The Tartan Epsilon were on the move. We
reached Bratislava after a very
comfortable Ryanair flight – but on arrival we realised that neither of us had
been able to decipher any of the in-flight announcements – and we’re in
the business of communication. :( We arrived after nightfall which meant, after
taking possession of our hired car, we had to make our way in the dark unknown
to find our gloriously-named hotel. However, thanks to Angeliki’s intrepid
driving skills and our helpful GPS lady, we arrived there quickly and safely - celebrating with a chicken and pastas
supper, accompanied with a very acceptable local white wine.
Our destination was Kosice – so we set off next morning
travelling eastwards across the country. These imposing castles kept looming
up, piercing the beautiful, blue, cloudless skyline.
Autumnal mists hung in low-lying areas and we saw life going on at a
relatively slow pace as we drove along their superb roads – not a pot-hole in
evidence, in sharp contrast to the general state of Greek roads.
There is,
however, a downside to this: our progress was considerably slowed down over
lengthy stretches as road maintenance in operation reduced us to single-lane
traffic.
We arrived
at our hotel in Kosice and within 45
minutes had checked in, unpacked what was necessary, showered, changed, parked
the car and booked a taxi which whisked us off to the conference venue-
phew!!
Here we are, presenting our ‘Using the Tablet in the Classroom’ workshop
at the Slovak Chamber of English
Teachers’ Conference, entitled Mind The Gap. It must be said we look a
wee bit serious here,
but I did enjoy
making mischief, and calling the photographer to catch one of our audience scoffing our sweet offering of loukoumi
(aka Greek Delight) mid-session!
Here we are
with Lynda Steyne, ace organizer,
enjoying the entertainment of national music and dance she and the committee
had laid on. The gentleman pictured here is a renowned musician, a master of
wind instruments in general. You will appreciate his technical wizardry if I
say he not only played the bag-pipes- oh, nostalgia! – but actually performed a
rendition of Ode to Joy ….. on a leaf from a lilac tree. We were exceptionally lucky to enjoy his
music then as the following week he was off to the States to play at the Carnegie Hall.
This lovely lady dancer had hand-made the mementoes we were kindly
given as gifts. But they not only danced for us – they insisted we take part in
some traditional, rapid thigh-slapping, hand-clapping jigs.
And it says a lot for my dance-partner, Tijana Ristic, that she was
still smiling and friendly, given my tendency
to lose tempo and inadvertently hit her on other body parts – she took it all
in good part, bless her!
We enjoyed,
as friend Colin would say, a hearty breakfast all together– some preparing for
their turn at presenting, others, like us, preparing for departure. But before
we go I have to take a shot of our en suite bathroom. I confess I saw a pic of
similar room taken by a fellow-presenter – actually in situ - and I’m terribly tempted to add an ‘h’ in
there! It reminded me of ‘Fiddler on the
Roof’ where Topol dreams of being a rich man and of having in his imagined
house two long staircases:
…’And one more leading nowhere just for show!’
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