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Get DirectionAbout Upcoming Events Past Events Contact The Kipsala International Exhibition Center is a premium venue in Latvia that boasts of having the most sophisticated and modern infrastructure. Since its establishment in March 2000, the center has rapidly climbed its way up to become one of the biggest exhibition center in the Baltic States. The Kipsala International Exhibition Center has seen the likes of several big international names from the entertainment business like Guano Apes, Venessa Mae, Def Leppard, Nazareth and many more performing in the center. The Exhibition Center provides an indoor exhibition space of 17,200 m2 and a parking facility for around 1,200 vehicles and is one of the fin
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How Disney stole the show at the Fair Print Chuck Schmidt | [email protected] STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — The Walt Disney Company contributed four cutting-edge attractions to the 1964-1965 New York World’s Fair, attractions which are still shown today — in whole or in parts — at Disney theme parks worldwide. When all was said and done, the four shows — Ford’s Magic Skyway, General Electric’s Progressland featuring Carousel of Progress, It’s a Small World and Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln — were a rousing success (four of the five most popular Fair shows had Disney’s stamp on them), accelerating the growth of Audio-Animatronics technology and paving the way for an “East Coast Disneyland” in central Florida. But the months, weeks and days leading up to the opening of the Fair in Queens on April 22, 1964, were fraught with angst for Disney’s creative team. LIVED IN QUEENS As Disney legend and former Imagineering Vice Chairman Marty Sklar said in a recent interview: “The installation was the big thing. We rented apartments in Queens — Lefrak City and I forget where else — and we had people living there and coming in and out every week. Don Edmond, who was our chief engineer, actually lived in New York for three years, working with the Ford people.” Then there were the unions. “Every one of the pavilions, I believe, had a different contractor at the time,” Sklar said. “It was a huge challenge dealing with the unions in New York and hoping your crew would work a whole day.” Another obstacle facing Disney’s staff was just getting the rides up to speed. The four attractions were designed and built in California, dismantled, shipped to the East Coast, then reassembled on-site. It’s a Small World presented its own unique set of challenges, primarily because Disney’s creative team was given just 11 months to come up with a completed ride for the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) pavilion. “Starting that 11 months before the Fair opened was kind of nuts, it really was,” said Sklar, “but it shows how smart the mechanical people were, because everybody said, ‘OK, the only way we can do this is if we make it really simple.’ There was no way you can do a complicated design mechanism and get it done in that amount of time. “So everything in that attraction was done very simply. Most of the things were taken off the shelf.” Thanks to that simplistic approach, It’s a Small World was probably the least problematic of the four Disney shows. The other three, however, hinged on Audio-Animatronic figures — a technology still very much in its infancy. GE’s Carousel of Progress depicted the history of electricity, using a rather unique theater setup — four individual seating areas holding 250 people rotated around four fixed stages. The scene on the first stage was from the 1890s and each subsequent stage showed how electricity progressed in the 1920s, 1940s and, finally, 1964. Each stage showed an Audio-Animatronic family — complete with a dog — with Father serving as the host and narrator. But problems popped up a few weeks before opening day. “Walt would come back to review the shows periodically and (was) to meet with the GE board of directors three weeks before the show opened,” Sklar recalls. “During the morning, he came to watch the show (the board was coming that evening) and nothing worked. “So he left and said: ‘I’m coming back with the board of directors tonight. I hope we’re gonna get it running.’ With a sigh of relief still detectable in his voice, Sklar added: “That night, everything worked.” LEGENDARY GLITCHES If one or two figures were misbehaving in the Carousel show, it might have gone unnoticed. Not so with Abraham Lincoln, who was a one-man — or should we say, one-Audio-Animatronic — show. The glitches with the Lincoln figure have become legendary. “They couldn’t figure out why he was having these — if you will — fits, and it was because of the way the current was being received in the pavilion. No one was able to figure out what the interference was, but they solved the problem finally.” “I know that we had a similar problem at Disneyland when we opened the Lincoln show there. And they did discover what it was. In Disneyland, the theater is probably 75 yards from the monorail and every time the monorail went by, it changed the current being received in the theater.” Sklar, who was born in New Brunswick, N.J., and began his Disney career as a 21-year-old intern in 1955, was responsible for script writing for many of the Fair shows. “I was called a staff writer at Imagineering at the time and I worked on everything but the Lincoln show. Most of my time was spent on various parts of the Ford pavilion, including the narration for the ride. “The first year we used a narrator, but the second year, Ford asked Walt to do it, so I wrote the narration for Walt. I worked with a team; John Hench and I were the principles. We were the ones who worked with Ford on ferreting out what they wanted to communicate, being an international company.” “The first year we used a narrator, but the second year, Ford asked Walt to do it, so I wrote the narration for Walt. I worked with a team; John Hench and I were the principles. We were the ones who worked with Ford on ferreting out what they wanted to communicate, being an international company.” Sklar remembers his boss, Walt Disney, and often cantakerous Fair organizer Robert Moses locking horns on one aspect of the Fair. “Walt and Robert Moses had a big argument about where the amusement areas should go. Moses put it across the freeway (the Long Island Expressway) and Walt said people wouldn’t go there. And Walt was correct. HELPED GET LINCOLN “But,” he added, “Moses was responsible for the state of Illinois doing the Lincoln show. He had come to the studio and seen the full presentation for the Hall of Presidents and he wanted Walt to do that show for the World’s Fair and Walt said, ‘We haven’t even done one figure yet.’ “And so, ultimately, he put the state of Illinois and Walt together to do the Lincoln figure, which was the first humanized Audio-Animatronics figure we had ever done.” Chuck Schmidt is the Sunday Editor of the Advance. For more on Marty Sklar and the World’s Fair, read his Goofy about Disney blog at http://blog.silive.com/goofy_about_disney/index.html. View/Post Comments
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Norfolk celebrations On 2 October Abba Seraphim was delighted to join the 14th annual pilgrimage in honour of St. Fursey, an Irish monk who evangelised East Anglia in the seventh century, which is held at Burgh Castle near Great Yarmouth, where it is believed the saint established his monastery. Apart from celebrating St. Fursey in services and pilgrimages, the Fursey Pilgrims have sponsored a number of lectures on the saint’s life and have published impressive and scholarly booklets on the saint and related topics. Abba Seraphim joined a goodly gathering of the pilgrims for lunch and fellowship, where much of the conversation revealed an enthusiasm and knowledge about East Anglia’s ancient Christian heritage. Following this, a service was held at St. Peter and Paul’s Church at Burgh Castle at which Abba Seraphim was the guest preacher. He spoke of the vitality of the Irish monastic tradition and the profound influence of St. Antony and Egyptian monasticism and suggested ways we might understand the balance between monasticism and evangelism & mission. Following the service in the church, Abba Seraphim joined the pilgrims in the short walk to the area within the substantial remains of the Roman fortress walls, where St. Fursey’s community settled and the pilgrims joined in further prayers and hymns. The day concluded with tea in the parish hall and the opportunity to purchase some of the excellent publications including the latest booklet, a translation of the 8th century manuscript Life of St. Fursey,Transitus Beati Fursei, by Professor Oliver Rackham. (For details see the website: www.furseypilgrims.co.uk) The following day, Sunday, 3 October, was the Dedication Festival of St. Felix’s Church at Babingley as an Orthodox Church, this being the ninth anniversary. Abba Seraphim spoke of his experience as a Fursey Pilgrim and said he had been struck by a prayer used which spoke of “footsteps in the sand.” This reminded him of the impact of the early British and English missionaries, including St. Felix and their contribution and lasting impact on the local Christian community. We value their legacy and hope that our ministry in Norfolk will keep faith with the past but also ensure its vitality for the future, so that our footsteps might also appear in the sand. Although we give thanks for the fine church where we worship and receive so any blessings, we need also to be conscious of the footsteps which led us there, especially the former chapel at the African Violet Centre at Terrington St. Clements. We must never lose sight of the fact that the Church is not the building but the people, and today’s lessons reminded us of this when St. Paul referred to the Christians of Corinth as an “epistle of Christ … written not with ink but by the Spirit of the living God” and St. Peter spoke of us as “living stones … built up a spiritual house, a holy priesthood.” Post tags: Abba Seraphim Babingley Christ Christian Church community Monasticism Pilgramage St Fursey St. Felix « Older Entries
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Interesting Facts About France Fertile plains cover two-thirds of France, which is the largest country in Western Europe. With more than half the land under cultivation, France leads the European Union in food exports. The mountain ranges are mostly in the south, including the Alps, Pyrenees, and Massif Central. Forests cover one-third of the land area in France and are a source of environmental and scenic wealth. The north is humid and cool, while the south is dry and warm. Favorable conditions for grape growing in the south make French wines world-renowned—and France the world's largest producer. The nation sets a fast pace in telecommunications, biotechnology, and aerospace industries. Sophia Antipolis, a booming high-tech complex on the Riviera, attracts scientists from throughout Europe. Coal and steel industries are concentrated in the northeast near major coalfields. The government continues to play a large role in directing economic activity. The national road network is the world's densest, and the high-speed train (TGV) runs at speeds of 270 kilometers (167 miles) per hour or more. Both road and rail transport tourists, helping to make France the most visited country on Earth. Nuclear power, which supplies 80 percent of France's electricity, enjoys widespread support, in part because there is virtually no domestic oil. Government policies provide for a 35-hour workweek and five weeks of paid vacation annually. Paris has long been France's cultural, political, and business epicenter. In the early 19th century Napoleon Bonaparte divided large, traditional provinces into small departments, which have since been regrouped into larger, regional units. Low turnout in the 2002 elections was interpreted as voter apathy due to the dominant influence of Paris. Amendments to the constitution, approved in 2003, give more political power to the country's 22 regions and 96 departments. Heavy losses in both world wars bled France of labor, wealth, and prestige. After World War II, France's colonial subjects, from Algeria to Vietnam, struggled for independence. Immigration from France's former colonies, especially Algeria, contributes to some four million persons of Arab descent living in France today. An independent defense doctrine, launched by President Charles de Gaulle in 1966, has turned the nation into one of the world's largest arms suppliers. France maintains ties with its former colonies through aid, trade, and military pacts. The French have developed modern political ties with former colonies still under French administration. Overseas departments (officially part of France) with their own elected governments are French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, and Reunion. Territories with varying degrees of autonomy are French Polynesia, French Southern and Antarctic Territories, Mayotte, New Caledonia, St.-Pierre and Miquelon, and Wallis and Futuna. Couple Walk Through Ruins of St. Lo France: A civilian couple walks through ruins of the heavily bombed ruins in the city of St. Lo, France, August 1944. (Photo Credit: Getty) Damage in Trafalgar Square, London: London, England 1942. Soldiers examine buildings in Trafalgar Square damaged by German bombs. (Photo Credit: Corbis) France Facts: Map and Geography France is situated in Western Europe, 1 hr flight from London/England, 5.5 hrs from New York/USA. On the France outline you will see the little island of Corsica, which belongs to France, also in the French flag colors:-) France Geography: France shares borders with Belgium to the North East, Germany and Luxemburg in the East as well as with Switzerland, Italy to the South East. The Pyrenees, a mountain range to the South of France, form a natural border between Spain and France. The highest mountain in France is the Mont Blanc, which is 4,810m high and stands at the border between France and Italy . Mainland France is divided into 27 regions and these into 101 departments . The Mediterranean island of Corsica belongs to France too. Of the 101 departments there are also 5 ROM (regions d’outre mer or overseas regions) also belonging to France: French Guyana in South America, Guadeloupe and Martinique in the Caribbean, La Reunion and Mayotte in Africa in the Indian Ocean. France Attractions Paris: Eiffel Tower, Notre Dame, Louvre, Montmartre, Arc de Triomphe, river Seine and many other great attractions Versailles : castle of French kings Lasceaux Caves for 17,000 year old rock paintings Cote d’Azur for turquoise blue sea and great beaches Corsica: in the Mediterranean sea French Alps: great skiing and snowboarding Mont St. Michel: Island with high tide Provence for lavender fields and old historic towns like Avignon Mont St. Michel: Island with high tide Interesting Facts: French Language facts French is the official language in France and it is also the second major language in Europe. The Romanic language comes from Latin and is today the second most studied language after English and spoken by more than 300million people around the world as first or second language. Famous French People
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This Abandoned Japanese Theme Park Is The Strangest Place You’ll See Today Gulliver’s Kingdom theme park in Japan was left to ruin after the owners closed it down in 2001. BuzzFeed News Reporter, UK 1. The surreal theme park was based on the novel Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift. Martin Lyle/Medavia.co.uk 2. At the centre of the park lay a giant model of the novel’s titular character, Lemuel Gulliver, tied to the ground - a vivid imagining of the famous scene where he is captured by the tiny people of Lilliput. 3. The park was built next to Mount Fuji near Aokigahara - Japan’s famous ‘suicide forest’ - and close to the former headquarters of Aum Shinrikyo, the religious cult responsible for 13 deaths in the Tokyo sarin nerve gas attack of 1995. 4. Photographer Martin Lyle, 44, braved the chilling atmosphere to explore the park’s interior. 5. He said: “The giant Gulliver was unreal. Entering the grounds I didn’t see him right away, then as I delved deeper into the park he suddenly loomed out of the landscape. 6. “It was such a momentous thing to stand in the presence of. It was the most amazing and surreal object I have ever seen. 7. “It felt so weird to lie in the palm of a giant man, while surrounded by the stunning scenery.” 8. Gulliver’s Kingdom opened its doors in 1997, but a short four years later it was forced to close due to a lack of customers. 9. Some speculate the park attracted so few visitors because of the site’s unfortunate proximity to such grim locations. 10. Aokigahara is the second most popular suicide spot in the world after the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, USA. More than 500 people are known to have taken their lives in the forest since 1950. 11. The nearby village of Kamikuishki was home to the terrorist organisation Aum Shinrikyo, which still has more than 1,000 adherents worldwide. It was used as a base for the production of nerve gas in the Tokyo subway attack. 12. Mr Lyle, of Atlanta, Georgia, USA said: “I can see why the park did not last very long. I would not want to go to a fun theme park next to those sinister places. 13. “Which ever way you look at it, the park had a strange concept. Why would you base a theme park on an 18th Century English novel? 14. The park was eventually demolished in 2007. Alan White is a senior reporter for BuzzFeed News and is based in London. More ▾ Next On BuzzFeed uk› 21 Secrets Chinese Restaurant Waiters Will Never Tell... 22 Hilarious Tweets That Prove Grindr Was At Its Worst... 20 People Who Immediately Recognized Their Mistake 19 Pictures That Will Finally Help You Sleep At Night... This Abandoned Japanese Theme Park Is The Strangest Place You'll See Today http://www.buzzfeed.com/alanwhite/atmospheric-p... Gulliver’s Kingdom theme park in Japan was left to ruin after the owners closed it down... The 9 Types Of People You See At A Theme Park There Is An Abandoned Wild West Theme Park In Cornwall South Korean Theme Park Dress Up Penguins In Novelty Outfits For Christmas 21 Signs Blackpool Pleasure Beach Is Your Spirit Home Tagged:gullivers travels, abandoned theme park, photography Facebook Conversations BuzzFeed uk More Uk ›
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CSCE :: Statement :: The Thirty-Seven Year Occupation of Cyprus Washington, Wednesday, July 20, 2011 THE THIRTY-SEVEN YEAR OCCUPATION OF CYPRUS Mr. SMITH of New Jersey. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to address ongoing human rights violations in occupied northern Cyprus . Today is the 37th anniversary of the illegal 1974 invasion--a terrible tragedy, and an ongoing one, as the continued occupation of that country by tens of thousands of Turkish troops continues to deprive of their homes all those forced to flee the north--estimated to number approximately 200,000. Many Greek Cypriots escaped the north with little more than the clothes on their backs. While some have returned to visit their own homes or ancestral villages, none have been allowed to take back their rightful property--those despoiled include an estimated 5,000 Americans of Cypriot descent. Several hundred courageous Greek Cypriots, mainly elderly people, refused to be uprooted and today live in enclaves, the remnant of once-thriving Greek Cypriot communities which have effectively been ethnically cleansed. Hundreds of churches, chapels and monasteries once dotted the rugged landscape of the region, part of Cyprus's rich religious cultural heritage. Indeed, St. Paul visited the island nation on one of his early missionary journeys, and St. Barnabas, a native of the Cypriot city of Salamis, was martyred nearby for his defense of Christianity. The Helsinki Commission, of which I am the Chairman in this Congress, has documented the desecration and destruction of some of the over 500 religious sites in the occupied area looted of their priceless icons, mosaics and frescoes once revered by the faithful. Many of these sacred objects, stolen from churches inside or adjoining Turkish military bases, have landed on the international art market. Even the dead are not allowed to rest in peace with destruction of cemeteries rampant throughout the region. Cypriot authorities interdicted a container originating in the occupied area filled with metal destined for a recycling facility in Asi
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Las Vegas set to open a park on the Strip for punters who are bored of the slot machines Las Vegas goes green! Sin City set to open a park on the Strip for customers who are bored of the slot machines Travelmail Reporter Forget the poker tables and abandon the pools, Las Vegas is going green.The desert city is set to develop an eight-acre park complete with 100ft fountain 'walls', huge man-made tulips to offer shade and street performers to add a musical backdrop to your walk. And it'll be located right on the Strip.Sin City is famed for its casinos and glamorous hotels, but MGM, who are behind the $100million (£59million) project say Vegas needs a park to compete with other US cities - albeit a rather 'pimped' version. Green space: A rendering shows how trees will line The Park, which will also include al fresco eateries and bars Getting back to nature: The park is the first to be created on the famous Las Vegas Strip, which is filled with hotels and casinos Simply know as The Park, the green space will be the first on the Strip, linking the New York-New York and Monte Carlo resorts and the new 20,000-seat world-class Las Vegas arena currently in development. It is slated to open in 2016. RELATED ARTICLES Are these the plane seats of the future? Flip-up chairs,... Enjoy your virtual stay! World's first hotel website... As 320,000 emigrants a year leave the UK for sunnier climes,... Guests who are bored with the whir of slot machines and the bright lights of the big hotels will be able to escape to the west side of the Strip for some peace and quiet.But, of course, this being Las Vegas, the park will also be packed with al fresco eateries, bars and street entertainers. Mature trees will be mixed in with 50ft man-made tulips, which will offer shade by day and lights up with LEDS at night.And eateries will include the popular burger brand Shake Shack, a gourmet waffle eatery named Bruxie and a Japanese restaurant called Sake Rok.A rum bar, whisky-themed drinking hole and a beer garden will complete the offering. Floral display: Giant 50ft tulips will provide shade in the day and be illuminated by night Central park: The green space will connect the New York-New York and Monte Carlo resorts MGM CEO Jim Murren said: 'Beautiful public places are highlights of many of the world’s finest cities, and Las Vegas shouldn’t be the exception.'The Park will be the first of its kind on the Las Vegas Strip ... To create this picturesque outdoor destination, we are literally taking down the walls and opening the doors at our resorts to develop a unique dining and entertainment district that complements its lush new surroundings.'The green space is MGM's bid to compete with rival Caesars Entertainment, which earlier this year opened an outdoor shopping district with a 550ft-tall High Roller observation wheel - which claims to be the world's tallest. Ready to roll: A general view of the Las Vegas High Roller at The LINQ in Las Vegas, Nevada. The 550-foot-tall attraction is the highest observation wheel in the world and features 28 spherical cabins that can hold up to 40 people each Caesars is also looking to open a Grand Bazaar, modelled on the one in Istanbul, offering another outdoor shopping experience spread over two acres outside Bally's Las Vegas Hotel and Casino. Share or comment on this article Plane passenger films his flight through a TERRIFYING...
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France and Vietnam Cultural, scientific and technical cooperation Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on Google Plus Print "France-Vietnam Year" is being organised to straddle 2013/2014: it will kick off with the Season of France in Vietnam in the second half of 2013, followed by the Season of Vietnam in France in the first half of 2014. The programme of events, designed to spotlight the close links between France and Vietnam, will be very wide ranging (covering the fields of culture, education, economic cooperation, tourism, etc.) and will take its inspiration from the 40th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries, which falls in April 2013. Updated on 28.03.13 Diplomatic Photo Gallery France / Vietnam (in French) Embassy of France in Vietnam Embassy of Vietnam in France Economic relations Cultural, scientific and technical cooperation Events SITE MAP
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South India Himachal Goa/Beaches Impressions of Ladakh Highlights North India North India By Road North India & Temple Tour in India 19 Days Buddhist Tour North India with Puri Temple Tiger Days Rajasthan Days Gujarat 26 Days South Days North India Days Rajasthan 17 Days Shekhwati Days Sikkim Days Nepal Days Ladakh Days Taj Triangle Days Tibet With Pushkar & Rajasthan in Rajasthan Palace Tour & South India Desert Tour East Tour Gujrat Tour Short Tour Tibet Kashmir Trip of Rajasthan To Rajasthan Punjab and Haryana Punjab has always been known and identified as a land of celebrations. Similarly Haryana, once part of Punjab, has also undertaken the same characteristics. Festivals in Punjab and Haryana have always been celebrated with much fanfare. These festivals are popular occasions for social gathering and enjoyment. Some of the festivals which are celebrated in Punjab and Haryana are Baisakhi, Guruparb, Lohri, Holla Mohalla, Tika, Teej, Sanjhi and Gita Jayanti. Many other festivals like Basant Panchmi, Karva Chauth, Holi, Diwali and Dussehra are also celebrated with great joy. Baisakhi The most important festival which is celebrated in Punjab is Baisakhi, which marks the arrival of the harvesting season. The word Baisakhi is derived from the month of Vaisakha (April-May) in which the festival is celebrated. This festival is celebrated on the 13th April every year, a time when the farmer returns home with his bumper crop, the fruit of his whole year�s hard labour. The people of Punjab attired in their best clothes perform the Bhangra dance to express their joy. The dancers and drummers challenge each other to continue the dance. The scenes of sowing, harvesting, winnowing and gathering of crops are expressed through zestful movements of the body with the accompaniment of ballads. For the Sikhs, Baisakhi has a special significance because on this day in 1699, their tenth guru, Guru Gobind Singh organized the Order of the Khalsa. On this day he administered amrit (nectar) to his first batch of five disciples making them Singhs, a martial community. Fairs are organized at various places in Punjab, where besides other recreational activities, wrestling bouts are also held. The festival is celebrated with great fun at Talwandi Sabo, where Guru Gobind Singh stayed for nine months and completed the recompilation of the Guru Granth Sahib. Baisakhi is also celebrated with great fun in Haryana. It marks the end of religious austerity of nine holy days of fasting. The people take a bath in the nearby river, canal, tank or well and then go to temples or gurudwaras and offer prayers, followed by song and dance. Guruparb The Gurparb festival is celebrated by the Sikhs to commemorate their gurus. Two major Guruparbs are held during the year. The first Guruparb is held in the month of November to celebrate the teachings of the founder of Sikhism, Guru Nanak, and the second in the month of January to celebrate the birth anniversary of Guru Govind Singhji. On the Guruparb, the Granth Sahib is taken out in a procession through the streets of all the cities, the prayers are offered at the gurudwaras, and prasada is distributed to the devotees. For two days and nights, the Granth Sahib and the Japji Sahib are recited continuously from beginning to the end and religious discourses are also held. The second Guruparb is also celebrated with great zeal and fervour by the Sikh community, especially at Patna Sahib, the birthplace of Guru Gobind Singh. The martyrdom of Guru Arjun Dev and Guru Teg Bahadur are also observed as Guruparbs. Langars (free meals) are served to all without distinction of caste or creed. Holla Mohalla The Holla Mohalla is observed by the Sikh community, one day after the Holi. Thousands of Sikh devotees gather at the Anandpur Sahib, where Guru Gobind Singh was baptized to participate in the grand fair of Holla Mohalla. The whole place wears a festive look, the processions take place and the people also take part in the festivities with zealous fervour. The event concludes with a long, military-style procession near Takht Sri Keshgarh Sahib, one of the five seats of temporal authority of the Sikhs. Tika Tika is celebrated in the month of Kartik (Oct-Nov) on the day following Diwali. Tika is celebrated both in Punjab and Haryana. The women put a tika of saffron and rice grains on the foreheads of their brothers, to protect them from evil. They dress up in finery to perform the ceremony. They feed their brothers with sweets and also sing and pray for their longevity and prosperity. The brothers in turn gave them some gifts or money as a token of their affection. Lohri The Lohri festival is celebrated both in Punjab and Haryana. It is one of the most popular harvest festivals of Punjab. This harvest festival is celebrated in the month of January and marks the end of the winter season. This harvest festival is celebrated to mark both celebration and sharing. In January, when the fields open up with the golden harvest, the farmers celebrate the festival before the cutting and gathering of crops. The purpose of the Lohri festival is to thank the God for his care and protection. On this occasion, children go from home to home, singing popular Lohri folk songs and people oblige them generously by giving them money and eatables as offering for the festival. In the evening, people gather together and light bonfires. They go around the fire three times, giving offerings of popcorns, peanuts, rayveri and sweets and sing songs. This symbolizes a prayer to Agni for abundant crops and prosperity. Then, on the beat of the dhol (traditional Indian drum), they perform Bhangra and Giddha, the popular folk dances, around the fire. Later, the prasad of til, peanuts, rayveri, puffed rice, popcorn, gajak and sweets is distributed. The joyous festivities assume a greater fervour on the birth of a child or the arrival of new bride in the family. On this day, fairs are also held at various places in Punjab and Haryana. For Punjabis, this is more than just a festival, it is also an example of a way of life. Teej Teej is celebrated on the occassion of the onset of Sawan (monsoon), which is essential for the agricultural prosperity of the state. This festival is also celebrated in both Punjab and Haryana. On this day, the women dress up in all their finery, with mehndi on their hands, and sing and dance to welcome the rains. They perform gidda and kikli, the folk dances of Punjab. The swings are hung from trees and the women frolic on them, singing the traditional bojeeyan and tappe songs. They also sing songs in praise of Goddess Parvati, as it was on this auspicious day that Parvati, the consort of Lord Shiva, won him after much penance. Sanjhi The Sanjhi festival is mainly celebrated by the women in rural Haryana, Sanjhi is a day for rituals, prayers and celebrations. It is celebrated in the month of October. Sanjhi is the name given to images of the Mother Goddess designed by the rural women. These images are made of cowdung paste and a symbol of health, wealth and prosperity. According to folklore, the Goddess of wealth only enters those houses whose walls are decorated with the form of Sanjhi. The image is designed on the first day of the nine days of Durga Puja. The people offer prayers and food to the goddess everyday. Gita Jayanti Gita Jayanti is a modern festival which is celebrated at Kurukshetra in Haryana. Gita Jayanti, has its roots in the Shrimad Bhagwad Gita. This festival is celebrated to commemorate the holy Gita and Lord Krishna for ten days. The arti and deep daan at the Brahma Sarovar, where lit diyas are set afloat in the sarovar to the chant of devotional songs, are an exercise in spiritual rejuvenation. During these days various events take place, which include the recitation of the Gita, a pageant depicting scenes from the Mahabharata, seminars and discussions on the Gita, and recitals of bhajans. States in Delhi || Jammu & Kashmir || Haryana & Punjab || Himachal Pradesh || Madhya Pradesh || Rajasthan || Uttar Pradesh || Information about Haryana and Punjab Introduction || History || Geography || || Climate || Flora and Fauna || People || Culture || Cities in Haryana and Punjab Amritsar || Chandigarh || Panipat || Kurukshetra Distances from Cities in Haryana and Punjab Ambala || Amritsar || Chandigarh || Gurgaon || Jalandhar || Ludhiana || Pathankot || Rohtak Festivals of Uttar Pradesh Baisakhi || Guruprab || Holla Mohalla || Tika || Lohri || Teej || Sanjhi || Gita Jayanti group departures... Contact Enquiry About www.indovacations.net Copyright � Indo Vacations. All Rights Reserved.
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Don’t Be A Tourist My Secret Paris Off-Beat & Little Known Paris Like a Local Unique Hotels Inspiration Vault Art & Design Awesomeness Desirable Digs Indie Shopper Movie / Music / Book Junkie People / Icons / Muses Teeny Tiny Stuff Life is Messy Comedic Therapy Fashion for Dummies Foodaholics anonymous How to start a subculture Forget Paris Obscure history There’s More! Shop Merci Nessy Follow @MessyNessyChic Le Sponsorship Le Press Page Psst!Did you hear about MessyNessy's secret gallery? Curious artists may enquire within... If You’re Strange Like Me, This Could Interest You… MessyNessy 5th May, 2011 There are a few things about me that could be perceived by some as a little off. For example, I highly enjoy doing a little dance in front my bathroom mirror occasionally, watching zombie films or snacking on salted crisps dipped in cold milk (trust me, try it). I also enjoy looking at derelict buildings. In fact, I find them fascinating; imagining the history before abandonment, both the attraction and intimidation of the ghostly presence left behind, the textures made by the decay– it’s extremely alluring. Have I lost you? Perhaps this might help. I attended a photography exhibition that opened this month here in Paris called “The Ruins of Detroit”. I may have been the first in line and I attended alone (as with dipping crisps in milk or dancing in front of the mirror, there are some things you just want to do alone). Two self-taught French photographers, Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre, collaborated for over five years in Detroit, possibly the hardest hit city by the economic downturn, photographing deserted landmarks, destroyed schools, concert halls, theatres and hotels literally falling apart. For a city that once stood as the cradle of modern mass-production, the photographs are a baffling documentation of a major American city “in a state of mummification”, as Marchand and Meffre call it. “Its splendid decaying monuments are, no less than the Pyramids of Egypt, the Coliseum of Rome, or the Acropolis in Athens, remnants of the passing of a great Empire”. (click on the photos if you want to get a closer look) Michigan Central Station It was once filled with the sounds of hellos and goodbyes, panting locomotives and screeching wheeled steel. It was Detroit’s Ellis Island, where many generations of Detroiters first stepped foot into the city for factory jobs. But for nearly twenty-five years now, it has been a place for vandals, thrill-seekers, junkies and the homeless. The only sounds to be heard are the hissing of cans of spray paint, the clicks and whirs of camera shutters and the slow drips of water through holes in the roof. Wind whistling through broken windows has replaced the deep-throated whistles of trains. Atrium, Farwell Building (office building) Built in 1915, its lobby was once lavishly decorated with Tiffany glass and its offices filled with natural light. In 1974 the Farwell was listed on the State Register of Historic Places and in 1974 on the National Register. Despite these efforts the building has stood vacant for nearly twenty years. There have been proposals for loft developments but as of today none have materialized. 18th floor dentist cabinet, David Broderick Tower Vacant since 1985, the Broderick Tower went from being “a beauty by day—a jewel by night” to the third-tallest abandoned building in the United States. There is a happy ending for this building however. In 1995, the Detroit Tigers announced they would build a new baseball stadium near the Broderick northeast of Grand Circus Park. Real estate deals started happening left and right and in May 2010, an announcement was made to start work on a $55 million redevelopment project that would feature nearly 130 residential units and a restaurant lounge. Works are expected to be finished in 2012. The Donovan Building Occupied by Motown Records from 1968 to 1972, demolished in 2006 because the Mayor said it was an eyesore for the visitors of the upcoming Super Bowl. The demolition of the building was completed in two weeks. Because of this time constraint, little was removed from the buildings before demolition. Items such as marble, documents, and architectural detailing were simply smashed to bits. Bagley-Clifford Office of the National Bank of Detroit A haunting image shows a once-secure and proud bank – its vault decrepit and strong boxes strewn. The United Artists Theater Opened in 1928. Detroit’s newest film palace became an instant hit and was one of two Detroit theaters to show Gone With the Wind when the film debuted in 1939. Today the building continues to stand empty and faces probable destruction, having been already stripped of much of its remaining plasterwork and scrap metal. Ballroom of the American Hotel Now a shell of a building, sadly. Originally built in 1926 at a cost of 1.8 million dollars, it closed for good in 1990. The William Livingston House Completed in 1893, this was one of the earliest known efforts of Albert Kahn, who designed the renaissance facade when he was just 23. The irony is that this house was moved one block east in the late 1990’s to save it from demolition. At that point the building was abandoned, and perched on its substandard foundations, it gradually began to slump and become derelict. After the collapse of its façade in the summer 2007, the building was sadly demolished on September 15th, 2007. I found a photograph of what it once look like below… Melted clock, Cass Technical High School Built in 1922, this school’s alumni included Diana Ross and Jack White of the White Stripes. Having been plagued by fires and vandalism for years, demolition took place last month. Piano, Saint Albertus School Closed since 1990. Left decaying for over 20 years now. East Methodist Church Post-apocalypse or downtown Detroit? A classroom at St. Margaret Mary’s School. Perhaps the teacher’s last chalk writings still on the board on the far left. Vanity ballrom The Vanity Ballroom was built in 1929 after the stock market crashed. Despite the Depression, the Vanity was one of the most popular dance venues in town. The Vanity could not survive the decline of garage rock and the decline of Detroit post-1967 riot. Over the decades following, attempts were made to revive the ballroom to its former glory, but were shortlived. The ballroom was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. It is not considered such by the state of Michigan. It closed for the last time in 1987. It remains the last intact ballroom of Detroit’s great dance halls of the big band era of the early 1930s and late 1940s. It has largely been spared the ravages of scrappers and vandals, most of its ornate Aztec features remain, however some of its architectural details were chiseled off and stolen. Jane Cooper Elementary School, Spring 2008 At the end of the 2007 school year, Jane Cooper Elementary (built in 1920) was left unsecured in the middle of the wasteland where a middle-class neighbourhood once stood. It took “scrappers” only a few months to strip the building of every last ounce of metal and leave it looking as though it hadn’t been occupied for decades. :::: Fisher Body 21 Plant Fisher Body 21 was the birthplace for the bodies of countless Cadillacs. Room 1504, Lee Plaza Hotel By the early 20th century it was actually fashionable to reside permanently in hotels. This explains why you can see a connecting kitchenette in the photograph. Hotels would be built specially for residents, used as upscale apartment with hotel services. Constructed in 1929, the Lee Plaza rises to 15 floors and is an excellent example of Art Deco architecture of the 1920s. After economic decline, the apartment’s ownership changed several times, being used as a senior citizen’s complex (making it even creepier) before finally closing as a residence in the early 1990s. The Ballroom of the Lee Plaza Hotel The Lee Plaza has been badly ravaged by vandals after its solid fortifications broke down by 2000. It is a registered historic site by the state of Michigan and was added to the United States National Register of Historic Places. See the full body of work on the photographer’s website here If you’re in Paris, I recommend you go to see the exhibition at Galerie Wanted in the Marais, 23, rue du roi de Sicile / 75004 Am I alone in my fascination for derelict and forgotten buildings? Like these stories? We deliver to your inbox too! Comments Ruins of Detroit: Before & After The Car Park Theatre of Detroit Will a Zombie Amusement Park take over Abandoned Detroit? The Sleazy 70s Game Show for Husbands Sleeping with their Secretaries The Fashion World’s Best Kept Secret The Art of Homemaking in a World War Dugout 13 Things I Found on the Internet Today (Vol. CXLXIV) Why don’t they bring back Ice-Skating Cocktail Waiters? Follow Messy Nessy Chic You had me @messynessychic Keep up on Facebook More in Comedic Therapy • Editor's Picks • How to start a subculture • Inspiration Vault • Life is Messy • Nostalgia • Obscure history • People / Icons / Muses • Time travel Chene House, Detroit, 1973-2010 I keep coming back to Detroit. It's bizarre how photogenic the downfall of America’s industrial powerhouse can be. However there's an eerie and unwanted sense of r... Detroit's haunting decline has been so well documented by urban explorers that to the outside world, it might seem like it's the only thing to know about this once great industrial metropolis. And ... [caption id="attachment_23817" align="aligncenter" width="764" caption="Image by Yves Marchand"][/caption] An ambitious Detroit entrepreneur has launched a campaign to turn the abandoned neighborhood... I finally found a reason to join Tumblr today. The last few hours of my life have been spent scrolling through the wonderful world of F**k Yeah Abandoned Places. It's pretty much the place on the inte... If you were watching American television between 1979 and 1980, you might have heard of a little game show called "Three's a Crowd," whose tagline was "Who knows a man better: his wife or his sec... If you asked me to name three fashion photographers off the top of my head, I would probably say, Mario Testino (easy one), Annie Leibovitz ... and does that guy who photographs everyone on the st... It all started with one photograph that caught my interest, and then through the course of today, I think I've easily gone through about 10,000 photographs, searching through various archives for ... 1. The Tale of the Seven Sutherland Sisters and Their 37 Feet of Hair "Their antics and wild, over-the-top parties were the talk of Niagara County". Read their story found on Collector's ... Winter is coming, and while I do enjoy having an excuse to quote Game of Thrones at any given moment, easing into the climactic equivalent of running my fingernails down a chalkboard isn't all tha... The Queen that worked at Macy’s Most princess stories involve finding Prince Charming and living happily ever after as king and queen of the castle. They don't typically include a part about the princess working at Macy's d... Ever Wondered Why Americans of the 1930s and 40s Spoke with an Accent? Oh I do love it when my shower thoughts finally get answered. Have you ever wondered why Hollywood favourites like Katharine Hepburn spoke as if they only just stepped off the ferry from England, ...
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Mint Tours A Popular Draw For Denver Tourists Filed Under: Coins, Denver Mint, United States Mint DENVER (CBS4) – Visitors from out of town make the U.S. Mint in Denver one of the city’s most popular tourist attractions, but sometimes those of us who live here seem to miss what’s in our own back yard. “The United States Mint facilities besides Philadelphia, all popped up in areas where silver or gold was discovered,” explained Tim Fessing. The gold rush of the 1850s created a need for a place where miners could cash in their mine ore. “The miners would come down from the mountains, sell us their gold and silver. We’d form it into bars and then ship that to the San Francisco Mint or the Philadelphia Mint to be made into gold and silver coins. The Denver Mint was located on 16th Street. Despite it being an official Mint, it never produced any coins. Denver didn’t begin doing that until the present Mint was built in 1906. “Most of the coins we produce are for you and for I and for our economy,” said Fessing. “They’re called circulating coins.” Last week the Mint unveiled the Lincoln or Union penny, which is now being made in Denver and is in circulation. The heads side of the coin will still be a profile of President Lincoln but the tail side now has a Union shield with 13 vertical stripes. “The coin production process is pretty amazing,” Fessing said. “Each coin starts our as part of large roll of metal. A small blank is punched from this. “We turn it into two tons of coins in only 45 minutes. Once the pennies drop into the presses, they’re struck by they’re struck by a set of steel dies on both sides at the same time.” The coins are periodically checked to ensure quality. If they don’t pass the entire batch is scrapped and recycled. Today the Denver Mint is as much museum as it is a Mint. You can see a machine gun nest that was installed in 1937 to protect the gold and silver. You can also see a steel box where guards would sit and watch the front doors. There’s a foot pedal that was used to dispersed tear gas in the event of an emergency that remains inside. Daily tours give you a walk through the history of the Denver Mint and an overhead view of production as millions of coins begin their journey to your piggy bank. The Mint makes about 30 million coins a day, which adds up to nearly 8 billion coins per year. The Denver Mint’s historic facility is located at 320 West Colfax. You can go to their Web site to schedule a tour, or call (303) 405-4761 for more information.
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The World in Images View of the Historic Center of Salvador, Brazil. The city, founded in the early 16th century, was one of the biggest in America until 19th century. It was the first city of Brazil and its capital until mid-18th century. The Belem Tower, in Lisbon. In the early 16th century, Portugal was the biggest power in the world, with large territories in four continents. It was the first global Empire. Copyright © Geographic Guide Planet Earth. Images of Brazil. ◄ Geographic Guide ◄ World Maps Manu Dias © pajomend
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picturesa few of our favorites linksthings we like infohours, location, and contact Tweets by highlifelounge Follow @highlifeloungePowered by Twitter Feed A 1960′s style corner tavern opened local owners of (Full Court Press) on Groundhog Day, February 2nd, 2005. Every city should have a bar like this with shag carpet, Formica bar top, vintage wallpaper, and wood paneling. Retro light fixtures and vintage Miller beer promotional lights and signs hang everywhere. The star of the show, Miller High Life, had a culture of its own in the 60’s and 70’s and its allure lives on today. The “Champagne of Beers” outsells two-to-one the next popular beer at the High Life Lounge. If a customer isn’t sipping a High Life, they’re still probably enjoying one of its contemporaries such as Hamm’s, Pabst Blue Ribbon, or original recipe Schlitz. Like the beer, the food remains true to the era. Deviled eggs, Spam and egg sandwiches, liver and onions, broasted chicken, fried chicken gizzards, and Mom’s pot roast are all favorites. The High Life Lounge is a place for regular folks to relax and have a good time without spending a lot of money, the most popular item on the menu is the $3.75 cheeseburger basket. It’s a quarter pound burger with cheese, pickle and onion served in a basket with a generous portion of golden brown French fries. The High Life Lounge has won its share of awards. Cityview magazine has named it “Best New Bar” and “Best Downtown Hangout”. It was featured on the Travel Channel’s Man v Food and also featured in the travel section of the New York Times It was also named one of the best bars in America by Esquire Magazine. One of the High Life’s proudest moments was when the president of Miller Brewing, Norm Adami stopped by after a ballgame and bought a round for the house to a capacity crowd. Situated a block from the ballpark, the High Life Lounge is the perfect place before and after an Iowa Cubs baseball game. Being so close to the bike trail the High Life Lounge is a favorite of cyclists before, during, and after a bike ride. The minute you walk in the High Life Lounge, “It’s Miller Time” and you’ll know you belong here. Oh, and don’t forget. It’s also the home of the world-famous “Tangermeister”, Thursday’s Crappy Beer Night, and America’s most popular Groundhog Day party every February 2nd. We hope to see you soon and remember, “Isn’t it time you lived the High Life?” Copyright © 2011 High Life Lounge
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Dallas Blooms Cool Thursdays Concert Series Summer at the Arboretum Garden Gigs Autumn at the Arboretum Holiday at the Arboretum Today in the Children's Garden 50 Reasons to Visit Restaurant DeGolyer ​Children's Garden Adventure Café by Two Sisters Seated Teas Lula Mae Slaughter Dining Terrace Café on the Green Seasonal Dining Garden Etiquette/Accessibility Photography Guidelines Coming to the Garden with Children Reviews and Accolades The Women's Council Home > Visit > Our Story Dallas Arboretum Mission The Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden was founded upon the dreams of a few visionaries with a passion for preserving both history and nature. Though the gardens themselves are comparatively young, the work that went into creating the current gardens began long ago. In 1974, the Dallas Arboretum & Botanical Society (DABS) adopted bylaws, elected officers and incorporated as a nonprofit organization. In 1977, the City of Dallas Park Board recommended that the grounds of the DeGolyer Estate, which the city purchased from Southern Methodist University, be the official location of the botanical garden. The city encouraged DABS to raise funds for the initial costs. During 1978 and 1979, DABS membership and awareness increased. Both business and local citizens began to support of the Arboretum project. By 1980, DABS had raised over one million dollars and purchased the 22-acre Alex Camp House, which is adjacent to the DeGolyer Estate. Both houses are located on White Rock Lake. In 1982, the City of Dallas and DABS signed a contract creating an arboretum and botanical garden on the combined 66 acres of the DeGolyer and Camp properties. The gardens opened to the public for the first time in 1984. The DeGolyer House The home of Everette DeGolyer (1886-1956) and Nell Goodrich DeGolyer (1887-1972) was designed to look 100 years old when it was built in 1939. Mr. DeGolyer was a geologist who ushered the oil industry into the age of technology with the use of the seismograph to find oil. Both Mr. and Mrs. DeGolyer were very active in the city of Dallas. The 21,000-square-foot home is Latin Colonial Revival style with 13 rooms, seven baths, five fireplaces, seven chimneys and a 1,750-square-foot library. Architects Denman Scott and Burton Schutt also included central air conditioning and heating when building the house. When the DeGolyers originally purchased the property, called “Rancho Encinal” because of the many live oak trees, it was being used as a 44-acre dairy farm. The DeGolyer House is on the National Register of Historic Places as well as the Texas Register of Historic Places. The house was recently renovated to re-create the look of the 1940s. Alex Camp House The Alex Camp House is an 8,500-square-foot home, which sits atop a gently sloping hill providing a stunning view of White Rock Lake. It was designed and built by well-known architect John Staub, and was completed in 1938. Both Alex Camp and Roberta Coke Camp were from prominent Dallas families, and Roberta was a generous philanthropist who supported local civic and charitable organizations including the symphony, art museum, ballet and her church. The house is a harmonious combination of Latin Colonial, English Regency and Art Deco styles. It is one room deep throughout, creating three exposures for all living and bedrooms.
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Home > Cruise News Archive > Royal Caribbean Announces Finalists in Godmother Search Date Published: January 19, 2006 Royal Caribbean International Profile and Reviews Royal Caribbean Announces Finalists in Godmother Search Royal Caribbean's Freedom of the Seas, which will launch this spring as the largest ship in the world, won't be an orphan for much longer. After seeking nominations for the ship's godmother, the cruise line has announced three finalists -- and you get to choose the winner. For the first time ever, Royal Caribbean is letting the average cruiser decide who will christen their newest ship through a Web-based poll, the second phase of a nationwide search. The contest is a new -- and unusual -- twist on an old tradition: Most of the time, cruise line execs simply choose a godmother, generally from the ranks of royalty or Hollywood (past Royal Caribbean godmothers include Her Majesty Queen Sonja of Norway and Whoopi Goldberg). Royal Caribbean chose the upcoming launch of this innovative, highly anticipated ship as an opportunity to instead honor an everyday person who has demonstrated exceptional courage, determination, inspiration and dedication. Exactly what does the godmother do? Besides presiding over a ship's naming ceremony (and breaking a bottle of bubbly on the hull for good luck), it is also maritime custom for her to serve as a "guiding spirit" throughout its lifetime. After reviewing thousands of potential candidates, Katherine Louise Calder, Ieta Kimbrough and Robyn Raphael were selected as finalists. Want to vote? Visit www.today.msnbc.com to make your choice known. Here is the rundown on the nominees: Calder, from Portland, Oregon, has been a foster parent to over 400 children in the last 27 years, acting as a "level three" special needs foster care provider and adoption advocate in her area. Kimbrough, from Indianapolis, Indiana, survived homelessness and domestic violence as a young mother. She founded The House of Refuge in 2001 to provide support for victims of domestic violence in Indiana. Raphael, from Roseville, California, lost her five year-old son to neuroblastoma in 1998. In honor of his memory, she founded the Keaton Raphael Memorial to assist children and their families in the fight against pediatric cancer. The winner, who will be announced live from the Torino Winter Olympics in February, will preside over the inaugural ceremonies at the ship's official debut in May and can cruise once a year on any Royal Caribbean ship free of charge with a guest -- for the rest of her life! Freedom of the Seas, weighing in at 160,000 tons and carrying 3,634 passengers, will debuts in May. The first "child" in the line's new Freedom family of ships will sail seven-night itineraries to the Western Caribbean.
