Monday, December 19, 2016
Monday, November 21, 2016
A Holiday Hike to Share with Friends
Trail mates come in all shapes, sizes, and attitudes. Get to know a new friend, or catch up with an old one, while you burn unwanted holiday calories on this easily accessed 2.5 mile loop.
The Sara Wan trailhead located on Pacific Coast Highway at the foot of Corral Canyon
is one of the Santa Monica Conservancy’s newer acquisitions. The well-maintained
path is wide enough for two and switches back and forth to heavenly vistas.
Bear to the left on your way up canyon and enjoy the murmur of Corral Creek as
you begin your hike. Fog chased by a cool breeze off the Pacific drifts through
stands of eucalyptus, alder, Coastal Live Oak and willow tracing the path of
the creek and keeping things comfortable. Soon you will be in mountains
frosted
with pink bush mallow and lavender Chia sage, so bring a hat, water, and sun
block. Once aloft, you enjoy an easy stroll with sweeping views of the coast
all the way to Point Dume.
The path takes you to a vantage point with stunning views of Catalina and the Santa Monica Bay before leading you back to the parking lot.
The path takes you to a vantage point with stunning views of Catalina and the Santa Monica Bay before leading you back to the parking lot.
The best ahi burger on the entire 27-mile stretch of scenic
Malibu Coastline awaits your return at the open air Malibu Seafood Café
adjacent to the parking lot. You can treat yourself to lobster live from the
tank or be happy with scrumptious fish and chips. From the upstairs covered
patio, dolphins are often seen cavorting in the deep channel. A flock of wild
parrots, migrants from Mexico ,
have made homes in the palms swaying overhead.
A siesta on the Dan Blocker beach on the other side of PCH is a wonderful way to cap off this outdoor day. Bring a good book and wait for sunset. You can park in the Santa Monica Conservancy lot all day for five bucks—such a deal!
Directions: Malibu Seafood
Market 25653 Pacific Coast Highway is about 11/2 miles up the coast from Pepperdine University
between Malibu Canyon and Kanaan Road . An MTA bus stop is there for
those who prefer not to drive.
Adventure-travel writer, Linda Ballou, has a host of travel
articles on her site, along with information about her travel memoir, Lost Angel Walkabout-One Traveler’s Tales,
her historical novel Wai-nani, A Voicefrom Old Hawai’i and her latest action-adventure novel The Cowgirl Jumped over the Moon at-www.LindaBallouAuthor.com.
Subscribe to her blog
Linda's Blogand receive updates on her books, and travel
destinations.
Tuesday, September 13, 2016
The Gift of Understanding-Kahuna Garden
Pi'ilanihale-Hana, Maui |
A rutted road in Hana, Maui leads to the site of Pi’ilanihale,
the largest remaining heiau (temple of worship) in all of Polynesia. You must
cross over a creek to get to the entrance of Kahanu Garden where the heiau was
hidden from sight until 1999. It is hard to believe that this immense structure
spanning three acres built of basalt rocks could be so overgrown with jungle
foliage that it would go unnoticed until modern times. The side facing the sea
rises steeply in five stepped terraces. Construction of the main terrace dates
back to the 14th century when remote, water-rich Hana was heavily
populated by Hawaiians.
Lono -God of Agriculture |
Our guide, also named Pi’ilani, one of 14 children in a
blended Hawaiian family, explained that Lono, the god of fertility, was worshipped
here for agricultural bounty. She said,
the Hawaiians were so embarrassed about the paganism in their past that they
let the heiau become overgrown. They may have also wanted to spare it from
being demolished like so many of the ancient sites were at the behest of
missionaries who prohibited hula, surfing, and even the language in schools in
the 1800’s. Perhaps, the gods did not want this structure trampled upon by
disrespectful tourists. Regardless of why it was hidden from time, the people
of Hana cut back lush jungle foliage that threatened to swallow the edifice
fifteen years ago, revealing a monument to a race of industrious, ingenious and
loving people.
