Monday, May 31, 2004

Rough Guides Travel - Chocolate in Brussels

I have a biz trip to the Netherlands in June. With one day off, I'm organizing a chocolate and beer field trip to Brussels. I've been doing some research. Here is a link passed on to me today. Brussels: A Chocolate Tour . Any other suggestions? I promise to take and share pictures and stories! I'll also be in Amsterdam and The Hague. Mostly The Hague.

Oh, and I will come back and finish the Armenia story one of these days. My other blog is hogging all of my attention.

Friday, May 28, 2004

Living on the Planet ?2 blogzine

Living on the Planet ?2 blogzine - Looks like something a traveler like me should check out!

Wednesday, May 26, 2004

REGIONAL CORNER: TAVUSH PROVINCE, ARMENIA

Here is a bit on Tavush region: Tavush Province, Armenia

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More of Sunday, May 3 - Tavush

Then on the road again… towards our day’s destination of Ijevan, about 30 km further down the road. Ijevan used to be home of the finest carpet factory in Armenia, now a skeleton in the post-Soviet era. It is a town of about 20,000, 20 km short of the Azerbaijan border and a site of skirmishes during the war between the two countries. It is situated along the banks of a river, which have been bordered with red stone walls through the main part of town and dividing the town with just 3 bridges crossing between the two sides. I wonder about floods. Trees everywhere and a very different style of commercial buildings that was almost “alp-like” in some small way.

We went to the cultural center where we grabbed a guide to help us find the four bed and breakfasts where the group was to stay. Through some aid funding, Ijevan has set up a very impressive B&B system, complete with English language illustrated brochures and trainings for all the B&B owners. Now all they need are tourists. Four of us stayed at Gulnara’s house, an 8 bedroom, 1 bath stone house high on the hill over town, reached by a very rutted dirt road. There are few paved roads outside of the downtown area, and livestock are clearly an important part of the economy, grazing in every corner. Gulnara and her husband have been restoring their home for 3 years and have just moved back in. With only 2 kids – one in Russia in Med school and a son in the army, the house is big for Gulnara and her husband Michael. They decided to become a B&B and are building a second bathroom. Gulnara treated us to herbal tea, dried fruits and her own pickled baby walnuts.

After everyone’s bags are at their respective B&Bs, we go to “Dendro Park,” a small arboretum at one end of town. We pass an old abandoned ferris wheel where some boys are trying to make it move. We are surprised to see them get the gondolas to go up about ¼ of the way….luckily with no children on board. I am struck by the cows grazing to the side of the wheel. The cow’s amusement park.


The park is a labor of love, with patches of cuttings set out in many places, but clearly not tended to the level you’d expect in other places. Plus there was a strong windstorm two months ago which devastated the park, taking down scores of huge evergreens, making it somewhat eerie to walk through the park. It looked as if a giant had picked random trees everywhere and just tipped them over.


We walked till we came to a picnic area where we sat down and the group played games in Armenian. I walked a bit with one of the group, followed closely by a thin man we presumed as staff of the park. Turns out he was keeping us company as there was a rather antagonistic dog in the area and he wanted to watch out for us. We asked him a bit about the staff, but his answers were brief, vague and uninformative.

Finally we walked back into town. Ijevan has filled the downtown area with large, abstract stone sculptures scattered here and there and concentrated in a sculpture park. It reminds me of the metal sculptures that Raymond, Washington, have put out as a distinct local feature. We passed a few on our way to an outdoor riverside café for tea, beer, cake and ice cream. We went for the casual dinner. Slow service, more games at our tables and finally the chill of dusk signaled the end of our day and we all scattered to our B&Bs.


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Postcards From Armenia - #2 - May 3, 2004

Time to head to the “Marzs” or rural regions of Armenia. Last year I was able to visit schools and communities to the south and west of Yerevan. This year we headed to Tavush Marz, to the north. Tavush is known to be a green mountainous resort area. The two main towns are Dilijan and Ijevan. 18 of us set out in two mini vans or “Marshutkas” to do a little sightseeing on Sunday and run a training event at Ijevan school #5 on Monday.

Our route took us out past the outskirts of Yerevan and a slow climb up the plateau towards Lake Sevan, the largest lake and landmark in Armenia. Sevan sits at the base of a barren mountain range, running (how many miles? Gotta look it up) miles long. There are small resorts dotting the shore and many road side fishmongers, advertising their fish by holding out their hands indicating that they have “big fish.” Sevan also produces large crayfish. Last year I visited two monasteries on the shores of the lake. This time we waved as we headed towards the new tunnel to Tavush, reducing the number of sharp hairpin turns over the mountains from 14 to seven, all on the Tavush side.

