Eastern Trip Emails

Newest Emails at Top

Western Trip Emails

Newest Emails at Top

3/5/09

n the past we used to allow people to bring musical instruments like guitars. What we found was that most of the kids were interested for a short while, then were irritated by having to listen to one person's music.  To make everyone happy we have limited kids to bring their own music devices (like Ipods, MP3 players) and their own music.  We have many cultures on the trip and they all have different musical taste.  We have found that many students get really mad when being forced to listen to music they don't like.  So because of this we don't allow students to bring guitars, mandolins, or other portable musical instruments.   Bring splitters so you can share your music with your seat mate. 

We ask that you don't bring your Rotary Jackets.  There really is no place to wear them and I would hate it if someone lost their jacket or the pins on their jackets.   Dress on the trip is very casual and there is no reason to get dressed up.  Some students like to get dressed up in cities like New York or Boston but it isn't necessary.   Just remember it may be wet, cold and windy so bring warm clothes.  Last year we had a day in Boston where it was -15 C wind chill in Boston.  It was COOOOOLLLLLDDDD>  In New York it rained both days we were there.

Make sure when you arrive on March 20 to wear a Rotary T-Shirt or some other identifying Rotary Exchange Student device.   Look for a chaperone holding a sign at the airport if you are flying in.

The best thing about this trip is that we make friends (both chaperones and students) who become very important to us.  Make sure you have your business cards with up-to-date contact information to exchange.  Jackie and I have made wonderful friends who are very dear to us on these trips and so will you. I talk to these friends all the time and keep in contact.  If you have facebook make sure you get connected with the other kids on the trip.   Try to find the kids you are rooming with on Facebook so you can share information.  Maybe you can share hairdryers or other items.

Chaperone Hijinks - Last year on the Eastern Trip in New York, the chaperones found the best Cup Cakes in the world (Magnolia Bakery on Beeker Street in Greenwich Village).  We also found a wonderful pizzeria which has been popular with the cast of "The Sopranos" in Little Italy.  In Boston last year the chaperones found the "No Name" restaurant in Boston's Commercial pier.  It may be the best and freshest sea food in the world.
 

3/3/09

ey everyone!
Today you have the extreme privilege of getting a trip email from me, group leader Jackie! Can you believe the trip is almost here?? It will be here before you know it. In this email I will talk about what to expect on the bus, when to trade pins and cards, cameras, and flight information.

One thing to keep in mind for this trip is that you will get tired easily because we are constantly doing something and we wake you up nice and early everyday. We will also be driving... a lot. The combination of both things will make you want to sleep on the bus. We don't mind that you sleep, but we do ask that you stay awake during our tours of the cities and when the chaperones and Bill make announcements. We don't like repeating ourselves so make sure you listen when we make the announcements. The first day of the trip the chaperones and Bill will be making many that are very important, like the bus safety rules, so make sure to pay attention. Also, be nice to our bus drivers. They are working very hard for us so when they tell you the rules of the bus, please follow them.   

During the trip you will make many new friends and will want to trade cards and pins. We will plan a day where you can do this near the end of the trip. Make sure you bring as many cards and pins as you can, some students end up not having enough.

Another thing to keep in mind is how many photos you will be taking. Definitely bring a camera if you have one. You will get some amazing photos of the places we will be visiting and some great group photos. When we do get everyone together for group photos, Bill and I will take the picture with our cameras and post them to facebook or the trip website. If you try to hand us your camera to take the photo, we will say no. The reason for this is because we don't have enough hands or time to take photos with everyone's camera. It's just easier, plus I'm sure your face will start to hurt from smiling for too long if we took the photo with so many cameras. If you have a large memory card for your camera, bring it with you.

Lastly, Bill has updated the flight information on the trip website: http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/Roteast09flights.htm
If you have any questions about the information, please let us know. We need to have everything finalized soon since the trip is almost 2 weeks away. Also, make sure you are checking the website for any changes. There is also a packing list on the site if you need help deciding what to bring.

Chaperone Fact: Everyone in the group of chaperones (Bill also) can be considered "weird" in their own ways. Bill likes to create nicknames for people and tell bad jokes. Rachelle is what we call "unique" but that's why we love her. I am labeled as a dork by my brother and most of my friends. Joe is addicted to Mafia Wars on facebook.

Most of the chaperones have either a myspace or a facebook account. Try to find us, we love to get to know you before the trips.
Can't wait to meet you all! See you in a few weeks!

-Jackie-

2/27/09

We really need you to check to make sure your payments are in. Please check the web site http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/roteastowes.htm  to make sure your name isn't on them.

One thing you'll find on the trip is that we get up and leave early so we don't miss anything.  If you have problems getting up take an alarm clock with you.

If you are flying email me your flight schedule is you haven't already.  We will finalize all the flights Monday morning.

Team leaders are pretty much selected.  If you want to be a team leader you can still come to the meetings (which are every other night). 

Rooming list is final, fine, done, carved in stone, completed.

If you have a friend who wants to go on the trip please have them contact me as soon as possible.  They do not have to be in an Ohio-Erie Rotary Club. They can be anywhere in the USA or Canada or the Bahamas.

Trip Fact:  Little Italy was where many of the Italian Immigrants came to the USA.  It is also the center of American Mafia lore.   Washington DC is located in the Southern USAand has always been considered a Southern City.

Chaperone Fact:  Over half our chaperones have been chaperones before and actually like exchange students.

Send me an email telling me about yourself if you haven't already.
 

2/25/09

My children have soundly thrashed me about my spelling and grammar on the emails I send.  I type very fast and sometimes not to accurately.  My mind goes faster than my fingers so forgive me.

We have locked in the rooms on the Eastern Trip and we are NOT going to make any changes so don't ask.  The hotels have what rooms you are in and if we change your rooms it creates a huge administrative mess.  We are also not going to let people move from one bus to another.  Don't even think about changing buses or rooms on your own.  It's not worth the pain.

We have a really  big surprise for you on the trip.  It will be a secret up the time minute we do it.  We are all excited about it.

Every night the chaperones do a room check. During the room check we give you information about what we are going to do the next day and what clothes to wear. It is also a time where you can ask us questions and bring up issues you might have.  Later in the evening we do random room checks to make sure you are safe and snug in your beds/   In most of the cities on the Eastern Trip I would not go out of your rooms after 10 pm.  Firstly you will get into trouble with the chaperones and miss the next day's events.  Secondly, although we have nice safe hotels, there occasionally are bad people in the hotels.  A couple of years ago in one hotel there were some drunken construction workers in the hotel and I didn't feel to safe and I'm a big strong guy. 

There are some simple rules in the hotels. 
 