Kahanu Garden where the Pi’ilanihale is located is a flat
expanse of green overlooking a tempestuous Pacific Ocean crashing on black lava
cliffs. It was a landing place of early Polynesian settlers bringing plants
they would need to survive. It was chosen by the ancients to be the site of the
Makahiki Festival that ran for four months from November to February. Warring was forbidden as this time of peace
that allowed warriors to practice skills with contests and games. Elders played
Konana, a form of checkers, and talked story while children frolicked. The tax
collectors came around at this time collecting the bounty of the common people
to be given to the royal class.
Chief Pi’ilani, who
ruled here in the 16th century was beloved by his people for uniting
the warring tribes of Maui and bringing prosperity in his reign. Under his rule the Pi’ilanihale (House of Pi’ilani)
Heiau that began construction in the 1200’s was completed. Rocks from as far
away as Hana Bay, seven miles away, were used to finish the task.
Wandering the grounds that boasts the largest collection of
breadfruit trees in the world, as well as samplings of all of the indigenous
plants brought by early settlers in double-hulled canoes, you can imagine the
joyous village that thrived here under Chief Pi’ilani’s rule. Our guide, Pi’ilani, talked to us about the
many uses of the kukui nut used to keep the fires burning at night. She said
the day began in the evening when the work was done and people came to share
what they had gathered that day in their fish nets, in their taro gardens, and
fruits from the mountain trees.
Linda, Lorraine, and Pi'ilani |
Pi’ilani generously
answered all of my questions about the realities of the people of old. At the
end of our tour she told me she wanted to empower me with the gift of her knowledge.
Instead of correcting or judging my tale of her ancestry in my novel Wai-nani, A Voice from Old Hawai’i,
she told me that she understood that my work was built on what I knew. She said
that she would be happy to add her knowledge, as it was handed down to her, to
my pool of understanding. We held hands while as she invited us to join her in
a chant to the gods who reside at Pi’ilanihale and give thanks for the bounty
of the Kahanu Garden, a gift to all who find their way there.A big mahalo to my friend Lorraine Brodek, author of Nobody in a Somebody who resides in
Hana, for making this very special tour possible for me.
Linda Ballou is the author of Wai-nani: A Voice from Old Hawai'i, Lost Angel Walkabout-One Traveler's Tales and The Cowgirl Jumped Over the Moon. www.lindaballouauthor.com
Linda Ballou is the author of Wai-nani: A Voice from Old Hawai'i, Lost Angel Walkabout-One Traveler's Tales and The Cowgirl Jumped Over the Moon. www.lindaballouauthor.com
Monday, August 29, 2016
Living Spiritual Temple-Mo'o'kini Heiau
Mo’okini Heiau sits
high on a knoll and enjoys a panoramic view of the Upolu Point of Kohala and
the distant shores of Maui . It stands in the
center of a once-royal complex that was a vital center of sacred and secular
power. It is one of the first luakini heiau (temple of human sacrifice) built
by the Tahitian Priest Paao in the 12th century. Legend has it that
it was the site of countless thousands of human sacrifices to the gods. The current site includes remains of the
sacrificial temple measuring 250' x 130' with an open stone paved court
enclosed by 20-foot-high stone walls and the sacrificial stone. According to
oral tradition it was built in one night by
15-20,000 men passing stones to one another from the Niuli’i, nine miles away.
The Tahitians believed that there was not enough respect on
the part of resident Hawaiians for the gods, and they set out to strengthen the
kapu system by building this temple and enforcing the strict laws of the land
(kapu). Paao summoned the warrior chief Pili who brought stones from one of the
most sacred sacrificial temples in Tahiti and
placed the bodies of fresh victims beneath these stones used as pillars to
consecrate Mo’okini Heiau. Mu, or body catchers, collected the humans to be
sacrificed. These were most often conquered warriors or members of the slave class.
