Cynthia Clampitt is a freelance writer, world traveler, and culinary historian. She’s been to 37 countries on six continents following her passions after quitting her corporate job and leaving for Australia, a trip that would change her life forever. She also was recently elected to the Society of Women Geographers. Her first book, Waltzing Australia, won the Mom’s Choice Award for travel writing. She’s worked for every major educational publisher in the U.S., including the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, and has published more than 400 articles and contributed two major entries (on Mongolia and Jordan) to the forthcoming Encyclopedia of Food and Culture. Read below to find out more about this fascinating woman!

FG: How did the idea for your book, Waltzing Australia begin?
CC:
My reason for leaving the corporate world was to pursue writing, so I had gone to Australia with the intention of writing daily. I filled pages and pages of notebook paper with observations, background, everything I was seeing, doing, learning, and experiencing. Every couple of weeks, I mailed the pages to my parents, basically in lieu of regular letters. When I returned at the end of the six months, I went to see my folks, and mom had put all the pages she’d received into a notebook—a surprisingly thick notebook. I could hardly believe I’d written so much—hundreds of pages. It already looked a lot like a book. I began typing up the notes during down time, as I built my career, thinking I might be able to turn it into a publishable work. However, it really didn’t seem as though I could turn it loose until it had that happy ending of “I made it.” The original notebook ended with me on the plane home saying, “what do I do now,” and that just wasn’t how I wanted the story to end. Once I got the happy ending firmly in place, I felt the book could be published.

FG: What are some of the advantages of traveling as a woman?
CC:
There are actually quite a few advantages. People generally feel safer with a stranger if it’s a woman, and so feel more comfortable striking up conversations. I’ve experienced this in many countries. People, from teens to retirees, have stopped to offer me directions, asked me to join them for dinner, offered to show me around, and even invited me home. Also, women are generally better than men at connecting quickly. I’ve struck up worthwhile friendships in the time it took to do a couple of loads of laundry at a youth hostel. Also, in lots of places, chivalry lives on, so assistance is readily offered.

FG: Out of all places in the world, why did you want to go to Australia first?
CC:
My dad had been with the airlines when I was growing up, so I’d been to Europe five times with my family, plus I lived in England for a semester while in college. So I was familiar with Europe. For starting my life over, I wanted something unfamiliar—something dramatically different, in fact. I wanted a place that would test me, not just let me be comfortably who I’d always been. I’d always been interested in Australia, but it grew to be almost an obsession—the place I had to go—when I started planning to get out of the corporate world. It proved to be absolutely the right destination.

FG: You now work as a freelance writer and travel the world writing about your adventures. Can you tell us about a few of the countries you’ve been to?
CC:
I’ve now been to 37 countries on six continents. One of the important things I’d learned about myself on that first trip to Australia was that I’m not just a traveler; I’m an adventurer. I’ve been back to Europe, and I love it, but I’ve also done a lot of rugged and exotic stuff that would have seemed unimaginable before Australia. I’ve drunk fermented mare’s milk with nomad herders in Mongolia’s Gobi Desert, traveled in a dugout canoe down Ecuador’s Rio Napo in the Amazon rain forest, browsed through the souks and medinas of Morocco, climbed the Great Wall of China and the stairs of Tibet’s Potala Palace, explored caves in karst formations in northern Vietnam, and soaked in a thermal spring in Iceland (in February). I have a particular fondness for culinary history and the interweaving of food and culture, so I’ve also gone to cooking school in Mexico and took cooking lessons while traveling in Thailand, India, and Egypt. Some places I love more deeply than others, but I’ve really enjoyed everywhere I’ve been.

FG: When you visit a new country, how do you go about choosing where to go? Are you often accompanied by a guide?
CC:
Choosing where to go is usually based on a great deal of research, sometimes lifelong, other times, in preparation for a specific trip. I also ask for other people’s recommendations. Some choices represent long-term goals, such as visiting Cambodia’s Angkor War, which entranced me when I first saw photos in a National Geographic back in grade school, or the Summer Palace in Beijing, which I’d wanted to see since reading Pearl Buck’s Imperial Woman in high school. Then, as a culinary historian, there are places you just have to visit, such as the Ethno-Botanic Garden in Oaxaca, Mexico, because Oaxaca is where corn was first developed thousands of years ago, or Kerala in southern India, where most of the world’s favorite spices originated. Wherever I’m headed, I always have a substantial list of places I want to go or things I want to experience before I leave home, and usually before I even book flights. However, I do try to leave a bit of room for serendipity, taking recommendations I get as I travel, or pursuing discoveries made on site.

