Friday, 28 May 2010

Sevilla...coming soon

Well hello strangers. Before I start writing I just would like to say thank you for all of the feedback you have given me over the past couple of weeks with regards to this blog. It makes me really happy that so many of you have enjoyed reading it!

So I have to confess that I actually returned from Seville a week ago and still have not blogged about it. However, in my defence this has been one of the busiest weeks in history. I got home from the airport in the middle of the night, so much of the weekend was spent sleeping, unpacking, washing suncream-coated clothes and catching up with my boyfriend who is so often neglected when it comes to my travelling (sorry love). Then on Monday I started working again for the BFI, which although is great fun is synonymous with 'chaos', so I have been a very busy girl. This weekend I have three (count 'em - THREE) lots of birthday celebrations to attend - tonight for my favourite-est travel buddy, Miss Samantha Garland; tomorrow for my neglected boyfriend; and Sunday for the son of my neighbours. Monday is a bank holiday (hooray!) so I intend to spend the day converting all of my Seville notes into something publishable, and hopefully saleable.

Anyway, enough about my social life. This weekend, as well as writing articles I am also going to write up my blog about my trip. Obviously much needs to be reserved for the articles, so it will take me a while to choose what will be going in the blog and what will be sent to potential publications. Just wanted to let you all know that I absolutely have not forgotten! In the meantime, there are some pictures on my Facebook page. Have a look through those and I will be with you very shortly.

Monday, 17 May 2010

Counting...

So today has been pretty much excitement and stress all rolled into one. Whilst aimlessly surfing the internet last night the dreaded words 'Ash Cloud' kept cropping up on my screen, and when I further investigated this BAA confirmed that ash from that pesky Icelandic volcano had indeed closed some UK airports. Damn. However, I have been checking both BAA and Ryanair throughout the day and it seems that Stansted isn't really affected. There are still nine hours until I have to leave for the airport, so a lot can change, so I am keeping my fingers firmly crossed that I will make it to Spain after all.

Today Sam came over and we ate pasta on my balcony and looked for planes. We even cheered as a BA jet flew overhead. It's nice to have a friend who is as much of a travel junkie as you are and understands the anxiety. Afterwards we wandered up to Peckham so I could buy a selection of toiletries which will not exceed the 100ml hand baggage limit.

And just as soon as I'm about to leave the country the weather picks up. Typical. I missed the entire of the 'British Summer' last year while in South East Asia. Caught two days of sun before I left and had two days when I got back.

Sunday, 16 May 2010

Almost Here...

Good evening all. Firstly, here comes yet another profound apology for my lack of blogging of late. I can only blame the exams which completely took over the last two weeks of my life. Thursday was my last exam of the year and my fellow students and I breathed a collective sigh of relief that a very difficult year was indeed over and we could get back to some kind of normality. The kind of life that doesn't involve spending the entire night high on pro-plus reading history books or nursing migraines or cursing oneself for missing morning lectures due to hangovers. I can now blog some more and travel some more and sleep a little easier.

The most exciting piece of news I have to report is that my Seville trip has finally come around. My flight leaves at 7am on Tuesday morning and tomorrow has to be spent packing and planning. I have guidebooks to read and outfits planned, articles in mind and many tapas bar recommendations. I just have to make sure that I don't miss the plane. I'm not trying to brag or depress any of my dear readers, but here's how the weather is looking there for the next few days:

OK, so maybe I am bragging a little. But the cold and dreary winter here has been so completely depressing that I feel as though I can a little. Sorry.

Also, Ollie's parents came by today bringing gifts from their recent trip. They spent three weeks in Australia visiting friends and bought us a beautiful little china travel tea-set from their stopover in Hong Kong.


I think pottery from Asia is one of my favourite things ever.

Thursday, 6 May 2010

Top Travel Thursday

I've scoped out some top travel deals for you all, just in case the outcome of the election is not what you hoped for and want to escape the UK:

Lufthansa are offering two-for-one flights from London Heathrow to Milan from £79.00 including taxes, fees and charges. Find out more info on their website.

Intrepid Travel offer a 20% discount on trips departing soon. There is a long list on the special promotions section of their webpage, but here are some highlights:

There is also still time left to take advantage of the lastminute.com 48 Hour Holiday Sale which includes 5* Gambia for £599, 3* Kenya for £339 and 4* Italy for £549.

