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Enjoy and please pass onto others on your list.

November 2010
eNewsletter
 ------------------------
Executive Board

Terry Koenig-President FTCOSF 2009_100dpi_2x3

President:
Terry F. Koenig
President of Koenig & Associates, a marketing and public relations company. Past President of the Skål Club of San Francisco. He has spent 38 years in the Travel Industry with 20 years directing the marketing for passenger ferry operations in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Served as Chairman of the California Travel Industry Association and on the boards of the Long Beach Convention & Visitors Bureau, Catalina Island Chamber of Commerce and the Tiburon Chamber of Commerce.
 
Vice President:
Robin Morales
Business Development - Sales Manager at SoPac/SF Connection -- a tourism and travel represenation company Robin has served as a successful professional in Business Development/ Sales for an airline, a tour wholesaler, a worldwide chauffeur company, a non-profit organization and a travel agency.
  

Secretary-Treasurer:

Christian Spirandelli

Bryan International Travel, President, CEO and Owner since 1995. He merged into FROSCH International Travel in 2007.  As usual with the travel industry, he has traveled extensively worldwide and has held advisory positions with several companies.
Chairman:
Lakshman Ratnapala

Chairman of Enelar International, a global management consultancy. Emeritus President & CEO of the Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA). A regular writer to business magazines and speaker on travel topics at conferences and workshops.
  
Co-Chairman:
Logan Happel
 
 Director of Sales and Client Relations, Travel Industry at USI Travel Insurance Services.


 
 
OUR STORY --
75 YEARS
 
Founded in 1934, the Foreign Travel Club (FTC) of San Francisco, the oldest of its kind in California, celebrates its 75th birthday this year.
 
The Club was launched by a band of enterprising men who challenged the monopoly of the local travel scene by employees of the Southern Pacific Railway.
 
The Club is non-sectarian and apolitical. Led over the years by respected executives of the travel industry, the Club membership has comprised individuals who have contributed to the growth of the single most important industry that enhances the quality of life and the vitality of the San Francisco Bay Area.
 
The FTC's monthly luncheon meetings, featuring speakers on travel topics are occasions where past and present travel industry executives, travel writers and frequent travelers meet to share experiences and promote the business of travel in a spirit of camaraderie.
 
 
INVITATION
The Foreign Travel Club cordially invites travel presentations at our monthly luncheon meetings from Government, State, and City Tourism Offices, Airlines, Cruiselines, Hotels, Tour Operators, Travel Writers, and others. 
 
Please contact:
 President, Terry Koenig at
There is no cost to the presenter.
 
 
CLUB EVENTS
Please mark your calendar for luncheon meetings of the Club scheduled for the fourth Thursday of every month, except September (summer outing), November (third Thursday), and December (Holiday Party). 
 
We usually meet at the Marines Memorial Club, 609 Sutter Street, 12th Floor, in San Francisco. The keynote topic, speaker and venue are announced by a special notice, a week prior to the meeting.  
 

 
COMING UP:
November 18th
Expatriates in Japan

 
December 18th
Holiday Party

 January 27, 2011
Brendan Vacations

Registration begins at 11:30 am.
Guests are welcome. 
 

For details and to RSVP, contact:
Terry Koenig
ftcosf@gmail.com, or
 call (415) 726-3712.

FTC CLUB ANNUAL
MEMBERSHIP DUES

 Couples - $50
Individuals - $40

For details, please contact Terry Koenig at ftcosf@gmail.comor call (415) 726-3712.
 
VALUE ADDED MEMBERSHIP
 
Membership of the FTC is open to travel industry personnel, travel writers and frequent foreign travelers whose credentials must be endorsed by a current member. Spouses are welcome to join. FTC luncheon meetings serve the dual purpose of social interaction and business opportunity. 
 
Professional presentations on travel trends, destinations and services are followed by Q&A session with Club members.

  Although the internet and guidebooks do a great job of preparing the traveler, nothing can replace the experience of someone who has been there, done that and can speak from personal exerience.  Research shows 20% of American travelers value others' personal comments over information from books, newspapers and the internet.
 
The FTC is a forum to meet world travelers, many of whom are travel writers and executives who have worked for tour companies, airlines/cruiselines and hotels. Whereas the internet gives impersonal information, the FTC offers insights to real life experiences.

