Archive for the 'About AHA' Category

BACK FROM ITALY: VACATION, VOCATION, WHAT’S THE DIFF?

October 24th, 2011

Two Hidden Restaurants, Tuscany

After our last research trip to Italy, I wrote a post entitled, “Wonderful Discoveries and Dismal Disappointments.”  Not so this time—it was all good!

We planned this trip as a working vacation with concentration on three of our favorite spots in Italy. We stayed in each for five days, determined to stay long enough to unpack, settle in, and catch the spirit of the place, which is just what we did.
With five days on the edge of Lake Como, five more at Castello di Proceno in southern-most Tuscany, and five more in our favorite, Rome, we had a wonderful and relaxing time as we explored historic villas and their gardens, rediscovered beautiful hill towns, and visited favorite places that still  move us. We ate in dozens of delicious restaurants, and had tours of some of the most beautiful, historic, and hidden hotels ever.
Before I go any further, I must thank our researcher, Maggie McKenny-Harris, for the list of hotels and restaurants that she painstakingly compiled after, what must ave been, hours and hours of research and interviews. After trying just two of her suggestions, I knew that I was armed with something very, very valuable indeed. Maggie had us in places I would never have found on my own—quaint, characteristic, historic, family-owned, and always, always lovely. Our guests will be so very thrilled with the amazing hotels and incredible restaurants that have now been added to the AHA list. After a little bounce on the beds, I touch the sheets and pillows, I am all over the bathrooms, into the breakfast rooms, and up on the rooftops. After each new find, we toasted Maggie, and I can’t wait to return to these places myself.  Thank you, Maggie, for finding these beautiful little boutique, out-of-the-way spots that our guests will love.
I will post again soon on our lazy time on the edge of Lago di Como, and, for those who will travel there with us, what you have to look forward to. I will follow with a post on Tuscany, our castle, and the upcoming Music Festival trip July 12 – 18, 2012, and the Tuscany Rome trip September 30-October 8, 2012, and finish the series with a post on what is in store for our travelers to Rome, both in September and Rome, October 10-17, 2012.

If you are curious as to what we found by following the primitive signs in the photo above, it was no big deal, just lunch in an Etruscan cave, circa 700 BC! Everything tastes better in a place like this, and welcome to cultural immersion. Thank you, Maggie!

Until we are there again, it is nice to be home, but I can still feel those warm cobblestones under my feet.
Cynthia

Lunch in an Etruscan cave, circa 700 BC

 

SEPTEMBER 11, 2002: PARIS – A Short And Positive Account

September 11th, 2011

September 11, 2011

AHA had a sold out trip to Paris ready to depart on September 13, 2001, when everything changed. On September 13, 2001 there were no planes leaving the ground, the whole world had been put on hold.

Fast forward one year to September 11, 2002, the first anniversary of those despicable terrorist attacks against our country.  AHA is in Paris with a great group of clients, looking forward to our final dinner together in this City of Light. Our all-glass restaurant came highly recommended, was the top story of a tall building, located on the left bank of the Seine, overlooking the gorgeous flying buttresses of Notre Dame.  The menu was different, creative and Middle Eastern.  Why?  Because our dinner restaurant, on September 11, 2002, just happened to be the top floor of the Muslim Institute, Paris. Funny how things happen. We dined on lamb with apricots and cashews and since it was our last night in Paris, on our way out, we all stood at the floor to ceiling windows to take a last look at this twinkling city.  We were startled out of our reverie by a loud WOOSH sound outside and to our right. Silently we stared across the Seine to the plaza in front of the Hotel du Ville, Paris’s city hall, where the sound had come from.  Unbeknownst to us, in memory of what had happened in the United States one year earlier, Paris lit two huge, perfectly square beams of light that shot up into the night sky for as far as you could see.

Caught completely by surprise, my guests and I did not speak a word.  As we processed what we were seeing, the other restaurant customers quietly stood, and in silence some raised their glasses while others bowed their heads. On that night that I will never ever forget, we were very proud to be Americans in Paris, we knew we were not in this alone, and we fell more in love with Paris than we thought possible.

 

ANNOUNCING THE AHA TOURS FOR 2012

September 1st, 2011

I Am Passionate About What I Do

Here are the deeply cultural, and beautiful tours that AHA will guide in 2012.  Lot’s of choices and gorgeous destinations.  This year we have deeper discounts for returning guests, early applications, and for bringing a friend.  Check out the Discounts page.  And don’t forget, a group of 4-6 friends or family that apply as a group, for any of the trips below, receive a private tour.

AHA is all about cultural immersion travel, and we love it when our guests return home enriched.  So, which culture would you like to take a dip into?