As for going with guides, that’s determined by a fairly broad range of factors. If there’s a lot of trackless wilderness involved, I definitely go with a guide. (I consider getting back home again to be a key part of a successful trip.) If I’m going to remote rural areas where no one speaks English, I’ll have a guide. In some countries, such as Tibet, guides are required by law. I’ll also travel with a guide in areas where the customs and beliefs are such that simply being a woman might get me into trouble. If I have a very limited amount of time, a guide can be useful, if for no other reason than knowing how to get to all the worthwhile spots. And then there are the country-specific reasons. For example, in Bali, the generally unmarked roads are dominated by farm animals, and if you hit a cow with your car, the village may very well seek an unpleasant revenge. Plus, it costs about half as much to hire a guide and driver as it costs to rent a car. So even though I’d outlined everything I wanted to see before reaching Bali, I still hired a guide when I wanted to venture out into the countryside. Otherwise, I don’t have much problem just using a guidebook and heading off on foot or using public transportation. Turkey, Japan, Hong Kong, and England are all places where it’s especially easy to rely on public transportation. But research is the key to figuring out where to go and not missing anything important.

FG: What advice do you have for women who are interested in having a career based around travel?
CC:
What you need to do depends on your other passions. If all you want to do is be out there, you can get a job on a cruise line or you can train to be a tour director. Just decide what you want, look at who’s doing it, and check to see if they have jobs available. If, however, you want to write, then I’d say the most important thing is to be good at several things. I write about travel, but I also write about food, history, culture, and geography. I’ve written hundreds of magazine articles, but I’ve also written dozens of textbooks and contributed to encyclopedias. This is actually not quite as diversified as it sounds, as there is no good travel writing that doesn’t include all these topics. It’s just a matter of learning how to tailor your work to your audience or client—plus getting good at research and taking notes everywhere.

FG: What were some of the obstacles you faced when first starting to pursue your dream of being a writer?
CC:
Well, the biggest obstacle was the one all writers face: no one goes out looking for new writers. There is no way to succeed other than just doing the work. Start with lowly magazines to get clips. Learn to write query letters. Expect to get rejections. In fact, if you’re a writer, that’s going to be your life, not just your start up. However, one does build a reputation, makes connections, and gets better at fitting queries to markets. So you don’t escape the work needed to get assignments, but you do get better at it. Like a good athlete—the course doesn’t get shorter, but your speed and endurance build, and you start to win more than you lose.

FG: How many of your business decisions are based on know how vs. your intuition?
CC:
Gosh—it’s actually kind of hard to separate the two. However, if I had to choose, I’d say know how, at least at this point in my career. I’m constantly studying, pursuing the things that matter most to me, keeping my skills sharp, and because I’ve built my career around the things I love—writing, travel, history, geography, food—it’s my know how that keeps me moving forward. That said, intuition is still involved, because the way the market and publishing are changing, there’s still a lot of guesswork.

FG: What do you consider to be some of the major highlights of your career thus far?
CC:
I think the initial big highlight was when I knew I was going to make it as a writer. I had been working part time in retail, to get insurance and make ends meet. When I could walk away from that and rely entirely on my writing to support me, I was overjoyed. Of course, having Waltzing Australia get published was a huge highlight, as was having it winning the Mom’s Choice Award® for travel writing. Writing for the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation was exciting. I loved being invited to contribute major articles (on Mongolia and Jordan) to the Encyclopedia of Food and Culture. And I was delighted to be elected to the Society of Women Geographers earlier this year.

A highlight of a different sort is getting reactions from readers who are inspired by my book. A lot of people just enjoy my adventure and wonder of Australia, but I am particularly excited to hear from people who have found something more in my book, whether it was simply the motivation to go on vacation or the inspiration to pursue their dreams.

FG: What is a spiritual mantra or philosophy that you live by?
CC:
I’d say that the closest I come to having a mantra would be something from Nobel laureate Patrick White that I quote often: “Nothing important is easy.” As for a philosophy, I think that could be boiled down to always doing the best work you can, even when it doesn’t seem to matter (because it always matters, even if it’s only internal), and care deeply—about your audience, about your craft, about the truth. Actually, I think caring deeply could be said to be the engine behind always doing the best you can.

