Monday, October 1, 2007

Hello From Victoria! Reaching The West Coast

Jetlag is an amazing thing. It's barely after 5 am and I have already been reading for an hour an a half. So I figured I might as well use this bout of sleeplessness and record my first impressions of British Columbia.

My WestJet flight out of Toronto left a 7:15 am yesterday, so that meant I got up at 4:30 am, after 2.5 hours of sleep, to check all my luggage, eat a brief breakfast and get myself out to the airport. Sometimes a little travel savvy goes a long way, I had decided to use my Airmiles to go to BC and upon doing some research I found out that WestJet had a special on that only required me to use 1600 Airmiles instead of the regular 3900 Airmiles, so off I went and booked the trip, saving myself 60% of the Airmiles that I would have otherwise spent. When you travel frequently, you have to look at every available option of savings costs and my travel reward miles came through big for me.

I was able to book a flight from Toronto to Calgary and another from Calgary to Vancouver. WestJet is always an interesting experience because its flight attendants are known for cracking jokes over the PA system. The flight to Calgary was actually really bumpy and for about an hour we went through what felt like a dirt road in the sky full of potholes, hitting the occasional air pocket and dropping a few feet. But the WestJet crew brought us down safely and humorously, something I was very happy about.

In retrospect I actually felt pretty lucky, considering that the very night before my departure an Air France flight had crash-landed in Toronto. Fortunately, all 300+ passengers and crew survived and only 43 people ended up with light injuries, despite the fact that the plane went up in flames. Not surprisingly the newspapers referred to this incident as the Miracle Flight.

Well, my aerial transport went a lot smoother and after about 7 hours of flight and transfers our plane touched down in beautiful Vancouver. The natural setting of Vancouver is indeed impressive: it is set in the Coastal Mountain Range, surrounded by Vancouver Island and the Pacific Ocean. It certainly looked breath-taking from the air, but my exploration of this city had to wait since my first item of the agenda was to get myself to the City of Victoria, on Vancouver Island.

I located the Pacific Coachlines desk at the Vancouver airport and for just over C$70.00 I bought a return ticket for a coach and ferry ride across to Victoria, the capital of British Columbia. I only had about a half hour between my arrival at the airport until a comfortable air-conditioned bus whisked us to the Tsawassen Bay Ferry Terminal, following which the bus went onto the BC Ferries boat itself.

The ferry was a very large vessel with 3 different decks for cars, trucks and buses. There are 3 additional passenger decks including an open-air sitting area in the front of the ferry. We slowly started our crossing of the Straits of Georgia and I thoroughly enjoyed the panomara of mountains and water. Due to my lack of sleep my head got a little heavy and I fell asleep on the open-air deck. When I woke up we were just chugging through the narrows between Galiano Island and Mayne Island. The narrow channel is embedded in between these islands which are covered by coniferous forests. The entire approach to the Swartz Bay Ferry Terminal was one of the most scenic waterways I have ever seen.

Punctually at 2:25 pm people headed back down to the bus, at 2:35 the bridge was lowered onto the ferry and our bus was the first vehicle out of the boat. Another 45 minutes later and we arrived in downtown Victoria at the bus terminal, right next to the Fairmont Empress Hotel, one of Victoria's most famous landmarks. Designed as a chateau-style luxury hotel, it was built in 1908 for $1 million and was extensively restored in the late 1980s to the tune of $45 million. But more extensive exploration of this stunning building would have to wait, since a local friend was picking me up at the bus station.

My co-worker Clare, who works with me in my full-time business in new business development, relocated to Victoria with her husband Haishan in March of this year, and the two of them have been graciously accommodating me since my arrival yesterday. Both Clare and her husband are originally from mainland China and have been calling Canada their home for the last few years.

Haishan came to pick me up and after a beautiful drive through Victoria and some of its suburbs, I arrived at Clare and Haishan's beautiful house in a little hillside community outside Victoria. After a couple of hours of rest due to my utter exhaustion, I got up to a beautiful Chinese dinner complete with 3 different meat dishes and the most delicous chicken with chestnuts dish I had ever eaten.

While we were savouring this gourmet meal, a deer made its appearance in the backyard, and Clare had already informed me earlier that deers show up in the backyard on an almost daily basis and take care of all newly planted landscaping and flowers, much to the chagrin of the residents.

After this delicious dinner we went on a little drive in the neighbourhood and drove down to the lagoon from where we had a perfect lookout to the Olympic Mountain Range in Washington State, across the narrow strait from Vancouver Island. One of the mountains was snow-covered and this majestic mountain range combined with the waters of the Pacific creates one of the most stunning sceneries this lovely planet of ours has to offer. We had a view of a historic light house and the Esquimalt navy base and after a brief drive through the hilly coastal roads (and another close encounter with a deer) we drove back to Clare's beautiful house on the slopes.

After another hour or two of shop talk I was positively exhausted and dropped into bed like a sack of potatoes, only to wake up before 4 am, unable to sleep. Well, this early rise has given me a chance to record my first impressions, and I have avidly been reading my guidebook on Vancouver and Victoria, laying out a draft itinerary for today. The sun is coming up now so I've got another couple of hours of reading ahead of me in preparation of today's discovery.

Viva Cuba!

Thanks to a severe case of the Revenge of Montezuma (or Ricky Ricardo?..,) I am sitting here in the Hotel Havana Libre and I finally get around to create updates from my first 4.5 days here in Cuba. The Internet connection is definitely the slowest I have ever seen in my entire life, (15 minutes to access my messages at Yahoo..), but I am giving it a shot anyways.

Friday morning I arrived at the airport in Toronto at 5:30 am since my husband gave me a ride before work. The plane was scheduled to leave at 10:30 and several transfers with public transport would have taken me 2.5 hours anyway, so I decided to head there early and read a book.

Air Canada was delayed after all (due to a problem with the water supply on the plane) and we had to wait for a substitute plane from Winnipeg and finally got off the ground at about noon. 3.5 hours later we arrived at the airport Jose Marti in Havana - a reasonably modern airport. However, it took me and the other travellers almost 2 hours to collect our luggage and finally hop into a taxi.

On the way in from the airport I noticed that there was a mixture of industrial developments and agricultural areas, right up until the centre of the city, which is strange compared to Toronto, where there is no significant agriculture until way outside the city. The older gentleman driving the taxi was very friendly and explained a few basic things to me, e.g. that most of the area is industrial and agricultural. He also showed the National Sports Centre to me. Of course you see old cars from the 50s and earlier as well as beat-up Russian Ladas everywhere. Old sidecar motorcycles are also a popular way to get around.

I finally arrived at my hotel at about 6 pm where my brand-new friend Pedro (a connection through a friend in Canada) was waiting for me. I had told my friend that I wanted to really spend some time with locals to learn about Cuba, its customs, its way of life etc.

Pedro is a brown-skinned black man in his late thirties with a common-law wife and a young daughter. An extremely nice person and he´s been very gracious in taking me around and explaining things to me.