1. GOLD RUSH WINES AND YOSEMITE  April 19-26, 2012

2.  SARDEGNA: ANCIENT, WILD, SPECTACULAR, May 22-28, 2012

3.  PARIS 201: BEYOND THE EIFFEL TOWER, May 30 – June 5, 2012

4.  MUSICA IN TUSCANY: A CASTLE COURTYARD CONCERT, HILL TOWNS AND ROME, July 2012

5.  GERMANY: CASTLES, CATHEDRALS and a CONCENTRATION CAMP, October 1-8, 2012

 

6.  ROME AND TUSCANY: A COLOSSEUM AND A CASTLE, September 30 – October 8, 2012

7.  ROMA AMOR -  ROME IS LOVE SPELLED BACKWARD:  JUDITH TESTA BRINGS HER BOOK TO LIFE, October 10-17, 2012

A WORD ON WHAT’S NEW FOR 2012:

SARDEGNA – May 22-28, 2012

Hauntingly Beautiful Tuscany

This large island off the west coast of Italy has been a vacation favorite with Italians for eons.  The colorful grottoes, beautiful beaches, and unique history, a result of being located along the high traffic seaway of conquering civilizations through the centuries, makes Sardegna a culture in which you want to immerse yourself.

MUSICA IN TUSCANY - July 2012

AHA’s first summer tour!  Not only will we attend a music festival held in the courtyard of an 11th-century Italian castle, we will stay there as well.  This itinerary will also include meandering through some of the nearby hill towns of Tuscany, enjoying the cuisine and wines that this area is famous for, and it will end with two days in Rome.  Here is a perfect trip for the educators, administrators, and summer vacationers that have asked for a summer trip.  I was listening and look forward to sharing Tuscany and Rome with you.

GERMANY: CASTLES, CATHEDRALS and a CONCENTRATION CAMP, October 1-8, 2012

This trip will begin in the wine country of Bavaria and end in the mountains outside of Munich, Germany.  We will travel the gorgeous “Romantic Road” watching the hilltop castles go by, stopping along the way to explore and “get into” Germany.  But, by way of balance, we will also include, an important piece of history. We will visit Dachau, the infamous concentration camp museum, and Nurnberg.  This is an outstanding art history itinerary, with both treasures and tragedy.

ROMA AMOR: ROME IS LOVE SPELLED BACKWARD – October 10-17, 2012

This tour, focusing on Rome and Rome alone, will be based on my favorite book on the Eternal City, Rome is Love Spelled Backward. And amazingly, for the fortunate guests that sign on, the author, Judith Testa, will guide this tour!  I will be there, too, listening and learning from AHA’s own art history consultant and professor, as she deftly paints, for us, a picture of ancient Rome.  How fortunate are we!

A NEW AHA TEAM MEMBER: INTRODUCING MAGGIE HARRIS

June 27th, 2011

Maggie Harris

Maggie Harris comes to AHA to head up research and development of a most important department; hotels and restaurants.  As I have pointed out  most recently in the post: “What is Cultural Immersion and How Do You Get It?“,  Hotels and restaurants are an integral part of our immersion process.  We are extremely particular, not simply that they are nice, but that they are characteristic of the place we are visiting, and Maggie gets it.

Years ago, when I started this business, research and development was maps spread out on a big table, some falling off to the floor, my favorite travel books with stickies everywhere, sharpees in different colors for different cities, and copious notes.  In those days, the web was less than useful.  The sorts of immersion spots I was searching for were years away from any web presence.  Fast forward.

Upon Maggie’s return from a recent trip to Paris, she emailed me a tip on a restaurant that AHA might want to use in the future.  Her email was so descriptive, insightful, and detailed, I felt I’d been right there, sitting across the table from her.  However, it wasn’t just what she said that caught my interest, it was that she was speaking my language.  The aspects that she swooned over were exactly the aspects I look for in and AHA restaurant.   From the food and “cultural” ambiance, to the welcoming staff and the location, she’d noted that all parts added up to, YES, and she wanted to share the information with me.  Little did Maggie or I imagine at the time, that that email was a sort of application and interview rolled into one.

A few emails later, realizing that I could trust Maggie’s judgment, I offered her this position, and she loved it.  With the AHA criteria understood, Maggie will scope hotels and restaurants in AHA destinations, online as well as through personal recommendations, compiling a list of places that I can try out while traveling.  This is a very, very important job, and Maggie will be GREAT at it.

  • Maggie holds a Master’s Degree in Organizational Leadership from Bethel University, and has worked or studied in Nicaragua, China, Japan, Hong Kong, and Indonesia. She loves to travel and has visited more than 20 countries. Maggie and her husband Nick are the proud parents of two children: Kate (7) and Liam (5).
  • Maggie is a leadership instructor at the University of Minnesota.
  • Maggie Harris is the President and Co-founder of Ever After Gowns, a volunteer-run, nonprofit organization that donates prom gowns and accessories to high school students in need. She leads an incredible team of women who devote themselves to cultivating strong community partnerships that help build self-esteem and confidence in young women.

Now Maggie, armed with your virtual sharpees and sticky notes, welcome to the happy crew of Art History Alive!

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