Tuesday, April 29, 2008

April 29, Issue 19


Brit-Bound


Issue #19…



A greased-up Erich and a bobby-socked Hannah onstage in their recent production of Doo-Wop.



May Day! May Day!

A reminder: Keith will be sending in our orders for currency on May 1st. I think most of you want the cash have responded. Keith says that so far he has money orders from 17 of us.

Da Bus….

Keith has also secured a bus for us for July 3rd and 15th. The total cost is $675 each way for a 47-passenger bus (the smallest available that’ll still fit us in…so…lots of room.)

This includes them picking us up at the Hardees parking lot in J’ville then snatching up our Springfield contingent at the Target lot in S’field.

The round-trip cost will be $50 per person. (It actually comes in at $46.75, but this will allow us to tip the driver.) With gas at $3.60 per gallon, parking $8 per day and hotels $100 plus per night, it’s a good deal. They require a deposit which Keith will take care of, and I’m sure he would appreciate the riders then sending him a check….

Keith Bradbury

34 Ivywood

Jacksonville, IL 62650

The Kay Financial Report:

Kay Welch passed along this helpful website. It’s a highly readable overview of British and Scottish money and more tips on ATM machines and such:

http://www.tripadvisor.com/Travel-g186216-s601/United-Kingdom:Banks.And.Money.html


More “currency” info from Ann:

“I've read that the cheapest way to change currencies without fees is just to use an ATM in the foreign country. The fees vary from bank to bank, but they are lower than changing currency directly. You just have to make sure your bank's card works in other countries.
For credit cards, most have 1-3% fees for using them in foreign countries. Capital One is the only card that doesn't charge any fees. So if you get one of those, you can use it in Europe, and there won't be additional fees tacked on to charges. The charge will just be converted to US$ on your bill at whatever the base exchange rate is on the currency markets.
Here are some links that tell more about it”
http://www.bankrate.com/brm/news/cc/20050624b1.asp
http://europeforvisitors.com/europe/articles/atm_conversion_fees.htm
http://www.flyerguide.com/wiki/index.php/Credit/Debit/ATM_Cards_and_Foreign_Exchange


A Nick-Link…

“This is a link to an image that I thought you might or the rest of the travelers might be
interested in. It came off of nasa's web gallery which I tend to frequent for the neat aerial images. This is Edinburgh, Scotland from the sky.”
http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/imagegallery/image_feature_1069.html


A Keith-Link…..

Keith passed this along as a user-friendly link to convert our bucks into their pounds and Euros: http://www.ask.com/web?q=number+of+US%20Dollars+in+100+Euro&qsrc=8&o=2811&l=dis

An Off-the-Cuff-Link....A Few More Travel/Packing Notes and Reminders…

---Please write your name and home address and tape it inside your suitcase in case your tag is torn off in transit. And…of course it’s a good idea to also include at least the first address where you’ll be staying in Ireland (once we know.) This way the airline will have a clue on where to deliver a late bag. I tape my entire itinerary inside my suitcase.

----Know where your passport is?

----Got an under-the-clothing carrying case for passport and cash?

---Of course you don’t want to over pack your carry-on, but keep in mind that in case of lost luggage, that carry-on might be a good place to put at least one day’s worth of necessities.

---I hope you’ve given some thought to rain gear. There’s a reason why Ireland is to green and it’s got nothing to do with fertilizer.


Visitors to the Stage…

It’s been good to see some of you as you’ve come to watch Hannah and Erich star in Doo-Wop at Triopia. As you saw, they are indeed two very talented young people and I can assure you that their maturity and kindness matches their talent onstage. And thanks to Janet Long for being in charge of our “hair from the fifties.”

And...three of our intrepid crew of travelers will be appearing in another show in May... Erich, Hannah, and Wendy will be performing "Privies and Party Lines, Romance and Rumble Seats," a collection of memories from our community from over 200 hours of taped interviews with our older residents. The specs: May 17, 7 p.m., Chapin Christian Church, and May 18, 2 p.m. St. Peter's Lutheran of Arenzville. (I know the the director and he's really cute.)

From the Bonnie Lass…

Fellow traveler Bonnie Flynn sends this report from her knee surgery and thanks all for their prayers….

I will have P.T. at home three days a week and the nurses will come in twice a week and draw my blood to see how my blood thinner is working. After six weeks I can discontinue that. Everything went well with my surgery. A couple days ago during one of my P.T. sessions I told the girl that when I did that exercise I felt like I had a nail running through my knee and she said, "you do have a nail running through your knee."