Women and children were generally spared. The bodies of the victims were then
baked and the flesh removed from the bones. The bones were used for fish hooks
or parts for weapons.
The oldest, largest, and most sacred heiau in old Hawaii is all that
remains of the royal Kohala complex dismantled by sugar plantation owners in
the 19th century. To
Hawaiians it is a living spiritual temple and not a cultural artifact.
It was long held to be strictly kapu to visit, but In
November of 1978 Kahuna Nui Leimomi Mo'okini Lum rededicated the Mo'okini
Luakini to the "Children of the Land" and lifted the restrictive
Kapu. In doing this she made it safe for all persons to enter the Heiau and
created a new legacy for the Mo'okini Luakini as a place of learning for future
generations to discover the past. Kahuna Nui Lum followed closely the wishes of
her father Kahuna Nui Dewey O. Mo'okini who visualized this sacred site as one
for the children of Hawai'i and the entire world.
Take Highway 270 north from
Kawaihae. Near Mile Marker #20 turn left at the sign to
Research for Wai-nani, A Voice from Old Hawai’i
became a beautiful obsession that called for numerous trips to the Islands. I
visited sacred sites, interviewed elders, spent nights in Waipio Valley where
the bones of ancient chiefs are hidden in caves in steep walls framing the
canyon. .www.lindaballouauthor.com
|
Friday, August 5, 2016
Spotting Spouts on Dana Wharf Whale Watching Adventure
Dana Pride-Dana Wharf Whale Watch |
For a day beneath tender blue skies with a teasing sea
breeze rippling aquamarine waters head to Dana Point Wharf for a whale watching adventure!!
It felt wonderful to leave the smoke-smudged skies from recent fires
behind and to breathe deeply of unsullied air. We motored through the harbor past the
breakwater to a deep channel where “Red”, a humpback whale, has been feeding
for that last couple of weeks.e |
Whale Salute-Eric Frigger |
Common Dolphin- Dana Wharf Whale Watch |
The giant blue whales run in July, but we were not lucky
enough to catch sight of one. The Gray whales are seen in numbers in the winter
months when they are migrating from the icy waters of Alaska to Magdalena Bay in Baja California where they give birth to their young. Common dolphin sightings are consistent
all year round. Sea lions and sea faring birds are often seen on the cruise. Your Captain shares information about the creatures you see as you patrol the shimmering blue water in search of marine life..
Sea Lions-Eric Frigger |
There is a galley on board if you need a burger and a
libation during your voyage. Back on shore Proud Mary’s with open patio seating
overlooking the sparkling bay offers breakfast, lunch and dinner.
Capt. Bringing us back to Dana Pt. Marina |
Sailings on the “Pride of Dana”, a luxurious catamaran with
viewing decks above and enclosed dining area below, go daily from dock #1 located in the Dana Point Marina. There is plenty of free parking in the marina.
During the week the crowds are light even in the heaviest tourist season. What
better way to beat the heat of the long, dog days of summer?
Linda cruising on the Dana Pride |
Based in Los Angeles, Adventure-travel writer, Linda Ballou, is the author of Lost Angel Walkabout-
One Traveler's Tales. Find travel articles on her site www.LindaBallouAuthor.com
Sunday, July 24, 2016
GOOD NEWS FROM THE INDIE BOOK STORE FRONT!!
GOOD NEWS FROM THE INDIE BOOK STORE FRONT!!
With so many independent book stores biting the dust, it was very exciting to learn about
the Diesel Book Store that is alive and well in Brentwood. The store is buzzing with customers eager to find their next good read. Manager Lynn, keeps displays revolving and shelfs refreshed with the newest best sellers. Super supportive of local authors like myself, she was eager to put all three of my books on display. It is great to see such enthusiam for print books. I have a kindle and it is fine for travel, but I love holding a book in my hand.
