Iceland

November 05, 2008

Group Leader Spotlight: Carole Miller

Gl_carole_miller High school French and Spanish teacher Carole Miller truly has seen the world with EF. She has traveled everywhere from Australia to Iceland on EF tours and teacher convention tours. After 30 years of teaching at four school districts in Pennsylvania, Carole retired. However, she’s still traveling the world with EF—now with adults.

Carole (pictured with her husband, Jack) shared her thoughts with us about travel's impact on her students, attending teacher convention tours and the value of EF's Global Rewards:

Continue reading "Group Leader Spotlight: Carole Miller" »

October 15, 2008

Group Leader Spotlight: Mike O'Neal

Gl_oneal_turkey

Mike O’Neal, a seventh- and eighth-grade social studies teacher from Kirkland, Washington, never wanted to be the type of person who one day would reflect upon his life and say, “Coulda, shoulda.”

When it comes to traveling, he certainly has accomplished that goal. Mike has taken more than a dozen EF tours and traveled on five Teacher Convention Tours. From Kenya to Russia to the Galápagos Islands, Mike has explored six continents with EF!

Mike (pictured above at a Turkish market) took a few minutes to talk about how travel impacts his students, planning and recruiting his tours and watching the pelicans and sharks in the Galápagos:

Continue reading "Group Leader Spotlight: Mike O'Neal" »

February 05, 2008

Travel Tidbits: One long walk

Saoirse How much does it cost to travel from Bristol, England, to Porbandar, India?

If you're Mark Boyle, the answer (hopefully) is nothing.

The catch is that Boyle is walking—yes, walking—from his British hometown to Gandhi's birthplace without any money.

The 28-year-old former businessman (pictured at left) began the 9,000-mile "pilgrimage" last Wednesday and plans to survive by relying solely on the goodwill of humanity or working for food and a place to rest.

"I've got some sunscreen, a good knife, a spoon, a bandage ... no Visa card, no travellers' cheques, no bank accounts, zero," he told BBC radio. "I won't actually touch money along the way."

Boyle, who also goes by the name Saoirse, estimates he'll cover 15 to 45 miles a day walking through France, Italy, eastern Europe, Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan. He guesses it will take him two and a half years to arrive in Porbandar, Gandhi's birthplace on India's west coast.

You can follow Boyle on his journey by reading his blog. And, if you happen to spot him along the way, be sure to post your sighting.

Read on for this week's installment of Travel Tidbits.

Continue reading "Travel Tidbits: One long walk" »

Contact our blog

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Life on Tour Poll

  • My site was nominated for Best Travel Blog!

EF Tours on Flickr

  • www.flickr.com
    items in EF Tours More in EF Tours pool

Search our blog


  • On Following the Equator
    On the Web

  • Add to Technorati Favorites

  • Travel Blogs - Blog Catalog Blog Directory

Add to Google Reader or Homepage

Subscribe in Bloglines

Add to My AOL

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Add to netvibes


  • Apture
Blog powered by TypePad