And more…please keep another couple fellow travelers in prayer… Rhonda Downs who’ll be contemplating surgery soon and Joyce Woodside who’s been getting good reports from her recent illness.

A short List…

Of What’s happening in Ireland during the first part of July.

· all Juli: 81st Cobh Summer Carillon Recital Season, St. Colman's Cathedral (Cork)

· all July: An Emigrant's Tale, Dooley's Hotel (Waterford City)

· all July: Ballykeeffe Midsummer Concerts, Kilmanagh (Kilkenny)

· all July: Diversions Festival, Temple Bar (Dublin)

· all July: Flora Birrensis 2008, Birr Castle (Offaly)

· all July: Hugh Lane Centenary Exhibition, Dubl9n City Gallery

· all July: International Circus Season, Temple Bar (Dublin City)

· all July: Jonathan Barry Exhibition, Dublin Writers Museum

· all July: The Writers Entertain, Dublin Writers Museum

· all July: Trad on the Prom, Salthill (Galway)

· all July: Wicklow Gardens Festival, County Wicklow

· all Juli every Wednesday: "The Booley House", St. Michael's Hall (Ballyduff Upper, Co. Waterford)

· all Juli every Tuesday and Thursday: Draiocht Na Faille Deirge, St. Paul's Community Centre (Clogheen, Co. Tipperary)

· -4th: Heritage Among the Drumlins, Cootehill (Cavan)

· -5th: Ireland's Environment & Culture, Gleann Cholm Cille (Donegal)

· 1st-6th: Cavan Summer Festival, Cavan Town

· 1st-6th: Connacht Fleadh, Westport (Mayo)

· -6th: Cairde Summer Festival, Sligo Town

· -6th: Cork Midsummer Festival (Cork)

· -6th: West Cork Chamber Music Festival, Bantry House (Cork)

· -23rd: Laois Walks Festival

· 2nd-6th: Feile Brain Boru, Killaloe (Clare) and Ballina (Tipperary)

· 2nd-6th: Waltons Guitar Festival of Ireland, Dublin

· from 2nd: Seisun 2008, Gurteen (Sligo)

· 3rd-5th: Bellewstown Races (Meath)

· 3rd-6th: Bard Summer School, Clare Island (Mayo)

· 3rd-6th: Castlebar International 4 Days' Walks Festival (Mayo)

· 3rd-6th: Hot Air Balloon Festival, Kilkenny Town

· from 3rd: Trad Beo, Aras Inis Gluaire (Mayo)

· 4-5th: Drogheda Samba Festival

· 4-6th: All-Ireland Open Festival of Dancing Championships, Gort (Galway)

· 4-6th: Blackstairs Opera Festival, Rathnure (Wexford)

· 4-6th: Ennis Street Festival (Clare)

· 4-6th: Feile Peile na nOg (Cavan)

· 4-6th: Killybegs Community Carnival and Maritime Festival (Donegal)

· 4-7th: Roundstone Open Arts Week (Galway)

· 4-13th: Armada International Week of Set Dancing, Spanish Point (Clare)

· 5th: Killusty Pony Show, Fethard (Tipperary)

· 5-6th: Achill Marathon (Mayo)

· 5th -6 th: Bundoran Horse and Pony Racing Festival (Donegal)

· 5-6th: South of Ireland Band Championships, Clonakilty (Cork)

· 5-12th: Dr. Douglas Hyde Summer School of Traditional Irish Music, Ballaghaderreen (Roscommon)

· 5-13th: Clonmel Junction Festival (Tipperary)

Gosh…think we’ll ever find anything to do?


And Lest You Forget Where You Are…

There is still an actual language called “Irish” although most Irish speak English for everyday banter. An example of Irish-speak:

Dia duit (God to you.)

Dia is Muire duit God and Mary to you. (reply)

Go mbeannaí Dia duit May God bless you.

Bail ó Dhia ort I'm doing well. The blessing of God on you.

Slán leat Good Bye (said to the person leaving)

Slán agat Good Bye (said to the one remaining)

Patience…patience…patience…

I got a polite inquiry from one of our group asking why the tour company won’t tell us earlier about flight times. I’ve been dealing with tour companies since ’79 and they all work the same way.

During the winter the tour companies book large numbers of plane tickets with various airlines depending upon the destinations. Groups like Passports literally do not know the flight times until what seems like the last moment because that’s when they get the info from the airlines. So…why do airlines wait so long? Although some flights are on regular schedules, once summer hits, flights are often booked according to the amount of traffic. So…we wait.

Best Not to Mention….

Fuel prices while in England. The price of gas (petrol) last week was 8 bucks a gallon!