Being a member of the FTC enhances every trip you take, it ensures you unforgettable travel experiences and opportunities to share them with other members in a spirit of camaraderie.
 
Why wait? Join today!
 
SIGN OF THE TIMES...  

World's Largest Cruise Liner Has a Twin
Allure of the Seas_72dpi_2x1
(HELSINKI - 10/29/10
Allure of the Seas, which cruised out of the shipyard in Turku, southwestern Finland where it was built, faces its first big test Saturday, when it must squeeze under a Danish bridge, just one foot (30 centimeters) taller than the ship - even after its telescopic smokestacks are lowered.
  
The second in a pair of the largest cruise liners in the world - an extravagant behemoth spanning nearly four football fields, with a 3-D move theater, an open-air central park and room for 8,300 people - set sail Friday for its new home port in Florida 
 

The gigantic vessel is the sister ship of the Oasis of the Seas, which was also delivered to Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines (RCCL) last year with a price tag of about $1.5 billion. The Allure of the Seas is in the same price range, said Juha Heikinheimo, managing director of STX Finland, which constructed the vessel.

 

Like its twin, the Allure of the Seas spans 1,200 feet (360 meters) from bow to stern, and its height from sea level is 236 feet (72 meters). It weighs 600 tons - 12 times more than the EiffelTower.

 

It can accommodate 6,300 passengers and some 2,000 crew, and has dozens of restaurants, cafes and bars along a promenade shopping street that includes a park with living trees and numerous plants. The ship boasts a two-deck high dance hall, a 1,380-seat theater and an ice skating rink, numerous pools, spas, gyms and a rock climbing wall.

 

It names the Rising Tide Bar as one of its showpieces - an elliptical restaurant platform accommodating 50 customers that ascends and descends a vertical distance of 32 feet (10 meters) between the central park and promenade.

 

The ship's home port will be Fort Lauderdale in Florida, where it is expected to arrive in a few weeks.

 



For the full story, visit the source: Yahoo! News.

 

=====================

World's 2nd largest cruise ship Oasis of the Seas

Oasis of Seas_72dpi_2x3

The Oasis of the Seas is seen docked at Port Everglades in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida on Friday, November 20, 2009.

 

The Finnish built 225,282 ton ship (also owned by RCCL) has 15 decks, a capacity of 5,400 passengers, 4 main swimming pools, a park promenade, surf simulators, rock climbing, and miniature golf.

 

It set sail on its debut voyage in the Caribbean on December 1, 2009 and was the world's largest and newest cruise ship until the launch of its twin, Allure of the Seas.

Holland_America_Ryndam
 
Cruising? 
 
 Join your fellow FTC members & friends  on fun cruises at
group rates with
group amenities.
 
CONTACT:
Claudette Main, CTC, ACC
Phone/Fax:
(650) 345-9455

French airline makes landmark flight to Baghdad
French Foreign Minister_in_Baghdad_72dpi_sm

French Minister of Foreign Trade Anne Marie Idrac disembarks from France's Aigle Azur airlines plane in Baghdad, Iraq,

 

(BAGHDAD - October 31, 2010) A French airliner landed at Baghdad International Airport Sunday, becoming one of the first passenger planes to fly into the Iraqi capital direct from western Europe since the Gulf War and opening a potential new route to stronger international business ties.

 

The inaugural flight by France's Aigle Azur, which touched down shortly before 6 a.m. local time, carried French officials and journalists and was largely ceremonial. The airline won't begin regularly scheduled passenger flights for another two to three months, but if successful, the flights would mark an important milestone in Iraq's economic development.

 

"It will also be a chance, a new chance for the development of business between France and Iraq but more globally, between Europe and Iraq," said France's top trade official, Anne-Marie Idrac, who was on board the flight.

 

Some carriers, such as Austrian Airlines, fly from western Europe to the Kurdish city of Irbil. Regional airlines such as the Abu Dhabi-based Etihad Airways, Bahrain's Gulf Air, the Beirut-based MEA airline and Turkish Airlines fly to the Iraqi capital.

 

But there are no direct passenger flights between Baghdad and western Europe. Stockholm-based Nordic Airways launched commercial flights to Baghdad from Copenhagen, Denmark, in January 2009 but its operating license was revoked later that month.

 

The lack of major European carriers flying to Baghdad shows the difficulties the country is having attracting major foreign investments in anything but the surest economic bets. Although some Western companies placed bids in the country's first round of oil licensing last year, it was only for the biggest and safest fields.

