Sunshine Coast, Australia

Our Week With The Sunshine Coast of Australia

Marlene DiBrito, Exchange Director

The Aussies came, they saw, and we conquered!

Our week exchange with the Sunshine Coast was educational, engaging, and enjoyable. The weather cooperated ironically with an Indian summer as we visited the Native American Museum to learn about our original inhabitants.

The Discovery Museum video highlighted the birth of our Northern Lake County and displayed live exhibits and artifacts showing the outgrowth connecting Chicago. After we viewed the dazzling cars at the Volo Auto Museum where our 16 ambassadors dreamed about owning and driving one of those antique American beauties, we toured the Volo Bog with a naturalist who explained the thousands of years of glacial melting and its effects on the surrounding area.

The Chicago History Museum gave our guests a virtual ride on the “L”, traced the cause and route of the Chicago Fire and all of the Chicago events following the rebuilding of it. We enjoyed lunch at a wonderful Asian restaurant; drove up Sheridan Road and viewed Evanston’s Northwestern University, Baha’i Temple and Glencoe’s Botanic Garden.

We wound up the week competing in teams playing Bocce Ball after enjoying a sumptuous Sunday Brunch and then all 35 of us experienced the musical “Dream Girls”.

During this exchange we traded experiences and cultures with our Sunshine Coast guests and got to know each other’s lives one on one across the dinner tables. We realized that no matter where we live and who we meet, we share the same joys and sorrows in our everyday lives and that Friendship Force gives us the opportunity to experience that friendship with many different worlds and know that through it all we are all the same.

Ambassadors with hosts at bus station

 

 

 

 

Northern Illinois meets Sunshine Coast

 

Volo Bog and Auto Museum

Native American Museum and Chicago History Museum

Entertainment at the Farewell Dinner: “Christmas in Australia”

Host Comments:

John Balazs:
Sunshine Coast travelers visited the Botanic Garden by John Balazs
Our two visitors from the Sunshine Coast of Australia, Tony and Patricia, enjoyed viewing the flowers and trees of our area, especially the roses and the fruit trees. Both are rarely seen in Australia. It seemed like all of the Aussies enjoyed the Garden and had a great time there.

They were impressed by our rivers and ponds throughout Illinois and smiled at the Botanic Garden waterways. Tony and Patricia said that their country has mainly black swans, when they saw the white swans of the Garden.
I also was told that although our trees lose their leaves, their huge Gum Trees lose many limbs (branches) during their lifetime.

Joan Harrington:
The Native American museum in Evanston was one of the highlights of this exchange for both our ambassadors and the hosts. The museum is well lighted, well organized and artifacts are beautifully displayed. Our docent was superb. He became interested in Native American art when his junior high school teacher gave them a project to create a Native American mask and to present its history. He said that he was hooked on Native American and Indian art from that time on. In addition to an explanation of the artifacts and art work our docent gave us the background of the migration of Indians all over the world.

This was a first class tour and I highly recommend it.

Mary Lou Balazs:
Tony Barry was very interested in seeing the coal mine in Chicago that he had heard so much about from friends. So on our free day, we took Tony & Patricia to the Museum of Science & Industry to spend the day. Tony very much enjoyed the simulated coal mine experience and asked a lot of questions from our guide.

He was equally impressed with the great World War II exhibit, showcasing the captured German U2 Submarine. They could not believe that the entire sub was enclosed in the museum and they were able to board it for a tour. The wonderful explanatory pictures and stories of the war leading up to the captured sub were especially important to both Tony and Patricia. Both were born in England during the war and had heard many stories from family. After extensive bombing, Tony’s mother, a nurse, was trapped in a hospital for 3 days before being rescued. And Patricia was born in a bomb shelter. Both had family members serving in the war and they appreciated reading all the old news articles from the London papers.

Another surprise at the museum was the life-size replica of the Mars rover, Curiosity. A museum guide was there to point out the various aspects of the space vehicle and showed actual pictures currently being sent back to Earth from its camera. Of course, the farm, trains and body exhibits were a big hit too. It was a full day, but one which they truly enjoyed.

