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[5 Sep 2010 | No Comment | ]
Why The 2010 UK University Admissions Debacle may be the Best Thing to Happen to Gap Years in….Years!

Those of you living outside the UK may have missed the ‘media storm’ surrounding the woefully shrunken economy and the effect it’s having on University admissions this summer but for the Brits among us it’s been impossible to escape! According to sources,  applications to UK Universities are up by 250,000, but with 6000 fewer places available than last year it is believed that up to 200,000 British students may miss out on their places, despite having secured the grades they required.
Ultimately this means lots of tears and tantrums and a …

Americas, Headline »

[4 Sep 2010 | No Comment | ]
Cloud Gazing

I’ve always been a cloud gazer.  When I was younger, I spent my lazy late summer afternoons on my back in the grass, looking upwards. Sometimes with my sister, sometimes alone, I’d lie there for hours at a time, keeping watch as dogs and fish and automobiles disguised as clouds wandered across the sky.
As I grew older, clouds became less magical. They became distractions, something to look at out classroom windows, indicators of wind or rain, and metaphors of anxiety or foreboding in any number of Victorian novels. Lately, though, …

Europe, Featured, Headline »

[31 Aug 2010 | No Comment | ]
Bridging Worlds

At the hotel, Kevin sits alone at the dinner table for six. He’s from Scotland and he’s never been to São Tomé before. We don’t know this, though, when we first sit down with him- four of us to fill the table up better. He is quiet, he eats quickly but at the same time he eats slowly and spreads his food around and studies it. He doesn’t look up.
The three Portuguese guys and I are talking about something, anything, I don’t remember what we’re talking about. One of the …

Asia, Featured, Headline »

[29 Aug 2010 | No Comment | ]
Silver Week – Part II

…Continued from…
Day 4:
We are up by 5:30, out of the tent by 6, and still are some of the latest sleepers in tent city.  Breakfast is warm muesli with extra raisins.  Tea gets me where I need to be.  We pack up and out and are rewarded with another beautiful day, climbing up and down peaks; I think we stood on top of five total mountains that day.   At 1pm, we reach a junction where we have three choices: stop for the day (X), continue …

Featured, Global, Headline, Tips and Advice »

[26 Aug 2010 | No Comment | ]
Ah, Cuba

Lately I’ve been reading up on some of the latest news regarding Cuba. I was very elated to find out what may happen in just a few short months or years (who really knows), that has the potential to impact travelers immensely. Mainly, the American travelers have been restricted from touring the island for years, but things may change. The restriction may become “loosened.”  Meaning, they may be able to travel there again. For most travelers, they will be very much excited about venturing back into Cuba.
One thing’s for sure, that if you …

Europe, Featured, Headline »

[25 Aug 2010 | One Comment | ]
San Sebastian in March

On the bus ride with the study abroad cohort to San Sebastian, I saw snow.  Let’s be honest, part of the reason I came to Spain to study abroad was for the culture and language, and the other big reason was to escape the snow and cold of Boston (where I attended college).  Needless to say, I was glad for my hat and coat sitting close by me in my weekend trip bag, but I wasn’t thrilled to have to use them.  After checking into the hotel and a brief …

Americas, Featured, Headline »

[21 Aug 2010 | No Comment | ]
Road Trips: Making Maps of Memory.

There’s a lot to hate about road trips: hours and hours seated in the same position,  the possibility of flat tires and overheated engines, the threat of being squished by a careless trucker, the constant quaffing of caffeinated beverages and the subsequent frequent need to pull over and pee. And from the perspective of plane travel, road trips are slow; automobiles take days to accomplish what hours can in a 747.
But I love road trips, and I have ever since I was old enough to drive a car myself, when …

Africa, Americas, Featured, Headline »

[20 Aug 2010 | No Comment | ]
Notes on the Return

So it’s been a couple months. You’d think I would have already gotten over the inevitable feeling of reverse culture shock, and we’d be on with life, right? Well, apparently not.  Even after two months of being at home, with friends, and being busy, Morocco seemed to invade my brain once more.  I was shopping in TJMaxx (one of my favorite shopping haunts) and out of the blue I was reminded of my host sister, and how much she would have loved some of the shirts and bags I had …

Featured, Global, Headline, Tips and Advice »

[19 Aug 2010 | No Comment | ]
Pack Rat, Will Travel

by Lisa
Once upon a time (six years ago) I embarked upon a six week hiking and camping road trip.  Since I was going solo — and since I had never done such a thing before — I spent a lot of time trying to figure out what equipment I needed and where to get it.  Before long, I had my shiny new equipment in piles in my bedroom.  The tent, sleeping bag, cooking equipment, backpack, lanterns, first aid kits, clothing, shoes, reading material, non-perishable food…the pile grew and grew and …

Europe, Featured, Headline »

[18 Aug 2010 | No Comment | ]
Sevilla

After a short bus ride from, we finally made it to the ‘real’ Spain.  Barcelona (our home city at that time) is an amazing city, but as many Catalans love to tell you, it is not Spain.  Sevilla (Seville), however, is southern Spain’s capital of culture, flamenco, and tapas.  I was ready to experience this southern city with my group of travel buddies, and luckily we were all very chill, easy going folk.  So, we started off our first day in the city by touring some of the famous monuments …