After I dropped off my suitcase and refreshed myself a little, we hopped into a private individual's car (a practice extremely common in Cuba), he paid a few local pesos and we were whisked downtown in a very old beat-up Lada which ended up picking up various other locals along the way.

Habana Vieja is a fascinating colonial city and the age and beauty of the building is astounding. Of course I saw the Capitolio (very similar to the Capital in Washington), several of the big museums, the Hotel Inglaterra and some of the bars that Hemingway frequented.

I also saw the big spider exhibit of 2 metallic spiders that are located right in the heart of downtown, an exhibit by a French sculptress that will stay in Havana until April 28 and then apparently move on to New York.

We walked around and chatted about life in Cuba and I started to learn a few things, about some of the practical consequences of the revolution (e.g. blacks have it much better today than before, and there is relatively little racism according to Pedro), and the double economy, where locals receive their salary in Pesos Cubanos, (around US$8 to $30 a month), which is not even close to enough for living, so everybody participates in the underground economy in some way.

We had a reasonably expensive meal in a downtown "Paladar", a private restaurant in a private home with a maximum of 12 seats, one of the few official private enterprises allowed. When asked about the future of Cuba after Fidel, both my new-found friend and the old man running the Paladar indicated that they thought not much would change after a future passing of Fidel. (Actually the mention of Fidel´s passing often makes people pull up their hands in front of their mouths and start to speak very quietly...).

After the meal, Pedro again flagged down a private vehicle, we hopped in and I got dropped off at the hotel, dropping into bed like a tired sack of potatoes. But I definitely had a great introduction to life in Cuba on my first evening....

Monday, September 24, 2007

Belgium

Belgium is a country that is surrounded by France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. It has a compact size which makes it thperfect country to travel. The capital of Belgium is Brussels and is also known as the heart of the country.

Brussels, BelBelgium is a country that is surrounded by France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. It has a compact size which makes it thperfect country togium is also the headquarters for NATO. There are so many different cultural attractions for travels such as the Museum of Modern Art, the Museum of Ancient Art, the Comic Strip Museum, and one of the most popular, the Chocolate and Cocoa Museum. The Chocolate and Cocoa Museum features one of Belgium’s best known products.

The capital is not the only place to experience in Belgium. In fact there are many enchanting cities including Ghent, Liege, and Bruges which all have impressive architecture, top-rated cuisine, as well as the night life.

Bruges, Belgium has been known as the "Venice of the North" because it is one of Europe’s most magnificent and well-preserved medieval cities. One of the best parts about this amazing city is that getting to Bruges could not be any easier. You can get there by Eurostar, a ferry, or Eurotunnel, than take a drive to Bruges.

If you are into popular fashion and modern design then you will want to visit the newly reinvented Antwerp. This city in Belgium is known as being a new hotbed for fashion and design. Antwerp, Belgium has many other sights to offer visitors as well including the mountainous area of the Ardennes region all the way to the East. There are also gorgeous coastline resorts set on the Western seaboard.

Belgium is a country that is best known for its specialty products such as ubiquitous beers, delicious chocolates, beautiful lace, and of course Belgian waffles. If you visit Belgium you must stay at one of their comfortable and inviting bed and breakfasts that they are so well known for.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Exotic Kenya

Kenya me! Really. Here too shivering said, visiting there to return home again. Recreation place with young people travel channel in August 2006, or skolechki not regretted their choice, but I am afraid to leave that, in Africa, there is no civilization, flying huge mosquitoes, tsetse flies, river-crocodiles, the safari-elephants, which are and norovyat crush poor directions tourists. Do not listen to this nonsense! ! ! AFRICA WILL BE THE TALE, which want to come back! travel channel

It is difficult to describe words are enormously strong impression that we received from the trip. Yet briefly try to cover everything, because this will be quite useful to people who chose to visit this extraordinary country.

Flights

Tickets for the plane made themselves. Through unwanted, I went to the airline emirates, where the online ticket booking system. That should say a much easier and more convenient than book through a travel agency: first, operators of any nabavyat their interest beyond price, and secondly, the book will surely through the same system. Asked at Fig overpay? They were ooochen happy. Flying with comfort, the convenience. Nothing not even noticed as flying time!

Tour operator

After again the same unwanted came to the company "skantrevel." The site well, understandable and accessible described. Called, said that I need. After a couple of hours already made reservations.

Visa and vaccinations

Visa has in Moscow for three days, apparently, no more. All that was required to complete the questionnaire in English. language and sfotkatsya.

Malaria pills are not saw, but from fever vaccinations just in case made. While understanding that it is absolutely not necessary. I deducted in the network, the most recent case of fever was recorded in one year is far from the last century. I confess trusiha, so decided podstrahovatsya just in case. Few if that!

Tour programme

We flew to Nairobi via Dubai, and has an internal flight from Nairobi to Mombasa. First nedelku decided to stay at the hotel, that it was easier to move acclimatization, relax, sun on the shores of the Indian Ocean. Hotel chose Diani Beach resort and Spa. Indeed, ultimate place! The hotel recently after repairs, as we were travel accessories told, the Germans for a repaired so that all high. Games oasis! Krasotischa! ! ! ! Frankly, I did not even go out on safari, but all these have gone.

Safari - aaa travel

Here is the adventure! Captures, insanity, beckons, consumes even true! Dorrit in a jeep to open Sawaneh (we were in parks East and Tsavo West and Amboseli; 4 days / 3 nights), a number of animals hodit- haunting. Look, there are a few elephants ears move in the other side of a sitting lion travel websites. Great! I do not know why, but it was not frightening. Apparently, the animals are so accustomed to tourists that they are still there - who travels who looks who photography, etc.

As one says in the song, "but the good ever ends."

Thus ended our beautiful fairy tale in Kenya! I hope to get back there again! ! ! !

Uganda

ENTRY

If you have come to this site, then you might want or already assembled wonderful visit countries in East Africa, Uganda. Why Uganda? Because this is a unique opportunity to see African culture, wild fauna, and enjoy the most comfortable in the world climate, the temperature never rises above 30 and never falls below 16. Many scientists believe that the first people came there in the background of the Nile River. In short, when Churchill said: Uganda, the pearl of Africa, was indefinitely rights. On a add that this gem is still not open to most tourists 180 people a year from Russia! ! ! This is in view of the embassy.
Former ruler of the country, and still resident dictator Idi Cannibal Amin Dada offered to move the headquarters of the United Nations in Uganda, because it "geographical heart of the planet." Now that the Well, believe it, because cannibals us better understand many things! In humans, for example ...
So ahead! Relax be so again wanted to rest after a rest!

PREPARING FOR THE VISIT

Above all, remember immunization against yellow fever-without formally barred, but I never asked. In Moscow vaccination centre (GP at No. 13), located at tel. River. e. 14, 621-94-65. Although mosquitoes in Uganda is much less than in Moscow just in case advise for 1-2 weeks before travel start to take pills against malaria.
The visa can be obtained as when entering Uganda, and at the embassy in Moscow at: Korovy shaft 7 kv.3, 230-22-76. A visa costs $ 30, do not forget the picture.