  • DON'T RUN OR MAKE LOUD NOISES IN THE HALLS, EVER!!!!
  • Don't play ball in the parking lots of the hotels.. any type of ball game. (broken car mirrors and windshields... it's happened).
  • DON'T SMOKE IN THE ROOMS... it can cost you and your room mates $300 if you are caught by the hotel.  That is what it cost to clean the smoke from the rooms.
  • Remember there are other people in the hotel so keep it quiet in the rooms and in the hallways and lobby.
  • Our hotels love our exchange students usually.  But if we make them mad they will throw us out in the middle of the night.  Very expensive for everyone as you have to buy another hotel room somewhere else.
  • You cannot leave your rooms after 10pm for any reason other than fire.  You don't have to sleep, but you are locked for the night in your rooms until 6:00am. 
     
  • If you violate these rules you will miss the next day's activities.
     

Fun Fact: Baseball Edition - 
 

  • Legend has it that modern baseball was invented by Abner Doubleday, who later became a famed Civil War General (although not a good one).  Actually baseball in it's basic form was played in the 15th Century in England.  
  • The first professional team was the Cincinnati Red Stockings, now known as the Reds.  
  • In 1919, famed gambler Hyman Rothstein paid 8 players on the Chicago White Sox to rig the World Series, which they did.  The players were caught and thrown out of baseball. 
  • In 1947 Jackie Robinson became the first African American to play in the major leagues.  He had been an all-star football player at the University of South California. 
     
  • Japan and Mexico are more baseball mad than the USA.  Some of the best Japanese players are now in the major USA Leagues. 
     
  • The Greatest home run hitter is a Japanese player who never played in the USA. 

2/20/09

Today I am sending the rooming list to all the hotels. From this point on I can't change room mates.  I have made a few changes today.  The same is true when it comes to buses.  We can't move you from one bus to another.  I am asked every year if people can move around... The answer is no.  It has to do with Bus Counts, not leaving anyone behind and confusion for the chaperones.   We have 82 students on the trip and 9 chaperones.  

Students are from 27 different countries.  The biggest group are the Brazilians (14); followed by the France (10); Germans (9);  Belgium (6);  Mexico (4); Japan, Czech Rep., Finland, Slovakia,  Thailand, and Argentina (3);  and  several countries with only 2 students.   Chaperones are from 2 countries, USA and Germany.   The heritage of the Chaperones is a mixed bag ranging from Philippines, to Germany, to France,  to England, to Redneck Mother. 

Today is less than 30 days from the day the trip leaves.  Wow. Time flies. 

Make sure your friends are getting the emails.  If they aren't it's because it is going into their Junk file.  It's really important they get this information. 

Here is the list of students on the rooming list. Make sure your name is on it.!!!!

 
Pattanachod Angwarawong Thailand
Carolina Autunes Brazil
Daniela Baigorri Argentina
Stephano Ballari Argentina
Eduardo Barbosa  Brazil
Antonio Barrera Mexico
Yasmine Bastug Switzerland
Lena Bechtolsheim Germany
Cynthia Biardeau France
Petra Cabadajova Czech Rep.
Mauricio Calatayud Diez Mexico
Milos Chabada Slovakia
Simon Charrade France
Ana Karina Chavez Mexico
Lucas Felipe da Cunha Brazil
Ambre Denis France
Laurianne Deriu France 
Victorien Dewuite France
Gulin Dogan Turkey
Nicole  Elias Brazil
Mareike Ellerhoff Germany
Phillipe Fournier-Murphy France
Lena Frenzer Germany
Dagur Fridriksson Iceland
Annella Fullard Australia
Midori Furuta  Japan
Arnaud Gathoye Belgium
Caroline Grisard Belgium
Mateusz Gugalka Poland
Elise Haterte Belgium
Bastian Havers Germany
Thea Hoffmann Germany
Kaisa Honkala Finland
David Jimenez-Torres Spain
Gulmira Kadyrova Kyrgyzstan
Hiroki Kato Japan
Ingrid Kihlanki Sweden
Fanni Killioniemi Finland
Cosima Klause Germany
Dominik Krause Germany
Hyemin Lee South Korea
Thibault Lefebvre France
Daniel  Leon Ecuador
Glaucia Lie Terasaka Brazil
Yuhan "Bonnie" Lin Taiwan
Linus Ljungblom Sweden
Julia Maciel Brazil
Dharmesh Madnani India
Egberto Maraes Spricigo Brazil
Jose Gabriel Mendoza Trapaga Mexico
Maria Danela Moreno Venezuela
Lyudmyla Morhun-le Ukraine
Desiree Mueller Germany
Sarah Namont France
Eduard Navara Czech Republic
Hyung-Taek Oh South Korea
Natsumi Okada Japan
Tiago Oliviera Brazil
Marketa  Ondrova Czech Republic
Derin Su Onur Turkey
Raghuram Prasad-Mullapudi India
Pat-in Promsawadi Thailand
Sina "Franzi" Raasch Germany
Alvaro Regonato Brazil
Esteban Rodriguez Argentina
Verena Rossman Austria
Raginhild Rostad Norway
Justine Rotthier Belgium
Elina Saarnio Finland
Ivana Sabakova Slovakia
Laurianne Saison France
Jakkapong  Saksrisuwan Thailand
Luciana Sales Brazil
Theodore  Schoenke France
Julia Silva Brazil
Mariana Silveira Brazil
Cyril Suter Switzerland
Christophe Tallon Belgium
Angel Uchiyama Brazil
Matus Velicky Slovakia
Catherine Wouters Belgium
Eduardo Zanella Brazil

 

2/18/09

We have really worked on our web site and it's got answers to most of your questions.  Check out  http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/roteast09.htm and look at the links. 

We have added a new web page for those of you who are flying.  I have tried to put all your flight schedules on line.  If you are flying and your name isn't on this web page please contact me as soon as possible. If you have done your own airfare please email me the itinerary. The Web Page is http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/Roteast09flights.htm

There is a good chance if you aren't reading these emails or checking the web site that you might miss the trip or find out a couple of days before the trip that you don't have a way here.  

Other pages you should be checking include the rooming list.  It is found on http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/roteastpixrooming09.htm.  This will be finalized and unchangeable by this Friday.

We have a list of hotels with their phone numbers and addresses (with a picture) at http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/roteast09hotels.htm

We have a handy packing guide you can use at http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/rotpacking.htm

We answer a lot of questions on the FAQ (Frequently asked Questions) page. http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/FAQ.htm

If you are driving look for this web page. http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/roteast%20pickupdropoffinstruction.htm.  Students from Cleveland and Northern Ohio can be picked up enroute near Richfield Ohio.  This has a map.  Other students will be picked up at the airport in Columbus at the Baymont Inn Hotel. There is a map to that there. 

MONEY
We need your money for the trip.  You are not on the trip until you are paid in full. Who owes money is found at  the web site http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/roteastowes.htm


2/17/09

We are staying in some big city areas and there are dangers to look out for.  The chaperones a couple of years ago came across some bad characters in one of the hotels.  We told the kids to stay in their rooms and not hang out in the lobbies or hall ways.   Listen to the Chaperones, we have seen it all.  