Wai-nani sits prominently on the GIRLS, GIRLS, GIRLS table dedicated to female protagonists and memorbable women in history. Wai-nani, inspired by the life Ka'hahumanu who rose to become the most powerful woman in old Hawai'i deserves a seat at this table.
I am so proud that my travel collection, Lost Angel Walkabout, just got a ringing endorsement from Julie Rosendo, Producer of the Emmy Award Winning PBS show Travel Scope hosted by her husband Joseph Rosendo. Makes my heart sing to get recognition from these top professionals in the travel world.
The Cowgirl Jumped Over the Moon received recognition in the 2015 Indie Excellence Awards. Horses, Romance and Adventure! " Who could ask for more from a book?" says publisher Jacqui Broderick who lives in Ireland AKA horse heaven.
The Brentwood Country Mart at 225 26th St in Santa Monica is a great place for lunch on the patio where ocean breezes keep it cool all year round. Many gourmet choices along with baskets of chicken and ribs make this a great place to feed body and soul.
With so many independent book stores biting the dust, it was very exciting to learn about
the Diesel Book Store that is alive and well in Brentwood. The store is buzzing with customers eager to find their next good read. Manager Lynn, keeps displays revolving and shelfs refreshed with the newest best sellers. Super supportive of local authors like myself, she was eager to put all three of my books on display. It is great to see such enthusiam for print books. I have a kindle and it is fine for travel, but I love holding a book in my hand.
Wai-nani sits prominently on the GIRLS, GIRLS, GIRLS table dedicated to female protagonists and memorbable women in history. Wai-nani, inspired by the life Ka'hahumanu who rose to become the most powerful woman in old Hawai'i deserves a seat at this table.
Lost Angel -Great Summer Read |
I am so proud that my travel collection, Lost Angel Walkabout, just got a ringing endorsement from Julie Rosendo, Producer of the Emmy Award Winning PBS show Travel Scope hosted by her husband Joseph Rosendo. Makes my heart sing to get recognition from these top professionals in the travel world.
The Cowgirl Jumped Over the Moon received recognition in the 2015 Indie Excellence Awards. Horses, Romance and Adventure! " Who could ask for more from a book?" says publisher Jacqui Broderick who lives in Ireland AKA horse heaven.
The Brentwood Country Mart at 225 26th St in Santa Monica is a great place for lunch on the patio where ocean breezes keep it cool all year round. Many gourmet choices along with baskets of chicken and ribs make this a great place to feed body and soul.
Adventure-travel writer, Linda
Ballou, a host of travel articles on her site, along with information about her
travel memoir, Lost Angel Walkabout-One
Traveler’s Tales, her historical novel
Wai-nani, A Voice from Old Hawai’i and her latest action-adventure novel The Cowgirl Jumped over the Moon at-www.LindaBallouAuthor.com.
Subscribe to her blog
www.LindaBallouTalkingtoyou.com and receive updates on her books, and travel
destinations.
Monday, July 11, 2016
Botswana: Poster Child for Wildlife Conservation
Lunch with a bachelor herd of ellies |
It’s late May in Chobe National
Park, Africa’s third largest wildlife preserve, and creatures great and small
are fat and sassy. Tall golden grasses are plentiful. They are the favorite of
the many herds of massive elephants and a host of antelope along with Cape
buffalo, zebra, and more. The sable with its handsome striped face, the kudu
with its elegant curled horns, and the seemingly thousands of impala all glow
with good health. They look at us in our open-air, tiered safari vehicle with
curious eyes as we trundle along sand tracks.
Saddle-backed crane-Tom Schwab photo |
The animals show off their young this time of
year. Month-old elephants hide beneath mother’s belly while the big-eared
offspring of the baboon ride on their mother’s back. The proud father of young
impala herds his harem away from us as they kick their heels high in the air
practicing getaways from predators. A parade of gray giants cross our path to
reach the clear waters of Chobe where they linger in the green grasses. After a
night’s hunt, a husky, black-colored male leads a pride of fourteen lions to
shade where they will sprawl for the day.
