what to wear. When I showed up in my good clothes, everyone else would be in jeans. When I turned up in shorts and sandals, everyone else would be in dresses. In your own society, you usually know these things. It’s disconcerting and humbling – but also kind of fun – to have no idea!

Of course, we didn’t want to make too many faux pas. We learned from our books not to take chrysanthemums to our dinner hostess. In France, they’re strictly for graves and funerals. We learned not to offer our French guests wine except at meals, unless it was mixed with a little blackcurrant liqueur to make a kir. Champagne, however, could be served any time! We learned that every French person considers it their duty to correct your grammar and pronunciation, whereas we would never dream of correcting their mistakes in English.

Dan: One difference we never quite got used to was the reluctance of the French to offer information unless you ask directly for it, lest they insult you by assuming you are ignorant or telling you something you already know. Ask a French ticket agent if there’s a train to Lyon at 3:15 and he’ll say yes or no – but, if the answer is no, he won’t go on to tell you the schedule for other trains to Lyon, or offer the information that there is no direct train, and that you’ll have to take a train to somewhere else, then transfer. That must be why, though we regularly took Roxanne’s nine year old car in for checkups and maintenance, the garage owner never told us that all cars more than five years old are legally required to have a safety inspection and display a certificate on their windshield. Two months after we came back to Canada, the new inhabitants of Mas Ste. Anne phoned us in some dismay. They’d been stopped by the police and had to pay an enormous fine!

9. You also made some connections with English-speaking expatriates. Please tell us a bit about their lifestyle, their experiences of community.

Judith: Once we’d settled into the house, we began taking French lessons at a language school, where we met some people who’d recently moved to France from England and Ireland. Through them, we discovered an English-speaking Anglican church and began attending services there. After so many months of being able to communicate with other people only in our halting and rudimentary French, it was an incredible relief to hear and speak English for that hour or two each week!

Dan: The Côte d’Azur attracts people from all over the world, and many of them are from the U.K., USA, Canada, Australia and other English-speaking countries. Most are ordinary people living ordinary lives, going to work, church or school, raising their families, paying their mortgages, and so on. They’re just doing it in one of the most beautiful places on earth. Even if their lives seem ordinary, they tend to be interesting and adventurous people.

But the ex-pat community spans all social classes, from very humble to the rich and famous, drawn together by their common language. We met and mingled with people we’d never normally have encountered back home – artists, journalists, distinguished statesmen, highly placed government bureaucrats, a few celebrities, even one or two who were at least rogues and rascals, if not con-men or outright criminals!

Judith: We made a number of good friends among the ex-pats and most of them knew each other. That was a big change from our life in Toronto, where our friends form our own personal network, but usually haven’t met each other. Here, we see our friends individually. As a result, our social calendar is often scheduled months in advance and we may see very good friends only a few times a year. Over there, our English-speaking friends were part of a community, and it was easy to keep in touch. We saw them at church, ran into them on the street, and we all went to the same parties. We didn’t need to plan our social life in advance; it was very spontaneous.

When I decided to throw a surprise birthday party for Dan, just a week before his birthday, it took only three phone calls: two to friends, and one to the traiteur (caterer) about the food. The night of the party, almost fifty people arrived together and sang Happy Birthday outside the door. (Many of them were choir members, so they sang it in four-part harmony!) They brought the food, the wine, and the cake with them; all I had to do was pay for it. And was Dan ever surprised!

Dan: Although we loved being part of this community, we had to be careful not to let it take over our lives. It would have been easy to listen only to Riviera Radio (an English station broadcast from Monaco), read the Riviera Reporter (an English magazine for ex-pats) and imported English or American newspapers, and spend all our free time with our ex-pat friends.

We didn’t want to do that. We made a conscious effort to listen to French radio and television, read French newspapers and speak French as much as possible. We usually attended the events in our village on our own, not with English-speaking friends, so we could interact with our French acquaintances and get to know them better. We invited French people for drinks, or dinner. As a result, we managed to live in two worlds, French and English, and to enjoy them both.

10. During your stay in Provence, you started a very interesting project to profile the village that you were staying in which allowed you to meet some very interesting local people. Please tell us more about that project.

Judith: Dan loves photography. I’m a writer. So doing a book while we were in France – his photography, my writing – seemed like a natural idea. We had limited funds, and couldn’t afford to travel, so, making a virtue of necessity, we decided to concentrate on Le Bar-sur-Loup, to show, in words and pictures, the rhythms of life in this typical French village. That was what we were learning about as we lived there, and it was what I looked for, and rarely found, in the text of the many photographic books on France we’d collected over the years, long before we ever dreamed we’d live there.

Dan: With the help of a translator – so as not to miss any nuances in the answers – and a tape recorder, we interviewed around 35 people, from the mayor on down, including the village policeman, the postman, the butcher, the baker and – no, there was no candlestick maker! – shopkeepers, retired couples, expatriates, even a family from Tunisia. As people answered the questions posed by Judith and our translator, I took photographs.

On other days, Judith would be at her laptop preparing for interviews and making notes, or – later in our stay – writing the first draft. I was often out with the camera: early in the mornings or at sunset for shots of the village from across the valley, throughout the day to catch people going about their everyday life, or to get close-ups of details like doors, door-knobs, fountains and windows. I spent one night – midnight to three a.m., and back again at six a.m. – taking pictures of the village baker and followed our olives from the trees, through harvesting, to the mill and back to our kitchen as olive oil. And of course, I took photographs of every village event!

Judith: I asked everyone we interviewed what they most liked about living in Le Bar-sur-Loup, and the answer was almost always the same, “C’est calme et tranquille.” So the title of our book is Calme & Tranquille: Rhythms of Life in a French Village.

11. What has happened to the book? Have you finished it?

Judith: No, we haven’t finished the book, though it’s getting close. When we came home ten years ago, I had written most of the first draft. We thought that we’d have the book done within months, or at most, in a year or two. In retrospect, that was naïve.

For the first three years after we got back, I missed Le Bar-sur-Loup so much that every time I tried to work on the book, I cried and couldn’t write a word. Eventually, we got the text written (a completely new rewrite), the photos selected and the book designed and laid out. We had another hiatus of several years while we supported our parents – Dan’s dad, my mother – through their final illnesses. We’re just now getting back to it and are finding that it’s pretty slow going. Other things – family, friends, work – come first. And I’m still not happy with the writing. I’m basically a how-to writer, but this book requires more evocative description and engaging story-telling. That’s a challenge for me.
Dan: It’s a bit embarrassing, especially when people from Le Bar-sur-Loup ask us where the book is. We’ve stopped making predictions about when it will be finished or how we’ll get it published. But we’re pleased with what we’ve done so far and we’re not giving up.

