Traveller's tales...I'm a kiwi lad working my way around the world visiting family, making new friends and gazing at old stuff and wild stuff. I'm a writer, so I'm writing about it.

Showing posts with label overview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label overview. Show all posts

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Blog updated, on hiatus for now.

Entries on Barga, Pisa, Roma 1, Roma 2, have been posted in the September section - my travelogue of 2007 is basically complete. So what will you be seeing in 2008 here?

Well, I've been in Britain for almost two months now, and I notice my only post has been about New Zealand! Homesick? Perhaps a little. I'm still travelling though, for a good while yet.

I have had several experiences I have felt were almost deserving of a blog entry. They include: escorting a bleeding drunk youth home in Newcastle; Ceidlhs and Scottish folk music nights in Newcastle and Glasgow; visiting my great-grandparents' graves; looking for stray golf balls at Gourock Golf Club with two adolescents who claimed they were drug-dealers; packing gourmet smoked goods into hampers 14 hours a day in Oban; learning to understand the words 'hame' 'hoose' and 'fer'. My funniest story would be getting very excited seeing a magazine in a Glasgow newsagents, coloured green, titled 'The Alternative View'. Great! some counter-cultural reading! I fish for a pound in my pocket. On closer inspection the subtitle was
'the magazine for Celtic supporters that deals with the real issues'.
Of course it was about fitba', not ecology. But what kind of place has multiple magazines about a single football club?



But I can't keep writing this blog while I'm here. There are many reasons. Sadly, perhaps unavoidably, I don't feel the wide-eyed wonder that I have had all through my trip, including the first time I was here. I think wonder is vital to good travel writing. Practically, I want to save money here, which can lead to both fatigue and monotony. To boot, a lot of the rest of my time is spent interacting with my family, and you don't want to know what we get up to!

In any case, many of you are already very Britian-savvy. You know that it is becoming more multicultural by the minute (The manuals in my last job are now written in Polish and English, for example) You know that 'security measures' both state and non-state, are ubiquitous (closed circuit television is everywhere). You know that West Scotland is wild and beautiful and England is crowded.



I do encounter things that inspire me personally, that you will be interested in, but they will be expressed in other ways than this site.

I would like to say 'Ta very much!' to everyone who has skimmed, read or devoured my tangential ramblings, and especially to those who commented, or wanted to comment but couldn't manage Blogspot's sometimes labyrinthine interface.

Hopefully this blog will rise again on phoenix wings, when I leave the UK. When will that be? Next summer, probably. Where will I go?



Across country to Southeast Asia via more of Europe (Mycenae! Amsterdam! Stockholm!), Siberia, China and Japan.
Peace.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Traveller to settle.... Press Release


Ewan Kingston, 27, professional traveller, has recently decided to make the UK his home for a while. Speaking from a friends house in Cadillac, Southwest France, Ewan expressed both a weariness of travel and excitement at spending time in the isle where his extended family live.

"Including within Aotearoa, Ive been travelling for almost a year. Its time to let the soul be settled and with luck, recharge the bank account. I'll hopefully be working quite hard for a lot of my time in the UK to save up money, but I should be able to see a lot of the Rennie clan as well at some point"

Ewan said he was about to head north towards the English channel by bicycle, despite the approaching winter. "Ive had enough of searching for that endless summer."

Ewan also added that he would most like to work and live in Scotland, where his maternal Grandparents came from but would also be happy to be based anywhere if the right job was available, especially if family were close to hand. The areas he will be optimistically looking to work in will be research, library work, and perhaps communications and publishing. He is prepared for the fact he will probably do some hospitality or retail work at some point.

Asked about his experience of the grape harvest, Ewan said. "The work was boring, but the conditions were ok and the people were very friendly and helpful, some exceptionally so. It also turned out to be a great way to meet interesting people and learn French. At the end of the vendange, we threw the foreman into a trailer full of grapes."

ENDS