It is winter and the temperatures
are mild with a warming sun shining brightly in cerulean blue skies. Bush
willow glows golden and the mopane trees are still dressed in fall colors of
yellow and orange. This perfect safari day began with a chill that crept into
my luxurious tent home in the wee hours. I awoke to a herd of water buffalo just
outside my door tramping through the camp and sounding like an army on the
march. The drumming of our escort guide at 5:30 AM signaled time to rise.
Dawn on the Chobe River |
Like all four of the bush camps on
the journey with Overseas Adventure Travel in Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Zambia,
communal meals are enjoyed buffet style in the main lodge.
Main Lodge Baobab Camp |
Meals in the camps are a healthful
mix of fresh vegetable salads prepared in creative ways. Fare included fish in
a tasty curry sauce with rice, tender beef stew with roasted potatoes, and lemon
chicken with fresh fruit and cheeses for dessert. We are offered tea on our
drives, cool wash cloths upon our return, and a welcome from the staff who do
all they can to ensure we are treated like royalty.
A short flight took us to the Okavango
Delta, a 6,000-square mile mosaic of open savannah, flowing rivers, floodplains,
and lagoons. The Banoka camp overlooks a champagne colored meadow where all
manner of wildlife from elephants to hippos, to the endangered wattle crane busy
spearing frogs, to vultures riding high on thermals enjoy their freedom.
Me and Cowboy |
Sisters taking a snooze |
We left the cats to their naps and
set out to explore more of nature’s most splendid creatures. We spotted
waterbuck with their distinctive toilet seat markings, and red lechwe antelope
with sweet brown eyes. A cruise through the flood plain cut through by a
meandering river garnered sightings of two lethargic crocodile sunning on the
shore and a monitor lizard slipping into the drink. A couple of secretary birds
strolled by and an elegant grey crowned crane poked in the grasses. The
ubiquitous hornbill birds lifted at our approach.
Hornbill-Tom Schwab photo |
Independent from Britain since 1966,
democratic and prosperous Botswana has a population of some two million people
who reside mainly in the northern sections of the country that is not
encroached upon by the Kalahari Desert sprawling over 80 percent of the land.
Good leadership in this land-locked republic provides universal education and
medicine for the people and conservation measures for the last remaining wild
herds of elephants, buffalo, zebras and more, along with 400 species of birds.
The flag of Botswana has black and white lines in the middle of tender blue—the
color of the pollution-free skies. It speaks of the good relations between
races.
The zebra with its bold markings is their symbol of unique pride and
unity. Botswana stands as a model for other African countries trying to
re-establish themselves after declaring independence from colonial powers in
the 1960s.
Note: This is a first in a series of articles
detailing the Ultimate Safari experience with Overseas Adventure Travel, aka
OATS, in the countries of Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Zambia. There is simply too
much ground to cover in one article. First published in National Association of Baby Boomer Women.
Monday, June 13, 2016
Snapshot of the Ultimate Safari
Ellies in Chobe Nat. Park Botswana |
My articles take time, so I am sharing this snapshot of my African adventure to provide instant gratification for curious minds that need to know
more about this epic journey through the last of Africa’s truly wild places.
Giraffes in Chobe River |
Day on the river Zambia |
We stayed three nights at each at four wonderful wilderness
camps where we were treated like royalty. Glamping at its best!!
It is the hallmark of Overseas Adventure Travel to
incorporate cultural tours into their trips. We stopped at a couple of local
markets, broke bread with a family in a village, danced with ladies who make
baskets for a living, and visited a school of 800 children eager to practice
their English.
Sundowner in Botswana |
The trip involves several flights in small planes and some
tricky border crossings. Ask for Abiot Azuze to be your trip leader to ensure a
seamless journey filled with wonderful surprises. Go the Oats website to see
videos and learn more about this fantastic adventure.
