![](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_OhWWsR1afKg/SpPvEQFUDMI/AAAAAAAACG0/cEPVe9CX3dU/s400/group+shot.jpg)
I hope the link to the course description still exists when you read this; it will give you a better idea of the richness of the content. Lectures on architecture were given by Richard Guy Wilson of UVa while lectures on art were by Justine Hopkins of Bristol and Oxford Universities. We had wonderful guides everywhere we went, supplemented by expert commentary from Richard and Justine. One evening we had a delightful lecture on the food and drink of the Middle Ages by Elizabeth Gemmill, Oxford program director. The UVa program director was Joan Gore, and the two of them made a great team.
We had meals, including served dinners, in the Merton dining hall; we’re standing on its steps in
![](http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_OhWWsR1afKg/SpPvVgCqoiI/AAAAAAAACG8/kjtpJaVZw4U/s320/richard+and+justine.jpg)
Two highlights for me were the field trip to Stowe and the choir concert. Stowe was a complete unknown to me; apparently the gardening magazines don’t write about it because it doesn’t have flowers! It was the first major garden commission of Capability Brown and seeing the incredible grounds (no, I didn’t miss flowers) helped me immensely to understand the impact of the movement he represents.
On Wednesday we attended Evensong at Christ Church, and it was very pleasant. We were told that the same choir would give another concert that evening in Merton Chapel and I liked the music, so I decided to attend. The performance of this visiting choir at Evensong was enjoyable; the second one was mind-blowing. The Merton Chapel is smaller and the acoustics were infinitely better, both because of the late hour and the absence of outside distractions. It was almost an hour uninterrupted liturgical music in a spectacular setting—truly a memorable experience!
My new friends are going to have additional high points and better pictures, I’m sure. That’s the main point of this post—to give us a central place to record our impressions and a place to link the pictures and slideshows that we’ll upload. I’ll link pictures as well as blogs and personal pages under the participant’s name on this post as they’re sent to me. I hope others will add their reflections as comments to this post. It will become a delightful record of our trip. Personally, I plan to inflict it on my family and friends as part of my annoying Christmas email!
A final note to my regular readers. This course was well done on all dimensions but I don’t know of any travel program that has gotten the social media implications. Mark got it from a participant’s standpoint on his personal blog (be sure to look at the comments on this post; that’s what it should be about). See what happened (the comments) when posted the following year about his forthcoming Oxford trip. That’s real CRM!
As I said, the purpose of this post-trip post is to give the participants a central place to store memories. Why doesn’t a travel program put it all together? Travel is inherently a learning experience. Emphasize whichever aspect (is it learning; is it experience?) is most central to a given offer. Better yet, give your clients a way to emphasize the aspect that is most central to each of them! Engage them in preparation, let them post if they wish during the program, and provide a place for them to store both visual and verbal memories.
It’s another instance in which customer reviews of experiences become the best marketing for future offerings. Right now, the travel programs are ceding that function to sites like Trip Advisor!
Happy rest of the summer!!! I’ll resume social media posts after Labor Day.
Ann's trip blog
Debra and Pat's Slideshow
Richard's show at UVA
Pat's watercolors
MLR My Room with a View