HOW POPAST In Uganda?

Of course, you can use such companies as KLM, Swissair, Lufthansa, British air, Emirates, but if you $ 200-500 are not redundant, it's best to contact the Egypt Air: Krasnopresnenskaya Naberezhnaya 12, Suite 901, 967-06-21. Entebbe Airport is located 40 km from the capital Kampala.
You can also go to Uganda from Kenya bus trip Nairobi-Kampala worth about $ 22 and lasts 12 hours.

WHAT IN UGANDA?

If you are interested in the beauty of nature and wildlife, our 10 national parks, a lake for fishing, mountain climbers to the mountain. Looking sharp sense? Rafting on the Nile! The acute sense of a different kind? In Kampala, there are casinos and discotheques, but it should be remembered that AIDS is not sleeping and there is no alternative to a condom.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Travel Afghanistan

Expeditions 1, 2 and 3. A Journey to the Source of the Oxus
The Expedition A Journey to the Source of the Oxus is an opportunity to travel to the source of this river in the Great Pamirs. Very few Europeans have ever seen it.

Expedition 1 leaves on 10th June and returns 31st June. Expedition 2 leaves on 6th August and returns on the 27th. Expedition 3 leaves on 27th August and returns on 17th September.

New for 2005
Expedition 4. Afghanistan Explorer. Bamiyan and Band-i-Amir
Bamiyan was always a popular tourist destination in the old days because of the two enormous Buddhas that dominated the valley. These were, famously, destroyed by the Taliban in March 2001, who also destroyed the painted stucco decoration in the rabbit warren of caves in the surrounding cliffs. But these were only one of the reasons to visit Bamiyan and there are a number of other sights in the area.

This Expedition combines visiting Bamiyan and Band i Amir with the Herat Expedition and Mazar i Sharif from the Road to Oxiana Expedition and a visit to the Panjshir Valley. This will leave on 14th July and return on 1st August.

Expedition 5. The Road to Oxiana
The provincial towns in the north of Afghanistan are comparatively unspoiled by the twentieth century. There are few cars. Most transport is by horse or donkey. In these places I have felt that I was in touch with the world of Kipling’s India. This Expedition will leave on 29th Sep and return on 17th October 2005.

Expedition 6. A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush: The Panjshir Valley, the Emerald Mines and the Lapis Mines of Badakhshan
The Panjshir has been most people's introduction to Afghanistan. When Afghanistan was on the tourist trail, its nearness to Kabul combined with its astonishing natural beauty, made it most people's first destination in the country. This Expedition will leave in September 2005 and the exact date to be confirmed.

Other Destinations Visited

In Xanadu: The Royal Hunting Grounds of Ajar
This stunningly beautiful valley, full of ibex and snow leopards, was the private hunting ground of the King of Afghanistan and is today almost completely unknown. Our visit in 2004 was the first by foreign tourists since 1979.

Herat and the Minaret of Jam
‘The world is like an ocean,’ it was said in ancient times, ‘...and in the ocean is a pearl, and the pearl is Herat.’

New for 2006

The following Expeditions are being planned and their routes explored for 2006. It may be possible to join some of Travel Afghanistan’s leaders as they make their reconnaissance.


Expedition 6. Lake Shiva, Marco Polo’s Ruby Mines and the Lapis Mines of Badakhshan
I believe that Badakshan is going to become one of the great trekking destinations in the world. It is an area almost completely unknown beyond a small group of Afghan specialists and the nomads who spend their summers here with their flocks amidst some of the most spectacular mountain scenery in the world.

Herat to Maimana and Mazar i Sharif
TBA

Friday, September 7, 2007

Message from His Excellency Hamid Karzai President of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan


In the name of God, most gracious, most merciful

Few lands are as beautiful or as rich in tradition as Afghanistan. It has played host to some of the most famous names in world history: Alexander the Great, Ghangis Khan, Tamerlane, and the Emperor Babur. It was, in former times, a meeting point of East and West, the home of the greatest Kingdoms of the silk road, legendary for their wealth and their culture; later, it became the cradle of some of the most magnificent cities of Islamic civilisation, celebrated for their arts and architecture, philosophers and poets.

With the help of the international community, Afghanistan is emerging from the shadows of the last twenty years, and retaking its place as a member of the fellowship of nations. As peace returns with the establishment of democracy and the rule of law, visitors are beginning to re-discover the wonders of Afghanistan. Travellers are now returning to see the snow-capped mountains and fertile valleys of the Hindu Kush; the northern plains, the Amu Darya (Oxus) and Balkh, ‘Mother of all cities’; the wondrous scenery, the rivers and glaciers of the Wakhan Corridor and the ‘Roof of the World’. Others may come to see the Burial Gardens in Kabul of the Emperor Babur, or the Kabul Museum, which has survived with many of its wondrous treasures intact.

Whether you wish to learn more about the history, society and culture of Afghanistan, or if you intend to travel here as a visitor, you will find in this book a full introduction to Afghanistan’s natural beauty, rich heritage and cultural diversity, along with the practical information which a traveller might require.

I hope we will soon have the pleasure of welcoming you to Afghanistan; I can promise that the Afghan people will receive you with the heartfelt hospitality for which they have always been renowned.

Afghanistan. Security

The security situation in Afghanistan continues to improve. The Taliban seem now to be a spent force. Their threats to disrupt the 2004 presidential election did not materialise. There had been fears that they might be able to make good their threat to stop people in the south – their ethnic heartland – from participating in the election and then claim the result invalid. But this did not happen. There was a high turnout and the Pashtun president Karzai and his Tajik vice-president are in power with a democratic mandate.

The risk that Afghanistan might slip back into civil war now seems remote. Reconstruction is progressing and Afghans’ daily lives are improving. There has been a sense since 2001 that no-one wants to go back to the past. In addition, most of Afghanistan’s tourist attractions are in Persian-speaking the north of the country which has never been an area at which foreigners have been at risk, unlike the Pashtun-speaking southern provinces. Badakhshan, the area where two of our Expeditions go, has always been safe and never fell to the Taliban, remaining under the control of Ahmed Shah Massoud, leader of the Northern Alliance. I travelled there alone during the civil war in perfect safety.

Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Afghanistan

Afghanistan is unlike any other country in the world. I have never been to a more beautiful country, or met such hospitable people. This is why I have written a Traveller’s Companion and Guide – the first guidebook since 1972 – to this extraordinary country and in 2004 started to take tours there. I think that everyone who came on one of those tours wants to return.

In the 1960s and 1970s Afghanistan was the most romantic and exciting travel destinations in the world, but after twenty-five years of war, is unjustly thought of as a barbarous backwater.

I have been visiting Afghanistan since 1993 and since the overthrow of the Taliban in 2001 have seen the country improve out of all recognition. The most recent milestone in the country’s reconstruction was the presidential election in 2004.

Travel in Afghanistan is tough but rewarding - you will see a unique world that will not survive much longer.

