Stranded students return home

WINSTED — A group of seven high-school students from The Gilbert School returned home from a trip to Italy last week after being stranded in Rome due to the eruption of an Icelandic volcano.

Students in Latin and Greek classes were in Italy for a one-week trip when the Eyjafjallajökull volcano erupted April 14 in southern Iceland, interrupting tens of thousands of international flights. The resulting plume of ash halted flights from April 15 to April 20. Ash was detected over Norway, Sweden, northwestern Russia, northern Polland, northern Germany, northern France and the southern United Kingdom.

Students on the international field trip included Angelica Consiglio, Jennie Fritch, Maggie Gainer, Isabella Panagakos, Jessica Shotwell, Teddy Smith and Jessica Stenman.

The Gilbert students’ return flight on British Airways was canceled after British civil aviation authorities closed down the country’s airspace at noon Thursday because of the cloud of ash that had permeated the skies.

In an e-mail last week, Gilbert classics teacher John Higgins confirmed that he and the group of students were stuck in Rome.

“There are worse places to be, but we would like to be home,� he wrote Tuesday, April 20. “We were supposed to fly back to the U.S. last Saturday and we are still waiting for a flight. Everything is still uncertain — I would say ‘up in the air’ — but I can’t stand puns.�

Parents of the stranded students seemed to take the news in stride last week.

“I personally was not worried at all,� said Pamela Stenman, whose daughter, Jessica, was among the students on the trip. “Mr. Higgins sent us regular e-mail updates, and they had a great place to stay. They saw some things they wouldn’t have seen otherwise, and it was better than being stranded at some airport on a cot.�

Stenman said she obviously missed her daughter but she knew Jessica was in good hands. Some parents worried that their children would miss scheduled sporting events.

Higgins said a number of strangers helped arrange lodging for the stranded students last week.

“Most of the group is now staying with a couple of families from the American Overseas School in Rome,� he wrote. “They are being extraordinarily hospitable.� The cost of the trip was approximately $2,500 per student prior to the delay, and Higgins said the extended stay ended up costing several hundred dollars more.

The teacher also noted that students handled their predicament maturely.

“The students have been outstanding throughout the whole thing,â€� he said. “Even before the eruption, I was really pleased with the way they comported themselves. In the days since the emergency began, they have all shown themselves to be flexible, understanding and mature. Nobody is happy about not knowing when we are going to be home, but I have heard scarcely a word of complaint. They have been cheerful (to the extent they can be in the circumstances) even though they have a lot to put up with.  They are a credit to their families, to Winsted and to The Gilbert School.â€�

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