On a train through the Andes
A lone Ecuadorian man just hanging out with the tourists
Our Amazing Journeys group enjoying the Catacachi Crater
Battle of the Equator–Group standing on their home side of the equator in Quito.
Here at Amazing Journeys, we’re lucky have the best jobs in the world—and we think our good fortune is worth sharing. So, when your next journey seems like a distant dream, take a few minutes to explore our WANDERLUST blog—it’s chock full of engaging tales and helpful tips from our travels around the world. Check out the most recent entry (at the top) or search by your preferred criteria. Consider it motivation for your next embarkation.
March 4, 2010
As AJ embarks upon another, well, ‘amazing journey’ a unique and significant occurrence recently played itself out. As travelers with AJ know, every trip is escorted by some combination of Bill and/or Malori-often times with the added leadership of Michele or Stacey or Barry. Behind the scenes are a collection of other players such as marketing personnel, tour companies, airlines and the Jewish Community Center.
The events of last week, most notably the earthquake in Chile, caused a plan of action in our company that has been thankfully unparalleled to date. With the return of our post-Antarctica tour of Easter Island delayed due to the disaster in Chile, Amazing Journeys embarks on a subsequent trip before the previous one officially concluded. With Malori stranded in Easter Island along with 15 travelers (who definitely got more than their money’s worth getting to know this solitary remote island), Bill departs to begin our tour with a new group headed to Ecuador and the Galapagos Islands. (coincidence that we’re headed back to South America, notwithstanding!). Thankfully, the Islanders and Galapagonians will be airplanes passing through the night as one group has just returned to Miami to finally head home, and the other group heads to Miami to begin their impending tour.
Interesting to say the least, but ultimately goodness, safety and adventure abound for all.
Departing for Ecuador in just a few hours with 23 excited passengers, we look forward to further enhancing Darwin’s theories as we explore giant tortoises, swim with sealions, gawk at strange birds like the blue-footed booby (and red-footed booby), visit natural reserves and animal research facilities…and totally discover a world visited by fewer people on earth than any other locale, save for where we just returned from-Antarctica.
What a world we live in!
Bill and group head to Ecuador sans Malori who is headed home for a well deserved break-in-the action having survived (prospered, even) along with our group, any effects from the Chile earthquake. As a matter of fact Malori and Michele (who staged the rescue mission from our AJ office in Pittsburgh) are quite the heroines. With thousands of people still stranded in Chile, these two single-handedly orchestrated a safe and expeditious (and in many cases, even fun!) way home for everyone.
“M & M” are the best. I am honored to work side-by-side with them and our travelers are blessed to have a team of such dedicated and hard working warriors.
Amazing Indeed!
TUESDAY 3/3/10
Beyond the borders of
Being in the far reaches of southern South America last week for purposes of visiting Antarctica, I took the opportunity on my way home to pay a visit to my friend Eduardo who lives in
Not this time.
Eduardo and I made plans to spend a few days of R& R at his home and at a beautiful resort along the coast called Punta del Este. Sort of where the “Lifestyles of the Rich & Famous” from
While this vacation was relaxing and totally pleasant (Eduardo was an exceptional host, making me feel like I was deserving of a lifestyle of the rich & famous), time with my amigo provided an enlightening and sometimes disturbing tutelage on this smallest of South American countries.
Eduardo is a single dad-the idol of two beautiful little boys, age 8 and 10. Fede and Diego call me Uncle Bill even though they don’t know my language and I don’t know theirs. These two boys live in a country where being Jewish and wanting to prosper with a Jewish life means having a future at risk.
On the lighter side of things I got a kick of the “men in green”. Instead of parking meters, these guys patrol most streets around the country sort of assisting you into your parking spot. A little wave here and a stop there and you are parked safely and conveniently. Tip please. Usually about the equivalent of $.50 is enough to appease these unsanctioned and unpaid but tolerated ‘employees’ of the state. They are everywhere and appear magically every time you pull in and out of a parking spot. Don’t tip them..be wary of spray of water or mean face. Maybe a scratch on your fender.
Interesting to learn, was about the rights of squatters. A vacant apartment can be inhabited by a homeless squatter, but if not reported within 24 hours he has permanent rights to the domain. An expensive lawsuit to remove the vagrant isn’t worth the effort and often times homeless, penniless people can enjoy rent free living just for being there. Eduardo owns a few apartments and thus employs a few “Squatter Resisters”; someone to stake out the vacant domain until Eduardo can rent it again. The few pesos it costs him to keep someone on site is much less cumbersome than the alternative of using the legal system. Another option is a show of force. Forget the law; get a slug to go in and remove the thug.
More disturbing was the news that a new “democratically elected” communist government is about to be put in place. By a narrow 51-49% vote the current socialist left wing government is being supplanted by an even more left wing communist president who has evidently spawned some dangerous international support from the likes of
Back home, Eduardo drives through stop signs on his ways around
Its not all bad in
In the meantime, he does his best to make a life for Fede and Diego. I see disappointment in Eduardo’s face. He loves his country, but is deeply ashamed for the direction its headed.