A Few Things Scottish…

· A quote from American President Woodrow Wilson, "Every line of strength in American history is a line colored with Scottish blood."

· More than 100 governors of pre- and post- Revolutionary America were of Scottish birth or descent.

· Others from Scotland or of Scots descent in American history:
- 35 U.S. Supreme Court Justices, 25 of them are in the Great Americans Hall of Fame.
- Almost 1/2 of the Secretaries of U.S. Treasury and 1/3 of the Secretaries of State were Scots.
- 9 of the signatures on the Declaration of Independence were from Scots descent.
- 9 of the 13 colony governors made in the new USA were Scots.
- James Pollock, of Scots descent, put the slogan "In God We Trust" on American coins!

· 61% of American Presidents are of Scots or Scots-Irish descent.

· A Scot, James Watt, developed the first efficient steam engine and in so doing started the Industrial Revolution.

· A Scot, John Logie Baird, invented the Television.

· A Scot, John Napier, invented logarithms and the decimal notation.

· A Scot, Kirkpatrick Macmillan, invented the bicycle.

· A Scot, John Paul Jones, founded the American Navy.

· A Scot, Alexander Fleming, discovered Penicillin.

· A Scot, William Paterson, founded the Bank of England.

· A Scot, Alexander Graham Bell, invented the telephone.

· A Scot, John Chalmers, invented the adhesive postage stamp.

(I think it’s a bit hilarious that the Scots, known for their ability to pinch a penny, have contributed half of our U.S. Secretaries of the Treasury.)


Thursday, April 17, 2008

The "Baggage" Issue..April 17

Brit-Bound


Issue #18…

What I’ve been able to learn about the luggage situation…

Many of you immediately emailed me to ask, “What does it mean by a medium-sized bag?”

I don’t blame you. It’s a rather ambiguous term. As our tour consultant, Kathy Bernard, said in her last email to me, the short hop from Dublin to Scotland will be with a British airline and the luggage policy may be more strict. So..(and this is solely from an Internet search)…I’ve found out the following about the two airlines that we’re most likely to use for our hop across the Irish Sea. Sorry, if it’s a lot of words, but I want you to know exactly what they say. I’ve tried my math-challenged best to translate metric into our system of measurement. Feel free to double check this English teacher. I’m quoting most of this from their websites:

RYANAIR

Each passenger is permitted to check in up to 3 bags with a maximum combined weight of 15kgs, subject to the payment of the applicable checked baggage fees. A discounted checked baggage fee is charged for each piece of checked baggage booked at the time of reservation on www.ryanair.com. If checked baggage fees are paid either at the airport or through a Ryanair call centre, the full rate will apply. (Click here for details)

No pooling or sharing of baggage allowances is permitted, even within a party travelling on the same reservation.

Any passenger exceeding their 15kg (33 pounds) personal checked baggage allowance will be charged for the excess at the applicable rate per kilo. (Click here for details)

There is no checked baggage allowance for infants. However, one fully collapsible pushchair per infant may be carried free of charge. Additional infant equipment is charged at separate fee per item. (Click here for details)

Mobility Equipment is carried free of charge.

For health and safety reasons Ryanair does not accept for carriage any individual item exceeding 32 kilos or with combined dimensions of more than 81cms (33 inches) (height), 119cms (46 iches) (width) and 119cms (46 inches) (depth). This weight limit does not apply to mobility equipment.

BRITISH MIDLAND

All passengers traveling to and from the UK are not permitted to check in any bag that weighs in excess of 32kg (70lbs). {GOOD LORD! 70 POUNDS OF UNDERWEAR AND SHOES!?)
The maximum weight limit of 32kg for any individual piece of baggage does not relate to your overall entitlement but is a safety measure to reduce injuries to baggage handling staff. Any item over 32kg (70lbs) should be referred to bmi cargo.
maximum size

Hand baggage must have a maximum length of 55cm (21 inch), width of 40cm (15 inch) and depth of 23cm (9 inch). These dimensions include wheels, handles, side pockets, etc. If your hand baggage exceeds this size, you will be asked to return to check-in and check the bag into the hold.
Checked baggage on flights to the USA and Caribbean should have maximum dimensions (length + width + height) of 158cm (62ins).