FG: What is the best piece of advice you’ve ever been given?
CC:
“Make the most of every opportunity.” My dad always emphasized that. The other best piece of advice, also from my dad, was “Be nice to everyone—but especially to the people others ignore.”

FG: What would you tell your younger-self if you knew then what you know now?
CC:
There is a degree to which I so value everything I’ve gone through and everything I’ve learned that I’m not sure I’d want to change anything, even the difficulties—and maybe especially the difficulties. Of course, it depends on how much younger. I might tell a much younger self not to be hurt by those who were intimidated by intelligence—but I’m not sure I’d have listened when I was younger. In fact, I’m pretty sure my mom told me that, but you can’t really process that until you’re older. If we’re talking about the beginning of my writing career, I’d probably have told myself the clients that would turn out to be the best, so I could have avoided a few dozen rejection letters. That way, I could have skipped the stint in retail. (Not a highlight of my career.)

Finish these sentences:

FG: Women should stop complaining about______ and start doing _____________
CC:
They should not complain about what they can’t do and start doing whatever they can. That will mean different things for different people, of course. If you have four kids, you can’t just walk out and go to another country. However, you can start writing articles for local magazines, or start learning a foreign language, or take a college course (online, if necessary), or start reading books about places you’d like to visit, or take up embroidery, painting, jewelry making, or archery. There’s always something you can start doing that will enrich your life, and there’s usually something you can do that will potentially, over time, lead to the fulfillment of a larger dream. Focus on what you can do. Everyone is happier when the glass is half full, rather than half empty.

And remember, nothing happens instantly. It took me three years to save enough money to pay for that first big Australia trip and to support myself for a year afterwards, while I started my new career. It took me longer than that to build a new career when I returned. Remember, “Nothing important is easy.”

FG: If your life had a soundtrack what would be your top three songs?
CC:
That makes me smile, because when I was planning to leave the corporate world, one of my motivational techniques was to create an “escape tape,” a tape of songs that reminded me I was getting out. One of the songs was “I’m Already Gone” by the Eagles, and I think that would have to be on any soundtrack of my life. I’d probably include “Southern Cross” by Crosby, Stills and Nash, just because Australia was the door into my new life. Gosh, about a dozen songs come to mind involving country roads, leaving on jet planes, and ships at sea. However, if I only get three, I think I’d have to pick “Africa” by Toto as my final one. It almost always brings me to my feet, dancing, and makes me think about digging out my passport.

FG: What project(s) do you have coming up?
CC:
I’m currently working on three books. One is a sequel to Waltzing Australia. I’ve been back to Australia three more times, though only for a month each time, not the six months of the original trip. However, I’ve had some delightful and often astonishing adventures on the return trips. I’ve also begun writing a book of all my tips, tricks, and advice for traveling smarter and healthier, and having a better time doing it, plus pointers on how to get more travel into your life. And I’m working on a book of the histories of the most important foods in the world. People are usually astonished to find out the impact food has had on world events—and how stunningly valuable currently ordinary items once were. For example, in the Middle Ages, a serf could buy his freedom for one pound of black pepper, and dried cod made the Age of Vikings possible.

For more information on Cynthia and Waltzing Austraila please visit the Waltzing Australia blog www.waltzingaustralia.wordpress.com, for information on Cynthia’s food history and non-Aussie travel blog: www.worldsfare.wordpress.com. You can also visit www.worldplate.com. Upcoming speaking engagements and book signings are posted on Facebook fan page (Cynthia Clampitt: Author).

 
 

Dafna Michaelson, Founder & President of 50 in 52 Journey

Dafna Michaelson is the founder, president and JourneyWoman for the 50 in 52 Journey, a project for which she traveled across America to all 50 states and Washington DC spanning the 52 weeks of 2009 to find America’s problem solvers and idea generators. Featured on NPR, CBS Sunday Morning and CNN, Michaelson has been sharing the stories of ordinary people doing extraordinary things for their communities throughout the country with the goal of inspiring others to action.

FG: How did the 50 in 52 journey begin?
DM: In 2009 I set out to travel to all 50 states in search of sharing the stories of people all over our country who were helping to solve community problems or were otherwise working to build community. I wanted to be an outlet to be part of the process of changing the mirror we use that reflects who we are as a society.

