Traveling.
Here is a story of a
man who had an terrible holiday: The first thing that went wrong was that the
country we were going to decided to have a war a few days before we were going
there. So that was the end of that. But the plane we were going on
was stopping off at Rome. So rather than not having a holiday at all, we
thought we'd go to Italy. Very nice. See the sights. Go to the beaches and get
fat with pasta. We were at the airport waiting for the plane and a friend of
mine who lived near the airport had come to see us off. So we were having a few
drinks in the bar and joking with this friend of mine, Peter, saying 'Poor old
you in cold rainy England. This time tomorrow we'll be in Italy on the beach.'
And I went down to see if the flight had been called and discovered it had
gone. It was a terribly stupid mistake. We hadn't checked the time of
departure. I was sure it was going 9 something but it was going at 19 something
which of course is 7 o'clock. So we were actually there in the bar when it went
without us. We were determined to have
our holiday. The irony was that Peter was now going back to his comfortable
home and we were stuck in the cold and the rain at 10 o'clock at night. You
see, it was a charter flight so we couldn't book another one. We lost our money
and all the other flights were booked up. Well, we got a train to the South
Coast and caught the midnight boat across the Channel, froze to death all
night, it was a terrible crossing with people being sick everywhere. And
eventually we got to I think it was Dieppe and then a train to Paris. We got to
Paris very early in the morning and I thought we'd be all right. You see, we
now had to hitch hike because a lot of our money had gone on the boat and the
train, but I thought 'Well, it's very early in the morning, we'll get a good
place to start hitching and we'll soon be well on our way.' We got to the start
of the motorway and I just couldn't believe it. I've never seen so many people
trying to hitch a lift in all my life.
Well, it was then it suddenly dawned on me. It was August the first
wasn't it? and on August the first in France the whole population goes on
holiday and there were hundreds of people, stopping the traffic, banging on
drivers' windows trying to persuade them to stop and give them a lift. It was
chaos, disastrous. Well, we got moving
eventually. A lorry driver gave us a lift. And then things started to get
better, as we got further south and it got warmer, you know, and we thought 'At
last, the holiday's beginning.' Well, we camped that night and we then set off
again the next day. We got some lifts, and met a great chap who owned a
vineyard. He took us back to his farm and we tasted all this wine -Burgundy, my
favorite - and we had a great time. Now the holiday really was starting. Well,
he took us back to the motorway, and there we were by the side of the road, the
sun was shining, we were a bit merry, sang a few songs - you know, life was
great. And we got another lift from ... well he was a maniac, complete maniac. He
seemed nice enough, but within a few minutes he was driving at about a hundred
miles an hour, overtaking on the inside on the motorway, with his stereo at
full volume, one hand on the wheel and well the other hand on various parts of
Susan's body. What! So what did you do? I don't know why I'm laughing I've
never been so frightened in all my life. We were absolutely -helpless. Susan
tried to say that she had to go to the toilet, but he wouldn't stop then she
pretended to be sick in his car, and he stopped in seconds. He had this really
flash expensive car, and as soon as he stopped we just jumped out and ran. The
worst thing was this tremendous drop from feeling so good to thinking that we
were going to get killed. We eventually got down to the south of France and
began to have a good time, and then down to
Italy. We ran out of money, of course, but apart from that, it was good.
I've never had such a tiring holiday. When we got back, I was exhausted. At the
end of the holiday, I needed a holiday! And this is a story of an old woman.
She has traveled all over the world in her tiny van. It's a nice way of having
holiday. Now at this moment, somewhere on the other side of the Atlantic, Olive
Gibbs is probably chugging along the road, in the early morning in her tiny
camping van. The travel bug came to Mrs. Gibbs rather late in life. About 14
years ago, to help her get over the death of her husband she went on an
overland bus trip to Katmandu. This fired her with the enthusiasm to travel
more, but as she couldn't afford to go on extensive organized tours, she bought
a camper and took to the road alone. Now at the age of 72, she's clocked up
about 75,000 miles on trips that have taken her to America, Australia and South
Africa. Ann Catchpole met her at her home on the Sussex coast just before she
was setting out on her current venture another wander around America, Canada
and Mexico, that'll take about a year, and she'd been very busy that afternoon
packing up the van, mainly, as she told Ann, with stocks of food. Of
all the meals that I have during the day, my breakfast is the one that I like.
It's not that I have a large breakfast
but I do like my toast and marmalade. I've got quite a few pounds of marmalade
in my van at the moment, I should think I have about 10 pounds, and when that
run out and if I'm down in California by then I shall make some marmalade. I
take English things like Marmite which not many other countries of the world
seem to appreciate. I'm also taking crisp breads to the United States because I
don't care for their bread very much. And I take biscuits because I don't care
for their biscuits very much. But otherwise I can buy everything I need in the
United States. But I don't like wasting my time shopping, so I carry as much as
I can and visit a supermarket only when I'm forced to. Well, I know vaguely
which way I'm going to go, but I do change my direction if there's something I
hear about which I think I would like to see, or I don't like the road I'll go
a completely different way. And at the beginning of the day I don't know quite
where I'm going to sleep at night. I wait until I feel tired or I wait until I
see somewhere that attracts me and then I stop.
The first thing I do, and I do this deliberately, I make myself a cup of
tea, and I sit outside my van because I think it, it pleases the Americans to
see an English lady having afternoon tea. But as soon as I really ... as soon
as I arrive, especially in the United States or Canada, the men all want to
talk to me about places they've been to when they were in the army during the
war over here. Other people want to know and tell me about where their
ancestors came from, and nearly always I have been to the places, or at least
know something about them, because I do travel quite a bit in my own country as
well as going abroad. In fact when I'm trying to unpack at the end of a day's
journey and get a meal in the evening, life becomes very difficult because
people gather round and want to know all about me and it's almost dark before I
can get on with my unpacking and getting a meal ready. But I do try to get my
cup of tea in first. In Zimbabwe, at that time called Rhodesia, and I was
actually camping in Zimbabwe by the Zimbabwe ruins. And during the night
someone went by with a torch. It woke me up, and I just thought it was somebody
going to a toilet, and I took no notice. But when I woke up in the morning I
found that a lot of my papers had been taken, and the wallet in which I kept
them. And of course I didn't realize at the time what was going on. It must
have been the noise of the door closing which woke me up. I suppose I'm very
foolish but often I don't lock myself in my van at night. Sometimes I do if I
feel at all nervous or if I'm in a camp site on my own, then I do lock myself
in. Each country has something special about it. But I think the beauty of
South Africa is something that I shall never forget. I used to stand sometimes
when I was there and say to myself, 'Just look and look as much as you can in
case you don't come this way again.
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