Chris and Marion - Our first SERVAS Hosts |
Roz with our second SERVAS host, Joanna |
July 4-July 8 WALES
Our First of Two SERVAS Visits
We said goodbye to one of our host's Collette at Highclere and headed toward Wales by 10:00 in the morning.
Prince of Wales Bridge over Bristol Channel into Wales |
"SERVAS is a worldwide cooperative cultural exchange network of travelers and hosts working together to foster peace, goodwill and mutual respect."
"Friendship Force is a non-profit cultural organization focused on promoting understanding, cultural education and citizen diplomacy through homestay Journeys and personal friendships."
Both organizations are focused on building peace through friendship. SERVAS is catered primarily to independent travelers and individual host who make their own arrangements with one another. Friendship Force is a locational club organization and is formally organized to send 15-20+ FF club members to other member clubs for hosting. FFI has about 300 clubs in 60 different countries.
We enjoy being a part of both organizations because we love to travel, love to learn about other cultures, love to make friends out of strangers, and appreciate the economical savings of traveling under the umbrella of these two groups that provide hosing with no cost for accommodations. Most of all we believe that making friends around the world is preferable to making enemies, and in a small way we work toward building peace.
We have visited SERVAS families in homes in Finland, Poland, Turkey, and the UK. On this trip we are visiting SERVAS members in Wales. Our first two night stay is with a couple in
Llangennech, Lianelli, Carmarthenshire. They live in an old farm house and still hold at least 10 acres of land.Both are retired physicians who have both a considerable amount of experience both traveling and hosting.
They were both GPs in Wales, and took care of the folks in their village including many ailing coal miners.
Coal mining was the primary industry in this area. Today the coal mines are closed and the blackened valleys and the lungs of the afflicted are recovering.
While we are here we visited the "Green Valley", a former coal mining area that according to our hosts Joanna and Chris is unrecognizable from former days when the hills were black, the forest denuded, and the houses covered with coal silt.
Today the valley is verdant, the railroad that transported coal converted to gentle walking trails, and the company row houses are gradually giving way to the upwardly mobile who call this valley home.
We enjoyed a long walk from mid valley to the end and back. Chris and Marion are expecting another SERVAS American family from Georgia later today. Their home is big enough to accommodate all of us. We gather together around the kitchen table for dinner,
share stories, play Uno with grandchildren and later introduce Left Right Center to the Adults.
All too soon our visit was over. Thank you Marion and Chris!
we left on July 6, and headed from "coal" country to "slate" country. It took us most of the day to reach our destination, but loved the vistas, lakes, valleys, and villages along the way.
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Mountains of Slate not fit for Commercial Sales |
Our SERVAS host Joanna is a retired teacher of music and classical singing. She herself has lovely soprano voice and a generous personality, and is currently working as a TESOL (Teaching English as a Second Language), so that she can take some additional useable skills upon her travels.
Joanna coming out of her front door. |
The deck into a private garden off our bedroom. |
Dinner |
Slate comes in various colors and cleaves in flat slabs |
On our second day with Joanna, we take off on our own to Snowdon. We plan to visit the Slate Museum and take the cog train to the top of Mount Snowdon which is about the same elevation as Colfax. Unlike the gradual climb through the foothills, Mount Snowdon rises dramatically upwards. Had we more time and the weather was not so hot we would have hiked to the top, but not today.
Our first stop is the slate museum. Slate is still mined in this valley, but not to the extent that it was.
After our visit to the Slate Museum, we took the Snowdon Cog Train to the top of the mountain. The hills were alive with hikers enjoying the unusually warm and sunny weather.
We have half an hour once we reach the station to climb the rest of the way to the top, enjoy the view and take photos before rebounding and heading down the hill. We have made the all day trek up and back in two and half hours by train.
Snowdon Traffic to the Top |
King of the Mountain on the Highest Point in the UK! |
How Human Kind Changes the Landscape and the Environment |
A Lone Tree in a rocky grassland. |
Alas, our second visit filled with great stories, good times, and a personal relationship has come to an end and we leave for England in the morning. But before we go we look through the old school telephone and see lots of Worralls, one or two Nyes, one Tibbets, many Shaws and Lewis. With Liverpool not far, we suspect than many of our ancestors may have live here in Wales. The Welsh language is still in use. It is very difficult for us to understand or even pronounce. The people are fine, and we bid goodbye to Joanna and to the country that could have been of our ancestors.
We leave for Liverpool back into England.
All is Well With the Worrall Travel Rs in Wales.
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