Teachers Tim Hall and Mike Hoeger gamely carry on the tradition started by fellow English teachers emeritus Rod Flagler and Joe Kelly some 25 years ago. This year 47 graduating seniors from Palos Verdes Peninsula High School in Rolling Hills Estates, CA will take on Europe for a month. It'll be a hoot.

Thursday, June 29, 2006

The World Cup: a Tour Speil

This group of travelers is lucky to not only be in Europe during the World Cup but are fortunate that The World Cup is being hosted by Germany. Our one day in a German city, Heidelberg, was an unqualified success. Most of us hung out at Heidelberg Universitat, in the student center courtyard, where big screen TVs broadcast the Ukraine/Switzerland match and earlier, Italy/Australia. The German student-fans were vocal and enthusiastic, but we had Alex Graeber and Mike Cooke, who, as the night wore on, easily eclipsed their counterparts exhuberance.

In Brugge, Eric Haynes, Andy Cole, Billy Baron, Alex Laetsch and Alex Kramer met some British lads who taught them English Football songs and they sung them to LV and TH later that night to prove it.

In Paris, Aaron Plocky, Andy Cole, Matt Lucky, Mitchell Beck,and Victor Poon had dinner with Tim Hall at the world famous Chartier and then finished at O´Sullivans Irish pub to woatch Argentina beat Mexico.

Truly but madly,
LV

By Indirections Find Direction Out

In Hamlet, Shakespeare´s Polonius gives hearty advice to his college-leaving son Laertes. "Gather thy friends with hoops of steel" and "Neither a borrower nor a lender be" are two famous admonitions and they apply to are group. As the Literary Vagabond, my favorite quote of his, though, has got to be this one: "By indirections find directions out." In other words, getting lost might be getting found. Dana Fors knows this well. Her first night in London she gathered Kristin Bohannon, Maddy DeWitt-Hoeger, and Alicia Mooradian for a mad dash to the London Eye--the giant ferris wheel on the Thames. After three bus exchanges, each taking them further away from their destination, they made it--but two minutes after the last ride. Anyway, they were the only ones to take the famous red double-decker buses, which are disappearing little by little each year. In Paris, her train ride to Versaille with Andrea Ingrassia, Keli Kadota, Kelley Tran, Laura Chalfin and Caitlyn Penny ended in equal amusement. They took the 40 minute ride the wrong way and knew it on the last stop--a garbage strewn wasteland. Was this what the Sun King´s sumptuous abode had become? Fast thinkers, they: in reversing their direction, they finally made it, laughing all the way. All said it was their most fun so far.

The indirection quote applies to Remy Rope, too. Today, on another bike ride, this time to Sound of Music sights in Salzberg, she lost her group, turning left instead of right. She found herself weaving through off-road mountain trails and swatting gigantic insects only to reappear in front a magic chicken kabob stand, which tasted as good as anything on the whole trip so far. The newfound sustanence lead her back to the city with stories to tell her friends.

Truly but wryly,
LV

Sunday, June 25, 2006

London


Samuel Johnson said, "If you tire of London, you tire of life." I couldn't agree more. So much to say about our time here but my time to blog is limited. Six girls win the most original and successful outing: Alexander Ochi, Laura Sattelmeyer, Madeline Low, Chelsea Alexander, Lyndsey Sherwood, and Kristin Najarian all went to the London Ice Bar. Maybe you 've seen Ice Hotels on the Travel Network. Here they donned Siberian Parkas, sat on ice chairs, leaned on sheep-skinned tables, ogled ice sculptures and quaffed icy drinks--I could have made them an ice drink for free, but nevertheless they have a great picture to prove they were there. I wish I could upload them onto the site but have no chord. Later I will. Am I bothered? (A British inside joke)

Truly; LV, from Rainy Paris

Our Flight to Europe

Sophocles called sleep the little brother of death. Maybe that's why no one seemed to sleep on our trans-atlantic flight. What saved many was the addicting video game Who Wants to be a Millonaire? From my memory, Lyndsay Sherwood, Eric Haynes, Andy Cole, Kevin Clifford, Alex Graeber and Mike Cooke made it all the way to the final question only to lose their million on this one: Complete the musical group, George, Paul, John and ... well, they chose (D) Gringo over (C) Ringo. Must have been 4 in the morning or maybe I'm getting old.

