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  1. Dicing With Death in the Gobi

    Dicing With Death in the Gobihttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/articles/beyond-the-guidebook/274-dicing-with-death-in-the-gobi

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Graydon Hazenberg
    • Category: Beyond the Guidebook

    Canadian adventurer Graydon Hazenberg follows the trail of China's most revered traveller along the Silk Road. The corpse lay on his back in the ditch, a blackened arm extended skyward from his ragged sleeve. He looked like the tramps I had seen...

  2. In Search of the Eagle Hunters

    In Search of the Eagle Huntershttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/articles/beyond-the-guidebook/273-in-search-of-the-eagle-hunters

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Tony Girardin
    • Category: Beyond the Guidebook

    In the most remote region of Mongolia, semi-nomadic herdsmen train golden eagles to help them hunt. Filmmaker Tony Girardin travels 1600 kilometres over the desert to meet one. We were exchanging glares as Kubikhan, a Kazakh eagle hunter, sharpened one...

  3. Tibet on the Rails

    Tibet on the Railshttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/articles/beyond-the-guidebook/271-tibet-on-the-rails

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Michael Buckley
    • Category: Beyond the Guidebook

    Tibetans fear that their culture will get derailed as the new train from China begins service to their region. When the first commercial train arrived in Lhasa in July 2006, it set a number of records. It set a record for the highest railway on earth,...

  4. Backgrounder: Tibet

    Backgrounder: Tibethttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/articles/beyond-the-guidebook/270-backgrounder-tibet

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Verge Staff
    • Category: Beyond the Guidebook

    Nestled in the Himalayan Region of Pacific-Asia, the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) is governed as a territory of China. China boasts Tibet’s modernization and burgeoning economy since its rule; but critics accuse China of committing human rights...

  5. How to Survive Anything

    How to Survive Anythinghttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/travel-intelligence/why-we-travel/269-how-to-survive-anything

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Jeff Minthorn
    • Category: Why we travel

    "Survivorman" Les Stroud has endured some of the harshest physical environments on earth. He speaks with Verge about the headspace you need to survive. Long before daybreak, the ground is crawling with insects—sand flies, ticks, chiggers, ants. The air...

  6. Visions of a Voodoo Psychic

    Visions of a Voodoo Psychichttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/articles/beyond-the-guidebook/268-visions-of-a-voodoo-psychic

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Marc-André Roy
    • Category: Beyond the Guidebook

    Marc-André Roy explores the value of voodoo in Benin. I’m far from superstitious, but couldn’t pass up a visit to the local voodoo psychic. I had been living in Benin, the supposed birthplace of voodoo. Two alleys over, I was told, lived a big,...

  7. Making the Grade in Mongolia

    Making the Grade in Mongoliahttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/articles/beyond-the-guidebook/267-making-the-grade-in-mongolia

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Cheryl Dunkerton
    • Category: Beyond the Guidebook

    Volunteer teacher Cheryl Dunkerton finds that Mongolian students juggle more than just exams in order to make it through school. Bundled in coats, my university English students huddle like little pigeons on wooden benches. But wait – do I have a new...

  8. Exploring some NGOs in Laos

    Exploring some NGOs in Laoshttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/travel-intelligence/why-we-travel/266-exploring-some-ngos-in-laos

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Julia Steinecke
    • Category: Why we travel

    Julia Steinecke finds it easy to meet NGOs and community organizations, like Big Brother Mouse. I'm not surprised to hear that foreign aid pays for sixty percent of public expenditures in Laos. Every time I get on a bus, I end up sitting beside an...

  9. Treading Lightly in Laos

    Treading Lightly in Laoshttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/articles/beyond-the-guidebook/265-treading-lightly-in-laos

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Julia Steinecke and Troy Nahumko
    • Category: Beyond the Guidebook

    Here's how your visit to Laos can have a positive impact. The Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge that spans the Mekong river just south of Vientiane is more than an infrastructure link; it's one of the main entry points for thousands of sweaty backpackers...

  10. Backgrounder: Laos

    Backgrounder: Laoshttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/articles/beyond-the-guidebook/264-backgrounder-laos

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Verge Staff
    • Category: Beyond the Guidebook

    For centuries, Laos and its neighbours were swept over by shifting dynasties, from Mon and Khmer Kingdoms to the Angkor and Siamese Empires. From the 14th century, the Lan Xang Kingdom centred on present-day Luang Prabang and spread to parts of...