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Volume 16, Number 9 | July 29–Aug. 4, 2003 ‘Great’ walker sits down to write By Albert Amateau Cy Adler, author of new book about Manhattan’s shoreline. It’s 32 miles around the shoreline of Manhattan and Cy Adler knows every inch of it. Teacher, writer and environmentalist, Adler is the founder of Shorewalkers, Inc., a not-for-profit walking and environmental group dedicated to exploring the metropolitan area shoreline on foot. Over the past 18 years or so, the Shorewalkers’ signature spring event has been a walk around Manhattan as close as possible to the waters edge. It starts at the Battery on an early May morning — walkers join or drop out along the way — and ends about 10 hours later after passing through more than 15 city parks and a few mean streets. Earlier this year, Adler’s guidebook to the event,”Walking Manhattan’s Rim – The Great Saunter,” a 175-papge paperback, was published by Adler’s Green Eagle Press ($13.95) with a foreword by the folk-singer Pete Seger and an introduction by Department of Parks and Recreation Commissioner Adrian Benepe. The book, with maps and photos, provides a historic and geographic profile of the Manhattan shoreline interspersed with glimpses into Adler’s environmental opinions and adventures. In an interview, Adler expanded on his explorations along the metropolitan area shoreline and his adventures on the Great Saunter and beyond. “We started the Great Saunter in 1984 or 1985 just to see if it could be done. There weren’t many walking groups then and the shoreline was a lot less accessible than it is now,” he said. “We started doing our longest walk on June 21, the longest day of the year, but it was too hot so we changed the date to May.” Adler has missed a few Saunters over the years but he has walked at least part of the route about a dozen times. “I’ve done the whole thing from beginning to end about four times,” he said. “The only one who completes it every time is Robert Johnson, from Newark. He’s very fast.” The obstacles have varied over the years. Construction in Battery Park City and along Hudson River Park has forced the Great Saunter to take some detours. The former rail yards between 60th and 72nd where the Trump project is under construction was a stretch where Shorewalkers had to crawl under a fence until recently when the new Riverside Park South opened to the public. But heat has been the most daunting problem. “I remember one Saunter when it was 94 degrees – in May,” said Adler. “I knew it was 94 because the temperature was flashing on Yankee Stadium as we were walking past it down the Harlem River. By the time we got to 86th St. in Carl Schurz Park I was feeling woozy. I made it to 34th St. and collapsed. I was walking with Joe Vitrano [a long-time Shorewalker] and a girl, Monami, he had just met. They called a cab and took me home. It worked out very well for them. They eventually got married and they have a couple of kids.” Adler’s list of acknowledgments in “Walking Manhattan’s Rim” is long. But he makes special mention of Minor Bishop, an architect and early member of Shorewalkers who often leads the second half of the Great Saunter down from Inwood Park along the eastern shoreline. Walt Wright, another leading Shorewalker, was the organizer of the 2003 Great Saunter and is expected to coordinate the event next year. “We get as many as 300 people at the beginning of the Saunter and about 30 or 40 finish it,” Adler said. Shorewalkers has a mailing list of 1,000. “But not all of them go on the walk and not all of them pay the $20 annual dues,” he said. Adler was born in 1927 “in Brooklyn on a kitchen table, so I’ve been told.” Appropriately for a man who likes to be in sight of the water, he went to sea as a young man. “In 1952 when I was a student at N.Y.U., I was living in a cold water flat on the Lower East Side paying $15.50 a month rent. But I got restless and wanted to see the world.” Adler said. “I went down to the National Maritime Union to try and get on a ship. But there were a lot of sailors in town—it wasn’t that long after the end of World War II. They told me to try a Norwegian ship, and I did. We left from Stapleton, Staten Island. It was a tramp steamer going around the world. Going across the Pacific we didn’t see land for 29 days, but we only got as far as Manila.” Adler recalled that he then signed onto an American vessel as a wiper (an engine room seaman) to get back home. “On the way back I got into a fight with a crazy sailor – he was my roommate actually. He bit me and took a piece out of my chest near the neck. There was no doctor on board and by the time we got to San Pedro I was running a high fever. I almost died but I still love the sea.” But he had seen enough of the world for a while and went on to take a degree in mathematics. He has taught math, physics and oceanography at various CUNY and SUNY schools, including Borough of Manhattan Community College, and at New York University and New School University. In a digression in “Walking Manhattan’s Rim,” Adler tells about an oceanographic research firm with offices on Nassau and Fulton Sts. that he ran in the 1970s. “My company, Offshore Sea Development Corp. used Pier 17 [at the South St. Seaport] as a biological research platform,” he said. “We lowered plastic crates of bivalves [oysters, mussels and clams] into the East River and observed their growth and vitality for over a year. We found that they grew well though some of them died off in the warm months, probably due to lower quantities of oxygen in the waters.” Adler also holds patents on several maritime industry processes. “I was a millionaire on paper for about six months,” he added. Adler has also written and published “Walking Manhattan’s Rim” and in 1998, “Walking the Hudson: Batt to Bear,” about a proposal to link 56 miles of trails from the Battery to Bear Mountain. For information about Adler or his books, visit www.greeneagle.org.
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Elmhurst Historical Museum DuPage County, Chicago’s Western Suburbs - This prize-winning museum features changing interpretive exhibits on Elmhurst history as well as national touring exhibits. Programs for children, families and adults throughout the year. The Elmhurst Historical Museum is located in a historically significant structure known as the Glos Mansion, which is the former home of Elmhurst's first village president, Henry L. Glos, and his wife, Lucy. DuPage County, Chicago’s Western Suburbs - The museum's award-winning structure contains a dramatic glass entrance gallery, three museum galleries, an educational pavilion, and the Ludwig Mies van der Rohe-designed McCormick house. Theatre Historical Society of America Theatre Historical Society of America features archives and gallery space featuring the history of America's theatres in photos, blueprints and artifacts.Rotating exhibits highlight the history of different theatres. CITY: Elmhurst West Town Museum of Cultural History The West Town Museum of Cultural History has been the repository for black history in Maywood since 1857. The museum features a pictorial exhibit on the Underground Railroad. CITY: Maywood Fischer Farm The Bensenville Park District and the DuPage County Forest Preserve have been working to restore this property and land. Fischer Farm is believed to be one of the oldest remaining homesteads in the county. Explore the buildings, touch the artifacts, and connect with history. Sheldon Peck Homestead DuPage County, Chicago’s Western Suburbs - This 1840s farmhouse features reproductions of Sheldon Peck's folk paintings, exhibits on the area's first school, the underground railroad, farming and pioneer life. Admission is free. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity & Foundation This 80-year-old Indiana limestone building was constructed as a memorial to the members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon who fought and died in our nation's wars, and contains some of the last stained-glass works of Louis C. Tiffany. Itasca Historical Depot Museum The Itasca Historical Museum was the original Itasca Train Depot built in 1873. A 1939 Milwaukee Road Rib-side Caboose numbered 01839 was acquired and restored to its original bright orange appearance with all new doors, windows and wood interior. Kids love the interactive train display in the Depot which looks like Itasca in the late 1800’s with bells and whistles. Open Tuesdays & Thursdays from 11am-4pm and the 1st and 2nd Saturdays each month from 9am-2pm.
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Mille LacsNational Wildlife Refuge | Minnesota Wildlife & HabitatAbout the Refuge About the RefugeMille Lacs National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1915 and is known as the smallest refuge (o.57 acres) in the National Wildlife Refuge System, which includes more than 556 refuges. It is closed to public access. If you are boating on Mille Lacs Lake, please stay at least 100 yards offshore while fishing or observing wildlife from your watercraft. Minimizing human disturbance to the waterbirds that call the refuge home is a high priority.Mille Lacs National Wildlife Refuge consists of two islands, Hennepin and Spirit, in Mille Lacs Lake. The islands are covered with jumbled rock, boulders, and gravel. Hennepin Island is managed as a nesting colony for the state-listed threatened common tern. Spirit Island is used by other colonial nesting species including ring-billed gulls, herring gulls, and double-crested cormorants. The two islands that make up Mille Lacs National Wildlife Refuge were given national designation in separate orders. Woodrow Wilson set aside Spirit Island with Executive Order 2199 on May 14, 1915, as Mille Lacs Reservation. On October 13, 1920, he enlarged the reservation with the addition of Hennepin Island under Executive Order 3340. The two islands were to constitute a “preserve and breeding ground for native birds.” Mille Lacs National Wildlife Refuge has been designated as a State Important Bird Area, as part of the larger Mille Lacs Important Bird Area, by the National Audubon Society. Mille Lacs National Wildlife Refuge is closed to public visitation. For more information about the refuge, contact: Rice Lake National Wildlife Refuge36289 State Highway 65 McGregor, MN 55760Phone: 218-768-2402 V/TTY: [email protected] Last Updated: Jul 27, 2012 ShareFollow Us OnlineFacebook PageTwitter FeedYouTube PageFlickr PageMapsMultimediaWhat We DoResource ManagementConservationGet InvolvedPartnerships Common TernMille Lacs National Wildlife Refuge hosts one of only five common tern breeding colonies in Minnesota. Return to main navigation Mille Lacs HomeRegional OfficeRefuges/Districts NearbyContact Us
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The first Biwako Ohashi Bridge was opened on September 28, 1964 as a "bridge of dreams" connecting the west coast and the southern and east coasts of the lake in order to contribute to industrial development and promote tourism at Lake Biwa. In 1980, pedestrian and bicycle lanes were installed. In response to increased traffic, a new bridge was constructed on the north side in July 1994, making a total of four lanes. Currently the bridges are run by Shiga Prefectural Road Public Corporation. More than 30,000 cars per day cross the bridges. The commemoration project is sponsored by an executive committee consisting of 21 entities, including the cities on both sides of the bridges, Moriyama City and Otsu City. The southern bridge bound from Moriyama to Otsu will be closed to cars from 9:30 a.m. till noon to hold the event. Although the bridge has previously been closed to cars due to marathons or other events, this is the first time it will be pedestrianized since its opening. A straight row of 1,000 people will equal the bridge's 1.4 kilometer length, so participants are being publicly sought. They will hold hands, fly balloons, and do radio gymnastic exercises together. In addition to walking freely on the pedestrianized bridge, visitors will be able to view the bridges from the lake on a free passenger vessel plying between Pieri Moriyama port and the Biwako Ohashi Kome Plaza port. There will be a back side tour along the inspection path for bridge management, a panel exhibition of the bridges' history, a fair featuring specialties of Lake Biwa, and other events. There is no charge for participation in the 1,000-people event, but prior reservations are necessary as it's first-come-first-served. The application deadline is September 5. To apply, contact the executive committee in Commerce and Tourism Division of Moriyama City, at 077-582-1131 (Japanese language inquiries only). (translated by Galileo, Inc.) Photo= The Biwako Ohashi Bridges are marking the 50th anniversary of their opening (view from Moriayama City toward Otsu City)
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Shangla Pass Shangla Pass: road between the valleys of the rivers Swat and Indus in Pakistan's tribal territories. Crossing the Shangla Pass There is no evidence that Alexander the Great ever visited the Shangla pass, but on the other hand: this is the shortest route between the Swat valley, where Alexander had captured Massaga, Bazira, and Ora, and the valley of the Indus, where he wanted to take Aornus. The dusty road, even today unpaved and hardly accessible. However, although the pass is not very accessible, it certainly is one of the most beautiful parts of Pakistan. You can see the Hindu Kush with glaciers in the northwest and the snow-covered peaks of the Himalaya - which really looks like a big wall - in the northeast. You can also see all kind of geographical formations, like the triangle-shaped shapes called "irons". In the distance: the wall-shaped Himalayas Hindu Kush Western access Looking back to the Swat Valley Bridge over a tributary of the Indus Terraces The Shangla area is also very fertile. Every part of it is put to agricultural use. Everywhere, you will see carefully made terraces. We learned that the inhabitants, who belong to the tribes of Pakistan's Northwest, do not pay taxes, but are requested to work for the government every now and then, for example to make roads. At the moment of our visit (May 2004), Chinese engineers were trying to improve the pavement. This page was created in 2004; last modified on 17 August 2015. Home » Articles » Place » Shangla Pass AuthorJona LenderingMore picturesShanglaCountryPakistanCategoryIndus CivilizationSubdisciplinesGeographyHistoryTagPass Donate to support Livius
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Home > National Parks of Canada > Elk Island National Park > Natural Wonders & Cultural Treasures > Bison Homecoming: Bison to American Prairie Reserve Elk Island National Park What's NewVisitor InformationNatural Wonders & Cultural Treasures Photo GalleryBison Homecoming: Bison to American Prairie ReservePlains Bison Fact SheetSakha Wood Bison TransferMore InformationTrumpeter Swan Reintroduction ProgramElk Management ActivitiesLearning ExperiencesPark ManagementHow to Reach Us Important BulletinsWeather Forecast Jobs At Parks Canada A Bison Homecoming Plains Bison Running© Bob Bittner On January 24, 2012, Elk Island National Park transferred 70 plains bison to American Prairie Reserve on the Great Plains north of the Missouri River in northeastern Montana. The 2012 partnering project between Parks Canada and American Prairie Foundation achieved a full-circle journey for North America’s plains bison. It represents a significant international conservation project that contributes to the continued survival and well-being of an animal that is the undisputed symbol of North America’s vast interior plains. (see news release) Plains Bison in Canada For centuries bison were the source of life's necessities and a focus of social and ceremonial life for the Aboriginal people of the North American plains. By 1900, overhunting and the advance of the agricultural frontier brought bison to the verge of extinction; fewer than 200 plains bison were left in the world. In the early 1900s, a few private citizens in the United States and Canada made efforts to save the species. In 1906, the last large herd of wild plains bison, the Pablo-Allard herd, was sold by Michel Pablo to the Government of Canada for $245 apiece. In 1907, 410 plains bison were shipped to Alberta from Montana – approximately 200 in May and the remainder in September. The animals were sent by train in 17 freight cars from Ravalli, Montana, to the Village of Lamont, Alberta, where they were herded to their new home at the newly established Elk Park, Alberta. The herd was eventually distributed throughout various national parks and most of today's surviving plains bison are their descendants. Elk Park became Elk Island National Park in 1913. Today, Elk Island National Park is Canada’s seventh smallest and only entirely-fenced national park. Due to an absence of natural predators, the bison herd within the fenced area must be kept at levels that preserve grazing habitat. Periodically, bison must be transferred out of the park in order to ensure that the habitat is not over-grazed. This creates an opportunity for Elk Island National Park to provide bison to conservation projects both here in Canada, and internationally. The Bison Homecoming: Return to Montana The first transfer between Elk Island National Park and American Prairie Foundation occurred in 2009-2010 when 93 bison were moved to American Prairie Reserve on the Great Plains north of the Missouri River in northeastern Montana. The January 2012 transfer was another homecoming that to re-introduce 70 plains bison to their original habitat at American Prairie Reserve. The January 2012 transfer increased the Reserve’s herd to more than 210 bison - a significant step in bringing them “home.” Partnering with American Prairie Foundation has been a unique conservation initiative, and an international success. The Government of Canada’s commitment to conservation initiatives is not limited by international borders. Elk Island National Park manages recovery herds for both plains and wood bison; its herds are disease-free. All of Canada’s plains bison conservation herds originated in Elk Island National Park and because of their high genetic diversity and long history of disease-free status, it will always be the priority conservation herd in Canada for supplying plains bison to national and international projects. The “bison homecoming” is a heart-warming chapter in the history of the near-extinction and slow comeback of plains bison in North America. American Prairie Foundation’s work to set aside lands for prairie wildlife has united with Canada’s work in conserving plains bison to strengthen a future for a magnificent animal that is part of the shared heritage of both nations. The Preservation of Plains Bison – A National historic Event Elk Island National Park, located along the Yellowhead Highway 45 kilometres east of Edmonton, has been proudly managing foundation herds of elk and bison for over a century. In 1946, the “Preservation of the Plains Bison” was designated as a National Historic Event. A Historic Sites and Monuments Board plaque at Astotin Lake in Elk Island National Park commemorates the Park’s nationally significant role in the survival of plains bison. In 2011, Parks Canada celebrated 100 years since it was established as the Dominion Parks Service, the first federal agency in the world managing national parks. Today, because of initiatives like bison and elk conservation in Elk Island National Park, Parks Canada is a recognized leader in the conservation and preservation of natural and cultural heritage. Moving Bison Plains bison are the better-known of the two sub-species, and as the iconic “buffalo” of the North American prairies. Diligent herd management has resulted in the eradication of disease, allowing Elk Island National Park to build a foundation for conservation projects throughout the bisons’ former range. Elk Island National Park is doing what it has done best for more than a century – supporting the relocation of disease-free animals such as plains bison, wood bison, and elk. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) and Parks Canada are integral partners. CFIA certifies the animals as disease-free for conservation transfers, including the January 2012 to American Prairie Reserve. CFIA, in co-operation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, has developed a disease testing and treatment protocol for the animals and a veterinary health certificate that both countries have agreed to for this export-import of bison. The bison have been weighed, ear tagged, tested for specific diseases, treated with antibiotics, and certified as disease-free based on the health certificate. The bison are quarantined for 60 days in Canada and again for 30 days upon their arrival in Montana. Safety of the plains bison is top priority for all stages of the transfer. Elk Island National Park staff have unique expertise and a long history in managing, caring for and handling bison and are assisted by a Parks Canada veterinarian. Animal welfare specialist, lecturer, and author Temple Grandin consulted on the design of Elk Island National Park’s state-of-the-art bison handling facility. American Prairie Foundation works with scientists from World Wildlife Fund to ensure the herd is healthy and well-managed at their Reserve. On January 24, 2012, 70 bison were loaded into trailers at Elk Island National Park and transported by a company experienced in bison transport. The animals travelled in these specially sealed trailers through Customs to a quarantine area near Malta, Montana. In March 2012, the bison will be released at American Prairie Reserve. Bison-watching Bison can be seen by visitors to Elk Island National Park. North of the Yellowhead Highway on the Elk Island Parkway, watch for plains bison and other wildlife such as moose. The park area on the south side of the Yellowhead Highway is dedicated to wood bison. The wood bison roam the hills and forage along the lakes and can be viewed from hiking trails and along the Park's boundaries. Click here to read the official press release.For more information, please visit: Elk Island National Park American Prairie Foundation Date Modified 2012-01-24
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Internacional (Español)International (English)International (Deutsch)International (Français)ArgentinaBelgique (Français)België (Nederlands)BrasilCanada (English)Canada (Français)DanmarkDeutschlandFranceIndiaItaliaIrelandMéxicoNederlandNorgeÖsterreichРоссияPolskaPortugalSchweiz (Deutsch)Suisse (Français)SuomiSverigeUnited KingdomUnited States中国日本한국 A route through Spain's medieval towns and cities Hondarribia Romanesque cloister in the church of San Pedro de la Rúa, in Estella Sigüenza Cathedral Here we suggest a route in Spain which is original and unconventional, but very interesting and attractive: it runs through our medieval towns and villages. The itinerary covers close to 1,500 kilometres across Spain from the north to the southwest, passing charming places surrounded by a variety of stunning countryside, with cultural heritage dating back to the Middle Ages. If you are thinking of a cultural trip in Spain, then take note. The Medieval Towns and Villages Route goes from the Basque Country to Extremadura. Here you have the chance to explore Spain from the very shores of the Cantabrian Sea to beautiful rural, inland areas, and to enjoy the country's natural and cultural diversity. All along the way there are towns and villages with stunning heritage and monuments, perfectly conserved over the centuries. You will love their medieval atmosphere. The full route comprises nine stages. You can do it all or choose the stages that interest you most. The route is ideal to follow by car, and the destinations along the way are well worth visiting. They all have shared history which can be seen clearly in their streets, packed with medieval palaces, churches, monasteries and castles. Nevertheless, each one has its own personality and attractions. You'll notice this as soon as the journey starts. You can get underway in the Basque Country, in Hondarribia (Guipúzcoa province), right on the Basque coast. Amongst other things, you will love its maritime atmosphere, its nearby beaches and its internationally-renowned gastronomy. In the same Region, now inland in the province of Álava, you will find Laguardia. Make a stop to stroll around its old town and sample the local wine with the internationally prestigious Rioja Alavesa Designation of Origin. Just 60 kilometres away, another vital stop is in Estella or Lizarra. At this town in Navarre you will probably come across pilgrims, alone or in groups, with rucksacks on their backs. Don't be surprised. The Camino de Santiago pilgrimage route runs through here. It is the first European cultural route and also has the UNESCO World Heritage designation. Barely 100 kilometres further on, close to the Pyrenees, in the province of Zaragoza, it is well worth making a visit to the historic monuments of Sos del Rey Católico. The route now enters the Region of Castile. First to Almazán, in Castile-León, with the Duero River and its huge fields of crops. The village of Pedraza (Segovia) is in the same region, and has a number of large mansions and an interesting historic quarter. The route continues on into the region of Castile-La Mancha . In Sigüenza (Guadalajara), you can discover what life was like for medieval knights. Almost one thousand years ago, El Cid Campeador, a legendary hero of Spanish history, passed through this town. Further south, in Consuegra, in the province of Toledo, you can see, amongst other things, the windmills that call to mind the imaginary giants from the story of Don Quixote, the immortal creation of writer Miguel de Cervantes. The route finishes in the Region of Extremadura, in the towns of Coria (Cáceres province) and Olivenza (Badajoz province). They are very close to another, highly-recommended route –the Silver Route– that runs across Spain from south to north. There's loads to see, don't you think? Enjoy this cultural adventure in Spain. In each of these towns you will take an exciting trip back to the Middle Ages, learning about their history and traditions, and admiring the countryside that surrounds them. And if you don't have time to see it all, don't worry. We will be awaiting you on your next trip. For more information: Spanish Network of Medieval Towns and Villages Don't miss Almazán >Art and culture >To learn more about Spain >Gastronomy >Health and Beauty >Accommodation >Other >Reports for families >Reports for adults without children >Reports for young people >Reports for seniors >Reports for LGBT How many days are you coming for? >One day in... >Two days in... >More than two days…
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Timing is ideal for expedition cruise By Aaron Saunders, The Province The 148-guest National Geographic Explorer.If you’ve never been on an expedition cruise (and you really should try one), there’s good reason to embark on one this year.Lindblad Expeditions (expeditions.com), perhaps best known for its long-standing partnership with National Geographic, is pulling out all the stops to commemorate both the 125th anniversary of the National Geographic Society, as well as the fifth anniversary of the line’s flagship, the 148-guest National Geographic Explorer.To start with, the line is offering one of the most ambitious expeditions in the history of the company: A rare 38-day journey around South America that begins in Trinidad and ends in Buenos Aires that departs Sept. 18.In addition to visiting eight separate countries on this massive expedition, guests can lay claim to having explored three legendary rivers: the Orinoco, Essequibo, and the mighty Amazon.On-board, the former president of Colombia, Cesar Gaviria will be on-hand to discuss the political and economic climate in South America.He will be joined by three National Geographic photographers, two Explorers-in-Residence, and New York Times bestselling author Priscilla Ann Goslin.Also noteworthy this year is the eight-day “Canadian Maritimes” itinerary that explores some of the most fascinating ports of call on the Canadian East Coast, including Newfoundland, Cape Breton Island, and even the French St. Pierre & Miquelon. This sailing departs on Sept. 7.One of the most exciting itineraries, in my opinion, is hosted by former Canadian Prime Minister Kim Campbell, who will be travelling on the line’s spectacular Aug. 24 Fabled Lands of the North voyage that sails from Greenland to Baffin Island and eventually on to Newfoundland and Labrador. The historical significance of this sailing cannot be underestimated, tracing the route taken by centuries of explorers and travellers that dates back to the time of the Vikings.If the Canadian High Arctic is your thing, Lindblad Expeditions-National Geographic are also offering two 17-day expeditions that reach deep into the Canadian arctic and navigate the beginnings of the fabled Northwest Passage.Departing on July 27 and Aug. 10 these voyages visit the historic Inuit village and UNESCO World Heritage Site of Sermermiut, along with a call on Uummannaq, which boasts one of Greenland’s most impressive mummy finds.Of course, the possibility of witnessing polar bears scrambling around on the pack ice and viewing the region’s famous Minke and Killer Whales doesn’t hurt either.These voyages are just the tip of what Lindblad Expeditions-National Geographic is offering this year. So why not skip the call on St. Thomas this year and set out on a voyage that promises to be truly fascinating?Visit fromthedeckchair.com for our latest Live Voyage Report as we sail around South Africa.© Copyright (c) The Province E-mail this ArticlePrint this ArticleShare this Article Story Tools E-mail this ArticlePrint this Article Font:***** Image:**** The 148-guest National Geographic Explorer. E-mail this GalleryPrint this GalleryShare this Gallery Photo Galleries » travelNational Geographic SocietyTiming is ideal for expedition cruise
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The Biggest Shows in Las Vegas History Plan Your Vegas Vacation BEST LAS VEGAS SHOWS AND ENTERTAINMENT Las Vegas is the premier destination for the hottest concerts, shows and events. View more Caesars Palace shows in Las Vegas to see which resident entertainers are currently headlining at The Colosseum. Whether you’re a fan of production shows, comedy acts, tribute concerts or special events, purchase your show tickets and get ready for an exciting evening with these Las Vegas shows. Learn more about some of the biggest shows in Las Vegas history, and discover the current acts and performances that are becoming new Vegas legends. Las Vegas Entertainment Calendar The best Las Vegas shows feature everything from comedy roasters to headlining superstars, scintilating showgirls and masters of magic. The Las Vegas entertainment calendar features performance dates and information to book your Las Vegas show tickets. One of the most immediately recognized, widely respected and successful performers in pop music history, Celine Dion performing live at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace. Mariah Carey, the iconic chanteuse and best-selling female artist of all time, is in Las Vegas with a headlining residency at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace. For the first time ever, superstar entertainers Reba, Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn join forces for a one-of-a-kind country music residency – Reba, Brooks & Dunn: Together in Vegas. One of the most successful live acts on the road today, Elton and his band put on an unforgettable show: the entire audience standing, dancing and singing along with much-loved classic songs. A Las Vegas concert celebration of his five decades atop the musical world. The beautiful, fiery Latin American entertainer Jennifer Lopez starts her exclusive headlining residency “All I Have” on Jan. 20, 2016 at Planet Hollywood. Lopez will take the stage at AXIS Theater delivering with her rock-star energy, electrifying dance moves and infectious vocals. Learn More Music icon Lionel Richie is heading to Las Vegas in an exclusive headlining residency show, “All The Hits,” starting on Wednesday, April 27, 2016 at The Axis at Planet Hollywood. Learn More Jerry Seinfeld fans can catch the all-star comedian as he returns to The Colosseum at Caesars Palace for his critically acclaimed stand-up comedy, December 26 & 27. The Penn & Teller show is an edgy mix of comedy and magic involving knives, guns, fire, a gorilla and a showgirl.
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St. John, USVI by vivid Fri Sep 22 2000 at 5:22:45 St. John is one of the U.S. Virgin Islands. It is the smallest of the three, at about 20 square miles. Archeological evidence shows that humans lived on the island as early as 700 BC. Some of the pre-European settlers left petroglyphs next to the only fresh-water spring on the island. Danes took formal possession in 1694 and established cane and sugar using slave labor. There was a large revolt and massacre in 1733. St. John is very rough and mountainous, formed mostly out of volcanic basalt. It is the least-developed of the three islands as well -- the Virgin Islands National Park covers 2/3 of the island and about that much of its beaches. Because of this, St. John is very laid back and unspoiled. The land for the park was purchsed by Laurence Rockefeller and then donated to the United States federal government in the 50s. The park opened in 1956. St. John has one town, Cruz Bay, and another small community, Coral Bay. There is no airport, but a ferry from St. Thomas docks hourly at Cruz Bay. Some of the best snorkeling and hiking in the region can be found on St. John.
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Asia Europe Africa Middle East North America South America Central America Oceania Adventure Travel Budget Travel Travel Tech Luxury Travel Photography Airlines Hotels Cruises Food & Drink Arts & Culture Articles tagged “InternetRadio” Teaching Geography With Google Maps by Sean McLachlan on Jan 27, 2013 Travelers aren’t born, they’re raised. Last week we talked about how to connect with your kids while you’re away traveling. There are plenty of ways to get them interested in this great big world of ours while you’re both at home too. One of the best and easiest ways to fire their imagination is with Google Maps. Like many good ideas in our family, my seven-year-old son thought of it first. He’s recently gotten into Internet Radio, especially Tonik Radio out of Dublin. Tonik and most other stations show a Google map with pointers to where their listeners are. I find it kind of freaky that our house is clearly indicated on a map for all the other listeners to see. The kid just thinks it’s cool. He’s of a generation that has always known the Information Age and thus has a whole different attitude towards privacy. So as he listens to House and Trance he surfs the globe, looking up where the other Tonik Radio listeners are–the cluster of fans in Dublin, the farmer in Israel, and the guy in the apartment block in Sterlitimak, Russia. Zooming in with the power of satellite photography, he can see what far-off countries look like from above. In some places he can even use Google Street View. Once he gets bored hunting down his fellow radio fans, he starts exploring the Terra Incognita of the spaces between the points. This week he conducted a close-up survey across the Pacific and happened upon the Johnston Atoll, a lonely little former U.S. military base that I had never heard of. I also show him places where I’ve been. He got an aerial view of the amusement park in Baghdad where I ate mazgouf. When the satellite took its photo, a small plane was flying over the riverside park and left its shadow on the water of the Tigris. A week later I came into my office and he’d found it again. He’s learning to navigate. I can even show him my past, hovering with him above the Danish farm where I was an exchange student back in my teens. I brought him up the country lane to the nearest highway and its bus stop, the same route I rode with my bike when I wanted to go to Slagelse, the nearest town. The hedge and ditch where I hid my bike before I caught the bus are still there. Strangely, this obsession with the computer hasn’t killed his interest in regular maps or his light-up globe. So if you have a young kid who’s curious about the world, try surfing Google Maps. It’s more than a bit Orwellian, but it’s a lot of fun. Image courtesy Google Maps, copyright 2011. Daily deal – 8GB Slacker Wi-Fi Internet radio player for $70 by Scott Carmichael on Dec 29, 2008 My daily deal for today is for the 8GB Slacker G1 Wi-Fi Internet Radio Player (isn’t that a mouthful!). This Wi-Fi enabled MP3/Internet Radio player connects to the Slacker music service, and refreshes your player with a new batch of music any time you want. We’ve taken a closer look at the newest generation Slacker player, and were so impressed that it became one of our top 25 travel products of the year. This first generation player has all the same features of the Slacker G2 we reviewed, but comes in a slightly larger unit. You’ll still get access to Slacker.com, and you can still load your own music on the device. The player is on sale at Woot.com, which means it could be out of stock at any moment, so if you are interested in a Wi-Fi enabled 8GB music player, don’t wait too long! Shipping is just $5. Daily deal – Slacker 4GB Wi-Fi Internet Radio for $79.99 My daily deal for today is for the Slacker 4GB Wi-Fi Internet Radio. I’ve reviewed Slacker here before, and their portable player was selected as one of the best travel products of 2008. The player on sale today is their previous generation unit, and while it may look nothing like the version I reviewed, it does offer the same functionality and of course, it uses the fantastic Slacker.com online music service. This player normally retails for about $150, but buy.com has it on sale today for just $79.99 with free shipping. Included with the player is a charger, USB cable and a pair of headphones. The basic Slacker music service is free to use, but for the best experience, you’ll want to upgrade to Slacker Premium. If you are ordering this as a Christmas gift, then I suggest upgrading to 2-day shipping, you’ll find the buy.com Holiday shipping schedule here. This Week in Travel Startup Funding: Freebird, Travo and MoreSkift
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Home » Your Visit » Stations » Bishops Lydeard Bishops Lydeard Postcode for Sat Nav: TA4 3RU Bishops Lydeard Station is the southern terminus of the West Somerset Railway. It is four miles from the County town of Taunton and the M5 Motorway (Junction 25). Please be aware that there is a maximum height barrier so access to the car park is for vehicles under 2.1 metres. Bishops Lydeard Station has a booking office and sells the full range of West Somerset Railway tickets. Please see the Fares Pages to find out more about fares from this station. The station has toilets, with facilities for disabled passengers and baby changing rooms. There is a large free car park and coach parking is available. The Gauge Museum on Platform 1 has many items of local rail interest and shows how the railway affected the people who worked on and used the line. The Museum also contains a working model railway open normally at weekends and Galas. Platform 1 is also home to the Taunton Model Railway Group whose layout, Bath Green Park, is intricately detailed and can be viewed when it is open on Gala days. On Platform 2 you will find the station shop and the Whistle-Stop Cafe, adjacent to the Signalbox, selling a comprehensive range of model railway equipment old and new, books and other souvenirs. The Whistle-Stop Cafe sells hot and cold snack items as well as a soft drinks and sweets. The village of Bishops Lydeard is situated at the foot of the Quantock Hills and is about five minutes walking from the station. The old village is a mixture of red sandstone and brick buildings which are all very charming to look at. Further up the road into the village is Mill Lane which, if followed, takes you to the village watermill which has been spendidly restored. Bishops Lydeard Mill welcomes visitors on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Sundays from 30th May to 30th September (plus Bank Holiday Mondays) and Saturdays in August between 11.30am - 4pm. The mill is home to a working water wheel, the wheelwright�s shop and the blacksmith�s shop. Once back on the main road further into the village is the Bird in the Hand Pub offering food and drink, garden and a children�s play area. Alongside the pub is a small craft shop. The Village Church is the very impressive St. Mary the Virgin and the earliest part dates from the 14th Century. There are some beautiful wood carvings in the church and the village charter from 1291 can be viewed. As you make your way from the station towards the village you will find the Lethbridge Arms, an old established inn, which offers food and drink including real ales in a number of rooms. The large wall in the car park is of historical interest as having been built for the playing of Fives, a Somerset game which was once very popular but which has now died out. A Fives Wall in West Somerset is unusual as the most popular area for the game was the south of the county. Near the church is a fascinating relic of the tram system in Taunton, a post that supported the electric wires, now in use as a lamp standard. The trams were closed in the 1920�s and no one is really sure how it got there. Other local attractions include Cedar Falls Health Farm and the Quantock Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. History of Bishops Lydeard Station The station, opened with the original Taunton to Watchet Line in 1862 and originally had only the main building, Goods shed and the Station Masters House (opposite the Shop on Platform 2 - it is now let out as a holiday home) until the Great Western Railway added the other platform and Signalbox in 1906. The station is home to the West Somerset Railway Association, the supporting charitable body of the Railway. Please visit the West Somerset Railway Association Web Site for further information.
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Home » Your Visit » Stations » Watchet Postcode for Sat Nav: TA23 0AU Watchet Station has a Booking Office and prices from this station can be found on our fares pages.The shop has been extended and sells souveniers,cakes,biscuits,sweets and hot and cold drinks.There are toilets available,including a disabled facility. A coal fire greets you on entering the booking hall.To the left of here there is a comprehensive secondhand book shop selling fiction and non-fiction books. On the platform the Pagoda waiting room has a pictorial display of the history of the railway at Watchet. Watchet Station is back on track with the return of the refurbished footbridge and a repaint of the station buildings. What to see and do nearby Watchet is an ancient harbour town with a history of over 1000 years and still has a network of small streets and shops to be explored, including several pubs and cafes. The Star Inn in Watchet was Somerset CAMRA�s Pub of the Year for 2005. The station stands right in the middle of the town adjacent to the harbour which, since the end of commercial shipping calling in the mid-1990�s has begun a new lease of life as a Marina and is home currently to a 1950�s Vintage Motor Torpedo Boat. The network of sidings that served the docks has gone and the former goods shed is now a Boat Museum. The town Museum is just off the esplanade and traces the history of the town through the ages and this includes the West Somerset Mineral Railway that once brought iron ore from the Brendon Hills for onward shipping to the furnaces at Ebbw Vale in South Wales. The trackbed of the Mineral Railway is now in use as a footpath. Local Businesses helping promote the Railway include: Bell Inn - 3 Market Street The 16th Century Bell Inn is situated in Market Street, Watchet, a few yards from the marina and is a family run pub. A warm welcome always awaits you from Paul, Gill, Adam and Clare, along with real ales, fine wines and good food. Open all day every day, food is served lunchtime and evenings. (Food not served on a Tuesday). History of Watchet Station This was the original terminus of the West Somerset Railway in 1862, a fact which is reflected in the station building standing at right angles to the railway line. For more information about things to see and do in Watchet as well as places to stay visit Visit Watchet.
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A brief-yet-ongoing journal of all things Carmi. You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll reach for your mouse to click back to Google. But you'll be intrigued. And you'll feel compelled to return following your next bowl of oatmeal. With brown sugar. And milk. Of all the words to misspell... ...did it have to be the four-letter d-word?I'll never understand people's apparent aversion to proofreading. It's one thing when you're publishing online - and can change it on the fly - and quite another when it's painted on a metal plate and bolted onto a golf cart for all time.I'm guessing this course doesn't have too many LGBT members.Your turn: Have you run into any spelling faux-pas in your own travels? Carmi Levy Canadian Mark I have to point out that perhaps it is possible that holes 5 & 15 have 'a natural or artificial slope or wall to regulate water levels' incorporated into their landscaping, thus making proper use of the word dyke, as opposed to the much younger slang representation of the word? Let's just say that my sister married a man with that last name and with her first name it isn't a pretty name. I'll never know why she didn't at least hypenate with her maiden name... Check the "World English Dictionary" definition... At the food court the other day, restaurant under new management and has new signage. Westran Sandwich, Ceraeal and Oat Meal.