12. Looking back on your experience, what are your three fondest memories of your time in France? How has this experience changed you?

Judith: It’s very hard to pick just three. One of my favourite memories, because it was so unlike anything I ever imagined about life in France, was the night we attended a Christmas party for the choir that many of our English-speaking friends sang in. There we were, in France, on the Côte d’Azur, in the glamorous town of Cannes, near the Croisette, around the corner from the world-famous Carleton Hotel – and we were in a Lebanese restaurant, having dined on middle eastern kebabs and rice, singing “Johnnie, Where’s Your Troosers?” with fifty or sixty English-speaking expatriates!
Dan: For me, it was being accepted by the people in our village, even though we were still étrangers, foreigners. People called us “les Canadiens”. A lot of them knew we were working on a book about them and their village. Through the interviews, we got to know a lot of people better than we ever could have in casual conversation – and they felt they knew us too. At village events, people would invite us to sit with them. They’d kiss us hello – the ritual two-cheek greeting – in the streets. When we left, the mayor and council gave us some lovely gifts, and thanked us for the interest we’d taken in their village. Though we were there only two years, we felt we belonged. We still keep in touch with several people in the village, and many others recognize us and greet us warmly every time we return.

Judith: On the route we usually took in and out of the village, there’s one spot where, as you approach the village, you come around a curve and see Le Bar-sur-Loup perched on the hillside, the mountain rising up behind and the valley sloping off below. Every time I saw that view – and it was often several times a day – I was filled with delight, gratitude, and sheer amazement at our good fortune. Even now, ten years later, that memory brings a flood of happy feelings.

13. Making a decision to move to another country for a year or more, in mid-life, was a very courageous decision and entailed some significant sacrifices. Please comment on that and tell us what you would say to someone who is contemplating a similar decision.

Dan: Before we left, people kept telling us it was courageous, but we didn’t see it that way. We were so excited about this great adventure that it didn’t occur to us that we were being brave. How could we turn down this opportunity?

It’s only now, looking back, that we see the sacrifices we made. Because we stayed for two years, instead of the original one, our funds ran very low. We came back to our house – and our mortgage – but we had spent all of our savings and our RRSPs.

When we returned, I decided not to go back to advertising, but to work with Judith in our business, be a musician and a househusband, and try to sell my photography. We had to start again financially, with only one income, and that has been more challenging than we thought it would be.

Now, with retirement looming in a few years, we sometimes wonder if it was foolish of us to have spent all our capital in mid-life, and to have chosen self-fulfillment and following our dreams instead of a regular pay cheque. But when we think about our experiences in France and the quality of life we’ve had since our return, we realize how glad we are that we made those choices. It wouldn’t be right for everyone, but it was for us.

14. Your stay lasted about 2 years. Please describe to us your experience upon re-entry into Canadian life.

Judith: Culture shock! We weren’t prepared for that. For the first month or two, we couldn’t eat in restaurants, because it was so noisy. French people pitch their voices just to the table. Canadians – like Americans – tend to talk at full volume, so everyone in the restaurant can hear. As the din increases, people speak even louder. We couldn’t stand it.

We also missed hearing French all around us. It’s very melodic. And it’s surprisingly restful when you don’t understand what other people are saying. You can tune it out more easily.
Dan: We also found it hard to adjust to the constant barrage of advertising, both visual and aural. Billboards, magazine and newspaper ads, radio and TV commercials – never-ending. We missed the formality of the French, the politeness of every conversational interaction. When we arrived, one suitcase didn’t arrive, and we went to the luggage counter. The clerk there was perfectly polite by Canadian standards, but he seemed rude to us as he asked, “Yes? What can I do for you?” without addressing us as Sir or Madam as he would have in France.
A brasserie in Antibes

Judith: We missed the medical system. It’s the best in the world, with doctors who routinely make house calls, no waiting (I got an MRI appointment in two weeks, whereas in Canada I have to book it one to two years ahead), and test results explained to you on the spot, with a copy for you as well as one for your doctor.

Dan: We missed the sophistication of the technology, from the amazing sound systems at every public event and the astounding fireworks displays, even in our tiny village, to the widespread use of wireless terminals in every restaurant so they can scan your credit or debit card right at the table. At the gas pumps, you have to key in your PIN number along with swiping your credit card, so there’s much less fraud. Last year, someone used our Visa card number to charge thousands of dollars worth of gas out in B.C. That couldn’t happen in France.

Judith: But coming back to Canada wasn’t all bad. The roads here are wider and easier to drive. Gas – but not wine! – is cheaper. We were glad to be close to family and friends again.

Dan: One of the things that helped a lot during that adjustment period was being able to talk to the family and friends who had visited us there, and to share our memories and stories with them. Since they had experienced our life there, even for a brief time, they were more interested and had more sense of how deeply it had changed us and how much we missed being there.

15. You have been back a few times to Provence since your extended stay. Please tell us about these trips. What did it feel like to go back?

Judith: We went back to Le Bar-sur-Loup for two months in the winter of 1997-1998. Besides all the usual reasons – longing to be there again, escaping the Canadian winter – I wanted to see if I could do subcontract work from there. I found that the technology was no problem, and the time difference was an advantage, but the clients were still uncomfortable with distance, even if they never had face to face contact with me in Toronto. And I sensed that it would be hard to get new contracts from so far away. That trip was wonderful, though. We’d only been back in Canada for a couple of years, ourFrench was still pretty good, and not much had changed over there. We slipped back into our old life very easily, and enjoyed it as much as ever. So did our cats!

Dan: In September 2000, we went back for two weeks. There were changes in the village – the butcher had retired, the husband of the couple who owned the pub and restaurant had died, some shops had opened and others had closed. We had a wonderful vacation. We were busy every day, seeing our friends, revisiting favourite sites, buying presents to take back home. But for us, the magic is in living there, in watching the seasons change, in conducting our daily lives surrounded by all that history, beauty, and – most of all – by being part of our village and the larger French culture and society.

Judith: We just returned from another vacation in France last month (May 2005). This time, we spent a week exploring another region, Languedoc Roussillon, along the Mediterranean from the Spanish border to Montpelier. House prices are cheaper there, and, if we want to spend more time in France in future, after we retire, we thought that might be a good area to move to. We’re still not sure – it wasn’t love at first sight – and we’ll likely go back there again to see if it grows on us. We went back to our village for the second week. Again, we had a great time visiting our friends, both English and French. But the rapidly rising house prices, and the high value of the Euro, make buying there almost impossible for us, at least right now.