Travel Afghanistan is an Anglo-Afghan joint-venture with Afghanistan’s largest and best transport and logistics company, Afghan Logistics who have fifty vehicles ranging from lorries, buses and 4WD Landcruisers to town cars run by Muqim Jamshady, one of Afghanistan’s most dynamic young entrepreneurs, and we are uniquely well-equipped for you to make the best of your time in this wonderful country.

Afghanistan as a travel destination in the past

Until the Russian invasion of 1979, Afghanistan was a well-known tourist destination. Bruce Chatwin and his wife Elizabeth were regular visitors. When I interviewed Elizabeth for a Times article on Afghanistan she said ‘Afghanistan is the benchmark for me against which all other countries are compared. Perhaps Kashmir comes close in beauty.’ Some of Bruce Chatwin’s best pictures were taken there and can be seen in the new paperback edition of Peter Levi’s Light Garden of the Angel King. (The full collection is in the care of the Trevillion Picture Library and is well worth seeing)

Bruce Chatwin wrote as brilliantly about Afghanistan as one would expect:

‘On the streets of Herat you saw men in mountainous turbans, strolling hand in hand, with roses in their mouths and rifles wrapped in flowered chintz. In Badakshan you could picnic on Chinese carpets and listen to the bulbul. In Balkh, the Mother of Cities, I asked a fakir the way to the shrine of Hadji Piardeh. ‘I don’t know it,’ he said. ‘It must have been destroyed by Genghiz.’

‘Even the Afghan embassy in London introduced you to a world that was hilarious and slightly strange. Control of the visa section rested with a tousle headed Russian emigré giant, who had cut the lining of his jacket so that it hung, as a curtain, to hide the holes in the seat of his pants. At opening time he’d be stirring up clouds of dust with a broom, only to let it settle afresh on the collapsing furniture. Once, when I tipped him ten shillings, he hugged me, lifted me off the floor and bellowed: ‘I hope you have a very accident-free trip to Afghanistan!’

His introduction is a lament for the world that has not been accessible to travellers since the Russian invasion until now:

‘That will not bring back the things we loved: the high, clear days and the blue icecaps on the mountains; the lines of white poplars fluttering in the wind, and the long white prayer flags; the fields of asphodels that followed the tulips; or the fat tailed sheep brindling the hills above Chagcharan, and the ram with a tail so big they had to tie it to a cart. We shall not lie on our backs on the Red Castle and watch the vultures wheeling over the valley where they killed the grandson of Genghiz. We shall not read Babur’s memoirs in his garden at Istalif and see the blind man smelling his way round the rose bushes. Or sit in the peace of Islam with the beggars of Gazar Gagh. We will not stand on the Buddha’s head at Bamiyan, upright in his niche like a whale in a dry dock. We will not sleep in the nomad tent, or scale the Minaret of Jam. And we shall lose the tastes – the hot, coarse, bitter bread; the green tea flavoured with cardamoms; the grapes we cooled in the snow melt; and the nuts and dried mulberries we munched for altitude sickness. Nor shall we get back the smell of the beanfields; the sweet resinous smell of deodar wood burning, or a whiff of a snow leopard at 14,000 feet.’

The monstrous Taliban blew up the Buddhas at Bamiyan and Istalif has been flattened. But you can experience most of the other things he listed.

Note: The Chatwin passages come from his introduction to the Picador edition of The Road to Oxiana.

Accommodation

In the old days, one stayed in hotels that were known as Klubs. Many of them were taken over by the local mujihadeen commander to put up visiting foreign dignitaries (and there were some), members of the government and journalists. Some of these guest houses are very good: any journalist who has covered Afghanistan will speak very highly of the government guest-house at Astana in the Panjshir, near Massoud’s home village, which has electric light, western lavatories and baths. 2002 saw the completion of what was intended to be a palace for President Rabbani in Faisabad on a rocky eminence overlooking the Kokcha river. As Rabbani is no longer president, this house has become the Government guest-house, and the Governor of Badakhshan considers it the first of what will be a chain of first-class hotels. Herat also has two perfectly decent hotels.

In the other towns, like Kunduz, the old Klubs are more basic and although the staff are (as always in Afghanistan) extremely hospitable, paying tourists would probably be disappointed. In these towns we will use our own tents moved onwards day by day in a Landcruiser and put up awaiting the group.

Getting around

Thesiger told me not to travel by car. ‘Always go by horse or on foot. That’s how I did it. There’s just no point travelling in a car.’ He is absolutely right. In a car, you are an intruder, not a participant, in the landscape. Sights rush past you, like a speeded up picture of a flower opening.

Therefore, although we will use Landcruisers to cross the Hindu Kush and for long journeys, we try as much as possible to let you travel as Thesiger did: by horse drawn carriage or foot. It is a completely different experience of travel and the country. Of course, if you prefer to go by car, you can. In the northern cities the main method of transport is horse-drawn carriage and this is how we will move from town to town.

You don’t need any experience to travel on a horse. The ones I have had have been very placid and I just sit on the back and let the horseman lead it. I had never been on a horse before I crossed from Badakhshan to Pakistan in 2001. You do, though, get quite stiff for the first few days and it would be a good idea to get some practice in before we leave. I can organise a few one-day courses in England.

You don’t need to be physically particularly fit. I take no exercise and have never really suffered. Nor especially young. My friend Mr Gary is 63 and spends months at a time in the country.
by Matthew Leeming

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Cooking in the Caribbean

Caribbean cooking introduces all visitors to some truly distinctive flavors through the addition of spices and other ingredients like mangoes, coconut, lime, cassava, papaya, yam, guava, and peppers. Surprisingly, the use of limes in Caribbean cooking among the natives is not all that different from the way it is used in the United States. Lime is one of the most popular ways of marinating fish and a popular dish is Ceviche, which is seafood cooked with the aid of citric juices and seasoned with herbs and onions. Caribbean cooking is not merely delicious it is also unique from one island to another. Each island has developed its own style and technique of cooking food and the food in the Caribbean is as varied as the experience from island to the next.
The Bahamas is known for the conch recipes.

Cuba is famous for black beans and rice.

Jamaica is the home of jerk cooking and seasoning.

Barbados means fried fish and cou cou.

Puerto Rico comes closer to home with chicken and rice.

The French Caribbean is known for its cerole dishes and many similar French cooking methods.

Trinidad is the land of curries.

All Caribbean cooking involves herbs and spices of various types for seasoning. One such ingredient is tamarind that is in many ways similar to Worcestershire sauce in taste because it too has tamarind as one of the major ingredients. In fact, the use of spices in Caribbean cooking is truly diverse and amazing. Nutmeg flavors the desserts in the United States but in the Caribbean, this spice is mixed with other spices that are natively grown on the islands and this makes for a totally different flavor in Caribbean cooking. The jerk cooking of Jamaica gets its flavor from allspice while the island of Cayman has a chocolate cake recipe that includes some spicy peppers.