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Yosemite National Park, My Summer Home! By Guest Bloggers / April 29, 2012 When you wake in the morning, what’s the first thing on your mind? Mine is always “where am I going next?” You never know working for adventure travel companies, but this year it has been Yosemite National Park, our Nation’s first State Park. Yellowstone beats it in the status ranking of the first National Park for technical reasons. You see, California became a State in 1850. That allowed the government to give Yosemite to the State of California in 1864, for protection and preservation. Yellowstone Park’s magnificence became known in the 1860’s and 1870’s and needed to be protected. It became a National Park in 1872, because the lands were only territories, in order to preserve the land for the betterment and enjoyment of the people. That all seems a little complicated, I know. But it is an important part to understanding their crucial role in bettering our country as a whole. Yellowstone Park prides itself in being Americas first National Park while Yosemite the first State Park. Both, today, are National Parks and incredible corners of our world that so needed to be protected for our generations to enjoy. But in the end it is Yosemite that was noticed first by a Scotsman named John Muir. On the Austin-Lehman Yosemite National Park Adventure we begin our journey in San Francisco on Sunday morning. From there we head east toward those 750,000 acres of playground. Each time we head out I think about John and his journey along that almost same path… through that San Joaquin valley, over the foothills of the Sierra Mountains and toward that hidden treasure. We do his 2 month walking excursion in almost 4 hours by car. And we think we’re tired when we get there! Most of Sunday is a little cycling tour and playing along the edge of the Park boundaries. You can feel the pull all day of Yosemite asking us to come explore and see. Ahh, but there is so much to see everywhere! Monday we head to Toulmne Meadows, my favorite meadow in the world! Glacially carved rolling hills, cold streams full of beauty and life, hikers and climbers taking it all in, its that wordless beauty – the kind you just can’t describe. You have to see it to believe it. But, to top that off, as if you ever thought that was possible – Tuesday we make our way into Yosemite Valley. That 7 mile valley that awaits us all… and even though I’ve seen it before it never ceases to amaze me, this might be one of my favorite family adventure vacations. I know how to explain its phenomenon geographically but at that moment, no, at those moments… its just not important. Standing there, whether from above or amidst, it is important just to be there, just to breath in its awesomeness and appreciate all its glory. And then of course to have a cold drink and say “Ahhh… sure am glad I didn’t walk here!” Your friendly adventure guide, Blair Peck 6 + eight = Post Comment Home Travel Resources Yosemite National Park, My Summer Home! Keep Informed
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Wild Neighbors:Pit Stops along the Flyway Sunday June 13, 2010 - 08:10:00 PM We’re never too long between migrations here. Most of the northbound birds have reached their destinations by now, even the chronic laggards like the yellow-billed cuckoo. But this is just a pause in the action between the first wave of shorebirds come through on their way south, starting next month; then the rufous hummingbirds tracing the Sierra southward, and the early-migrant passerines, and the raptors and the waterfowl. So June is not such an odd time for a migration column, inspired by recent research at Ohio State University on the use of stopover habitat by the Swainson’s thrush. These birds occur in California as well, although ours are a different subspecies. They’re furtive creatures; in their breeding season, you’ll hear a dozen for every one you see. (Gifted singers, too; one of the most extraordinary voices in the chorus.) The Swainson’s thrush looks a lot like its bolder relative, the hermit thrush, but it’s more uniform in coloration and sleeker in shape. The two rarely overlap; by now our wintering hermits are back in the mountains where they nest. The Ohio State study was an attempt to define this bird’s minimum habitat requirements when it touches down for a breather during migration. It’s a forest species: nests in northern boreal or western riparian forest, winters in tropical rainforest, seeks out forest or forest fragments as stopovers. It’s been a long time since Ohio had great unbroken swathes of deciduous woods. The thrushes now have to settle for something less, including remnant forest patches in urban areas. The question driving the research: how small can those patches be without losing value to the birds? It look a while for scientists to appreciate the value of stopover habitat. The tendency was to focus more on breeding grounds and wintering grounds. For a handful of birds, like the bar-tailed godwits that migrate directly from Alaska to New Zealand, the issue is moot: they just don’t stop. That kind of extreme migration. requiring special physiological adaptations, is beyond most birds, though. Typical migrants need to rest and refuel somewhere along the way. Birds are attracted to some stopover spots by seasonally abundant resources. The phalaropes and grebes that cover Mono Lake in the summer, gorging on brine shrimp, are on their way south; the phalaropes will end up in the southern oceans, consorting with whales. Northbound surf scoters time their journey to match the spawning runs of herring; the ducks are after the nutritious roe, not the fish themselves. Another kind of spawning event draws migrating red knots and other shorebirds to Delaware Bay to feed on horseshoe crab eggs. Overexploitation of these ancient arthropods—not true crabs, they’re more closely related to spiders—has put a major knot population at serious risk. Migrating Swainson’s thrushes are looking for food too, insects in their case, as well as shelter from predators. In the Ohio State study, professor Paul Rodewald and postdoc Stephen Matthews, netted 91 thrushes at a woodlot on campus in May and early June from 2004 through 2007. The birds were equipped with radio transmitters, each weighing two-thirds of a gram, which were glued to their back feathers. Each bird was then released in one of seven forest fragments in the Columbus area, ranging from just under two to 94 acres in size. After that kind of trauma, you’d think the birds’ first priority would be getting the hell out of Columbus. They didn’t, though. About a quarter of the thrushes released at the two smallest sites moved to larger forested areas. Most of those at the five largest sites stayed put until they headed north again, an average of four days (extremes of one and twelve.) Except for the birds that traded up to a larger woodlot, length of stay didn’t correlate with size of site. Other findings: thrushes with lower body mass when captured tended to stay longest, bulking up before resuming their flight. Those caught late in the season had shorter stays, as if they somehow knew that time was running out: got to get back to Manitoba before all the good territories are taken. “The good news is that the birds in our study seemed to be finding enough food in even the smaller urban habitats to refuel and continue their journey,” said Mathews, in a press release. Small sites can still be valuable: “"If our study sites differed strongly in habitat quality, we should have seen differences in how long the birds stayed. The fact that the stopover duration was similar suggests that all the sites were meeting the needs of the thrushes as they prepared for the next leg of migration." It was also welcome news that Swainson’s thrushes are more flexible in their stopover habitat requirements than had been thought. Flexibility is a good thing. Let’s hope we can be flexible enough to preserve those patches of urban forest. Links we like:
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New study: Russellville ‘ideal’ location for tourism, convention facility 11:36 AM, Wednesday, May 08 2013 | 4420 views | 1 | 11 | | Progress toward a convention center in Russellville is underway once again after the recession of 2007 put the project on hold.A 2003 feasibility study led to the city’s purchase of a 22-acre site for a proposed hotel and convention center. A contract with developer John Q. Hammons fell through in 2009, effectively halting the project. Now, the project has begun moving forward again.An updated study to determine the feasibility of the project was completed in January by Chicago-based Johnson Consulting. The completed report stated “Russellville is ideally located to prosper in the tourism and convention markets.”The study listed several characteristics that make Russellville an ideal location for such a facility, including the lack of convention and meeting space in the area, easy access to the proposed convention center site, presence of major corporations and strategic location along I-40.“These factors, along with many others, provide a case for the development of a hotel and convention center on the subject site,” the report stated. “Johnson Consulting is of the opinion that the proposed facility, if targeted and marketed appropriately, has the potential to become a real focal point in the community.”Johnson Consulting recommended a facility with a 200-bed hotel and a convention center with 15,000 square feet of flexible space for exhibit or ballroom space, and 6,000 square feet of meeting space. In March, Chamber of Commerce president Jeff Pipkin told city leaders a request for qualifications (RFQ) was issued to help identify viable developers. The next step will be a request for proposal (RFP), which Pipkin said should be sent out this week. He said the list of potential developers has been narrowed down to four, and each of those will be asked to submit a full proposal.“I feel fairly confident that we’re going to be able to get a project going this calendar year,” he said, acknowledging the difficulty in predicting such things. “It’s just encouraging that we’ve got developers interested in it. We went three or four years where nobody would talk to us because of the economy.”The convention center will be privately owned and operated, though the Johnson Consulting report indicated some financial assistance may be needed.“We do expect some finance support to still be required,” the report stated. “But since the land is banked and paid for, and excess land exists for commercial development, it is expected that finance tools applied to the site could fund any capital and operating needs of the project.” Goodwill center opens locally Obituary: Wes Harris Salon conducts yearly ‘Adopt a Senior’ event oldredneck | Hmmm, why do I suspect the tax increase that was passed to support this project is about to expire? Perhaps our city council (mayor) would like to publicly show us where that money is and how much has been spent and why it has been spent! I say no to any new tax or extension on this tax until we see in writing that it will not be used for any other reason than to build a convention center, even if we really don't need a new convention (fishing) center! Reply
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Dark Harbour Pond Dark Harbour Road, Grand Manan, New Brunswick, Canada Dark Harbour Pond circa 1900 Dark Harbour Pond, circa 1890 Sketch of Dark Harbour cliffs with dory Official website for the Village of Grand Manan Dark Harbour Pond is a very dark place as its name reflects; the 120 metre cliffs on its eastern shore keep the sun from reaching the pond until long into the morning. A road cut into these cliffs is the only access to Dark Harbour Pond from the rest of Grand Manan Island by land. A natural seawall of stones protects the pond. Dark Harbour Pond is designated a Local Historic Place for its unique natural formation and for its long association with the unique fishing community of Dark Harbour. Dark Harbour Pond is a naturally occurring pond fed with fresh water from the surrounding 120 metre cliffs and with salt water from the ocean which seeps through the seawall that contains the pond. It is the only indentation in the cliffs on the entire western side of Grand Manan Island. A natural seawall of stones keeps the pond in place as the force of the ocean pushes the stones up from the ocean and the fresh water from the brook pushes the stones on the inner side. The first man made opening in the seawall was made in 1846 to allow ships to enter and find safety inside the seawall. It was paid for by John Walter Wilson and James Rait. Through the years, the openings have been closed-in by storms, such as the the Saxby Gale in 1869, which completely filled in the original location on the southern opening. After this storm, a more protected opening on the northern end was opened and has been maintained ever since.Dark Harbour Pond is also recognized for its association with many folklore and pirate stories that have their origins in this dark locale. From the arrival of Grand Manan’s first settlers in 1783 until 1833, a stable ownership of this area was not clarified. Many stories tell how the Spaniards cursed the pond so as to never allow anyone success in their ventures. Despite this, most industries have been unsuccessful. The pond is now owned by the Village of Grand Manan.Dark Harbour Pond is also recognized for its association with the development of successful industries in the region. Through the 1800’s and into the early 1900’s, the brook was dammed up and trees were harvested from the surrounding woods. The trees were floated downstream to the Dark Harbour Pond where they were milled and the lumber was sold. Many early residents who lived in Dark Harbour, such as Isaac Newton & Sons, had developed the pond as a natural fish trap with weirs. They built processing and smoke sheds for harvesting and processing their catch. A unique fish tower that used fire to attract fish to the opening of the pond from the ocean is one of the ways fish were harvested from this tidal area. Also, in the winter, the pond would freeze over on the high tide and then, as the tide receded, the ice would dip down. When the tide came back in, the men would cut holes in the ice and the force of the incoming water would force the fish up through the holes and the men would gather them off the top of the ice.Due to the towering surrounding cliffs, the pond area is a very dark spot. This creates the perfect conditions for the dulse seaweed to grow on the ocean side of the Dark Harbour Pond seawall. Grand Manan has become famous for this dulse, which is an edible seaweed very high in iron. There is a whole seasonal community of fisher people who move to Dark Harbour Pond and live in camps on the seawall for the summer months to harvest the dulse. They pick the dulse at low tide and on the high tide they spread it on the seawall to dry in the sun.From the early 1980s to late 1990's salmon aquaculture was present in the pond. The cages remain but they are empty.Sources: Grand Manan Archives, Historic Places files; Grand Manan Historian XXVII, History of Dark Harbour - Fact and Fiction. The character-defining elements that describe Dark Harbour Pond include:- spectacular natural setting;- 120 metre cliffs separating to encircle the only water access on the back of Grand Manan Island;- the road leading to Dark Harbour Pond hewn out of the side of the cliffs - not a ride for the faint of heart;- approximately 1.5 km long naturally-occurring barrier of rock protecting the pond from the ocean;- brackish pond water fed by fresh water from the Dark Harbour Brook and by ocean water which infiltrates through the rock seawall as the tide rises and falls;- water depth of 27.5 metres;- man-made opening allowing tide and boats to come and go;- visible remnants of various fishing ventures, including herring and salmon cages. Local Governments (NB) Local Historic Places Program Municipal Register of Local Historic Places 1869/01/01 to 1869/01/011783/01/01 to 1833/01/011846/01/01 to 1846/01/01 Peopling the LandSettlement Peopling the LandPeople and the Environment Developing EconomiesHunting and Gathering Developing EconomiesTrade and Commerce EnvironmentNature ElementFood SupplyFisheries SiteTransport-WaterHarbour Facility Architect / Designer Grand Manan Archives, 1141 Route 776, Grand Manan, NB Indian Beach Grand Manan, New Brunswick Indian Beach is fronted by the Grand Manan Channel with extreme strong currents. The back of the… North Head School 130 Route 776, Grand Manan, New Brunswick The North Head School is located directly on the roadside of Route 776 adjacent to the North Head… Whale Cove Cottages 26 Whale Cottage Road, Grand Manan, New Brunswick Whale Cove Cottages are located overlooking Whale Cove Harbour in the community of North Head,…
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Ferrets And Prairie Dogs, Hidden Gems, Follow Theseries: This American Landair date: 8/18/13 7:00 AMFerrets and Prairie Dogs: After being nearly wiped out in the early 20th century, the black- footed ferret is making a comeback. It's taken a complicated conservation effort and a captive breeding program to restore this species to the Great Plains. The health of the ferret is tied directly to the success of prairie dogs- animals that have also had plenty of run-ins with humans. Keeping these two playful, adorable species in good shape is also helping save 130 unique plants and animals in this North American prairie ecosystem. Hidden Gems: Whether you are a hiker, skier, or mountain biker, there is plenty to treasure in an area of the Rocky Mountains known as Hidden Gems. A plan that's been 11 years in the making would protect this area as wilderness, creating more habitat corridors for wildlife and protecting these areas from development, motorized vehicles, and unauthorized trail-building. Supporters have worked hard to make sure that the needs of all outdoor lovers are considered. Join us as we hit the trails! Follow the Water: If scientists want to understand drought, floods, and water supplies, they have to follow the water-every drop of it! At Penn State University, researchers are documenting the flow of water, using tools like infrared lasers and other sophisticated sensors. But to get all the data they need there's some old-fashioned skills necessary too, like climbing trees to collect leaves and branches. These water sleuths will be able to help planners predict changes triggered by accelerating climate change. Island Fires: Martha's Vineyard is known for water, not fire. That's why some might be surprised that "prescribed burns," a few dozen acres at a time, really boil down to good ecological housekeeping. Ridding areas of the island of flammable shrubbery before it ignites by itself is actually a good way to re-charge the landscape. The ash that's left behind from the fire is a natural fertilizer, giving plants lots of energy. And those controlled burns also give residents peace of mind. Email Reminder
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PANORAMIC JOURNEYS Tailor-made Holidays & Group Tours to Mongolia, Bhutan and Burma HOME MONGOLIA BLOG PHOTOS CONTACT EAGLE FESTIVAL +44 (0) 1608 676821 Mongolia Tours Booking Mongolia Overview Regions and Maps Nomadic Culture Accommodation Food Getting to Mongolia "Your organisation, your staff, the country, the people just great! Everyone from the UK office to the horseman in Mongolia, could not have done more for us. - Thank you all!" Chris Drayson - Land of the Reindeer, Mongolia Mongolia Festivals Naadam Festival Eagle Festival Ice Festival Camel Festival EAGLE FESTIVAL Witness the ancient tradition of hunting with eagles at the Eagle Festival in Western Mongolia as entrants compete with their eagles for speed, accuracy & agility. The Eagle Festival is held during the first weekend in October, run by the Mongolian Eagle Hunter's Association. It showcases the lives and livelihoods of many of the nomadic people of Mongolia's westernmost province Bayan Olgii. Heavily imbued with neighbouring Kazakhstan's heritage, culture and language, the people and the landscape are markedly different from other parts of Mongolia. Dark, rocky mountainous terrain forms the backdrop to the festivities which incorporate an opening ceremony, parade, cultural exhibitions, demonstrations and handcrafts in the centre of town followed by sporting activities and competitions 4km out towards the mountains. Dressed in full eagle hunting regalia and mounted on groomed decorated horses, the entrants compete for the awards of Best Turned Out Eagle and Owner; Best Eagle at Hunting Prey and Best Eagle at Locating Its Owner from a Distance. Other sporting activities include horse racing, archery and the highly entertaining Bushkashi - goatskin tug of war on horseback. Our Gobi and Altai Classic Journey incorporates this unique festival or you can choose to include the Eagle Festival in a tailor-made tour of Mongolia. ABOUT US Panoramic Journeys Press Coverage Photo Gallery Events & Shows Job Opportunities Blog Order Calendar How to Book Booking Form Visas Special Offers Links Media Services Sitemap WHERE WE GO Trip List Mongolia India WHAT WE DO Mongolia Group Tours Mongolia Tailor-made Tours Bhutan Group Tours Bhutan Tailor-made Tours Burma Group Tours Burma Tailor-made Tours Private Trips Media Services Panoramic Journeys Ltd, Granary Barn, Chapel Road, Chadlington, Oxon, OX7 3NX, UK - ATOL9954 - Copyright - Terms - Privacy Policy
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Tickets for events at Her Majesty's Theatre Her Majesty's Theatre, Haymarket, London, SW1Y 4QL Venue Info Her Majesty's Theatre, Haymarket, London, SW1Y 4QL General Information Transport Accessibility Venue Information Since 1705 there have been four theatres on the site of Her Majesty's. The current building was erected by the famous Actor-Manager Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree to house his spectacular productions of Shakespeare and literary adaptations and opened in 1897. The theatre hosted the original production of George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion and Oscar Asche's record breaking Chu Chin Chow. During the rest of the Twentieth Century it was home to many successful musicals including Noel Coward's Bitter Sweet (1929), Brigadoon (1949), Paint Your Wagon (1953), West Side Story (1958), Bye Bye Birdie (1961), Lock Up Your Daughters (1962), Fiddler On The Roof (1967) and the current production of The Phantom Of The Opera which opened in 1986. Nearest underground station is Piccadilly Circus (Piccadilly and Bakerloo lines). The nearest car park is in Trafalgar. Masterpark at Whitcomb Street. Meters on Charles II Street and in St James's Square. Single yellow lines in the Haymarket. www.parkingforbluebadges.com (Comprehensive parking and interactive bus information for Blue Badge disabled drivers travelling around London) FOYER - level access STALLS - 40 (22 steps down from the foyer through the Stalls Bar, then 18 steps up) ROYAL CIRCLE - 32 steps up (steps lead to the back of the Royal Circle only) GRAND CIRCLE - 62 steps up (steps lead to the back of the Grand Circle only) BALCONY - 89 steps up (steps lead to the back of the Balcony only) Step-free information Step free access is available into the Stalls via a door on Charles II Street, which is located at the side of the theatre. This access point is aimed at wheelchair users and customers wishing to avoid the main stairs into the Stalls and open 30 minutes before the performance. There is a slight slope to the rear right stalls. Please speak to a member of the front of house team at the main entrance and they will accompany through to the step free access/seats. There are 3 wheelchair spaces in row S of the Stalls (2 manual wheelchair spaces, 1 electric wheelchair space) with companion seats alongside or directly in the row in front. Wheelchair transfers are available to any end of row seat in the Stalls, except row B. Access into the auditorium is via Charles II Street on the side of the theatre. There is an accessible toilet in the Stalls for wheelchair users by the level access entrance. Hearing Systems The theatre uses the Sennheiser infra-red headset system and 10 headsets are available from the front of house staff in main foyer. These headsets are for people who are hard of hearing but please note there is no induction loop system in the auditorium. 2 necklace type hearing systems are available for people who use a hearing aid. There is an induction loop at the Box Office to assist hearing aid users when booking tickets. For further information regarding hearing systems, please call the theatre stage door on 0207 850 8750. The theatre management are happy to look after your Guide/Hearing dog during the performance. Please approach a member of the front of house team when you arrive at the theatre and they will make the necessary arrangements. Autistic Spectrum Info The theatre would be grateful for any additional information regarding your needs prior to going to the theatre, especially anything regarding sensory issues or matters relating to Autistic Spectrum Disorder. Please feel welcome to call the theatre management on 0207 850 8750 so they can offer you more assistance throughout your visit. Ticket Prices: £33.30 - The Phantom of the Opera Please note the prices mentioned above are per ticket and only available for the disabled person and companion. Additional tickets are charged at the regular rate. Sorry, there are no shows on sale at Her Majesty's Theatre right now.
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Free and cheap family fun this week Tracey Henry Thursday, February 12, 2009 9:00am Snowbird season is in full swing, which means we locals have a lot of good events to choose from, many of them free. Here’s this week’s cheap thrills: It may have taken a trip to the World Series to load up the bandwagon, but all is forgiven at Saturday's Rays Fan Fest at Tropicana Field. It's free parking for free fun from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, though a $10 donation to the Rays Baseball Foundation will get you autographs from Rays players and coaches throughout the day. Season ticket holders can get their picture taken with Rays players, too. More than 20 former major leaguers will be signing autographs. And really, get there early because last season's success will probably bring out lots of the bandwagon riders. See the American League Championship Trophy in person, let the kids play in the interactive zone, swing in a big league batting cage, test their fastball in the speed pitch booth and hit a home run in the Wiffle Ball Home Run Derby. Kids will also have the chance to run the bases and all fans can tour the Rays clubhouse. The team will also be holding National Anthem auditions. The first 50 fans to register will audition live for a chance to sing the anthem before a game at Tropicana Field this season. Audition sign-ups will be from 9 to 10 a.m. at Gate 1. Check the team's Web site for more information. Sure the nighttime bacchanal isn't for kids but the Illuminated Knight Parade and Family Fiesta has free entertainment all day for the entire family including sports team presentations, face painting, inflatables and live entertainment from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at Centennial Park, 1800 E Eighth Ave., Ybor City. Free. The parade gets rolling at 7 p.m. See the Krewe's Web site for parade routes and bleacher tickets. This is the last weekend for the Florida State Fair featuring the midway, lots of food (chocolate-dipped bacon), entertainment and animals. The fair goes through Monday. You can root for our own Tampa Bay Derby Darlins (who have fab names like Dee Bauchery and Rue Morgue) as they take on roller derby teams from around the state in the 2009 Sunshine Skate Florida Roller Derby State Championship at the fair. This is the second year for the statewide battle for bragging rights and cash prizes. But this year, it’s a two-day format to allow more games. The first round will be Sunday at SkatePlex, 5313 E Bush Blvd. in Tampa. It’s $10 to watch and it starts at 3 p.m. The semi-final and final game, as well as the loser's bracket games will be Monday at the fairgrounds from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. in the Sweetbay Entertainment Hall. The Art Spot Drop-In Program is a free event for kids that encourages them to express themselves by visiting galleries and creating projects. The event is free at the Tampa Museum of Art, 2306 N Howard Ave., Tampa. The program is held each Saturday this month and March 14-28. This week, kids will make intricate valentines from cut and collaged paper. The baklava will surely be on the menu at the annual Greek Festival, hosted by the St. George Greek Orthodox Church. The festival has been moved, though, and is now held at Gulfview Square Mall, 9409 U.S. 19 N, Port Richey. Come for the food, music and fun. Admission is $1 each day for the festival which runs Friday through Sunday. And as we mentioned in an earlier post, Baby Loves Disco is finally coming to the bay area. The event brings families and their kids ages 6 months to 7 years together to boogie oogie oogie at the Blue Martini Lounge at International Plaza. This one isn't free or cheap (tickets are $15 in advance for anyone who can walk; $18 for walk up; crawlers are free) but it should be fun. Go here for more details. If you have the next Luciano Pavarotti or Beverly Sills in your home then you may want that child to attend the Opera Workshop for children at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Patel Conservatory at the Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center in Tampa. Cost is $20 for the workshop. Phew! That's enough to keep you hopping this weekend. -- Sharon Kennedy Wynne and Sherry Robinson [Photos: Times files] [Last modified: Thursday, May 13, 2010 10:59am]
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Map Old State House History & Heritage Shaped by forces as old and as powerful as those that shaped the nation itself, Delaware’s history and heritage is a tale of passionate struggles, of vast fortunes, and of a people who helped forge America’s identity as a fiercely independent and thoroughly patriotic nation. Here, you will see the stories of the Native Americans who lived on the state’s shores for millennia, and follow the struggles of early settlers who would help lead the Colonies’ fight for independence. Here, you can step inside a mid-river Civil War fort, or follow the trail to freedom for thousands of slaves on the Underground Railroad. In Delaware, it’s possible to stand on the site where the DuPont Co.’s amazing story (and the DuPont family’s enormous fortunes) began, and then visit the place where Methodism in America was born – all in the same afternoon. DuPont Mansions in Delaware Delaware's Historic Homes Delaware Attractions Northern Attractions Central Trip Ideas, Photos & Videos DuPont Mansions in Delaware Discover Delaware Trails of Discovery Northern Delaware Itinerary Events Free Admission on All Day Sundays…
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Angkor Archaeological Park Earth : Asia : Southeast Asia : Cambodia : Angkor Archaeological Park Revision as of 09:39, 24 April 2011 by Ikan Kekek (Talk | contribs) Understand Symbolism Angkor Wat History How to explore Bayon History Baphuon Other Angkor Thom sights Little Circuit Big Circuit Roluos group Outlying temples Angkor Wat Temple Pre Rup, one of the many temple ruins within the Angkor Archaeological Park Angkor Archaeological Park, located in northern Cambodia, is one of the most important archaeological sites in Southeast Asia. Stretching over some 400 square kilometers, including forested area, Angkor Archaeological Park contains the magnificent remains of several capitals of the Khmer Empire of the 9th to the 15th centuries, including the largest pre-industrial city in the world. The most famous are the Temple of Angkor Wat and, at Angkor Thom, the Bayon Temple with its countless sculptural decorations. Angkor Archaeological Park was declared a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1992. At the same time, it was also placed on the List of World Heritage in Danger due to looting, a declining water table, and unsustainable tourism. UNESCO has now set up a wide-ranging programme to safeguard this symbolic site and its surroundings. Angkor itself has no accommodations and few facilities; the nearby town of Siem Reap is the tourist hub for the area. The temples of Angkor are highly symbolic structures. The foremost Hindu concept is the temple-mountain, where the temple is built as a representation of the mythical Mount Meru: this is why so many temples, including Angkor Wat itself, are surrounded by moats, built in a mountain-like pyramidal shape and topped by precisely five towers, representing the five peaks of Mount Meru. The linga (phallus), representing the god Shiva, was also critical and while the lingas themselves have largely gone, linga stands (carved, table-like blocks of stone) can be found in many if not most rooms in the temples. There was also a political element to it all: most kings wanted to build their own state temples to symbolize their kingdom and their rule. While early Angkor temples were built as Hindu temples, Jayavarman VII converted to Mahayana Buddhism c. 1200 and embarked on a prodigious building spree, building the new capital city of Angkor Thom including Bayon, Ta Prohm, Preah Khan and many more as Buddhist structures. However, his successor Jayavarman VIII returned to Hinduism and embarked on an equally massive spree of destruction, systematically defacing Buddhist images and even crudely altering some to be Hindu again. Hinduism eventually lost out to Buddhism again, but the (few) Buddha images in the temples today are later Theraveda additions. One element that continues to mystify archeaologists is the baray, or water reservoir, built in a grand scale around Angkor: for example, the West Baray is a mind-boggling 8 km by 2.3 km in size. While it has long been assumed that they were used for irrigation, some historians argue that their primary function was political or religious. Today, the moat around Angkor and the West Baray still contains water, but the rest have dried up. As you tour the temples, you will see certain mythical figures and other motifs cropping up repeatedly. ApsaraCelestial nymphs, always bare-breasted and usually dancing, representing an ideal of female beauty. KalaMonstrous face without a lower jaw, often found on temple gateways, meant to guard against evil. NagaMany-headed mythical serpent. The most famous Nagas' in Angkor can be found on the guardrails of each entrance to Angkor Thom. Fierce battles in the reign of Jayavarman VII, Bayon Angkor is hot and sticky throughout the year, but the peak season is November to February, when the weather is dry and temperatures are coolest (25-30°C). The flip side is that the temples are packed, especially around Christmas/New Year's, and hotel rates are at their highest. March to May is brutally hot, with temperatures reaching 40°C. June to October is the rainy season, and outlying temples and the roads leading to them can turn into quagmires of mud. However, this is also when the temples are at their quietest, and it's still often possible to do a good half-day round of sightseeing before the rains start in the afternoon.
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Europe : Russia Revision as of 06:16, 4 May 2014 by 173.219.160.212 (Talk) Other destinations [+] History An Imperial Power Headquarters of Communism A Nascent Democracy Get in [+] Visas 1. Getting an invitation 2. Applying for the visa Arrival and customs Overstaying a visa By train Europe By train Transportation of bicycle Sleeper cars Train classes Historical attractions Early history Imperial history Soviet history Cultural sights Do Whitewater rafting Buy Money Stay safe Crime Russian Mafia Identification Papers Respect Gestures Inside voices Sensitive Issues Political Issues Home Etiquette In Church Other Etiquette Contact Emergency services (landlines) Emergency services (mobile phone) 2gis Prepaid SIM cards Russian Ruble (Pуб.) total: 17,098,242 km2water: 720,500 km2land: 16,377,742 km2 143,200,000 (2012 estimate) Russian Orthodox 46.5%, Muslim 6.5%, Spiritual 25.1%, Atheist 12.9, Others 9%. .ru UTC +3 to UTC +12 Russia (Russian: Россия) [1] is by far the largest country in the world, covering more than one-eighth of the Earth's inhabited land area, spanning Eastern Europe and northern Asia, sharing land borders with Norway, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, by administering the Kaliningrad Oblast exclave on the Baltic coast, Belarus, and Ukraine to the west, Georgia (including the disputed regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia) and Azerbaijan to the southwest, and Kazakhstan, China, Mongolia, North Korea to the east and much of the south. While geographically mostly in Asia, the bulk of Russia's population is concentrated in the European part, and culturally, Russia is unmistakably European. Central Russia (Federal City of Moscow, Ivanovo Oblast, Kaluga Oblast, Kostroma Oblast, Moscow Oblast, Ryazan Oblast, Smolensk Oblast, Tver Oblast, Tula Oblast, Vladimir Oblast, Yaroslavl Oblast)The richest side in the entire country, dominated by spectacular architecture and historical buildings. It is the country's gate to Europe, and houses the capital city Moscow. Chernozemye (Belgorod Oblast, Bryansk Oblast, Kursk Oblast, Lipetsk Oblast, Oryol Oblast, Tambov Oblast, Voronezh Oblast)South to Central Russia, the region is famous for its rich, deep, black soil (Chernozem in Russian means "Black soil"). This region played as the important battleground during World War II Northwestern Russia (Federal City of Saint Petersburg, Arkhangelsk Oblast, Karelia, Komi Republic, Leningrad Oblast, Murmansk Oblast, Nenetsia, Novgorod Oblast, Pskov Oblast, Vologda Oblast)Home to the former imperial capital Saint Petersburg also known as Northern capital. It combines some beautiful landscapes of large lakes Ladoga and Onega, medieval forts of Pskov Oblast with the lacustrine region of Karelia and provides a gate for the country to enter Scandinavian territories. Kaliningrad Oblast (often considered as a part of Northwestern Russia)The only exclave of Russia, the Kaliningrad oblast allows a gate for Russia to share borders with Poland and Lithuania, and is a key site for where the 2018 FIFA World Cup will be held. Southern Russia (Adygea, Chechnya, Dagestan, Ingushetia, Kabardino-Balkaria, Kalmykia, Karachay-Cherkessia, Krasnodar Krai, North Ossetia, Rostov Oblast, Stavropol Krai)The warmest region in the entire country, with beautiful resort cities such as subtropical Sochi, and also brings a path to the mountainous North Caucasus. Volga Region (Astrakhan Oblast, Chuvashia, Kirov Oblast, Mari El, Mordovia, Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, Penza Oblast, Samara Oblast, Saratov Oblast, Tatarstan, Udmurtia, Ulyanovsk Oblast, Volgograd Oblast)The most industrialized region in the entire country, known for producing wide-scale military equipment in cities such as Izhevsk. Region is widely known for its rich culture and history. Urals Region (Bashkortostan, Chelyabinsk Oblast, Khantia-Mansia, Kurgan Oblast, Orenburg Oblast, Perm Krai, Sverdlovsk Oblast, Tyumen Oblast, Yamalia)One of the wealthiest regions, known for producing much of the resources Russia needs today and is named after vast Ural mountains. Siberia (Altai Krai, Altai Republic, Buryatia, Irkutsk Oblast, Kemerovo Oblast, Khakassia, Krasnoyarsk Krai, Novosibirsk Oblast, Omsk Oblast, Tomsk, Tuva, Zabaykalsky Krai)The largest area in the country diverse in landscape and yearly temperatures with stunning lakes, world longest rivers, but swampy in most part in the center and north. Provides a gate to enter into much of Asia. Russian Far East (Amur Oblast, Chukotka, Jewish Autonomous Oblast, Kamchatka Krai, Khabarovsk Krai, Magadan Oblast, Primorsky Krai, Sakhalin Oblast, Yakutia)One of the coldest places in all of Russia, even home to the coldest city in the world, Yakutsk. Worldwide renown for boasting national parks, beautiful scenery and mountains and even allows the traveler to see the volcanoes of Kamchatka. The region is also a gate to enter into North Korea, China and Mongolia. Here is a representative sample of nine Russian cities with their Anglicized and Russian Cyrillic names: The Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg Moscow (Москва) — Russia's gargantuan capital is one of the world's greatest cities and has endless attractions to offer an adventurous visitor Saint Petersburg (Санкт-Петербург) — Russia's cultural and former political capital is home to the Hermitage, one of the world's best museums, while the city center is a living open air museum in its own right, making this city one of the world's top travel destinations. It's also the second largest city in the country. Irkutsk (Иркутск) — the world's favorite Siberian city, located within an hour of Lake Baikal on the Trans-Siberian Railway Kazan (Казань) — the capital of Tatar culture is an attractive city in the heart of the Volga Region with an impressive kremlin Nizhny Novgorod (Нижний Новгород) — often overlooked despite being one of the largest cities in Russia, Nizhny Novgorod is well worth a visit for its kremlin, Sakharov museum, and nearby Makaryev Monastery Sochi (Сочи) — Russia's favorite Black Sea beach resort has been largely unknown to foreigners, but this has started to change in a major way adfter hosting the 2014 Winter Olympic Games. Vladivostok (Владивосток) — often referred to (somewhat ironically) as "Russia's San Francisco," full of hilly streets and battleships, this is Russia's principal Pacific city and the terminus of the Trans-Siberian Railway Volgograd (Волгоград) — formerly Stalingrad, the scene of perhaps the deciding battle of World War II, and now home to a massive war memorial Yekaterinburg (Екатеринбург) — the center of the Urals region and one of Russia's principal cultural centers is a good stop on the Trans-Siberian Railway and an arrival point for visitors to the Urals, the second russian financial center. Lake Baikal, the deepest lake in the world Border of Europe and Asia — it's clearly defined in Yekaterinburg, and a very popular stop for photo ops straddling the continents! Dombai — while neither as internationally famous nor as well kept nowadays, this is the most beautiful mountain resort area of the Northern Caucasus. Golden Ring — a popular loop of pretty historical cities and towns forming a ring around Moscow. Kamchatka — the region of active volcanos, geysers, mineral springs and bears walking in the streets. Kizhi — one of the most precious sites in all Russia, Kizhi Island on Lake Onega is famous for its spectacular ensemble of traditional wooden churches. Komi Virgin Forests — profoundly remote, and hard-to-visit, but this is by far Europe's largest wild area, containing Russia's largest National Park of Yugyd Va. Lake Baikal — the "pearl of Siberia" is the world's deepest and biggest lake by volume and a remarkable destination for all who love the outdoors. Mamaev Kurgan — a massive monument and museum on and about the battlefield upon which the twentieth century's most pivotal battle played out: Stalingrad. Solovetsky Islands — far north in the White Sea and home to the beautiful Solovetsky Monastery, which has served as both a military fortress and a gulag throughout its tortuous history. Russia can't be understood by mind,Nor measured by common yardstick.She has of herself a unique build:Russia can only be believed.«Умом Россию не понять, Аршином общим не измерить: У ней особенная стать — В Россию можно только верить.»,Fyodor Tyutchev, 1866 An Imperial Power Russian identity can be traced to the Middle Ages, its first state known as Kievan Rus and its religion rooted in Byzantians' Christianity that was adopted from Constantinople. However it was not considered part of mainstream Europe until the reign of Tsar Peter the Great, who ruled until 1725. He was a dedicated Europhile and the first Tsar to visit 'Europe proper'. Peter established the Russian Empire in 1721, although the Romanov dynasty had been in power since 1613. One of Russia's most charismatic and forceful leaders, Peter built the foundations of empire on a centralized and authoritarian political culture and forced "westernization" of the nation. As part of this effort he moved the capital from the medieval and insular city of Moscow to St. Petersburg, a city built by force of his will and strength of his treasury. Modeled largely on French and Italianate styles, St. Petersburg became known as Russia's "Window on the West" and adopted the manners and style of the royal courts of western Europe, to the point of adopting French as its preferred language. The Russian Empire reached its peak during the late 18th and early 19th centuries, producing many colorful and enlightened figures such as Catherine the Great, Dostoevsky, and Tolstoy. Nevertheless, the gulf between the authoritarian dynasty and its subjects became more apparent with each generation. By the late 19th century, political crises followed in rapid succession, with rebellion and repression locked a a vicious cycle of death and despair. The occasional attempts by the Romanovs and the privileged classes to reform the society and ameliorate the condition of the underclasses invariably ended in failure. Russia entered the World War I in the union of the Triple Entente, like other European Empires with catastrophic results for itself. Tsar Nicholas II and his wife, a granddaughter of Queen Victoria, proved to be feckless, weak, and distracted by personal tragedies and the burdens of the war. The government proved unable to hold back the Russian Revolution of 1917. Deposed and held under house arrest, Nicholas, Alexandra, and their children -- and with them the Romanov dynasty -- were exterminated by gunfire in the basement of Yekaterinburg manor house and buried in unmarked graves which were found after Communism and reburied in the St. Paul and Peter Cathedral in Saint Petersburg. World War I strained Imperial Russia's governmental and social institutions to the breaking point of Revolution in 1917. Following a brief interim government headed by social democrat Alexander Kerensky, the Bolshevik faction of the Communist Party under Marxist Vladimir Lenin seized power, withdrew Russia from the war, and launched a purge of clerics, political dissidents, aristocrats, the bourgeoise, and the kulak class of wealthy independent farming classes. A brutal civil war between the "Red Army" of the communist leadership and the "White Army" of the nobility and middle classes lasted until late 1920. In his years in power, Lenin used the Red Army, the internal security apparatus, and the Communist Party leadership to arrest and execute many opponents of the nascent regime, and redistribute land that have long been owned by the nobility to peasants who work in it (Collectivisation of agriculture would not take place until 1928). After the Civil War, Lenin adopted a New Economic Policy, which allowed certain sectors to be denationalized, as well as canceling the practice of grain requisitioning that was widely used in wartime, as well as a loosening of political and cultural controls. The revolutionary state was not directly ruled by the officials in titular control of the government, which was established in the name of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). The government in the commonly understood sense was largely irrelevant both in fact and in Communist theory throughout the years of Communist control. In a manner akin to the Tsarist regime, the real power lay in the leadership of the Communist Party, the Red Army, and the internal security apparatus (secret police). Following Lenin's death in 1924, a power struggle among the Bolshevik leadership ensued, with Josef Stalin emerging as the new leader of the Communist Party and dictator of the USSR. Stalin's brutal rule (1928-53) was marked by waves of "purges" in which suspected dissidents in the government, the Party, the Red Army, and even the security forces were executed or exiled to gulags (prison camps) on little or no evidence. In addition to forced collectivization of agriculture and renationalization of industries, Stalin introduced a ruthlessly centralized economic system ("socialism in one country") that rapidly industrialized the USSR. Stalin's rivals to succeed Lenin, as well as critics arising thereafter, typically ended up as victims of the purges. Although seen as less of an idealist than Lenin or Trotsky, Stalin did relentlessly pursue international revolution through the Russia-based "Comintern" control over the communist parties of foreign countries, and foreign espionage. World War II, from a Soviet perspective, began with Stalin abruptly entering into a Non-Aggression Pact with Nazi Germany. The Treaty, which shook Western governments to their core and stunned the Left in Europe and America, guaranteed Hitler a free hand to launch war against Poland, France, and England. The Pact also granted the USSR itself leave to invade and conquer neutral Finland and take over all of eastern Poland after the German invasion in 1939, which predominantly populated by East Slavic tribes. Finally in June 1941, having conquered France and most of the rest of Western Europe, Hitler turned on his erstwhile ally and invaded the USSR. A change to an alliance of necessity with the Western nations was instrumental in the defeat of Nazism in 1945. The Red Army's bloody campaigns on the Eastern Front, culminating in its capture of Berlin, resulted in over 20 million Soviet deaths, most of them civilian victims, or soldiers thrown into ghastly land battles. At the conclusion of the Second World War, the USSR rapidly moved to establish influence over all of the eastern half of Europe, encouraging the creation of Communist regimes in East Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, and Romania and effectively crushed political dissent. In Asia, it also helped to install communist governments in China, North Vietnam and North Korea. Western critics came to describe the USSR and its European and Asian "satellites" as trapped behind an "Iron Curtain" of ruthless totalitarianism and command economies. Yugoslavia's Communist Party rifted from Moscow in 1948, but similar attempts in Hungary (1956) and Czechoslovakia (1968) were ruthlessly crushed. After Stalin's death in 1953, Soviet heavy industry and military might continued to grow under Georgy Malenkov (1953-1955) and Nikita Khrushchev (1955-1964), Stalin's successors as General Secretary of the Party. Although attempts were made to produce consumer goods, as well as a progressive decentralization, despite resistance from the armed forces. In 1956, Khrushchev renounced the excesses of Stalin's regime and commenced his own purge to "de-Stalinize" the economy and society of the USSR. Results were mixed, and Khrushchev himself was deposed. In October 1957 the USSR became the first country to launch an artificial satellite into space. This was followed by sending the first human (Yuri Gagarin) into space in 1961. The Soviet Union reached its military, diplomatic, and economic peak during the closing years of Leonid Brezhnev (1964-1982). But increasing corruption and a slowdown in economic growth marched inexorably to a crisis that eventually led General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev (1985-91) to introduce glasnost (openness) and perestroika (limited economic freedom). His initiatives inadvertently released forces that went beyond his control, triggering political movements that eventually consumed the Soviet Union itself in December 1991. Novgorod memorial to the Viking Ryurik and the ensuing 1,000 years of Russian history The Russian Federation emerged from the Soviet Union, accompanied by a storm of problems followed. The first leader of the newly formed nation was Boris Yeltsin, who rose to power by standing up to an attempted putsch by the KGB. Yeltsin largely succeeded in transferring control over the country from the old Soviet elite to his own oligarchical apparatus. Yeltsin was a charismatic leader widely supported by the West, but his government proved to be unstable. A wave of economic hardship put Russia's economy in ruins and left the military underfunded and undisciplined. During this time, Russian organized crime and its relationship with the government, now universally recognized as corrupt and incompetent, assumed greater control over the nation, even as political reforms were taking place. Ironically, before he came to power Yeltsin had labelled Russia as the "biggest mafia state in the world". Russia was also at war with Chechen separatists, which had devastating consequences for the already weak Russian economy. Widespread corruption, poverty, and large-scale political and social problems, eventually forced to Yeltsin resign, and Vladimir Putin filled his remaining term (January - April 2000) as President. An ex-KGB officer under the Communist regime, and head of the revived Russian spy service under Yeltsin, Putin imposed his own personality and will on the unruly and criminal quarters of the country, but has been much condemned for his authoritarian behavior. Having served his constitutionally limited terms (2000-2008), Putin titularly stepped down as President but continued to control the government through his anointed successor, Dmitry Medvedev. To no one's surprise, Putin resumed the presidency when eligible again in 2012. Since 2000, under Putin's direct and indirect rule, the economy has bounced back from crisis, thanks in no small part to five-fold increases in the prices of raw materials Russia has in abundance. Inflation has dropped down from the triple digits into single units, poverty has been reduced, and Russia has re-emerged as a dominant regional economic, political and military power. This performance has often been called the "Russian Miracle." Today, the modern Russia still has to fully recover from the doldrums that have hit the country in recent years, with inflation driving up prices, an increasingly unstoppable burden to combat pervasive corruption, an under-competitive political system, conflict in the North Caucasus, a demographic crisis, and decreasing economic competition. Russians also appear to be facing up to the problem of reconciling Putin's successes with his totalitarian and self-aggrandizing impulses. Nonetheless, Russians have achieved a much higher standard of living since the fall of the USSR. The terrain consists of broad plains with low hills west of the Urals; vast coniferous forest and tundra in Siberia; uplands and mountains along southern border regions; mountainous and volcanic throughout much of the Russian Far East. Russia is a cold country, but there are always shades in the grey. The contrast of tundra's permafrost, which occupies 65% of Russian land and exotic Black sea coast has in between the continental climate, which is the most inhabited zone of European Russia, southern regions of Siberia and the Russian Far East. Its summers are always warm with a good portion of hot days enabling outdoor swimming in many of rivers, lakes and the seas. Siberian birch forest near Novosibirsk Russia's list of holidays is divided into federally and regionally established, ethnic, historical, professional and religious. The first two types are all-country day-off and should be taken into account while planning a trip. These are official holidays in Russian Federation: New Year Holidays (1-5 January) are often merged with Christmas and make up more than a week off. Orthodox Christmas (7 January). People's Unity Day (4 February). Fatherland Defender Day (23 February). International Women's Day (8 March). The Day of Spring and Labour (1 May). Victory Day (9 May). Day of Russia (12 June). Russian system of measurement is metric, the same as European one. Expect to encounter Centigrades, kilometers, kilogrammes, litres and so on. The archaic units for distance are versta and vershok, for weight — pud. Citizens of the Commonwealth of Independent States, Argentina (90 days), Bosnia and Herzegovina (90 days), Brazil (90 days), Chile (90 days), Colombia (90 days), Croatia (3 months, invitation required), Cuba (30 days), Ecuador (90 days), Fiji (90 days), Hong Kong (14 days), Israel (90 days), Macau (30 days), Macedonia (90 days), Montenegro (90 days), Nicaragua (90 days), Peru (90 days), Serbia (30 days, only biometric passports)[2], South Korea (90 days), Thailand (30 days), Turkey (30 days), Uruguay (90 days), Venezuela (90 days) all do not need a visa. Everyone else does. Transit through a few airports, including Moscow Sheremetyevo [3], Moscow Domodedovo, Moscow Vnukovo or Yekaterinburg Koltsovo airports, does not require a transit visa, provided the traveller has a confirmed onward flight, remains in the airport for no more than 24 hours. Flights to and from Belarus are considered domestic, therefore visa-free transit is not available. Transit to and from Kazakhstan (which is in customs union with Russia) is visa-free only through Moscow Vnukovo airport. Passing through St. Petersburg Pulkovo airport requires a transit (or other) visa. Visas can, in some cases, be obtained from consular officers at the airports. A "visa-free" regimen will be introduced for visitors from all nations for the duration of the 2018 FIFA World Cup, which will be held in Russia. For those unfortunates that require a visa, the complexity of the process depends on the class of visa. Thirty day tourist visas are fairly straightforward to acquire; 90 day (and more) business visas, less so. It is best to start the application process well in advance. While expedited processing is available to those who need visas quickly, it can double the application cost. Arranging a visa basically involves two steps: 1.) Getting an invitation and 2.) Applying for the visa. You may arrive at any time on or after the start date of your visa's validity and may depart at any time on or before its expiry date. Normally, an exit visa is included in transit, private visit/homestay, tourist, and business visas so long as the visa is still valid. Other classes, such as student visas, still require a separate exit visa that can take up to three weeks to process. Exit and reentry during the validity period of your visa requires permits. Getting these permits is a Kafkaesque bureaucratic nightmare that is best avoided entirely by getting a double- or multiple-entry visa in the first place. If you're in Russia and have lost your passport, your sponsor, not your embassy, must apply to the Federal Migration Service to transfer your visa to your replacement passport. Having a copy of your old visa helps with this, but is not sufficient to let you depart. Note: New rules for visas have recently been instituted for US citizens per a visa facilitation agreement which entered into force on 9 September 2012. 1. Getting an invitation Russia's most striking border crossing—the Friendship Bridge between the castles of Narva and Ivangorod Procedures for U.S. Citizens A visa facilitation agreement that entered into force on 9 September 2012 has changed the requirements for US citizens to obtain Russian visas (and, for that matter, vice-versa), which changes several of the aspects of the procedure. The main points are: U.S. Citizens no longer need formal, approved invitations or vouchers for business, tourist, or private/homestay visas, but they will need a letter of sponsorship from their inviting agency (hotel or business contact person). Additional information may be required by the consulate. Visas may now permit a maximum stay of six months (rather than 90 days) and may now be valid for multiple entries over up to three years. Visa fees are now set at $140 for single-entry, $150 for double-entry, and $160 for multiple-entry visas. Express processing is a uniform $250 (3 business days). Other aspects of the regimen were accordingly changed; due to this, it's wise to contact the nearest Russian consular agency for further information. The invitation type determines the visa. A tourist invitation begets a tourist visa, a private visit invitation begets a private visit visa etc. Except for tourist visas, invitations are official documents issued by Russian government agencies and must be applied for by the person or organization inviting you. The invitation will include the intended dates of travel and the number of entries requires (1, 2 or multiple). The dates on the invitation determine the period of the ensuing visa's validity. If in doubt of dates, ensure that the invitation covers a period longer than the intended stay: a tourist visa valid for 7 days costs the same as one valid for 30 days. In the likely situation you have to buy your invitation, shop around globally: all invitations come from Russia and the company that gets it for you will have a base in Russia. It doesn't make a difference whether its website is based in Germany, UK, USA or Swaziland. Many embassies and consulates only require a copy of the invitation, however this is not always the case so check with the embassy or consulate beforehand. If the original invitation is required it will have to be flown from Russia anyway. It is only applying for the visa itself that generally requires the application to be made in the applicant's homeland. A tourist invitation (also called reservation confirmation) is a letter of confirmation of booking and pre-payment of accommodation and travel arrangements in Russia. It is accompanied by a tourist voucher. These two documents can be issued by "government approved" tour operators, hotels, online hotel booking services or Russian travel agencies (several Russian travel agencies have offices outside Russia and are adept at facilitating visa applications). "Government approval" here means that the organization in question has a "consular reference" and has been registered with the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Only hotels and travel agencies that have a consular reference can issue confirmations valid for visa purposes. An ordinary hotel booking is not sufficient to constitute an invitation. Some hotels charge a fee to issue the invitation. Booking one night in a hotel will get you an invitation valid for one day (maybe two) and hence the resulting visa will be valid for a very brief time. For independent travelers planning to travel around Russia, it is best to get an invitation through an agency. These agencies will issue a confirmation for a fee (approx. $30 or £15), without actually collecting the accommodation prepayment. While the strict legality of such is questionable, it is a largely academic point and does not lead to problems for the traveler. If your itinerary is confined to only one hotel, then it makes sense to obtain the invitation documents directly from the hotel as the service fee will be similar. Consider getting a private/homestay visa if you have friends or relatives in Russia (they do not necessarily have to be Russian). They would need to seek an invitation through their local Passport and Visa Division of the Federal Migration Service (formerly OVIR). These invitations tend to take at least a month to process. The inviting individual also becomes solely responsible for all your activities while in Russia and can be penalized heavily if something were to go wrong. Because of this, personal invitations are usually not available for a fee through the net. Business invitations are issued by the government. They are generally time-consuming and costly to acquire but they can be quickly arranged for exorbitant fees. Any registered company in Russia can apply for a business invitation. Travel agencies and visa specialists can also get them issued for you. Business visas have longer validity than tourist visas. Being a tourist on a business visa is permitted, so anyone wanting more than a 30-day stay should get one of these. As a rough guide, one UK company can arrange a business invitation for a single 90 day stay for various amounts between £38 (for 12 working day processing) and £121 (for 2 working day processing). Invitations for student visas are issued by the educational institution where you plan to study. Most universities and language schools are familiar with the process. Some Russian local governments have a right to invite foreigners for cultural exchanges by sending a message directly to the Embassy or Consulate of Russia overseas, requesting the visa be issued to a particular foreigner or group of foreigners. Such messages are used instead of an invitation. This is normally the way to go if you are invited by the government. Arriving via nuclear-powered ice breaker is always one option. Different embassies and consulates have different requirements for visa applications. They may issue visas by mail, they may require application in person, they may accept a copy of the invitation, they may require the original. They may accept payment by card, they may insist on a money order. Check with the embassy or consulate beforehand - in most cases it will be on their website. Visa service companies, for a fee, will double-check your application and invitation, go to the embassy for you, and return your passport to you. This service is nothing that you cannot do yourself (unlike arranging the invitation) but it can save time and frustration. A single entry, 30 day tourist visa for citizens of EU-Schengen countries costs €35 and takes three working days for standard processing (€70 gets express service for next day collection). For UK citizens the price is £50 and processing takes 5 working days not 3 (express service is next day and costs £100). In some countries which have a busy trade in Russian visas (e.g. UK and USA), the visa processing has been outsourced to private companies. These companies levy a further unavoidable application fee on top of the visa fees stated above. For applications made in the UK (by a citizen of any country) the application fee is £26.40 for standard service and £33.60 for express service. For applications made in the USA, the application fee is $30. The total cost of getting a visa usually has three parts: invitation fee, visa fee and application fee. If you're lucky, one or more of these may be zero but be prepared to be hit by all three. Take as an example a UK citizen applying for a 30 day, single entry tourist visa with standard processing in the UK (not the cheapest example and not the most expensive): invitation bought through an agency - £15, visa fee - £50, application fee - £26.40 = £91.40 (that's roughly US$140). Tourist, homestay, and transit visas can allow one or two entries. Tourist and homestay visas have a maximum validity of 30 days. Transit visas are typically for one to three days for air travel and up to ten days for overland journeys. Business and other visa categories can be issued for one, two or multiple entries. Generally speaking, a business visa can permit a maximum stay in any one visit of up to 90 days. However, a business visa only permits a total stay of 90 days in Russia in a 180-day period, regardless of how long it is valid for (whether it be 3, 6, or 12 months). If you stay in Russia for 90 days, you have to leave and your visa will not permit you to return for another 90 days. This means (give or take - a year isn't 360 days) that a six month visa permits as long a total time in Russia as a three month visa! Once you have your visa, check all the dates and information as it's much easier to correct mistakes before you travel than after you arrive! An unaccompanied minor with Russian nationality needs, apart from the regular requirements for adults, a notarized statements in Russian signed by both parents. This statement can be requested at the Russian embassy or consulate. The child is likely able to get into Russia without this statement, but will most likely be prevented to get out by the Russian customs at the airport! On arriving in Russia (except from Belarus), you'll have to fill out a migration card. As in most places, one half is surrendered on entry and the other portion should remain with your passport until you leave Russia (except to Belarus). It is usually printed in both Russian and English though other languages may be available. Upon leaving Russia, a lost migration card may be overlooked with the help of a nominal fine. Belarus is a special case because Russia and Belarus run a common border and share the same migration card. Usually, you will be permitted to enter and remain in Russia for the term of your visa (or the term stipulated by visa-exemption agreement, if applicable). Immigration officers are very unlikely to use their power to decide otherwise. Those who enter Russia with valuable electronic items or musical instruments (especially violins that look antique and expensive), antiques, large amounts of currency, or other such items are required to declare them on the customs entry card and must insist on having the card stamped by a customs officer upon arrival. Even if the customs officer claims that it is not necessary to declare such items, insist on a stamp on your declaration. Having this stamp may prevent considerable hassle (fines, confiscation) upon departure from Russia should the customs agent at departure decide that an item should have been declared upon entry. Just like in many European countries, upon arriving in any new dwelling, you must be registered within 7 business days of arriving. Your host at that dwelling (not necessarily the one who issued the invitation) is responsible for registering you. Registration is done at post offices, costs money and involves a lot of hassle. The proof of registration is a separate piece of paper with a big blue stamp on it. Border guards have neither authority not possibility to check if the duty to register has ever existed and evaded. Nevertheless, it is worth insisting to be register
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Красная Площадь andrey air_man Copyright: Andrey Air Man Jaime Brotons Stabarbara360cities Flooded poplar Fabian Stern St Katharinen Claudio Muzzetto Capo Testa, Cala di Mezu Дмитрий Юрлагин Вид с Малого Боруса Arno Dietz Tomasz Judkowiak Toolbrunup Peak Stirling Range Calvin K McDonald Wilsons Arch, Utah, USA More About Moscow The World : Europe : Российская Федерация : Moscow Overview and HistoryMoscow takes its name from the Moskva river, where Slavic settlements began around 500AD. They adopted Christianity from the Byzantine Empire in 988 A.D., and it would last as the national religion for a thousand years.By the 15th cent. Moscow had become the capitol of the Russian state under the Grand Duchy of Moscow, which had been busily assimilating smaller feudal territories while battling the Golden Horde of Mongols. The city was raided and burnt down by the Tatar-Mongols at least three times.Consolidation of many smaller territories under Moscow's power set the stage for Ivan III to adopt the title of "Ruler of all of Russia." His son Ivan IV, or "Ivan the Terrible", become the first crowned Tsar of Russia.The succession of Tsars lasted from Ivan IV until Peter the Great, who proclaimed the Russian Empire in 1721, with St. Petersburg for its capitol.The Russian Empire survived the "Times of Troubles" which saw chaos, invasion and several uprisings of the people. Napolean Bonaparte came within 25 miles of capturing Moscow during his disastrous invasion of 1812, but was turned back after thousands of his starving troops were ambushed and killed by peasant guerilla fighters.By the beginning of the 20th Century, Moscow was capitol, this time of the largest country in the world.The Industrial Revolution came later to Russia than to Western Europe, partly due to Russia's institute of serfdom which kept peasants bound to the land. Soon enough however, the emergence of the Socialist political movement was loudly advocating total revolution, and by 1917 the Soviet Union replaced the Tsar and his autocratic rule. This began the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), which lasted until 1991.After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Moscow continues to be the capital of Russia, or the Russian Federation as it is now known. It is still the largest single country in the world. People and CultureMoscow is in the grips of a western renovation, with consumerism and ostentatious displays of wealth parading everywhere. As of 2008 it is the city with the most expensive cost of living in the world, home of the most billionaires, as well as being the largest city in Europe. Getting ThereMoscow is laid out in five major sections in concentric pattern, with the Kremlin smack in the middle. The Kremlin is the administrative seat of power, and its name means "fortress." Its walls delineate the 15th century boundaries of the city. TransportationYou can find information about getting to and from the airports here . Click here for some great tips about the fantastic metro system Here is some more useful overview stuff about the metro, trams, trolleys etc. Things to doThere are many galleries and museums in moscow but here are two favorites:First is Modern Art Museum . and second is Winzavod - it means wine factoryIn addition to these, you can visit the Museum of Geology, Museum of Aviation and Astronautics, Museum of History of Moscow.For art lovers, try the State Tretiyakovskaya Gallerry - with a huge collection of Russian art and icons - one of the most famous russian museum after the State Hermitage in St.Petersburg.There's also a beautiful Zoo, comparing to others in russia.. As for restaurants and clubs there's nice cafe just near the red squre - F.A.Q. Cafe - if you can read russian.There's an old good club 'Propaganda' - it's almost 10 years but still one of the best places to go out every night! Others which are not bad are: Ikra Solyanka Fabrique RecommendationsWhat to look for in general: Red Square, the Kremlin, the Lenin Mausoleum, the Cathedral of St. Basil, and Bely Gorod which is a shopping district.One more beautiful old place to see in Moscow is - Novodevichiy monastery (was built in 1524 and Ivan IV became a czar there).A good place to visit for outdoor activities is also Vorob'evi Gori (hills) - it's kind of recreation zone on the moskva river with a park and Moscow state university's main huge soviet building on the top.Another thing you can do is go for a walk down Old Arbat, a pedestrian street with ethnic flavour of Soviet times and buildings from the time of the Russian Empire.Text by Steve Smith.