Dan: Le Bar-sur-Loup has changed a lot since we were there last, and the changes are hard to adjust to when they hit you all at once. The lovely old chateau is being turned into a modern hotel and restaurant. They’ve torn down the old porch, with its distinctive arches, put in modern windows, and covered it with yellow crépi (plaster). It’s quite a shock! The church is closed for major renovations until sometime in 2006. A huge extension is being built on the back of the Mairie (town hall). The village is clogged with cars; it’s almost impossible to find a parking space. Some of the shops, and one of our favourite restaurants, have closed. The tourist office no longer sells souvenirs, books or photographs, so it has lost much of its charm and appeal. And, as Judith said, the house prices are astronomical right now.

We’ve always dreamed of returning to Le Bar. We’re still attached to it in many ways, but the changes make it a little easier to contemplate other possibilities.

16. The South of France has left lasting impressions on both of you. I understand you have plans to spend more time in France in the future. Please tell us about your plans.

Dan: Before our trip in May, we were talking a lot about retiring to France in five years, and were considering the pros and cons of buying a place there in the next year or two. Our idea was to move there permanently when we retire and come back here in the summers, perhaps swapping our house and car for one in the GTA.

Now we’re thinking about renting instead of buying, especially since we learned that you can often negotiate a reasonable rent for most of the year if you’ll agree to leave during July and August, so the owners can rent the house by the week – at very high rates – during the summer. That would work for us. And, while are living there, it would be a lot easier to buy, if that’s what we eventually decide to do – and if we can afford it.

Judith: Despite the changes we see in France – graffiti everywhere, more fast food, people eating on the run, the creeping invasion of American culture, and so many foreigners (like us!) moving there – we still want to live there again in the future. Life there is a delight for the senses. It’s rich in culture, history and the customs of everyday life. For us, it’s a satisfying and balanced way of life. In France, I feel bien dans mon peau (“good in my skin”). I have a sense of general well-being and aliveness I rarely experience anywhere else. I want more of it.

Dan: Me too.
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For more travel articles, advice, photos, interesting interviews &
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Sunday, June 19, 2005

"Captain Ron" Talks About The Houseboating Lifestyle -Travel Full-Time - Affordably

Sunday, June 19, 2005

"Captain Ron" Talks About The Houseboating Lifestyle -Travel Full-Time - Affordably

It was a beautiful evening for a stroll tonight, so I went down to one of my favourite places: Toronto's waterfront. Listening to the melee of languages, observing the broad mixture of people, I was thinking about upcoming travel plans, business issues, articles to write for the website, and many other things. I liken this feeling to a hamster on a wheel who's constantly spinning and moving. My brain was working overtime, which happens a lot when I think about the website and all the ideas and topics I'd like to write about.

So I am strolling by the sailboat harbour at Ashbridges Bay, a particularly serene place with a quiet little inlet surrounded by willow trees on the east side, on the north side there is a private marina where hundreds of sailboats are docked, on the south side there is a little peninsula with just a few places where a variety of boats can anchor at the municipal docks.

So I am walking, enjoying the reflections of the evening sunshine playing on the water, listening to the joyful songs of the birds, observing bikers, walkers, rollerbladers, watching the boats......... and then I had an idea - I might as well interview on of these boaters and find out a bit more about their lifestyle and travel adventures.

I approached a houseboat and I saw that the captain was sitting on the bridge. I knocked on the glass door and asked if I could do an interview with him. The man, a white-haired bearded man in his 60s, was very welcoming and invited me in. He actually asked me to sit in the captain's chair and I shyly accepted.

He introduced himself as Ron, "Captain Ron", a name by which he is well known in the Lake Ontario boating community. Ron is a former corporate sales manager, now comfortably retired, with an active lifestyle. Ron still has a house in Whitby, just outside of Toronto, but he spends a lot of his time on the houseboat, and many of his friends live full-time on a houseboat.

His particular boat is an Intracoastal houseboat, meaning it has a hull and is more seaworthy than pontoon houseboats. It was made in 1970, and cost $17,000 when it was new. Ron has had it for 18 years and he regularly gets offers from people who want to buy it. Recently someone offered him $50,000 in cash for the houseboat. But since Ron loves the lifestyle, and a new boat would probably cost $150,000 to $200,000, it makes no sense for him to sell his beloved house on the water. He politely declined the offer.

The boat has an elevated bridge which not only houses the "steering wheel" (is that proper marine terminology?), but also accommodates a fold-out double bed. A few steps down is the galley on the left, and a bathroom with a combined toilet, sink and shower on the right. Beside the bathroom is a small door leading down to the cabin that has 4 bunk beds. Behind the kitchen is the living room area with an eating nook and another double fold out bed.

In theory the houseboat can sleep 8 people, but Ron said that you would not want to cram that many people on board with just one small bathroom. Makes a lot of sense... Ron seems to be travelling mostly by himself, judging by the lone deck chair that was located on the boat's top deck from where I had a perfect view of the serene harbour setting. Ron says Ashbridges Bay is one of his favourite spots and he was sitting there quietly, enjoying the evening, when I approached him for the interview.

Ron uses the boat about 6 months of the year, he puts it in the water in mid April and takes it out in mid October and he mostly cruises Lake Ontario with it. From the 1000 Islands in the east near Kingston, a city that he loves (me too...), to Toronto with its islands, and St. Catharines with its Port Dalhousie harbour, he actively cruises the north shore of Lake Ontario.

He commented that the harbours on the US side of Lake Ontario are not as clean and unfortunately since 911, the American Coastguard has become overly protective, he said even paranoid, and the minute they see him, they figure he must be a drug smuggler and they put him through the third degree. So he prefers to cruise the Canadian side of the lake.

Many of Ron's friends actually live on a houseboat full-time. They sail northern waters in the summer and then connect through the Ohio River - Mississippi waterway system down into Gulf of Mexico from where they sail down to southern Florida. On the way back in the spring they take the Intracoastal Waterway (the "Ditch") to come back up north for the summer.

Ron also has a lot of friends who have ocean-going sailboats who spend much of their time in the Caribbean. As a matter of fact, one of his friends has a unique type of sailboat that was recently commandeered by the producers of the sequel for "Pirates of the Caribbean".

Naturally I asked Ron about the cost of houseboating. Apart from the purchase costs, which he estimated at $150,000 to $200,000 for a new boat, there are dockage costs, fuel, insurance, repairs. He said he spends about $1000 on fuel, and about $5,000 a year for dockage and other operating costs. According to Ron, the people that do the Canada-Florida run usually spend anywhere from about $10,000 to $30,000 for the round-trip which could take a whole year. The cost at the lower end means that you are using the on-board kitchen (or rather, galley) facilities, you are staying at town docks rather than private marinas, using the boat's shower, rather than the marina's expensive facilities. Since Ron is a good cook, he practically always uses his boat's kitchen to make his meals, a huge savings.