My home on the river in Zambia |
Saturday, May 7, 2016
Exploring the Wonders of Africa
Botswana Safari Companion: Photo Safari Companion by Alain Pons
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Enjoy all the great shots you won’t get because you don’t have the patience or opportunity to capture the light on the animals of Botswana. Thanks to these experts who do provide directions on how to get those lovely images you don’t have to. They take you to Okavango Delta, heralded as one of most fantastic wildlife sanctuaries in the world, and the Chobe reserve where herds of elephants line up at watering holes. This little book provides a good overview of what to expect in Botswana a country that limits the amount of tourists and tour companies to operate in its borders. It has whet my wanderlust and made me even more eager to explore the wonders of Africa.Lost Angel Walkabout: One Traveler's Tales
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Enjoy all the great shots you won’t get because you don’t have the patience or opportunity to capture the light on the animals of Botswana. Thanks to these experts who do provide directions on how to get those lovely images you don’t have to. They take you to Okavango Delta, heralded as one of most fantastic wildlife sanctuaries in the world, and the Chobe reserve where herds of elephants line up at watering holes. This little book provides a good overview of what to expect in Botswana a country that limits the amount of tourists and tour companies to operate in its borders. It has whet my wanderlust and made me even more eager to explore the wonders of Africa.Lost Angel Walkabout: One Traveler's Tales
View all my reviews
Monday, May 2, 2016
Coming Full Circle with Riding Star Susan Hutchison
As promised here is my interview with riding Super Star
Susan Hutchison. She is the rider I had in my mind’s eye while writing the Grand Prix jumping scenes in the The
Cowgirl Jumped Over the Moon. Susie melds with her mounts and flows with
their movement giving them the freedom to enjoy what they are doing and to win.
I saw her ride Samsung Woodstock the horse who took her to the World Equestrian
Games in 1994. She is still going strong and was inducted into the Jumper Hall
of Fame in 2015. I am proud to have my conversation with Susie featured in The
California Riding Magazine.
ASusie Hutchison. Photo: Wendy Gleason / Malibu5StarNaturals.com |
It is very gratifying to see my book listed with two other
great reads in the book review section of the California Riding Magazine.
Writing the story has brought me full circle and back into the horse world in ways
I could never have imagined. I wrote the story standing up at my breakfast bar.
It took my mind off the extreme sciatica I was experiencing due to an injury to
my back that forced me to give up riding. My protagonist has an accident on
course that forces her to re-think her life and determine if the riding world is
worth the sacrifice and discipline necessary to be a winner.
“Linda
Ballou captures the energy, excitement and adrenalin rush of the Grand Prix
jumping world that has kept me in the game all these years.” Susan Hutchison
Adventure-travel writer, Linda Ballou, shares Great Outdoor
days in L.A, as well as a host of travel articles on her site, along with
information about her travel memoir, Lost
Angel Walkabout-One Traveler’s Tales, her historical novel Wai-nani, A Voice from Old Hawai’i and
her latest action-adventure novel The
Cowgirl Jumped over the Moon available on Amazon or www.lindaballouauthorcom
Monday, April 25, 2016
Early years in Kenya
Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfulness by Alexandra Fuller
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
What a wonderful find. Alexandra Fuller captures the seduction of the African sun and burning landscape. The vast spaces that set the mind sailing seduced her parents and made them stay against great adversity. They lived in Kenya when British Colonists spent their days in royal comfort, but those days ended with a revolution and war in the 60’s. Ms. Fuller masterfully weaves the very personal history of her dramatic childhood and the life of her stiff upper lip parents against the backdrop of a tumultuous time. Her parents chose to remain in Africa after their lands were seized and to set up housekeeping in remote Zambia where they found peace under the” Tree of Forgetfullness”. I have ordered the third book in the trilogy of Ms. Fuller’s stunning memoir.