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Topics Nature Cook County Forest Preserve Cook County Forest Preserve The Cook County Forest Preserve is a countywide collection of forests, prairies, wetlands, streams and lakes set aside as natural areas. Established in 1914 through a county referendum after the Illinois Forest Preserve District Act of 1913, the 69,123-acre forest preserve is the oldest and largest in the United States. Its mission is acquiring, protecting and maintaining natural, open space and animal habitats “for the education, pleasure and recreation of the public now and in the future.” The preserve tallies about 40 million visits per year, and its combined parcels make up about 11 percent of the county’s land. The Forest Preserve District of Cook County, a special taxation district headquartered in River Forest, oversees the preserve’s facilities, trails, events, activities and educational initiatives. Attractions on preserve land include 40 managed lakes and ponds, 10 public golf courses and 300 miles of marked trails for hiking, biking, horseback riding and cross-country skiing. Brookfield Zoo (managed by the Chicago Zoological Society) and the Chicago Botanic Gardens (Chicago Horticultural Society) are also on preserve land.
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Denise Richardello of MCLA, Molly Kerns of Tsubo Massage, Lauri Klefos of Berkshire Visitors Bureau, Laura Roudabush of Barrington Stage, Megan Whilden of Cultural Pittsfield and Vicki Saltzman of the Clark Art Institute at the BVB's 'Trendsetter' awards celebration.Berkshire Visitors Bureau Highlights 'Trendsetters'By Nichole DupontiBerkshires Staff05:52PM / Monday, June 13, 2011Print | EmailLENOX, Mass. — It's one thing to enjoy the Berkshires, it's another to put the county on the map. Tourism has been a driving force behind the area's economic success recently and, said Lauri Klefos, president and CEO of the Berkshire Visitors Bureau, that force is only getting stronger thanks to local businesses. Last Tuesday night at Seven Hills Inn, the BVB presented the Trendsetter Awards, the first of its kind, to five area businesses and organizations "who are doing exceptional work in promoting themselves and the Berkshires." The awards were honored as part of the BVB's Berkshires in Bloom celebration. "This is all about celebrating tourism and marketing the Berkshires," Klefos said in a phone interview. "We are all about bringing people together to talk about marketing in the Berkshires. We wanted to recognize that there are a lot of people out there doing a great job at getting the word out. They are so excited to talk about this place that we often take for granted." Laura Roudabush, director of marketing at Barrington Stage Company, accepted the Online Marketing Award for the company's "2.0 Initiative," which used online resources to broaden the theater audience by providing video diaries of various performances. This behind-the-scenes look into the theater world is, said Rhoudabush, the new face of the stage. "Coming up with a fundraiser for marketing is a great idea," she said. "I don't think this kind of award has ever been given out. It's our job to keep ahead of the market trends and I think a lot of arts organizations tend to have the most forward-thinking, creative marketing. We got a grant to try some new technology marketing initiatives. "Basically, it's the spaghetti against the wall test, you have to throw it out there to find out what sticks," she continued. "We have lots of media resources in our arsenal. Social media has exploded within the last two years. Everything is 'shareable' these days. We want to keep putting different things out there and see what people respond to." E-newsletters, YouTube and iPhoto booths are just a few of the tools that Barrington Stage is using to boost and attract a diverse audience. In fact, technology has a very prominent place at the table of most Berkshire organizations. Megan Whilden, director of Pittsfield's Office of Cultural Development, accepted the Inspiring Community Award on behalf of Cultural Pittsfield. She said the marketing challenge for most organizations these days is not a case of too little, but of too much. "There are so many different channels to put this information," she said. "Now there are so many media messages and ads and the messages are more personal or individualized. It's been an uphill challenge. This is my seventh year in this position and I feel like we've raised the ante for everyone and this is a good thing. We've inspired other communities. It benefits the Berkshires to have a vibrant and creative Pittsfield. There's no doubt about it that being in the Berkshires is one of the city's greatest assets." Whilden's charge is unique. While most cities are focused on hard-scape infrastructure to spark growth, her job is all about attitude. "I think I have the only municipal job with a description that starts with 'create an atmosphere,'" said Whilden, who helped usher the former GE milltown to a Creative Commonwealth Award in 2009. "A great place to live is also a great place to visit. The Berkshires has a very good understanding that quality of life is essential." Boosting the image of an entire city and delving headfirst into cyberspace are no small accomplishments, especially when money is tight for most businesses and organizations. Molly Kerns, owner of Tsubo Massage in Williamstown, said that keeping a ground's-eye view has allowed her to continue to operate her business and provide for her employees. Tsubo was presented with the Marketing on a Shoestring Award, something that Kerns is very familiar with. "It's an irony that tourists come here for the quaintness of Williamstown and we're all running around feeling very busy," she said. "People come to this area for the small businesses. We're active role models and we're not giving anyone massages who are going to go home and have bonbons in the afternoon. Most people come in for 30 minutes because they need to make that time. With this business, I'm not looking to make retirement, it's not about that. It's about my staff being comfortable and being able to pay their mortgages. I've got a dedicated staff that's unbelievable and the Visitors Bureau has been so encouraging to me." Taking care of staff and her family is Kerns' top priority, and she knows that she is not the only Berkshire business owner juggling everything. In fact, she said she is inspired by the many women business owners and community leaders who continue to forge ahead. "What's so awesome is that women have such a huge role in our community," she said. "There's no competition but a lot of 'count me in' entrepreneurs who want feedback and who give great feedback." Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, the Clark Art Institute and Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art also received awards for advertising, public relations and "Putting the Berkshires on the Map." Your CommentsiBerkshires.com welcomes critical, respectful dialogue. Name-calling, personal attacks, libel, slander or foul language is not allowed. All comments are reviewed before posting and will be deleted or edited as necessary.Comments are closed for this article. If you would like to contribute information on this article, e-mail us at [email protected] No Comments iBerkshires.com Text Ads Home Inspection ServicesHome Inspection for Structural, Water, Pest, Mold, Asbestos, Radon,and more. MA Lic#372 413-447-1299www.iberkshires.comBerkshire Wine & LiquorBeer, Wine, Liquor, & Lottery. Over 200 Craft Beers. Click to see our Specials. Tyler St, Pittsfieldwww.facebook.comTahiti TakeoutChinese and Polynesian dishes. Daily lunch & Dinner Specials. (413)499-4711www.thetahititakeout.com Recent Stories <MORE> North Adams Sees 4% Tax Rate Hike;...Lenox Girls Finish Second in StateLee Football Team Finishes Strong in...Northbridge Rallies Past Hoosac in... Menu
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View the background - Skellig, Co. Kerry, Ireland Home Skellig Michael, County Kerry Welcome to the Unesco World Heritage Site once described by the Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw as “part of our dream world”. Small skellig, Co. Kerry, Ireland The Skellig Islands sit approximately 8 miles from the village of Portmagee in County Kerry. Accessed via boat trips from Valentia, Portmagee or Ballinskelligs, these islands are instantly representative of Kerry’s elemental west coast. Of the two islands, the jagged, pointed Skellig Michael (Sceilig Mhichíl) is of particular significant religious and historical relevance. The island is referenced in history as early as 1400BC, and also appears in Irish legend. A story originating in approximately 200AD tells of Daire Domhain ("King of the World") preparing here before an epic battle with the warrior Fionn mac Cumhaill (Finn McCool) and the Fianna army. But what really sets Skellig Michael apart is the keyhole view it offers into the lives of an isolated and storm-lashed community of monks. A monastic marvel Monastic settlements, evidenced by the stone beehive huts (clochain in Irish) at the island’s summit, are believed to date as far back as the 6th century. Historians tell of the monks who built the monastic site, walking the 600 plus steps daily to the water’s edge where they would fish for their breakfast. It must have been an extreme and ascetic existence, and yet the monks lived here right through to the 13th century when it is thought that the worsening weather drove them to move to Ballinskelligs on the mainland. Today, the huts are still lashed by the weather, and visitors must climb the 600 steps to reach them today, meaning that it’s is not recommended for those with reduced mobility. Anyone with a fear of heights may also find the summit’s location – some 714 feet over the Atlantic Ocean – a step too far. But if you can manage it, getting this close to a unique slice of history is an unparalleled experience. Ireland Puffin on cliff face Skellig Michael, Co. Kerry, Ireland Skellig Michael rock formation, Co. Kerry, Ireland A Viking visit Considering its isolated location, it was no great surprise that the Skelligs, particularly Skellig Michael, became prey to Viking invaders. But it wasn’t all bad; one legend tells of a hermit from the island baptising one Olav Trygvasson in 993. The Norseman would later become king of Norway. Winged residents The Skelligs’ charms are not only confined to past glories. Along with their sister group, the Blaskets, to the north, the Skelligs supports some of the largest collections of manx sheerwater and puffins in the world. Such is the nature of this unique assembly that an Irish radio documentary spent an overnight on Skellig Michael just to record the sound affect created by the storm petrels and manx sheerwaters who call the islands home. Boat tours, too, departing from Portmagee, Ballinskelligs and Valentia, skirt alongside Little Skellig to offer a waterside view of up to 27,000 of gannets that nest there. Skellig sweets Back on dry land, yet still within view of the islands, it’s time to taste the Skelligs. Skelligs Chocolate boasts the kind of treats that couldn’t be more different from the Spartan diet of the early monastic residents. Sea Salt Dark Chocolate, Rose & Pistachio Milk Chocolate, Chocolate Honeycomb Clusters and more are on the menu. For the culinary curious, Colm Healy and family are happy for guests to take a peek on the factory floor to see the whole process in action (“There is no tour,” the owners advise, “and therefore there is no entrance charge”). Keep your eyes peeled, too, for the new Willy Wonka mural. Think a friend might enjoy this article? Click to save and share Mullaghmore, County Sligo This is Yeats Country. This is surfer country. This is a country of castles, seaside, and Ireland's very own Table Mountain.... Keem Strand, County Mayo Only a road bridge stands between mainland County Mayo and Achill Island, Ireland’s largest island Killary Harbour, County Mayo Facing out onto the Atlantic Ocean, Killary Harbour is in the heart of Connemara Go on a custom boat trip & explore Dingle's coast €100 1 Hour max. 12 passengers Vacation ideas, news, offers… sign up for our ezine and we’ll keep you in touch with Ireland. Where ? Please enter details of your search
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View the background - Giant’s Causeway, County Antrim View as map Swiss Cottage Cahir, Tipperary Swiss Cottage was built by Richard Butler, 1st Earl of Glengall, it is delightful "cottage orné", or ornamental cottage, was built in the early 1800s, , located about 2km south of the Heritage Town of Cahir, and close to the River Suir. Westport House & Gardens Westport, Mayo First opened to the public in 1960, Westport House & Grounds is one of Ireland’s best loved heritage attractions. Ballyhack Castle Ballyhack, Wexford Ballyhack Castle is located on a steep slope in a commanding position overlooking Waterford estuary in Ballyhack. It is a large tower house, thought to have been built c. 1450. Strokestown Park House and Garden Strokestown, Roscommon Strokestown Park House is an 18th Century mansion, faithfully restored, retaining its original furnishings with professionally guided tours. It is located in County Roscommon and also has a six acre walled garden. Ballaghmore Castle Borris In Ossory, Laois Ballaghmore Castle is a unique and beautiful place. Set in the Irish midlands in County Laois, it is the perfect setting for a relaxing rural break. Russborough House Blessington, Wicklow Russborough House is one of the most beautiful houses in Ireland and was built between 1740 and 1750, in the Palladian style by Richard Castle, with fine stucco ceilings by the Lafranchini brothers. It is located in Blessington, County Wicklow. Glenveagh National Park and Castle Letterkenny, Donegal Glenveagh Castle was completed in 1873, taking its inspiration from the concept of a romantic highland retreat. Situated 24 kilometres north west of Letterkenny, Glenveagh is the most northerly of the nations' six national parks. Bantry House And Garden Bantry, Cork Bantry House and Garden, the stunning stately home of the Earls of Bantry and their descendants the White family. The estate, situated overlooking Bantry Bay in County Cork, is open from April to October and includes a tearoom. Coolcarrigan House and Gardens Naas, Kildare Coolcarrigan House and Gardens are approached by a long, woodland avenue, which has a large collection of rhododendrons and azaleas. The formal gardens around the house have a good herbaceous border, rockeries and fine Victorian greenhouse.
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Just across the Charles River from Boston, the city of Cambridge is often considered an uber-intellectual, liberal enclave—“Boston’s Left Bank” or “The People’s Republic of Cambridge.” Home to Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge attracts brilliant academics from around the world.Bostonians and locals refer to Cambridge residents as Cantabrigians, rooted in the city’s Latin name—Cantabrigia. Yet defining a Cantabrigian is not so straightforward, particularly in such a cultural melting pot. English Puritans settled the city in 1630. In the 19th century, Irish immigrants escaped the potato famine to Cambridge and boosted the population 22 percent. Polish, Italian and German transplants soon followed. The city's historical makeup has resulted in today's extremely diverse population of 105,000.Visitors arrive from Boston by hopping on the Red Line and crossing the Charles River. A top attraction in Cambridge is Harvard Square—the center point of the city, where John F. Kennedy Street, Massachusetts Avenue and Brattle Street converge. Book stores, bars and cafés pepper the area that is alive with an eclectic mix of mathematicians, poets and musicians, working students and wealthy alumni. In the middle of Harvard Square, at the information booth, volunteers hand out area brochures and maps.Many of the top attractions in Cambridge are within a pleasant walking distance of Harvard Square. A stroll along Brattle Street leads to Tory Row, a residential neighborhood of 18th-century homes, once occupied by British residents loyal to the crown during the Revolutionary War. While visiting Cambridge, history buffs also stop at 105 Brattle Street, the butter-yellow mansion of poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. General George Washington set up headquarters here during the Siege of Boston from 1775 to 1776. Visitor tours are available.Just off Massachusetts Avenue, around the corner from Harvard Square, lies world-renowned Harvard University. Student-led tours are free, and visitors meet at the Events & Information Center in Holyoke Center. Also on campus, see the Harvard Museum of Natural History, connected to the Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology.About a mile from Harvard Square is Massachusetts Institute of Technology, nestled on the Charles River bank, across from Beacon Hill and Back Bay. During a free campus tour, art aficionados eye outdoor sculptures by Picasso, and modern architecture such as the Stata Center, designed by Frank Gehry.While visiting Cambridge, a jog or stroll along the Charles River completes the journey. Approximately 10 minutes from any point in the city, the river walk provides views of the Boston skyline, Massachusetts Avenue Bridge, and the spires of Harvard University.Mount Auburn Cemetery is located on the west side of Cambridge, at the intersection of Brattle Street and Mount Auburn Street. The most famous burial place in the Cambridge and Boston area, Mount Auburn was dedicated in 1831 as the first garden cemetery in the U.S. It should be no surprise that well-known intellectuals, such as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and B. F. Skinner, are buried here. Story Chapel visitor center displays exhibits and provides information on tours.
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The Address offers 24-hour stay Dubai, March 30, 2009 The Address Hotels + Resorts, the five-star hotel brand owned and operated by Emaar Hospitality Group, has introduced a 24-hour stay benefit across all its hotels. This service, which is a marked departure from scheduled 12 noon check-outs followed by hotels world-wide, is currently available at The Address, Downtown Burj Dubai and The Palace – The Old Town, the two properties currently operated by the brand in Dubai. As per the new benefit, guests opting for suite or club room accommodations can enjoy the privilege of a total 24-hour stay without incurring late check-out charges. This also means that guests arriving in the evening or even after midnight now have the option of keeping their room for a complete 24 hours without having to follow the traditional check-out time of 12 noon. “The complete 24-hour stay benefit helps us build further on the one-size-fits-one approach which we have incorporated with The Address Hotels + Resorts brand,” said Marc Dardenne, chief executive officer, Emaar Hospitality Group. “Meeting the needs of our guests’ individual preferences is part of the brand operational strategy of The Address,” he added. Yet another customer service introduced by the hotel involves the check-in process, where instead of conventional check-in desks, guests are welcomed upon arrival and escorted directly to their rooms where they can complete check-in formalities. In addition, complimentary wireless internet is available throughout the hotels. “We have looked at the times our guests check-in, which is often very late at night, and we estimate that more than 25 per cent of our guests can benefit from this added service,” said Dardenne. “Our business lounges and fitness centre are also open 24 hours which is another added benefit allowing guests to utilize these facilities at their convenience.” The new features will be extended to the up-and-coming properties of The Address Hotels + Resorts in Dubai – The Address, Dubai Mall and The Address, Dubai Marina – scheduled to open later this year, as well as in future international openings, a statement said. – TradeArabia News Service Tags: Dubai | hotels | The Address | 24-hour stay | More Travel, Tourism & Hospitality Stories
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UNOG UNOG Open Day 2012 Saturday 15 September 2012 - 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Palais des Nations and Ariana Park Some 9,000 visitors flocked to the Palais des Nations under bright blue skies for an Open Day organized by the United Nations Office at Geneva on 15 September 2012 to mark the tenth anniversary of Switzerland’s accession to the United Nations. Brazilian drums gave a decisively festive beat in the Assembly Hall and children ran in solemn hallways more accustomed to quiet conversations among men in dark suits, while curious visitors learned about solar power and refugee registration in the Ariana Park. When the doors opened at 11 a.m. in the morning, hundreds of families from Geneva or surrounding areas as well as tourists passing through the city were already queuing on the Place des Nations to enter the ground of the United Nations. The programme focused on democracy (15 September being the International Day of Democracy) and sustainable energy (2012 is the International Year of Sustainable Energy for all). Visitors could participate in dozens of activities, including concerts, dances and other cultural performances organized with the help of member states, film screenings, debates on democracy, exhibitions, quizzes and sports as well as many games for young children. Over 100 United Nations staff, easily identifiable thanks to their white and blue t-shirts, volunteered their time to make the Day a success, and visitors unanimously praised their helpfulness and courtesy. Pictures and interviews with enthusiastic visitors are available on the Facebook page created for the event: Open Day Facebook See below the programme for the day. Cultural activities, dance, music, story-telling, films and ceremonies On the occasion of this Open Day, the United Nations offers a true cultural festival! Dance shows, concerts, a Japanese tea ceremony and a fashion show will be performed on four different stages within the Palais des Nations. These events are organized with the support of the Permanent Missions of Brazil, Burundi, China, Honduras, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Mongolia and Romania, as well as the UN Music Club. Visitors can also listen to “Story Telling” organized by the “International Organization of La Francophonie” First-time performances: The Permanent Mission of Italy, with the support of Bayer, BCC Barlassina and Elior, present: “A Stradivarius for the United Nations”, an exceptional concert played on an original 1726 Antonio Stradivari violin. The Permanent Mission of Mexico will offer a piano recital by the world-known pianist Jorge Viladoms Weber. Films produced by the United Nations, other international organizations and Member States will be screened in two rooms (the exact timetable will be published at a later date). Cinéma 1 (Room XI) Cinéma 2 (Room XIX) 10th anniversary of Switzerland's membership in the UN International Day of Democracy Sustainable Energy for All Stands and demonstrations Exhibitions and Guided Tours "Building for Peace" – organized by the United Nations Office at Geneva "Greening the UN" – organized by the United Nations Office at Geneva "Children and migration" – organized by the Permanent Mission of Mexico Exceptional exhibition of ancient, rare books on the themes of peace, democracy and international relations, organized by the Library of the United Nations Office at Geneva "From the League of Nations to the United Nations" – permanent exhibition of the League of Nations Museum "The City speaks" organized by the British Council and the Permanent Mission of the United Kingdom Paintings by Evy Pineda – organized by the Permanent Mission of Honduras Guided Tours of the UNOG Library, international research centre and instrument for People's Understanding since 1927. The tours include the temporary exhibition in the League of Nations Museum "Philanthropy and International Organizations since the League of Nations". Guided Tours of the League of Nations Museum, to showcase the history of International Geneva through unique archives documents. The tours include the permanent exhibition "From the League of Nations to the United Nations" and the temporary exhibition "Philanthropy and International Organizations since the League of Nations". It will also be possible to freely visit the UNOG Library and the League of Nations Museum during the whole day. For the younger ones ... and more .... Flyer with map and programme Important Practical Information All are welcome. A valid identification document (passport, ID card or driving licence) will be necessary to enter the premises (one ID document per family or group); visitors aged up to 13 years do not need an ID but have to be accompanied. Pets are not permitted to enter, except for guide dogs. It is strongly recommended to use public transport to reach the Place des Nations. The Transports public genevois (TPG) are offering a free shuttle service from Cornavin train station to the Place des Nations (every 20 minutes between 10:40 and 16:40; last departure from the Place des Nations at 18:00) - see map Food and drinks will be available (hot and cold food, sandwiches and beverages). ______________________ Click here to have a glimpse of the cultural events organized on the previous Open Day at the UN, which took place on 5 June 2010, on the occasion of the World Environment Day. United Nations Information Service Palais des Nations, CH-1211 Geneva 10 Tel.: +41 22 917 2336 - Fax: +41 22 917 0030 e-mail: [email protected] Join us on Facebook Address: Palais des Nations, 1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland. | P: +41 (0) 22 917 1234 | F: +41 (0) 22 917 0123 | E:[email protected]
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Make a self catering villa or holiday rental in Northamptonshire, England your home away from home Northamptonshire is a county with a delightful cross section of fields and pastures, forests and urban areas. This historic area, once the Royal hunting grounds, has a wealth of historic attractions and country estates including Althorp, the family home of Lady Diana Spencer, Holdenby House and Kelmarsh Hall among others. Once known as the county of “spires and squires”, Northamptonshire has many churches to visit. The county town of Northampton is known for its shoe-making industry. Things to Do in Northamptonshire Bird Watching Rockingham Forest is an area of ancient woodland where many rare and unusual birds can be seen and heard. The Red Kite, an eagle-like bird of prey, was extinct in Britain but breeding pairs have been successfully reintroduced to the area. Bird-watchers may also enjoy a visit to the Red Kite Visitor Centre. Boating The historic Grand Union Canal runs through Northamptonshire and its towpaths make an excellent traffic-free walking trail. It is also possible to hire boats for the day to explore these rural waterways, including the 3km long Blisworth Tunnel and the nearby Waterway Museum. Walking and cycling The quiet green lanes around Northamptonshire are ideal for exploring on foot or by bicycle. The rural farmland and fresh air offer a great way to enjoy nature at its best. Places to Visit in Northamptonshire Woburn Abbey Set in 3,000 acres of deer forest, Woburn Abbey is a delightful historic home to visit. It has one of the most important private art collections in the world, including paintings by Van Dyck, Gainsborough, Reynolds and Canaletto as well as fine antique furniture, porcelain and gold. Stroll around the grounds and browse the Antiques Centre of this excellent attraction. Sulgrave Manor Sulgrave Manor is the home of George Washington’s relatives. It is a modest manor house with beautiful English country gardens and a gift shop. The former buttery is now a café. All Saints Church This historic church at Earl’s Barton is typical of many in the area. All Saints Church is known for its fine tower with battlements and observation posts, its Norman door and unique Saxon architecture. The interior of the church has a medieval rood screen, a Victorian font and some fine stained glass windows. Weather in Northamptonshire Northamptonshire has warm but cloudy summers with some showers. Expect summer temperatures to average 73°F (23°C) during the day. The winters are generally mild with more rainfall and occasional snow. Getting to Northamptonshire There are several airports close to your Northamptonshire holiday rental. Coventry Airport is 26 miles from the centre of Northampton. London’s Luton Airport is 34 miles from Northampton and Birmingham International Airport is 39 miles away. A car is essential to make the most of exploring this scenic area. A hire car can be picked up from the airport, or consider driving to this beautiful area via the M1 from the north or from London.
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DoubleTree by Hilton Opens Second Hotel in Rochester DoubleTree by Hilton today announced the opening of a newly renovated, all-suite upscale full-service hotel in historic Rochester, N.Y. The 155-suite The Strathallan– a DoubleTree by Hilton, is located in the heart of Rochester’s East End, a cultural and historic district, just 10 minutes away from the Greater Rochester International Airport. The hotel is owned and operated by 550 East Ave, LLC, under a franchise license agreement with a subsidiary of Hilton Worldwide. Over the past year each of the hotel’s guest suites was completely renovated to meet DoubleTree by Hilton standards and now include the brand’s signature Sweet Dreams sleep system, Wolfgang Puck in-room gourmet coffee and tea service; and Crabtree & Evelyn Citron bath and body products new carpets, drapery, furnishing and wall coverings. Renovations to the public spaces make the transformation complete. “We chose DoubleTree by Hilton because of the Hilton name. Hilton stands for quality and provides the best customer service in the industry. DoubleTree allowed us to keep the uniqueness of The Strathallan which we felt was important since The Strathallan has been a fixture in the Rochester community. We are happy to be a part of the Hilton family,” said Kevin Morgan. The Strathallan– a DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel is part of Rochester’s Neighborhood of the Arts (NOTA), and is in the heart of Rochester’s historical and cultural districts. Guest can walk to several museums, such as the Memorial Art Gallery, The Rochester Science Museum, The George Eastman House, and the Strong Museum of Play. Local area attractions include the bistro lined streets of Park Avenue, University Avenue and the nightlife offered in the East/Alexander District. “USA Today and first time visitors are giving Rochester high marks for its friendliness, fun, active outdoor lifestyle and memorable places to visit,” said Rob Palleschi, global head DoubleTree by Hilton. “The city’s surprising blend of famous sites, charming neighborhoods, quaint villages and historic canal towns create a mosaic of attractions that travelers appreciate. Strathallan Rochester’s historic charms, coupled with the power of the DoubleTree by Hilton brand are sure to appeal to travelers from around the world who are discovering this scenic city.” Guests of The Strathallan– a DoubleTree by Hilton are sure to appreciate the brand’s characteristic qualities found at more than 300 DoubleTree by Hilton locations in 24 countries around the world, including the signature warm chocolate chip cookie welcome, an array of upscale amenities and guest services, the rewards of the Hilton HHonors guest loyalty program, and a unique and caring team member commitment to the local community. The tastefully appointed guest suites feature bright décor and modern comforts and conveniences suited to today's business and leisure travelers. Each guest suites provide two full-size rooms; granite bathrooms; mini fridge; complimentary wireless high-speed internet access (also in public areas); spacious work desks with ergonomic chairs; 42-inch, high-definition, LCD TVs; MP3-compatible alarm clocks; plush bedding and combed cotton linens. Many rooms offer balconies as well as living areas separated from the bedrooms with solid core doors. The Strathallan – a DoubleTree by Hilton offers 2,492 sq. ft. of flexible meeting spaces. The hotel also has a 24-hour self-service business center and complimentary printing service that includes “print-from-your room” convenience as well as a lobby market that is always accessible. For guests who wish to keep up with their workout program while travelling, a 24-hour fitness center and a heated indoor swimming pool are available. The hotel’s restaurant, Char Steak and Lounge offers contemporary American cuisine using locally-sourced, seasonal foods. The restaurant serves the brand’s signature Wake Up DoubleTree Breakfast, which includes hot entrees and healthy options to start the day right. At the end of a busy day, guests can unwind with a fine selection of refreshing cocktails. Room service also is available. The Strathallan – a DoubleTree by Hilton is located at 550 East Avenue, Rochester, New York 14607. For more information about The Strathallan– a DoubleTree by Hilton, call 585-461-5010 visit www.doubletree.com, contact your preferred travel professional or call 1 800 222 TREE. About DoubleTree by Hilton With a growing collection of contemporary, upscale accommodations and more than 310 hotels in gateway cities, metropolitan areas and vacation destinations in 23 countries, DoubleTree by Hilton hotels are distinctively designed properties that provide true comfort to today’s business and leisure travelers. From the millions of delighted hotel guests who are welcomed with the brand’s legendary, warm chocolate chip cookies at check-in to the advantages of the award-winning Hilton HHonors® guest reward program, each DoubleTree by Hilton guest receives a satisfying stay wherever their travels take them. To find out information about any DoubleTree by Hilton hotel, travelers may visit our website at www.DoubleTree.com or contact their preferred travel professional. Social media users may connect with us at www.facebook.com/doubletree, www.twitter.com/doubletree and www.youtube.com/doubletreehotels. For the latest news, story starters and fact sheets about our brand, reporters and bloggers may visit our DoubleTree by Hilton Global Media Center at www.doubletreebyhiltonglobalmediacenter.com. About Hilton Worldwide Hilton Worldwide is a leading global hospitality company, spanning the lodging sector from luxurious full-service hotels and resorts to extended-stay suites and mid-priced hotels. For 93 years, Hilton Worldwide has offered business and leisure travelers the finest in accommodations, service, amenities and value. The company is dedicated to continuing its tradition of providing exceptional guest experiences across its global brands. Its brands are comprised of more than 3,900 hotels and timeshare properties, with 640,000 rooms in 90 countries and territories and include Waldorf Astoria Hotels & Resorts, Conrad Hotels & Resorts, Hilton Hotels & Resorts, DoubleTree by Hilton, Embassy Suites Hotels, Hilton Garden Inn, Hampton Hotels, Homewood Suites by Hilton, Home2 Suites by Hilton and Hilton Grand Vacations. The company also manages the world-class guest reward program Hilton HHonors®. Visit www.hiltonworldwide.com for more information and connect with Hilton Worldwide at www.facebook.com/hiltonworldwide, www.twitter.com/hiltonworldwide, www.youtube.com/hiltonworldwide, www.flickr.com/hiltonworldwide and www.linkedin.com/company/hilton-worldwide.