Our hotels are all pretty nice and are perfect for our type of trip.  They do have rules for student groups.  All students have to be in there rooms and quiet after 10:00 pm.  You can't leave your room.  The main reason for this is your safety.  The 2nd reason is that if you are noisy (and slamming doors are noisy) the hotel can kick us out of the hotel.  This means that you will get to sleep  while standing up in a cold parking lot.  The bus drivers won't open the bus.  Your chaperones will be rather angry.

 We like our hotels and have stayed in all of them before.  Don't mess it up for us.  We want to use these hotels again.

Photo  Tips:
 

  • Make sure that you are in all your pictures. 

  • If you have a time/date stamp on your camera use it.   

  • Lower your resolution (you can take more pictures)

  • Get a bigger SD (memory) Card (Most kids take 500-700 pictures.

  • Jackie takes amazing group pictures which you will be able to download

  • We will take lots of group shots (make sure you are in all of them)

  • Keep you camera on a neck strap or wrist strap. Don't drop your camera.

  • Have your friends take lots of pictures of you (in case you lose or break your camera)

  • Don't use your flash in the bus (Turn it off because it's dangerous)

  • Use your flash outside on cloudy days.

I hate flip flops because someone is always stubbing their toe or freezing from cold feet. March is not the weather to wear flip flops.  Wear solid comfortable sneakers, cross-trainers or running shoes.

Chaperone Fact: - Bill McMurray has an uncle who rescues sick monkeys.  Jackie Favrets family owns a heating and air conditioning families.  Rachelle Speth and Jackie Favret were in a Color Guard team together.  Larry Jenkins has marched in four Indianapolis 500s as part of the Purdue University Band.  Sema Akgun Thimmes was a counselor for International Students at her University. 

2/12/09

A number of you are driving to Westerville on the 20th March. The best time to arrive is after 1pm and before 6pm.  If you arrive after 6PM you might not find anything to eat.  We are having a pizza party that evening at the Ramada North.  When you arrive go to the chaperone in the lobby who will check you in and give you your room number and key.  If you arrive in the afternoon you are free to take off from the hotel (there aren't many places to go.  Across the main street is a beautiful park, Sharon Woods, which has great walking trails.   Near the hotel there is a Wendy's, KFC, and a Mexican Restaurant if you are hungry. 

If you are flying in, go straight to the Baggage claim area (even if you are carrying your own baggage. There will be someone to meet you and get you a ride to the hotel. That person will have a Rotary Eastern Adventure sign. If your flight is delayed enroute we will give you a phone number to call so we can know when to expect you.

Columbus is the capitol of Ohio and is a very large city (1.8 million). Westerville, where the first night hotel is located is in the Northeast corner of metropolitan Columbus.  It is a nice community of about 70,000 people.  There are two Rotary Clubs in Westerville and about 15 in the greater Columbus area.

Those of you coming from Michigan should check in with Ellen Blauer as she is driving a number of students to Westerville.  Her email is ryeblauer@yahoo.com.

Ask your friends if the are getting these emails.  It's really important for them to read these.  If not tell them to email me. bill@mcmurraytravel.com.

Chaperone Fact:  Sema Thimmes is from Istanbul, Turkey, and was an exchange student 5 years ago in Ohio.  She liked it so much she came back to college and is living here, having married her beloved Josh (whom she met through an outbound exchange student in her school).  Sema has a degree in business. Sema went on the Western Trip as a student and as a chaperone. 

2/10/09

If you are being driven to Columbus for the trip remember that you have to be here on March 20 and be picked up on March 28th. Those who are flying in arrive March 20th also, but don't leave until the morning of March 29th. We are providing hotel rooms for those flying on that last night.

Drop off is at the Ramada North Hotel (see website for map) after 1 pm. Pick up is at the Baymont Suites at Port Columbus Airport (also on the web site). Only Students who are flying will be staying at the Baymont Suites.

If you are flying you should have your flights booked and ticketed by now. If not call Jeanne McMurray at 800-783-2359 Monday through Friday, 12:00 pm to 5:00 pm Eastern Standard Time and get that finalized. Airline tickets cost extra.

If you haven't paid all your money for the trip DO SO. We are finalizing hotels. If you cancel at this time you will lose 25% of the cost of the trip.

There is space on the trip available for friends, but please tell them to hurry.

Trip fact: Many of the buildings in downtown Boston date from the American Revolution in 1775-1783. Boston looked very different in 1775. It was basically an Island with a little causeway connecting it to the mainland. Since then all the shallow harbor has been filled in with debris and has had building built on it. Where we drop you off is the oldest part of the city and is a lot of fun.

2/4/09

You received an email from Allan Forsythe yesterday. He is the chairman of the trip. He is also quite lovable in a strange sort of way.

One reason this trip  works so well is that we want the students to own the trip. To do so we assign a number of you to be team leaders.  Team leaders are like the parliament for students. We ask that you help students who are having problems.  Give out information we give you in meetings and tell me and the chaperones if there are things you or other students do not like, or do like about the trip.  It takes almost no time and is a way to get more involved in the trip.  We meet every two days in my room before 10pm and we exchange ideas to make the trip better.  It has worked great over 10 years and team leaders have actually saved lives of other students.  If you would like to be one let me know.  I have assigned a few students to this already from my district.

I have updated the email web site so you can read all the past emails for the Eastern Trip (and the western trip).  Check out http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/rotemails09.htm and catch up on what I have been raving about.

Check out the pictures on the rooming list web site.  Did you know that young Abraham Lincoln is on the trip, as is an extremely ugly fish, a sumo wrestler in a tutu and a bunch of bananas. 

Next week is Abraham Lincoln's 200th Birthday.  He was president during the American Civil War (1861-65), was our first assassinated president, and came from extremely poor background.  Most people consider him our greatest president.
 

2/3/09

When you get to Washington DC you keep hearing about the Mall.  The mall is not a big shopping center. It's the park which is surrounded by the US Capitol, the Smithsonian Museums, the Washington Monument, Lincoln Memorial and Korean Memorial.  Much of what we are going to visit is surrounds the mall.   The Mall is where the people were gathered during President Obama's inauguration .

The fun part of any trip is the journey are the things you see along the way.  We'll be traveling on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, which is the first major four lane highway in the USA and one of the first two in the world (the Autobahn is about the same age).  Built on an old railroad it travels through some beautiful mountains.  Driving through New Jersey into New York you can see the first gasoline refinery ever built.  Between New York and Boston in Connecticut you can see where the Atomic Submarines were invented and the largest factory of Atomic Submarines in the world.  You will also drive past Yale University in Connecticut. The New York Thurway follows the Erie CanalUpstate New York is some of the most beautiful country in the USA.  Our hotel in New Jersey is a short distance from Giant's Stadium.  Our hotel in Washington is off the campus of the University of Maryland.  Jackie and I will be pointing out places all along the way. 

Make sure you have plenty of memory for your digital camera.  Usually students take between 500 and 750 photos on this trip.  A good idea is to reduce your resolution to 2 or 3 megapixels so you have more room to take picture.   When you take pictures make sure you are in most of your pictures. 