FG: What kind of preparation went into the planning of this trip?
DM: From the moment I quit my job I spent every waking breath trying to make connections in all 50 states, spread the word, find money, make a schedule. I had basically 5 months from the birth of the idea to my first trip. Not a lot of time! I got so desperate at one point trying to find people to interview in Delaware that while sitting in traffic on a rainy day I noticed a car with Delaware plates and actually jumped out of my car and knocked on their window asking them if they knew any community problem solvers in Delaware. It was hilarious!

FG: What are some of the lessons you learned on this journey?
DM:
I learned much about community and what it takes to step up and solve a problem. I learned what it means to be truly strong in your beliefs and put yourself out to lose the faith of friends and family while making life better for those around you. I learned much about my own prejudices that I did not think existed and I learned how I too can be strong while facing some of the toughest challenges of my life. Most of all I learned that my role is to help people with the knowledge I have amassed and to be the one that is the cheering section when no one else believes your idea is a good one!

FG: What tips would you give to people who are interested in becoming active in their community?
DM:
Becoming active in your community, or solving community problems as I like to say, does not mean you have to be the ringleader or the sole body on an effort. When I speak to groups I ask them to think about the things they complain about in their community. I ask them to look critically at that list and tell me if there is not one thing on that list that they could tackle. I ask will you Raise Your Hand© and say about one thing “I’ve got that one!” Then bring a group of friends together and solve that problem for your community. At the heart of it all you have to be working on something you care about and that will impact you or the people around you. The reward is a stronger community for all.

FG: How do you balance family and the work life?
DM:
This a response to that very question from my blog: Today I was asked to describe balance. Balance? Me? I was really quite amused and answered as follows: “Balance…hmmmm…balance is the perfect mix of morning snuggles with my children before camp/school, loving caresses from my boyfriend as he runs me to the airport…enjoying stimulating conversation on the airplane…meeting incredible people in each state I visit…sleeping on the airplane ride home…enjoying the I missed you kiss from my boyfriend when he picks me up from the airport, the giggles and hugs when I pick up the kids from camp…enjoying a weekend of family fun and starting all over again the next Wednesday. Balance=Love, Inspiration, fun, more love (sleep not required).”
I really thought I was a funny person to ask that question of. When I relayed the question and my (I thought) quite humorous answer to my boyfriend he said, “of course you’re the right person to answer that, look at what you’ve accomplished.” He pointed to the fact that we’ve created this Journey in the best way possible to least impact the children. I only travel on the days the kids are with their dad. I come home every week. I work while the kids are in camp/school. When the kids are home we play games, go to the playground, have play dates, cook dinner, laugh – a lot. Balance. As I meet people in each state doing incredible things to build community they are often doing so while holding full time jobs like Dr. Mehari in Kentucky and Debbie in Washington. Often they have started two and three organizations like Linda in Maryland and the ladies of the Catholic Action Center in Kentucky. Others have made their lives work of their passions like Michael in Florida and Michael in California. All of the people I have met are juggling so many balls that many times I’ve asked the question, How do you do it all? Almost to the person they have said that they would not have it any other way. For them balance means living life with love for others and following through on that love in the fullest way they know how. When you love your family you will do everything in your power to protect and provide for them. When you love your community you will do the same. Balance is that ability to fill your life with equal parts love of self, love of family, love of community and choosing your work through that lens. The people whom I have been so fortunate to meet do that without thinking. I have to think about it, for certain, but truly I’m working my way there. I even manage a few minutes of precious alone time with my boyfriend every now and then! Balance.
 

FG: How many of your business decisions are based on know how vs. your intuition?
DM:
Intuition definitely plays a big part in decision making, the trick is balancing it with the know how. I studied for an MBA so that I would be able to follow my gut and put business acumen behind my drive. I have been so fortunate in my career that my path has led me to so many unique opportunities and each experience has helped me grow into the business woman and social entrepreneur that I have become.

FG: What do you consider to be some of the major highlights of your career thus far?
DM:
I recently did an exercise with my resume. I needed to submit a resume for a position as a guest lecturer for an entrepreneurship class. I went to update it and was so bored by the traditional resume that I blew it up and created a resume graphic utilizing the major highlights of my career so that I could follow the path and see what went into making up the whole of me, from a business perspective:

FG: What is a spiritual mantra or philosophy that you live by?
DM:
I will not complain about a problem unless I am willing to work on the solution AND It takes a little crazy to make a difference! These are my two basic foundational philosophies although I use mantra and prayer every day in different ways depending on what I am facing at the moment and from where I need to derive strength.