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Huffpost Travel Get TravelNewsletters Say Bye Bye To The Knee Defender Global Entry vs. TSA PreCheck: Which One Is Right for You? This Couple Is Homeless, On A 1,000-Day Canoe Trip, And Completely Inspirational 11 Places In NYC That Aren't Totally Chaotic What I Learned From Five Months Of Travel The ONE Tourist Mistake You Should NOT Make On Your Next Trip Abroad The World's Dreamiest Private Island Resorts 25 Things To Do In New York This Fall You Can Afford A Private Jet, Too 5 Of The World's Best Road Trips How to Fly Like a Pro Mount Seymour Ski Resort: A Huffington Post Travel Ski Resort Guide The Huffington Post | By Brian Willett Posted: 01/03/2012 2:28 pm EST Updated: 01/05/2012 3:08 pm EST Share Mount Seymour gets nearly 33 feet of snow annually. Mount Seymour in British Columbia is a popular destination for skiers and snowboarders. As part of a series on ski resorts, Huffington Post Travel offers our guide to Mount Seymour, featuring all the key information snow lovers need to know before they hit the slopes.The Basics Mount Seymour is one of several resorts located in the Vancouver, Canada, area. This resort is just 35 minutes from the city, making it more convenient than most. The resort caters to skiers and snowboarders but also provides alternative activities such as tobogganing, snowshoeing and snow tubing. Mount Seymour is accessible via car, but visitors can also take a shuttle to avoid tackling the snowy streets. The Mountain With an average snowfall of nearly 33 feet annually, Mount Seymour has plenty of powder for all of the activities it offers. The resort provides 200 acres of skiable terrain, and with a vertical drop of more than 1,000 feet, Mount Seymour will keep thrill-seekers satisfied all season. As Ski Resorts Guide notes, Mount Seymour has both the deepest snowfall and the highest base elevation of the region's North Shore Mountains, which makes it a perennial favorite. Trails and Lifts Whether you're looking to tame Mount Seymour's longest run -- a one-mile challenge -- or simply hope to navigate the beginner slopes, the resort provides a number of options. Mount Seymour has 23 ski runs, eight toboggan runs and a four-lane snow tubing course. About 20 percent of the runs are intended for expert skiers, while the rest are split fairly evenly between beginner and intermediate difficulty. Mount Seymour also has three terrain parks providing 40 features. The mountain is serviced by five lifts. In The News Even those who haven't visited Vancouver may have seen Mount Seymour, as the picturesque landscape was the site of filming for the movie Hot Tub Time Machine as well as episodes of The X-Files and MacGyver. Santa visits the resort for pictures with the kids in December, and the resort hosts an annual Family First Night celebration for New Year's Eve. Mount Seymour Ski Resort offers Baby and Me guided snowshoe tours for parents to spend time bonding with their littlest ones. Other snowshoe tours include Chocolate Fondue and Discovery tours. Cost Mount Seymour is open from 9:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. weekdays and 8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. on weekends. All-day passes cost $46 for adults and $41 for students and youth aged 13 to 18. Afternoon passes are $37 and $34, respectively. Reduced rates are available for seniors and children 6 to 12. Tots 5 and younger ski free. Mount Seymour also offers family passes for $1,899 and season passes starting at $809 for adults. Lessons and rentals are also available. Apres-Ski Mount Seymour provides a unique array of entertainment options, including 90-minute SnowFit workout sessions. Friday night wildlife tracking tours and 90-minute private guided tours are also available. The resort can accomodate business visitors with its corporate meeting spaces, and all visitors can enjoy dining areas, including Whiskey Jack Room, Grill Works Cafeteria and The Rock Chute Inn. WATCH: Mount Seymour A group of snowboarders tackled the slopes at Mount Seymour. Mount Seymour Ski Resort Vancouver Travel
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View the background - Beaghmore stones, County Tyrone Places to go Historic Ireland – ancient sites Stop almost anywhere in the Irish landscape, and you’ll find proof of the country’s ancient past close to hand. You just need to know what to look for Burial mounds, stone circles surrounded by munching cows, enormous dolmens and amazingly engineered passage tombs… they’re all scattered throughout Ireland in abundance. And sometimes in the most unexpected of places. Who’d have thought, for example, that the world’s oldest known field system would lie under a blanket of bog in west Mayo? Spread over several kilometres, the Céide Fields are a landscape of stone houses, walls and tombs built along mathematical principles by Neolithic farmers 5,000 years ago. Visitors can take a guided tour, or just stroll towards the cliff edge and marvel that anything at all was built so close to the thumping Atlantic breakers. Still out west, it seems people have always been drawn to settle in Ireland’s wildest outreaches. What else but its strategic location could explain the presence of Dún Aonghasa, a prehistoric stone fort huddled on a cliff at the edge of the Aran Islands in the Atlantic Ocean? It’s all too easy to imagine how approaching invaders would have been in awe – National Geographic recently included its “unclimbable” perch amongst its Top 10 Ocean Views. The surprises keep on coming. Did you know that stone circles abound in counties Fermanagh and Tyrone? Or that at Mount Sandel, near Coleraine, you’ll find the first known dwelling in Ireland, dating back to around 7,000BC, making it even older than Carrowmore in Sligo and way, way older than the Pyramids of Egypt? And while people often talk of the High Kings of Ireland’s stronghold in Tara, let’s not forget Navan Fort near Armagh, seat of the Ulster kings, which was made famous in the sagas of the Irish mythical hero, Cú Chulainn. If the walls could speak… “What’s the story?” Wherever you go in Ireland, you’ll hear this casual greeting, a conversation-starter that says as much about the place of storytelling and oral history in Irish culture as it does the friendliness of the greeter. And just as you’re never far from a ring-fort or stone circle here, so some rollicking tale of an ancient warrior, weird creature or pioneering saint is always close to hand. Push through the old rhododendron below Muck Rock on Howth Head, County Dublin, for instance, and you’ll come across a 2,500-year-old collapsed dolmen. It’s known locally as Aideen’s Grave. Why? Aideen was a warrior who died of grief shortly after her husband, Oscar, was killed in battle. Oscar’s father, Oisín, is said to have personally buried her beneath a 75-tonne capstone. Circles of friends Similar treasures lie hidden at Lough Gur, County Limerick. Pull up at the enchanting lakeside setting here, and you’ll find a site at which people have lived for at least 5,500 years, and you can’t swing a cat without hitting a stone circle, hill fort or mass rock of some kind. Tread carefully, mind – it’s said that every seven years, Gur demands the heart of a human. At the nearby Grange Stone Circle, however, the cowpats are a more imminent threat. So you see, a slice of Ireland’s history is never far away – but don’t just look out for the obvious (or even the cowpats), it’s often the stories surrounding them that’ll take your breath away. Downton Abbey Comes to Life Limerick City of Culture 2014
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H-NO PLACE LIKE HOME Sep 22, 2011 7:53 PM by Jeanette Trompeter No Place Like Home: The Lido at Dolphin Bay Resort Today is the last day of summer, and fall is upon us. But on the central coast, that means we're heading into one of the best times of year to take in our local tourist hot spots. Because, can you hear that? The crowds are gone, and for the most part, we have little pockets of paradise all to ourselves. And more reason, There's Place Like Home. Sometimes it blows me away. The little getaways that are right in our own backyard. I'm not talking overnight adventures, although they easily could be. But even if you don't have the time or money for that...you can still easily pack a little paradise into your days. Especially right now."We just think this is the nicest area on the actual west coast. I don't think there's a nicer view in California than right here." says Jerry Anderson, who lives in Bakersfield, but spends a lot of time in Southern California. People who are well acquainted with the loveliest vistas in our state, still find those to be found at patios along the central and south coast the cream of the crop. Such is the case at the Lido Restaurant and Grill at Dolphin Bay Estates in Shell Beach. "Well the setting, look at this! It's awesome!" says Robin Irwin. She and Mike Spangler spent an afternoon recently on the patio of the Lido. They live in Shell Beach, but are frequent visitors. "We come to catch a sighting of a whale, or dolphin." Irwin explains. Spangler says there's no reason not to be taking in the treasures available right in our own backyard. There's just something about being down here and being so close to all the nature that's happening here. It's just irresistible. Why wouldn't you be here? If it takes more than the view to draw you in, the chef at the Lido is a draw for many. Brian Collins is local but spread his wings to work at restaurants in San Francisco, including one Gourmet Magazine called the best in the country. He recently returned to the Lido after spending a few years at Full of Flatbread in Los Alamos. And he's all about serving up local fresh cuisine with a presentation worthy of the environment in which it's served. And spectacular Shell Beach sunsets coincide beautifully these days with Lido's happy hour from 4 to 6 , where you can enjoy discounted drinks and free flatbread Pizzetas while taking in the spectacular surroundings. Even if you arrive wound up and weighed down a bit by the worries of your work-a-day world, things change quickly once you take a deep breath and take notice of where it is you are. As you watch the pelicans ride the wind currents that come up come this time of day, you'll start to feel your worries drift away as well. No matter what your day started like, when you wrap it up in a setting like this, the ending is pretty much picture perfect. And we have it all pretty much to ourselves right now. And yep, it's all right in our own backyard. For more information on The Lido at Dolphin Bay, click here. »Comments
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Bentzen Ball Hey - BYT is ad-supported. It's where we get the cash to keep writing. Please consider making an exception in your ad blocker for BYT. First Look: Eat The Rich Opens Doors In Shaw October 18, 2013 | 11:30AM all photos: Stephanie Breijo Back in June, when Mockingbird Hill, the sherry and ham temple opened in Shaw, we were pretty goddamn excited to learn that it was only 1/3 of the project Derek Brown and Angie Salame will be undertaking on 7th street. Now, a mere four months later, the part two of the puzzle arrives at 1829 7th street NW. A collaboration with Rappahannock River Oysters and named after a Motorhead song, Eat the Rich is a bar and restaurant built around the love of seafood and strong, seasonal drinking. The rock’n’roll theme is clear throughout. Whether it is the SeaMonsters of Rock murals in the back (done by local artist and drummer Laura Harris, whose handiwork you’ve maybe seen adorn the walls of ShowTime as well) or the painting done and gifted to the restaurant by GWAR’s maestro Dave Brockie himself to chowderhead on the menu and some serious heavyness on the speakers, you know you’re in a place that doesn’t mess about. The kitchen (which officially opens for dinner tomorrow, and for brunch starting next week) is manned by Julian Shapiro, who was previously in charge of artisanal charcuterie over at Range. The menu, which is separated into “RAW” and “HOT” categories, will utilize seafood from New Jersey to North Carolina and is brimming with dishes worth coming back over and over for; on top of the obvious oysters and clams, there will be squid, mackarel, albacore and herring, plus eel pies, rapa whelks and on the brunch menu hen eggs with oysters and toast tips and a Grand Chesapeake Boil which combines several kinds of seafood with garlic sausage, new potatoes, cauliflower, coddled eggs, grilled bread and a proper aioli. The bar will serve oyster shooters too, a $1 of each will go to the Oyster Recovery Fund. Speaking of the bar, obviously, the big talk of the drinking town will be the pitchers of cocktails. When we stopped by, two seasonal selections were on offer (each not batched, but made to order on site, like one big, fancy cocktail): a mezcal/appleshrub/hellfire bitters combination that was wonderfully rich and warming, and a bourbon/ginger/lemon selection which bright and open. Brown is, of course, known for his martinis too, so expect some Greenhat gins in those pitchers soon enough too. Nothing not to like (or fear, depending on how your night is going). And yes, the third restaurant (sandwiched in between this one and Mockingbird hill) is en route as well. The theme: a southern style comfort food diner, with a twist. We can’t wait. be our social media friend: facebook.com/brightestyoungthings twitter.com/byt come to our next BYT event or FotoWeek Event like what you read? give us some free money! Name Email Your Email Address Will Not Be Published Anonymous says: November 29, 2013 at 4:57 pm It’s Julien not Julian Reply Big Daddy Pain says: October 23, 2013 at 1:11 pm Dumbest name ever, is it supposed to appeal to a hipster’s sense of irony? Reply Anonymous says: October 23, 2013 at 1:08 pm this place should be called “Eat & PAY LIKE the rich” it’ll be closed by next summer. Reply Harrison says: October 18, 2013 at 2:40 pm you guys really need to start adding website links. Reply svetlana says: October 20, 2013 at 10:26 am EAT THE RICH actually currently doesn’t have a website. Reply Wednesday 02/10 Gregory Porter @ The Howard Theatre $39 / $45 Ever-dapper in his Kangol Summer Spitfire hat, suit jacket and wooden-wristband Nixon watch, Gregory Porter is discussing his new single. A rolling piano, organ and brass-powered soul-jazz number, it’s called Musical Genocide. It’s a provocative title – was that intentional? “Well…” begins this Grammy-winning singer/songwriter/entertainer with a chuckle. “It’s a provocative title in the sense that unfortunately the word carries significance in our history – and still does. So I meant it to be provocative in that way. But as the first lines say: ‘I do not agree, this is not for me…’” So while, yes, “on a larger level I’m talking about that,” Porter’s song has typically multiple layers. Musical Genocide isn’t the only song on his acclaimed third album Liquid Spirit that talks about the record industry. “If you manufacture everything; if you shy away from the organic artist who’s gone through something in his life to try figure out music; if you’re only going for the sexiest, newest thing… Well, that’ll be the death of blues, of soul… So that’s what I mean.” Luckily, this charismatic Californian is here to breathe life, and vitality, and fun, and excitement, and passion, and honesty into the musical genres he has loved from boyhood, ever since Nat “King” Cole entered his heart. It’s the central message of the album’s title: Porter is here with Liquid Spirit, offering up a replenishing, satisfying brew. As the 200,000 fans who’ve bought his albums in Germany will attest, or as the British listeners who have heard him light up the airwaves at 6 Music and BBC Radio 2 will agree, or as the lucky crowds who’ve seen him at Cheltenham Jazz Festival or playing with Gilles Peterson or his set just before Stevie Wonder at Calling Festival can vouchsafe: you can drink deep of Gregory Porter. And the best kind of intoxication will follow. As the lyrics to his foot-stomping, high-clapping title track have it: “Un-reroute the rivers, let the dammed water be, there’s some people down the way that’s thirsty, so let the liquid spirit free…’” It’s a sentiment that’s of a piece with the slow burning success of Liquid Spirit, released last autumn as the first fruits of Porter’s new worldwide deal with Blue Note Records, and now back in the UK mainstream charts and nearing the Top 10. “The word-of-mouth quality of this record, and even my first two, is a positive thing in a way,” affirms this big-voiced, big-hearted man who’s as adept at covers of The “In” Crowd and jazz standard I Fall In Love Too Easily as he is at singing his own compositions. “When you say the people are thirsty – they want something. And not speaking narcissistically, everything they want is contained in me! But I do know that people are thirsting for something musical. And they come to me after a concert and say: where you been?’ And sometimes,” he acknowledges with a grin, “I think they don’t even mean me – it’s a feeling they get inside once they hear something I’ve done.” Where he’s been is slowly, measuredly building his craft. It’s a work ethic – dogged, patient, respectful – that Porter learned at his mother’s knee in Bakersfield, California. A single parent to eight children, and a “storefront minister”, she’s paid tribute to on the simple, elegant, brushed-snares album track When Love Is King: “He lifted up the underneath, all of his wealth he did bequeath… of hungry children first He’d think to pull their lives up from the brink…” “These are all concerns she’s had, the philosophies she instilled in me. If there was somebody on the edge who needed just a little help to get back, whether spiritually, food, housing, clothing… That was her thing. She as a storefront minister who wanted to go where people are dazed and confused and lost. Kids walking around who didn’t know where their daddy was. She wanted to go where there was trouble.” Often times that trouble rolled right up to the Porter kids’ front door. The Klu Klux Klan was active in Bakersfield, and young Gregory and his brothers regularly ran the gauntlet of racial hate. “It was intense,” he says simply. “But my mother protected us and shielded us from that – psychologically as well. But at the same time we still had cool friends, basketball games and summer league. So there were two kinds of worlds going on.” There were also many musical words. Bakersfield was an epicentre of country music. But it’s mostly migrated population – from Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi – had also brought with it gospel, blues, rhythm and blues, jazz, soul. “I was singing that music of a bygone era with these old church members that my mother would associate with. And that still informs my music. Liquid Spirit is directly from that.” This rich mixture goes some way to explaining the power and impact of Porter’s music. But he’s the first to admit that it also means it can be confusing to purists. “I’m fully aware that everything I do doesn’t adequately please jazz traditionalists,” he says with a shrug. But he likes it that way – likes being able to appeal to the Cheltenham Jazz crowds and the younger fans of Peterson, the respected, genre-hopping DJ doyen. “I laugh at the mix of people who show up at shows. I realise I have to give them all something – and something for all of them exists in me. There are songs that a 68-year-old grandma likes. And there are hard-hitting, more bass- and funk-infused things. That’s part of my vocabulary as well. And I don’t do them as a separate part of the show – they co-mingle and co-exist. Which is something I’ve done with everything – racially, politically. I’m trying to find that happy medium.” All of which has conspired to take Gregory Porter a long way from Bakersfield. These days he lives in Brooklyn with his wife and 18-month-old son. But, actually, mostly he lives on the road. “It’s intense,” he nods of the familial absence that’s been amplified by the international success of Liquid Spirit. “It’s intense,” he repeats. “I go home and he tries not to let me go the day that I’m there. He knows that if I have a 5am wake-up for a flight, he knows I’m up and liable to be gone for two, three weeks. And that’s a long time in his memory. That’s half his life! “But one thing I’ve realised is that with all three of these records, I don’t shy away from uncomfortable or painful situations in my life. So that’s the emotions that that brings. Today, before I came here, I was working on a song called Cornbread And Caviar Dreams, which is about my son. My wife is Russian, and of course my mother made great cornbread,” he laughs. “So that’s painful. But I’m figuring it out. I want him to hear the message in When Love Was King. I hope he has thought and empathy for other people, and mutual respect. He has some say in this record.And true to his positive mindset, Porter uses the separation, and the travelling, and alchemises it into something magical on stage. “In a way, jetlag and the punishing schedule can actually take me there more,” he says of his onstage mindset. “The band will be like, ‘Greg, you ain’t got to sing that hard!’ But that feeling of exhaustion makes me think of my family or my mother or a situation or a struggle. When I sing Work Song it makes me think of my mother and how hard she worked. And it makes me work harder.” And when he’s not working, this stylish man is relaxing by entertaining in another way. “I love cooking, and I love having friends over. I think of music in the same way I think about food, in the serving aspect – you put a plate of food in front of a friend and it feels good, they’re nourished. I think about music like that. And the things that I’m good at are these nourishing things – music, food…. I used to be into massage. Giving, not receiving! And then some other things that you don’t need to know about!” he adds with a hearty laugh. But in the end it always comes back to the music. For Gregory Porter the songs, and their messages, and their power, literally are the be-all and end-all. “I’m trying to come honestly, really trying to be unpretentious. I’m trying to be appealing, even as a jazz artist, to the non-jazz head. Trying to speak to them as well. I want to speak to the human heart. “And I’m gonna keep on trying to do my thing,” he smiles. “Really, I’m married to music. And whether people keep on buying my records or not, or keep on coming to the shows or not, I’m still gonna sing. I’m amazed and thankful and blown away that I’ve had these opportunities. But if they take it away, I’m cool. I’ve still got my songs,” Porter concludes, beaming expansively. “I swear to God I am cool!” That he is. They don’t come much cooler than Gregory Porter. Tickets>> Weekly Food News Round-Up Places To Stalk Bentzen Ball Comics The Least Douchey Bars in DC – 2015 Edition 5 Brunches to Try This Weekend DC Oyster Guide Happy Hour Hotline: Slushee Edition Giveaway: Patriotic Cocktail Competition and Tasting @ National Archives Spirited Republic After Hours Cocktail Recap 10/11: First Look: Rose’s Luxury10/04: First Look: Barcelona, a new wine and tapas bar, Opens on 14th Street10/04: First Look: Dacha Beer Garden09/25: First Look: Petworth Citizen, Bar & Reading Room09/19: First Look: 2 Birds 1 Stone – Your New Punch Heaven on 14th Web Font Resize Text
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Timbuktu’s Ancient Libraries: Saved by Locals, Endangered by a Government One week after Islamic militants fled Timbuktu, preservationists are uncertain about how to protect the city’s ancient documents By Vivienne Walt @vivwaltFeb. 04, 20130 Share BENOIT TESSIER / REUTERSA museum guard picks up boxes holding ancient manuscripts, which were partially damaged by Islamist rebels, at the Ahmed Baba Institute in Timbuktu on Jan. 31, 2013 Email One week after Islamic militants fled Timbuktu under French bombing strikes, preservationists are deeply uncertain about how to continue protecting the city’s priceless ancient documents — a conundrum that cuts to the heart of how treasures are safeguarded through political upheaval in places where locals have little trust in government. When French and African forces rumbled into northern Mali’s ancient capital 10 days ago, Timbuktu’s mayor, who had little direct information, told journalists erroneously that the jihadists had destroyed “all the important documents” and that Malians needed to “kill all the rebels.” In fact, Timbuktu’s residents and preservationists had told TIME early last year that they had rescued tens of thousands of manuscripts before the militants seized northern Mali. They agreed to talk on the condition that TIME kept their secret until the jihadists had been defeated. The operation was conducted by Timbuktu’s old families, which have looked after the city’s 300,000 or so ancient documents for centuries. The residents left behind just a few hundred manuscripts in Timbuktu’s only publicly run collection, the Ahmed Baba Institute, in order to conceal the fact that they’d hidden the bulk of them elsewhere; it was those that were destroyed last month. (MORE: Mali: Timbuktu Locals Saved Some of City’s Ancient Manuscripts from Islamists) Even jihadists who are illiterate are likely aware of the manuscripts’ high value, given the headline news generated by their potential destruction. Timbuktu’s libraries comprise one the most detailed written accounts of Africa, from when the city was a gold- and salt-trading hub in the 15th and 16th centuries with a thriving community of scholars and several universities. When TIME visited Timbuktu in 2009 to describe the manuscripts, residents explained that each family appointed one of their children to look after the documents for the next generation — a system that has lasted through countless migrations, invasions and skirmishes over the years. But with the manuscript pages brittle — they can crumble at the lightest touch — preserving them has become urgent. Not only are they fragile, but they might be especially vulnerable during Mali’s unsettled conflict, since such periods of upheaval often lead to the looting and trafficking of historical treasures. Preservationists also fear that as young Malians become more mobile they might sell them, especially as foreign collectors have begun scouting for treasures in Timbuktu during the past decade. Until very recently, Mali had no law forbidding the manuscripts from leaving the country, and in any case, the government had little means to stop them. Changing this will not be easy. To the frustration of preservationists, only about 10% of Timbuktu’s documents are housed in the government-run Ahmed Baba Institute, a modern adobe-style building sponsored by the South African government in 2009, which has the city’s only state-of-the-art digitizing equipment. The families have had no confidence in anyone but themselves looking after their collections. International organizations have found locals extremely reluctant to give their manuscripts over for safekeeping or even to loan them for brief periods to be digitized. With the war over in Timbuktu, now comes the question of what to do next. “We’ll do everything possible to look at how the originals can be more securely safeguarded,” Irina Bokova, Director General of UNESCO, said in an e-mail to TIME on Monday. Bokova flew to Timbuktu on Saturday with French President François Hollande and believes it is urgent to tackle the state of the manuscripts. “If there is no digital copy, they could be lost forever,” she wrote in her e-mail. “Given that the vast majority of the Timbuktu documents are held in private collections, this situation presents a particular challenge. We must work with these communities in Timbuktu to find a way forward.” (MORE: For the Treasures of Timbuktu, a Moment of Grave Peril) Ultimately, the key to preserving Timbuktu’s manuscripts may lie not with organizations like UNESCO but with Mali’s bitterly divided politicians. So long as the government in Bamako’s present dysfunction continues — and it remains estranged from the largely ethnic Tuareg population of the north — the collections will be vulnerable, say some experts. The 30 to 40 Timbuktu families who have been custodians of the manuscripts have lived through centuries of tension and alienation from Mali’s government in Bamako, which has in turn invested little in the far poorer desert region of northern Mali. To them, it has seemed better to keep the manuscripts hidden in rickety closets or under floorboards at home, rather than hand them over for safekeeping to an unstable government, which collapsed after a military coup last year. “You are not going to solve the question of the manuscripts without solving it politically,” says Shamil Jeppie, director of the University of Cape Town’s Tombouctou Manuscripts Project, which has helped coordinate the preservation work. “There is no sense in trying to protect the manuscripts if you don’t properly protect the city.” Though the idea seems unbelievable now, Timbuktu’s residents initially wanted Ahmed Baba to have free access, with no security, much like a public library in any city. “The building was conceived with no walls around it so people could walk right in from the street or the square outside the mosque,” Jeppie says. Even though the government finally walled off the compound, it was not heavily secured. By the time militants seized Timbuktu last March, he says, “there was a simple night watchman.” MORE: Mali’s War: After Surging into the Islamist-Held North, Will France Retreat? Vivienne Walt @vivwalt Vivienne Walt lives in Paris and has written for TIME since 2003, from dozens of countries around the Middle East, Africa, and Europe. 1 comments lasekask 5pts til I looked at the bank draft for $8808, I didnt believe that my neighbours mother could actualie taking home money in there spare time at their laptop.. there uncle has done this 4 less than seven months and resently repayed the debts on their villa and bourt a new Saab 99 Turbo. this is where I went, http://m3mi.com/2736
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Vystavochnyj zal Odesskogo istoriko-kraevedcheskogo muzeja pered otkrytiem vystavki Andrew Pryadko Copyright: Andrew Pryadko Tags: odessa lanzheronovskaja 24-a vystavochnyj zal odesskogo istoriko-kraevedcheskogo muzeja More About Odessa The World : Europe : Ukraine : Odessa Overview and HistoryOdessa is the largest city on the coastline of the Black Sea and was once the third largest city in Russia, after Moscow and St. Petersburg. Her nicknames are "the Pearl of the Black Sea", "Odessa Mama" and "Southern Palmira."The name probably comes from the earliest recorded inhabitants, a Greek colony called Odessos which disappeared around the fourth century AD. Here's a lightning overview of Odessa's rulers, from the beginning. First there were the ancient Greeks, then miscellaneous nomadic tribes, the Golden Horde of Mongolia, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the Crimean Khanate, the Ottoman Empire, the Russian Empire, the U.S.S.R, and finally Ukrainian independence in 1991.The founding of the first city in this location dates to 1240 AD and is credited to a Turkish Tatar named Hacibey Khan. Its name at that time was Khadjibey. The first fortress was built in the fourteenth century, when Odessa was already becoming a major trading center. The fortress served to protect the harbor. Khadjibey became part of the Ottoman Empire in the early sixteenth century. Its fortress was rebuilt by the Ottomans and named Yeni Dunya, around 1764 AD.The eighteenth century saw Odessa change hands from Turkish to Russian control. Russia captured Odessa in 1789 under the command of Jose de Ribas, a Spaniard who became a Russian admiral and played a major part in the victory. Jose de Ribas gets the credit for founding the modern city of Odessa -- his name is remembered in the most prominent street through the heart of Odessa -- Deribasovskaya Street.In the treaty of Jassy in 1792, Turkey gave over control of a wide swath of land encompassing modern-day Ukraine and Odessa. The city was rebuilt to be a fort, commercial port and naval base. During the nineteenth century Odessa attracted immigrants from Greece, Bulgaria, Romania, Armenia and all over Europe, enjoying its status as a free port.Odessa was bombed by British and French weaponry during the Crimean War of the 1850's. After the destruction was repaired, a railroad joined Odessa to Kiev in 1866 and the city rapidly developed as the main export center for grain production. It became a center of Ukranian nationalism at the turn of the 20th century and in 1905 Odessa was the scene of a worker's uprising, led by sailors from the battleship Potemkin. During the uprising hundreds of citizens were murdered on the staircase that has come to be called "the Potemkin Steps."During WWI Odessa was bombarded by the Turkish fleet and after the Bolshevik Revolution the city was occupied by the Central Powers, the French and the Red Army. In 1922 Odessa was unified with the Ukranian Soviet Socialist Republic. There was terrible suffering in the famine which took place after the Russian revolution in 1921.Odessa was taken by German forces in 1941, and almost 300,00 civilians were killed. It remained under Romanian administration during WWII until its liberation by the Soviet Army in 1944. The city went through another rapid growth period after WWII, with industries of ship-building, oil refineries and chemical processing. The city became part of newly-independent Ukraine in 1991 after the fall of communism.Getting ThereBy air, the International Airport of Odessa is where you'll arrive and it's linked to the city by buses. Passenger ships from Istanbul, Haifa and Varna connect with the port. The Marine terminal is at the bottom of the Potemkin steps. When you get to the top you'll be greeted by the Duke of Richelieu, one of the city's founding fathers. This staircase also forms an optical illusion; looking down from the top, the steps are invisible and the side walls of the staircase appear to run parallel. Don't be fooled.TransportationThe main railway station is in the southern part of the city and it's connected with trams and buses, as usual, to get you around.People and CultureOdessa has a big graffiti scene as you can see here. Lots of concrete walls in empty places...Things to do, RecommendationsThe Opera House is the oldest and most famous in Odessa, built in 1810 with rich decorative rococo style. Here's a look at the Opera Theater at night. The Palais-Royal is adjoined to the Opera Theater and is also worth a trip to see.On the "must-see" list, Deribasovskaya Street is the very heart of Odessa. Its unique character lasted even when adherence to Soviet-design styles was strictly promoted -- so here you can find amazing architecture, outdoor cafes and restaurants, cobblestone streets and no vehicle traffic.Here's a look in the Passage shopping mall and hotel in the city center, a cool place to walk around.Visit the Spaso-Preobrazhensky Cathedral, the largest Orthodox Church in the city. It's been newly reconstructed after its destruction by Bolsheviks in the 1930's.Architectural curiosities: go and find the one-wall building when you run out of things to do. This would be first on my list, actually. Here's another mixup of architectural styles to have a look at.Finally, go and visit Empress Ekaterina, one of the main founders the city, at her monument.Text by Steve Smith.
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Carolina Corner, A Great Place to Live, Work & Play Featuring the Northwestern North Carolina Counties: Alexander, Alleghany, Avery, Ashe, Caldwell, Iredell, Surry, Watauga, Wilkes and Yadkin. Carolina Corner was developed to provide information about the beautiful mountains and foothills of North Carolina. As with any trip to a new place, an excellent place to start would be our site map section, where you will find a complete description of everything available on Carolina Corner. If your vacation plans include a visit to western North Carolina, visit the various Chambers of Commerce listed to help in your plans. If you're planning to go to the coast of North or South Carolina, don't make any plans until you've checked the conditions with the Carolina Corner. In the winter, you'll find some of the best skiing in the southeast. Get your up-to-the-minute weather reports from Carolina Corner Weather. 12 things to Do, See, and Experience in Durham Dirty, boring, and dangerous. Those were the words that formerly defined downtown Durham (and 20 years ago, those words weren't too far off-base). But a funny thing happened over the past decade or so. The abandoned factories that once blemished the landscape transformed into dazzling shops, restaurants, and condos. A slew of imaginative chefs brought new... Shop in the Streets at Southpoint Mall While we usually hesitate to put chain-dominated malls in stories like this, Southpoint is no ordinary shopping experience. The retail epicenter in southern Durham features over 140 shops and restaurants, including a number of hard-to-find retailers (Nordstrom, Bose, Apple Computer, etc.) The mall's open-air "Main Street" shines with sculptures, water... See A First-Class Film at the Carolina Theatre Located In the heart of downtown, the venerable Carolina Theater comes with plenty of character and charm great reasons it remains the city's most celebrated cinema. Films are screened nightly, running the gamut from award-winning independents to timeless classics. Refreshments, Including beer and wine, are sold on-site. A number of concerts and events,... Catch Food Truck Fever When it comes to mobile food culture, no place does it better than Durham. Thanks to operator-friendly legislation and a bevy of late-night bar-hoppers, food trucks from across the region descend on the town at twilight, selling everything from burgers to tacos to Indian food. For help tracking the most popular trucks. Raise Your Glass at Full Steam Brewery Handcrafted beer, fresh local ingredients and a distinct Southern flair these are what you’ll get a Full steam, an inventive tavern/brewery in the Central Park district. The wide-open tavern might best be described as rec-center chic, with ping pong and picnic tables creating a distinctly Durham vibe. As for beer recommendations, we loved the chocolaty... Go Funky Along The Ninth Street Shopping District Stationed near Duke's East Campus, this eclectic strip of shops showcases a colorful, funky side of Durham. Highlights Include Regulator Bookshop, the Play House Toy Store and the Duck Shop (stocked with Duke apparel). A number of standout eateries such as Dain's Place and Magnolia Grill also call Ninth Street home. Get Some Fresh Air at Eno River State Park While it’s a 10 minute drive from downtown Durham to the Eno River State Park, the two liter airy seem worlds away. Park visitors can hike along 24 miles of trails that pass through rugged woodlands. Fishing, kayaking and camping are also popular options. Eno River State Park 6101 Cole Mill Rd See a Show at The Durham Performing Arts Center Opened in 2008, the Durham Performing Arts Center (DPAC) stands proudly as the largest performing arts center in the Carolin's. With its shimmering, see-through exterior and 2,800-seat concert hall, the facility is a spectacle itself. The best of Broadway lights up the stage, with shows like Shrek the Musical and Hair highlighting a packed spring calendar... Explore Durham's Wild Side at The Museum of Life and Science This interactive science center ranks as one of the most family-friendly museums in the Southeast Highlights include a dinosaur nail, butterfly house, animal park, insectarium and dozens of hands-on exhibits. It's open Monday through Saturday from 10 am-5 pm. The Museum of Life and Science 433 Murray Avenue Web: http... Relive the Past at Durham's Three State Historic Sites The great thing about Durham's three historic sites aside from the fact they're all within minutes of each other is die linear plot line that unites them. All three are linked by the Civil War, setting up in a prewar, war and post-war narrative. First up, there's Historic Stagville, a prewar plantation that housed nearly 1.000 slaves across its 30,000 acres... Stroll Through the Duke University Campus Tourism officials will tell you: If you've only got an afternoon in Durham, a trip to Duke is probably your best bet. No matter your ACC allegiance, the school's campus is quite a sight to behold. This is particularly true on the West Campus, where the towering hardwoods and neo-Gothic architecture make you fed like you've stepped right into a Harry Potter... Experience Legendary Baseball at a Durham Bulls Game Simply put, the Durham Bulls are the worlds most famous minor league baseball team (well, that's what totals will tell you at least). While the 1988 sports classic Bull Durham put the team on the map, it's the unbeatable game-day experience that keeps the fans pouring in. The Bulls are the Triple A affiliate for the Tampa Bay Rays, meaning players are... See Adaptive Reuse In Action In Downtown Durham As The New York Times recently noted, downtown Durham was a place best avoided after sundown. But as revitalization has transformed abandoned tobacco factories and former textile nulls into bustling mixed-use properties, the city has been Injected with much-needed life. 'Nowhere is this more evident than Blight leaf Square, which transformed two abandoned... Community Information: Oak Ridge Oak Ridge, incorporated in 1998, has grown from an agricultural area to a bedroom community; it’s over 5,000 residents, many of whom live in developments on former family farms, primarily work in the nearby cities of Greensboro, High Point and Winston-Salem. Like other northwest-area towns. Oak Ridge is rich is history. It was aptly named for the stately... Community Information: Stokesdale Stokesdale, the oldest of the northwest areas three towns was incorporated in 1989. The town initially developed around the railroad; although trains no longer pass through Stokesdale, the historic downtown area that faced the tracks is still lined with shops, restaurants and offices that comprise the commercial core. More recently, more modern commercial... NC Guides NC Menu | Home | Privacy | Contact |
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HomeLeisure & OutdoorsTravelSightseeing InternationalField Cathedral of the Polish Army (Warsaw, Poland) Field Cathedral of the Polish Army (Warsaw, Poland) Also known as the 'Church of Our Lady Queen of the Polish Crown' / Locally known as: Katedra Polowa Wojska Polskiego „ A fascinating church that I knew little about but glad I found it Warsaw is full of churches; most of them are huge and quite beautiful and a handful are situated in the Old Town. These are the churches I know well but the other week when I was out taking snapshots I came across one by accident.The Field Church of the Polish Army or in Polish - Katedra Polowa NMP Krolowej Korony Polskiej, stands out mainly because of the colour of its facade which is pastel pink and egg shell, the sort of colour I am used to seeing in Spain or Portugal. Originally, baroque in style and built in 1660-82 by T Buratini. Apparently, the facade which is very grand and truly magnificent to look at especially when the sun is just rising above its domes was added in the years between 1758 and 1769.From 1835-36 the church was remodelled into a Russian Orthodox Church and the gold plated Byzantine domes were added. When Poland became independent in 1918, the Orthodox church was once again remodelled and from 1923-33 was returned to Catholicism and designated as a military church, keeping its original appearance and furnishings which were restored.After the Second World War, in the years 1946-60, it was rebuilt in baroque style and declared a field cathedral in 1991. What is interesting are the symbols of the armed forces such as the anchor; a symbol of the Navy and the propeller, a symbol of the Air Force which are in immaculate condition, painted black, and sit outside the front of the building. The jet black symbols against the pale pink walls of the church is a stunning feature.The facade gives the impression of greatness but actually the church is a lot smaller inside even though the doors which you enter from are indeed high and very interesting to look at, embossed with battle scenes made from a gold coloured metal. There are two main doors; one leads into the main interior which was empty when I entered and had a serene aura. A lady was cleaning the floor between the wooden pews but I did go in and have a peek and noticed seven altars and paintings of illustrious artists. I always feel very nervous when walking through a church especially when there isn't a congregation as I feel like I am intruding. I found it a very emotional experience; the chapel which commemorates the terrible deaths that took place in the Katyn Forest near the villages of Katyn and Gnezdova really upset me. This barbaric massacre is a part of Polish history that I find very difficult to forget. The other door which is to the left of a memorial statue of Pope Paul John II leads into a very sombre area where plaques commemorating soldiers who died on all fronts of the Second World war were unveiled. The walls are virtually covered with plaques; all of different shapes and designs, mostly made from bronze. I was in awe of all these beautifully sculptured name plaques and I could feel the sadness all around me. It was also quite dark, very warm especially as the temperatures were something like -14 outside, and silent. Only one other person was inside looking at the commemorative memorabilia. I think there are two or maybe even three vestibules which are lavishly decorated in quite bizarre forms. These bear the names of the Polish Legions. You are unable to enter the vestibules as there are elaborately decorated wrought iron doors which are closed and locked. I was fascinated with the colourful decoration in this area as it was so loud and distinctive. One of the vestibules reminded me of the work of Gustav Klimt. As I looked down the arched corridor from the vestibules which is opposite the main part of the church I noticed a carved statue, Jesus Christ of the Missing. A very sad piece of work created by Miroslaw Biskupsi. The head and body of Jesus look taut and heavy. Beautifully carved and placed in a part of the church where I couldn't help but notice it and the tangled form of his body drew me to him and I was truly mystified.I have seen quite a few churches over the last couple of weeks in Warsaw and all of them are very interesting but this one is one of my favourites, if not my favourite. I love the way the facade dominates the corner of Dluga Street facing the spectacular monument to the Warsaw Uprising. If you turn the corner you will find yourself on Miodowa Street (Honey Street) which is a very old historic street where there are some fine palaces and immaculate buildings so it's worth a small detour out of the main part of the city. Admission is free. You can reach the Field Cathedral Church of the Polish Army by jumping on a tram that takes you to the Stare Miasto;- 23. 13, 26. You can catch these from Ratusz Arsenal. Comments Castle Square (Warsaw, Poland) Warsaw Uprising Monument (Warsaw, Poland) Adam Mickiewicz Monument (Warsaw, Poland) Holy Cross Church (Warsaw, Poland) Church of St Jack's and the Dominican Convent (Warsaw, Poland) Lost City Trek (Colombia) Edward Youde Aviary (Hongkong) Agios Dionisios Church (Greece) Effigy Mounds (Iowa, USA) Rano Raraku (Easter Island)
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Promontory For other uses, see Promontory (disambiguation). Sròn a Chorra Bhuilg, a typical promontory, in the Scottish Highlands. A promontory is a raised mass of land, declined abruptly from only one side. It can overlook water (in which case it can be called a peninsula) or land. Most promontories either are formed from a hard ridge of rock that has resisted the erosive forces that have removed the softer rock to the sides of it, or are the high ground that remains between two river valleys where they form a confluence. Throughout history many forts and castles have been built on promontories because of their inherent defensibility. The promontory forts in Ireland are examples of this. Similarly, the ancient town of Ras Bar Balla in southern Somalia, which in the Middle Ages was part of the Ajuran Sultanate's domain, was built on a small promontory.[1] Headlands and bays Promontory fort Law Promontory Promontory, Utah Promontory Point, Utah Rabbit's Back Wilsons Promontory
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Шопинг Центр More About Canary Islands The World : Africa : Spain : Canary Islands Overview and HistoryThe Canary Islands lie off the west coast of Africa and exist as an autonomous community belonging to Spain.There are seven major islands in the archipelago and one minor island, then several small pointy bits which grumble about their diminutive status. The big ones are Tenerife, Gran Canaria, Fuerteventura, La Palma, Lanzarote, El Hierro, and La Gomera.The whole group is the result of volcanic activity from 60 million years ago, which is why the beaches have black sand for you to crunch along on. There are no active volcanos at the moment, but one never knows. Another way to say it is that these islands are part of the Atlas Mountain range which can be traced across northern Africa.At one point in the 16th century the islands were called "the sugar islands" for their production of cane sugar. The economy has since developed wineries, agriculture and now tourism as principal activity.Getting ThereThe Canary Islands have six airports in total. Here's a quick reference for the airports. The main international airport is Gran Canaria Airport, the gateway to the islands. It's 18km south of Las Palmas and has EU, International and Inter-Island terminals.TransportationHighway maintenance to the Canary Islands is sorely lacking, ha ha. Ferry service connects the islands to each other, but you can also take a small plane to hop between them.On the islands you can rent a car but be sure to carry your passport and license with you all the time. People ride bikes and take the guagua bus to get around. (It's pronounced "wa-wa".) Bus schedules can be infrequent or sporadic. Tenerife and Gran Canaria have impressive public transport systems that cover most of their islands.People and CultureThe Canary currency is the Euro; the islands are one of the farthest outlaying regions of the Euro zone.The culture is undoubtedly Spanish, but the mainland custom of kissing on both cheeks when you say hello can be abbreviated to only one kiss. You need quick reflexes to get it right. There's an accent that's a little bit different from mainland, and not quite the same as South American spanish either. The saying is that islanders talk "with potatos in their mouth" because of their lazy-sounding pronunciation.Things to do, RecommendationsHere's a basic look at the main islands. The way we see it, if you need directions for how to have fun on a tropical island full of fruit and fish, you're beyond our help.The largest island is Tenerife with about two thousand square kilometers and a wide variety of plant life and terrain. It is home to the highest point "in Spain", the volcano El Teide at 3718 meters. Tenerife has excellent weather all year round, with a wide variety of terrain and vegetation including crops such as bananas, tomatos and potatos.La Palma does not have very many beaches, and they are not very long. Two popular ones are in Puerto Naos on the west side, and Los Cancajos on the east. Most of the island is a biological reserve. It's known as "the green island"; come here for the mountains, sweet bananas and vineyards.On Gran Canaria you can choose from endless sandy beaches, dunes, mountains and also lush green scenery. This island is home to more than half the population of the Canary Islands.Fuertaventura has the oldest history. Homer mentioned it in his brief travel guide called "The Odyssey." Its name may come from the expression "What a great adventure!", or possibly, "strong wind." It's only separated from continental Africa by a narrow channel. Fuertaventura has the longest of all the beaches, and wonderful fine sand.Lanzarote is a Biosphere Reserve under UNESCO declaration, and comprises one of the six universal models of sustainable development according to the World Tourism Organization. Lanzarote is the farthest East of the major islands and has a year-round average temperature of 22 degrees C.La Gomera sports a National Park with dense forestation, crossed by deep ravines and surrounded by a perimeter of cliffs along most of the coast. Islanders have a special whistling language to communicate across the gorges in the forest.Text by Steve Smith.
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Chilling at the beach: Distinguished Young Women party on Dauphin Island Glen Luke Flanagan | [email protected] DAUPHIN ISLAND, Alabama -- Distinguished Young Women finalists hit up the beach at Dauphin Island for some rest and relaxation before beginning the final week of their stay in Mobile. Unlike most other days during their stay here, the young women were free to wander the beach or swim in the Holiday Isle pool reserved for their use, with hardly any scheduled activities to attend. For Natalie Rebekah Palmquist of Wyoming, who spent her day building a sand castle, the outing was a welcome introduction to the Gulf Coast. "I think it's beautiful," she said. "I love the sand – other beaches I've been to have always been rock beaches. The water (there) is a little clearer, but you don't get to play in the sand and build the castles that you get to down here." For Jennifer Ann Sheasley of Alaska, the trip was a chance to do something she couldn't do at home. "The beaches in Alaska are way too chilly to swim," she said. "So I spent most of the first hour and a half in the water, just enjoying that it was so warm." Sheasley didn't build a sandcastle, though – she's more used to playing in the snow. "I'm very good at snowmen," she joked. Makana Williams of Hawaii was right at home on the beach, but she still found Dauphin Island a new experience compared to the beaches of her home state. "I have to say the Alabama sand is really nice – it reminds me of sugar," she said. "The water here is so much warmer," she added. "It feels like a bath tub to me." Visiting the beach was a chance for host families to relax as well, and get to know the participants better. "We live in Spanish Fort and we unfortunately don't come to the beach a lot," said Betsy Reeves, a Distinguished Young Women host mother. "We look forward to this every year." After a fast-paced week, everyone seemed ready to take Sunday slow. "I'm planning on lounging," Williams said with a laugh. "I did my swimming in the pool."