Captain Ron has really figured out a perfect retirement lifestyle for himself. He houseboats in the summer, goes deer hunting in the fall, heads out of Ontario to Florida or British Columbia in the winter, where he either stays with friends and family, or rents a reasonably priced apartment inland from the coast. Or, if he sees a good offer in the newspaper, he might just hop on a plane to Mexico for a quick getaway. And he loves to spend the summers in Ontario, where he cruises Lake Ontario and spends some time on beautiful Georgian Bay where his brothers live.

According to Ron, the key thing in retirement is health, and he works hard to stay healthy. He plays tennis, rides his bike, he loves to swim and he works out. He said, particularly if you want to travel to the US as a retiree, being healthy is critical. His brother had a heart attack in Florida, and his health insurance wouldn't cover his treatment costs, and he ended up a with a $150,000 bill at the end. No wonder Captain Ron considers good health a key factor for travelling....

Captain Ron gave me a glimpse into his unique lifestyle, and I couldn't help but envy him a little. He seemed so peaceful, so relaxed, enjoying the evening sun looking out over the water. I realized that he's figured it all out, and he's created his perfect little niche for himself......

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For more travel articles, advice, photos, interesting interviews &
the opportunity to win a cruise on the Amazon River
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Friday, June 17, 2005

Presenting: Pier 21: Canada's "Front Door" to Millions of Immigrants

June 17, 2005

Presenting: Pier 21: Canada's "Front Door" to Millions of Immigrants

I am fascinated by human stories and by intercultural connections. The immigrant experience combines both these elements. On the continuum of intercultural experiences from tourist to traveller to long-term visitor / expatriate to becoming a permanent resident in a new country, the immigrant experience involves the most extreme and intense form of cultural interchange, and often confrontation. As an immigrant myself, I have experienced first-hand the effects of culture shock and it took me about 4 years to really settle emotionally in my new home country of Canada.

Along these lines, here is an interview with Maria McGowan, Communications Manager for Pier 21, Canada's immigration museum, a national historic site in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

1. Pier 21 is Canada’s immigration museum. Please tell us more about Pier 21, its location and facilities and what it is today.

From the twenties to the seventies, Pier 21 was Canada's 'front door' to over a million immigrants, wartime evacuees, refugees, troops, war brides and their children. This enriched our social and cultural landscape and uplifted the very soul of a nation forever.

Pier 21, a National Historic Site, has been transformed into a testament to Canada's profoundly emotional immigration experience. The sheer impact of the interactive displays, virtual projections and abundance of fascinating images is simply overwhelming.

Part of Canada's past and what continues to shape our future began at Pier 21. You will find photographs and the names of passengers and ships. Also, you will see actual passports, immigration papers and even ships' menus from this time.

This year-round facility is much more than a visitor attraction. It is a unique and authentic glimpse into our history that you and your family will never forget.

2. Please tell us more about the Exhibition Hall, the centerpiece of Pier 21.

The Rudolph Peter Bratty Exhibition Hall is the centerpiece of Pier 21. Designed to represent the different stages of immigration, the exhibit invites visitors to trace the same path that immigrants followed as they journeyed to a new country. This highly interactive exhibit recreates the immigration experience with the use of innovative displays, evocative soundscapes and interactive technology.

- Leaving Home The decision to leave home was often filled with great uncertainty. Through photographs, interpretive panels and personal artifacts, visitors see how immigration was influenced by world events.

- The Voyage Until the 1960's, almost all immigrants arrived by ship. Find out what it was like to travel across the Atlantic to a new world. The Secunda Wall of Ships showcases the photographs of the top 100 ships to call on Pier 21.

- Immigration Hall Upon arrival of Pier 21, passengers would disembark and proceed to the examination hall. This area has been recreated with wooden benches, wire cages and an immigration officer who may ask to see your papers.

- Customs Trunks were inspected in the baggage room. A model of the original Pier 21 immigration complex shows the location of the baggage room, detention area, dormitories and train station.

- The Annex Volunteers played a special role welcoming newcomers. The Red Cross volunteers ran a nursery for families. Representatives from different religious denominations were on hand to greet new arrivals. This area pays tribute to those who helped immigrants in so many ways.

- Face of Immigration Listening stations tell the stories of the home children, British evacuee children, the military, volunteers, staff, refugees and immigrants from three different time periods in the history of Pier 21.

- World War II Deck Between 1939 and 1947, the Department of National Defense took over Pier 21. 494,000 Canadian troops departed from Pier 21 to serve overseas. It is here where these troops bravely boarded ships for WWII.

- Travel Across Canada For most people passing through Pier 21, the next stage was train travel. Less than 5% of arrivals at Pier 21 stayed in Nova Scotia. Visitors step aboard a recreated CN railcar and watch the Canadian countryside flash by the train windows. Inside the railcar, interviews of actual Pier 21 alumni sharing their memories are shown.

- Andrea and Charles Bronfman- In-Transit Theatre "Oceans of Hope" A 24-minute virtual projection presentation portrays the emotional stories of those who passed through Pier 21.

3. Please tell us about the Library and Resource Centre.

Our Resource Centre houses a wealth of information valuable to individuals who arrived at Pier 21, their descendents, researchers, historians, school groups and other interested parties. The Resource Centre possesses unique images compiled from sources such as the National Archives, Sisters of Service, Canadian National Railway, Halifax Port Corporation and the Public Archives of Nova Scotia, many of which are on display in the Exhibit Hall. The collection also includes newspaper photographs, the "Day in the Life of Pier 21" series donated by Ken Elliot, the Allan S. Tanner Collection of images depicting Canadian troops returning to Pier 21 in 1945, and the Francis E. Murphy Collection which documents the building of the piers. It has a small but growing collection of books on topics such as Canadian immigration, the Canadian military in World War II, multiculturalism and other areas of study related to Pier 21.

Four computer terminals are available where our website, stories database, ship database and other electronic resources may be accessed. Visitors may search electronically for the basic arrival information of anyone who immigrated through a Canadian port between 1925 and 1935. Immigration records of individuals who entered Canada through Quebec City, Montreal, Halifax and Saint John between 1925 and 1935 may be accessed on microfilm.

The microfilm records are very popular because they contain the responses to the twenty-eight questions that a prospective immigrant had to answer before being allowed to enter Canada.

