I got a job! (Can you hear my exhilaration?)
About two weeks ago I stopped at Fireflies, a small restaurant in Del Ray that specializes in pizza; I almost never order pizza, but I had a craving for their upscale specialties. As I sat at the bar waiting for it to come out of the brick oven, I was checking my e-mail on my iPhone as I always do, and there is an e-mail from Globus Tours saying that I was highly recommended from ITMI, and they had some fall tour openings. If I were interested and available, they would set up a phone interview. It was all I could do to contain myself in the restaurant, but as soon as I walked out, I was on the phone calling everyone, starting with my dad: I had a job interview! And it sounded very promising.
That was a Friday, and since I got the e-mail around 7:30, I knew I had to wait until Monday to get a response. By 5:30 Monday night I was getting anxious, until, finally, there it was -- an e-mail asking me for a time and date for the call. About the same time I learned that Bob, my friend and colleague from ITMI got the same e-mail. His interview was set for Tuesday at 5:30; mine would be Wednesday at the same time. I asked him to call me immediately and let me know the questions; he followed me on the DC and NY tour guide tests, and I gave him all of the questions I remembered. When he called he told me that it wasn't much of an interview; she asked what he had been up to since graduating ITMI and then told him he was recommended and asked which tour he wanted! Now I was even more excited and assumed I would have a similar experience. 5:30 the next night I received the call. But she didn't even ask me what I have been up to; perhaps that is because I sent her an updated resume just a few weeks before or perhaps she was just so tired of interviewing and anxious to get her tours filled. First question was which tour I wanted to do! I told her that even though I would love to travel the National Parks of the West (she had previously explained that she had openings for three tours -- the national parks, fall foliage, and Eastern U.S./Canada), I should probably stay with what I know. I was booked on the Eastern U.S. and Canada Grand Vacation Grand vacation.

At first I was disappointed that the tour was with Cosmos, the budget division of Globus. The tour itself was almost exactly the same as the higher end Globus version, but it includes no meals and a lower class of hotels. When I thought about it, as a tour director with a per diem for food, no meals was good. I could eat when and where I wanted during "free" time or what I wanted on our lunch stops. When I looked up the hotels online, they were all fine, although in a few cases a bit out of the way of the town center. Most importantly, I had a tour despite my concern that it wouldn't come for months, or even years.
I would do the tour three times: the first time is a training tour. I get paid to take the tour and learn. Then, after two days in New York, just in time to celebrate Rosh Hashanah, I fly home for another two days before meeting my first over-the-road tour back at the Skyline Hotel for two back-to-back 14 days tours of 9 cities in the Eastern U.S. and Canada.
Who would take this tour? We start in Manhattan for a night and a morning city tour with lunch at Grand Central Station before heading north to Boston for two nights where we have a city tour and an optional harbour cruise. The hotel is out in Brookline, so it's not an easy walk to the city center. From Boston we have a long drive past the Canadian border to Quebec for two nights followed by a night in Montreal and another in Ottawa before stopping for two days in Toronto. Each stop includes a city tour, most with a step-on guide. However, our bus tour of Toronto is guided by the TD (me), so I have a little learning and research to do. Our last stop in Canada is Niagara Falls before making the very long trip south to Lancaster, PA and home of the Amish. After a night at the Lancaster Host Hotel, where I spent a few family vacations as a child, we continue to Washington, DC. It is a wonderful coincidence that the DC hotel is actually in Alexandria, just a few blocks from my condo, giving me time to go home, get my mail, and do some laundry before heading back to New York by way of Philadelphia and picking up the second tour. A total of 9,000 miles in 45 days! It made sense that many of the clients are from Great Britain, New Zealand, and Australia, people who flew far distances to see as much of the countries as possible.When I was in Napa Valley this winter I purchased a 98-point Cabernet, planning to hold it until I got my first tour. I truly thought it would have at least a year more to age. Now I just have to decide with whom to share it.
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