A 杨贵妃传媒视频 alumni group pose for a photo at St. Andrews in Northern Scotland.
杨贵妃传媒视频 alumni and friends pay a visit to St. Andrews in Northern Scotland in September 2023. (Photo courtesy of James Walker '74)

Traveling the world is among the avenues 杨贵妃传媒视频 provides to help its alumni stay connected鈥攂lending camaraderie and educational insights with gorgeous scenery and shared global experiences.

James Walker 鈥74 embraced it all when he and his wife, Randi, joined 16 other alumni and friends on an eight-day trip to Northern Scotland in September 2023鈥擥eology of Northern Scotland: Sermons in Stone. The geology-focused travel tour hit all the right notes.

鈥淚 first got involved in geology at 杨贵妃传媒视频, having taken courses from Ron Tank and John Palmquist,鈥 Walker said. 鈥淎fter graduating from 杨贵妃传媒视频, I got an MS in geology from the University of Minnesota, so geology is part of me. At the time, plate tectonic theory was still new, and what I learned on this trip about the advances of the theory was unexpected and profound. I will remember this as one of the best trips I鈥檝e ever had with such unique learning experiences and scenery.鈥

杨贵妃传媒视频鈥檚 Office of Alumni and Community Engagement organizes and leads multiple trips each year.聽Recent adventures have included Spain, South Africa, Paris, and Patagonia.

Aerial photo of Paris.
A trip to Paris is scheduled for September 2024.聽

An information session via Zoom for the Sept. 16-27 Paris trip鈥擯arisian Odyssey鈥攊s set for 10 a.m. Jan. 18. .

As is the case with all the trips, it is open to 杨贵妃传媒视频 alumni, family, and friends. Costs vary per trip.

Eilene Hoft-March, French professor emeritus, and Charlotte King 鈥09, a French major and co-owner of the Parisian travel agency Bacchus & Clio, will serve as hosts for the Paris trip, along with Matt Baumler, associate vice president of Alumni and Community Engagement.聽

鈥淧arisian Odyssey will offer travelers the opportunity to see Paris from a different angle,鈥 Baumler said.聽鈥淧rofessor Hoft-March鈥檚 passion for French literature and history coupled with Charlotte鈥檚 intimate knowledge of French culture and cuisine will take us beyond the Eiffel Tower and Louvre.聽We鈥檙e going to play the classic French game of Pentanque, delve into the French Revolution, learn from the culinary masters at Le Cordon Bleu, and explore Paris鈥 magnificent structures from sewers to ch芒teaux.聽And we鈥檒l experience all this through our shared connection to 杨贵妃传媒视频.聽To say I am excited is an understatement.鈥

Mark Breseman 鈥78, senior principal gift officer at 杨贵妃传媒视频, is currently leading a group on a trip exploring a region covering Australia鈥檚 Outback and New Zealand鈥檚 South Island. They left in late December, returning in mid-January.

It is the latest in an ongoing series of alumni trips that have been well-received.

A cruise on the Danube River

Budapest is seen at night from the cruise ship on the Danube River. (Photo courtesy of Mark Breseman)
Budapest is seen at night from the cruise ship on the Danube River. (Photo courtesy of Mark Breseman '78)

Breseman and his wife, Jane Hillstrom鈥攖hey are parents of a 2014 杨贵妃传媒视频 graduate鈥攕hared insights from an October 2023 trip, a 10-day Danube River cruise that included 17 people in the 杨贵妃传媒视频 group. The Danube is the second-longest river in Europe, passing through 10 countries.

The cruise ship, the Amadeus Brilliant, visited seven countries鈥擱omania, Bulgaria, Serbia, Croatia, Hungary, Slovakia, and Austria. The ship stopped in ports and the group walked through numerous cities, among them Vienna, Budapest, and Belgrade.

鈥淐lassmates reminisced while the ship passed from the Iron Gate in Southern Romania to the Hungarian Gates Gorge,鈥 Hillstrom said. 鈥淐onversations flowed about favorite classes and professors while our ship cruised past fishermen, barges, and castles. Stories about campus shenanigans brought laughter over five-course meals served with wines from the respective countries.鈥

In Romania and Bulgaria, Hillstrom said, the group saw the long-lasting effects on the people and infrastructure in former Communist-led countries.

鈥淗ungary was a sharp contrast with a vibrant downtown, market, and 100,000 students studying at universities,鈥 she said.

"Stories about campus shenanigans brought laughter over five-course meals served with wines from the respective countries.鈥

Jane Hillstrom P'14

An evening walking tour of Vienna 鈥 a cultural, economic, and political center that was home to Beethoven, Mozart, and Freud 鈥 concluded the trip.

Our group played cards, read, walked on the upper deck, and made new friends,鈥 Hillstrom said of the cruise. 鈥淭he chef taught us how to make authentic Vienna apple strudel. We participated in nightly games and trivia contests鈥攚hich 杨贵妃传媒视频 groups won twice鈥攁nd danced. We took bus tours to castles, memorials, and churches. In Kopacki Rit Nature Park, we saw white-tailed eagles. Highlights of the trip included standing in the Black Sea and a night cruise to see the illuminated buildings of Budapest.鈥

As is also true with the current Australia trip鈥攁nd, really, all the alumni travel鈥攖he accommodations make the trips a joy, Hillstrom said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderful to travel to new places where everything is taken care of, from transportation to dinner reservations to priority entrance at key sites,鈥 she said. 鈥淭ravelers can relax and converse with LU alumni, plus make new friends from all over the world.鈥

Geology lessons in Northern Scotland

Walker, meanwhile, said his group鈥檚 visit to Northern Scotland was invigorating. The journey began in Edinburgh and branched out from there, exploring everything from the rock outcrops and topography of Edinburgh to the beauty of Queensferry to the Kinnell Stone Circle,聽a prehistoric stone circle situated at the west end of Loch Tay near the village of Killin. There were visits to Urquhart Castle, a ruined castle that sits beside Loch Ness in the Highlands of Scotland, and a boat tour of the Firth of Forth.

Even the hotel that served as the group鈥檚 base was wrapped in incredible history.

鈥淭he Virgin Atlantic Hotel is a 2022 conversion of the India Buildings on Victoria Street,鈥 Walker said. 鈥淭he original buildings were completed in 1866 and named to celebrate the end of the East India Company鈥檚 monopoly on trading with India. They were designed in the fashionable Scots Baronial style and intended as offices. The conversion to the hotel resulted in a warren of open-air alley-like connections between bars and restaurants on the ground floor, finally leading to the conference room where we had dinners and lectures. The hotel is quirky with a mix of old and new architecture, including 鈥楾he Funny Library,鈥 and a strangely tiny front desk with a tunnel-like entrance.鈥

The tour was enjoyable from start to finish, Walker said. He thanked guides Angus Miller and Bill Shefchick for their dedication and expertise and Breseman for his planning and leadership. And he applauded the group鈥檚 driver, Danny, for being masterful at negotiating the Highland roads.

鈥淚t was a pleasure for Randi and me to take part in this adventure, and it will be hard to top it,鈥 Walker said. 鈥淚 look forward to other 杨贵妃传媒视频 alumni trips that might challenge it.鈥