The Resource Centre houses photographs of 90% of the ships that brought immigrants to Halifax between 1928 and 1971, and we are constantly adding to our collection. The Resource Centre has all of the videotaped immigrant interviews conducted by the CBC in the year before we opened, news coverage of the Pier 21 project, documentaries and several films on topics related to Canadian immigration. One of Pier 21's most important projects has been collecting the personal recollections of immigrants, war brides, service men and women, British guest children and home children. Many visitors enjoy this collection in the Centre and choose to write their own arrival stories after seeing it. The Pier 21 experience is greatly enhanced by a visit to the Resource Centre.

4. Pier 21 had a significant impact on Canada’s history. Please shed some more light on that.

Halifax's Pier 21 opened in 1928 and closed in 1971.
Throughout these years passed:
- 1 million immigrants
- 100,000 displaced persons and refugees
- 50,000 war brides and their 22,000 children
- 3,000 British evacuee children, escaping the ravages of war at home
- 494,000 Canadian troops bound for Europe during World War II

5. What type of people came through Pier 21, what countries did they come from?

People from all walks of life from Europe and the Mediterranean.

6. Please tell us more about some of the special groups that came through Pier 21, e.g. displaced persons, evacuee children and war brides. What were some of the special circumstances of these unique immigrant groups?

They came for various reasons such as war, seeking better opportunities or joining loved ones who were already in Canada. You can read some of their stories on our website.

7. You have an immigrant stories section on your website. How did that come about and what type of stories can I read there? Can I submit my own stories?

Stories are an integral part of Pier 21. We are collecting stories from people that have been part of Pier 21. If you immigrated to Canada and first step foot in this country at Pier 21 then we would love to hear from you. Also, if you were in the services during the Second World War and left for Europe from Pier 21 or returned from European battlefields to Pier 21, we would love to hear your stories. We are likewise very interested in hearing any stories from past employees or volunteers that once helped so many Canadians at Pier 21. All of your stories are valuable to us and we would love to have them for our collection.

You can submit them online in our Resource Centre section or send it by email or by mail.

8. Pier 21 is also a location for conferences and children’s camps. Please comment on some of these events and activities that go on at Pier 21.

Pier 21 is a bustling meeting place for conferences and meetings and continues to grow each year as it gains a great reputation for professional service, a world-class view of Halifax Harbour and a unique setting. School-aged children can come during March Break for hands-on fun day camps. Special programming and special events are ongoing and family-friendly.

9. Please tell us a bit the Manulife Education Program that is offered by Pier 21.

Pier 21 offers curriculum related workshops throughout the year, teaching students about nation building, citizenship, Canadian heritage and multiculturalism.

These unique workshops are designed by qualified professionals and led by trained museum interpreters. Students participate in fun and interactive workshops, complimenting their guided tour of the museum (Rudolph P. Bratty Exhibition Hall).

Pre-visit and follow-up activities are also available. Teachers will find these and other useful teaching resources in the Teacher Section of our website.

Students will want to explore the Student Section for great project ideas and resources. Our capacity to offer programs en français is also rapidly growing!

10. Pier 21 has also won some awards as a special events venue. Please tell us more about that.

Only recently re-opened in July 1999, Meetings and Incentive Travel Magazine has twice since voted Pier 21 as one of the top seven unique venues for Service Excellence in Atlantic Canada! After conducting surveys of their readership of 10,500 M&IT asked the question "Which Canadian Facility Best Met your Expectations in 2000-2001, then again, in 2002 – 2003. Pier 21 is one of seven properties in Atlantic Canada to receive this prestigious award, twice in just four years!

Thank you for your time, Maria, in talking to us about this wonderful institution.

www.textronics.com

For more travel articles, advice, photos, interesting interviews &
the opportunity to win a cruise on the Amazon River
visit my website at www.travelandtransitions.com.

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

Presenting: CARIBANA - Toronto's Huge Caribbean Cultural Festival

June 15, 2005

Presenting: CARIBANA - Toronto's Huge Caribbean Cultural Festival

I had a chance to talk with John Kam, Vice-Chair of the Board of Directors, about one of Toronto's greatest special events and tourist attractions: Caribana, the city's hugely popular and internationally renowned festival of Caribbean culture which is scheduled this year for July 15 to August 1, 2005.

1.Please tell us about Caribana – what type of festival is it?

CARIBANA™ is a two-week festival of Caribbean culture that includes a great variety of events, here are just a selected few: from a media launch on June 23, to the popular Children's Carnival on July 16, a Calypso-Soca Forum on July 16, an Interfaith Service on July 17 at the St. James Cathedral, the King & Queen Extravaganza on July 28, to the big CARIBANA™ parade on July 30 which is followed up by the Arts and Cultural Festival on Olympic Island on July 31 and August 1, 2005.

CARIBANA™ is a feast for the eyes and ears, and you will be able to enjoy a great Caribbean celebration, complete with fabulous music, exuberant dancing and delicious food.

CARIBANA™ is also the only surviving Arts Project launched as part of the 1967, Canada B1-centennial celebrations. It has gone on to become the cornerstone of Tourism in Southern Ontario.

2. Please tell us about the festival’s history, how has it evolved?

The Caribbean Cultural Committee (“the CCC”, registered trademark – CARIBANA™) is a non-profit, community-based corporation created by a group of Pan-Caribbean academics, students and professionals in 1967, under the name Caribbean Committee for Cultural Advancement. The CCC was established in response to Canada’s centennial celebration commemorating its diversity and the contributions made to Canada from the various cultures that comprise the Canadian mosaic. What began as an expression of the goals and aspirations of the Caribbean community resident here—that the culture of the Caribbean had pride of place in Canada—has blossomed into the world-renowned festival of Carnival Arts, CARIBANA™.

3. How about all the colourful costumes? Who creates them? What about the cost involved?

The masquerade costumes are designed by special artists after which people with special craft-making skills are employed to actually produce the costumes at what are called mas camps. The cost varies from band to band but generally stays within the range of $75 to $130 per costume.

4. Please tell us about the Caribana Marketplace.

The Caribbean Village is going to be set up on an elevated area overlooking the parade route, on Lakeshore Boulevard. From there patrons will be able to look down and see the spectacle of Caribana as it unfolds while having another party going on nonstop! There will be more than 50 top artistes from different islands of the Caribbean performing during the course of the day from 10:00 a.m. until 9:00 p.m. The artistes will come from Barbados, Grenada, Antigua/Barbuda, Trinidad & Tobago, St. Vincent & The Grenadines and much, much more. There will also be locally based Caribbean-bred performers appearing during the all-day extravaganza. This is to be staged on a cordoned off area knows as the Bandshell.

