Ireland Delegation Day 1
Our delegation of 13 students, 2 teachers and 3 parents met at Adelaide airport for our 12.15pm departure to Sydney. It was a bit of a rough journey to begin with, given the thunderstorms, but we eventually cleared them and settled in… mostly. One of our students had come down with a 24-hour gastro bug during the night. She made it to Sydney without incident, but suffered a little on the leg to Singapore (she is doing much better now). Another had eaten something that disagreed with her just before departing, and vomited all the way to Sydney, poor darling. She is back to normal now too! I managed to assist both girls without joining in in sympathy so am pretty chuffed with myself!
We made our connection to the flight to London via Singapore comfortably, and our flight passed without incident. I think the record for most movies watched during the flight was Casey with 6 1/2 films. I managed to watch ‘The Hangover’ (very, very wrong, but very, very funny), ‘Adventureland’ (quite liked it), ‘My Life in Ruins’ (meh…), ‘My Year Without Sex’ (about the relationship between a husband and wife in the year after she survives an aneurysm – quite good), and ‘Young Victoria’ (had already seen it, but enjoyed it again).
I think we all survived the flight comfortably… some even managed a few hours sleep!
Clare High School Irish Delegation 2009
Its been more than 12 months but I am off over seas again, this time with 13 students, 1 other teacher and 3 parents from my school in tow. We are a delegation from my high school who will be visiting our sister school in Co Clare, Ireland. We live in Clare, South Australia, a town that was settled by Irish settlers from Co Clare, hence the link. Our sister school is St Joseph’s Secondary School in Spanish Point.
We leave on Monday, flying via Sydney, Singapore and London to Dublin. We plan to spend 3 days in Dublin seeing various sites, before taking a bus to Kilkenny and Cork. From there we head up the west coast to Spanish Point which is a tiny location just out of Miltown Malbay. We will spend just over a week here, staying with host families from the school and seeing local places of interest including Ennis, the Cliffs of Moher, the Burren, Galway and Connemara National Park.
From there we return to London for two days, touring Westminster Abbey, the Tower of London and either Lords Cricket Ground or Kensington Palace.
We are all looking forward to the trip, although at the moment it doesn’t feel like it. Mandy, the other teacher, and I are exhausted and are desperately trying to finish Year 12 reports, write relief lessons for 5 days and manage everything else that needs doing. Thank goodness for the long haul flight where we can relax in a (relatively) comfy seat, watch movies on demand and have food brought to us… bliss!
I will be trying to update this every couple of days during our tour to keep friends and students’ families updated.
Sunny England
England apparently haven’t had much of a summer this year, but it was 28 degrees when I arrived this morning from Bergamo! I am staying with my friends Hilary and Keith in Keyworth, a village near Nottingham and we are heading to the Lakes District tomorrow morning. It does promise to be a little cooler and damper up there!
Bergamo was a very pleasant city. I was really only able to look briefly around the old town which is perched on yet another hill! The newer city sprawls on the plains below and is a very pleasant modern city with nice wide tree-lined roads. I took the funicular up to the old town, being far too lazy to climb the stairs and had a wander around the streets. It was lovely and quiet, and I like the duomo; lots of lovely tapestries hanging on the walls.
I stayed over night in a B&B in an apartment, and my host, Alex, picked me up just before 8am this morning to drive me to the airport (part of the service he offers for a modest fee) to catch my Ryanair flight to Luton in England. Can I just say here, that yes, Ryanair is a cheap airline, but that doesn’t mean we have to behave rudely people! What a bunfight. It was as if people were afraid they might not actually get a seat! Oh, and teenagers around the world are rude and thoughtless, excluding my lovely students of course
– the passports might be different but the hormones are all the same…
So after a lovely meal prepared by Hilary (strawberries on the sponge cake prepared by Claudia) I am ready for a good night’s sleep, and a lovely visit with my friends!
Vernazza, my favourite seaside village anywhere!
I am in Vernazza, one of the five villages of the Cinque Terre on the west coast of Italy. I have been here before, loved it then and still love it! One day I will come here for at least a week, longer if I can manage it, and just hang out! The food is good, the accommodation is good, the views are lovely and the people, inspite of all the tourists are welcoming!
I am staying at the quiet end of town which suits me; no trouble sleeping here! My room is lovely; I am staying at Camere Fontanavecchia. Just up the lane as you head out of town is my favourite cafe, Il Pirata delle 5 Terre, which is run by two Sicilan brothers who make the most wonderful pastries for breakfast and serve fresh fruit slushies, such as fresh strawberry and fresh peach. Divine!
Last night I sat near a Canadian couple who turned out to be teachers and we shared a fantastic conversation. Today I wrote out the postcards for which my English Studies class are waiting anxiously (apparently – I got a ‘hurry up and send them’ email from Sarah this week), sat on the beach and read for a while, had a bit of a nap, ate fish and chips as I watched the sun set, and generally relaxed. I am sunburned and well-fed and not really looking forward to leaving tomorrow!
I am taking the train to Bergamo tomorrow morning, and will be flying to Luton in the UK on Sunday morning. I will pick up my hire car and drive to Nottingham where I will be stayng with Hilary and Keith, some teacher friends of mine. While it is sad to be leaving Italy, I am looking forward to company and conversations in English with people I have known for more than 30 minutes!
The leaning tower of Pisa
So now I can tick this one off! Yes, I have seen the leaning tower of Pisa and can verify that it is indeed on a lean! Acutally it is quite pretty, a bright pure white that contrasted beautifully with the surrounding emerald of the grass! It was being cleaned while I was there so had a band of scaffolding around it (scaffolding is something you accept as normal when you travel Europe!).
What was far more amusing was the sight of dozens and dozens of tourists posing strangly for photographs, every single one of them pretending to be propping the tower up. Even more amusing was the lone security man shooing hundreds of people off that emerald green grass; no one ever thinks those bright red ‘keep off the grass’ signs apply to them. While it wasn’t the highlight of my trip, the leaning tower is beautiful and worth visiting.