Sevan had a few startling images, even as we flashed through. A woman standing by the side of the road holding a huge hawk by the wingtips, presumably dead and for sale. A house made out of a rusted old oil tank. Shepherds by the side of the road, watching over 6-12 muddy cows, occasionally right on the road. A fence around a cow pasture made of rusted out automobile hulks. An abandoned former soviet resort with a huge empty elevator tower. I suspect it was intended to descend from the hotel on the hill down to the lake, but it was unclear if it was ever finished. Like the huge half-finished “dachas” abandoned for lack of funds at the end of the Soviet era and the crash of the Armenian economy, there are echoes of decay everywhere. Yet there are strong signs of building in Yerevan. However, it is unclear if any of the growth benefits more than a few pockets, heavy with profit. They need places to spend/launder money and building seems to be the method of choice. Families also invest any savings in home building, even if it takes years and years to finish the house. You see people living in a lower story, still building above. Or many foundations indicating the beginning of a lifetime of savings for one’s own home.

Traveling through the new tunnel was pretty wild. First, the tunnel is fairly narrow and although new, does not feel quite so large or well lit as the tunnels I have been used to. Plus it was a gateway between two very different ecosystems. We entered the Sevan side of the 2 km tunnel with patches of snow on the treeless hills, grass still flattened by winter snow, and emerged in the green, birch covered slopes on the Tavush side. The new growth was brilliant and I felt like I had green lenses in my glasses. As we descended the remaining 7 hairpin turns (and yes, these were HAIRpin turns!) the trees had more leaves and spring flowers dotted the roadside, particularly the yellow primroses that grow on both sides of this mountain range.

Our first stop was Dilijan, a popular resort town that offers green, refreshing cool in the hot Armenian summers. We walked up the hill to the original section of the town. There are plans to restore these wood and stone buildings along a green stone road as a tourist attraction. Now many of the ornately decorated wood porches are open, roofless to the sky. Curvaceous iron grill work guards rooms with trash and abandoned building materials. I hope they rescue the place in time, because it is beautiful, but in a fragile state of disrepair. The pattern of wood trim and wooden porches reminded me of old Tiblisi, not that much farther northwest. Unlike the drier parts of Armenia, there is plenty of wood so there is a break from the stone and metal style of building in most of the rest of the country. But the pyramidal basic structure of homes and buildings was consistent, each with porches for the summer sun. There was also this beautiful Armenian cross.

True to form with my Project Harmony colleagues there was much group picture taking, clowning around and strolling back down the hill arm in arm, snipping off bits of lilac and apple blossoms to put in our hair and in buttonholes. We know how to have fun. The lilacs, the famous in Dilijan, were just starting to open their buds, about 4 weeks behind my lilacs in Seattle. The apple blossoms interrupted the green swaths of birches, from white to a darker pink.

One of the staff members from Dilijan had a special treat arranged for his coworker. Her brother was stationed in the army in Dilijan, serving his obligatory 2 year stint. Every able man serves two years after they conclude their education (high school or college). 6 months in basic then they are sent somewhere in the country. They are supposed to get one leave a year, but some never get theirs and others get more – bribes. Our team colleague had not seen her 20-year-old brother for 6 months, so there was a grateful 15-minute reunion while we loitered on the river’s edge.

Then we headed on to a side road where we climbed up a verdant valley along a stream to a monastery perched at the mountain ridge. Rusting picnic shelters dotted the riverside, popular in the warmer months, but some were filled this cool and sunny Sunday. The smoke from BBQ, an Armenian national tradition and passion, wafted in our windows.

We tumbled out of the marshutkas and walked around the monastery, lit candles in the church, and posed by a hollowed out old walnut tree. This set of buildings included the church, a library, a burial ground of a king and the larger monastery. It was built between the 11th and 13th century and like most sites in Armenia, has seen waves of attack, invasion and pillaging through the centuries, leaving only the massive hulk of the basic structures behind. There were a few columns that looked like pre-Christian Roman structures that might have formed some of the underlying structure of the buildings.





Beside the monastery was a small farmhouse painted green with bright blue beehives out front. I was ready to move in. Before we left, we all went into the old refectory where the gang sang a few Armenian folks songs, seeking an echo. The building was mute.

We walked down the hill a bit to an old gondola tower, now abandoned. More pictures, flower picking and clowning around till rumbling stomachs sent us on our way.

We headed back down the hill to one of the river side BBQ places, many with covered tables beside the VERY full and brown running river from winter snowmelt and last week’s strong rains. The river looked at the top of its bank, loud and insistent even on fairly flat stretches.