FG: What is the best piece of advice you’ve ever been given?
DM: My mother told me from the time I was a very young child: You can be anything you want to be AND Be true to yourself and your beliefs and you can’t go wrong.

FG: What would you tell your younger-self if you knew then what you know now?
DM:
Follow your instincts, listen to your mind and to your gut, remember to take care of yourself too.

FG: Finish this sentence….Women should stop complaining about _____________ and_______________.
DM:
Women should stop complaining about_anything_____ and start doing ___something to solve the problem they would like to complain about.__________

FG: If your life came with a soundtrack, what would be the top three songs (and please indicate the singer or band):
DM:
If you believe by Julie Geller, Defying Gravity from Wicked, We Shall Be Free by Garth Brooks

FG: What project(s) do you have coming up?
DM:
The first Journey Institute summit and roundtables will be held November 11th and 14th 2010. The focus will be Youth Leadership in Community Problem Solving, also a series for Rocky Mountain PBS highlighting social entrepreneurs in Colorado to launch online October 2010. We are also launching curriculum based on the journey for classrooms and individuals aged 7 – 107 to learn what it means to be community problem solvers. This will launch by September 2010 on the Random Acts of Kindness website. The Raise Your Hand© workshop, first held as a follow up to my presentation at TedxDeverED, to help groups and individuals take the next step in community problem solving will hit the road in August 2010. I am also working on completing the book about the 50 in 52 Journey for publication late 2010/early 2011.

For more information on Dafna Michaelson and the 50 in 52 journey please visit www.dafnam.com.

 

Sandy Salle, CEO of Hills of Africa Travel

Sandy Salle is a native of Zimbabwe and was born and raised in Southern Africa. The Chief Executive Officer of Hills of Africa travel, Sally is passionate about using her first-hand knowledge of Africa to create the trip of a lifetime for her clients. Currently based state-side in North Carolina, she resides with her husband and two small children. Sandy travels home to Africa several times a year and believes that the next best thing to living in Africa is sharing it with others. Read more about this Woman 2 Watch below.

FG: Why did you feel it was important to start the Hills of Africa tours?

SS: Once you’ve been to Africa and experienced the soul of Africa, it lives with you forever. It changes you, and you have a feeling of completeness with yourself. In starting Hills of Africa, we wanted to share this beauty—which is derived from the landscapes, animals, cities, and people of Africa—with the world.

FG: What types of trips and travel packages do you offer?

SS: We mainly specialize in luxury family, group, and honeymoon trips to Africa, but we offer all kinds of trips and packages. All of our trips are completely customized to fit our client’s individual needs and preferences—there are no pre-made or generic itineraries. From wildlife encounters to wine and oil tastings to sunset river cruises, we are dedicated to making our client’s dreams come true, and we’ll go to great lengths to ensure our clients receive everything they desire on their trip to Africa.

FG: Why is Africa a great place for a vacation or romantic getaway?

SS: Whether you’re celebrating your honeymoon or your 50th wedding anniversary, Africa is the ultimate romantic escape. Many honeymooners to Africa are looking to experience a rich mixture of adventure and relaxation—two elements that Africa offers in great quantities. Therefore, many romance-based itineraries include everything from the beaches of Zanzibar to Botswana walking safari tours. Romantic activities abound, from horseback wine tastings to side-by-side bush baths beneath the African night sky to champagne picnics on the beach.

Visiting Africa as a family is one of the most rewarding and unforgettable ways to share the experiences of new cultures, fascinating history, and exciting adventures, as an entire family. Whether you have younger children or late teens, everyone can enjoy experiences that range from adventurous safaris to Cape Town city tours, horse riding tours on the beach to cultural expeditions with the native Bushmen, and a trip to Monkeyland Primate Sanctuary to elephant back rides. Children-friendly camps offer a variety of activities for the young ones who aren’t yet of age to participate on a game drive or safari tour. While the children are enjoying bush treasure hunts, bead-making classes, and bedtime stories from traditional African storytellers, parents can relax or partake in an adventurous safari tour.

FG: What are some of the common misconceptions people have about vacationing in Africa?

SS: There are many safety misconceptions about Africa; for example, many people think the food and water are inedible, mosquitoes and disease are rampant, and safaris are inherently unsafe. In reality, trusted accommodations have access to filtered water at all times and offer only the freshest food that is absolutely delectable and completely safe to consume.