OKAY…let’s say we take United Airlines to Ireland…Here are the current United stats:

Maximum linear dimensions of all bags: 62 inches/158cm (length + width + height) each

50 pound limit per bag

Here’s Northwest Airlines:

  • Northwest will accept luggage up to a maximum of 50 pounds (23 kg) and a total linear dimension of 62 inches (158 cm) per piece at no charge.
  • Additional charges may apply for luggage weighing more than 50 pounds (23 kg) or with a total linear dimension of more than 62 inches (158 cm) per piece.
  • For domestic and trans-Atlantic travel, the maximum weight accepted for any piece of checked luggage, including special luggage items, is 70 pounds. For trans-Pacific travel, the maximum weight accepted for any piece of checked luggage is 100 pounds. (YOU CAN TAKE HEAVIER SHOES IF YOU’RE GOING TO JAPAN?)

So…there we have it. The restrictions of Midland and Ryanair are indeed somewhat less lenient, but wholly manageable I think. Thus endeth the short and pithy tale of “What Is A Medium-Sized Bag?”

Hot news flash… You may have met her at our country club get-together. Sheila Stephens, mother of our traveler Hannah, was surprised today by receiving the Golden Apple Award for teaching. Both sets of grandparents and husband Jeff were tipped off to the surprise. So far I’ve not heard from Sheila. (Hannah would have attended but her mean old theatre teacher demanded she attend a rehearsal instead.)

Speaking of which..two of our travelers, Erich Nobis and Hannah Stephens will be appearing in the premiere of Doo-Wop at Triopia High School on April 24-26 at 7 p.m. each evening. Come and cheer them on! (The play’s author is a real doll, too.)

Saturday, April 12, 2008

April 12, 2008

Brit-Bound

Issue #17…

Surprise! We’re 42, not 41!

It was much like the final 30 minutes of an Indiana Jones movie. The clock said 3:45 p.m. Our tour company deemed it to be the last day to sign-up for the tour. The Arenzville post office closed at 4:15. The race was on. Andrew raced from his school at the U of I Springfield, his mother dashed in from Chapin. They met within minutes of an awaiting KB at Triopia who had the forms in his hand. She signed. He signed. KB took off for the post office and slam-dunked the parcel into Uncle Sam’s hands with a scant seven minutes remaining on the clock. The result?

Andrew Hill, age 21, an upperclassman at the U of I Springfield with a major in…I don’t know..accounting or something obtuse like that..the son of Jeffrey and Karol Hill of Chapin. Long, tall, and loves to write music, sing, dance, play basketball, and box.

Welcome aboard, Andrew! If the rest of your trip proves to be as exciting as your entry into this touring group of crazies, you’re in for quite a ride!

Travis and our newest traveler, Andrew Hill, in their performance of "The Knollwood Tales" As usual, Andrew's playing guitar and Travis hasn't shaved.



Some Hot Tips from Anne..

This from a friend of Anne Wildrick after she’d taken a similar trip to ours:

Limerick--We drove through on one trip and our driver showed us where Angela's Ashes story took place but it is now modern housing so there is really nothing to see. Otherwise, nothing spectacular.

Adare - Absolutely beautiful to see. We stopped at Adare Manor and had drinks.

Killarney - One of my favorite Irish towns. We stayed at the Killarney Park Hotel and could walk into the town and shop our brains out in the quaint little shops. Great pubs, too, like the Danny Mann and the Laurels.

The Ring of Kerry is beautiful in the summer with all the purple heather growing on the hillsides and the beautiful lakes. Definitely worth the trip around.

Cork has the great Central Market and good shopping in downtown.

Blarney - You can't go there and not kiss the Blarney Stone once. Make sure you pay the money at the bottom to have them take your picture doing it, then pick it up at the bottom. They do let you use your own camera to take pictures if you prefer. Hope you have time to go to the Blarney Woolen Mills close by because they have every Irish brand imaginable.

Waterford - If you see a piece of Waterford crystal that you like anywhere during your travels in Ireland, just get it because it is the same price no matter where you go in Ireland, even at the Waterford factory. This tour description doesn't mention getting a tour of the factory and actually watching them make crystal pieces, just going to the visitors' center but the tour is pretty good too.

Dublin - The morning tour hits pretty much all the typical sites and the Book of Kells at Trinity College is pretty interesting. But in the afternoon when you are on your own, skip all the museums and go to Grafton Street to shop. It is foot traffic only and during the summer all the shops are open and the street entertainment is unique.

Reminders….

May 1st is the deadline for contacting banker Keith if you want him to get you some foreign cash.

Please let Keith or I know if you’d like to avail yourself of the transport from the Jacksonville-Springfield area to St. Louis.

If you’ve not signed up for your optional excursions, here’s a friendly reminder to do so.