We had kebab, which is pork sausage cooled on a metal skewer and served with onions and flat Lavosh bread, pickled spring shoots of two varieties ( I could not identify them), cheese, olives, tomatoes, cucumbers, more bread, then grilled pieces of pork and potatoes. We were full when we had dark small cups of Armenian coffee, which is addictive and sweet. I learned how to turn over my cup after I drained all the liquid with only the thick paste of fine grounds at the bottom. Depending on the pattern on both the plate and the cup, I could foretell my future.

Postcards from Armenia - #1 – April 26th, 2004

(Yes, this is a bit of catch up)

It is late afternoon at the offices of http://www.projectharmony.am and people are slowly filtering out. I'm putting finishing touches on materials for a four-day training that starts tomorrow. Tonight a few of us are going out to dinner, and then I'm working to finish preparations for tomorrow. Lots to do.

Since my arrival at 12:15 am on Saturday morning (and a 5-6 hour sleep) I have gone with two other Project Harmony exchange groups (2 law enforcement guys from New England and a group of 20 high school students - 10 from Florida and 10 from Armenia) to the Genocide Memorial to mark the anniversary of the Turkish genocide of the Armenian people (more on this in a bit), strolling around the central area, out to a free concert at the Opera House (requiem mass), to the "Vernisage" (outdoor market) to do a little souvenir shopping and to the Ballet. I have been drenched to the skin in a couple of downpours as well!

The walk to and through the Genocide Memorial was quite moving. We joined thousands of other Armenians, many in family groups with 3-4 generations as they hiked up the hill to the site, flowers in hand. Red tulips, lilies, gerberas, bright spots in a sea of folks dressed mostly in black or gray (not just this day -- this is pretty typical here).

The walkway up the hill was lined with police, as there have been anti government demonstrations here this month. Near the long promenade leading up to the memorial itself we were stopped and let through in groups. The promenade is bordered on one side by a long wall with the names of the villages that disappeared during the genocide. Many people stopped to place flowers by their families' village.


Somber choral music blared out of tinny speakers and the chatter subsided. The memorial is a large circle surrounded by stone pillars leaning in towards the center, encircling an eternal flame. The main part is flanked by a large two-part sculpture piercing the sky, representing separated Armenia.


We placed our flowers around the flame on the growing wall of flowers, and then exited on the opposite side. The teenagers seemed relieved to be out the other side. Of the Floridian kids, there are four African Americans, an unusual site in Armenia. As they have been since their arrival, they were swamped by people wanting to have pictures taken with them, touched, even kissed! Before we started down the hill they had been interviewed by three TV news crews.

At the bottom of the hill we split with the other groups. I had lunch with some of the wonderful PH staff and a gentle stroll. We finished with tea at an outdoor, and thankfully undercover, cafe, where we waited out an amazing rain/hail storm.


So some of you may not know what I am doing in Armenia for two weeks. I have the honor of working with 19 people of Project Harmony for a second time. Last year we began an adventure together to introduce the practice and application of online interaction to address community issues and needs. Participants in the online events went to their local school based Internet center as this is still a fairly unwired country.

The team I worked with did miracles. Before we ever starty, everyone said no one would participate in an online event and an online event would not make a difference in the communities. This group proved them wrong on all counts.

This year, with 12 months and many events under their belts, the team is shifting their attention to bringing in new leaders and organizers of online events to build sustainability and expand the work. This is where we'll see if we can reach a tipping point where communities start acting on their own without the intense leadership and support of paid PH staff. It is a big chasm. We start the leap tomorrow.

Some of the online gang!

The daily, quotidian stuff:
The weather when I got here was tumultuous variations of rain, hail and sunshine. Today however mother nature allowed a kiss of spring - blue sky, high 60's F. I even got to see Mount Arrarat as Siobhan and I walked to the office (1 hour) and got our exercise. Had fresh bread and this curd-like cheese for breakfast, along with tea. Mm. Sort of like fresh ricotta. We sprinkled it with sugar.

Spent the day at the office in meetings, preparations for tomorrow and a quick hop to the meeting venue for room set up.

On Sunday we head north to the Tavush/Lori region. We'll do some sightseeing on the way, have a meeting on Monday, then do some sightseeing on the return on Tuesday. Working in the office wed- Friday.

Oh, I forgot to tell you we went to the Ballet last night in the newly renovated Opera House (there has been a lot of renovation/building since I was here last). Amazing sets, costumes, full orchestra and large corps de ballet! I was only sorry I was so sleepy! Packed house, appreciative audience. I seem to have misplaced the pictures. Later!


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Time to Blog My Trips?

For years when I or my family and I have travelled, we have sent emails to friends and family called "Postcards from the Road." Now some of the material is not blog-material, but others have often asked for stories and pictures. This blog will attempt to do that!