 

When the airline began planning the route about a year ago, they wanted to begin passenger service immediately after the inaugural flight, said the president of Aigle Azur's executive board, Francois Hersen. But there wasn't enough passenger interest, in part due to Iraq's political and security problems.

 

The country is in its eighth month without a new government after March 7 national elections failed to produce a clear winner. And violence, although much reduced, continues to claim lives.

 

Hersen said the airline is confident they'll have enough customers when flights start in earnest early next year.

 

Attempts by Iraq's national carrier, Iraqi Airways, to launch flights to London in April were swiftly quashed when lawyers for neighboring Kuwait tried to confiscate the inaugural plane upon landing in London to settle debts related to Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait.

 

The Aigle Azur flight, which took off late Saturday from Paris, carried a delegation of French business leaders planning to attend the Baghdad International Fair, an annual showcase designed to attract businesses to Iraq.

 

When regular flights begin early next year, the French airline plans to fly into Baghdad twice a week from Paris' Charles de Gaulle airport.

 

A ticket for one of the 124 economy seats will be about 1,500 euros, or $2,100. The 24 business class seats on the Airbus A319 will cost around 2,500 euros, or $3,500, each, Hersen said.

 

Aigle Azur is a French carrier operating out of Paris's Orly and Charles de Gaulle airports that mainly flies to locations in Africa such as Algeria, Mali, Morocco and Tunisia. They also operate flights to the French cities of Lille, Lyon, Marseille, Mulhouse and Toulouse.

 

The German carrier Deutsche Lufthansa AG was slated to begin regular flights between Munich and Baghdad Sept. 30 but canceled them due to a lack of customer interest.

 

The news was a blow to Iraq's hopes to reconnect Baghdad with international capitals since most Western airlines discontinued flights to the city after the 1991 Gulf War.

Many potential investors still view Iraq with trepidation.

 

"We are worried about security. We would not be able to come (to Iraq) by ourselves. The cost of security is too important to us," said a businessman on the flight, Lionel Cuenca, from the French company Gindre Duchavany, which specializes in copper products.

 

For years, many regional and Western carriers shied away from Iraq due to safety concerns. The few airlines that did fly in and out of the airport, formerly named after Saddam Hussein, performed a tight corkscrew when landing, a spiraling maneuver designed to protect them from missile attack.

 

For the full story,visit: Yahoo!News/AP.
 
WANT TO SELL ...
destinations, tour packages, cruises, airfares, hotels or other services?
The FTC delivers you a sophisticated travel audience. 
 
COSTS: Graphic banner ads cost $15 per issue. For live links to websites, add $15 per URL. 
 
AD DIMENSIONS: Files must be submitted in .JPG file format with a 100 dpi resolution with dimensions as follows:
 

Rectangle Ad: 180 pixels wide x 240 pixels high.

Vertical Banner Ad : 60 pixels wide x 100 pixels high.

 
FTC members receive a 10% discount. For ad quotes or to place an ad, contact:
.
PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE:
END OF YEAR WRAP-UP
 

As 2010 draws to a close, it's time to celebrate another successful speakers program. 

In the cold wind and rain of January, Rolf Freedman of Crystal Cruises warmed us with exotic cruises to warm climates with palm trees.   

February brought us back to the Bay Area and high  above it with Pamela Yvonne Wright from Airship Ventures taking us on a virtual ride on Airship's Zeppelin.

 

In March, Rodney Fong Chair of the SFCVB and the SF Port Commission spoke about the development of a new cruise terminal. 

 

Doug Shelton from Japan Airlines International was our April speaker and had a wonderful Power Point with great Japan images as well as great insight to traveling in Japan. 

  

May's speaker, Bill Diebenow from World Leaders Travel spoke about their small group tours to the Middle East led by famous world leaders.

 

In June, Rene de los Santos from the Philippine Department  of Tourism told of the wonders of the Philippines with a focus on food.

 

July's speaker, Michael Stehr, an artist, took us to Italy and showed us the great art of Rome.

 

In August, members Diane LeBow and John Montgomery along with Alena Bartoli described their recent trip to Lebanon, Syria and Jordan all accompanied by great photos.

 

October's speaker Ric Ewing from AMTRAK fired us up about train travel in the U.S.  

