Want to be an elephant trainer?
Learning vacations for anyone thirsting for knowledge
Adult education can be a beautiful thing. Lovers of the finer things in life—like Aston Martin cars and Valrhona chocolates—can learn about them by taking special courses offered by their parent companies... often in exceedingly pleasant surroundings.
Learning vacations can teach you everything from how to drive an Aston Martin and gamble in Monte Carlo’s renowned casinos to how to make truffles using Valrhona’s fabled chocolate. At the very least, they'll turn you into a great date.
Other “status skills” you can pick up include glass-blowing—taught at a school outside Seattle founded by the famed artisan, Dale Chihuly—wine and scotch-making, tango and ballroom dancing, and even learning how to be a mahout, or elephant driver. Hint: It's all in the knees.
And these courses won't set you back a semester. Waltz lessons, given by Vienna’s famed Elmayer Dance School, are 50 minutes long, while Glengoyne Distillery, a scotch producer outside of Glasgow, offers two blending courses, one two hours long and another a half day. Both include a tour of the distillery and necessitate the drinking of fine scotch.
The elephant riding course is three days long, while the tango courses are offered as part of four and eight-day packages. The glass-blowing courses given at Chihuly’s Pilchuck School require some commitment, however—each one is each 17 days long.
|
Kathy Holler, managing director of destination sales for Virtuoso, a consortium of high-end travel agencies, says taking a vacation to pick up new skills—which she dubs “experiential travel”—is very popular today.
Traveling has become very personal she explains. “We’re all very busy and have limited time. Experiential travel in some way touches your soul. When you go home, you take a treasure with you, something you learned. It stays with you a long time.”
![]() |
© Glengoyne Glengoyne Distillery offers two courses—one two hours long, the other a half day—to individuals interested in learning how to blend Scotch. Both courses include a tour of the distillery, a tasting and scotch-blending sessions; they are taught in Glengoyne’s ”sample room,” whose walls are lined with sample bottles containing whiskies at different stages of maturation. |
Pallavi Shah, owner of Our Personal Guest, a custom tour operator in New York, finds vacation courses serve other purposes.
“People are driven all the time to do something, they’re psychologically in the habit of multi-tasking. Why on Earth would you go on a vacation and do nothing if you do something all the time?” she said.
Taking a course in a locale famous for a specific skill can also be a more authentic—if not unique—experience, than picking it up at home: You can learn how to tango at a dancing school near your home, but if you take a course at the Maison Dandi Royal, you will not only get daily group lessons, but also attend “milongas,” tango dances frequented by local Argentinians—porteños—and a tango dinner show. And you’d be hard-pressed to learn how to drive an elephant anywhere outside of Thailand.
“We love to travel and know how to speak Spanish, and also like to immerse ourselves in different cultures,” Mrs. Chu explained.
Their studying evidently paid off: The Chus have tangoed on their local Fox TV station and been asked to give stage performances.
Taking a course to pick up a new skill might not turn you into a local star, as it did the Chus, but you’ll no doubt have fun and probably learn a thing or two.
Here’s a list of some of the more unusual classes you can take, both in the United States and overseas.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM ACTIVE |
| Add Active headlines to your news reader: |
Resource guide