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Medieval Mayhem rules at stunning strongholds for family fun MEDIEVAL MAYHEM RULES AT STUNNING STRONGHOLDS FOR FAMILY FUN If the school holidays seem to be dragging on and you’re looking for something new to keep the kids entertained, don’t delay in getting straight over to Stirling Castle! The stunning historic stronghold is about to host four days of fun and games specially designed to offer a great day out, and that ‘wicked, awesome’ appeal for kids (which the summer break may just be starting to lack). The Medieval Mayhem family event takes place from 11am to 3.00pm on Friday 30th and Saturday 31st July and Sunday 1st and Monday 2nd August. With a host of activities including junior jousting, sword-play, archery and crossbow shooting, as well as exciting story-telling with tales of legendary outlaws, heroic quests and thrilling battles, it promises to be a child’s dream come true – not to mention a bit of midsummer magic for parents tired of little voices bemoaning, “I’m bored; what can I do now?” As all of the Medieval Mayhem entertainment is included in the normal admission to Stirling Castle (priced adult - £9.00, concession - £7.20, child - £5.40, with free entry for Historic Scotland Members), the event offers great value as well as great fun – whilst of course also providing a perfect opportunity to explore the many fascinating highlights of one of Scotland’s most outstanding heritage attractions and important sites in our country’s history. And if you can’t make any of the dates at Stirling Castle, you don’t need to miss out on the Medieval Mayhem experience - there’s another chance to enjoy the event at Caerlaverock Castle on Saturday 28th and Sunday 29th August. With its moat, twin-towered gatehouse and imposing battlements, this dramatic-looking medieval stronghold near Dumfries is always a favourite with children, so Medieval Mayhem should prove popular there. The event is again on from 11am to 3pm and included in the cost of admission to Caerlaverock (adult - £5.20, concession- £4.20, child - £3.10, and free for Historic Scotland members). Stirling Castle is one of Scotland’s grandest castles due to its imposing position and impressive architecture. From the castle’s ramparts, visitors can take in views over two of Scotland’s most important battle sites – Stirling Bridge (1297) and Bannockburn (1314). The castle is at the head of Stirling’s historic old town, off M9 junction 9 or 10. Tel: 01786 450000. For details of opening times and further information on the castle, visit www.stirlingcastle.gov.uk. Major conservation work has been carried out at Stirling Castle over many years to preserve the attraction as a major national and international monument. An ambitious £12 million scheme, the Stirling Castle Palace Project, is currently underway to restore and refurbish the Royal Palace at Stirling and present the Royal Lodgings as they might have appeared in the heyday of Scotland’s Stewart court in the mid 16th century. An interpretive display on the court of James V will be created in the palace vaults and a Renaissance Gallery on the upper floors of the palace will house the original Stirling Heads, a rare group of intricately carved oak ceiling medallions depicting kings, queens, courtiers and mythological creatures. Costumed interpreters will bring to life the history of the 16th century to enrich visitors’ enjoyment. The refurbished Palace will open next Easter. Caerlaverock Castle is 8 miles south-east of Dumfries on the B725. Postcode DG1 4RU. Tel: 01387 770244. Caerlaverock’s impressive architectural features make it the epitome of a medieval stronghold. The castle’s turbulent history owes much to its proximity to England, which brought it into numerous border conflicts over the years. Caerlaverock was built by the Maxwell family, who enjoyed peaceful prosperity there until the invasion of Scotland by Edward I. The castle became a target for Edward’s wrath against Scots resistance and, in 1300, Lord Maxwell was forced to surrender to the might of the besieging army. Caerlaverock remained caught up in border disputes for many years afterward and peace did not come until James VI’s accession to the English throne in 1603. The truce collapsed with the 1640 Civil War and the final siege at Caerlaverock came when the Royalists surrendered to the Covenanters. Stirling Castle and Caerlaverock Castle are two of 345 outstanding heritage properties and sites in the care of Historic Scotland. Ranging from prehistoric dwellings to medieval castles, and from cathedrals to industrial buildings, these include some of the leading tourism attractions in the country. For further details of all Historic Scotland’s sites visit: www.historic-scotland.gov.uk/places Historic Scotland’s Mission is: to safeguard Scotland’s historic environment and to promote its understanding and enjoyment. Historic Scotland social media details www.twitter.com/welovehistory www.facebook.com - search for Make Your Own History www.youtube.com/historicscotlandtv www.flickr.com/groups/makeyourownhistory For further information, interviews and images Ellen Drummond Ferroni 0131 668 8685 / 07801 820757
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Huffpost Travel Get TravelNewsletters U.S. Destinations Int'l Destinations Destination Discovery Travel Next Gerald Eskenazi Sports and travel writer The Grandchildren Are Here. Now What? The trick in grandparenting these days is to be cool, as well as warm.It used to be so easy -- you visit your gramma or grampy, spend the day getting hugs and kisses and a good hot meal and then you go home.But now, they're not around the corner any more. Now, in the global world, they can be anywhere -- like Florida, for God's sake, or in our case London. And so visiting them -- or having them come to us -- requires considerable planning.I think we've figured it out. And I think this could be a template for others in our situation.Every summer, our London-based Jane flies to New York from London and spends some time with us before going to an Upstate camp for three weeks. Those days with us are precious, and we have tried to be creative. She explained to us after living in London for a few years, "I've seen most of the capitals of Western Europe, but I haven't even seen my own."Thus, we set out to make sure she enjoys herself and goes home thinking how fabulous her New York grandparents are. Two years ago, we took her to Chincoteague, the island of wild horses off Virginia's eastern shore. Now almost 12 years old, Jane has been enamored of animals, and horses especially, since cuddling stuffed animals as an infant.So Chincoteague was a slam-dunk. You can walk among the horses -- although you're admonished not to touch them (especially when a park ranger is looking). It was a transformative experience, reminding me of our African safari and of driving alongside lions in the bush.On the way back to NYC we stopped in Washington so we could see the capital of Jane's homeland, and snapped a great picture (take a look) of her contemplating the White House.Last year, we made it up to Boston for her annual Americanization fix. We stayed at the Taj Boston, giving Jane a taste of the good life as well as being close to things important to her: the Boston Children's Museum and the Aquarium. The Taj -- part of a worldwide chain of some of the most sophisticated hotels -- was remarkably child-friendly, and the staff made us feel as if grandparents with kids were as welcome as VIP business travelers.This year, we decided we were going to do all animals, all the time. Destination: Catskills in New York State.I have a thing for the Catskills. It conjures a time, a place, a memory that I never want erased. For many people, the Catskills evokes a certain type of hotel, or a summer spent in what we used to call "the mountains."But I also discovered a place called the Catskill Animal Sanctuary -- a world where dozens of "rescued" animals (including three blind horses) live in a loving, caring, hands-on environment. It's in Saugerties, about a two-hour drive from Midtown, and a bucolic world of difference.The Sanctuary has an early 19th-century house with a few rooms -- recently renovated and air-conditioned. It's under $200 with a vegan breakfast. If you spend the night, you're an instant VIP, get yourself a badge to hang around your neck, and can walk just about wherever you please. You don't need the tour, which is available only on weekends for the same-day visitor.Goats walked alongside us, and the pigs were friendly, even though they sniffled at us from behind a wooden gate. Roosters crowed constantly (I thought they did it only at daybreak), and the baby horse snuggled, although his momma sometimes gave us a sidelong glare. If you have the least little bit of feeling for animals -- farm animals, that is -- you had better come to Catskill Animal Sanctuary.But don't stop there. We didn't. We visited nearby Woodstock (where Yasger's farm isn't), and plucked at the faux guitars that line the sidewalks and that channel Hendrix. Stopped off at Joshua's, for its zucchini fritters, and chuckled at the 60-year-old bearded hippies riding bikes. Greenwich Village Rural.This was not my grandmother's Catskills -- she had a farm in Jeffersonville, with no plumbing or electricity and provided the greatest summers I ever had. Her place is not the place I remember. The great hotels aren't there any more. But in their place is a lively country-ish environment in which you can do just about anything, from riding to sitting on a porch swing, to having a goat cheese and beets salad to hiking.Indeed, the Catskills of 2012 probably offer more to do than most other areas adjacent to big cities I have visited.We spent only two days there, but it was one of those excursions where you feel as if you've been gone a week. You know what I mean?And then, a few days later, we went with Jane to the Animal Medical Center on East 62d Street. A friend's cat had a problem. The Center is eight stories high, one of the largest veterinary centers in America. A vet there told us about some of her recent "patients" -- that's what they're called. Their human owners are "clients." We heard about the bird with a hernia, the dog with the heart problem. The Central Park swans with, well, swan problems. There are CAT-scans and X-ray machines and a caring professional staff that shows there's more to medicine than just being smart.So now that summer's coming to a close, Jane will be going back to London. And we'll be thinking of what to do for her next experience. It reminds me of my old Brooklyn Dodgers' refrain: Wait Till Next Year! When the Grandchildren Visit of Jane looking at White House. Wild horses at Chincoteague. My wife, Rosalind, Jane, and geese at Catskill Animal Sanctuary. Jane and once-abused, now happy, horse. The cute one is Jane. Parenting Grandparenting "The Huffington Post" is a registered trademark of TheHuffingtonPost.com, Inc. All rights reserved. 2015© Part of HuffPost Travel Group
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Go to the Ends of the Earth in Engadin St. Moritz Following the end of the ice age, an almost 50 mile long valley opened up in the modern canton of Graubünden, at a height of 5,900 feet above sea level. This valley - the Engadin, is one of the highest inhabited valleys in Europe. For many centuries the valley was only accessible via mountain passes and goods were transported along narrow mule tracks on mule and horseback. Since the extension of the road system through these passes, the construction of the Rhaetian Railway and the Bernina Express, which reaches as far as Veltlin, Upper Engadin has been accessible to the entire world - and people from all over the world love this area, which delights visitors with its incomparable nature at all times of the year.St. MoritzSt. Moritz is not simply a holiday resort. It was the birthplace of winter tourism in the Alps (1864) and has hosted two Winter Olympics. Nevertheless, St. Moritz originally owes its importance to its mineral springs, to which people have been flocking for 3,000 years and which did much to establish the village early on as a summer health resort. These days, St. Moritz is the world’s top address among all the Alpine holiday destinations. Here, out-of-the-ordinary leisure and sporting activities, cultural highlights, a wide variety of shopping facilities and world-class events and restaurants are guaranteed.Muottas MuraglThe magnificent view from the hiking mountain Muottas Muragl has inspired poets and painters for centuries. In the summer, the Panoramic Path takes you across alpine hills and pastures into nearby valleys. Newly renovated, the hotel and restaurant Muottas Muragl (located at 8057 feet) offers regional culinary specialties and Italian cuisine as well as an extensive choice of wines from all over the world. The hotel and the viewing platform have been accessible by mountain train since 1907.The Swiss National ParkExtraordinary, but true: in the far eastern corner of Switzerland is a world that has not changed since the days of our great-grandparents. The Park incorporates 105 square miles of untouched nature, in whose natural development man has not intervened for nearly one hundred years. The Swiss National Park, founded in 1914, is the oldest in the Alps. Thanks to the strict conservation of nature - one is not allowed to leave the hiking paths - ibexes, chamois, marmots, northern hares, lizards and innumerable birds can be observed in the wild. The visitors’ center in Zernez houses permanent exhibitions about the National Park, changing exhibitions about natural history and a platform for nature conservancy organizations.Morteratsch GlacierThe walk from the Morteratsch train station to the end of the Morteratsch Glacier is a brief one, yet it covers thousands of years of the earth’s history. Immense white tongues seem to push forth from the ice and snow-covered Piz Palü and Piz Bernina towards Pontresina. These are the Pers and Morteratsch Glaciers. At the Isla Persa, the two glacier arms unite to form a glacier tongue, which ends after just over a mile. Only 120 years ago, the Morteratsch Glacier extended nearly 1.2 miles further into the valley. An educational trail informs hikers about the retreat of the glacier and the mysterious life that exists in the pre-glacier ridge. The Train is the Best Way to Travel in Switzerland Switzerland's 11 UNESCO World Heritage Sites Top 10 Things to do in Switzerland How to See Australia in a Week 8 UNESCO World Heritage Sites to Add to Your European Bucket List 4 Ways to Keep the Kids Busy in Atlanta TAGS TO EXPLORE Engadin Morteratsch Glacier Swiss National Park Muottas Muragl
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Tourism in Osmanabad District, Maharashtra - Informative & researched article on Tourism in Osmanabad District, Maharashtra States of India in ForumArticles Art & Culture|Entertainment|Health|Reference|Sports|Society|TravelForum | Free E-magazine | RSS Feeds States of India|Indian Cities|Beaches of India|Hill Stations in India|Forests in India Home > Travel > States of India > Maharashtra > Districts of Maharashtra > Osmanabad > Tourism in Osmanabad District Tourism in Osmanabad District, MaharashtraTourism in Osmanabad district offers visits to places of pilgrimage as well as those of historical interest. One of the Shkatipeeths, Tulja Bhawani of Tuljapur, is also situated here. Tourism in Osmanabad district is a packed trip. There are a number of places that the tourist can visit, both of religious significance as well as leisurely interest. For the pilgrims visiting the district, there are temples such as the Shri Tulja Bhavani Temple and the Saint Goroba Kaka Temple. Also located here is a rather holy site for the followers of Jainism, the Shri Digambar Jain Sidhkshetra Kuntalgiri. This is a site said to have been made holy by the brothers Kulbhushan and Deshbhushan, who had offered tapasya here for the transformation of the soul. Among other attractions, the district offers the Dharashiv Caves, the Naldurg Fort and the Paranda Fort. All these places of tourist interest in Osmanabad district are discussed below. Pilgrimage Tourism in Osmanabad District Saint Goroba Kaka Temple Saint Goroba was born in Ter(Dhoki) in the year 1267. Hence this village is popular and known as 'Goroba Ter'. The temple of Saint Goroba is one of the major attractions for the tourists and pilgrims visiting Osmanabad district. The temple was built in the 13th century after the death of Saint Goroba in 1317. This temple is square-shaped and constructed fully with stone. It is one of the best architectural models. There is also a Sabha Mandao here to perform religious and cultural activities. Shri Digambar Jain Sidhkshetra Kuntalgiri Kuntalgiri is one of the holy places of the Digambar Jain Sidhakshetras of south India. It is the land of Kulbhushan and Deshbhushan saints. During the period of twentieth Tirthankara Munisuvratnath, two brothers, Kulbhushan and Deshbhushan, had offered sustained prayer (Tapashcharya) for the transformation of the soul towards the almighty and thus made this place holy. Shri Tulja Bhavani Temple The second among the Shaktipeeths in India is the Tulja Bhavani of Tuljapur. It was the family deity of the Bhosale kings. Chatrapati Shivaji always visited the temple to seek her blessings. It is believed that the Goddess gifted him a sword - 'the Bhawani sword' - for success in his expeditions. The history of the temple has been mentioned in the Skanda Puran. The temple is located on the hill of the Balaghat. The same place is today known as Tuljapur. The Idol of the Shree Tulja Bhavani mata is a swayambu idol. The goddess has eight hands and is seen sitting on a throne. There are two main entrances to get into the temple. One is called the Raja Shahaji Mahadwar, and the other is the Rajmata Jijavu main gate. Among the Annual programs celebrated in the temple are: Chaitra Purnima Utsav: Every year on the day of 'Purnima' in the month of 'Chaitra' this Utsav is held. In the same month a Mela is held at Shikhar-Shingnapur in the honour of Shambu Mahadev. Shakambhari Navaratri utsav:- Every year in the month of 'Paush' this utsav is held in the honour of the Shakambhari Devi of Badami, Karnataka. Sharadiya Navaratri Utsav:- This utsav is held every year in the month of Ashwin. Leisure Tourism in Osmanabad District Dharashiv Caves The Dharashiv caves are situated 8 Kms away from Osmanabad city in Balaghat mountains. There are a total of 7 caves in the Balaghat Mountain range. The first cave is without any statue with a small open space .The second cave consists of a statue with artistic work on the right side of the statue. The art work is of the Gandharva era. The fourth cave is an open space without any statue inside. The statue in the sixth cave is damaged while the seventh cave has no statue. That this is an ancient place is shown by the caves excavated in the hill at a distance of about eight miles. These caves were originally Buddhist, but were later converted into monuments of the Jain religion and fresh caves were also excavated nearby. There are some more Buddhist caves that have been excavated in the hills, about 8 miles from Dharashiva. The earliest of them probably belongs to the 7th century AD. Cave No. II is modelled on the plan of the Vakataka cave at Ajanta caves. It has a central hall measuring 80 feet by 80 feet, with 14 cells for the residence of the Bhiksus and garbhagriha with a colossal image of Lord Buddha in Padmasana. From the hoods of a serpent spread over its head, it is supposed to be the image of the Jaina Tirthankara Parasvanatha, but the figures of deer with a dharmacakra between them on the pedestal indicates that it is that of Gautama Buddha. As per the historical survey of caves they were built in the 5th century B.C. Naldurg Naldurg, which was formerly a district headquarters, is situated about 50 Kms. south-east of Osmanabad. The fort has enclosed a surface of a knoll or plantain of basalt rock which juts out into the valley of the small Bori River. Along the rest of the cliff on three sides ran fortifications. The bastions are firmly built and are large enough to carry heavy guns. The entire circumference is about a mile and a half. The interior is covered with ruined walls and a vide road running up to the centre. The fort has many bastions amongst which are Upli Buruj, which is the high point in the fort , Paranda Buruj , Nagar Buruj, Sangam Buruj, Sangram Buruj etc. Inside the fort there are remains of the walls and some of the buildings such a Barood kotha, Baradari, Ambarkhana, Rangaan mahal, Jali etc. Though the buildings are in ruins the remains give a impression that there night have been at one time rather spacious buildings. The hathi Darwaza and the Hurmukh darwaza are the main gates of the fort. The most interesting building which connects the fort and the Ranmandala is the dam constructed across the Bori River. The fort is said to have been originally built by a Hindu Raja who was a vassal of the Chalukyas of Kalyani. It was later included in the dominions of the Bahamani dynasty and was subsequently taken over by the Adil shahi dynasty of Bijapur , from whom it passed into the hands of the Mughal dynasty in 1686 AD. Paranda Fort Paranda is situated about 80 Kms. from the district headquarters. The fort is one of many forts constructed by the Bahamani kings and is a fine specimen of military architecture and engineering. The gates are defended by traversals, redoubts and the ramparts. Around the fort there is a moat, which was always kept filled with water. The fort can be reached by only one passage. Inside the fort here are 26 bastions amongst which the note-worthy ones are "Mahakal Buruj" "Buruj Mahakal," Buland Buruj," Chanchal Buruj," and "Shah Mathkal." On some of the bastions there are old guns, the most important of which are the "Malike Maiden", and "Azda Paikar". The great bronze gun viz. the Malika Maiden now at Bijapur, is side to have been originally mounted here. At present inside the fort there are the mosque, Narsimaha Mandir, remains of the buildings like baradari, taikhana. Zanana makan etc. The remains of the walls and the dilapidated remains give an impression that at one time these might have been spacious and exquisite constructions. These are the various places of tourism located in the district of Osmanabad. (Last Updated on : 20/10/2014) E-mail this Article | Post a Comment More Articles in Osmanabad (3) • Geography of Osmanabad Di... • Administration of Osmanab... • Tourism in Osmanabad Dist... Recently Updated Articles in States of India •ChambaChamba is a small town situated in the state of Uttarakhand, and perfectly placed at the junction of roads leading from Rishikesh, Mussoorie, Tehri Dam Lake and New Tehri. •Red Hills LakeRed Hills Lake located in Tamil Nadu is a rain fed reservoir. The lake also known as Puzhal Lake has a full capacity of 3,300 million ft³. •Maenam HillMaenam Hill located near to Ravangla town in Sikkim is a famous tourist spot. One can enjoy the breathtaking view of the Kanchenjunga Peak and waterfalls. •Religion of OdishaReligion of Odisha is varied. There is seen the presence of diverse religious forces in the state. Forum Forum on States of IndiaFree E-magazineSubscribe to Free E-Magazine on Travel Copyright © 2008 Jupiter Infomedia Ltd. All rights reserved including the right to reproduce the contents in whole or in part in any form or medium without the express written permission of Jupiter Infomedia Ltd.
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LocalLuxe City Guides >Omaha City Guide Omaha Travel Guide Omaha Attractions Omaha Zoo In carrying out its mission of conservation, research, education and recreation, the Omaha Zoo has created Lied Jungle, the world's largest indoor rainforest. Visitors can also explore the... Strategic Air and Space Museum The Strategic Air and Space Museum, regarded as the nation's foremost facility of its kind, showcases WWII and Cold War era aircraft and artefacts to illustrate the historical role of strategic... Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts The Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, just south of the Old Market district, was founded on the principle that exceptional talent deserves to be supported. Artists from around the world apply to... The famous Spencer Tracey film, for which he won an Academy Award, was based on the true story of Father Flanagan and his creation of a haven for abused and abandoned boys. Today, the program has... Omaha Children's Museum This fun-filled and award-winning interactive museum is designed as a learning and exploration space for young people. The various exhibits and activities are exciting and engaging, with... The Amazing Pizza Machine This family entertainment centre combines games, rides, activities and an all-you-can-eat buffet under one enormous roof. The entrance fee is the price of the buffet, while individual games Travel guide by (c) Globe Media Ltd. By its very nature much of the information in this travel guide is subject to change at short notice and travellers are urged to verify information on which they're relying with the relevant authorities. We cannot accept any responsibility for any loss or inconvenience to any person as a result of information contained above.
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Red Rock really does rock. Hike. Helicopter. Or high-performance vehicle. It doesn't matter how you get there, just get there. Red Rock Canyon is one of the Valley's most popular destinations. And despite its exotic good looks (as seen in movies and on numerous TV commercials), Red Rock is about 30 minutes from the Strip. more...Officially known as Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area, this 520-acre spread is managed by the Bureau of Land Management and protected as a National Conservation Area. It's visited by more than a million travelers each yearSeemingly more a mountain range than a canyon, the area is dominated by spectacular layered walls of colorful hard rock and sandstone. Up to 3,000 feet high, it's a popular hiking and rock-climbing destination. But its jaw-dropping beauty and fiery red highlights surely make the range one of the most photographed attractions in the Southwest.A 13-mile loop road provides vehicle access to trailheads and viewing spots. And a visitor center is located at the start of the loop road. Most Red Rock tours take you around the scenic loop, with frequent stops for photographs. You'll see red and tan sandstone, colorful carbonate rock and, if you're a bit more adventurous, Indian pictographs, too. Nearby Spring Mountain Ranch State Park, once owned by legendary billionaire and Las Vegas resident Howard Hughes, has stunning views of the marvelous Wilson Cliffs. Green and cool, this working ranch is the perfect spot for a picnic lunch. Red Rock Las Vegas tours typically provide transportation right from your hotel, making it the perfect half-day getaway. Keyword
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Jerusalem Travel Blog Underground in Jerusalem Things to Do — By Judy Lash Balint on February 23, 2012 at 11:30 pm Jerusalem has been a continuously inhabited city for thousands of years, fought over and ruled by many empires throughout history, so it stands to reason that there would be many layers to the city. Excavations in the Old City: Photo: Judy Lash Balint There are a few places in and around the Old City where visitors can go underground to get a glimpse of what life was like in ancient times. The Western Wall Tunnel Tour Book ahead for this 90-minute walk that will take you down many levels below the piece of the Western Wall, the last remnant of the Temple, that is visible today. Largest stone in western Wall; Photo: Bibleplaces.com As you descend into the tunnel that starts at the northern side of the Western Wall plaza, the incredible feat of engineering started by King Herod back in 37 BCE will unveil itself before your eyes. Take a good look at the massive stones that make up the lower levels of the Temple mount. Your guide will take you on a walk along the entire length of the western wall, down about 14 levels of stones from what is visible above ground today. Along the way, you’ll encounter discoveries from several periods of ancient history, including a Hasmonean-era aqueduct and Roman-era stones. Emerge into the Via Dolorosa and explore Jerusalem of 2012 at ground level. The Burnt House Burnt House, Jerusalem. Not too far away from the tunnels, in the Jewish Quarter, is the Burnt House–the remains of a Second Temple-era home belonging to the Katros family–a well-to-do family whose members served as High Priests in the Temple. According to archeologists, the house was burned at the time when the Romans destroyed the Temple in 70 A.D. Today, visitors walk down from street level to the remains of the house, which has been covered by the lively Jewish Quarter. There’s an interesting 20-minute holograph presentation in English that will fill you in on the events that led up to the pillage of Jerusalem. Afterwards, be sure to look around the rooms to see the restored remains that were found there when the Jewish Quarter was excavated in the 1970s. Domonique Orozco says: May 3, 2012 at 9:53 am When I originally commented I clicked the -Notify me when new surveys are added- checkbox and now every time a comment is added I get four emails sticking with the same comment. Possibly there is by any indicates you’re able to get rid of me from that service? Thanks! Jerusalem's Oldest, Most Unusual Synagogue Best Places to Take In Art in Jerusalem
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Register Books Update Books Disney Dreaming Facts & Overviews Deals & Budgeting Best Times to Visit Value Resorts Moderate Resorts Deluxe Resorts DVC Resorts Off Property Character Meals Dinner Shows More Dining All About Cruising Cruise Clues Coming Editions Forum Guides My Podcasts PassPorter's Club Get a Pass FAQ & Agreement My E-Worksheets guidebooks | podcasts | boards | worksheets | PassPorter'sArticle ToolsPrint ArticleDownload PDFChicago: The Windy Cityby Cheryl Pendry, PassPorter Featured ColumnistLast modified 02/05/2009 PassPorter.com > Articles > U.S. Travel > General Travel There are some places in the world that everyone always seems to agree are well worth visiting. New York City, which we discussed in the January 2, 2009 issue of PassPorter News is one and Chicago seems to be another. Having visited a lot of America's great cities, including New York, Washington DC, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Boston, it seemed that the time was right to move away from the western or eastern seaboard of the States and finally head inland to Chicago. However, even that statement feels like a contradiction, for while Chicago may be located in the middle of the States, we felt it was just as much of a coastal city as many of the others we'd already visited.Located on the shores of Lake Michigan, we knew that this was one of the Great Lakes, but until you see the sheer size and scale of the lakes, you can't appreciate just how great they are. It stretches into the horizon, just like any ocean or sea, and on more than one occasion, we made the mistake of saying to locals that we were on the seaside. What adds to that feeling is the fact that Chicago is home to 29 miles of public lakefront shoreline, much of it made up of beaches. That, and the many swimming pools we saw as we flew into the city, highlight just how warm Chicago can get during the summer months. And there's another contradiction, as the city can also literally freeze in the winter. We deliberately planned our trip for mid-October and we were fortunate enough to still have warm enough temperatures that we could comfortably walk around, although we had to be bundled up against the infamous wind that Chicago is so well known for. It certainly lives up to its name of the Windy City, with me almost taking off on one occasion, so strong was the wind. There's certainly a lot to see in Chicago and something for everyone. One of the main draws for me was the architecture and I knew, from photos I'd already seen of the city before our visit, that I wasn't going to be disappointed. The city has done a superb job of preserving its heritage, although of course much of that history was sadly wiped out by the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, which burned for 36 hours. In that time, it destroyed most of the buildings in the downtown area, but from that disaster, Chicago was reborn, with some superb additions to the skyline since then. As we toured the city, it became clear that building in Chicago seems to go in spurts, with huge growth, followed by periods of stability and then more growth. For example, the 1920s saw some of the city's most prominent landmarks arrive, such as the Wrigley Building, two massive towers connected by three arcades, and the Tribune Tower, which was built to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Chicago Tribune. The building you see today was the winning design of an international competition and is peppered with stones from landmark buildings around the world, including the White House, Independence Hall in Philadelphia, the House of Commons in London, the Berlin Wall and the Notre Dame cathedral in Paris. One Big Thank YouAll of the work is worth it when they realize their dreams are coming true! - photo by kennewhitsonPassPorter's Walt Disney World 2015 GuidebookAvailable for 15%-35% Off!Purchase includes a free Online Edition! Both buildings are located along what's called the Magnificent Mile, to the north of the Chicago River. It's Chicago's most fashionable street and, if you want to shop, it's the place to head for. It's also the place that you'll find one of the few buildings that escaped the Great Fire, the Water Tower and Pumping Station and, just a few steps away, one of the newer additions to the skyline. The John Hancock Center opened in 1969, boasting 100 floors, with an observation deck on the 94th. It offers superb views of the city, including the city's other famous skyscraper, the Sears Tower. That arrived on the skyline just five years later and ten storeys higher and, for many years, was the tallest building in the world. We became aware during our stay in Chicago that the locals are very proud of the records that their city holds and that's apparent when you look at the history of the Sears Tower. We learned that it's twice been added to in an attempt to retain its title of the world's tallest building and plans are in place to build a new spire in the city, which will be over 2,000 feet tall to ensure that title returns to Chicago. Engineering feats are nothing new to this city. Even the Chicago River that flows through the middle of the city is an engineering feat in its own right. It's the only river in the world that flows backwards, away from Lake Michigan and into the 28 mile Sanitary and Ship Canal, constructed after a devastating outbreak of cholera and typhoid in the 19th century. The river is home to architectural cruises, giving you a different perspective of the city and allowing you to learn a lot about the history of Chicago. It was an excellent way to spend an hour and it certainly brought home to me how many bridges there are over the Chicago River. In total, there are 52 that are movable, more than any other city in the world. It certainly makes getting around on foot easy enough, although there is a lot of walking involved in seeing the city. Another way to get around the city is the "El," or "elevated line," Chicago's subway system. We were told by locals that every visitor should experience a ride on it while in the city and it's certainly an experience to hear these trains clattering through the streets overhead, although a ride on them proved to be just like any other subway journey. Chicago is certainly a city of contradictions. It feels like a coastal city, although it's hundreds of miles away from the coast; it's got contrasting architecture, built throughout the years and contrasting temperatures that fluctuate widely throughout the year. Best of all, although it's one of America's biggest cities, it also has an intimate feel to it and a genuinely friendly community. I can't see any visitor to this beautiful city leaving disappointed. Talking with Princess AuroraHere I am with Princess Aurora when she "invited" us to come back as a family - photo by kennewhitsonAbout the Author: Cheryl and husband Mark live in England and love to travel, particularly to Disney, and they have made numerous visits to destinations across America and Europe. They recently completed their tour of every Disney theme park around the world, which culminated in their visit to Japan, including the Tokyo Disney Resort. Click here to view more of Cheryl's articles! Recent U.S. Travel Articles:Sharks Underwater Grill - A SeaWorld Dining Review last updated 10-22-2015Take a Walk on The Wild Side at Busch Gardens Tampa (Part 4) - An Orlando-Area Attraction Review last updated 10-15-2015Take a Walk on The Wild Side at Busch Gardens Tampa (Part 3) - An Orlando-Area Attraction Review last updated 10-08-2015Take a Walk on The Wild Side at Busch Gardens Tampa (Part 2) - An Orlando-Area Attraction Review last updated 10-01-2015Take a Walk on The Wild Side at Busch Gardens Tampa - An Orlando-Area Attraction Review last updated 09-17-2015More Related Links:Serendipity 3 in New York City - A Dining Review last updated 12/29/2008Hong Kong Disneyland Celebrates - A New Year In A New Disney Park last updated 12/18/2008Valencia, Spain - Travel Tips last updated 11/27/2008Bellagio of Las Vegas - Simply Bellissimo! last updated 1/08/2009Hever Castle - Kent, England last updated 1/15/2009 Reader Comments: So what do you think? Click here to share your comments, feedback, and experiences on this article and topic! (Note: You must be a member of our PassPorter Message Board Community to leave comments. Join today for free!)Updated 02/05/2009 - Article #55 Read additional articles from PassPorter.com Subscribe to our free e-mail newsletter, PassPorter News, published for more than 58,000 opt-in subscribers worldwide. As an added bonus for subscribing, you will receive a 20% discount coupon for the PassPorter Store -- no catch! E-mail Format: -Text/Don't Know -HTML We respect your privacy and never sell or rent our subscriber list. Subscribing will not result in more spam! We guarantee it. Copyright 1999-2015 by PassPorter Travel Press, an imprint of MediaMarx, Inc. Learn More With Our Award-Winning Guidebooks RSS General
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E-Mail to a Friend x Home > Press Room > Story Ideas > African American Tours Story Idea Your browser does not support inline frames or is currently configured not to display inline frames. Please visit us on http://www.facebook.com African American ToursThe rich and vibrant story of Virginia cannot be told fully without knowledge of the African-American experience. The lives of both ordinary men and women - in both slavery and in freedom - and the lives of such notables as Maggie Walker, Booker T. Washington, John Mercer Langston, Anne Spencer, Robert R. Moton, Vernon and Barbara Johns and others are an important part of the fabric of Virginia history. All across Virginia are sites and sights that celebrate these people and the events of their lives. In the capital city of Richmond alone are at least a dozen places to stand amid the glories of the past. Richmond sites include the Maggie L. Walker National Historic Site, the Black History Museum and Cultural Center of Virginia and the John Marshall House. The Maggie Walker home has been restored to its 1930s appearance, and honors the first woman in the United States to charter and serve as president of a bank. The John Marshall House, built in 1790, was the home, for 45 years, of the former U.S. Supreme Court Justice who sought to end slavery. Virginia State University, chartered in 1882 as the nation's first state-supported college for African Americans, is today home to more than 5,000 students. And Virginia Union University, founded in 1865, is among the nation's oldest historically black universities. It is located in the Historic Jackson Ward, a 40-block neighborhood known, from the ‘20s through the ‘60s, as the “Harlem of the South.” The Hampton Roads area is similarly rich in African American heritage sites, highlighted perhaps by the Attucks Theatre in Norfolk, an African American entertainment and performance center that re-opened in 2004 with all the charm and character that earned it the name “The Apollo of the South.” Hampton University's Emancipation Oak was the site of the first Southern reading of President Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, an act which accelerated the demand for African-American education. Mary Peake, daughter of a freed woman, conducted the first lessons taught under the oak..The region is also home to a variety of churches and events with strong ties to the African American community and experience. There are many more names that are part of the glory of Virginia's past. Booker T. Washington, born into slavery on a tobacco farm in 1856, became one of the nation's leading educators and writers. The Booker T. Washington National Monument is in Franklin County along Rte. 40. At Colonial National Historical Park near Jamestown and Yorktown, visit the site of the arrival of the first Africans, in 1619, in what would become the United States. Yorktown was an important port of entry for enslaved Africans bound for Williamsburg. And during the 1781 seige of Yorktown, African Americans were a part of both sides, building fortifications for the British and serving under arms in General George Washington's army. Petersburg, south of Richmond, is home to Petersburg National Battlefield, which commemorates not only the longest seige in American history, but also the city that was considered to have the largest number of free African Americans when the Civil War began. And during the war, the greatest concentration of U.S. Colored Troops (USCT) was at Petersburg. That force ranged between 9,000 and 16,000 men. In the Petersburg Campaign, USCTs partipated in six major engagements and earned 15 of the 16 total Medals of Honor awarded to African Americans during the Civil War. Northern Virginia is home to a treasure trove of African American sites. After the Civil War, Oatlands, in Leesburg, became a refuge for relatives, friends and emancipated slaves left homeless. The Loudoun Museum's exhibits include displays on the Liberian Movement, the Underground Railroad and John W. Jones. In Alexandria, stop at the Ramsay House Visitors Center to pick up a copy “A Remarkable and Courageous Journey: A Guide to Alexandria's African American History.” Next, visit the Alexandria African American Heritage Park, dedicated to Alexandria's African Americans and their contribution to the growth of the city. These are but a few of the rich and varied sites all across Virginia. For a directory of many more, and for listings of African American festivals, go to www.virginia.org and click on the African American button under the History & Heritage header. See African American Itineraries here. Multi-Day Trips Single Day Trips This is the official press room for the Virginia Tourism Corporation. This site is designed to help journalists develop news stories about travel in Virginia. For general travel information and trip planning resources please visit www.Virginia.org Media Contacts Virginia Media Caroline Logan Director of Corporate Communications [email protected] National Media Richard Lewis National Media Relations Director [email protected] Danielle Emerson National Media Relations Manager [email protected] Andrew Cothern Public Relations and Communications Coordinator [email protected] Connect with Virginia Tourism PR Travels In Virginia Blog RSS Feed Media Selections You have 0 image(s) and 0 video(s) in your media Tourism $$ in Virginia Press Room Contact Us Comments About Virginia About Group Planners Sports Marketers Meetings Professionals Travel Industry Support Add/Update Your Listings Privacy Policy Survey Live Assistance Virginia Tourism Corporation 901 E. Byrd St. Richmond, VA 23219 (804) 545-5500
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Show Your Team Pride Disney World’s newest attraction is…a video game? By John Gaudiosi WALT DISNEY WORLD RESORT — There's a brand new attraction at the Magic Kingdom. But it's not a ride. 'Sorcerers of the Magic Kingdom' is a new card-based role-playing game designed by one of the creators of several beloved LucasArts adventure games, including Sam & Max Hit the Road, Day of the Tentacle, Full Throttle and The Curse of Monkey Island. But rather than sitting in a dark room and interacting with a screen, this game is spread throughout Orlando's Disney World theme park with over 20 hidden areas. It's a multiplayer affair that encourages replay through a level up system similar to what you might find in games like World of WarCraft. Guests become apprentice sorcerers and embark on a challenge to stop animated villains like Hades (voiced by James Woods), Ursula (Pat Carroll), Dr. Facilier (Keith David) and Cruella de Vil from stealing one of the four shattered pieces of Merlin's powerful crystal ball. "When guests enter the Magic Kingdom they can come to one of our two sign-up locations," said Jonathan Ackley, Project Producer & Creative Director at Walt Disney Imagineering. "One is on Main Street at the firehouse, where Merlin is organizing a Citizens Brigade to protect the Magic Kingdom, and one is recruiting for General Merlin's army in Liberty Square." View gallery.A sample card from 'Sorcerers of the Magic Kingdom'It's at these locations that players are given a Sorcerer's key and a pack of five spell cards. Merlin's assistants also hand players a map that details the location of each of the mystic portals scattered throughout the theme park. Each hidden portal in Adventureland, Fantasyland, Frontierland, Liberty Square, and Main Street, U.S.A. has a round marker on the ground for players to stand on, as well as a chest or some type of object for the key to unlock. Find the right spot, and a video wall -- sometimes hidden inside store fronts -- comes alive and the gameplay begins. "When the portal opens a Disney villain will appear and players -- up to six at a time -- will engage in a Sorcerers' duel," explained Ackley. "Players can pick the spell they think would be best or funniest to defeat the villain and then hold it out and show it to the villain. Then it becomes a turn-based game of spell casting until the loser runs out of magic and the combat is over." Four years in the making, this real-life RPG has been designed to keep players moving through the park, including the ability to send players to different locations based on how busy things are. The game is also attracting repeat players. "We are seeing similar behaviors to those that you see with online games," said Ackley. "We're seeing repeat players, people who've beaten the game once, twice, five times, even seven times. That's not something, honestly, that I ever predicted." Part of the replay value comes in the form of the 70 collectible spell cards, each with a popular Disney character on the front. Guests collect and trade these cards, which are kept in folders. Up to six spells can be cast at any portal and mixing up cards gets different results. "What we're finding is that games are sticky," said Ackley. "If people like it, they're going to come back, play it again, and they're going to want to level up and try something new and see what their new cards open up in this game." Ackley and his team worked with Disney animators to create over 95 minutes of original animation for the new attraction. Most of the original Hollywood actors reprise their roles for this game, which features heroes, sidekicks and the aforementioned villains. The influx of Facebook casual games, including the first-ever Disney theme park tie-in game 'Disney Animal Kingdom Explorers', has opened up a whole new audience for Imagineers to tap into with video games. "The prevalence of casual games and the way that they're growing the gaming market really makes people look at games as not just for kids anymore," said Ackley. "There's a cultural shift about games and we see that with so many grandparents playing the game, sometimes without their grandkids or kids." Perhaps the best thing about the game? No lines. And that's something that any theme park patron will appreciate. For game news, free codes and more, Like us on Facebook, follow @yahoogames on Twitter and check us out on Pinterest! Featured Trailers Play Fallout 4 - Launch Trailer 02:50 Play Star Wars Battlefront - Launch Trailer 02:06 Play Tekken 7 - Announcement Trailer 02:21 Play Minecraft: Story Mode - Launch Trailer 02:20 Play Star Citizen Squadron 42 - Admiral Bishop Speech 04:12 Play Battleborn: Rendain Trailer 02:26 Copyright 2012 Unplugged
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Swansea Pictorial History Home | More Famous People | Forums | Contact Us Princess Lillian - Swansea's own Cinderella story Hover over any thumbnail to display the main picture. Lillian Davies was born on August 30th, 1915 in a tiny mid-terrace house in Garden Street, in the vicinity of what is now the Quadrant Shopping Centre. Her parents were William John Davies and his wife, Gladys. William was a stall holder in Swansea Market, and served as a Private in the Swansea Battalion during World War I. In her younger days, Lillian worked in the market for her father, and at the Baths Laundry near the Patti Pavilion. Finally, she joined up with three friends and moved to London to seek a new life. Here they originally had jobs such as maids and factory workers. However, with Lillian being a very glamourous young woman, looking as she did like Marlene Dietriech, and a lover of designer outfits, she eventually took up as a dancer and singer. She began to move amongst the glitterati, moving in the right circles and attending star-studded parties. Within a year of being in London, she was living the high life in a flat in Bayswater. Lillian's big break came when she was spotted by a fashion agent, and recruited as a potential top model. It was during this period that she dropped the second 'l' from her name. She met and married a Scottish actor called Ian Craig, who was also quite affluent. However, war came and he went off to fight in 1942. They split up in 1943. Lilian met Prince Bertil, Duke of Holland and Prince of Sweden, at a cocktail party in honour of her birthday, A romance sprung up between the Royal Prince and the Welsh commoner. He was tall and dark, and the assistant Naval Attache at the Swedish Embassy in London. After the war, the now-divorced Lilian lived in the South of France with Bertil, and later moved to Sweden, where they kept their romance discreet. However, dynastic and political factors prevented their marriage. Lilian was in a similar position to Mrs Simpson, and had she insisted on marriage as a commoner and divorcee, it could have sparked a Swedish constitutional crisis. In 1947, Bertil's brother, King Gustav Adolf, was killed in an air crash. Bertil took over the title of Prince Regent until his nephew, only a year old at the time of his father's death, was able to ascend to the throne. In 1976, the nephew was crowned King Cal XVI Gustav, and since he had married a commoner himself, he gave Bertil and Lilian permission to wed, 33 years after they had met in London. They were married on December 7th, 1976, at a low-key ceremony at the Palace church at Drottinghilm Palace. Both the King and Queen attended. Lilian was now 61, and Bertil was 65. At her wedding, the title of "Her Royal Highness, Princess Lilian, Duchess of Hallam" was bestowed upon her. The period that Bertil held the duties of the Crown were very difficult for Lilian. On the surface, she seemed to be living an exotic lifestyle. There were upmarket residences in London and Stockholm, and a house on the Riviera where Lilian would retreat when Bertil went about his Royal duties. He did take her with him on occasions, but she would stay in the background as much as possible. Although some people knew about her, officially she was a secret. Prince Bertil was a very well liked and respected man, and the press respected his wish for privacy right up to his death in 1997. As a widow, Lilian has continued Bertil's official duties, including his patronage of Sports and Motor Sports, and over the years she has played an important role in adding more SOS children's villages in Sweden - an organisation providing orphans with shelter and accommodation. At the age of 94, she is now the oldest living member of the Swedish Royal Family. She has two stepsisters still living in Swansea. (C) Advanced Computer Services 2010
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The BYGONE BUREAU The Gulf: Windows on the World Darryl Campbell In the final edition of The Gulf, Darryl Campbell asks, “Where do we go from here?” Kuwait is not exactly a tourism hotspot. As one taxi driver told me, everyone in the country is there to work, not to enjoy him- or herself. After all, those with deep pockets and a taste for a country with a male to female ratio slightly lower than 2:1 tend toward Bahrain, Qatar, or the UAE, Kuwait’s more glamorous neighbors. With few other sightseeing options, sooner or later every tourist ends up visiting the country’s only truly iconic structures, the Kuwait Towers. The main tower is Kuwait’s answer to the Space Needle: its upper sphere is a restaurant, and its lower sphere is a rotating viewing platform. From it, you can see the entire city, and on an exceptionally clear day, I’m told you can see all the way across the Persian Gulf. But even more interesting than the view (which is marred by the dust-coated glass anyway) is the decor. The entire lower level commemorates the 1990-91 Iraqi Invasion of Kuwait. Pictures of the main tower, wrecked by shell and RPG fire, cover the walls, with slightly mistranslated—but very antagonistic—captions such as “Tanks and light missiles fired the towers because they want it to destroy Kuwait symbol” and “The barbaric destruction of Horizon Restaurant by the Iraqi invaders in 1990″ underneath. If landmarks really do represent a nation’s character, then the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait continues to define the country. Apart from the gallery inside the Kuwait Towers, two other places serve as memorials to the invasion and the First Gulf War. Downtown is the tallest building in the country, the “Liberation Tower,” which is featured on the five dinar note (the Kuwait Towers are on the one dinar note). Two hours’ drive north of the city is the “Highway of Death,” a major road that runs between Kuwait City and Basra, which still features the wreckage of thousands of Iraqi military vehicles. It’s no coincidence, however, that the only people who regularly visit these places are tourists. The intervening twenty years have all but erased any similarity between the Kuwait of the early ’90s and the Kuwait of today. Iraq is no longer a looming regional threat but a failed state, struggling toward peace and stability. Americans are welcomed as liberators no more; instead, they are advised by the U.S. State Department to keep their heads down and avoid drawing attention to themselves. Some commentators and agitators focus on Iran and Palestine, and criticize the United States and Israel; others complain about the illiberal tendencies of the government. The government publicly touts the country’s economic development and diversification plans, and quietly deals with extremist militants. That is, anyone who pays attention to Middle Eastern politics can understand the story, because it seems to be playing out in Kuwait just like it does in almost every other Gulf state. Except that satellite news agencies and international newspapers ignore most of what’s happening on the ground. The laborers who spend their shifts welding steel re-bar without eye protection and the taxi drivers who shuttle tourists around for sixteen hours a day barely get noticed. Many of these people, overwhelmingly poor immigrants, live in tenements or shabby apartment buildings and send the majority of their paychecks back home to families that they see a few times a year. But they get mentioned only when they break the law, for example in the regional newspapers’ crime blotters, which identify criminals based on their nationality. Even though it might be tempting to imagine the entire Middle East as a powder keg ready to burst into chants of “Death to America” at a moment’s notice, it’s hard to imagine that the currents of foreign affairs dominate the lives of many Kuwaitis. In other words, Kuwait does not fall into neat little categories. It’s not defined by the aftermath of the Gulf War, nor is it bursting with anti-American sentiment. The country is staking its economic future on tourism and finance, like Dubai, as much as on oil, its traditional source of wealth. It’s also trying to balance the preservation of its cultural heritage while embracing the generic, but distinctly Westernized, trappings of globalization. In order to do that, it relies on a largely invisible class of foreigners to build, drive, greet, serve, and wait. As the tagline to this series says, tensions in the Persian Gulf abound, whether ideological, economic, racial, or cultural—exactly what someone might expect in a nation of immigrants. And if these issues sound familiar, they should. At their core, Kuwait’s problems are simply a regional variant of the exact same ones facing every country and every individual: at what cost, globalism and growth? Since 1945, we’ve thought about our world mostly in economic terms (now more than ever, thanks to the global recession), but that doesn’t mean that economic concerns have completely displaced political, cultural, or social ones; economic self-interest is hardly personal self-fulfillment. We’ve all seen in the past six months that unchecked economic self-interest and indefinite economic growth are not necessarily public goods. It looks like the idea of the benign invisible hand, the belief that material progress automatically equals human progress, is no more credible than all the other ideologies that have come crashing down since I’ve been alive (I’ll be 24 in July), from Marxism-Leninism to the Bush Doctrine. If we have indeed lost our faith in modernist political and economic philosophies, where do we go from here, and how do we make sense of the world? The answer, I hope, isn’t the substitution of one version of political tribalism for another, whereby we pit Western liberalism against “Islamofascism” or the “Axis of Evil” instead of Western democracy against communism, for example. Nor is it the blind embrace of multiculturalism and political correctness, which is its own form of anti-rationalism and anti-intellectualism. But every time we conflate newsworthy events (which invariably tend toward the sensational and radical) with a place’s day-to-day existence, and every time a commentator or blogger tries to pass an ideology off as a reality-based worldview, we back away from real prosperity, real fulfillment, and—ironically—real security. It seems to me that the best protection against this intellectual and ideological regression is some combination of simple curiosity and informed, thoughtful reflection. Incidentally, it’s easier to come by this sort of thing when you’re in an unfamiliar place, among unfamiliar people. Four years ago, I thought of the Middle East as a dangerous, hostile place full of die-hard sectarians and political extremists. Even now, I know that they’re out there. But during my time in the region, I’ve found so many things that annoyed, bemused, exasperated, outraged, captivated, and awed me that I couldn’t possibly put the whole region into a neat mental “box.” If I hadn’t bothered to really experience the place, then my impression of the Middle East would be still colored entirely by a terrorist attack and a few wars, just like it is for so many other Americans. That doesn’t sound very enlightened to me. Maybe I’d heard that op-ed-column-turned-Baz-Luhrmann-song on the local ’90s station one too many times, but so much of what I did while I was in the Middle East was new and (to one degree or another) scary. Yet up there in the Kuwait Towers, looking out one moment over the water and toward the coastline of Iraq and Iran, and the next over the skyscrapers of the city of Kuwait, I also knew that I’d barely begun to experience and understand the Gulf. Published on May 15th, 2009 Darryl Campbell is the managing editor at The Bygone Bureau. He once got called an "elitist young author" by John Stossel, which he considers one of his top-ten lifetime accomplishments so far. Others include writing for The Christian Science Monitor and the Chronicle of Higher Education, paying off his car loan a year early, and getting a Twitter account. Send him an email. Laughing and Crying: Sofiya Alexandra Sofiya Alexandra LA-based comedian and writer Sofiya Alexandra explains how her grandfather's sickness helped her realize the value of comedy. Jul 10, 2014 Laughing and Crying: Julia Ingalls Julia Ingalls Essayist Julia Ingalls talks about the death of her ex-fiance. Jul 9, 2014 Laughing and Crying: Jim Bruce Jim Bruce Stand-up comedian Jim Bruce has done a lot of shows and been to a lot of funerals. He talks about how grief taught him empathy. More → The Bygone Bureau examines modern life through personal essays, cultural criticism, humor pieces, and comics. We believe in good ideas and polished prose. The site launched in the summer of 2007, and in 2009, won the Web Award for Best New Blog at South by Southwest Interactive. Subscribe via RSS Follow @bygonebureau
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Landlocked Chad is both one of the largest and one of the least-densely populated countries in Africa. Chad's capital, N'djamena, is the country's largest city and economic centre. Both French and Arabic are official languages. Chad's economy is dominated by agriculture, which supports at least 80 per cent of the population, and oil, which generates the bulk of export revenues. Chad was a founding member of the African Union. It is also a member of La Francophonie and the Economic Community of Central African States. Australia's Ambassador to Chad is resident in Paris, France. Travel advice for Chad | See also our Travel Information page Before you travel: Passports Australia | Visa information | 'Safe Travel'-Top 10 Tips Assistance to Australian travellers: Consular Services Charter Heads of Government Includes Heads of State, Prime Ministers, Foreign, Trade and Aid Ministers. Embassies and consulates Australia The Australian Embassy in France is responsible for Chad Financial Scams
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Pleasure Pier, Santa Monica, California Reference URL Pleasure Pier, Santa Monica, California Loading content ... Description Identifier clloy_013 Title Pleasure Pier, Santa Monica, California Creator Unknown Date Published circa 1917 Subject (Topic) Piers--California--Santa Monica; Amusement rides--California--Santa Monica Subject (Name) Santa Monica Pier (Santa Monica, Calif.) Subject (Place) Santa Monica (Calif.) Type image Form/Genre Postcards Physical Description 1 postcard : b&w ; 9 x 14 cm. Institution Department of Archives and Special Collections, William H. Hannon Library, Loyola Marymount University Country of Creation US Copyright Status public domain Copyright Statement http://library.lmu.edu/generalinformation/departments/digitallibraryprogram/copyrightandreproductionpolicy/ Language eng Description Looking southwest towards the Santa Monica pier; a sign on the Hippodrome building reads: "Welcome" and a sign on the building to the right of the Hippodrome reads: "Bowling and billiards." To the left of the Hippodrome building is the Aeroscope ride, and there is a partial view of a roller coaster. Historical Background The Santa Monica Municipal Pier was built in the early 1900s. Charles Looff, known for his career building amusement park rides at Coney Island at other locations across America, built an adjoining Pleasure Pier next to the Municipal Pier around 1916. The completed pier was 178,200 square feet and included restaurants, a carousel, a roller coaster and other attractions. A building with a domed roof and octagon-shaped towers, known as the Hippodrome Building, housed the carousel. The Aeroscope ride to the west of the Hippodrome building was a tower ride that launched six-passenger boats into the air and whirled them around at 35 miles per hour. In 1924, Looff sold the pier to the Santa Monica Pleasure Pier Company, who expanded it to include the La Monica Ballroom towards the ocean end of the pier. The two adjoined piers later became known as simply, "The Pier" and was acquired by the city in the 1950s. The Pier was declared a Santa Monica City Landmark in 1976. Additional Notes Real photo postcard on Kruxo paper. Source Werner von Boltenstern Postcard Collection you wish to report:
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by dtaylor Thu Jul 05 2001 at 20:15:10 Actually, Stirling is not currently a city. It is officially a town, although the much smaller Dunblane, a few miles away, is called a city simply because it happens to have a cathedral, whilst Stirling only has various churches. On the other hand, Stirling recently made a bid to become a city at the start of the new millennium when the Queen made one UK town an 'honourary city'. Unfortunately, it was beaten by Inverness, although another Scottish town will be made a city next year, when the Queen celebrates the 25th year of her reign here in the UK. As well as being near the site of the Battle of Bannockburn and the Bannockburn Herritige Centre, which is full of information on the battle led by Robert The Bruce, it is also the home of the Wallace Monument, errected in memory of William Wallace, who was another key figure in the Scottish Jackobite rebellion. Obviously, Stirling Castle is also located here, which makes Stirling a popular destination for tourists from all around the world. Especially Americans who saw Braveheart and want to come and say they climbed the Wallace Monument. Although in my opinion, as someone who can see the Wallace Monument and Stirling Castle just by looking out of my window, they are both rather boring places to visit when you could go to some more exciting place such as Alton Towers in England, or the various theme parks in Florida, or the rest of the United States. But apparantly, some people are extremely excited about the idea of being in the place where (we think) a b
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Trends Reports SkiftIQ Skift Jobs Get your daily dose of news from Destinations Cuba Libro Brings English-Language Books to Tourists and Expats in Havana Peter Orsi, Associated Press - Aug 10, 2013 8:25 am Customers read at the English-language bookstore, cafe and literary salon "Cuba Libro" in Havana, Cuba, Friday, Aug. 9, 2013. Ramon Espinosa / AP Photo How Rio de Janeiro is Building the City of the Future Sponsored This content is created collaboratively with one of our sponsors. + Can a smarter city solve Rio's socio-economic issues? Follow MasterCard: Read More Skift Take The island’s tourism infrastructure continues to grow as travel becomes a more important part of its economy. It’s still no easy task for an American tourist to get there. — Samantha Shankman Anglophones, rejoice: Cuba’s first English-language bookstore, cafe and literary salon opened in Havana on Friday, offering islanders and tourists alike a unique space to converse, thumb through magazines and buy or borrow tomes in the language of Shakespeare. The brainchild of a longtime U.S. expat, Cuba Libro launched with just 300 books on offer, about what you’d expect to find in the lobby of an average U.S. bed & breakfast. Next to what’s available elsewhere in English in Cuba, however, it might as well be the Library of Congress. “I know how hard it is to get English-language sources here,” said New York City native Conner Gorry, 43, a journalist living in Cuba since 2002. “So I started cooking this idea.” Cuba Libro is a play on “libro,” the Spanish word for “book,” and “Cuba libre,” the rum-cola cocktail that, legend has it, was invented in 1900 to celebrate the island’s independence from Spain. The concept was hatched two years ago when a friend called Gorry to say she had a sack of about 35 books she didn’t know what do with. More donations have come in since. Locally produced English-language fare includes the occasional translated Cuban novel, two weekly newspapers full of the bland official-speak of state media and a smattering of tourist magazines. Beyond that, it’s mostly books such as translations of the writings of Fidel Castro and Ernesto “Che” Guevara, and pro-government works denouncing the United States. One state bookshop offered a few dog-eared texts that pushed the definition of random: “Diving Physiology in Plain English,” a volume published by the Undersea Hyperbaric Medical Society, and “Woe Unto You, Lawyers!” a first-edition critique of the legal profession from 1939 that, judging by a sticker inside, once belonged to the Columbia University Law Library. Gorry said Cuba Libro is not in the business of offering anything that could be considered “counterrevolutionary.” But Cuba Libro’s offerings do include views not commonly found on an island where the government controls nearly all media. For starters there’s Mexican journalist Alma Guillermoprieto’s, “Dancing With Cuba,” a nuanced memoir of her experiences in Cuba, warts and all, as a ballet instructor in the 1970s. Along with back issues of The New Yorker and Rolling Stone, there’s a summer 2010 edition of ReVista, the Harvard Review of Latin America, dedicated to Cuban ally Venezuela. It’s generally sympathetic to the late President Hugo Chavez but also includes an essay by critic Teodoro Petkoff calling Chavez’s government “an authoritarian, autocratic and militaristic regime.” You’ll never hear that on Cuba’s nightly state TV news broadcast. “I hope (the store) flourishes,” said Carlos Menendez, a 77-year-old retired economist who dropped in for a coffee and was delighted to find “Freefall” by Joseph E. Stiglitz, 2001 winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics. “Freefall” argues for more government regulation of the U.S. economy, but even a left-leaning prescription for capitalism is a novelty in this Communist-run country where the concept of the free market is anathema. “It is increasing in Cuba, the possibility to have different alternatives,” Menendez said, seated on Cuba Libro’s shady patio under a towering almond tree. He was referring to President Raul Castro’s economic and social reforms, which have allowed hundreds of thousands of islanders to legally open or go to work for private small businesses in recent years. Cuba Libro operates on food-service and used-book-sales licenses made possible by the reforms, and functions with Gorry’s help as a kind of unofficial cooperative, or group-owned private enterprise, with five Cubans. Washington’s economic embargo bars U.S. citizens from conducting financial transactions with the Cuban government, and Gorry said she was careful to avoid anything that would run afoul of laws back home. “I’ve had to tread extremely carefully, everything above-board and legal, because I’m an American, I’m a North American, I am beholden to U.S. laws,” she said. “And so I’m not in agreement with those laws, but I abide by them.” Cubans tend to be well-educated, and millions attend Havana’s annual Book Festival each February and snap up Spanish-language volumes for pennies. At the same time Cubans are increasingly eager to learn English for careers such as computing or medicine, or as a ticket to a relatively high-paying job in the tourism industry. Cuba Libro is already planning English classes taught by native speakers, and those who can’t afford to buy books will be able to borrow them in a lending-library format. Meanwhile staffers are reaching out to diplomats and other foreigners to build the store’s stock. “Getting donations is going to be another interesting piece of it, because importing books here is very difficult,” Gorry said. Her litmus test is simply that books be good literature, and she’s trying to keep dime-store mysteries to a minimum. Still, there’s a small whodunit section with the likes of Sue Grafton’s “Q is for Quarry.” It will be up to future donors to supply A through P, and R through Z. Copyright (2013) Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Americans Giving Up Citizenship Shoots Up Six Times, After Tougher Rules Tags: books, cuba More Stories Below ▼ This Week in Travel Startup Funding: Freebird, Travo and More Venture Investment Trends in the Travel Industry 2015 Sabre Extends Hotel Reservations Capabilities In $154 Million Acquisition of Trust International Infographic: Homestays Vs. Empty Rentals Rezidor Hotels Vows To Reopen Radisson Blu in Mali After Attack Deep Dive Into Google’s Travel Ambitions About Skift
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Things to do Attractions Markets and Street Trading Street Trading Opportunities Markets and Street Trading Street Trading Opportunities Consultation Process and Guidance NotesBirmingham City Council strictly controls traders who wish to sell goods from mobile units sited on the public highway within the Birmingham boundary.Birmingham City Council does not identify sites normally, these are left to the discretion of the individual. However, guidance on the likely outcome can be given where previous applications for a site have been received. A fuller explanation of the consultation process that an application follows is set out below.Birmingham City Council is not currently accepting applications for street trading consents for any City Centre or Football Club sites as these have reached saturation point. If sites do become available, for example if the existing trader ceases business, these are advertised in the Business Opportunities section of the local paper (Birmingham Mail).There is no list kept of enquiries from prospective traders looking for any available sites within the Birmingham area.Consultation Process For Street Trading Applications(1) Copy of all applications are sent to City Transportation, The Director of Public Health, West Midlands Police and where relevant, City Centre Managers Office, for comment, unless a previous application had been made for the same position had been rejected. Should an objection be received from any of these consultative bodies, the application will be rejected, and the applicant advised by letter.(2) If no objections are raised, a public notice giving details of the application (does not include name and address) will be posted on street furniture adjacent to the site applied for. This notice will be in place for a minimum of 21 days in order to allow local traders or public to object or comment upon the application.(3) Following the posting of the site, a report, which will include any comments or objections, will be prepared and presented for consideration and comment at the next available relevant Ward Sub-Committee meeting.(4) Once an application has been to the Ward Sub-Committee/District Committee, a resolution will be sent to the Head of Service (Markets) and the decision to grant or deny a Street Trading Consent will be made.(5) In respect of Point 1, should an application be rejected, the applicant will be advised as to the reasons for the rejections and which of the consultative bodies raised the objection, should they wish further clarification.Guidance Notes on the Issue of Street Trading Consents(1) Consents are issued for specific locations and applicants must put forward the precise details of where they wish to trade.(2) It is unlikely that consents will be issued for main thoroughfares on the roadway or at places where they are likely to cause obstruction or congestion, such as near to schools. Neither are consents issued in areas which are the subject of parking restrictions of any sort, including official Local Authority Car Parks.(3) Goods outside a shop, on pavements and forecourts, as long as they form part of the main business; i.e. the same commodities and same trader as inside the shop, are not street trading.(4) Sub-letting of a pavement or forecourt for a different purpose, e.g. fruit and veg outside a dress shop, or to a third party even for the same purpose, is street trading.(5) Food hawkers are required to register with Environmental Health but any Certificate of Registration (Licence) issued does not entitle them to trade in a ‘consent street' without a Street Trading Consent.(6) Exposing for sale is the same as selling and taking orders by glazing firms, etc. or signing members by RAC, does require consent.(7) Political organisations and charities distributing literature do not need consent, but if they sell goods they do. Setting up a stall may be considered as an obstruction by the Police.(8) Traders in lay-bys, car parks, on open ground, recreation grounds, etc. with open access to the Street at no charge to the public do need consents. There may be exceptions for concessionaires of other Departments of the City but applications are necessary.(9) Suitcase salesmen and similar itinerant traders will not be issued with consents.(10) Fully completed application forms should be sent to the Street Trading, Markets Service, Birmingham City Council, Manor House, 40 Moat Lane, Birmingham, B5 5BD.(11) In addition, applications to trade from private land will require.Land owners permission to trade, in writing andPlanning Approval to trade from the location. For further details please call Planning on 0121 303 3157Street Trading Contact Details and ApplicationTelephone No: 0121 303 0254 or 0121 464 8349E-mail:[email protected]
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Big Morongo Canyon Preserve Site 193 in the California Wildlife Viewing GuideDescription Nestled among the Little San Bernardino Mountains, the desert oasis at Big Morongo Canyon is one of the 10 largest cottonwood and willow riparian (stream) habitats in California. The upstream end of the canyon lies in the Mojave Desert, while its downstream portion opens into the Colorado Desert.Because of the fault line running along the base of the mountains, water draining from the Morongo Basin surfaces at their base. This water flows above ground as Big Morongo Creek, then disappears into sandy soil further downstream. The result is a three-mile stretch of rich stream and marsh habitat lying between rugged canyon walls.The Bureau of Land Management designated Big Morongo Canyon as an Area of Critical Environmental Concern in recognition of its special values. The land is managed by the BLM to protect rare and endangered wildlife, enhance sensitive riparian areas, promote the growth of a wide variety of plants, provide for scientific research, and offer educational opportunities.Animals you may see hereBirds: This canyon oasis has gained a national reputation among birdwatchers as "a usual spot to see the unusual." At least 235 species of birds have been observed here, including the rare yellow-billed cuckoo - listed by California as a threatened species - and the endangered least Bell's vireo. The stream is a lifeline to migrating and breeding birds such as indigo buntings and yellow-breasted chats. See a list of the birds (PDF file, 20 kilobytes) spotted on the Preserve.Other wildlife: Desert bighorn sheep and mule deer file down the canyon's steep slopes to find water at the stream. Raccoons, bobcats, and coyotes rely on the lush riparian habitat for food and shelter. A variety of lizards and snakes are found here, including whiptail lizards and desert spiny lizards. The California tree frog also finds a home here, as do invertebrates such as butterflies, dragonflies and damselflies.Viewing tips for this area Dawn and dusk are good times to watch for small mammals and predators - and during the summer, for peninsular bighorn sheep.Wooden walkways allow the visitor to meander through the creekside and marsh areas.Trails begin from the parking lot kiosk and allow access to the six-mile length of the canyon. See:a trailsmap (PDF),Be sure to see tips for "Ultimate Wildlife Watching."How to get hereFrom Interstate 10 northwest of Palm Springs, take Highway 62, the "Twentynine Palms Highway." About 10.5 miles north on Highway 62, turn right on East Drive. After about 200 yards, turn left into the Big Morongo Canyon Wildlife Preserve.Size: About 31,000 acres.Managed by: Bureau of Land Management, Palm Springs-South Coast Field Office. The Bureau of Land Management provides an on-site steward and docents to lead public tours. The area also includes 120 acres of riparian habitat owned by San Bernardino County that is maintained as the Big Morongo Canyon Wildlife Preserve and managed as part of the ACEC.For more information, contact: Bureau of Land Management, Big Morongo Canyon Preserve, (760) 363-7190 or Palm Springs-South Coast Field Office or visit Friends of Big Morongo Canyon Preserve.Site 193 in the California Wildlife Viewing Guide.Watchable Wildlife Sites
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Google +1FacebookTwitterPinterestYoutube Most commentedEditor’s Picks Himeji's Other Star 0 comments Koko-en Garden Himeji, long famous for its 400-year-old castle, is experiencing a renaissance. The broad boulevard leading from Himeji Station to the castle has been spiffed up with new restaurants, shopping centers, and craft stores housed in traditional-looking buildings. Tom Cruise injected star status to the nearby mountain retreat of Engyoji Temple, where scenes from The Last Samurai were filmed. But Himeji’s true rising star, in my opinion, is Koko-en Garden, located beside Himeji Castle. Occupying the site of former samurai mansions, it has several distinctive features that set it apart from Japan’s many other gardens. Covering only 3.5 hectares (8.6 acres), it packs a wallop in its diminutive size by featuring nine separate gardens, each centered on a different theme authentic to the Edo Period and enclosed by replica mud walls topped by tiled roofs. Preserving the atmosphere of the old samurai compounds, each garden’s walls are painted a different hue, just as in the days of yore when different tints signified the identity of the samurai who dwelled there. There’s a garden of deciduous trees, a bamboo garden, a garden of pine trees, and a garden filled with flowers popular during the Edo Period. One garden imitates mountain scenery, while another reminds visitors of the flat countryside and affords picturesque views of Himeji Castle rising in the background. There are traditional Japanese gardens with ponds, waterfalls, and running streams. The tea-ceremony garden offers ceremonial tea and sweets, along with views of a meticulously choreographed landscape that mimics nature on a miniature scale. Koko-en’s name means love of the old garden. And yet and this is the most astounding aspect of Koko-en for me the garden dates only from 1992, when it was laid out to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Himeji’s establishment as a municipality. With every passing year, Koko-en looks more mature and more impressive. Mark my words: Over time, Koko-en will emerge as one of the most popular gardens in Japan.