A “Short” Report from Keith:

“I went to travelsmith.com and got throw away socks and underwear. The underwear comes in 5 packs (the pack is about the size of a good sandwich). I wore them and they are not too bad. Will save lots of room in a suit case and they cost about a dollar apiece.”

Staying in Touch…

Some of you have asked about contacting each other. Here’s our list of email addresses. (Sorry if you didn’t want yours divulged, but they’ve been printed on all my group emailings anyway. This is just a more organized list:

Bradbury, Kenneth

ken@bradbury.cc



Love, Wendy

wlove90@gmail.com



Nobis, Erich

knobis@frontiernet.net



Stephens, Hannah

stephenss4@hotmail.com



Stephens, Nicholas

ncs077@truman.edu



Top of Form



Bradbury, Douglas

doug@bradbury.cc



Bradbury, Jennifer

jlbradbury2002@yahoo.com



Bradbury, Keith

bradbury@franklinbank.net



Bradbury, Nancy

bradbury@franklinbank.net



Burnham, Lola-Virge

601 S. Main, Virginia, IL 62691



Burrus, Adelle

delmart@burrusseed.com



Chipman, Janet

chipman@csj.net



Chipman, Robert

chipman@csj.net



Crawford, Ellen

jonmex@frontiernet.net



Curry Jr, George

gwcurry3@verizon.net



Deaver, Travis

tdeaver@hotmail.com



Downs, Rhonda

downs@irtc.net



Flynn, Bonnie

bonnie325@insightbb.com



Hall, Judith

judy.hall@agimedia.com



Henning, Karla

dickdir@aol.com



Hubner, Billie

hubnerb@cooketech.net



Johnson, Judith

judy@dtnspeed.net



Johnson, Robert

judy@dtnspeed.net



Long, Janet

jlong@family-net.net



Nelson, Claudia

cnelson@coscoindustries.com



Nobis, June

jlon@frontiernet.net



Pham, Y Nhu

ypham83@yahoo.com



Ryder, Margaret

tennismom03@sbcglobal.net



Ryder, William

tomryder@sbcglobal.net



Seiz, Mary Jo

m.seiz@insightbb.com



Seymour, Mary E

meseymour_61@hotmail.com



Toler, Sharon

rtoler1@otn.speed.net



Vicari, Maryann

sjvicari@warpnet.net



Vicari, Sandra

svicari@siumed.edu



Vicari Sr, Stephen

sjvicari@warpnet.net



Vinyard, Rhonda

rsv3@verizon.net



Welsh, Margaret

makayup@irtc.net



Wildrick, Anne

annewild@mchsi.com



Wildrick, Maurice

dudewild@mchsi.com



Winters, Tamra

tamiwntr@verizon.net



Woodside, Joyce

jwoodside210@hotmail.com



Hill, Andrew

drew12for3@yahoo.com



An Irish Saying:

If you want to know what God thinks of money, look who He gives it to.

A Bit More Monetary Info:

Reggie Toler, husband of Sharon, found this and passed it along:

Acceptance of Visa, MasterCard, and Eurocard is almost universal for retailing and most services, including supermarkets, accommodation, railways, restaurants, gas stations, department stores, payment of parking tickets, airport parking charges, etc. American Express and Diners Club cards are also accepted by some service establishments. Very few if any establishments accept The Discover Card.

Note: All EuroCard/MasterCard ATMs also accept Visa, Plus, and Eurocheque cards.

It is inadvisable to rely solely on a plastic card when travelling in any country. The risks include:

  • Loss or theft of the card
  • Corruption of the magnetic stripe rendering it un-machine readable
  • ATM failure*
  • Network failures affecting the authorization process

Beware when travelling anywhere that the Visa and MasterCard organizations and their member banks have a poor record in communicating and enforcing standards, and card rejection problems can arise with cards that work perfectly well "back home" - due for example, to manufacturing tolerance variations affecting readability of the magnetic stripe, security features, the use of PINs at point of sale, etc. The ideal is to bring at least two cards, (preferably issued by different banks - with one a Visa or Visa Plus and the other a MasterCard, Cirrus or AmEx), with some travellers cheques and/or cash for emergencies. Credit cards are slightly more reliable than debit cards because they can be used for over the counter (ie offline) cash advances at bank branches, whereas debit cards usually can only be used in ATMs. Over the counter cash advances often require additional identification (eg national ID card or passport) and frequently cost more than ATM withdrawals using the same plastic. Be sure to know your PINs!

*While the Dublin area is reasonably well served with ATMs, the same can't be said for smaller towns and villages where there may be at most one ATM in the locality.

Here’s the website…a good one:

http://www.iol.ie/~discover/fx.htm