Saturday, February 7, 2015

ROAD TRIPPING: A LIFE CHANGING ADVENTURE



... The road ahead is as long as you make it. Make it worth the trip
Jon Bon Jovi

Road tripping is the epitome of adventurous travel, where planning is replaced by spontaneity and en route impulsive decisions, a freeing experience in a world where precise planning and strict timing, rule.
Breaking free from everyday planning may seem intimidating at first, as planning is often being used to avoid undesired and unpredictable events and situations... and a road trip is just as much about unpleasant surprises as delightful ones. You must be prepared to take it all as it comes, and this is precisely where lies the beauty of the experience.

The literary world and movie industry have been enriched by what have become cult road trip novels and movies. It is a genre in itself as the journey is as important as the main character who evolves along the trip's experiences and encounters. 
Temporarily freed from everyday's duties and obligations, which dictate life's pace and content, the heart and spirit become exceptionally receptive to the burst of energy and renewed gusto for life an untamed trip offers.


“Nothing behind me, everything ahead of me, as is ever so on the road.” 
Jack KerouacOn the Road

Jack Kerouac's autobiographical novel On the Road remains a reference of choice among aspiring road-trippers celebrating the raw romanticism of cruising mid -century America.
"I woke up as the sun was reddening; and that was the one distinct time in my life, the strangest moment of all, when I didn't know who I was — I was far away from home, haunted and tired with travel, in a cheap hotel room I'd never seen, hearing the hiss of steam outside, and the creak of the old wood of the hotel, and footsteps upstairs, and all the sad sounds, and I looked at the cracked high ceiling and really didn't know who I was for about fifteen strange seconds." 
Jack Kerouac, On the Road, Des Moines. 

                     



The  Top ten cinematic road trips is a good start to set the mood for the great adventure.
One of my favorites has to be Motocycle Diaries, ased on 23 years old Ernesto Guevara's (El Che) travel journals. 
Unlike most road trip movies which take place in the US, it is set into Latin America's wilderness, which brings a fresh take on the subject: while studying medicine engaged a nine months trip through Latin America with his best friend and physician Alberto Granado.
The journey relates alongside the mere adventure of the travel itself, Ernesto's growth into what would later become his life mission and lead his to his exceptional destiny.

   

For a lighter humourous take on road tripping The Bad Girl's Guide to the Open Road, by Cameron Tuttle is a cheering and happy read with clever tips, thoughts and ideas.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

TRAIN RIDES : A ZEST OF ROMANCE AND MYSTERY

I have always loved movies scenes set on trains, they exude adventure and mistery at once.

Alfred Hitchcock, the master of intrigue, has set some of his most memorable scenes on a  train: Shadow of a Doubt, Number Seventeen, The 39 Steps, The Lady Vanishes, Strangers on a Train and North by Northwest  prove that the limitations and intimacy imposed on characters by train travel, add a particular dimension to thrill and romance.

In North by Northwest the epitome of sexiness is reached on the first encounter between Eve Kendall ( Eve Marie Saint) and Roger Thornhill ( Cary Grant ) in a train's dining car:



 

Roger Thornhill: The moment I meet an attractive woman, I have to start pretending I have no desire to make love to her.
Eve Kendall: What makes you think you have to conceal it?
Roger Thornhill: She might find the idea objectionable.
Eve Kendall: Then again, she might not.

One of Strangers on a Train's most thrilling scenes is set in Bruno's compartment over lunch, when Bruno ( Robert Walker).tells Guy ( Farley Granger) about his idea for the perfect murder: he will kill Myriam and in exchange, Guy will kill Bruno's father.  A"Criss-cross" murder.




Guy accidentally leaves his cigarette lighter behind, a gift from his soon to be wife Anne, Bruno promptly pockets it.
A fatal act that will later tie the two men until the end...










                                   

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Winter Cocktail: Candy Cane Martini

How nice to warm-up in front of the fireplace after a day on the slopes!
 Receipe via  Sweet Paul

TRAVEL POSTERS : A LEGACY OF THE GOLDEN AGE

At the beginning of the 20th century, airplanes, ocean liners and railroads brought a new freedom to  the world, making leisure travel not only luxurious but possible: the Golden Age of Travel was born and would last until World War II.
This is the time when the lithographic poster appeared, it was ideally suited to tempt the consumer with bold fonts and  large images. Rail train stations, travel agencies and kiosks all over America and Europe displayed these stunning images.
Time hasn't altered their unique appeal and reproductions are nowdays often used as decorative elements.
Some of the artists became famous in their genre and the original posters, are valued collectibles traded at auction houses.


St Croix-les-Rasses, Switzerland, 1930
                         Find it here!                         


  Roger Broders, Sports D'Hiver, 1929

Sports in Italy, 1935







Canadian Pacific Rockies Snow Ski