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Home » Your Visit » Stations » Crowcombe Heathfield Crowcombe Heathfield Postcode for Sat Nav: TA4 4PA Crowcombe Heathfield Station was built in 1862 when the line was opened and stands at the highest point on the line, just under 400ft. above the sea. The station is surrounded by lovely scenic countryside and a network of lanes, bridle ways and footpaths offering walking, cycling and horse riding. A leaflet (obtained from the stations) prepared jointly between Crowcombe Heathfield and Stogumber Stations shows the lanes and footpath routes in the area and there is a web site www.fochs.org.uk which is well worth a visit. The visual charm of the station and surroundings has caught the eye of several TV and film directors leading to scenes being shot at the station for "The Flockton Flyer", The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe", "Land Girls", and The Beatles film "A Hard Days Night". The station has a booking office and prices from this Station can be found on our Fares Pages. There is also a small shop and toilet facilities as well as a disabled persons accessable toilet on the station. During operating days the station is open for hot and cold drinks, cakes and famous "Bread Pudding" and you can be assured a warm welcome awaits you. On Gala days this is widened to include hot savoury snacks, soups and a coal fire to welcome you during the cold weather! Why not do the 'One Mile Walk'? Enjoy a very gentle and easy 1 mile circular walk from the station in either direction. The walk gives some lovely views of the line, �The Avenue� with its beech trees and crossed two railway bridges. The station is the ideal start/end point for a walk on the Quantock Hills or a cycle ride round Somerset�s country lanes. History of Crowcombe Heathfield Station The first sod on the original West Somerset Railway was lifted as part of the cutting at the tranquil wayside station which is a perfect spot to relax and watch the world go by, or for the more energetic to start or conclude a walk in the Quantock Hills. The station is not close to any major settlement and this has made it popular with film crews in the past. Sequences that feature Crowcombe Heathfield include Ringo Starr riding a bicycle down the platform in A Hard Days Night and in the opening sequence of Land Girls. The main station building dates from the 1860s whilst the wooden building on the opposite platform is a replacement for an earlier structure demolished by British Railways. Similarly the signal box dates from the preservation era. Its brick built base was built new by the West Somerset Railway whilst the wooden top comes from Ebbw Vale in South Wales. Please visit the Crowcombe Heathfield Station Website.
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Revision as of 15:31, 1 October 2012 by 109.70.142.53 (Talk) Regions Disputed territory By train For railway fans By thumb See Cities and villages Monasteries Spas and resorts Archeological sites Do Festivals and nightlife [[File:|250px|frameless|Serbia]] [[File:|250px|frameless]] Belgrade (Beograd / Београд) parliamentary democracy 88,361 sq km Serbian 90.1% (official), Hungarian 3.8%, Romany (Gypsy) 1.1%, other 4.1%, unknown 0.9% (2002 census) note: Romanian, Hungarian, Slovak, Ukrainian, and Croatian all official in Vojvodina Orthodox 65%, Muslim 19%, Roman Catholic 4%, Protestant 1%, other 11% 230V/50Hz (European plug) Serbia (Serbian: Србија, Srbija) [1] is a country located in the Balkans, in Southern Europe. It was a founder and one of six republics forming the former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. It is surrounded by Montenegro to the south, Bosnia and Herzegovina to the west, Bulgaria to the southeast, Croatia to the northwest, Hungary to the north, Macedonia and Albania (through Kosovo) to the south, and Romania to the northeast. It is situated on one of the major land routes from Central Europe to Turkey and further on to the Near East. Medieval castle in Golubac Serbia is a lovely country, open for tourism all year round. During the summer tourists love spending their time in Belgrade and enjoy the nature of many national parks throughout the country. In winter, they are warmly welcomed to mountain resorts (one of the most popular being Kopaonik, featured on BBC as one of the best ski destinations in Europe). There are also many spa resorts such as Sokobanja, Niška Banja and Vrnjačka Banja. Serbs are warm people, especially towards foreigners. They are very welcoming towards tourists, of which there are not many as the country's full potential has yet to be reached! Most Serbs speak some English and are eager to practice it (seniors, however, are more likely to speak German and/or French), so you will be able to find your way around by asking directions. Most tourists come to Serbia in the summer and you can often hear German, Italian, French and English in the streets of Belgrade, while Slovenian tourists pour for New Year holidays. Yugoslavia was such a beautiful country with so many different attractive places that somehow, Serbia was neglected and it is still to be rediscovered not only by visitors, but by many Serbs, too. It is also a varied and beautiful place notwithstanding the fact that it is landlocked. From the plains of Vojvodina, which in winter, remind of the scenes from the film of Dr. Zhivago, to many mountains and lakes or reservoirs and ski resorts of outstanding beauty. There were seventeen Roman emperors born in the territory of today's Serbia, and it is well-known that they all left monuments and built palaces in or close to their birthplaces. It may well be that the oldest ever found human settlements in Europe, if not in the world, can be found in country of Serbia. The longest stretch of the river Danube, longer than in any other European country is in Serbia. The giant hydroelectric dam of Djerdap has created a lake stretching for many miles out of the Canyon Djerdap with its famous Roman road to the East build by the Emperor Trajan. Serbia is on the crossroads of European history and as such, it is a mix of cultures, ethnicity and religions. Its people, contrary to a recent stigma, are one of the most hospitable and welcoming and recently, Belgrade was voted as one of the up and coming capitals of Europe. It hosted the recent Eurovison song contest and it is the home town of world names like Djokovic, Jankovic and Ivanovic; the ambassadors of New Serbia. There may be more attractive locations elsewhere, but Serbia has a spirit and a soul that is rare to find coupled with melange of different cultures and a gusto for good living. Climate In the north: continental climate (cold winters and hot, humid summers with well distributed rainfall); central portion: moderate continental climate; and to the south: hot, dry summers and autumns and relatively cold winters with heavy snowfall. Extremely varied: to the north, rich fertile plains; to the east, limestone ranges and basins; to the southeast, ancient mountains and hills. Although the region around the town of Mionica has been known for some earthquakes in recent years, these were by no means destructive. The highest point is Đeravica at 2656 m. The first Serbian state was formed in the mid 9th century, expanding by the mid 14th century to an empire comprising most of the Balkans. In 1389, the Serbs lost a decisive battle in the Kosovo field against the Ottoman empire. Serbia managed to preserve its freedom for another seventy years, only to be finally overwhelmed by the Turks in 1459. An uprising in the early 1800s that grew in the full scale war (War of Restoration) led to the restoration of Serbian independence in 1815. The 1914 Austro-Hungarian invasion of Serbia following the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand by an ethnic Serb high school student precipitated the first World War. In its aftermath in 1918, victorious Serbia gatherd all south Slav lands (Croatia, Slovenia, Slavonia, Dalmatia, Bosnia and Herzegowina, and Montenegro)into the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes; The country's name was changed to Yugoslavia in 1929. Invasion and occupation by Germany and Italy in 1941 was resisted by Yugoslav Army in fatherland (Chetniks), commanded by Lt.-Gen Dragoljub Mihajlović and communist led guerilla (partisans) who eventually started fighting each other as well as the invaders. The partisans, commanded by Field-Marshal Josip Broz Tito emerged victorious and formed a provisional governement that abolished the monarchy and proclaimed a republic in 1946 after a dubious referendum. At the end of the war, nearly all ethnic Germans left the country. Although pro-Communist, J.B. Tito's new government successfully steered its own delecate path between the Warsaw Pact nations and the West for the next four and a half decades. In the early 1990s, post-Tito Yugoslavia began to unravel along ethnic lines: Slovenia, Croatia, and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia all split from the Yugoslav Union in 1991; and Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1992. All of efforts to preserve Yugoslavia were ultimately unsuccessful and bloody civil wars broke out in Croatia and in Bosnia. The remaining republics of Serbia and Montenegro declared a new "Federal Republic of Yugoslavia" (FRY) in 1992. Slobodan Milosevic was elected the first president of Serbia. In the late 1990s, the conflict with the Albanian separatist movement in Kosovo led to a NATO bombing campaign and direct intervention, which left the placement of Kosovo under a UN administration. Slobodan Milosevic, by this time elected for the president of the federation, lost in the Federal elections in the fall of 2000 to Vojislav Kostunica. The country reestablished its membership in the UN and started preparations to join the EU. In 2002, the republics of Serbia and Montenegro began negotiations to forge a looser relationship, which led first to the name change of the nation to "Serbia and Montenegro", then culminated in Montenegro declaring independence in June 2006. More recently, Kosovo unilaterally declared its independence; however, this act remains unrecognised by Serbia and some other countries. Independence came on 4 February 2003 (when it changed from the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro) or on 5 June 2006 (from the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro to Serbia). January 1-2 (New Year's Day), January 7 (Eastern Orthodox Christmas), January 14 (National Holiday (Orthodox New Year), January 27 (Saint Sava's feast Day), February 15 (Sretenje / Groundhog Day (Candlemas) / Serbian National Day), May 1-2 (Labour Day), May 9 (Victory Day) and June 28 (Vidovdan / St Vitus Day) are designated as state holidays. Major retail establishments such as supermarkets and shopping malls remain open on all of these days except January 1 and January 7. There are also several officially designated days on which only the members of certain religious minorities have the right not to work. In practice this means that in the northernmost areas of the country, including Subotica, where there is a sizeable Catholic population, many shops close on December 25 - Christmas Day according to the Gregorian calendar. Serbia's official currency is the Serbian dinar (RSD). The Serbian dinar can be exchanged in most of the banks throughout the Europe. However, it is best to convert at the airport (even though the rate there tends to be a bit higher) or in the banks located in the towns or in the numerous and visibly marked authorized exchange offices (Menjačnica/Мењачница). The Euro is occasionally accepted, but prices are often overestimated when directly compared to the Dinar. Belgrade is typically on par with many European cities prices; however, outside the capital, prices of almost any item are lot lower than in the capital. Typically, 150 dinars for a coke in a Belgrade bar, and 220 dinars for 3 cokes in a bar outside the capital. In April 2012, the exchange rate stood at 84 Serbian Dinars for 1 US Dollar, and 111 Serbian Dinars for €1. Money changers may refuse worn-out or damaged foreign banknotes, especially US dollars, therefore it is recommended to bring notes only in good condition. Banks usually accept slightly damaged notes, sometimes with a commission. Gas stations close to borders sometimes accept foreign currencies. Serbia, like most countries in the world, uses the Metric system. Serbia can be divided into five regions and one de facto independent republic: Map of Serbia Belgrade Podunavlje Podrinje Šumadija Vojvodina Belgrade and Vojvodina are relatively economically prosperous and have a Central European influenced culture, while the southern regions are more impoverished. Kosovo Considered an autonomous province of Serbia by the United Nations, Kosovo has been recognized by many Western nations and is de facto an independent republic. It has an ethnic Albanian majority; however, the Northern, Serb majority part of Kosovo remains connected to Serbia. We cover Kosovo in a separate article. While the legitimacy of the Kosovan government is disputed by many countries, from a traveller's point of view the Kosovar government has de facto control of the area (separate visas, laws, currency, etc), with the exception of North Kosovo. This is not a political endorsement of claims by either side in the dispute. Belgrade (Beograd / Београд) — the capital of Serbia. Kragujevac (Serbian Cyrillic: Крагујевац)— The first capital of modern Serbia, industrial hub and the 4th largest city in Serbia.Kragujevac is located in the region Šumadija, 120 km south of Belgrade. Kragujevac passes through a small river Lepenica. Near the town is Lake Gružansko(Гружанско Језеро).The city has a university, and important cultural and medical buildings. It has a rich history and many cultural and historical monuments. Kraljevo(Serbian Cyrillic: Краљево)-Kraljevo is an important economic center in Serbia, located south of 170 Beograda.It lies on two rivers, the Morava and The Ibar river.In the outskirts of the city is very famous monastery "Žiča"(Жича) with a rich history, and in addition to the monastery and the famous Mataruška spa(Матарушка бања), and a little further Bogutovačka Spa(Богутовачка бања). Čačak(Serbian Cyrillic:Чачак)-Čačak is a city in central Serbia. It is the administrative center of the Moravica District of Serbia. Čačak is also the main industrial, cultural and sport center of the district.Cacak is one of the major cities in the territory of the Srbiji.On the wider city area there are two well-known spas and Spa Gornja Trepča(Бања Горња Трепча) and Ovčar Spa(Овчар Бања). Nearby is the famous Očarsko-Kablar Gorge, which is located
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Become a Supporter We Get Support From: Become a Supporter Rick Ridgeway Rick Ridgeway oversees Patagonia's environmental grant making, environmental education and environmental projects including Freedom to Roam, a campaign to preserve wildlife corridors across North America. A writer, photographer and Emmy Award-winning filmmaker, Ridgeway has produced and directed more than 30 adventure shows for television. He has authored several books, including Seven Summits, The Shadow of Kilimanjaro and Below Another Sky. His articles have appeared in Outside, National Geographic, Readers Digest and many other publications. Ridgeway is one of the world's foremost mountaineers. He was a member of the first American team to summit K2. Rolling Stone magazine dubbed him "the real Indiana Jones," and National Geographic honored him with its "Lifetime Achievement in Adventure" award.
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Geeky Things to do in New York Thread: Geeky Things to do in New York We'll be going to NYC for a week and I wondered if anyone could recommend any 'must see / must do / must eat / must drink' type stuff. I'm 48, like gaming, married with a a 4 year old who I will have in tow while my wife goes to meetings. I like arty / architectural stuff, historical (esp military history) stuff, fantasy and SF. I've got a trip to 'the Intrepid' slated...can anyone recommend any other things to do and see? /rubs hands Well now, here's a quick list. i'll add other things I can think of as and when. • Staten Island Ferry - great way to see the Statue of Liberty from the water and the skyline of New York for free. YOu've got to get off at the end so make sure to move quickly so you don't get stranded on Staten Island. • The Metropolitan Museum of Art - it's massive and you can get lost in there for days. I'd been there many, many times before I found the full size Egyptian temple in there. Think of it as the British Museum and the National Portrait Gallery rolled into one. Note that it's a 'suggested donation' to get in - so you can pay a dollar and get in. It's part of it's charter, so don't feel you need to pay their suggested donation of $20. • Brooklyn Children's Museum - we don't have kids, but our friends who do, swear by this one. • The High Line - beautiful raised park on an old elevated railroad in the heart of the city. It's close to the Intrepid, but it's also a good way to see some of the city with a little perspective. • Right beside the High Line - Chelsea Market - think Borough Market with artisinal food places. Great for a coffee (or an amazing Jacques Torres hot chocolate). It's a good place to warm up before/after the High Line (though don't rely on it for bathrooms - the lines are almost always huge). • Animazing Gallery - they have a wide rage of work on the walls, but if you hint you're interested in purchasing something, they have flat files full of original Disney plates, Tim Burton sketches and more. It's a treasure trove. • Museum of Art and Design - they usually have fun architecture/design work and there's a great cafe at the top with Park views. • Central Park (of course) - with specific destinations like Strawberry Fields. Depending on where you're staying we can also provide restaurant recommendations. Just let me know - I think you've got my email? Brilliant, thanks Jon! I do have your email and will drop you a line! I'd also offer up a couple things - if you have limited time, take the Speedboat Tour which is a hoot (though could be too intense for a 4 year old) Also, right next to the departure for that is the Sea Air and Space Museum where you can walk through a sub, as well as see the rest of the museum (which is on an aircraft carrier). There is also a space shuttle there, but not sure about that as it was not open to the public when I went. We also did the Rockefeller Center Tour for a great look at the architecture, art, sculpture and history of the building... and a glimps into the cold war era and politics to boot. Even if you don't take the tour, go to the Top of the Rock Observation Deck as it has a better view than the empire state building (IMOO) - as there are two major NYC landmarks you can see from the Rock that you can't see from the Empire States building... namely the Empire states Building, and Central Park! Thanks Rob. The Sea Air and Space Museum is definitely on the cards. Am putting the Rockerfeller centre on the cards too. I'll keep the speedboat tour as a back up! Jrandom Posts 10 Go take a tour of the New York Federal Reserve and see all their gold down in the catacombs. Visiting the New York Fed - Federal Reserve Bank of New York Larb Perhaps you could drop by that Museum of Digital Art that showcased several maps from here a while back? Just so you can tell us what it is like. I had a top time in New York and Greenwich. Got back to London today. On my Geeklist I managed to: 1. meet Torstan 2. Go to the 'Compleat Gamer' Gameshop (with Torstan) - which had one of his maps posted in the doorway!! 3. Go to the Metropolitan Museum of Art 4. To to the top of the Rockerfeller Centre Other memorable visits were to the Highline and the Chelsea market. Didn't manage to get to the USS Intrepid or see the WTC memorial or do the Staten Island ferry but we will go back to NYC - we just loved it. The food in NYC is just ultimate - every meal was more than delicious. The people we met were really nice too. New Yorkers are a really good bunch of people. Glad you made it back safely! It was great to meet you and show you a little of the city. Looking forward to the return trip! Thanks for the guided tour! Do tell me if and when you get back to London! I can't wait to get back to NYC - there is so much more to see and do there.
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Watching the planes come and go. Roy Barnes photo More of The Stories Behind Strange Airport Codes By Roy A. Barnes Air travel today has lost much of its romance and sense of adventure. Yet when it comes to the destinations that travelers flock to for business or pleasure, an air of mystery still can be found over many three-letter codes which don’t seem to make any sense: CAE -- Columbia, South Carolina The airport in Columbia, South Carolina has a mysterious letter “e” as its third letter. Could it be a filler letter or is there an interesting story for the airport code of Columbia Metropolitan Airport? The small town of Cayce is due northwest of the airport, and might explain the code, but it’s not totally certain. This airport has the distinction for being the training grounds for Jimmy Doolittle’s B-25 flight crews, which would conduct a bombing raid over Tokyo in April of 1942. This raid helped to raise the morale of the USA, which was struggling initially in both the European and Pacific campaigns of World War II. CAE offers the public free tours and can even arrange scavenger hunts! BNA -- Nashville Today’s Nashville International Airport still retains the airport code of BNA, which honors World War I veteran and air transport advocate Colonel Harry S. Berry. He was Tennessee’s WPA Administrator. The WPA was one of Frankin D. Roosevelt’s alphabet soup programs that helped put people to back to work during the Great Depression, and was responsible for the building of Berry Field in 1937. So despite the name change to Nashville International Airport in 1988, the three letter airport code remains to remind people of Berry Field NAshiville. SDF -- Louisville, Kentucky Louisville, Kentucky’s international airport’s code doesn’t seem to make any sense at all unless you go back to its roots of being partly built on ground owned by the family of Dr. Elisha David Standiford, who was a legislator and held high positions in local transportation companies like the Louisville and Nashville Railroad. In 1947, Standiford Field (where the SDF comes from) opened to the public, but has since expanded to be a heavy air freight and international air-sorting hub for UPS . RSW -- Fort Myers, FLorida The airport that serves the residents of Fort Myers, Florida, is called Southwest Florida International Airport. While the “SW” letters make sense, in that they stand for Southwest, the “R” seems to not make any sense until you go back in history to 1983, when the airport was opened and originally named Southwest Florida Regional Airport; that is, the “R” stands for Regional. This was the first airport in America to be built in compliance with National Environmental Protection Association (NEPA) regulations. BDL -- Hartford Connecticut/Springfield Massachusetts The airport that serves Hartford, Connecticut is named Bradley International Airport; and thus the BDL designation. The airport name and its three-letter code honor the first fatality at the venue, which had been constructed in 1941 as a military air base. On August 21, 1941, Lt. Eugene Bradley died in a training exercise there at the age of 24. The first commercial air flight out of this airport occurred in 1947 via Eastern Airlines. GTR -- Columbus, Mississippi Students who go to Mississippi State University are only 15 minutes away from an airport in Columbus, Mississippi to fly out of when the semester ends or when Spring Break’s a-calling. So what do the letters GTR have to do with an airport located here? Well, GTR stands for Golden Triangle Regional Airport, which serves two other cities besides Columbus; that is, Starkville and West Point, which form a triangle. Ironically, GTR airport is located a bit south of of the “triangle”! SNA -- Orange County, California “The Duke” has an airport named after him called John Wayne Airport, which is located in the heart of Orange County, California, or “The O.C.” Yet neither Orange County nor John Wayne have the letters “SNA”, so what’s up with this strange code? It comes from the name Santa Ana, the city where the airport is located. TYS -- Knoxville, Tenessee Knoxville, Tennessee has a strange three-letter code that doesn’t match its place name. The TYS designation comes from the name Tyson. In 1918, during the First World War, a pilot by the name of Charles McGhee Tyson was killed after crashing into the waters off the English coast. His parents were a rich and prominent family in “The Marble City”, and years after the war ended, a piece of land for an airstrip was donated by Charles’ mother Bettie on the condition that it be named after her deceased son, which is called McGhee Tyson Airport to this day. MCI -- Kansas City Missouri The international airport that serves Kansas City, Missouri has quite a story as to how its airport code came about. Before the airport was dedicated in the fall of 1972, it was called Mid-Continent International Airport, of which the MCI designation makes sense, but politicians in Kansas City decided to give it a name that would make a better connection with the city, so the name Kansas City International Airport replaced its original one. But since American cities that start with K have to begin with a letter other than K because this letter is for radio and television stations, the original MCI was kept since it was registered already. If you think you’re going to Kansas City, Missouri, because your luggage tags say KCI, you’re gonna be in for a big surprise, because that happens to be the three-letter code for Kono, Indonesia! Roy A. Barnes writes from Cheyenne, Wyoming. He’s worked in the airline and travel agent industries, and had to use many of these strange three-letter codes when making airline reservations. Read more about strange airport codes.Airport Codes More About Strange Airport Codes Airport Codes By Roy A. Barnes Air travel today has lost much of its romance and sense More Revelations About Strange Airport Codes It's Cheaper Not to Park at the Airport! Don't Park at the Airport! Off-Site Lots Charge 60 to 80 Percent Less By Stephen Inexpensive off-site lots at airport Airport Shuttles from Anywhere in the US Airport Shuttles Take a shuttle to the airport the next time you fly Airport Naps Crashing Before a Flight A traveler uses a mini-suite to nap A Airport Naps Made Easy with Mini-Suites Convenient Airport Parking... Just A Mouse Click Away. By Arline Bleecker I Got Codes? Save On Travel Expenses Using Promotional Codes A Got Codes? Save On Travel Expenses Using Promotional Codes by Beth Simmons A Woman Alone in Mumbai Airport attitude (Mumbai, India) IT WAS NOT A GOOD SIGN when the airport security guard, rifle swinging from his Berlin Brandenburg Airport Opens October 2016 A Berlin Brandenburg Airport will open in 2016 . Berlin's Airports: (Almost) Ready Staying Fit While You Wait For Your Flight the travelerAs control. While it may be frustrating to still be sitting in an airport after reading Clear Pass Membership Cuts Down on Airport Waiting Time Orlando International Airport is the first major airport to institute Clear Lanes. Photos Layover Guide: Look Forward To Your Next Layover A Layoverguide.com offers tips for hundreds of airport locations to make your layover more Getting a Bird's-Eye View of the Pioneer Valley The author and her instructor, Ben Foster, aboard a Piper Warrior II N4302V at the airport Hangliding in the Outer Banks The Norfolk, VA airport is served by several airlines. You can rent a compact car here for around $140 per Tags: storySection: TraveldeskLocation: Anywhere
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ontario international airport forecast Menu "News & Facts" Begins - Skip Menu News & Facts Chronological History Directions to Airport Travelers with Disabilities Inside the Airport Marketplace Search Friends of Ontario Airport Airport Filming Travelers Aid of the Inland Empire Airports & Facilities Airport Engineering Commercial Development Airport Badging Ontario Concessions Free Wi-Fi Service Fixed Base Operators Tenants 411 Tenant Projects CEQA/NEPA Bids Opportunities ONT Rules & Regs Ontario UTC Menu "News & Facts" Ends Home > ONT LA/Ontario International Airport (ONT) is a medium-hub, full-service airport with commercial jet service to major U.S. cities and through service to many international destinations. ONT is located in the Inland Empire, approximately 35 miles east of downtown Los Angeles in the center of Southern California. The airport is the centerpiece of one of the fastest-growing transportation regions in the United States. ONT's service area includes a population of six million people living in San Bernardino and Riverside Counties and portions of north Orange County and east Los Angeles County. In 2013 3.9 million passengers used the airport and 460,535 tons of air freight were shipped. ONT's more than 120 daily flights provide service to major cities in the U.S. ONT's airlines include AeroMexico, Alaska, American, Delta, Southwest, United/United Express, US Airways and Volaris. The "new" Ontario International Airport opened September 27, 1998. The $270 million project includes two new terminals at 265,000 square foot each for a total of 530,000 square feet, a new ground transportation center, an additional parking lot and new roadway system, airfield improvements, landscaping, and a site storm-drain system. The new terminals are eight times larger than the former terminal and can accommodate up to 10 million passengers a year. When passenger traffic at ONT reaches 10 million in two consecutive years, a third terminal will be constructed. ONT is also the center of a rapidly developing freight movement system that includes the airport, two railroads, four major freeways, and an expanding network of freight forwarders. ONT is served by major U.S. air freight carriers including Ameriflight, Empire Airlines, Federal Express, Kalitta Air, West Air and United Parcel Service. ONT is a member of the Los Angeles World Airports system and is ideally situated as an airfreight center for Pacific Rim and European cargo. The airport is less than 50 miles from Los Angeles and Long Beach Harbors.”
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Discover the finest hotels and journeys in Mexico, Central America, and South America Luxury Latin America Uxua Casa Hotel—Trancoso, Brazil Quadrado, Trancoso, Bahia, Brazil “Hippie chic” has become a cliché term, but it’s pretty apt in the case of Trancoso. Inhabited by Tupi Indians before the arrival of Jesuits in the 1500s, the tiny fishing village remained off the world’s radar until it became a hippie hot spot in the 1970s. Electricity and paved roads arrived in the ‘80s and ‘90s followed by jet–setters in the early aughts. Although many hippies have never left, the chic is settling in with a vengeance. Since it opened in 2009, Trancoso’s most luxurious address has been Uxua Casa, a rarefied tropical escape that, while playing refined riffs on lingering hippie elements, eschews chic like the plague. This is because Uxua’s Dutch creator and owner, Wilbert Das, had already done his time in the realm of high fashion – for years he was creative director of Diesel – before visiting Trancoso and succumbing to its spell. Particularly alluring was the Quadrado, the town’s vibrant grass-carpeted main square. Flanked by brightly painted bungalows and anchored by a whitewashed church, it offers sweeping views of Atlantic rainforest, mangroves, winding rivers and a diaphanous sea. Das was so taken with the spot that he purchased his own villa on the Quadrado from a couple of Swiss hippies in the throes of a divorce. The property included an immense jungle of a garden filled with fruit trees; an Edenic spot for the 10 guesthouses that comprise the Uxua Casa Hotel. With the help of Google SketchUp, Das meticulously designed each one, as well as the library, spa (featuring locally sourced, organic beauty products), and restaurant/bar overlooking the pi&egr
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Tulsa, once known as the “Oil Capital of the World,” made its way onto the map with the Glenn Pool oil strike of 1905. Though the city’s oil production has ebbed and flowed since that time, its Art Deco architecture and temperate climate have remained constant. With temperatures that rarely register below freezing in the winter and that hover in the mid-80s during summer months, Tulsa visitors typically enjoy ideal conditions for outdoor activities. Tulsa offers approximately 6,000 acres spread across 135 parks—plenty of space for locals and visitors to stretch their legs. A favorite, Mohawk Park comprises both the 800-acre Oxley Nature Center and the Tulsa Zoo. In the nature center, Tulsa visitors can explore trails systems and learn more about prairies, wetlands and forestlands. The zoo, a top Tulsa attraction, is home for more than 1,500 animals and attracts over 500,000 visitors annually. Kids of all ages can interact with live animals in the North American Living Museum, experience a simulated earthquake and explore a walk-through cave.Museums are also top Tulsa attractions and draw thousands of visitors each year. The Philbrook Museum of Art, located in an Italian Renaissance villa that sits on 23 acres, offers a broad range of exhibits including American art, African art, Asian art, antiquities, modern and contemporary art, European art and Native American art. The Gilcrease Museum, the world’s largest collection of artifacts and art from the American West, attracts visitors to its Osage Hills' location, approximately 10 minutes from downtown. At the Cherokee Heritage Center, one of Oklahoma’s most-visited Native American sites, an authentic Cherokee village and a museum complement a living history experience, with a Trail of Tears memorial exhibit. Many opt to continue their exploration into Native American culture with take-home treasures. Oklahoma’s largest collection of buyable art is in Tulsa at the Art Market, located on E 51st Street. Some expand their sites at the Tulsa Artists’ Coalition’s Gallery, located downtown in the Brady Arts District. Here, local artists display contemporary art work, running the gamut of various media and techniques. And for more downtown shopping, Utica Square has stores with well-loved names (think Coach and Saks Fifth Avenue) as well as locally-owned shops; Miss Jackson’s is a favorite, a 1910 lingerie-shop-turned-fashion-boutique. Shoppers looking for locally grown produce will find it at the Cherry Street Farmers’ Market. Tulsa lights up when the sun goes down. Tourists can follow the locals to the Blue Dome District, named for a gas station on Route 66 in the 1920s. From its humble beginnings, the area has grown to a hub of restaurants, pubs and entertainment. Ample parking and easy walking add to its appeal. For an upscale crowd with an ear for bass, Blue Dome District’s Electric Circus offers a New York-style club with live DJs and a 300-person capacity dance floor. At Max Retropub, which pays homage to 1980s Americana, patrons find classic pub fare. The Blue Dome Arts Festival, an annual event with food, live music and art vendors, runs concurrently with the city’s yearly Mayfest celebration.
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Help▼ContentsSearchFAQSupportPortalsWatercoolerSuggestions Place:Media, Delaware, Pennsylvania, United States LSnellgrove NameMedia TypeBorough Coordinates39.919°N 75.388°W Located inDelaware, Pennsylvania, United States The borough of Media is the county seat of Delaware County, Pennsylvania and is located 12 miles (19 km) west of Philadelphia. Media was incorporated in 1850 at the same time that it was named the county seat. The population was 5,533 at the 2000 census. Its school district is the Rose Tree Media School District with Penncrest High School and Springton Lake Middle School. In June 2006, it became the first fair trade town in America. The history of the area goes back to William Penn, but the area remained predominantly rural until the twentieth century. The Delaware County Institute of Science was founded in Media in 1833, while the Pennsylvania Institute of Technology, a two-year technical college, Williamson Free School of Mechanical Trades a three-year technical college, and Delaware County Community College, a two-year liberal arts college, are located nearby. Media promotes itself as "Everybody's Hometown". Land in area was sold and settled soon after William Penn was named proprietor of the colony of Pennsylvania in 1681 by King Charles II of England. Peter and Wiliam Taylor bought the land where Media is now located, directly from Penn. Providence Township was organized in 1684, and divided into Upper Providence and Nether Providence Townships by 1690 even though they only had 40 taxable properties at the time. The current borough, formed in 1850, sits between the two townships. In 1683, the Court of Chester County approved the construction of "Providence Great Road" (now Pennsylvania Route 252). The road, which runs north from Chester to within a few blocks from today's downtown, is shown on a 1687 map along with the names of local landowners. It forms the eastern border of the borough. Thomas Minshall, a Quaker, was an early Media resident, settling just outside the small village then known as Providence, along the Providence Great Road. The village then included a tailor shop, blacksmith shop, wheelwright shop, barn and other buildings. Minshall bought from William Penn and arrived in 1682. The Providence Friends Meeting was established at his house in February, 1688, and a meetinghouse was later built on land he donated for the purpose. The original meetinghouse was built out of logs in 1699 or 1700 and the current building dates to 1814. A house on Minshall’s property, built c. 1750, still stands and was given to the citizens of the borough in 1975. The area remained rural through 1850. On March 11, 1850, the State of Pennsylvania by Special Act of Assembly incorporated the Borough of Media, and made the sale of malt and spirituous liquors unlawful within its borders. At the same time, the county seat of Delaware County was moved to Media from Chester. The borough was formed from four farms purchased by the county, totalling only . The borders of the borough have not changed since that time. Streets were plotted in a rectangular grid around the location of the new courthouse, lots were sold at public auctions, and the construction of houses began. Sources agree that Minshall Painter, a descendant of Thomas Minshall, suggested the name "Media", but do not agree on the reason. The name may come from the city’s central location in Delaware County, or from the biblical area of Medea. The John J. Tyler Arboretum occupies part of Thomas Minshall's original . This farm was used by the underground railroad. The land was donated to a public trust in 1944 by an eighth generation descendant. The arboretum was started as a private collection by brothers Jacob and Minshall Painter. In 1825, they began systematically planting over 1,000 varieties of trees and shrubs. Over 20 of their original trees survive including a giant sequoia. Minshall Painter was also a leader of the Delaware County Institute of Science, which was formed on September 21, 1833 with just four other members: George Miller, John Miller, George Smith, M.D., and John Cassin. The Institute was incorporated in 1836. About 1850, Painter gave the Institute the land where its building currently stands at 11 Veteran's Square, and the building was constructed in 1867. In the second half of the 19th Century, Media was a summer resort for well-to-do Philadelphians. The borough's large vacation hotels included the Idlewild Hotel (1871) on Lincoln Street at Gayley Terrace, Chestnut Grove House or "The Colonial" (1860) on Orange Street, and Brooke Hall on Lemon Street and Washington Ave. (now Baltimore Ave.). The Chestnut Grove was used for a year by nearby Swarthmore College due to a fire on their campus. The West Chester and Philadelphia Railroad was built through Media on October 19, 1854. Electrified service was opened on December 2, 1928. Up to 50 trains passed through each day. The railroad became part of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad and eventually the Penn Central. SEPTA took over operations in 1983. Woodrow Wilson spoke at the Media Station in 1912 during his first election campaign. Trolley transportation lines spread to and through Media in the 1890s and early 1900s. The Media Theatre opened as a vaudeville house in 1927. The first talkie film, The Jazz Singer, was shown there. It remained a popular cinema through the 1970s. In 1994, the theater was refurbished by Walter Strine, Sr. and reopened as a professional live music theater. Shows produced there include "The Full Monty", "Carousel" and "Miss Saigon". Tony Award winners Judy Kaye and David Miller have performed there. In June 2006, Media became the first town in the United States to follow over three-hundred towns in Europe in attaining fair trade certification. To meet the criteria for certification, Media passed a council resolution in support of fair trade, serve fair-trade coffee and tea in local government meetings and offices, ensure that a range of fair-trade products were available in local restaurants and businesses, raise popular support and provide media coverage for the fair-trade campaign, and convene a fair-trade steering committee to ensure continued commitment. [edit]Media and the FBI Media may be best known for secret government documents that were illegally seized there by activists in 1971 and distributed nationwide. On March 8 of that year, the Citizens' Commission to Investigate the FBI raided an FBI "resident agency" in Media. They later released thousands of documents to major newspapers around the country. These documents revealed controversial and illegal FBI tactics, like the recruitment of Boy Scouts as informants, and confirmed for the first time the existence of COINTELPRO, an FBI program to "expose, disrupt, misdirect, discredit, or otherwise neutralize" dissident groups in the United States. [edit] Research Tips This place has no commentary yet. It is only a stub. You can help by editing it and sharing what you know: research tips, history, relationships with other places, etc. This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original content was at Media, Pennsylvania. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with WeRelate, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. Retrieved from "http://www.werelate.org/wiki/Place:Media%2C_Delaware%2C_Pennsylvania%2C_United_States" Category: Delaware, Pennsylvania, United States Don't want ads? This page was last modified 19:14, 18 December 2007.