Meanwhile….AJ heads off on yet another Amazing Journey to South America. Departing for Miami tomorrow en route to Ecuador and the Galapagos Islands with a group of eager Giant Tortoises excited to meet some Americans..and an Aussie, Canadian & Italian too. Watch our AJ facebook pages for updates on the journey…
February 27th, 2010
As I sit here at the airport in Buenos Aires on my way back home from our amazing Antarctica adventure, I am drawn to reflect on some events from the previous several days. Upon returning to South America from Antarctica about half our group took advantage of a unique opportunity to visit Easter Island off the coast (waaay off the coast) of Chile. This remote island is closer to the western coast of South America than any other mainland on planet earth. The word “close” being used loosely, Easter Island is roughly the same distance away from South America that California is from New York. As I write this, I breathe with relief in discovering just a short while ago that my friends, patrons and comrades are all safe and sound, having escaped any wrath of the devastating earthquake that hit Chile early this morning. Merely an inconvenience as compared to what could have been and what is happening in the mainland, our group of 17 are indeed stranded on the far-away island as their flight to Santiago is in limbo due to damage at the airport. Most importantly, they are safe….and now enjoying an added post-post trip among the famous Moias–ancient statues–that sprinkle the landscape. Nice weather will help, as will the company of some good friends and a hospitable community in Easter Island. Hopefully the employers, dog sitters and fish feeders back home don’t mind a few extra days of absence.
My intent on this particular entry wasn’t to write about my friends in Easter Island, but rather to reflect upon something personal that I opted to do instead of accompanying a group to a solitary island in the middle of the Pacific. Today’s events warrant a small shift in my plan of what to blog, but I’m not the one holed up on an island in the south pacific, so I’ll just deal with it.
Life is full of choices and while I covet the experience of seeing a far away island, I chose another–and unique–path of an extended South American experience. At this moment I yearn to be with the group and assist with getting everyone home, but I am now on my way home by another route, having encountered a different, less inconvenient but still very eye-opening experience. Stay tuned in a few days for another entry, and some reflection on another South American community.
For more information on other experiences you can be a part of on an Amazing Journey, visit https://amazingjourneys.net/
…but as we head due north on our last day aboard our expedition vessel, some thoughts as shared with a friend:
“…being in Antarctica has been life changing. Words and photos alone cannot convey the magnitude and true realization of this continent. This was so very cool in every sense. We had unusually great weather and even as I write this we are sailing in the dreaded Drake Passage which is where the Atlantic and Pacific meet causing notoriously rough waters–some of the roughest in the world. But, today miraculously, we are almost perfectly calm. The whole group is wearing patches and popping Dramamine, but happily we are looking out at calm waters for the moment. Day after tomorrow we’re back in Ushuaia and then one more night in Buenos Aires (and a dinner with Tango Show) before some head off to Easter Island and some head on home back to their “real life”.
The nice weather we’ve had has meant that half of the layers I brought I never needed. I never even wore my winter gloves–just a pair of lightweight ones…and usually just two layers of clothes on land. The cruise line gave us all a very useful outer jacket and AJ gave everyone a fleece as a gift, so that and a t-shirt underneath was more than enough.
We’ve seen whales and seals and so many adorable penguins. Baby chics hatched only about 8 weeks ago so we were privy to the antics of a lot of young penguins and their parents. Often times, the mommies will be running away (and falling on bellies in the process) as the babies give chase in want of being fed. We saw thousands of penguins and these chases were everywhere. It was very entertaining..especially since the penguins weren’t influenced by our presence and seemed to put on a show right at our feet.
One other highlight occurred yesterday when we took a short cruise on our smaller ‘polarcircle’ boats through a glacier canal. We were up close to a leopard seal on an iceberg (ugly animal!) and some majestic mountains and glaciers like nothing I’ve ever seen. We were even lucky to see an avalanche occur way up one of these remote mountains while we were at a safe distance on our boat below. I was absolutely mesmerized.
Soon this experience will be just a fond memory, but the actuality of being a part of this frozen, barren, remote but wildly interesting continent will live in our lives forever. I wonder how cold I’ll really feel when I come home to traffic, deadlines, rules and pollution…for a life without any of that seems to exert a sense of calling.
Today is our last day amongst the mainland of Antarctica and what a joyously incredible day it has been. I write at mid afternoon, shortly after a stop at Almirante Brown on the mainland in Paradise Harbour of the Antarctic Peninsula and before a visit to Wilhelmina Bay, a feeding ground for several species of whales. While exploring Paradise Harbour (and it truly is a paradise) we witnessed fishing penguins, mommy-chasing baby penguins, a leopard seal resting after a meal, glaciers as tall as skyscrapers and even an avalanche not so far from our small vessel excursion around the peninsula. Amazing!
To commemorate our place among the colonies and colonies (and more colonies) of penguins with whom we shared this amazing journey, today we did our own little ‘march of the penguins’ as you can see from the photo above. Not be outdone by a little humor, the true dazzling continues to come from the unending, uncharted and truly unbelievable landscape that befalls our every waking moment. We are trying our best to share this experience with our loved ones back home by way of Facebook, emails, text messages and blog posts, but the scope of this continent by which we are merely a speck can never accurately be conveyed by pictures and electronic means alone.
Happy Feet indeed! As AJ delves deeper and deeper into the Antarctic we are just ‘kvelling’ over the delving. Penguins who waddle right up to our toes, icebergs as tall as skyscrapers in Manhattan and water as cold as possible without freezing are making for some truly amazing moments. “Stars on ice“ have taken on a whole new meaning here in Antarctica. After passing through the rough waters of the Drake Passage our tour through the icebergs, landscape, wildlife and uncharted territories have dazed and amazed our group of 31 like no experience on earth.