There are many common forms of spices used in Caribbean cooking but the trick is that though you will recognize flavors as a familiar taste the cooking will be subtle enough to feel unique to your taste buds. Caribbean cooking is full of delectable sauces that are made of sweet fruits like mango, papaya, and orange with spicy hot peppers. Dipping sauces in Caribbean cooking are made from mango, chili peppers, and melon.

In Caribbean cooking, coconut milk is the basis of several stews and sauces.

Last, and by no means the last, is the most favorite ingredient of Caribbean cooking that is used in marinades, desserts, sauces, and soups - rum.
mes Penn runs a highly informative Caribbean website which details exactly how to find Caribbean beach resorts and also the ten best activities in the Caribbean for families and couples alike.

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Japan

Traveling to Japan will be for you while traveling in the next century and a century ago. Nowhere in the world of ancient traditions of the people do not have so much significance in everyday life, as in Japan. We want to introduce you to these traditions, to change the stereotypes about Japan.
Far and near ... simple and mysterious, colorfully described in books and reports by well-known journalists, it captures our imagination and the exotic electronics, affects economic miracle and ancient history.

Statehood Japan under national epics began with the erection of the first to the throne of Emperor Kamuyamato - Ivarehiko in 660 BC e. Day of his enthronement to the throne on February 11 observed as a national holiday, the Day of the empire.

On interesting historical events from a bygone world many architectural elements reminiscent of those times : the locks, shintoism and Buddhist temples. In Japan, you will see many interesting. Days held in the Rising Sun Country will always be in your memory!
Welcome to Japan!

Start familiarity with Japan should, of course, in Tokyo. With posed capital Countries Rising Sun? Endless skyscrapers, endless vortex vigorous business life of one of the largest cities in the world, magnificent entertainment for adults and children "DisneyLende", the National Theatre of "Kabuki" enchanting beauty shintoism and Buddhist temples.

Be sure to visit the Omotesando district, which the Japanese called Tokyo Eliseyskimi fields. Here are glorified house Kenzo and Mori, the most elegant and stylish cafes, restaurants, boutiques, galleries, where the evening is going to Tokyo bohemia.
Want to buy-Baden on the most famous street of Ginze. Here are many large and small boutiques where clothes offered very particular Japanese designers, has long been the fashion world legislators.

Tokyo is the biggest city of Japan : one of the three largest cities in the world. The other two are New York and Shanghai, the population of Tokyo about 12 million. Tokyo is the most modern and vesternizirovanny city of Japan. It has a lot of large buildings; It paved streets as zapruzheny as in New York and London. The legacy inherited from the old Japan, which pleased the eyes of tourists, Japanese gardens, imperator- Teacher Palace, a large number of churches. To say that Tokyo is a place where East and West, old and new mix most harmonious way.

Tour, which offers our agency in Tokyo includes an excellent opportunity to visit one of the largest parks in the world, founded in 1985. With hands loan, you can see the hundreds of different attractions in the territory of 50 hectares in six thematic areas. You will see a parade of heroes Walt Disney films and evening fireworks. You will see one of the biggest cities in the world. The tour will run through pridvortsovuyu area in the business district of Tokyo-Kasumiga- customs, which are building the Japanese parliament and government agencies. You will see the Akasaka Palace, a similar appearance at Buckingham Palace in London, through a number of national stadium. Inspect the Shinto shrine, vozdvignuty in memory of Emperor Meiji. Enjoy the panorama of the city with a new viewing platform Municipality and pronesetes over Tokyo Bay Bridge on the beautiful Rainbow Bridge. Also, you can see the oldest Buddhist temple in Tokyo goddess of mercy, Kannon, which is trading Street Nakamise - Dori center sales of souvenirs. In the end you through a tour of razor Gindze.

Kyoto, the ancient imperial capital of Japan, which was the center of Japanese civilization for more than 1,000 years. This continued a visit to all visitors to Japan. Despite the fact that the Kyoto modernized, it, nevertheless, is the classic city, which are abundant in the ancient temples, sanctuaries and monuments of Japanese art. Fortunately, Kyoto was not injured during the Second World War. Kyoto is also a Buddhist Centre of Japan. In 1600 the city and some 300 Buddhist temples shintoism.

Okinawa is an unincorporated archipelago located between Kyushu and Taiwan. This is the only area of Japan, located in the humid subtropical climate. Prior to the capital Naha, Okinawa Prefecture, from Tokyo about two hours. Palace Syuri-largest demonstration of Chinese influence on the architecture of Japan. Historical, closely linked with China, coral reefs, emerald sea, sunny skies and subtropical climate attract tourists to Okinawa. Archipelago, the United States occupied after World War II, was returned to Japan in 1972. You will be able to offer on the ocean liner voyage from the port of Yokohama to the island entertainment Hakkeydzima where Akvamuzey, Dolphinarium, attractions. Among the most recent steep slide over American marine waters. It is located 170 kilometres north of Tokyo. You can enjoy the nature of this unique place where you will impress Lake Tyuzendzi, Kegon Waterfall, Tosegu Shinto shrine, a museum of architectural miniatures "Tobu World Square."

You never forget swimming in the thermal sources, which are the traditional form of recreation for the Japanese. You can become a traditional Japanese etiquette serving tea powder, elegant manners, the kind of aesthetic studies. You tell the history of tea ceremony and show, as it posted a 15 century Buddhist monks. The ancient feudal capital of Japan and a famous spa, where you can look at the bronze Chinese Buddha Amida, visit the Shinto shrine Tsurugaoka Hatimangu, walk on the banks of the Pacific.

The first imperial capital of Japan, where you can extended the park, which are more than 1,000 deer. You can visit the Buddhist temple Todaydzi, see the largest and the oldest in Japan bronze statue of Vairocana Buddha.

Spa Hakone
They come to get rid of a number of respiratory diseases, arthritis, osteochondrosis, psoriasis and eczema. Indeed, there are a great many hot springs (onseny). Each year, thousands of suffering plunge in mud to mud baths come here from all over the world. You can also sizzling in the sand bath. Outgoing reduce heat razogreet body is not worse than in pairs. In just a few minutes, you feel yourself, just tents at the top. However, many health willing to tolerate these sweet flour again and again.

Sapporo
Clearly, the best rest here at this time of year to ski resort. You can also visit the aquarium, a museum of beer and exhibit contemporary art known masters of Japan, Denmark, Czech Republic, USA, France ...

You may well rest on the best ski resorts in Japan Naspa and Naeba.
In the Rising Sun Country respected alpine sports and improve infrastructure winter entertainment.
Of Niigata (which has direct air links with Vladivostok) can be driven to the city Yuzawa (travel time is about 1 hour), where the bus departed to ski resorts NASPA, Joetsu Kokusai and Naeba.
Naeba is one of the most famous, fashionable and popular ski resorts of Japan. Located on the slopes of Mount Takenoko, it became the venue for numerous competitions downhill skiing and snowboard local and international level.
Many slopes for beginners, amateurs and professionals, over 30 lifts, rent, school instructors, children's playground, Snow Land.
Between spa and Yuzavoy offers special shuttle-bus.
A foot of the mountains is a smart hotel Naeba Prince 5 *.