On our second free day, we took Tony, Patricia and our 3 year old grandson to the Apple Holler Orchard in Wisconsin. They enjoyed seeing the children feed the goats, play on the hay stacks, pick out pumpkins and walk through the corn maze. In addition, they got to experience the changing color of our trees.

 

Santiago and La Serena, Chile

On November 15, nine Ambassadors from FF Northern Illinois along with five from Florida, North Carolina, New Jersey and Iowa returned from a 2-week exchange with FF clubs in Santiago and La Serena, Chile.  Ten Ambassadors also participated in an optional 7-night pre-exchange tour of Buenos Aires and Iguazu Falls, Argentina.

Map of South America

Click here to see photos of the Argentina tour.

November is springtime in Chile and arrival day in Santiago was beautifully sunny and warm.  E.D. Maria Beatriz Bravo Ureta hosted a welcome party at the home of her mother “Kika” Bravo.  Well into her eighties, Kika is a 30+ year charter member of the Friendship Force of Santiago.  Arriving guests were greeted with empanadas, chilled pisco sours and creamy glasses of whipped cherimoya, made from the white flesh of a delicious Chilean fruit.  A lavish outdoor lunch combined with live entertainment followed.  The thoroughly charmed guests were reluctant to depart.

Ambassadors were treated to city tours of Santiago, Valparaiso and Viña del Mar.  Also included were visits to the Metropolitan Cathedral, the Ralli Art Museum, the Museum of Pablo Neruda (the Nobel Prize winning Chilean poet) and numerous other places of interest.  We climbed Cerro Santa Lucia and Cerro San Cristobal both built on hilltops with spectacular views of Santiago.  The ceremonial changing of the guard at La Moneda Palace was particularly memorable since it was enhanced for review by a visiting military delegation from Ecuador.  Shop ‘til you drop was the order of the day several times as was our introduction to several of the fine restaurants Santiago is known for.

In lieu of a gift to their club, FFNI offered to donate gift funds to a charity chosen by our hosts.  The Santiago club selected Hogar Mi Familia, a local orphanage.  This facility receives and temporarily cares for children from 0 to 3 years old placed there by the courts.  Ambassadors were brought to the orphanage for presentation of this gift.  Staffed mostly by volunteers, the obvious outpouring of love and affection for the children was emotionally overwhelming, turning the visit into a memorable highlight of the exchange.

Click here for photos of the Santiago exchange.

After 7-nights in Santiago, Ambassadors boarded an airplane for the one hour flight to La Serena.  Hosts greeted their Ambassadors at the airport and transported them to their temporary homes for lunch and unpacking.  Later that evening, Ambassadors were treated to a welcome party at a local seaside restaurant complete with musical entertainment and dancing.

La Serena and the adjoining city of Coquimbo are Pacific Ocean beach communities with a combined population of 430,000 people.  Visitors from Chile and western Argentina stream into the area during the December – March peak season.  High rise condominium buildings under construction along the shoreline are reminiscent of the Miami Beach of 40 years ago.

In addition to city tours of La Serena and Coquimbo, the program included a bus trip to Vicuña City, Bauer Tower and nighttime observation of the heavens at Mamalluca Observatory.   Another trip took Ambassadors by boat to the Damas Island reserve for viewing of protected sea lions, penguins and other species of sea birds.  One of the home hosts, Nancy Iriate, is a renowned artist and art educator with particular expertise in pre-Columbian indigenous art and petroglyphs.  Several lucky Ambassadors were treated to a private showing of her recent paintings, narrated by the artist herself.

As a gift to the host club and a memorial of the exchange, FFNI provided funds to purchase and plant a Friendship Tree in La Serena’s Japanese Park.  A photo and article about the ceremonial planting appeared the following day in the daily newspaper of La Serena.

Click here for photos of the La Serena exchange.

Brian Harrington, ED