When it comes to mosquitoes and insect-carrying diseases, you will stay healthy as long as you follow suggested precautions to ensure complete safety, such as taking anti-malaria pills during your trip. Also, accommodations that are prone to mosquitoes always offer mosquito nets to guests. You can rest assured you are safe when embarking on safari with a qualified and professional safari provider. Guides are armed with weapons, equipped with handheld communication devices, and have undergone extensive training in proper safety procedures and animal behavior. In fact, professional guides require a minimum of four years of training in the field before they can accompany safari goers on an outing!

FG: What is the most rewarding experience you’ve had in creating the Hills of Africa tours?

SS: It would have to be seeing how Hills of Africa has changed lives—both the lives of the African people and our clients. Hills of Africa practices sustainable tourism and only partners with eco-friendly and Fair Trade companies, which ensures that the communities our clients visit receive the direct economic benefits of tourism, such as job creation. The locals who work in tourism at Fair Trade companies are guaranteed safe working conditions and just wages. It’s thrilling to see the money that tourism brings to these local communities used to boost the standard of living through education programs and wildlife initiatives. Often Africa touches our clients’ lives in small, yet profound ways. A couple of instances come to mind: For a family of twenty visiting Africa, we organized a tour to a small village, where they played a soccer match against the villagers. Despite it pouring rain, the game was filled with much camaraderie and laughing and the day become one that no one in the family will soon forget. Another was a client who loved elephants. All she wanted to do on her safari was to be around them, so we arranged for her to work with elephants at a sanctuary – It was a dream come true for her.

FG: How do you balance family life and the work you do for the foundation?

SS: It is very important to close shop at the end of the workday and spend time with family. For me, it’s a blessing that I am able to work with clients and on the foundation doing something that I truly love and that I feel changes lives, but it’s my family who empowers me to be able to do what I love. Family time gives me the energy to be able to go out and help people.

FG: How many of your business decisions are based on know how vs. your intuition?

SS: I am a thinker, so every idea is usually a know how, which is then clearly put together through our proven formulas. I have each member of our team work through our Procedures Manual.

FG: What do you consider to be some of the major highlights of your career thus far?

SS: Working with clients whose lives have been touched and changed by the magic of Africa, being in a position to help the people of Africa, for example by teaching them how to plant vegetable gardens that will feed their family for a year or painting a school classroom.

FG: What is a spiritual mantra or philosophy that you live by?

SS: I live by a mantra that I made up “live big, love big, dream big and travel big”. It means a lot to me in so many ways, but it’s essentially a reminder that it is so important to live your life to its fullest.

FG: What is the best piece of advice you’ve ever been given?

SS: Don’t play small, and stop treating your business as a hobby and treat it as the corporation that it should be.

FG: What would you tell your younger-self if you knew then what you know now?
SS: We are all here for a reason, and we are here to be of service to others.

Finish this sentence….

FG: Women should stop complaining about _______________ and start _________________

SS: Women should stop complaining about how much they are responsible for in family life and start enjoying the family they have created.

FG: If your life came with a soundtrack, what would be the top three songs (and please indicate the singer or band)

SS: “Unwritten” by Natasha Beddingfield, “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” by Israel Kamakawiwo`ole, and “Waka Waka (This Time For Africa)” by Shakira (the official 2010 World Cup Song)

FG: What project(s) do you have coming up?

SS: We have some exciting group safari tours coming up! Soul Safari Transformation, led by Oprah Soul Series author Ainslie MacLeod, is a 9-day African Safari from April 29-May 7, 2011 through South Africa and Zimbabwe that combines MacLeod’s life-changing teachings, daily spiritual workshops, and the energetic boost of the African bush. Participants are guided by MacLeod to discover the path their souls intended while enjoying leisure activities—such as game-viewing, canoeing, and elephant-back riding—all within the safe haven of an intimate environment of 24 people there for the same purpose. To learn more, visit: and website: http://www.hillsofafrica.com/Soul_Safari/Soul_Safari.html.

We are in the final stages of developing several more group tours, including the Awakening Inspiration Safari with renowned holistic healer and author Jonathan Ellerby commencing September 19, 2011. Please check the Hills of Africa website (www.hillsofafrica.com) over the next few weeks for the latest info all our upcoming group safari tours.

For more information on Sandy Salle or the Hills of Africa visit www.hillsofafrica.com and blog: www.livethemagicofafrica.com or on Twitter: @hillsofafrica. You can also call Hills of Africa by phone 1.800.940.9344 or email: hoainfo@hillsofafrica.com.

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