 

Kendo practice_Himeji _72dpi_5x5

Kendo practice in Himeji, Japan.

 

Our last speaker of the year on Thursday, November 18th is our own member, Katherine Bruce, who 

recently spent 16 months living in Japan and will talk to us about, "Expatriates and the role of the foreigner in Japanese culture."

 

Please remember to mark your calendar for our annual Holiday Brunch. This year's event will be held on Saturday, December 18th at 12 Noon at The Fog Harbor Restaurant at Pier 39.  There will be validated parking available.

 

Go Giants!

 
Best,


Terry Koenig
President
Foreign Travel Club of San Francisco
 

 

FOCUS THIS MONTH:  Expatriates and the Role of the Foreigner in Japanese Culture
Katherine Bruce_72dpi

Our November 18th speaker is Katherine Bruce a young professional eager to explore the world. She feels the best experiences in travel come when one is able to spend some time living in a different country to more deeply understand cultural mores, language and the struggles with assimilation. 

 

Katherine has spent extended periods of time living in France, Brasil and most recently Japan. Taking a brief pause in her budding  marketing/advertising career to work in an English corporation near Kobe, Japan, Katherine was profoundly taken by the role of the foreigner in Japanese culture. 

Port Tower_Kobe_72dpi_3x5

 Port of Kobe Tower.

 

Japan is an exceedingly difficult culture for foreigners to live in, and it also attracts a certain type of foreigner who is seeking a polar opposite style of life from what Westerners are traditionally accustomed to. Thriving in Japanese society means forsaking a sense of your own American identity and keeping an open mind to things you never knew existed. Thus, the role of the expatriate is unlike anywhere else in the world. Being a foreigner herself, Katherine was able to explore niches in the foreign population where she found expatriates who had settled in Japan and started their own English school, restaurant, magazine, etc. Also, Katherine had some trying and enlightening experiences working and living in a small, mostly Japanese city with few foreigners that proved to be a testament to her connectedness to the country now.  

 

Somen noodles_Shodoshima_72dpi_3x5 

Somen noodles, Shodoshima.

 

From food to socializing to work, Japan works on a strict mode of society norms that only Japanese are accustomed and privy to. Often, Eastern cultures see life as a mystery and living as an expatriate in Japanese society is just cracking the surface of such mystery. With an open my and an adventurous spirit, the expatriate can extract a lot from a foreign country and live a lifestyle that crosses international boundaries and makes one more a citizen of the world. 

 

Katherine is currently living in San Francisco working in marketing and external affairs for a political organization in support of positive PR for Israel in the United States. She is also getting her Masters in Counseling Psychology at The Wright Institute in Berkeley. She will speak to us about her 16 month experience living abroad in Japan and some of the cultural similarities and differences she encountered while living there as well as the benefits of life as an expatriate.

Marines_Memorial_Club_Building_blueEVENT DETAILS:

WHEN:
 
Thursday, November 18, 2010

WHERE:  
Marines' Memorial Club
609 Sutter Street, 12th Floor
(Corner of Mason Street)
San Francisco, CA

SCHEDULE:
11:30 AM - Registration & Bar Opens
12:00 Noon - Lunch & Program

COST:   $26.00 - Luncheon and Program

MENU SELECTION:
1.  ASIAN CHICKEN SALAD - Served with a ginger vinaigrette & fried wontons
2.  COBB SALAD - With grilled chicken, bacon, avocado, tomatoes, chopped egg, crumbled blue cheese and a poppy seed dressing
3.  PETRALE SOLE - Flour dusted & sauteed, topped with brown butter, capers, lemon juice & parsley, served with French green beans and rice Pilaf
4.  LEATHERNECK ANGUS CHEESEBURGER - Served with Club French Fries and Cole Slaw.
5.  PASTA PRIMAVERA - Sauteed fresh seasonal vegetables served over fettuccini with a light wine, herb and garlic sauce

LUNCH INCLUDES - Rolls & Butter, Ice Tea, Starbucks Coffee & Tea and Dessert.

To RSVP:  
Select one of the entrees from above and click on either the YES or NO link below.  When the message appears on your screen, fill in your name (and the names of any guests), choice of entree(s) from the selections above, then click send.

YES, I WILL ATTEND (ftcosf.yes@google.com), or


RSVP Deadline:  RSVP by Monday, November 15th. 
 
