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You are here:Home»Work Abroad»Internships Abroad»Nick Goodchild - Third Year Abroad

Nick Goodchild

  • Nick Goodchild studied French and Spanish at King’s College, London. After graduating and spending some time in Chile, he decided to find an internship abroad. He came across the Leonardo da Vinci program, and gives us a bit more information about it...
  • Bordeaux 1

    Monday, 15 November 2010

    An overview of the Leonardo da Vinci program and how I got to Bordeaux.

  • Un techo para Chile

    Saturday, 17 July 2010
    Soundtrack of the weekend: I played The Chemical Brothers from a portable speaker and it was surprising how much it helped us to work. Energetic, melodic, amazing!

    The Chilean earthquake is old news. But to some the effects of the earthquake are still acutely present, even after all this time. It was estimated that around 500,000 homes were destroyed, their inhabitants left literally homeless. It is this situation that the charity Un Techo Para Chile is trying to solve. ‘A roof for Chile’. What a noble spirit of community that simple name evokes. They build houses not only for earthquake victims but also for other people who need homes, in an attempt to get them out of the refugee-style camps that are so common throughout the country. They were given funds by the government to buy materials for new homes, and then they appeal for volunteers to go and build them. Young people, often university students, go in busloads every weekend. I wanted to see more of how Chile had been affected and how people were coping, and I wanted to join in the work that Techo Para Chile was doing for them. So I signed up with them and went to build a house.

  • Mountains and Glaciers

    Monday, 19 April 2010
    Soundtrack: F*** Buttons - Space Mountain. Epic electronics for an epic landscape.

    “Down down down. Just keep going down.” Our philosophy remained steadfast and we continued ever southwards towards the tip of the continent. From Bariloche we took a bus for 5 hours to El Bolson, where we spent several easy-going nights. The best thing about the whole place was the campsite where we stayed, where we built fires and grilled the hell out of massive juicy steaks for dinner. The owner of the place, who I took to calling Esteban but whose name it turned out was really Daniel, sold us locally made beer in unmarked bottles for £1.50 a litre, the best beer we tasted in Argentina, and took pleasure in showing us his collection of wild boar heads mounted on the wall of his cabin.
  • La Ligue contre le cancer

    Wednesday, 24 November 2010
    My life in charity PR and Events in Bordeaux
  • Altiplano

    Thursday, 01 July 2010
    Salt Lake City - the Altiplano, Bolivia Soundtrack - Boards of Canada, which I was introduced to while I was in Patagonia. Warmly surreal chillout, went perfectly with the warmly surreal surroundings.

    ‘Salar de Uyuni’ read the sign outside the tour office on the main street of San Pedro. I walked in with D and O, my new friends who I met on my arrival to this desert town.
  • Soundtrack: I am heavily indebted to J for introducing me to Fever Ray, whose album I listened to at least 6 times while staying there.

    It had been a while since I arrived back from my trip to Patagonia. For two months I hung out in Santiago absorbing the sights and the sunshine, keeping myself entertained and doing some paid work here and there. But at the same time I was getting restless. I wasn’t going to be here forever, and I wanted to see more, go somewhere new. I had already seen the South, so it was time to swim up stream, to go North. My first stop was La Serena, 6 hours North by bus. J, a friend from England, lives there and said that I could stay with her for a few days. Welcome news to my ears because it meant I didn’t have to pay for accommodation, and I was on a tight budget.
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