We like to take group pictures and usually Jackie and I will take a master shot which we will upload on the web site which you can download.  We took group pictures last year at the White House, Capitol, Statue of Liberty, Old North Church in Boston and a few other places. 

We are serious about enforcing the 4 Ds and Drinking, Drugs and "Doing It" will get you sent home (you don't have opportunity to drive).  My favorite D is the 5th D, Don't be Dumb (which gets most kids sent home).  Use your brain and don't do anything stupid and you will have the best trip of your life.  Which is our goal.

Jackie Favret is my co-leader on the trip and she has a great deal to do with putting this trip together.  Jackie is a regular volunteer in Youth Exchange and has been active on these trips for 3 years.
 

2/2/09

We are still working on the rooming list. Make sure you look at the website and the following link: http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/roteastpixrooming09.htm so we have you in the right room and your picture isn't hideously ugly.   If you haven't sent me a picture I have found one of my own to represent you. 

Make sure you are set on getting to the tour.  Check with Jeanne at our office 800-783-2359 to get it straight. Jeanne has been working on it.  Email Jeanne directly jeanne@mcmurraytravel.com for particulars and cost. 

Most of you are driving to the tour.  There is a map of where to find the hotel on the web site at link http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/roteast%20pickupdropoffinstruction.htm
That should help a bit.

Tell your friends about the trip. There are still places left. 
 

1/30/09

We have plenty of places left on the Eastern (and the Western Trip) so tell your friends so they can get signed up.  We are running two buses.  The rooming list is linked to the main web site and shows your room mates and what bus/room you are in.  There are pictures.

We have a very tight schedule on the Eastern Trip so you can't be late.  We leave early every morning and spend the entire day touring.  If someone is late we miss things.  So make sure you take something to wake you up every morning like an alarm clock.  When we give you a time to be on the bus make sure you are there at least 5 minutes before that time.  In the past RYE Students have been wonderful in this.

We really do trust exchange students and we do give you a lot of free time to wander on your own in different cities.  There is one ABSOLUTE RULE.  You must stay in groups of 4 or more.  No individuals or couples wondering off.  The reason for this rule is safety.  4 kids traveling together are not a crime target. You also can share the cost of a taxi if you need to.  

In New York we don't want you taking the Subway.  For 4 people taxis are about the same price and more direct and safer.  You don't want to waste your time.  Some of the kids walked all over New York.  One group walked from Wall Street to 59th St., about 10 miles.  You have to be careful crossing the street because New Yorkers will run you over without a thought.  One thing though, you have to stay in groups of 4.  Chaperones are all over and if we catch you alone you get to spend all the free times you have with the chaperones.

If you don't have a group to go with. You can join the chaperones in their explorations.  We go to some very cool places (I love New York) and I know the city very well having lived there for 4 years.  Jackie and the other chaperones really knows the city well.

Chaperone Fact:  Last year the Chaperones visited the Nexus of the Center of the Universe in New York and the best Cup Cake Bakery in the World and ate pizza where the mafia enjoys their pizza.
 

1/27/09

ROOMING: I have been working on rooming list.  I moved people all over the place (and have fixed a few since I put it on line.  LOOK AT IT PEOPLE.  Let me know if you are happy with everything and we can move on.  I do keep people from the same rotary district in the same bus for the most part.

THOSE WHO FLY: Jeanne in our office has been working hard on the flight information.  Please contact her asap (Email is fine at jeanne@mcmurraytravel.com)  She can not book the tickets until she gets your OK on her flight schedule and she gets your credit card.  We take credit cards ONLY on these flights.

THOSE WHO DRIVE: Most of you won't be flying so you need to get to the Ramada Inn North in Westerville Ohio on March 20 after 1:00pm.   Make sure you have worked out the details with your district chair and committee on how you are going to get here. '

We need final payments on this tour.  We are leaving in less that two months. More like 7 weeks from now.  VERY SOON>

Packing:  It can get really cold in March.  Bring gloves, warm clothes in layers and something rainproof.  There is a good packing list on the web site.

This is the 200th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's Birth.  He was President during the American civil war and is often considered our greatest president.  While President he had a son die in the white house, a wife who went insane and he was assassinated just a couple of days after the war ended.  Shot by a famous actor.  It would have been like Brad Pitt shooting the president. John Wilkes Booth was the Brad Pitt of his time.  We will see his amazing monument in the Washington Mall and maybe you can visit the Ford Theater where he was shot.  It's free and amazing.

All the Smithsonian Museums are free admission.

Chaperone Fact: We have two Engineers for chaperones, Rachelle Speth and Larry Jenkins.  We also have a few people who really stink at Math.

1/26/09

ave just finished redoing the Eastern Trip rooming list.  Look and give me you feelings about your room mates.  Tell me what changes you would like to make. We can't make any more changes after February 10.

If any of your friends have not signed up to join the trip please have them contact me. We still have plenty of places to fill.

If you don't see a picture of yourself on the rooming list please send me a picture.  If you don't I will have to put one of my stock pictures of reptiles and movie monsters. I have having places without pictures. 

Please get your final payments to us.  It's important.

Make sure you friends who have arrive mid-year send their applications for the trip as soon as possible. and have them contact me.

Rule Fact:  On three different occasions students have been nearly arrested for playing ball in hotel parking lots.  Because of this we don't allow you to play ball in hotel parking lots. 

1/22/09

First thing we still have 27 places left on the trip so tell your friends about it.  It is a great trip and fun.

If you are flying to meet the trip (so far 28 of your are flying here) please bear with us as we are trying to coordinate everything properly.   Hopefully most of you will be done by Monday.   We want as many of you flying on the same planes as possible.

We have been working on the itinerary and trying to make it better (which we always do). We are planning on visiting the US Capitol Visitors Center.  Unfortunately we can't get a guided tour of the Capitol but the new visitors center is really interesting. 
If you watching the inauguration this pass week, we are going to be all over that area. We are adding more time at the Museum of Immigration on Ellis Island near the Statue of Liberty. Another itinerary chance is a little more time walking around Harvard University's Harvard Yard.  We are also planning on seeing Plymouth Rock, with the first settlers in New England arrived in the new world in 1620.  (The Spanish had been here for 28 years by that time.

We will be shifting rooms around. Please let me know if there is someone else you would like to room with or if you hate your room mate you have now.  Check out  http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/roteastpixrooming09.htm to check who is rooming with whom.  Some rooms on Bus A will be on Bus B and some Bus B rooms will be moved to Bus A.&nb of 4 or more.  We love to see 10 to 20 of you walking around together, but you can't go around by yourself.  If we see you alone you get to spend the rest of the day with the chaperones. How much fun is that? Especially for we chaperones.

Our buses are really nice and have bathrooms on board.  You are allowed one piece of luggage (a squishy duffel is best, a suitcase if you have nothing else), and a backpack or book bag.  You won't have a chance to wash clothes so bring enough clothes for the entire trip.  In your back pack carry your music (ipod etc), snacks, drinks, gloves, hat and scarf, books, pencils, notepad to write down what you are seeing, digital camera and make up. Use your backpack like a purse to save you stuff to carry.