There will be Arts & Crafts booths from the different Caribbean islands set up around the area with tasty Caribbean food on sale throughout the day. All of is going to cost only $10.
The CARIBANA ™ 'Marketplace is where commerce meets culture, and everyone walks away with a tasteful memory. Dine on festival-style Caribbean cuisine, shop for an array of Arts & Crafts, and Festival souvenirs and relish a toast of the brewmaster’s craft and some of Niagara’s internationally acclaimed wines and spirits.

5. Please tell us about the musical entertainment offered during Caribana?
The musical entertainment generally comes from various top Caribbean artistes coming in from the Caribbean and of course locally based Caribbean-bred artistes.


6. What type of food services are available during Caribana?

There are various types of food available during the festival each year. On either side of the parade route on Caribana Day, authorized vendors sell different types of Caribbean cuisine including Pelau (Peas & Rice), Jerk Chicken, Bake & Shark (sandwiches) and traditional drinks including Sorrel and Mauby (a drink made from the bitter bark of a tree and sweetened with lots of sugar).

7. Please give us an idea of the sponsors who make this big event happen.

The sponsors vary from year to year. This year the list includes The City of Toronto, CTV News, The Toronto Star, Yorkgate Mall, British West Indian Airways (BWIA), The Caribbean Camera and Breyers.

8. Roughly how many people visit Caribana and what economic impact does it have on Toronto?

CARIBANA™ attracts according to research estimates from DECIMA (1990) nearly one million spectators to the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), generating, according to figures compiled and released by the City of Toronto, $400 million annually for the Toronto economy.

9. What is the cost of attending Caribana? What events require tickets, how much are they and where can I obtain tickets?

Some events require the purchase of tickets, while others don’t. For instance the CCC/Yorkgate Mall Children’s Parade which takes place on July 16, is FREE. So too is the Parade Day. However, if on Caribana Day (the parade day), you wish to sit in the stadium on the CNE Grounds that requires the purchase of a ticket. Different events carry different admission fees. You will be able to get specific information about the admission prices for the official Caribana events by visiting the website: www.caribana.ca.

Thank you for giving us a preview of this colourful, exciting festival and I look forward to a great party.

www.textronics.com

For more travel articles, advice, photos, interesting interviews &
the opportunity to win a cruise on the Amazon River
visit my website at www.travelandtransitions.com.

Interview: Dr. Arya Goes Trekks Through Nepal - His Most Intense Travel Experience Ever - Physically and Mentally

June 15, 2005

Interview: Dr. Arya Goes Trekks Through Nepal - His Most Intense Travel Experience Ever - Physically and Mentally

I have written about my dentist before who is a really cool guy. Not only is he a dentist, but he is also a practicing lawyer. More than that he is also a world traveller and an active global volunteer. Dr. Arya recently did a treek through Nepal, which he described as his most challenging travel experience ever, physically and mentally. Read here about his adventure in Nepal:

1) Please give us a general itinerary of the trip and a description of the trekk

Our trip was a 12-day trip in which we landed in the Delhi and eventually made our way by various modes of transportation to the State of Sikhim, which is in the very northern part of India. Sikhim is a very controversial state, as it is the subject of many territory disputes between China and India. However, I believe that China has just recently officially recognized it as a part of India. The trekk involved first going to Darjeeling (yes, where the tea originates!), where we rested up and slightly acclimatized ourselves for 2 or 3 days in a very picturesque, tranquil setting. From there we took a 7 hour jeep ride up into Yuksom (Sikhim), a little village where trekkers usually start their journey. The long jeep ride itself was quite exciting as you are going up mountains on very narrow roads, and cars are coming from all over not paying particular attention to which side of the road they should be traveling. One side of the road has a sheer cliff with no guardrails, and you think you are going to fall down any moment.

There were also some hilarious road signs going all the way up, reminding people to drive slowly: For example, "Don't hurry, so that you can enjoy your curry", or "Donate your blood at the blood bank, not on the highway." We really got a chuckle out of these signs. Finally, after the long ride we made it to our starting point for the trekk where we stayed in a very basic hotel. It was probably a one-star hotel; however little did we know that this would actually be luxury compared to the accommodations that were still to come.

On our trekk we had with us one sherpa guide, 2 sherpa cooks, and 2 sherpa horsemen for carrying supplies. The carrying animals are small ponies or yaks, since they are the only animals that can make it through the rough terrain.

We started the trekk with daypacks- weighing less than 20 pounds. We also carried water and fancy gear such as climbing poles, fancy hiking boots, etc. Members of 6 person group also carried medical and trekking kits. The heavier bags were put on the animals and taken up. So, we were excited and ready to go.

Basically, every day we walked about 20 km or so which took about 9 hours to do. We typically walked uphill for 8 or 9 hours straight with a one hour lunch break through various terrains. The vegetation changes the higher up you go. We started at an altitude of about 2000 m where the vegetation was very green and lush. As we got to 4000 m (equivalent to the top of the European Alps) around the second or third day of the trekk, we started to see rhododendrons fade, less green and more shrubs. We spent about a day at that altitude to acclimatize ourselves.
We stayed in wood huts or tents that had no electricity, no running water, no furniture, no plumbing, or no heat. The nights got really cold, so the sherpas would boil water and fill it into our drinking bottles. We took those hot bottles and put them into our sleeping bags to keep warm. The next day we used the same water as drinking water. For the entire 8 days we did not really substantially change our clothes; we just changed socks in order to avoid blisters. You certainly don't want to expose skin too long in this environment.

Interestingly enough, at about 4000 m I actually got a severe headache, my nose started bleeding, and my ears were ringing really bad. Every night we would have debriefings: however that night I did not participate in the debriefing since I wasn't feeling well at all. I was very quiet. I took some diamoxx to help me more quickly adjust to the altitude.

The next day I felt better, and we kept on going up. At about 4500 m we started to see snow and sleet. At about 5000 m we reached Samiti Lake, which is a high altitude lake. It is very odd to see a little lake in the middle of these mountains. We camped out there, this was our pinnacle day.

The next day we aimed to go to Lagochla which was going to be the high altitude point for the trekk. Of the 6 people in our group, 4 of us decided to make it to Lagochla. Last year 6 Germans actually died on this stretch because of an avalanche. They had been instructed by the sherpas not to go, but they went anyway- killing themselves and a poor porter.