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Tourism Plans / Article As Tropical Storm Alberto crosses over Florida, you would think hurricane season was the main focus of the Panama City Beach Tourist Development Council. But the TDC is also looking forward to another summer and fall season full of events. In August, powerboat racing comes back to Panama City Beach. Last year offshore powerboat racing returned after a 12-year hiatus. But that's just the first of a number of big events coming to the beach. There's the Indian Summer Festival in October and a major car show coming in November. The TDC has also started to prepare for Spring Break 2007 by working on promotions, contacting music groups and marketing companies.
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Washington Dulles International Airport Main Terminal Added by KHusband, last update: October 14, 2011, 10:34 pmExterior view, source: XYZ+T, retrieved from Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/xyzt/2170965142, date: February 15, 2006Location 1 Saarinen Circle Dulles, VA 38° 57' 47.9448" N, 77° 27' 31.4064" W See map: Google Maps Javascript is required to view this map.Identity of Building / SitePrimary classification: Transport/Communications (TRC)Secondary classification: Federal, State, or Local Designation(s) and Date(s): History of Building/SiteOriginal Brief: In the middle of the twentieth century, plans for Washington Dulles International Airport grew out of the need for another airport in the Washington D.C. region as the Washington National Airport (Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport) was already outgrowing demand. The second Washington Airport Act of 1950 was passed by Congress to provide for the construction of a new airport. A site was chosen 26 miles from Washington D.C., and the construction of Dulles Airport began on September 2, 1958. Dates: Commission / Completion:1958-1962.Architectural and other Designer(s): Eero Saarinen and Associates of Hamden, Connecticut were chosen as the architect for the Main Terminal building. Saarinen had previously completed the Trans World Airlines Flight Center at J.F.K. International Airport from 1956-62. The firm of Ammann and Whitney of New York was selected as engineers for the airport.Others associated with Building/Site: The airport consultant was Charles Landrum, and the mechanical engineering was done by Burns and McDonnell Engineering Company. The landscape architect of the airport was Dan Kiley. The Chrysler Corporation desined the mobile lounges.Significant Alteration(s) with Date(s): Construction began on September 2, 1958 and the building was completed by 1962. There have been many significant alterations to the airport since its construction. In 1980 a fifty foot corridor designed by Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum (HOK) was added to the length of the Main Terminal. In 1991 The International Arrivals Building was completed 300’ west of the Main Terminal designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM). In 1996 the expansion of the Main Terminal from 600’ to 1,240’ was completed and designed by SOM. The expansion reflected the original design of Saarinen, who planned for an expansion to accommodate the growth of the facility. The International Arrivals building was connected to the Main Terminal due to the expansion on the west elevation. In 2005, the interior of the Main Terminal was renovated and ticket counters and baggage handling facilities were updated. An additional baggage basement was constructed under the ground level. Other additions to the overall complex include the construction of temporary Concourses C and D in 1985 and Concourses A and B in 1998-99 which were linked to the main terminal through the mobile lounges and an underground walkway.Current Use: Washington Dulles International Airport is used for both domestic and international air travel.Current Condition: The Main Terminal is in good condition.General Description:The Main Terminal and airport complex sits on 11,803 acres in Dulles, Virginia, and the Main Terminal and complex use approximately 5,000 acres. The Main Terminal is reached by an access road leading to a three-leveled oval roadway that runs parallel to the north elevation. The 1,240’ long building is composed of concrete columns 40’ apart along the north and south elevations supporting an upward curving concrete panel roof held together by catenary cables. The columns punctuate the roof and curve over the top of the structure on the north and south elevations. The spaces between column and roof are filled with glass panels curved into the building. The form of the building was designed by Saarinen to be centered between earth and sky, and as Saarinen stated to “both rise from the plan and hover over it.” The interior space of the main level is one large, open area designed by Saarinen to expedite flow of passengers from the roadway to the waiting planes and to connect the interior of the terminal to the exterior. The ground floor contains baggage circulation, and an additional basement also serves this function. A concrete control tower is situated south of the Main Terminal. Additional later concourses were added to the complex and run parallel to the Main Terminal along the south elevation and are linked to the Main Terminal by mobile lounges and an underground walkway.Construction Period:The building was constructed with reinforced concrete columns 40’ apart supporting an upward curving concrete panel roof of approximately 1792 precast concrete panels held together by catenary cables, which allowed for the uninterrupted interior space. Glass panels framed by metal surrounds create large open areas between the columns that slightly curve in towards the interior.Original Physical Context:When the need for Dulles Airport arose in the mid twentieth century, the entire functionality of how an airport works and operates was studied by Eero Saarinen to design an efficient new airport specifically geared for jet airplanes. Saarinen focused on this aspect of the structure when planning the flow of passengers from the drop off outside of the Main Terminal, through the building, and onto the waiting airplanes. A significant feature of Saarinen’s design was the mobile lounge concept. The mobile lounges allowed for the Main Terminal to be a single independent mass without what Saarinen called extending structural “fingers.” The mobile lounges were a modernistic design to bring passengers directly to the plane and to shorten the walking distance. Saarinen also planned for the growth of the Main Terminal and the airport complex and incorporated future extensions into his design in order to keep pace with the expanding airport industry. The Main Terminal was a modern building signifying modern travel by the jet airplane.EvaluationTechnical Evaluation:When planning and designing Washington Dulles International Airport, Eero Saarinen tested the functionality of other airport buildings and incorporated his findings into the design of the terminal. Teams were sent out to record information about existing airports such as walking distance, interchange problems, schedules, weather, and baggage handling to incorporate all aspects of air travel into his design. The design of the roof, with concrete panels supported by catenary cables, stands out as an important technical feature of the building and allows for an uninterrupted interior space to streamline the flow of passengers from the unloading area up to the mobile lounges and onto the plane. Saarinen was also taking into consideration the jet planes in his design, with the mobile lounge concept reducing reduced airport noise near the terminal.Social:Eero Saarinen’s design of Dulles Airport was centered on how architecture could facilitate the travel experience of the passenger in the new age of jet travel. His modernistic creation reflected the connection of ground to sky, and Saarinen was also attempting to express “the movement and excitement of modern travel by air.” Saarinen was making a statement against static Federal architecture by incorporating the concept of movement into his design. Saarinen also extended the role of the architect by not only creating a functional and stylistic design for the Main Terminal but by providing a master plan which would take into consideration future expansion of the entire complex.Cultural & Aesthetic:The architectural design of the Main Terminal subtly reflects flight and movement. The airport has been touted as a landmark of modern architecture due to its simplistic means of fulfilling the complex needs of an airport. Saarinen took an intricate problem and made it simple, and his design for the Main Terminal stands out as a prominent building in the Modern Movement.Historical:In 1958 Eero Saarninen and Associates were chosen as the architects for a new airport to be built twenty six miles west of Washington D.C. Construction began that year, and Dulles International officially opened and was formally dedicated by President John F. Kennedy on November 17, 1962. Dulles Airport received praise after its completion for its architecture and design, and in 1966 the Dulles International Airport Terminal Building received the Honor Award from the American Institute of Architects for its “vigorous, free and graceful movement which we associate with flight, while avoiding literal and obvious analogy.” In 1978 the airport was determined eligible for the National Register of Historic Places before it reached fifty years of age because of its architectural importance. It has been heavily praised from the beginning as a monument to modern travel. Major additions to the airport began in the 1980s with the addition of a 50’ wide skylighted corridor added to the south elevation of the Main Terminal. In 1984, when the airport was renamed Washington Dulles International Airport, three proposals were considered to address airport efficiency problems. In 1985 two temporary structures, Concourses C and D were constructed away from the Main Terminal which expanded the complex. An International Arrivals building was completed in 1991 300’ from the terminal, but by 1996, the International Arrivals building became part of the Main Terminal when SOM’s expansion was completed and effectively joined the two buildings. Concourses A and B were added in 1999 further expanding the entire airport complex. D2, a Dulles Development Program, was approved in 2000 to improve the efficiency and growth of the airport, which included a renovation of the interior of the Main Terminal in 2005 to maximize public space within and to update the technologies of the building. General Assessment:DocumentationText references:“A.I.A Selects Annual Honor Awards.” Architectural Record, July 1966, 41. “Airport Development Planning.” Progressive Architecture, November 1961, 158-163. “Dulles Airport.” Progressive Architecture, August 1963, 86-101. “Dulles Airport Expansion.” Architecture, November 1993, 40-41. “Dulles International Airport.” Architectural Record, July 1963, 101-110. Freeman, Allen. “SOM’s Addition to Dulles International Airport Respects Eero Saarinen’s 'Modern Masterpiece.'” Architectural Record, March 1997, 62-67. “Hammock Type Roof for Dulles Airport.” Architectural Record, November 1961, 198. “History of Washington Dulles International Airport.” Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority. http://www.metwashairports.com/dulles/ Lebovich, William. “Redoing Dulles: Three Proposals.” Progressive Architecture, April 1984, 29-30. “A New Airport for Jets.” Architectural Record, March 1960, 175-182.AuthoringRecorder/Date: Tags: Saarinen, Eero
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Click for weather forecast Cobblestone Inn & Suites now open Written by Darci Tomky After their first guests booked a room Saturday, June 15, Cobblestone Inn & Suites in Holyoke was officially open for business. Groundbreaking took place for the new hotel Nov. 6, 2012, at 805 S. Interocean—a great location just south of City Park. While a “Now Open” sign is proudly displayed on the front of the hotel, a grand opening celebration won’t take place until the first week in October. The hotel, with 38 rooms, is the first Cobblestone Inn & Suites to open in Colorado, with one in Wray to open soon in July. Following the building of the local Phillips County Event Center, Steve and Kim Young of Holyoke saw the need for more lodging in town and began brainstorming ways to help fill that need. “We saw there was a lot of people not staying in Holyoke because there wasn’t enough space,” said Steve.A “Now Open” sign hangs on the front of the new Cobblestone Inn & Suites at 805 S. Interocean Ave. on the south edge of Holyoke next to City Park. The hotel welcomed its first official guests Saturday, June 15, seven months after the groundbreaking ceremony Nov. 6, 2012. —Enterprise photo “There’s lots of room for growth,” said Kim, noting they wanted to put up a hotel to bring in more business to Holyoke, both at the Event Center and elsewhere. “There is a need for all of us,” she said. By offering more lodging, explained Steve, it’s more feasible to hold bigger, multiple-day events in Holyoke. It gives the city reasons to keep people in town and generate business not only for hotels but for gas stations, restaurants and other businesses. “People will now see Holyoke as a growing community. ‘Pride and Progress’ is what Holyoke’s about,” Kim added. “I see good things going on, and we’re proud to be able to say we’re from Holyoke.” About the time the Youngs began thinking of a hotel, Cobblestone Hotels LLC became interested in Holyoke as the next location for one of their hotels. A group of people formed Holyoke Hotels LLC and began working with Cobblestone. Kim said they liked Cobblestone’s philosophy—Big City Quality, Small Town Value. The Wisconsin-based brand started when two men in the hotel industry were driving through a small town. They said to themselves that those small communities needed hotels too. “They were meeting a need,” said Kim. “The features of each hotel meet the needs of the community.” “Smaller communities needed a hotel designed for them,” added Steve, noting the building and design of these hotels is very community-driven.General manager Kim Young, at right, stands at the Cobblestone Inn & Suites entrance with front desk personnel Melissa Houghtelling. —Enterprise photo Cobblestone Hotel and Suites and Cobblestone Inn and Suites is the fastest-growing new build brand in the United States. They branched out from Wisconsin to nine other states including Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Texas and now Colorado. Since opening its first hotel in January of 2008, the Holyoke hotel is Cobblestone’s 26th location, with the 27th opening the following day and eight more set to open in the next two months. The building in Holyoke is the first Cobblestone to have a center entrance. It faces west toward Interocean Avenue/Highway 385. The attractive and inviting building is two stories with staircases at both ends and in the center. Kim, who is the general manager, said they worked with BriMark Builders, LLC to customize the hotel to meet the needs of Holyoke. Some upgrades at the Holyoke hotel that are not found in most Cobblestones include a larger front entryway, a bar and lounge with a back patio and a full fitness room. Kim explained there are four different styles of rooms in the hotel. They include rooms with individual king beds and double queen beds. Queen suites have two queen beds as well as a pull-out couch. These three types all include a mini refrigerator and a microwave. Cobblestone also offers five extended stay rooms—the fourth lodging style. These have a separate bedroom area with one king bed, a living area with a couch and chairs as well as a kitchen with a full refrigerator, microwave, cooktop, dishwasher and dishes. The hotel rooms all have a 40-inch flat-panel TV, DVD player and free access to WiFi Internet. A hot breakfast is complimentary every morning, Wolfgang Puck coffee is included in each room, and guests will also have access to a small convenience store.The fitness room, business desk with a computer and printer and coin-operated laundry facilities are all available to guests. The local hotel employs around 15 people for the front desk, lounge and housekeeping services.Cobblestone Inn & Suites offers 38 rooms, including the double queen room pictured above as well as individual king rooms, queen suites and extended-stay rooms.—Enterprise photoThe full-service Cobblestone Lounge will be up and running soon and will be open to the public. Drinks and appetizers will be offered Monday-Thursday from 4:30-11:30 p.m. and Friday-Saturday from 4:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. The four flat-screen TVs will make it a great place to go for sporting events, and various specialty drinks (like martini nights) will help mix things up a bit. The front desk, which is open 24 hours a day, is available to take reservations, including blocks for weddings and other events. Kim said they are excited to work with the community on things like BST Racing, the Mexican rodeo scheduled for the fair, a Taste of Home event and hopefully another Babe Ruth baseball tournament and a junior rodeo in the future. With the Cobblestone Rewards Program, guests can earn $40 or a $40 room credit applied to the next stay for every 10 stays at Cobblestone. Kim said their first official guests were actually Australian. They decided to stop in Holyoke when they were passing through and saw the 125th Anniversary/Dandelion Daze events going on Saturday, June 15. She is excited to already have guests and other events like weddings booked at the hotel. “Cobblestone Hotels is extremely excited to open its first property in Colorado,” said Brian Wogernese, president of Cobblestone Hotels. “When we have the opportunity to work with and provide upper-midscale lodging to small communities like Holyoke, we are filling a need. Markets like Holyoke need accommodations, and Cobblestone Hotels is one of the few hotel brands that provide it at the right size and cost.” Cobblestone Hotels currently has six projects similar to Holyoke under development in Colorado, as well as the one under construction in Wray. “Developing this project and other projects like Holyoke in Colorado is great for the community,” said Tim Shefchik, with BriMark Builders, the hotel developer on the project. “We have a strong pipeline in the state of Colorado and only see that pipeline expanding.” To contact Cobblestone Inn and Suites in Holyoke, call locally at 970-854-3222 or toll free at 1-888-693-8268. They may also be reached by email at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or by visiting the website at www.staycobblestone.com.Holyoke Enterprise June 27, 2013
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3D Tours HD Photos Jerusalem Info Jerusalem Share Jerusalem / Jerusalem Articles / Chrisitanity / Restoration at Th... Restoration at The Church of the Holy Sepulchre < Return to Chrisitanity 19/08/2012 by Ami Metav Jerusalem Photos The Garden Tomb The Jewish Temple 3D Virtual Tour Jerusalem History What is Jerusalem? The entrance to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (or the Church of the Resurrection) is from the south. We are all familiar with the square situated between the Mosque of Omar and the smaller Armenian and Ethiopian churches. The square leads southwards through embellished Crusader gates, directly to the Stone of Unction. Not everyone is aware that the original entrance to the church was in fact from the east. Anyone who studied Christianity knows that churches face the rising sun in the east, thus easing the pagan worshipers into a monotheist belief. This means the entrance to most churches in the world is from the west. Naturally, every rule has an exception, such as: the church of St. Peter in Jaffa facing west as a bold statement of spreading the word of Christ overseas. It comes as quite a surprise that the most important church in the world was originally constructed with an opposite entrance, meaning: from the east facing the west. The pilgrim would first come across the site where the crucifixion occurred (Calvary), from that point proceeding to an open court, he'd continue west towards the Rotunda, Christ's place of sepulchre and resurrection. Nowadays the eastern entrance is marked by Zalatimo Sweets shop on Bab Khan Al-Zeit St. On the Christian Quarter road, on its northern part andits eastern side, a gate sealed by a brick wall can be seen. The gate seals offthe Church of the Holy Sepulchre from the west. There is no doubt this is a Crusader gate designed as part ofthe general layout of the grand southern gates and the bell tower. The pillow-shaped voussoirs, the pointed arch and the overall appearance indicate this clearly. This site is defiantly a portal to the Patriarch's complex situated on the northern part of the church. Nowadays this is part of the Al-Khanka Mosque, having been converted toliving quarters for Sufi monks by Saladin after conquering Jerusalem in 1187. The Latin Patriarchate Palace attached to the Anastasis on the north, was probably in existence since the Constantinopolitan church. The same as in other Crusader sites, there is an attempt to join the single structures (the crucifixion, the finding of the cross by Helena, the Sepulcher and the Resurrection) by slightly modifying onthe inside, but mainly by framing the complex on the outside. In this case a façade was built including the series of gates which our gate is a part of (all be it to the side), as an entrance to the Patriarch's complex. So why Mary? And how old is Mary's chapel attached to the Patriarch's living quarters, which may be associated with our gate? Obviously there are many sites referring to Mary's role in the crucifixion. Out of the three chapels attached to the Anastasi from south-west, dedicated to St. John, the Holy Trinity and Jacob, one may have been dedicated in the past to Mary (themiddle one). These chapels are part of a reconstruction that was carried out by Constantine IX Monomachos (mid 11th century) according to popular belief, after the Fatimi khalif al-Hakim demolished the church. Some researchers (Pringle) claim the church was restored twenty years earlier as part of a prisoner exchange treaty between Egypt and the Byzantine Empire in 1027. This means that a chapel dedicated to Mary has existed at least since the 11th century. The gate in question belongs to this part of the complex and was built by the Crusaders, however there is no evidence they named the gate after Mary. Up until two and a half years ago Mary's gate was blocked off by iron bars. Who added the bars, when and why?No one has a clear answer. The bars rusted over the years and were found inappropriate for the tourist attraction that is main Christian road, let alone the back of the most valued church in the world. The gap between the bars and the sealed gate became a rubbish bin, until 2011 when the Jerusalem Development Authority in cooperation with the Israel Antiquities Authority decided to restore the monument. The first action was ripping out the rusty old bars, and following that initiating further restoration such as cleaning the original stone work. Just like anything in Jerusalem, this wasn't simple. Each action was extremely sensitive considering we're dealing with matter of archaeological and religious significance. At first the Greek Orthodox Patriarchs went back on their original consent and objected to the project. Despite this, the work was carried out,the bars are gone, and the arch is looking better than ever. Executing the restoration without the Greek Orthodox Patriarchs' full consent left an unnecessary dent in the relations between the authorities and the patriarchs, and measures are being taken to make amends. After further discussion between the patriarchs andthe authorities, a low and aesthetically pleasing 1.10m railing was agreed upon and installed to everyone delight. A statement was released by the patriarchs in the East-Jerusalem press regarding the matter, saying that as far as they're concerned the Greek Orthodox Church was restored to its former grandeur without harming the "status quo". De facto, this is a finer railing, which is found to be esthetically pleasing and appropriate for the site and place. Special thanks to my teachers and mentors in academia: Prof Yvonne Friedman and Prof Dan Bahat, who enlightened me regarding Crusader Jerusalem and this monument in particular. Tell us what you think about this topic Articles / Chrisitanity / In memory of Igal Lichtman Founder, Visionary, Father & Husband More about Jerusalem History of Jerusalem 14 Stations of the Cross Jewish Temple Virtual Tour Photos of Jerusalem Jerusalem Daily Photo Jesus in Jerusalem Western Wall Tunnels Jerusalem News Follow Jerusalem.com Follow @wwwJerusalemCom Sign up to get the latest from Jerusalem.com Copyright © 2013 Jerusalem.com - an InternetDominion.com Company. All rights reserved. Peace is possible Join us to show your support Get the latest updates from Jerusalem.com such as new 3D tours, photos, videos, special offers and more.. Jerusalem.com - Jerusalem for everyone, everywhere Join the largest community on Jerusalem and relgions. All for FREE The fastest way to join New to Jerusalem.com? Sign Up Have a Jerusalem.com account? Sign In It's free so all can enjoy! By signing up you agree to Jerusalem.com Terms of Service
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Excitement Surrounds Hooked’s Opening In OC Posted on 05/23/2013 by DispatchAdmin OCEAN CITY – Hooked has opened its doors in Ocean City, bringing its tradition of fresh, honest and local food to Maryland, but adding a twist to the new location with a one-of-a-kind, hand-crafted cocktail list. Owners Steve Hagen and Kevin Frey started Indian River Seafood Company in 2010 and opened their first restaurant, Off the Hook, in Bethany Beach that year. One year later, the company opened its second restaurant, Just Hooked, in Fenwick Island, and as the company took on a second location and catering they found the need to add a commissary/seafood market. Off the Hook Market opened last July besides the restaurant in Bethany. Following a trend moving south, the company has now opened a third restaurant in Ocean City on 80th Street and Coastal Highway adjacent to South Moon Under. Hagen explained the opportunity to open another restaurant came around Thanksgiving of last year, and negotiations took place until the deal was signed in early February, and renovations immediately began The space has become lighter and open with a white and pale blue paint pallet, accenting the dark wood beams and floor. The restaurant took on a coastal design theme presenting the work of local artists on the walls. The kitchen and bathrooms were transformed with new fixtures and appliances. Hooked seats about 220 guests with downstairs, upstairs and outdoor seating offered. There are three bars with one on each floor and outside. There is also an abundance of parking in the rear of the building as the restaurant has at least 50-plus parking spaces between the front and back of the building. Hooked will continue the company’s tradition with the farm to plate mentality for lunch and dinner, sourcing local artisans, farmers and watermen. “It is a new menu,” Hagen said. “I feel like it is one of the best menus we have put out in our company, and we have started a new cocktail and wine program here that we are really excited about.” Hooked has released its signature cocktail list, or as Hagen puts it “farm fresh cocktails.” “We have done a great job on the food. Our plates are very clean and the things we are bringing to the table are very fresh. Its fundamental-based cooking in a very fun tasteful way,” he said. “I think the thing we were lacking was more creativity on the cocktail end and more variety on the wine end.” There is not a single specialty cocktail on the menu that is not processed and commissary on the premises. Besides squeezing their own lemons and oranges for their freshly made Hooked Lemonade and Orange Crush, the restaurant has taken it to the next level by pickling and infusing cocktail ingredients. For example, fresh strawberries, blueberries, cherries and heirloom tomatoes are pickled and to be served in the one-of-kind concoctions like the Blueberry Pie, Uptown Pig and Smokey Mater. A cocktail Hagen was sure to point out was the Return to Youth, a grown up chocolate banana milkshake with 360 Double Chocolate Vodka, banana liquor, banana chocolate milk, with a banana dust rim served up. “It is amazing … it is just ridiculous,” he said. “You can see it. The proof is in the pudding when you come in here. Every bar has our infusions up on the rack … we are taking a lot of pride in it.” Hooked’s wine list has been extended offering more variety when it comes to wines by the glass and by the bottle. It includes 11 white wines and 10 red wines by the glass, plus a selection of at least 45 bottles of wine that were all thoroughly researched before hand selected. The food menu is different but follows the company’s concept of staying in taste with the season. The expected and popular entrees of pan roasted chicken, local crab cake, filet mignon, seared scallops, salmon, mahi and tuna remain but the menu has been left open ended to include at least three to four specials a night. “We are always sourcing things, such as black sea bass is huge around here, something that is local and tasty, like tog, sheepshead, or rockfish,” Hagen said of items that pop up in the local market. “Matt [Cornelius, managing partner and executive chef] and I have been playing around in the kitchen since we opened Off the Hook years ago … and people have become familiar with our chalkboards.” Each location has a chalkboard displayed presenting that day’s special whether it be an appetizer to an entrée. In the week Hooked has been open, the kinks are being worked out between getting comfortable in the new space to training new employees. “I feel like we are ready, and there is no better time to be ready then for Memorial Day weekend,” Hagen said. “We are excited to have the success that we have had in such a short period of time, and I think the addition of this place lends itself into becoming something really special. It is a gorgeous location … we are happy to be here and part of what Ocean City has going on.”
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Top Historical Tours Of South Florida View Comments Florida is relatively young state, but there have been five flags that have flown over Florida since it was first discovered in April 2, 1513 by Juan Ponce de Leon who is fabled to have been searching for the “fountain of youth.” He named it Florida for its “feast of flowers.” Since then, Florida has come along way, but left behind a rich history that many historical tours like to recount. Here’s a sample of the best historical tours South Florida has to offer. (Source: Historical Museum of Southern Florida) Historical Museum of Southern Florida 101 West Flagler Street www.hmsf.org Historian Dr. Paul George is the ultimate authority in South Florida history. He teaches courses and also guides tourists and locals through neighborhoods and shares his knowledge to those who are curious about the area’s past. His tours are varied and include walking tours or cruises through the Miami River. George also takes his guests through a cigar factory in Little Havana and Al Capone’s former home. He reveals the stories that made South Florida what it is today. (Source: Miami Design Preservation League) Art Deco Architectural Tours Miami Dade Preservation League 10th Street and Ocean Drive www.mdpl.org The pastel-colored buildings along South Beach have an equally colorful history. Find out the story behind the most famous mansion on Ocean Drive — Casa Casaurina, more famously referred to as the Versace mansion. What is a Casaurina anyway? Well, one of several Miami-Dade Preservation League volunteers will be happy to educate you on the subject. Many of the Art Deco buildings date back to the 1940s and 1950s and some of them have been designated on the National Register of Historic Places. Check their website for times and tour dates. (Source: Miami Aqua Tours) Imagine learning about South Florida aboard a pirate ship, Schooner or glass-bottom boat. Imagine no more. Miami Aqua Tours offers all three options. The pirate ship is a replica of a Spanish Galleon from the XVI Century and allows tourists a chance to experience what life during that time period might have been like. The glass bottom boat offers customers to see the vareity of species living in the Atlantic waters, while the Schooner Heritage of Miami II is 45-passenger sail boat that offers a tour by night. Prices start at $25 per person. (Source: Historic Tours Of America) Old Town Trolley Tours (Key West) 201 Front Street, Suite 224 Key West, Fl 33040 www.historictours.com/keywest/ Nearly everyone who grew up in South Florida has a picture with the “Old Town Trolley.” Both locals and out-of-towners have been flocking to Key West in order to slam down a few at the famous Sloppy Joe’s or walk through Ernest Hemingway’s former home that is now inhabited by the infamous six-toed cats. (Source: Carrie B. Cruises) Carrie B. Cruises 440 North New River Drive East www.carriebcruises.com Several sightseeing cruises sail out of the New River daily at 11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. and each cruise lasts about 90 minutes. The guided tours offer visitors a chance to learn about who lives in the homes along the river. The captain serves as the narrator and takes tourists through the history of the river. Prices start at $12.95 for children under 12 and $19.95 for adults. Top Spots Travel & Outdoors Related TagsFloridaHistoricalHistorySouth FloridaTopspotsTours Listen Live
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HOME > Press Releases > Japan�s New Tourism Highlight ... Press Releases Japan�s New Tourism Highlight in Kyushu Japan's New Tourism Highlight in Kyushu While Tokyo and Kyoto are noteworthy destinations for the majority of US travelers, the Japan National Tourism Organization in New York has introduced Kyushu as the next must-see destination. Extraordinarily rich in culture and nature, the profound culinary and pottery culture of Kyushu received new attention from tourism industry and media in New York, along with profound culinary and pottery culture. As the cultural crossroads of East Asia, and as the first settlement of early Europeans, the remarkable cultural experiences and exception train services offered in Kyushu were officially introduced to the US travel industry. The Seven Stars in Kyushu New York, New York, November 21, 2013: With the news about the launch of Japan's first luxury sleeper train service, the Kyushu's name became more visible than ever before. The Consulate General of Japan in New York and Japan National Tourism Organization (JNTO) invited editorial and tourism industry professionals to an event showcasing the region of Kyushu on November 14, 2013. The event introduced Kyushu from different perspectives of interest – history, tourism attractions, geographic diversity and culinary traditions. The event also featured specialists who spoke on Kyushu's attractions in depth, including the long-time Frommer's Japan guidebook author Beth Reiber, who briefed the audience on highlights of Kyushu's landmarks and history. Stephen Lyman, a researcher of Kyushu's regional liquor shochu, lectured on the culture of shochu. Mr. Lyman clearly differentiated shochu from Japanese sake with ingredients and the processing methods, which are strongly associated with regional climate and geographic characteristics. For the very authentic experience of shochu, a shochu promotion company in New York Zation invited six Kyushu local shochu distillers to the event, serving their top of the line labels to the attendees. In addition, the discussions also included tidbits on Kyushu's regional tradition, craftsmanship, pottery pieces at the national treasure level, and premium quality of food. Each one of these exceptional extraordinary attractions was also introduced in the introduction of the "Seven Stars in Kyushu," the newly launched luxury sleeper trains in Kyushu. With only fourteen suites on board, each room is carefully designed using the finest products of Kyushu, such as the Arita pottery ware basin on the vanity, local Oshima-Tsumugi fabric for the chair cushions, local premium cedar wood walls, and elaborate wooden fixtures crafted in the region's traditional style from centuries ago. Meals are prepared with local premium ingredients, served in actual art pieces created by renowned artists in the country. The Seven Stars train travels to several magnificent tourist spots such as the hot springs area in Yufuin, the dynamic volcano known as Mt. Aso, the Southern coastal town of Miyazaki, the historic city of Nagasaki, and more. Kyushu Shochu Imari ware pottery for wash basin used in the Seven Stars suite Suite room on the Seven Stars Kyushu has been relatively overlooked as a tourist destination, and the event attendees were all surprised by the unique history and cultural richness of the region. In his opening remarks, Ambassador Sumio Kusaka noted that "Kyushu is one of the most beautiful countries," and after the event discover that many participants from local editorial industry described Kyushu as "culturally inspiring," "the hidden gem of Japanese cuisine," and "unexpectedly colorful." In the very first official introduction of the Seven Stars in Kyushu to the US market, the luxury sleeper trains earned special attention not only from journalists and editors, but also from luxury tour operators such as Remote Land, a New York based tour operator specializing in the luxury market. After being introduced as the exclusive luxury train in Japan, the tickets sold out immediately, and the US tourism industry was already eager to find out the ticket sales schedule for the US market in 2014. "The new luxury train is extremely interesting and perfect for the US luxury travelers, and we would love to get booking information for 2014," says Ms. Victoria Hiller, the general manager of Remote Land, who attended the event. Kumamoto Governor and Kumamon The event also included a special guest for a very unique tourism promotion: A regional mascot bear called Kumamon appeared alongside with the Kumamoto Prefecture Governor, Mr. Ikuo Kabashima. Kumamon has been hugely popular as the promotional mascot of Kumamoto Prefecture, which is located in the Kyushu region. The popularity of Kumamon instantly raises awareness about the Kumamoto Prefecture, and he definitely brought attention to Kumamoto even at this event. Kyushu is one of the four major islands of Japan. Because of its southwest location near the Korean Peninsula and mainland China, the regional culture has stemmed from foreign cultural influences, including influences brought by the first Europeans who traveled to Nagasaki for international trade in the 17th century. Kyushu Sho-chu Project operated by Zation Corp. (https://www.facebook.com/kyushushochu) Stephen Lyman Nori Akashi, Public Relations Manager [email protected] Information is provided as a courtesy to users of this website. Though the JNTO endeavors to ensure the information is accurate, users of the information are to act on such using their own judgement and at their own risk. Neither the JNTO nor any holder of copyright to the information shall be held responsible in any way whatsoever for any loss or misunderstanding, either direct or indirect, that is incurred as a result of utilizing the information.
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For things to do in London learn about the city's cultural heritage and exciting history Visitors planning their trips to London attractions such as the Banqueting House can take advantage of the upcoming Story of London festival. Travellers as well as Londoners can gain a unique insight in to the culture, heritage, innovations and history of this brilliant city. As many as 100 events will be organised to celebrate the city's pioneers and thinkers whose ideas went a long way in shaping the UK's customs. Throughout history, London has been the hub of scientific inventions, geographical discoveries as well as the site of literary innovations and advances in fashion. Mayor of London Boris Johnson said: "London is a city where around almost every corner there has been a great Eureka! moment. Full of pioneering bright sparks in every field, there are hundreds of stories to be discovered." A pop-up beach at Whitechapel also promises visitors the chance to relax on deck chairs and delve into the world of literature to discover a world of holiday novels or enjoy a spot of fun by participating in a literary volleyball. Posted by Georgina Black Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Next Take a nap..at Hampton Court PalaceMonday 16th of September 2013 Fancy a sleepover at Hampton Court Palace? If you have ever relished the thought of staying at one... Experience the beauty of London from the Thames Monday 9th of September 2013 There is nothing quite like cruising along the river on a bright autumn morning, taking in the sunshine... London markets attract buyers from across the globeMonday 26th of August 2013 One of the best reasons to take a trip to London is you get the opportunities to acquaint yourself... Get your dancing shoes on at Notting Hill CarnivalMonday 19th of August 2013 Once a year, the streets of London come to life with exotic dancing, celebration and the sweet-smelling... Explore the cryptic mysteries of the Tower of LondonMonday 12th of August 2013 Very few buildings in London have quite managed to capture the imaginations... Enjoy the fun and festivities at London's greatest fringe festivalMonday 5th of August 2013 Camden Fringe is a lively medley of theatre, song and spoken word which is set to entertain visitors... London Attractions: Celebrate royalty this month at Kensington Palace Monday 29th of July 2013 If you are looking for things to do in London then why not join thousands of Brits, who are celebrating... London attractions: How to entertain kids this summer - Kids Week LondonWednesday 24th of July 2013 If you are busy trying to entertain the kids this summer and are on the lookout for things to do in... London attractions: Outdoor theatre events in LondonMonday 22nd of July 2013 One of the best things about summer is that theatres across the country - such as Shakespeare's... Things to do in London: Buckingham Palace Summer OpeningThursday 18th of July 2013 It's not every day you get to visit the dwelling places of kings and queens, particularly when... London attractions: How to enjoy the best of fine dining in the cityWednesday 17th of July 2013 If you are visiting London this summer and are on the lookout for great places to eat after a day... Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Next Offer Ends: Tue 2nd Sep 2014
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A Ghost Ship Launches for Halloween in Southern California Official Ghost Ship Website http://www.ghostship.com /jul11/ghostships.jpg As a full-blown haunted attraction junkie, I’ve spent years covering every October-themed event Los Angeles has to offer. One of the best of the bunch was last year’s “LA Haunted Hayride”, and the twisted minds behind it are returning with an attraction that, truth be told, even I’m a little scared to go on. This fall GHOST SHIP will kick the usual trend of haunted mazes by taking guests off the mainland for a 75-minute night cruise that promises all sorts of demented sights. October can’t come soon enough! Read on for full details! From the Press Release From the creators of the popular Los Angeles Haunted Hayride, Ghost Ship is the first haunted attraction in the country to take place on a ship that sets sail into the dark, open ocean at night. Departing from Newport Beach, California, and comprised of three levels of highly interactive content, Ghost Ship will send guests on a 75-minute ride of pure terror where not one corner of this ship is off limits. The plot behind Ghost Ship starts in the early 1930’s when the State of California became responsible for the residents of Psych Ward 7. These were the most dangerous inmates in the country, so dangerous that no walls on land were considered adequate to keep society safe. It was decided that these inmates were to be housed on a ship anchored over 100 miles off shore that was to become the country’s first floating asylum. One fall night in 1939, without so much as a cloud in the sky or a ripple in the water, the ship disappeared off the Coast Guard’s radar and has never been found…until now. The gut of the ship will bring guests through the abandoned hallways of what once was the treatment deck for those in need of Electro Shock Therapy, Hydrotherapy, and Sleep Disorder Rehabilitation as well as the old examination rooms and morgue. The middle floor will appear to provide a moment of calm where patrons can grab a cocktail and take in the old ballroom vibe of the 1930’s. However, appearances can be incredibly deceiving as this may just be the most disturbing floor of the ship with some severely twisted surprises that guests will never see coming. Lastly, the top deck will bring gluttons for punishment through an interactive execution experience that just may make them wonder “who” is actually getting executed. This will be an experience you will not want to miss if you are someone with a high tolerance for fear. And we must warn you that once you have stepped onto Ghost Ship, you are fair game. Once guests enter the ship, they are able to move through the floors at their own pace. Melissa Carbone, Executive Producer of Ghost Ship, states that “obviously, content is very important to haunted attractions, but I believe that of equal importance is the environment in which you place that content. That’s what makes Ghost Ship special. It’s another exercise in isolation…this time in the ocean. And that to our knowledge has not been done before.” Ghost Ship has also adopted a “Fur Free” policy prohibiting guests from bringing garments made of fur onto the ship with an apropos slogan for the season of “We have enough blood and guts inside, NO FUR PLEASE.” Parent company, Ten Thirty One Productions, owns, produces, and promotes attractions internationally, including the successful Southern California based “Los Angeles Haunted Hayride,” while using them as a vehicle to create social awareness and fundraising for Animal and Wildlife Preservation as well as Environmental Conservation. Additionally, Ghost Ship will be a presenting sponsor at the “Stan Lee and Comikaze Expo’s” Comic-Con Private After-Party event on Thursday, July 21st, at the Bristol Hotel in Downtown San Diego. Ghost Ship’s maiden voyage is October 14th and operates every Friday and Saturday through October 29th. There will be three voyages per night at 6:30pm, 8:15pm, and 10:00pm. General Admission is $59. Only 400 tickets are sold for each voyage so space is very limited. Tickets are currently available for purchase online at Ghost Ship! Get haunted in the comments section below! Uncategorized Haunted Attraction DreadCentral presents Box of Dread * US Residents Only New One-Sheet and Trailer Debut – Grave Encounters Scream of the Banshee (UK DVD) Sponsored By Box of Dread *US Residents Only
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Regions › Shenandoah Valley Virginia’s historic Natural Bridge is for sale By Paula C. Squires Natural Bridge, one of Virginia’s most famous historic landmarks, is on the market again. Principal owner Angelo Puglisi has retained Roanoke-based Woltz & Associates to market and sell the 215-foot-high bridge, the 150-room hotel, Natural Bridge Caverns and about 1,600 acres. "A lot of people probably don't even realize the Natural Bridge, one of the natural wonders of the world, is privately owned, and it is a great honor to be entrusted with this treasure," Jim Woltz, president of Woltz & Associates, said in a statement. Puglisi and a group of other owners, all reportedly in their 80s, first put the property up for sale in April 2007 with an asking price of $32 million, but there were no takers. “It’s a much more favorable environment now,” Carl Carter, a spokesman for Woltz, said in an interview with Virginia Business. Also, the owners are willing to sell the property in pieces. “There’s a good possibility that it will go to multiple buyers. We’re going to offer it in a configuration that gives people the most flexibility,” Carter said. The property will be marketed aggressively in the U.S. and internationally, he added. “We’ll be carrying out a very extensive campaign with advertising to the tourism and hospitality industry.” Richard Lewis, public relations manager for the Va. Tourism Corp, said in an email that the state's tourism agency "would have no interest in buying the property but we have and will continue to be active in promoting it as a Virginia attraction." According to Natural Bridge, 200,000 people visit the arched 90-foot span in Rockbridge County a year. The history behind the arch is a big draw. In 1774, two years before the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson purchased the Natural Bridge from King George III for 20 shillings, It attracted visitors from all over the world in the 18th and 19th centuries. The bridge -- 23 stories of solid rock -- was named a national landmark in 1998. Before Jefferson purchased the property, it is believed that George Washington visited Natural Bridge in 1750 as a surveyor on business for Lord Thomas Fairfax. Some people believe the initials GW carved on the bridge wall were the initials of the first president of the United States. Beneath the bridge are the Natural Bridge caverns, a tourist draw in their own right. The Natural Bridge Wax Museum offers scenes of Washington, Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin and other historical figures.As many as 150 employees work at the attractions during the peak summer tourist season. “Together, these significant attractions and the hotel, coupled with the surrounding 1,600 acres … create a very unique opportunity for investors, hotel/attraction operators, conservation easement buyers and state and national parks,” said Woltz.
Woltz noted in his remarks that Puglisi, a resident of the Washington, D.C., area, “has been a wonderful, caring owner of this property for over a quarter of a century. He has set a goal to find a new, trustworthy steward of the bridge for the generations to come.” According to Woltz’s chronology, Puglisi’s father immigrated from Italy to the U.S. in 1901 and settled in D.C. When the opportunity to purchase Natural Bridge presented itself in the 1980s, Angelo bought a major interest in the property “with reverent respect to Thomas Jefferson and the founding fathers, who helped create the land of opportunity where he himself had his beginning.”
Carter said about half of the sales for the Woltz real estate firm comes from listings and the other half from auctions. “We do a lot of properties with historic significance, but I can’t think of anything that’s been in this class.” Chip plant expansion will benefit potato farmers by Joan Tupponce Shentel to pay $640 million to acquire Ntelos by Joan Tupponce New facility expected to boost turkey processing by Joan Tupponce Commonwealth formally transfers Fort Monroe land to National Park Service Interchange develops food-grade warehouses by Joan Tupponce First Bank names president and chief operating officer Mary Baldwin to become university in 2016 by Joan Tupponce Shenandoah Growers plants seeds for higher sales by Veronica Garabelli Dynamic Aviation gets new initiatives off the ground by Veronica Garabelli Shenandoah Valley Partnership picks new director by Veronica Garabelli View all »
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Menor's Ferry on the Snake River at Moose in Grand Teton National Park. (GTNP) Menor’s Ferry to begin cross river service this coming Tuesday in GTNP (Moose, Wyo.) — This past week, Grand Teton National Park staff launched Menor’s ferry boat and park visitors may once again experience crossing the Snake River in the same fashion provided by Bill Menor through his ferry service of the late 1800s and early 1900s. The ferry rides will begin on Tuesday, August 12th. The replica ferry serves as a central feature of the Menor/Noble historic district, located just north of the Craig Thomas Discovery and Visitor Center. Park ranger naturalists offer free ferry rides daily from 9 – 10 a.m., and most afternoons, from Menor’s general store on the west bank of the Snake River to Dornan’s on the east bank—and back. Call 307.739.3399 for times of afternoon operation. Bill Menor at Menor’s Ferry across the Snake River in the late 1800s, early 1900s. (GTNP) Menor’s Ferry consists of a platform deck placed upon two pontoons for flotation. The ferry is tethered to a cable system that spans the river and operates by directing the pontoons toward the opposite riverbank, allowing the power of the current to push the craft across the river channel. The system uses river power—rather than motor power—to push the ferry across the water. This type of river travel existed in ancient times and was widely used throughout the United States. Menor’s Ferry played a vital role in providing safe transport for passengers over the swift-flowing Snake River before construction of a bridge. Prior to the ferry’s existence, the Snake River was essentially impassable from Wilson to Moran—except during low water periods in the fall and winter months. As a man of vision, Bill Menor saw the need for a more convenient access across the Snake River and consequently built and operated his ferry from 1894 until 1918 when he sold it to Maud Noble. Maud operated the ferry until 1927 when its use became obsolete after a steel truss bridge was constructed across the river, allowing for vehicles and foot traffic to cross without the assistance of a ferry service. Although transportation has changed over time, Menor’s Ferry offers a chance to step back into the past and experience a bygone time and historic mode of river passage. –Provided by Grand Teton National Park A Park Ranger is pictured operating the Menor’s Ferry in 2009 (GTNP) 1 year ago Ernie Over Read More ‹ Grass fire knocked down between buildings at the Lander Industrial ParkRiverton Museum Wilderness Medicine talk is today; New exhibits now on display › Search our County 10 archive stories here.
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