QUESTIONS? Call Terry Koenig at
 (415) 726-3712.
U.S. Navy Museum, Washington, D.C.:

Commodore Perry and the Opening of Japan

 

On March 31, 1854 representatives of Japan and the United States signed a historic treaty. A United States naval officer, Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry, negotiated tirelessly for several months with Japanese officials to achieve the goal of opening the doors of trade with Japan.

 

Japanese_72dpi_3x4_MapFor two centuries, Japanese ports were closed to all but a few Dutch and Chinese traders. The United States hoped Japan would agree to open certain ports so American vessels could begin to trade with the mysterious island kingdom. In addition to interest in the Japanese market, America needed Japanese ports to replenish coal and supplies for the commercial whaling fleet.

 

On July 8, 1853 four black ships led by USS Powhatan and commanded by Commodore Matthew Perry, anchored at Edo (Tokyo) Bay. Never before had the Japanese seen ships steaming with smoke. They thought the ships were "giant dragons puffing smoke." They did not know that steamboats existed and were shocked by the number and size of the guns on board the ships.

 

At age 60, Matthew Perry had a long and distinguished naval career. He knew that the mission to Japan would be his most significant accomplishment. He brought a letter from the President of the United States, Millard Fillmore, to the Emperor of Japan. He waited with his armed ships and refused to see any of the lesser dignitaries sent by the Japanese, insisting on dealing only with the highest emissaries of the Emperor.

 

The Japanese government realized that their country was in no position to defend itself against a foreign power, and Japan could not retain its isolation policy without risking war. On March 31, 1854, after weeks of long and tiresome talks, Perry received what he had so dearly worked for--a treaty with Japan.

 

The treaty provided for:

1.      Peace and friendship between the United States and Japan.

2.      Opening of two ports to American ships at Shimoda and Hakodate

3.      Help for any American ships wrecked on the Japanese coast and protection for shipwrecked persons

4.      Permission for American ships to buy supplies, coal, water, and other necessary provisions in Japanese ports.

 

After the signing of the treaty, the Japanese invited the Americans to a feast. The Americans admired the courtesy and politeness of their hosts, and thought very highly of the rich Japanese culture. Commodore Perry broke down barriers that separated Japan from the rest of the world.

 

Today the Japanese celebrate his expedition with annual black ship festivals. Perry lived in Newport, Rhode Island, which also celebrates a Black Ship festival in July. In Perry's honor, Newport has become Shimoda's sister city.

OCTOBER PRIZE WINNERS: 
FTC - OCT 2010 PRIZE WINNERS_5x3_72dpi

(From Left) Prize Winners - Georgia Hesse, Monica Conrady, Speaker - Ric Ewing (AMTRAK) & Prize Winner - Marilyn Nelson Clark. (Photo by Terry Koenig.)

 

50/50 Drawing of $30.50 -  Monica Conrady

 

Bottle of Provenance Vineyards 2009 Sauvignon Blanc  - Georgia Hesse

 

Bottle of Rosenblum Cellars Zinfandel - Marilyn Nelson Clark


COMING ATTRACTIONS: 

Thursday, November 18th
Katherine Bruce
TOPIC: Expatriates and the role of the foreigner in Japanese culture.
 
Saturday, December 18th
Holiday Party
VENUE: Fog Harbor Restaurant at Pier 39

 
Thursday, January 27th, 2011
Jeannie Bean, Brendan Vacations

Raffle_Tix
LUCKY YOU!
Every meeting features a 50-50 raffle and one or more lucky draws that you must be present to win. 
A Sense of Travel . . . with Georgia Hesse
Map within driving distance of Ravello_72dpi
Once, so long ago that no one was around to watch, the gods of geology went crazy on the limb of land we now call Italy that stretches northwest to southeast along the Tyrrhenian Sea. Earth belched up masses of limestone, which the gods then carved and folded and bent and stacked and twisted and tore and wrenched and yanked into a stony fantasy above a sea as blue as the inside of a sapphire. And they saw it was beautiful.

 

So did the people who finally came along, whether they were primitive cave dwellers or cultured Greeks or Etruscans or Romans or Pliny the Elder or Gore Vidal. Every true traveler comes at last to this wild and dizzying landscape, especially to the 49-mile-long corniche called the Amalfi Coast that soars and plunges from Sorrento to Salerno.

