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VietnamTravel Goals
1. Climb to Everest Base Camp.2. Climb Mt Kilimanjaro.
3. Learn to Scuba Dive.
4. Visit every continent.
5. See the Galapagos Islands.
6. Sail down the Amazon River.
7. Climb Ayer's Rock.
8. Travel on the Trans-Siberian Railroad.
9. Go into space.
10. Throw tomatos at La Tomintina in Spain.
11. See the sunrise from Mt. Fuji.
12. Try to figure out the Buddhist messages at Borobudor in Indonesia.
13. Visit the Pyramids
14. Safari in East Africa for 3 months.
15. Go to the World Cup!
16. See Macchu Picchu.
17. Join the Century Club. (100 countries visited)
18. Join the Mile High Club. (Hey why not?)
19. Do development work in a 3rd world country.
20. See Petra Jordan.
21. Backpack the Eastern Block.
22. Go back to Alaska and see the Northern Lights.
23. Vegas Baby! Vegas!
24. Greek Island hop.
25. Cycle Tuscany.
26. Visit India.
27. Lounge forever in the Seychelles.
28. See Morocco.
29. Oktoberfest!
30. Caravan across the Sahara.
31. Visit Tibet.
32. Go to the Cannes Film Festival.
33. Go to the Sundance Film Festival.
34. Eat a sushi meal at NOBU
35. Pacific Island hop.
36. Spend a night in the Ice Hotel in Sweden.
37. Go to Israel.
38. Carnival!!!!
39. and it's slightly less cool cousin, Mardi Gras!
40. See Glacier National Park before the glaciers melt.
41. Fly first class on some long international flight!
The Saturday City: Stratford Upon Avon
August 2, 2008
The birthplace of the bard, Stratford Upon Avon is a mecca for Shakespeare enthusiasts. Tourists descend on this place in hordes during the summer months and everywhere I went there were lots and lots of people.
The city doesn’t have much to offer besides its Shakespearean past. Outside the historic area, it’s just another English city. However, inside the center, it’s another story. They’ve gone out their way to preserve and capitalize on the bard and the city’s historic past. There’s numerous sites dedicated to the playwright- you can see his home, birthplace, theater, and final resting place. The Royal Shakespeare Company puts on numerous plays from the spring until the fall. This year they are doing Hamlet, The Taming of the Shrew, Midsummer’s Night Dream, and The Merchant of Venice. Hamlet was showing the day I went but was sold out. The large theater they normally perform in is closed for renovation until 2009 but they are performing at the smaller Courtyard Theater down the street. Outside of town, you can see Anne Hathaway’s cottage, birthplace of the bard’s wife.


A good walking tour begins at the information center and meanders down by the street along the Avon river. There you pass both Shakespeare theaters and a few nice houses before coming upon William Shakespeare’s burial site at Trinity Church. Also on that street is the Shakespearience, a museum that uses holograms to tell the bard’s history. Trinity church, where he is buried in, has well worn graves dating back many centuries in the surrounding courtyard and it’s quite interesting to walk around and try to decipher the dates. The church itself is pretty basic and not that spectacular.


From there, you can turn around and walk up towards Hall’s Croft (his daughter’s house) and see the remembrance garden dedicated to soldiers from World War Two. From there, it’s a slight turn left and then a straight shot past a museum, his house, the town center, and then finally his birthplace. It’s a great way to see the Shakespeare’s life in reverse order or you can walk it from his birth to death. The walk will take you through all the major tourists sites, the town center, and around a few streets by the church that are a bit out of the way from all the tourists. In fact, Stratford was pretty nice and relaxing when you got away from the chaos of the town center. You could just walk slowly and stare at all the homes without dodging crowds and cars.


Stratford center, despite the bustle, was surprisingly well preserved. All around were buildings dating back to Tudor times and walking around it was easy to imagine the bard and his fellow country men walking through the streets. High Street was the real highlight of the city for me. This street has house after house in the Tudor style, many dating as far back as to Henry VIII’s time. Peering in you can still see the original woodwork with it’s low ceilings. For this history geek, it was fascinating.


Stratford is just a regular city but around the center and in the nearby streets is history and lots of it. For any Shakespeare lover, Stratford is a must on your trip to England. However, if you want to see a show, make sure you book early as tickets are usually sold out and getting a ticket the day of requires lots of luck. My only real wish for the city would be that they turned the center into a pedestrian only zone- not having to dodge cars while taking photos would have been nice. However, if you don’t like William Shakespeare, then the city isn’t worth going to and there are far nicer places in England to spend your time.
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Posted by NomadicMatt | Filed Under Saturday City
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Matt- thanks for the last couple of posts in England - makes me even more excited to go now!
Oddly enough, despite being an English major and liking Shakespeare well enough, I have no desire to go here. But I do like the looks of some of the buildings, particularly the ones in the last photograph. They remind me in a very vague way of the wonderful painted buildings in the town of Pirgi on Chios, in Greece.