You have the opportunity to stay in Japan to learn
with various companies of Japan, to meet with them, find answers to many of your questions. Our visitors were briefed on the work of the automotive, chemical, petrochemical, electronics, steel, were guests Association notaries, employees of real estate, bank of Japan.

We will be happy to arrange a visit for you or your firm interest. Many of our group of tourists visiting various international exhibitions organised in Japan. We invite you to visit the two largest expo Japan : Big Sidon, a city of Tokyo and Makuhari Messe in Chiba City (near Tokyo).

Useful :

The Japanese supermarket products, as a rule, an order of magnitude more expensive than in the street machines. For example, in stores for juice or soft drinks you take from 140 to 280 yen. By purchasing the same machine, you save between 20 and 40 yen.

In Japan, but restaurants offering ethnic dishes, a large number of enterprises' FastFood "where you can quickly, tasty and inexpensive meal. This is the famous "Makkdonalds" and "Kentucky Fried Chikken." Cumin is worth 59 yen, complete with potatoes and Cola-at least 580 yen.

Our advice - Dining once in a family restaurant. They usually offer an adequate selection of foods from European cuisine.

Friday, August 17, 2007

What's the best laptop for travel?

Reader Mike S. wants to know what the best laptop for travel is, and rather than actually take the time to answer this ourselves, we figured we'd turn this over to the collective wisdom and accumulated knowledge of the blog. Here's what he wrote:

My old Dell is on its last legs and it's time to buy a new notebook. I need something that'll be good for business travel, since I take at least two or three trips a month. It has to be light (under four pounds), have built-in WiFi, and cost somewhere in the neighborhood of two grand (the less the better!). A built-in DVD drive would be nice, but is optional.

Any bloggers out there think they can help a brother out with some suggestions?

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Travel To Taiwan

A gem in the China Seas, Taiwan embodies a unique entangling of ancient and modern, East and West. From the bustling commercial center of the capital city, Taipei, to the cascading volcanic mountains of Yushan National Park, Taiwan offers the world traveler an unmatched experience. It is no coincidence that Portuguese explorers named this island 'Ilha Formosa', or the beautiful island.

Taiwan is truly a gem worth visiting. But, just like any overseas travel, expensive airfare can easily keep this gem out of reach. If you want to discover the natural beauty of Taiwan but want to keep your travel budget from spiraling out of control, be sure to find discount airfare to Taiwan. cFares is a great place to find deals on wholesale travel to Taiwan. cFares offers amazing travel deals and discount airfare to Taiwan that just can't be found anywhere else. So if you looking to book a flight to Taiwan but want the best deal possible, check out cFares for discount airfare to Taiwan. Wholesale travel to Taiwan is the answer to finding the best travel deal.
To Travel to Taiwan is to Understand Diversity
Officially known as the Republic of China (R.O.C.), Taiwan should not be confused with the People's Republic of China, which refers to mainland China. Within the past 200 years the island has been ruled by the Dutch, become part of Japan, has been "returned" to China and is currently striving to become an internationally recognized sovereign nation. Taiwan's tumultuous and fascinating history of the Aboriginal, Taiwanese and Chinese people is revealed through the many cultural festivals held throughout the year. Travel to the island in February for the Taiwan Lantern Festival or in June to watch the world-famous Dragon Boat Races during the Dragon Boat Festival.

One of Taiwan's most prominent cultural symbols is Taipei 101, the world's tallest building, measuring 508 meters and 101 floors. Finished in 2003, the tower signifies Taiwan's substantial economic growth from the periphery of the global economy to become one of the four Asian Tigers, as well as the government's dedication to a democratic society separate from that of China. Tainan, the oldest and fourth largest city on the island, offers a more authentic and less commercialized window into Taiwanese culture. Temples and Memorial Arches define this city where the Ching Dynasty once prayed to the God of War.
The Taiwan Terrain: Recreation and Ecotourism
Exploration of the thriving urban centers is only one of many ways to get in touch with Taiwan. The rugged topography of Taiwan is adorned with magnificent peaks, lush valleys and dramatic waterfalls. Yushan National Park is home to the island's tallest peak, Jade Mountain, which towers at 2,610 meters. Hike to the summit and take the more technical route down or simply enjoy the breathtaking view from the Tatachia Visitor Center, accessible directly from the new Central Cross-Island Highway. From Jade Mountain, descend deep into Taroko Gorge on Taiwan's rocky and secluded east coast. This 12-mile-long canyon is home to the natural open-air Wenshan hot springs and the Atayal people, one of Taiwan's remaining aboriginal tribes. The rocky cliffs at the canyon's end are a starting point for those who wish to travel farther into Taiwan's history. The surrounding Pacific Ocean is sprinkled with beautiful green islands that have unique native histories and are mostly accessible by plane or ferry. Most of the pristine and dramatic destinations are protected by Taiwan's National Park Department, which offers an array of lodging and guiding services and has proven to be a well-organized resource for the outdoor sightseer.

From the island's tallest building to its tallest peak, Taiwan has something exceptional to offer every kind traveler. Travel Taiwan's thriving society and come face-to-face with an Asian Tiger.

If you really want the lowest discount airfare to Taiwan start your search at cFares. The number one wholesale travel site for the shrewd international traveler.

cFares also offers great travel deals on airfare to China, Japan, South Korea, and other countries in Asia.
For more information on travel to Taiwan and other areas in Asia, and discount airfare to Taiwan, www.cfares.com.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Kuala Lumpur!

Kuala Lumpur is an Asian tiger that roars: in almost 150 years, it has grown from nothing to a modern, bustling city. Take in its high-flying triumphs from the viewing deck of the world's tallest building, then dive down to explore its more traditional culture in the back lanes of Chinatown.


It's a modern Asian city of gleaming skyscrapers, but it retains much of the local colour that has been wiped out in other Asian boom-cities such as Singapore. It has plenty of colonial buildings in its centre, a vibrant Chinatown with street vendors and night markets, and a bustling Little India.


When To Go

KL is hot and humid almost all the time. Although there is rain through the year, March to April and September to November are the wettest months. KL's wide ethnic diversity means that celebrations of one kind or another are usually going on somewhere around the city; these can make transport more crowded than usual. Public holidays are a surprisingly good time to be around, as most locals head for the beaches and hills. In more liberal KL, Ramadan doesn't pose the same 'where to eat?' problems that affect the more devout Muslim areas on the east coast.

Full Name
Kuala Lumpur

Area
243 sq km
94 sq miles

Population
1,800,000

Time Zone
GMT/UTC +8 ()

Daylight Saving Start
not in use

Daylight Saving End
not in use

Electricity
240V 50HzHz
Kuala Lumpur See here
Good bye.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

All About Vodka!

Whether very much many people ask me there is any subject which unites all East Europe, i.e. all slavic people. I answer is, and it is VODKA! That ruins people centuries and that gives force for action and the struggle, too many centuries :-)

I shall tell a little about an origin of vodka and its history. To data of readers - I do not drink

Vodka is the surprise package of the 20th Century. From an unknown Russian drink to the most widely used cocktail drink, it has been quite a journey.