Chaperone Fact:  Larry Jenkins has been involved in a lot of Rotary student activities.  He helped start Interact in Westerville, been a Boy Scout Eagle Scout, and was a percussionist on the Purdue University Marching Band (which has the largest drum in the world). Larry has two little kids (a boy and a girl) and a dog named Indy.  Check out more chaperon biographies and pictures at http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/rotinfo.htm 

There are 44 people on the trip as of today. Bus 1 is a go and we will fill it up this week.  By Christmas we may have filled up the other bus if last year is something to go by.  It was filled by December 31 last year.   Make sure the other kids in your district have signed up as well as your Rotary friends.This trip will go with two buses and a total of 100 exchange student.
 

11/25/08

Send me some information about ourself by email.  Bill@mcmurraytravel.com.

Just a note to remember that you aren't really on the trip until I received your deposit and applications.  So make sure you get those to me as soon as possible. We are getting lots of applications and once the trip fills, those who have not sent their deposit will go off the trip is there is an application received with the deposit.  Final payment of the trip will be due January 18, which isn't very far away.

Rooming:  We will try to put you where you want to room except in the following times. If you district chair has a comment about who you might not be good with we will listen to him or her.  If you haven't asked to room with someone, we'll put you in a room with your District folks.  We will always put you on the same bus with kids from your district. You can change room up to 1 month before departure (when we send the rooming lists to the hotel).

Why in the hell do we have that rule? - We have a rule about playing ball in parking lots (we don't allow it).  Why do we have that rule?  It's because on three occasions damage has been done to cars by people playing ball in parking lots. In one case a student was almost arrested. 

We are Family!!!!   Exchange students are weird and wonderful creatures and one thing we have learned in the last 10 years that 100 exchange students on a trip become like one large dysfunctional family.  It really is fun and the main reason we keep doing this crazy thing.  Treat everyone on the trip like they are a relative you like. 

The language of the Trip is English: We required that everyone speaks English on the trip.  This was a suggestion by a bunch of our exchange students.  They get upset because they feel left out by one group of another speaking their own language. So speak English on the trip.

Chaperone Fact:  Alex Von Lautz is a German Rotex and former trip participant.  Alex speaks English with a North Carolina accent.   Jackie Favret lives with her blackberry in her hand and has the most annoying ring of any person in the world. Bill McMurray has a total inability to concieve of any language so he constantly mispronounces names and foreign words.  Inspite of having a daughter who is a linguist (who is fluent in spanish and Turkish and speaks Arabic reasonably well).   

11/18/08

The Eastern Trip is filling up nicely and should go filled.  If you have friends who are interested in doing this trip, please have them contact me as soon as possible. 

The trip is a definite go  (WE ARE NOT CANCELING IT).
 
 One of the reasons our trip is a success is we are very strict on enforcing our rules.  We don't have any rule on this trip that doesn't have a very good and established reason.  The four Ds are obvious, they are Rotary Rules.  Drinking, Drugs, and Sex will get you sent home from your Host Club.  The same is true from the trip.  Our curfew rule is important because we do this trip every year and we have long time relationships with many of our hotels.  Their rules have restrictions on students out of the rooms after 10 pm.  Our hotels love us because our exchange students are so good.  If we have people in the hall after 10 pm, people complain and the group is not invited back.  Our hotels are very nice, we like them.   It seems early but you have to get up verrrrrrrry early.  It makes sense. The other important reason is that we want you to get a good night's sleep because we see SO MUCH STUFF. 

Sorry not to write more frequently, Lexi, my oldest daughter and long time chaperone on the trip got married this weekend.  I have been pre-occupied.

Trip Facts: We will be in Washington during the early days of President Elect Obama's term; Fall River, Mass. (near our Boston Hotel) has been settled by Portuguese and Brazilian immigrants; Washington DC was designed by a Frenchman; The University of Maryland's (near our Washington Hotel) football team is called the Terrapins, which is  kind of turtle.

Chaperone Fact: Jazalene is not some kind of bio-fuel.... it's one of our chaperones.  Jaz Lux. Rachelle Speth is a plane freak (she is an aeronautical engineer) and has a large B-2 Bomber Tattoo on her back. Several of our chaperones have body art. 

11/03/08

It is only a few months until we go on the Eastern Trip and the time will go very fast.

Make sure you check the website all the time for new information on the trip.  The best web site to link in your computer is http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/rotrip.htm
It has all the links to answer your questions.

The Eastern Trip is 20 percent filled, and filling pretty quickly.  Tell your friends to get their applications in. 

New York is a fun place and is pretty large.  There are 5 boroughs or counties in New York.  Where we will be is Manhattan Island.  The island is connected to the mainland (New Jersey where our hotel is) on the west and Long Island on the East.   There are hundreds of tunnels and many bridges connecting Manhattan. Manhattan is 15 miles from.  Wall Street is the oldest part of the city.  The building where George Washington was sworn in as the first president of the USA is right in the middle of Wall Street.  It's called Wall Street because there was a wall there to keep out the Indians.   We will be exploring the entire city.

If you want to see a cool web site about New York check out http://home.nyc.rr.com/jkn/nysonglines/index.htm
This website is filled with really interesting places in New York.

10/16/08

Thanks for joining the Rotary Eastern Adventure in 2009.  We have been doing this trip for six years and it's always been a great trip and a great deal of fun.   There should be 100 exchange students from approximately 30 countries on this trip. They will be living all over the USA and Canada and maybe even the Bahamas.

 I also do the Western Trip (This year is our 10th version) and if you aren't signed up for that yet, I would think about it soon.  It sells out very quickly and is our best trip. About 80 percent of the kids on the Eastern want to go on the Western.  

This year we are going to Washington, New York, Boston, and Niagara Falls as many places  in between these great cities.  You will get a chance to explore on your own as well as with a fantastic group of experienced chaperones.   

The Rotary Trip is part of your exchange experience.  I have been a Rotarian for 16 years and am inbound RYE Chair for 6690. 

We only have a few rules but we are really strict in our enforcement of them.  
The 4 Ds, especially Alcohol, Drugs and Sex will get you sent home quickly.  Usually that means you will not only end your trip but your exchange.  We use the same great hotels year after year and to do that we have to follow their rules.  One is you have to be in your room and quiet at 10PM every night.  No exceptions. The other rules are on our web site which is http://www.mcmurraytravel.com.roteast09.htm.

I like to communicate in Emails so you must read the emails. There will be very important information in the emails, as well as some cool information and fun facts.  All the emails can be found on the web site.

Fun Trip Fact: Washington DC was built on land once owned by George Washington.

3/4/09

Only 99 days until the trip guys.

The most dangerous animal we'll see in any numbers is the American Bison, commonly called the Buffalo.  A 1000 kilo in weight with very bad eyesight and a nasty temper, bison can kill you by accident.  Their eye sight is so bad they think people are their arch enemies, the Bear.  The will attack a bear, especially if there are babies around.  Very cool looking, you should keep 100 meters between you and a buffalo. Also it's a good idea to keep a large object like a rock or bus behind you so they can't see you very well.