 

Positano on the Amalfi Coast_72dpi_3x5

Positano on the Amalfi Coast

 

Fishing villages of white cubes or faintly Moorish, pastel cottages rise like children's building blocks out of the sea, stacked untidily on each other and interspersed with cypresses, orange trees, olives, almonds, citrus groves and vineyards. Fishing boats bob in curls of harbors, dozens of Pointillist dots on a canvas of (usually) calmest blue. Occasionally, however, winds wail, thunder rumbles, and storms surge as if inspired by the Furies; especially in the dark depths of the aptly named Furore Valley.

 

(At any time, clinging to the convolutions of the Amalfi Drive can be about as comfortable as tripping along a tightrope. Once, settling into the passenger seat of my rented Renault 5, my mother suddenly screamed, shaking the little car to its stem. I nearly drove off into the view. "Oh-h-h!  I'm sorry! I sat on a bee!" Then, calmer, "At least it was an Italian bee.")

 

Dining terrace of the hotel San Pietro in Positano_72dpi 

Dining terrace of the Hotel San Pietro in Positano.

 

Positano is as prettily perfect as a stage set; Sorrento is a garden sliced by sinuous old streets, and Amalfi itself, captain of the coast, is a rich little resort escaped from Spain with an antique cathedral of positively oriental splendor, speaking of trade with 9th-century Constantinople. (Amalfi was Italy's oldest republic and created the world's oldest maritime code, the Amalfi Navigation Tables, in the 11th-century.)

 

All these towns could be called (if one wanted to spoil the show) touristy, but what else would you expect?  Seeking slightly more solitude on my second call along the coast, I cut off the Drive, SS163, just beyond Atrani, turned left and uphill at SS373, Via Castiglione, and found myself in Ravello in a matter of minutes. 

Ravello on the Amalfi Coast down the Sorrento Peninsula 

Caruso Belvedere Hotel overlooking the Amalfi Coast in Ravello.

 

Ravello (pop. 2,500 or so) is less a town than a perch, clinging onto a ledge suspended between sea and sky on the slopes above the Valley of the Dragon (Valle dei Dragone). At one time, I found myself in this enticing escape almost every year, always at the Hotel Caruso Belvedere and, as often as possible, in room 5. The view from it, off toward the ancient Greek colony of Paestum (founded around 600 B.C.E.), sucked one into a blue space warp, almost a wall with nothing to mark earth from heaven. If one spread his arms and jumped, it seemed, he would soar safely into the void.

Caruso Belvedere Hotel_Ravello_72dpi

Caruso Belvedere Hotel in Ravello.

 

A hotel is almost never a destination. This one is. It began in 1893 when vineyard owner Pantaleone Caruso and his wife rented a wing of the 11th-century palace belonging to the Marquis D'Affitto and opened their five-room Pensione Caruso.  In 1903, a wandering writer from the New York Times discovered the hideaway, 19 rooms were added in the palazzo, and England's Bloomsburg Group made its way up the hill - Virginia Woolf, economist John Maynard Keynes, Lytton Strachey and Clive Bell, all that crowd - followed later by Graham Greene and Gore Vidal, who wrote his 1968 novel "Myra Breckinridge" in room 9.

 

 Infinity Pool of the Hotel Caruso Belvedere_Image_72dpi

Infinity Pool of the Hotel Caruso Belvedere.

 

When I knew her well, a Caruso family member was still in charge. Today, the 48 transformed rooms and suites have joined the 40-plus hotels and six railroads of the long-lived Orient-Express family. The vast fireplace, the 18th-century frescoes, the terrace with its Norman arches and the gardens remain. An infinity pool matching sky and sea in harmonious blue adds a fourth, imaginary, dimension to the three we know. 

 

Oh, yes; off the piazza, Villa Cimbrone with its cloisters and vaulted ceilings seduces the art lover and from July to through September, 2011, will revel in the annual Music Festival centered in the 13th-century Villa Rufolo.   

Ruines of Pompeiii_3x5_72dpi

Ruins of Pompeii.

 

You may want never to venture away from Ravello or the Caruso but, beyond the curvy Amalfi Drive, Capri, Paestum, Pompeii, Ercolano and Mt. Vesuvius are waiting to allure you.  They're another story. 

Designed, Edited and Produced by Gina Snow & Associates

Contact: (415) 563-5333 - gsnow@gsacommunications.com - www.gsacommunications.com