View all my reviews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
What a wonderful find. Alexandra Fuller captures the seduction of the African sun and burning landscape. The vast spaces that set the mind sailing seduced her parents and made them stay against great adversity. They lived in Kenya when British Colonists spent their days in royal comfort, but those days ended with a revolution and war in the 60’s. Ms. Fuller masterfully weaves the very personal history of her dramatic childhood and the life of her stiff upper lip parents against the backdrop of a tumultuous time. Her parents chose to remain in Africa after their lands were seized and to set up housekeeping in remote Zambia where they found peace under the” Tree of Forgetfullness”. I have ordered the third book in the trilogy of Ms. Fuller’s stunning memoir.
View all my reviews
Leaving Before the Rains Come by Alexandra Fuller
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I bought this book in anticipation of my up coming trip to Zambia. I read Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfulness, the second in Fuller’s memoir trilogy and was excited to carry on with Alexandra’s life in Africa. She painted an exotic, chaotic portrait of her parents living in Kenya and Zambia in the second book, and I couldn’t wait to get to the next chapter. In this book she acknowledges that her glamorous, amorous parents enjoyed the blissful comradery that comes when both parties are alcoholics. Their boozy parties with dancing on the table seemed less appealing to Fuller after living 16 years in Wyoming with the modern cowboy she married. Her husband was a rafting guide on the Zambezi River when they met. Pretty hunkie if you ask me, but that is not the point. The point seems to be that she and he were not compatible even though they loved each deeply. Fuller is a brilliant writer and an honest to the bone memoirist. There is nothing saccharine or banal in her reflections on her life in Kenya and Zambia while they were going through wars declaring their independence from colonial British dominance. However, I noticed the cover image on this book is of her looking away as though she still has trouble facing the truths in her life. Her mother often told her not to write any of her “awful” books about them. I was sad in the end, not because of her story, but because of Zambia’s story. In the 1990’s it was home to vast herds of elephants, giraffes, antelopes, and rhinos and cheetah. I do hope I will find the remnant of what remains of the wild animals, less than tragic and on the rebound. I hope African’s can contain the poaching that persists in the wildlife preserves in Zambia. As for Ms. Fuller, I am sure her brilliance will shine in many novels to come now that she is free of living with the conflict that comes with marriage to the wrong person.Lost Angel Walkabout: One Traveler's Tales
View all my reviews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I bought this book in anticipation of my up coming trip to Zambia. I read Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfulness, the second in Fuller’s memoir trilogy and was excited to carry on with Alexandra’s life in Africa. She painted an exotic, chaotic portrait of her parents living in Kenya and Zambia in the second book, and I couldn’t wait to get to the next chapter. In this book she acknowledges that her glamorous, amorous parents enjoyed the blissful comradery that comes when both parties are alcoholics. Their boozy parties with dancing on the table seemed less appealing to Fuller after living 16 years in Wyoming with the modern cowboy she married. Her husband was a rafting guide on the Zambezi River when they met. Pretty hunkie if you ask me, but that is not the point. The point seems to be that she and he were not compatible even though they loved each deeply. Fuller is a brilliant writer and an honest to the bone memoirist. There is nothing saccharine or banal in her reflections on her life in Kenya and Zambia while they were going through wars declaring their independence from colonial British dominance. However, I noticed the cover image on this book is of her looking away as though she still has trouble facing the truths in her life. Her mother often told her not to write any of her “awful” books about them. I was sad in the end, not because of her story, but because of Zambia’s story. In the 1990’s it was home to vast herds of elephants, giraffes, antelopes, and rhinos and cheetah. I do hope I will find the remnant of what remains of the wild animals, less than tragic and on the rebound. I hope African’s can contain the poaching that persists in the wildlife preserves in Zambia. As for Ms. Fuller, I am sure her brilliance will shine in many novels to come now that she is free of living with the conflict that comes with marriage to the wrong person.Lost Angel Walkabout: One Traveler's Tales
View all my reviews
Thursday, April 21, 2016
Make Earth Day-Every Day
My stated mission is to get to as many beautiful places as I
can before they are gone!