My escape to Seville is coming along as planned although I seem to be permanently buried under travel publications in the name of research. The price of worldwide flights could currently be my specialist subject on Mastermind should I ever wind up in the black chair...

Tuesday, 4 May 2010

Blog-o-rama

Just a quick mention, my blog has been featured on the Goldsmiths University blog page designed to give new students an insight into living in London and studying at Goldsmiths. If you have some time, be sure to check out some of the other blogs on this page. I've had a look myself and they're ace. Thanks!

Monday, 3 May 2010

BK

Being the complete travel geek that I am, I can reel off on demand a list of the countries on the Foreign Consulate Office's "Don't Go" list. I also know where they are in order to not waste time gazing at them on my map-of-the-world shower curtain. (Don't joke, this is where much of my travel inspiration comes from). I have, as yet, no desire to visit any of the countries on this list, excpeting possibly Yemen, but was sad to see that Thailand had made an appearance due to the volatile political situation in the country.

The FCO's advice is as follows:
We advise against all but essential travel to the whole of Thailand due to the increasingly volatile and tense political situation. Violent incidents of an unpredictable nature are occurring in many parts of Thailand. On 28 April there were serious clashes between troops and anti-government protestors as they travelled towards Talad Thai in Pathumthani province (close to Bangkok’s second airport, Don Muang). One soldier was killed and at least ten people were injured. In the early hours of 27 April, substantial numbers of troops deployed in Central Bangkok. On 26/27 April there were at least eight incidents in various parts of Thailand involving protestors setting up barricades, in some instances leading to clashes with the security forces. In the last week, protests and violent incidents have taken place in other parts of Thailand including popular tourist destinations such as Pattaya, Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, Ayuthaya and other locations.

I visited Bangkok last summer at the end of a month-long trip to South East Asia with my friends Sam, Jen and Nicola. Some government protests had taken place prior to our arrival, including the siege of Suvarnabhumi airport, but by then the situation had calmed down (although my Mother, still haunted by news pictures of a burning bus on a Bangkok street some months before, barely slept while I was in the city). On one day, the concierge at our hotel advised us not to go to a certain part of town where anti-government sentiments were high, and on another our tuk-tuk drove past a group of protesters, although this demonstration appeared to be peaceful. Bangkok happened to be my least favourite city on our South East Asia journey for reasons I find it difficult to describe. I guess it just didn't have the charm of the places we visited in Vietnam and Cambodia. I just didn't like the vibe there and am not sure if the underlying discontent among the people was a factor in this or not. Although it was momentarily suppressed, you could still sense it.

Thailand's recent status as a no-go zone will inevitably have effects on the travel of South East Asia. Bangkok is considered to be the gateway to the region due to both the abundance of overground routes departing from it daily and its well-connected airport. Many of the people we met, like ourselves, began or ended their travels in Bangkok for this very reason. Of course, it is possible to explore South East Asia and avoid Thailand, but it could be argued that in doing this, you deny yourself part of the experience. Although Bangkok was not for me, I would never dissuade anybody else from visiting it as it is one of those places which has to be seen. I plan to get back there one day but for the sole purpose of using it as a base to explore the rest of Thailand. It looks as though these plans will need to be put on hold, at least for the time being.

Some happy memories in Bangkok with Jen and Sam:

By the way, you can buy map-of-the-world shower curtains from Habitat for £22.00 here

Sunday, 2 May 2010

Seville...Here I Come.

This week I have been struck down with the cold from hell. So this has resulted in me spending most of last week and much of today on my couch, under a blanket reading an abundance of travel literature. The only time I have managed to get out and do anything vaguely social in the past week was last night when I took Ollie and my brother Mike to the amazing Tay Do Cafe in Shoreditch for a big Vietnamese dinner. Neither of them have been to Vietnam and my brother is a notoriously fussy eater, but luckily they enjoyed it very much. It's not quite the little place on the corner in the Hanoi Old Quarter that sold vegetable fried noodles and pints of Hanoi beer for 35,000 dong, but it's as close as you can probably get in London.

In other news, following a severely long travel drought I have finally reacquainted myself with the excited feeling I get when a flight e-ticket pops up in my inbox. I've been deliberating where to travel to for my first travel writing assignment and have been mainly looking at Eastern European destinations such as Budapest and Bratislava. Then Ryanair decided to throw me a curve-ball when they started offering cheap trips to Seville and my weakness for tapas and Moorish architecture caused me to cave spectacularly and book myself a ticket.

So Seville it is. And I am SO excited!