History Of Vodka

The exact history of vodka is not known. However, it has its origins in a grain growing region around what we know today as Poland, Western Russia and Ukraine. The word 'vodka' is derived from the Russian word 'voda', which means water. Experts believe that the first record of vodka was found somewhere around the 9th Century. However, the first known distillery is around 200 years after that, around the 11th Century, in Khylnovsk, Russia.

The early process of distillation of vodka was crude. Due to the limitations in technology of the period, many impurities would remain behind and cause an unpleasant and unwanted taste. The early distillers would mask this by adding flavours to the vodka: The most common among them being absinthe, anisette, juniper, mint, pepper and peppermint.

The Bolshevik Revolution, banned all private distilleries in Russia. Many of the master distillers fled from the country: One of them being the son of Master Distiller Smirnov. Vladimir Smirnov fled to France to setup his distillery. Here he made contact with an American businessman and created the Smirnoff (the French version of his family name) brand. Vodka was publicized as a 'white whiskey' that left you 'breathless' (it did not leave one with an alcohol breath). But, vodka found its place only in the 1950s and 'swinging 60s'. The affluent youth and numerous cocktails, for which vodka's odourless and tasteless characteristics make it a perfect component, led to the Vodka revolution. And Vodka surpassed Bourbon (American whiskey) as the largest selling hard liquor.

Production Of Vodka

Vodka has traditionally been prepared with the cheapest grain available at hand. Vodka is mainly made from starch. However certain Polish vodkas are based on potato. Even molasses is used sometimes. Vodka is basically pure alcohol (ethanol) and water. It is extremely similar to whiskey. Both are produced from fermented mash. However, Vodka is distilled off at a very high proof. Thus, by distilling vodka off at 190 proof, most of the flavour is lost and almost only alcohol and water are left behind. Thus, the best vodka is tasteless, colourless and odourless.

Brands

Some of the most popular and good quality vodka brands are Smirnoff, Grey Goose and Absolut. However, blind tastes often confirm, that most of us cannot discern between the different brands of vodka. This is natural and desired, as vodka is supposed to be tasteless as well as odourless. Hence, the brand of vodka, is a personal preference. It is suggested to use any 'house' brand while using vodka in mixed drinks.

Vodkas also come in a variety of flavours. Brands like Absolut and Smirnoff have an arsenal of flavoured vodkas. Some of the popular flavours include raspberry, citrus, orange, vanilla and pepper.

Thursday, July 5, 2007

Argentina Travel - Buenos Aires, Mar del Plata, Iguazu Falls, Tierra del Fuego and Patagonia

Argentina is on the way back from the economic crisis of the last few years. If you are looking for a travel destination, Argentina is amazing and cheap.

Economic Woes

While Argentina has unlimited beauty, it also has unlimited corruption. The massive corruption finally lead to an economic crisis at the turn of the century. With the currency devalued and jobs hard to find, Argentina was a decidedly dangerous place for travelers. At one point, the country was going through Presidents faster than I go through coffee. At one point, the country went through five of them in a month! Wait, that might not be such a bad idea. Regardless, things appear to have stabilized and the country is back on the travel map. So, what’s to see?

Buenos Aires

Prior to landing in Buenos Aires, you are strongly encouraged to glue your jaw shut. Buenos Aires is a city of jaw-dropping beauty. In many ways, you will feel as though you have magically been transported to Vienna. The European impression is overwhelming. The city is elegance itself. If you’re a meat eater, make sure you experience one of the steak houses. You won’t be disappointed.

Mar del Plata

You’ve been doing sit ups, right? The Mar de Plata is the hot beach area. Literally. Damn hot, sometimes. If you wish to pursue a little melanoma research, this is the place. If you prefer to pass on the cancer research, you can hit the Mar de Plata Aquarium, play golf on five different courses. The area is also rife with discos. Try the ones on the “Noisy Avenue”, but don’t mention my name. There were…problems last time I was there.

Iguazu Falls

If you like waterfalls, this is the place for you. The Iquaza Falls are twice as wide and taller than Niagara Falls. The Falls actually consist of over 250 cascades that came into existence due to a volcanic eruption. If you can, try to visit the falls in the spring or fall as it is ungodly hot and humid in the summer.

Tierra del Fuego

Welcome to the end of the world. At least, that’s the hook for Tierra del Fuego. Ushuaia, the capital of Tierra del Fuego, is the southernmost city in the world. From the city, you can take the “end of the world” train to see incredible snow covered mountain ranges in the Tierra del Fuego National Park. Words fail me, but the area is definitely worth visiting. Come on, you rode the elephants in Thailand, didn’t you?

Patagonia

No, we are not talking about the clothing line. Patagonia is located in a vast area below Buenos Aires and is famous for uncompromised beauty. Greater Patagonia is actually split between Chile and Argentina. The section in Argentina is filled with glaciers, national parks and so on. I can’t possibly describe it, so I’m not even going to try. Just know that you will not be disappointed.

Argentina

From glaciers to beaches, from elegant cities to friendly little towns, Argentina is a top travel destination. With the economy stabilizing, now is the time to go.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Australia Day Comes Alive

I write about Australia. Very much it has liked me :)

When Australia Day comes each January 26th, it brings with it a celebration of all things Australian. This celebration has greatly evolved over time, changing both its name and its content to reflect modern Australians and their pride in their country.

Australia Day began as a celebration of the foundation of the Australian colony. On January 26, 1788, Captain Arthur Phillip (pictured right) took formal possession of the then-British colony and became its first governor. While people throughout the colony informally celebrated this date for the next several years, it wasn’t until 1818 that the celebration was officially celebrated as part of the 30th anniversary of the colony’s settlement by Europeans.

By 1838, the 50th anniversary, it became Australia’s first public holiday. This commemoration was different in that it encompassed everyone, not just those smaller, private events of the past. This early celebration was known as “Foundation Day” and usually included many sporting events. Horse racing was particularly popular, as was sailing. In fact, the Anniversary Regatta (now known as the Australia Day Regatta) in Sydney is the world’s oldest continuous regatta and stems from this early athletic bent to Foundation Day.

When Australia’s centennial celebration came around in 1888, Australia was a very different country than it had been 100 years prior. Gold had been discovered, and Australia was home to nearly three million people. In 1888, all the colonial capitals, except Adelaide, proclaimed “Anniversary Day” a public holiday and each colony celebrated Australia’s 100th birthday.

The 150th anniversary of European settlement in 1938 brought an issue regarding Anniversary Day into the limelight. The highlight of the celebrations in New South Wales was a reenactment of Captain Phillip's landing, complete with the deposition of an Aboriginal tribe. However, aboriginal people in the city refused to participate in the reenactment and instead, several hours prior, Aboriginal activists convened a 'Day of Mourning' conference aimed at securing citizenship and equal status for Aborigines. This was the first time Aboriginal complaints were so prominent on Anniversary Day, but it wouldn’t be the last.