When we pull our group of foreign teenagers into a small town in the west people get a little frightened.  Make sure you are friendly and talk to people to ease their mind.  Once a large number of South American students walked into a store and the lady thought a street gang was coming to terrorize her.  When she found out their were RYE she was much friendlier. 

If any of you are trying to get payments or application to me, I will be at the Ohio -Erie Rotary Conference in Columbus this weekend. You might be able to get your district chair's to deliver it for you. 

Check our web site all the time.  We are constantly updating and improving it.  There will be a lot more information on the web site.  Check out http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/rotwest09.htm

This year students are really slow signing up for the Western Trip. Right now we only have one bus filled and want to run a second bus.  Please tell your friends to join the trip.  We think this is the best itinerary we have every run.  All the chaperones are very excited about it.  There is no wasted time and we will see the real west this year.  

Also there are still a few places left on the Eastern Trip.
http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/roteast09.htm

 

2/25/09

f you haven't done so, please make your deposit on the Western Trip.   Also if you have friends who are thinking about going on the trip, please have them contact us and sign up.  This is the best itinerary we have ever done and we are surprised that we only have one bus filled so far.  Usually the trip is filled by now.

Flying:  We are getting ready to purchase group airfares shortly for the trip.  If you have a flight deviation please let us know.  Remind us which airport you would like to fly from.  The airfare is included in the price of the tour.  The flights will be very very early in the morning.  We try to have everyone arrive in Phoenix before lunch time.

We are also starting the examine the rooming.  Please let us know who you would like to travel with.  If we have two buses we try to keep kids from the same district on the same bus.

Trip Notes:  Navaho Loop is one of the most beautiful hikes in the world. Located in Bryce Canyon NP, it goes straight down hill through bright orange rocks carved into beautiful shapes by wind and water.   

 

2/19/09

Just to let you know if you are interested in doing the Eastern Trip there are places available. Contact me quickly.  It leaves from Columbus Ohio on March 20-28/29.

We ask students to help us make this trip great.  These folks are called team leaders.  It is more like student government.  We ask you what your opinion of things are.  We also tell you when we think there might be a problem.  Team leaders are also used to help lead hikes and sometimes help chaperones in rooming checks when there is a lot of distance between our rooms.  It is fun and you are actively involved in the trip. 

One thing we try to do when you have to buy a meal is make it cheap and easy for you. We try to stop at places which have supermarkets, fast food and even sit down restaurants.  Most kids and chaperones will go to the super markets and get some munchies and have a picnic.  It is much cheaper than including the meals (which usually run between 10-15 dollars a meal.  Also you can select how healthy and how much you want to eat.  Some students live on fast food like McDonalds.  Others like to eat salads and veggies.

We have a lot of free time for you to explore on this trip (and the eastern trip too).  We have one solid rule on these times.  You have to travel in packs of 4 or more.  We prefer you travel with mixed sexes (boys and girls together).  There is safety in numbers.  We will have free time in some pretty dangerous cities, like Denver and Las Vegas so this is really important. 

Trip Fact:  Animals:  We should see some mountain goats and sheep, american Bison, coyotes, badgers, antelopes, deer, elk, and if past years are true... black or grizzly bears.  

2/10/09

What kind of hiking do we have on the trip?  I got this question at our last Rotary weekend and here is the answer.  It's easy enough that anyone in reasonably good health can do without much effort.  It is also primarily on nice trails with chances to stop if you need to.  If the hike is a little difficult, like Navaho Loop at Bryce Canyon, there is another optional walk you can do along the rim of the canyon.  Navaho Loop is tough for me so I stay on the top (I have asthma).  The Rim Trail on the South Rim of the Grand Canyon is amazing, but it's also downhill the entire way so it's easy for everyone.  String Lake in Grand Teton is a little more difficult, but so beautiful you don't want to miss it.  We have seen bear and elk along that trail. Windows at Arches National Park isn't long but it's extremely hot and dry so water makes it easier to do.  That's why we require you to bring a 2 liter water bottle with you.  You will definitely need it.

Two rules are absolutely enforced on hikes. You have to stay 2 meters away from the edge of canyons and rim trails.  You also have to carry 2 liters of water with you.  A cheap canteen, even a 2 liter Coke bottle filled with water can be used.  We ask that you wear comfortable but solid shoes like sneakers or hiking boots, no flip flops.  We have had people injured in those.

There is space on the Western Trip, please tell your friends.

Chaperone Fact:  Mike Rosselet is a student at The Ohio State University majoring in Environmental Science. He has also studied Philosophy and Film Studies.  Mike is a good saxophone player and has played in a jazz band.  He is a huge fan of the "Dark Tower Series and Douglas Adams books. He is also an avid camper. Mike also has a deep love of hats. 

2/3/09

Next to the Highway of death in Bolivia, the scariest highway in the world is the road from Ouray to Silverton in Colorado.  We take that trip in huge buses.  It is fun but a little scary. 

Silverton is an old mining town and a great place to hang out and have fun.  We stop there for a couple of hours and we have found it a great place to buy western gear.  If you want a cowboy hat to wear out west, we do suggest you buy it nearer home.  Walmart usually has cheaper but still cool cowboy hats

Shoes are important on the trip and when you are on the trails during the hikes wear solid sneakers or hiking boots.  Many of the trails aren't too smooth and you need something stronger than flip flops.  Days we drive you are welcome to wear flip flops.

Sunburns are a huge problem on the trip. Even people who never burn, burn in the high desert.  One African boy with a very dark complexion got a sun burn.  I burn in 20 minutes in a parking lot.  Bring some strong PDF Sunblock.  You'll need it or you will be sorry. You don't tan you really burn in that sun. 

Water is hyper critcal ( I know I've said this before).  It is important you bring a 2 liter water bottle, canteen or hydration system.  I don't want to take you to the hospital.

Make sure you get your applications in if you haven't and send your deposits.  You aren't on the trip until we get your deposit.   The trip is open and tell your friends to sign up. 

Bill McMurray has been doing this trip for 10 years and has had the joy of getting to know over 1500 exchange students.  Most of whom still talk to me on a regular basis.  I love the west and know most of it very well.  I am very excited about this year because we are visiting some really exciting places I've not been to in year. 

1/27/09

e are in the process of starting finalizing for the Eastern Trip.  If any of you who are not on the trip want to join, please feel free to do so.  It is available. 

Hiking and dehydration:  We do a lot of hiking, walking and sightseeing on this trip.  One of the major problems we have is people not eating or drinking enough on the trip and getting very sick.  Four times we have had to take people to the hospital for dehydration.  That is the reason we demand that you take a 2-liter water bottle or canteen with you.  You can pick one up at an army surplus place or dollar store for a couple of dollars.  

Water: often students waste money (and environmental resources) buying water.  Everywhere we go on this trip the water is completely drinkable and safe.  Just fill up the water bottle from the sink or tub at our hotels.