To reach Lagochla we left at 2 am, when it was pitch dark outside. We had headlights on our heads and followed closely on the guide's footsteps. We were literally walking on the edge of cliffs at times. You don’t know how far down the cliff is- it could be 2 feet or 200 feet. All you can do is just concentrate and keep on walking. At 2:30 am, my hands started hurting because of the cold. Since it was so early into the trekk I did not want to say anything and embarrass myself. Right about that time, the girl in front of me stopped and started to complain about the same thing. We all stopped to evaluate the situation. She pulled out a heat pack to warm her hands. I found that the act of moving fingers back and forth quickly actually calmed our fingers down. We continued to climb and at 4:45 am we reached our pinnacle. We didn't go any further than that. We had hit Lagochla I. Lagochla III was slightly ahead and was to be our planned destination; however the sherpas felt it was too dangerous to continue. There was some heavy debate amongst them and then us. We decided we were done and would watch the sunrise from this point. Then we all did a little prayer with the sherpas. We savoured the view, which is, of course, unbelievably beautiful. We were very close to Katchachamanga, the 3rd highest peak in the world. The view was truly spectacular. I made a mental note as we turned around at 5:10 am and I thought of my wife, saying to myself "I am coming home". Little did I know that the walk back was extremely hard as well, it was very slippery and dangerous and very hard on the knees. At that point we were 4 days into the hard trekk and we had another 4 days to go.

After our early morning trip to Lagochla, we got back to the camp at 8:30 am. We had breakfast and then we walked another 9 hours. We slowly made our way down, 8 or 9 hours every day. On the second last day of the trekk, one group member got very violently ill. At one time she actually threw up 9 times an hour. She was completely zapped of energy. On the last day, another group member got sick. At this point, I decided to talk to the leader since I am familiar with this type of illness. I figured both of them just needed rest, why don't I take them down as quickly as possible to the hotel. Coming down slower would be even more painful for these guys as they had the mental fortitude and physical tenacity to make a ‘run’ for it. We would aim for doing it in 6 hours instead of 9. So a decision was made that I would take them down. The 2 sick people and myself rushed down and we indeed made it in 6 hours. Making it down safely was an incredible experience. I felt it was a real physical and mental feat.

After rushing down from the mountains we arrived in the little dusty town where we had started and we felt like cowboys riding in. The locals were sitting around in the heat watching three dusty travellers limp through their town with smiling faces. We were told that of all trekking groups that went up at this time, we were the only group that had made it to Lagochla, everybody else had turned around. We were very even more proud of the accomplishment.

One of the sherpas said that Western people always say "we conquered the mountain". Eastern people, on the other hand, say "the mountain let us pass". I am a firm believer of the latter. The rest of group came down a couple of hours later, exhilirated to make it back safely. We were all in a state of shock due to exertion, but we were happy as well.

3) Please comment on practical aspects of the trekk: accommodation, food, equipment, fitness level required

Obviously, one has to be in decent shape to do this sort of trek. I am not certain one needs to be a marathoner etc. do complete it. I was in good shape anyway as I run and work out quite a bit. From a cardio perspective, I did not feel exerted. I did feel exerted tremendously from a muscular perspective as the duration of each trekking day was quite long. The trek can be hard on your knees and feet.

We all had very high quality mountain boots and packs. We had breathable clothes and socks. We would carry water bottles during the day along with high energy food stuffs like peanut brittle.

As far as accommodation goes-well, what accommodation?

I would, however, recommend that if one elects to go on this type of journey then they be in good shape of course. Get your cardio to a point where you are not huffing and puffing after a 30 minute jog. The mental training would be equally important. Read about the details of these types of trips and learn what to expect. Try to take some of the surprise out of it. It may help.

4) Please tell us about the mental components of the trekk (insights, learning experiences, emotions, spiritual experiences)

The nights would be so incredibly cold, I was freezing and almost in state of delirium. I wrote in my journal every day describing what we all were going through. I had pictures of my wife and daughter with me to which I would stare at every night. I found myself touching the pictures, longing for my family. I can honestly say that I missed them so much. Of course I couldn’t speak with them since there are no phones along the trekk. This was a really incredible feeling - this intense longing, I could not believe the intensity of this feeling..

The mental stress that you feel as a result of the conditions is very difficult. You have to go to the washroom outside, live with the cold (and heat) and deal with very poor sanitary conditions. This is difficult. It wears you down. The group was very strong mentally. We would pick each other up often and make each other laugh. I took the role on this trip as the person who would try to make everyone laugh when times got tough. I believe I took the role of the silent leader. We had designated leaders on the trip. As I felt mostly strong through the trip, I found I could often be used as a pillar when times got tough. I was lucky.

The reflection for this trip became more accurate as some time elapsed. In other words, it was difficult to fully enjoy the beautiful sights and sounds during the trek. However, upon my return and looking at the photos etc. I started to reflect in a more positive manner. It was a difficult trip; however, I realized that this trip was not about getting to a destination or saying you made it to a certain point. This trip was about the struggles, fun, exhilaration, companionship, and commentary along the way. I suppose- much like life! Seeing the beautiful sunrise at LaGochla or the peak of Everest from Darjeeling are really just minor events. The amount I learned about people and myself as we slowly and deliberately walked through rough terrain was incredible. Yes, the journey and not just the destination is what it was all about.

5) Please comment on the cultural components of the trip (contact points with locals, exposure to cultures, political insights etc.)

India, in general, is a fascinating and complicated place. I don’t think a real traveler should miss the adventure of traveling to the sub-continent.

The trek offered us some exposure to the Nepalase/Tibetian way of life. A seemingly simpler life with simple wants and needs. In addition, the usual and controversial effects of globalization are obviously apparent including the environmental issues. There is plenty of garbage left on the trails by Westerners as a result of the ever increasing number of people going on these types of treks. This is obviously quite disturbing.

The Sherpas were absolutely fascinating. First of all, we were quite humbled by them. Physically, they were in such superior shape. It was really something to see. They are very respectful of the mountains, the environment and to people in general. They are very accommodating, pleasant and knowledgeable about the mountains. Some of them would be carrying 100 pound loads on their backs and trotting up the hills like a Sunday stroll. Each time this happened, and it happened a lot, I would just watch in absolute awe.

6) Please tell us about the after-effects of the trekk

Since coming back it has taken me about a month to recover. Although I was 100% functional, something wasn't quite right, something just didn't feel right. Physically I was slightly off, I felt clumsy. After the trip I wanted to read more about the Himalayas, and since then I have read 4 books on the Himalayas, including two about the famous tragedy in 1996 when several climbers that died up there. There are also some amazing survival stories connected to this event. What started out as an interest in where I had been, lately has been, I must confess, a minor obsession to return. I have experienced more enthusiasm about going back, maybe trying an extreme climb, an adventure 2 notches higher than this trekk. I am grappling with that because I would really want to do something like that. But there is tremendous pressure from my family not to do it since they were worried sick about me while I was away on my trekk. The rational part of mind also agrees. I fully agree that there is no point in me trying to do something silly. I have a wife, child and another one on the way. I was lucky to go on this trip.