This would include witnessing the wildlife that is
quickly moving towards extinction as a result of exploding human populations. With
so much negative news on the wildlife in Africa conservation front, I was
getting depressed and afraid that I am already too late. But, Nova delivered a
very heartening documentary about plans in North American and in Africa to
create wildlife corridors that will enable mega fauna to traverse migration
routes and to thrive once more.
It was especially
exciting to learn that in the regions I am exploring in May 2016 on my UltimateSafari with Overseas Adventure Travel is are part of the KAZA area. The KAZA
TFCA is an initiative of the Governments of Angola, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia
and Zimbabwe. It is situated in the Okavango and Zambezi river basins where the
borders of the five countries converge.
This video shows how the five countries have come together
to solve the problems of shrinking habitat and hideous poaching that crosses
international borders.
This model is a powerful message for all the world
demonstrating how countries can join hands for the greater good of all. It gives me hope that it is not too late for
human beings to reverse the trends that have been so destructive to the
creatures that make up our beautiful world.
On my journey I will looking for signs that this treaty
between countries is having a positive impact on animal and human populations.
Full report when I return.
Linda Ballou is the author of Lost Angel Walkabout-One Traveler's Tales. See more of her articles at www.LindaBallouAuthor.com
Thursday, February 25, 2016
Romance. Adventure. Horses - what more could anyone want in a book?
Review: by Jacqui Broderick of Lavender & White Publishing
Gemcie McCauley seems to have everything. She is
a rider at the top of her game, making an unbeatable team with Marshal, a
handsome Irish bred stallion, until an horrific accident changes everything.
Fighting back from a dreadful injury she finds
she has lost not only her nerve, but also her horse and husband to her arch
rival, Domanique La Fevre. Reeling from the cruel blows Gemcie returns to her mother's home where she tries to pick up the threads of some kind of life and recover from her mental and physical injuries. Unable to settle to any kind of life Gemcie heads back to her roots and the mountains where she was conceived. Struck by the beauty of the wilderness and longing, for once in her life to be totally alone she feels drawn to life on the trail and persuades her hosts to let her ride the John Muir trail.
When a black bear attacks and injures her horse she is rescued by Brady, a loner who lives in the mountains, working for the Bureau of Land Management. On a journey of discovery about herself Gemcie finds herself falling in love with this tough, yet gentle man.
Brady though is not without his own problems and after he is forced to kill the bear that attacked Gemcie he abruptly ends their relationship, sending Gemcie back to civilisation. I was as devastated as Gemcie – their relationship seems to be so perfect.
During her time in the mountains Gemcie has learned a lot about herself and is determined to get her beloved horse back. Domenique has never got on with Marshal and after badly injuring him in a competition it looks as if his career is over.
Gemcie, with a team of supporters nurse the horse back to health then begin the impossible and fight to get her riding confidence back in order to be able to pay huge vet and livery bills. She has to ride – and win – in order to be able to keep him.
This is a well written book, Ballou brings her characters and backgrounds to life in often tear jerking detail. Gemcie is likeable, readers will both empathise and sympathise with the situations she finds herself in. Ballou uses her text well, describing both the worlds of the wilderness and horse shows with convincing detail
Readers cannot help but love this book. I was gripped from the first to the last page where Ballou brought all of the strings of her remarkable story to a hugely satisfying conclusion.
by Jacqui Broderick of Lavender & White Publishing
Purchase on Amazon or on Linda's site and receive free shipping
Adventure-travel writer, Linda
Ballou, shares Great Outdoor days in L.A, as well as a host of travel articles
on her site, along with information about her travel memoir, Lost Angel Walkabout-One Traveler’s Tales,
her historical novel Wai-nani, A Voice
from Old Hawai’i and her latest action-adventure novel The Cowgirl Jumped over the Moon at-www.LindaBallouAuthor.com.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)