We have some great hotels on this trip.  I have been taking students to several of these hotels for years and they like us because we are the best behaved student groups they get.  Look at the web site at the hotels.  Some of them have incredible views. Most have swimming pools and many have workout rooms. http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/rotwest09hotels09.htm.  My favorite hotels on this trip are the Bryce Lodge, Arizona Inn and the Sandstone inn.  All are in the middle of beautiful places

Trip Fact:  Mesa Verde is a national park dedicated to the famous "Pueblo Style"  dwellings of the Anasazi indians.  Anasazi is  an indian word meaning "the ancient ones".  They lived 3000 meters up in the mountains in sophisticated houses, which are on cliffs.  They were defensible and very advanced.  The cliff dwellers lived between 1500 and 800 years ago.

Chaperone Fact:  Janine Cannell is a avid environmentalist who can give you great information on how to be more "green" in your life.

1/16/09

We have been working on getting the web site a little easier to read and adding some interesting info and links to the web site.  Check out http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/rotwest09.htm.  There are some really great links about flying, the rooming list http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/rotwestpixrooming09.htm, and past emails http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/rotemails09.htm.

We have been doing this trip for the past 10 years and it has been a joy to do for us.  The first year we had 147 exchange students in three buses.  We have shrank that to two buses and a maximum of 100 people.   We have had rave reviews from exchange students since doing the trip . http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/thankyourotarytrip.htm. Since starting this trip we have had over 1500 RYE students on the trip.

We are having chaperone training this weekend.  Our chaperones will be here for three hours learning about the trip and you.  Many of them have been through it several times.

We have pretty great hotels on this trip.  We try to have a swimming pool at each western trip hotel and if everything runs smooth you'll have plenty of time to go swimming.  In the West some of the hotels have a Wild West Theme like the Branding Iron Inn and the Red Stone Inn.  Some just are sitting at an amazing place like the Arizona inn in Page.  That hotel has a spectacular view of the Colorado River, Glen Canyon Dam and the wonderful rock formations.   All the hotels are nice.

We also have very nice buses.  All have bathrooms aboard and are air conditioned with large windows so you don't miss anything.  

Tell you friends about the trip.

1/13/09

The trip is wide open at this point so please ask your friends to check out the web site and sign up. 

We will be coordinating all our flights into Phoenix and we do the air tickets and schedules. The idea is to get everyone there as early as possible so we can see something the day we arrive.  Last year we got a chance to spend a couple of hours in Sedona, Arizona, which  is an amazing place to visit.  It was really beautiful.  

Our goal this year is to have you see as much of the American west as we can.  So we get up early and make as many stops as we can.  

Trip Fact:  The Navaho Loop at Bryce Canyon National Park is a short hike but vigorous and takes a while to complete.  It's less that 2.5 miles in length but most of that distance is at very high altitude (over 8000 feet) and it's half downhill and half uphill.  It is spectacularly beautiful.

Trip Fact: Denver is call the Mile-High-City as it sits over 5000 feet in altitude. Denver was the site of the Democratic Convention and was where Barack Obama was nominated for president this year.

1/5/09

Make sure you get your applications to us. Some of you I have not gotten an application from.  The most important parts are pages 1-4, which including the application and rules.  You can send me the other parts later.

Make sure you friends are signing up for the trip. 

I was watching movies over the holidays and in one day watching movies I saw about 10 places we are visiting.  How is that for weird.  I watched the new National Treasure Movie and  Back to the Future III

Our itinerary is quite different this year, but there are reasons for changing it.  For one thing we wanted to keep the trip affordable for you and the old trip was getting too expensive.  The main reason is we want to take you to places you will probably not get a chance to see in the future.  We are going to the most beautiful places in the USA and some of the most exciting places anywhere.   Moab and Arches NP is an amazing site.  Bryce Canyon has the best short hike in the world, Navaho Loop.  The South Rim of the Grand Canyon is awe inspiring. Denver is the most vibrant city in the USA right now.  Vegas is .... well Vegas.  Everyday we will be doing or seeing something different, amazing and beautiful.  There are no slack or boring days in the entire trip.  Last year we had 4 boring days and I wanted to get rid of those.  I am so excited about it this year.

Trip Fact:  The most dangerous animal we will see in quantity is the American Bison or Buffalo.  They are about 700kg of grumpy cow who are nearsighted . People are exactly the size of their worst enemy, the bear so they don't like us much. 

12/22/08

Happy Holidays and Merry Christmas

Remember everything you need to know is on the web site. We update it all the time. Check out all the links for important informatoin .

If you live in much of the country the weather sucks today.  It's 1 degree in Columbus and feeling colder.  When we are on the trip often the weather goes cold in the high mountains.  We tell everyone to bring layers.  A sweatshirt, tshirt, sweater and windbreaker can protect you against all sorts of bad weather.  We have had temperature variations of from -5C to +40C in one day.  So you have to be prepared for everything.

2 Meter Rule: When we are near the cliffs we have a rule where you have to stay 2 meters away from the edge.  The drops in the Grand Canyon and other places we are traveling can be up to 500 meters and the edges are usually loose dirt.  25 people a year die from falls in the Grand Canyon.

Hiking - We love hiking and we are always looking for the coolest walks which anyone can do.  Our favorites are "Windows" in Arches NP, String Lake in Grand Teton NP, and the South Rim Trail at the Grand Canyon.  There will be some great new ones this year.

Trip Fact:  Cody WY is named after Buffalo Bill Cody because he helped found the town.  It is a major center of Rodeo and quarter horses.

Chaperone Fact:  Jackie Favret played the piano and saxophone.  She has three crazy dogs and her own house.
 

12/5/08

Christmas Gifts
If you are writing Santa Claus for a gif this season, you might want to ask for a good 2-liter canteen or water bottle.  Everyone on the Western Trip is required to have one.. Every place we goes has a real danger of dehydration.  We spend a great deal of time in the high desert and you are always thirsty there.  Over the years we have taken several students to hospital because they are not drinking enough.  Most students will refill a 2-liter water bottle once or twice a day on the trip. 

A good back pack is always handy.  One with a hydration system included is a great help.

Another good present is an ipod or other MP3 music device. 

Grand Canyon Rule: We have a great safety rule in the Grand Canyon.  There are few guard rails near the edge of the canyon and every year 25 people are killed or injured by falling off the cliff. Where we are the falls are usually of 200 to 400 meters.  We ask that everyone stay 2 meters from the edge.  Last year's group was perfect at this.  The edge of the canyon is crumbling rock and it's easy to slip and fall to a grisly horrible death. 

Chaperone Notes: We have a great group of chaperones and this year will be pretty close to the same chaperones we had last year and they are great people.   Samantha Sellinger (2nd year) is a college student who has plenty of experience working with students.  She is a vegetarian, athletic and funny.  She is from Greensburg PA, and goes to Mercyhurst College where she is learning to be a biology teacher.  She will be a Senior next year.