LV from Rainy Paris

Thursday, June 22, 2006

Bruge

We're six days into our trip and very few of us have had time for an internet cafe stop. I'll work backwards in recapping the glorious highlights. Some names will be mentioned, but not all in this post. We'll make sure everyone is outed at some time during the trip.

Let's get one big word out to you: peregrination. There it is--slides right off the tongue, no? It means traveling with a destination in mind. On my fourth tour of Europe I am clearly a vagabond, making decisions on a whim, on a hunch, on a dime. This group of 18 year olds, however, is not--I'm happy to report--not haphazard. They move with a purpose and resolve, and it's impressive.

Yesterday many rented bikes taking them out of this medieval fairy tale of a city into the countryside. The early drizzle did not deter them. Some ventured to the coast, to Blankenberge, but most headed north to cross into the Holland city of Sluice, 17 kilometers away. I was with that group. We were instructed to take a canal street past four windmills and then cross a highway onto a river bike trail which would lead us to the Nederlands. That we did. This riverpath was idyllic with tall grasses and giant cottonwoods lining the way into a vanishing point artists dream about. As the hazy morning cleared, nightingales sang, while cormorants, kites, and magpies swooped from tree to tree, over and under wooden bridges, past an occasional fisherman. The grasses gave way to shoulder-high rhubarb plants and Pieter Brueghel and Pliny the Younger waved to us. Along the way bikers clumpt--I'll take that as a word for now--together, stretched apart, but mostly stayed together. The wind picked up and knees weakened but again that resolve kicked in. Alex Laetsch, a veteran of the Tour de Tuscany took the lead, sometimes relieved by Anna Minniti who was a tomboy until age 10, so she says. Alicia Mooradian coasted contentedly with her ipod nano and Mark Paulsen appeared from out of the blue or the sky to hobnob with the leaders. It's when Kelly Kodota lost her sandal, and I fell back to retrieve it, that I lost the group. Somehow Kelly, athleticism intact, caught up to Victor Poon who had dropped his camera on a missed hand-off (camera's OK). Both caught the group who had lost the trail and were walking their bikes through cow dung. Sensing something amiss and smelling something remorseful, I doubled back to the other side of the river never to be seen again. It was not the first time I have abandoned the group. At the end of the Literary Pub Crawl I vanished, ghostlike into the Dickensian walls of the venerable Lamb and Flag. I will continue to lead them where they want to go--Oh the places they will go--but will hesitate to hold their hands on a round trip excursion.
Truly,
LV, The Literary Vagabond

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Barbara and Samantha



Barbara DeWitt and Samantha Hall
made the trip with us to Europe
last year but have decided to
forego this year's tour.
Barb will be attending two family
reunions and Samantha has, alas,
summer school. One great memory
we have is strolling the streets of Florence together and eating dinner at a fantastic restaurant. We forgot to take pictures that night and the restaurant's name skips my mind. Here are, however, a couple other pictures.

Monday, June 12, 2006

European Dream 2006



Welcome Dreamers.
In 6 days the dream will be over for 47 Pen High graduates. We will be in London. The dream will be over and our adventure will begin. Vicarious dreamers, curious wellwishers, and future travelers are encouraged to follow our exploits mostly described in text entries from Dover Cliffs and cruise ships to Matterhorn heights andTuscany sights; While we fondle Grecian Urns and traipse around Bavarian castles, you'll at least sigh contentedly that one family member, or distant relative or neighborhood lottery winner begat the dream.
Truly but wryly,
The Literary Vagabond