Enrich your Travel With Do-It-Yourself Volunteering

This past Thursday I talked with Columbus-based artist and traveler Eric Marlow at an event for the “Optic Nerve: Perceptual Art of the 1960s” exhibit at the Columbus Museum of Art in Columbus, Ohio. Earlier that evening I saw him at the opening of “Outside the Box, ” a retrospective of “garbage art” at the Kings Art Complex. Marlow’s work was one of the pieces in the show. Both exhibits I recommend, but this post is about the traveling/volunteering experience Marlow told me about.

Recently, he went to Nicaragua on a beach vacation and while there decided to do something useful, not that one needs to do something useful on a beach vacation. But, he felt the urge and contacted a local school in San Juan del Sur to find out if the school would like a guest artist to do an art workshop with students. The school was delighted with Marlow’s offer so he spent three 3 hours leading a group of adolescents in a found-art collaborative sculpture. This endeavor did involve a trip to the beach. One of his comments was how the school didn’t have any resources. None. Zip. Zippo. Nada.

This is an example of a do-it-yourself kind of volunteer project. If you’re traveling in place with limited resources and schools are in session, perhaps approaching a school with your ready-made project idea would be something they’d be interested in. If you’re looking to hook up with projects before you leave for vacation, try International Volunteer Programs Association. If nothing else, its website lists ideas for what sort of volunteer projects are available. To learn more about volunteering in Nicaragua here is an article that goes into more detail. While you’re packing for a trip, tuck in a few boxes of crayons and a pad of paper. You might find yourself having a fine time with a group of kids somewhere.

Photo of the Day (3/29/07)

Bright red watermelon, bright green banana leaves. This is the luncheon scene faced by Ourmanwhere someplace in Granada (Nicaragua). I’m not a big fan of watermelon, but look how sweet and juicy those slices look. Mmmm… It must have been a tasty tour of Grenada.

If you would like your vacation photos considered for our Photo of the Day, jump on over to our Gadling Flickr Pool and upload away. Be kind, however, and don’t post anymore photos that will make us hungry.

Photo of the Day (3/22/07)

Today’s blaze of yellow sunshine and peeling paint comes to us from Nicaragua thanks to the fine photography skills of OurManWhere. I’m not sure what the product being advertised might be (perhaps detergent), but I love how that beam of light slicing through the photo is so very appropriate for the one Spanish word I recognize: sol (sun).

Megan Lyles Travel Writer

When really good travel blogs manage to remain secret to me, I get bummed wishing someone had called me sooner to say, “Hey, Adrienne you need to peep this right now!” No personal calls were ever received which leads me to wonder how many folks even know about the travel writing goodness of Megan Lyles? It really makes no huge difference that I didn’t follow Megan and her fiancé/photographer, Michael Simon, while they were blogging on the road. It just means I have a ton of catching up to do.

Back in the summer of 2005 Megan and Michael took off on a one-year long bus trip from Manhattan to the tip of South America. The trip has since been wrapped up and Megan and Michael are back in Manhattan, but the site is still up and there for your viewing pleasure. And I do mean it is a pleasure to check out. I read through some of the Mexico, Paraguay, and Uruguay stops not wanting to stop, but catching up is going to take a while. Before I departed I clicked on just one more plug while they were in North Carolina attending the Vans Warped tour. All I can say is Megan, where ever you are – I can totally relate.