Thank you so much, Dr. Arya, for sharing your experiences with us from this exciting and unusual travel experiences.

www.textronics.com

For more travel articles, advice, photos, interesting interviews &
the opportunity to win a cruise on the Amazon River
visit my website at www.travelandtransitions.com.
June 15, 2005

An Interview with Gary Dunn, Publisher of the Caretaker Gazette, "Caretaking" - An Innovative, Cost-Saving Concept in the Travel Industry

I am always on the lookout for innovative, unconventional, and first and foremost, cost-saving ways to travel. I recently came across the concept of "caretaking", i.e. looking after other people's (often beautiful) properties and estates, as a way of procuring rent-free living opportunities in interesting places. Read about this innovative concept in this interview with Gary Dunn, expert on "caretaking", and see if you might be able to apply it yourself....

1. Please tell us more about the Caretaking concept.

For those who are not involved in the profession, the word "caretaker" may have numerous meanings. But for the growing number of people who are discovering the caretaking profession, a caretaker is a property caretaker: a person or persons who cares for a property in exchange for rent-free living accommodations, and with the possibility of additional compensation.

The caretaking profession includes positions such as housesitters, ranch sitters, Bed & Breakfast and Innsitters, property managers, Estate Managers, and hosts at resorts and campgrounds. A caretaker is generally distinguished from a “caregiver,” someone with health care skills who is employed to care for another person, often as a live-in aide.

Caretaking is a very old profession, rooted in the British tradition of land maintenance. In 1868, The Times of London defined a caretaker as “a person put in charge of a farm from which the tenant has been evicted.” Today that definition has been expanded to cover a multitude of landowner/caretaker relationships. The number and diversity of these relationships has increased during the past decade. The caretaking profession continues to grow in popularity as more landowners discover the benefits of having a caretaker(s) on their property.

2. How did you become an expert in caretaking?

By practicing what we preach! We started caretaking in the 1970’s via word-of-mouth, and soon learned how difficult it was to find new caretaking assignments, after completing a housesitting assignment somewhere. So we saw a real need for a way that property owners and property caretakers could find each other – thus the genesis of THE CARETAKER GAZETTE.

3. You are the publisher about a newsletter on caretaking. Since when have you been doing this and what does the newsletter contain?

THE CARETAKER GAZETTE has been published since 1983, and we now provide our subscribers with 1,000+ caretaking and housesitting assignments each year, worldwide. We keep growing year by year and provide our subscribers with more rent-free living opportunities each year, along with helpful articles and info about the property caretaking field!

4. What type of properties become available for caretaking?

Every kind of property you can imagine – from simple homes – to mansions on large acreage and even private islands! A sample listing of the types of properties is available on my website, this will give you an idea of the diverse and often gorgeous types of properties available. Caretaking opportunities can be found all over the world.

5. What qualifications does it take to become a caretaker?

To get across to the property owner that you will be trustworthy and reliable with their property and that you are in good health and have a lot of common sense!

6. What kind of people are usually attracted to the concept of caretaking?

People who are tired of making rent or mortgage payments and want to live rent-free, plus a lot of travelers who like to explore various locations and people thinking about the best location that they would like to retire to and spend their retirement years.

7. What type of activities does a caretaker perform? What are the duties of a caretaker?

Some caretaking situations involve simple housesitting assignments, in which all that is required of the caretaker is to occupy the property. Some landowners seek experienced caretakers with specific skills (e.g., maintenance, farming, ranching or animal husbandry) while others are willing to take on and train people with general backgrounds.

As with most other professions, traits such as honesty, common sense, reliability, and flexibility are key prerequisites. For caretakers who live and work alone on the property of an absentee landowner, the ability to function independently and fulfill one's responsibilities without daily guidance and instruction from the landowner are important qualifications. Although a love of nature and solitude is important, having hobbies and interests (e.g., reading, writing, computers, photography) that can be pursued in what are often remote areas is extremely helpful.

8. There are "innsitters", "island caretakers", "wilderness caretakers" and other unique caretakers. Please describe some of these specialty caretaking roles.

The duties and responsibilities of a caretaker are as varied as the landowners and caretakers themselves. Some caretaking positions simply require persons to occupy a home and watch after it as if it were their own. Other caretaking assignments provide opportunities to work in dozens of areas, including: groundskeeping, land stewardship, gardening, and resort management.

While some landowners need a presence on their property and do not require any physical work, others need fences mended, snow plowed, gardens tended, animals cared for, and houses, roads and pastures maintained. Plumbing and electrical work may be part of a caretaker's duties - or the caretaker may be responsible for hiring competent repair persons.

Caretaking positions on nature preserves may involve land stewardship, caring for land to ensure that it remains intact and productive for future generations. Caretakers act as land stewards when their responsibilities include preservation and maintenance activities.

9. How does one find out about caretaking opportunities?

By being in the right place at the right time to find an assignment via word-of-mouth, or subscribing to THE CARETAKER GAZETTE via www.caretaker.org

10. How do property owners and caretakers usually connect, how does the selection process work?

Either via phone, fax, email or snail mail. The prudent caretaker sets out to develop a strong working relationship with the landowner. If the landowner's goals and philosophies are stated in the caretaker-wanted advertisement, prospective caretakers should consider whether these are in harmony with their own beliefs.

While skill and experience are important, most landowners are initially concerned with character references. When answering an ad, a neatly prepared resume should be accompanied by photographs of oneself (and family, if applicable) and personal and professional references.

Landowners often request a personal letter, where the prospective caretaker discusses such things as interests, goals and reasons for desiring a caretaking position. Both parties should be as open and honest as possible. Information regarding any special skills, interests, or experiences should also be included.

11. What practical advice can you give someone who wants to become a caretaker?

Inveterate travelers have discovered that caretaking enables them to live and work in a variety of interesting locales - both in the U.S. and abroad. Positions may be for the long or short-term (including two-week housesitting stints for a vacationing homeowner), seasonal or year-round.

Many newcomers to the caretaking field have been lifelong travelers. Most are motivated by the desire to explore another culture in depth. Caretaking offers travelers the opportunity to become a part of a community and experience life as the locals live it. Travelers can caretake resort properties during off-seasons, enjoying the use of the grounds and facilities. For travelers who are considering a move to another geographic area, caretaking allows them to experience life in a new location prior to spending time, money and energy relocating there.

Thank you, Gary, for enlightening us on this unique and definitely cost-saving way to travel. You have given me something to think about.....

www.textronics.com

For more travel articles, advice, photos, interesting interviews &
the opportunity to win a cruise on the Amazon River
visit my website at www.travelandtransitions.com.
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