Tatum Faithful (2nd Year)  is another college student attending Charleston College in South Carolina. Tatum has an associates degree in management of animal based businesses.  She has worked on her mother's horse camp for years.  She also is very active in Youth Exchange in SC.  

 

12/3/08

Christmas Gifts
If you are writing Santa Claus for a gif this season, you might want to ask for a good 2-liter canteen or water bottle.  Everyone on the Western Trip is required to have one.. Every place we goes has a real danger of dehydration.  We spend a great deal of time in the high desert and you are always thirsty there.  Over the years we have taken several students to hospital because they are not drinking enough.  Most students will refill a 2-liter water bottle once or twice a day on the trip. 

A good back pack is always handy.  One with a hydration system included is a great help.

Another good present is an ipod or other MP3 music device. 

Grand Canyon Rule: We have a great safety rule in the Grand Canyon.  There are few guard rails near the edge of the canyon and every year 25 people are killed or injured by falling off the cliff. Where we are the falls are usually of 200 to 400 meters.  We ask that everyone stay 2 meters from the edge.  Last year's group was perfect at this.  The edge of the canyon is crumbling rock and it's easy to slip and fall to a grisly horrible death. 

Chaperone Notes: We have a great group of chaperones and this year will be pretty close to the same chaperones we had last year and they are great people.   Samantha Sellinger (2nd year) is a college student who has plenty of experience working with students.  She is a vegetarian, athletic and funny.  She is from Greensburg PA, and goes to Mercyhurst College where she is learning to be a biology teacher.  She will be a Senior next year.

Tatum Faithful (2nd Year)  is another college student attending Charleston College in South Carolina. Tatum has an associates degree in management of animal based businesses.  She has worked on her mother's horse camp for years.  She also is very active in Youth Exchange in SC.  

11/25/08

Send me an email telling me about yourself.

We have had so much fun on these trips because we all become such close friends. In fact one of my chaperones last year called it surreal because we were like a huge family.  That is when we know the trip is great.  We try to make it like a big family vacation with me as the grumpy by lovable uncle.

The Western Trip goes to some amazing beautiful places.  Most people are in awe of the views and scenery and the things we see.  Last year we saw a beautiful black bear in the woods, ice capped mountains, even a forest fire. Every 10 minutes the scenery is new and completely different.  It is so diverse, you can not believe it.  We see a large number of animals; antelopes, American Bison, elk, moose, wolverines, beavers, coyotes, wolves, white tail deer, mule deer, bald and golden eagles, and last year we saw a mountain condor in the Grand Canyon.

We see some strange and beautiful rock formations, bright red mountains made of one solid rock, cores of ancient volcanoes, flat plains, Sonoran deserts, high desert plains, buttes (pronounced "beauts"), and many different types of mountains.  You'll get a chance to enjoy it all close up and personal, not just from the window of a bus. There are few things cooler than sitting in the pool at the Arizona Inn looking at the Glen Canyon Dam, Lake Powell and rock formations of Page AZ. 

The trip is filling quickly, so tell your friends to get their application in.  Kids on the Eastern Trip will definitely fill the western trip (they almost all decide they want to go on both trips after being on the eastern trip, so get your buddy's signed up.

Stange Past Student Facts: We had a nice Australian exchange student who had an unreasonable fear of birds.  It was especially weird because he looked like a bird.

Chaperone Fact:  Tatum Faithful's first name is Sunshine. She is an expert horsewoman and has had pet pigs. Bill McMurray used to have two pet fighting bantam roosters named Pipsqueak and Wilfred.

11/18/08

I am so excited about this trip.  This is a dream itinerary. I love this trip and have been on 9 of them before.  (Yes I am crazy).

This year I am so excited.  We are going to Mt. Rushmore!.  We are also going near The Little Big Horn where General Custer made his last stand vs the Sioux Indians. I hope we have time to do it.  Where we are is exactly where most of the great American Indian Wars of the 1800s took place.  Near Mt. Rushmore is the Crazy Horse Memorial and we'll see that too.  There are many American Indian (some like to be called Native Americans, most by their Tribal names) sites on our trip.  Monument Valley is in the heart of the Navaho Reservation. Cortez, Colorado is the heart of the Ute Tribe (the USA state Utah is named for them).  We'll drive by the Blackfoot Tribe Reservation while out west.  Most of the big cities in the west started out as frontier forts, built to quell uprisings.

The trip is filling quickly (we had 4 applications today) so please tell your friends to sign up as soon as possible.

I put your Pictures on the "Who's on the Trip" page on the website.  Check it out to see who else is one the trip.  

If you are Facebook look me up and befriend me.  I have more interesting stuff about Exchange and the trips on the facebook, including past pictures.

11/03/08

We are getting people signing up for the trip at a very fast rate.  You can see everyone's picture, country etc... at http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/rotwestpixrooming09.htm.

We have the trip planned and ready to go.  There are a couple of things to ask for Christmas which may help you on the trip.  

You'll need a nice camera.... digital is best.  It doesn't have to be expensive but you'll want to remember everything.  

You'll need a two-liter water bottle, canteen, or sports bottle for the trip.  When we go on hikes we required you carry two liters of water with you.  Every year someone gets sick because they haven't drank enough water.  I have had to visit several hospitals with students because of this.

Trip Fact: Near Mt. Rushmore is a statue of American Indian Hero Crazy Horse which is the largest statue in the world.  It is carved out of a mountain.

Chaperones Notes:  All the chaperones are volunteers and give up their time.  Dave Saho is a retired steelworker from Eastern Ohio who has a degree in accounting.  Janine Cannell is a senior at the University of Toledo and is a environmental activist.  Jackie Favret is an expert on this trip and this will be her 6th Rotary Trip.

10/16/08

Welcome to the Rotary Western Adventure!!!  This is the 10th year we've done the trip and it is one of our favorite things to do.   Jackie Favret and I run the trip and we have a great group of chaperones.  I am a district inbound chair for RYE and Jackie is an active volunteer in the program. 

This year's trip is the best itinerary we have ever had and Jackie and I are really excited about it.   Make sure you tell your friends to sign up because it sells out usually by the middle of January.   It is open to all Rotary Exchange students. 

Each year our students tell us this is the highlight of their exchange year and one of the best experiences of their life.   It is a great experience and by the end of the trip you will feel like you are part of an amazing family.  You will make some of the best friends of your life. 

We have a few rules we ask you to follow which you can find at http://www.mcmurraytravel.com/rules.htm.  The biggest rules are of course the 4Ds of RYE and any of them can get you sent home (meaning you will end your exchange).  Drugs and alcohol will guarantee that you will be sent home. We strictly enforce these rules.

Make sure you ALWAYS read these emails (there will be many of them).  If you do you will have a great trip. They will have very important information in them.  You will be able to find them on the web site under past emails.  I also put a lot of fun information which will help you enjoy the trip more.  There will also be safety information.  This is a physically tough trip and you need to follow some health guidelines.

Fun Fact:  Mt Rushmore has the heads of 4 US President carved out of a mountain.