  11. Freeze Frame in Luang Namtha

    Freeze Frame in Luang Namthahttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/articles/beyond-the-guidebook/263-freeze-frame-in-luang-namtha

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Kees Sprengers
    • Category: Beyond the Guidebook

    Photographer Kees Sprengers captures a moment in time for North West Lao cultures in transition. The children went wild, pushing each other aside to see my little camera screen. The adults surveyed me with great interest: my skin, my hair, my clothes....

  12. The Draw of Downunder: Working in Australia

    The Draw of Downunder: Working in Australiahttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/articles/work-abroad/262-the-draw-of-downunder-working-in-australia

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Susan Griffith
    • Category: Work Abroad

    From the streets of Sydney to the outback, Susan Griffith discovers that it's easier than ever to pay your way, mate! As I was chatting with the young Canadian woman working at the Glebe Village Backpackers in Sydney, the hostel phone rang. I had been...

  13. Our Generation: Homegrown Electricity in Kenya

    Our Generation: Homegrown Electricity in Kenyahttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/travel-intelligence/why-we-travel/261-our-generation-homegrown-electricity-in-kenya

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Andrea Gourgy
    • Category: Why we travel

    Local ingenuity brings homegrown electricity to Kenyan communities. When Nyaga Ndiga was a young boy growing up on the slopes of Mount Kenya, he was fascinated with electricity. Whenever he could get hold of metal wires or batteries, he hid them under...

  14. Rock, Water, Fire: Quenching Guatemalas Thirst

    Rock, Water, Fire: Quenching Guatemala's Thirsthttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/travel-intelligence/why-we-travel/258-rock-water-fire-quenching-guatemalas-thirst

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Larry Frolick
    • Category: Why we travel

    A team from Niagara tackles water scarcity in rural Guatemala. In Guatemala’s remote mountain villages, every man over the age of seven wears a sword, and every woman over the age of five, a plastic jug on her head. The sword, of course, is a machete;...

  15. A Slice of Reality: Mumbai Slum Tours

    A Slice of Reality: Mumbai Slum Tourshttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/articles/beyond-the-guidebook/257-a-slice-of-reality-mumbai-slum-tours

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Brent Lewin
    • Category: Beyond the Guidebook

    A gap year gig turns into a quest to show travellers a hidden side of urban India. They're beggars and criminals. They live wasted lives of misery and pain. They should get jobs and do something to better themselves. They are not the same as you or me....

  16. Travel Considerations For Diabetics

    Travel Considerations For Diabeticshttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/travel-intelligence/171-travel-health/256-travel-considerations-for-diabetics

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Mike Webster
    • Category: Travel Health

    Mike Webster offers the following considerations for travelling as or with a diabetic. Blood sugar should be monitored frequently. If you are travelling with someone who is diabetic, learn how to use their glucose tester. Plan meals with as much...

  17. Secret Agent: Present Continuous

    Secret Agent: Present Continuoushttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/articles/work-abroad/255-secret-agent-present-continuous

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Troy Nahumko
    • Category: Work Abroad

    Veteran English teacher Troy Nahumko launches a four-part series of TEFL Reality Talks with a few tips to help you dodge the fiasco factor. Flying into Tripoli International Airport, even the most experienced traveller gets a thrill seeing the endless...

  18. Random Acts of Curiosity

    Random Acts of Curiosityhttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/articles/beyond-the-guidebook/254-random-acts-of-curiosity

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Shane Barter
    • Category: Beyond the Guidebook

    A chance meeting with an Indonesian farmer teaches Shane Barter that everyone has a story. The November day dawned crisp and cool in the province of Aceh, Indonesia. I was returning from my morning walk outside the hillside village of Saree, where I...

  19. Undoing the Limbo: Recovering from Hurricanes in the Caribbean

    Undoing the Limbo: Recovering from Hurricanes in the Caribbeanhttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/travel-intelligence/why-we-travel/253-undoing-the-limbo-recovering-from-hurricanes-in-the-caribbean

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Julia Steinecke
    • Category: Why we travel

    It's one thing to put the roof back on a house—what about rebuilding young lives in a Caribbean economy torn apart by hurricanes? When Walt Nathaniel graduated with an Honours degree in Business Administration, many of his fellow grads pursued...

  20. Portraits That Speak Volumes

    Portraits That Speak Volumeshttps://www.studyandgoabroad.org/travel-intelligence/travel-photography-and-travel-writing/251-portraits-that-speak-volumes

    • Type: Article
    • Author: Trevor Lush
    • Category: PhotoPro

    Snapping shots of people is easy; slowing down and turning it into a genuine encounter is a whole different story. Photographer Trevor Lush explains how. I like to meet new people. I like to talk with them. I like to find out what they do for a living...

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