In 1946, the Commonwealth Government, States and Territories agreed to observe “Australia Day” under one name and on the same day. The celebrations continued to have a distinct slant towards the European settlers, and consisted largely of reenactments of the First Fleet’s landing and the events that immediately followed.

Looking to promote a wider celebration of Australia Day, the National Australia Day Council was formed in 1979, with state and territory councils and committees soon after. These groups have worked towards more local and individual involvement in Australia Day, rather than it just being “another holiday.”
When 1988 brought Australia’s bicentennial, it marked two distinct celebrations. The classic reenactment
Sydney Opera House, Sydney Australia

of the First Fleet’s voyage was held. However, alongside the celebrations, 1988 was named a Year of Mourning for Australia's Aboriginal people, who also regarded the year as a celebration of survival. To many people, Australia Day is still best known as “Survival Day.”

Finally, in 1994, it was legislated that all the states and territories endorsed the celebration of Australia Day on the actual day instead of the closest Monday. Universal Australia Day celebrations have been held on January 26th ever since.

About the author:
Jane S. Roseen is the Owner and President of Harmony Sweets. She has taken a small, successful gourmet chocolate shop and made it a name recognized world-wide. Harmony Sweets’ original mission focused on individual consumers purchasing gourmet chocolates from around the world for their friends and relatives as birthday, anniversary, Christmas, Valentine's Day, and Mother's Day gifts. Roseen expanded that mission to include corporate gift-giving.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

South Wales

Yes. The world is huge. Somewhere there burn woods, which on thousand years. On account of Queen, the God (?) has decided to wash off sins of its citizens. Here awe.
Hardly further people пекуться for vividly. And in Siberia even summer also did not begin. And, what, you ask occurs to the world? And I shall tell - anything! Simply the world varies. It can be too fast for us, but not to us it solve. Though not a small role human nonsense here has played.
Here the person tells about South Wales . Rocks, fresh air, the girlfriend on a rope and you feel the god.

Interestingly from my readers there is somebody from Australia?

Monday, June 25, 2007

Australia – A Land of Natural Wonders

The huge monolith known as Uluru – formerly Ayer’s Rock – remains one of Australia’s most mysterious and beautiful natural features. Rising more than 1,000 feet above the flat red center of the continent, "The Rock" is eight miles in circumf

The huge monolith known as Uluru – formerly Ayer’s Rock – remains one of Australia’s most mysterious and beautiful natural features. Rising more than 1,000 feet above the flat red center of the continent, "The Rock" is eight miles in circumference and honeycombed with caves, displaying Aboriginal wall art. Uluru once stood at the bottom of an inland ocean, and is a spectacular sight as it changes color through the day. The sandstone it is composed of contains many minerals like feldspar which reflect shades from deep red to violet, according to the angle of the sun. However, while Uluru is probably the most famous Australian geological wonder, it is certainly not the only one. The amazing Bungle Bungles in Western Australia are huge pillars of sandstone that look like ancient ziggurats. But nature, not man, made these orange and black striped monoliths, situated in Purnululu National Park. The black stripes are caused by lichens growing on the orange sandstone. Known to Aborigines for centuries, it remained a secret to the rest of the world until the 1980s, when the stunning rock formation was spotted from the air. The Devil’s Marbles in the Northern territory are another example of Australia’s geological diversity. The “marbles” are huge roughly hewn ovoid boulders piled on top of one another, some seemingly defying gravity, poised like eggs balancing on end. Made of coarse granite, the marbles have gained their shape by constant weathering. The Great Barrier Reef is one of the few geological wonders that can be seen from space. A spectacular 161 square miles of coral reef, it stretches from New Guinea down the Queensland Coast. Dotted with coral islands, the reef is the largest structure ever built by living creatures. These tiny polyps leave their skeletal remains behind, forming stretches of coral reef. Nullabor means, literally, no trees, and the Nullabor Plain between Adelaide in South Australia and Perth in Western Australia lives up to its name. It is a vast 155,000 mile flat desert that drops with frightening suddenness into the Great Southern Ocean. There are no towns or permanent habitations on the Nullabor Plain – and definitely no trees. Wave Rock is a stunning formation in Western Australia that looks like a breaking wave on land. The smooth curve of the rock was believed to be caused by water erosion. Around 500 million years old, the wave shape was formed by granite flowing in molten form. For more information about travel (airfares, hotels, car rentals, vacations, cruises, etc) to Australia, including Sydney, Melbourne, Perth, Cairns and Brisbane, please visit http://www.icheapairfares.com/Australia-Airfares.htm

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Andorra

For 715 years, given by 1278 to 1993, Andorrans lasted under a unparalleled co-principality, found by French and Spanish leaders (derived from 1607 onward, the French chief of state and the Spanish bishop of Urgel). In 1993, this feudal system was modified with the titular heads of province retained, however the government metamorphosed into a parliamentary republic. Long detached and impoverished, mountainous Andorra accomplished considerable successfulness since World War II through its tourer industry. Numbers of immigrants (legal and illegal) are attracted to the thriving economy with its lack of income taxes.

The single official language is Catalan, the language of the close Spanish autonomous region of Catalonia, by using which Andorra shares several cultural traits, though Spanish, Portuguese and French are likewise usually spoken. The predominant religion is Catholicism. Andorra's long story has provided it with a rich mythology and an abundance of country tales, with roots originating as far as Andalusia in the south and the Netherlands in the north.

Andorran culture is Catalan in heart, since the inborn population of Andorra is Catalan. Even so, it has given a significant and well identifiable contribution to the conglomerate of Catalan culture.

Two writers famed in Catalonia & the domain, Michele Gazier and Ramon Villero, each came from Andorra.

Andorra is home to folk dances like the contrapas and marratxa, which one survive in Sant Julia de Loria especially. Andorran folk music has similarities to all of its neighbors, however is especially Catalan in character, specially in the presence of dances such as the sardana. More Andorran folk dances admit contrapas in Andorra la Vella and Saint Anne's dancing in Escaldes-Engordany.

Saturday, June 9, 2007

A Visitors Guide To Zurich Switzerland

Zurich is the biggest city in Switzerland and one of the only destinations in the world that truly has something for everybody. Most of the city's residents can speak multiple languages, including Zurich Swiss travel German, English, French, and Italian. The city is well known for its banking district, luxury goods, and outstanding universities, but it also provides a vast array of athletic and cultural events. All of these elements add up to a great travel place to live, so it should travel come as no surprise that for five successive years, Zurich has been named the city with the highest quality of life in the world by consulting company William M. Mercer.

Zurich accommodates visitors of all backgrounds, regardless of their age, race, gender, sexuality, or social class. Children and their families have many options to choose from, including the outstanding Zurich Toy Museum (Fortunagasse 15, 8001 Zurich), which has free admission and features over 1000 antique toys from all over Europe. Zurich is also one of the world's most queer-friendly cities, with a substantial number of bars, clubs, and cultural events-such as the Pink Apple, a gay and lesbian film festival that takes place every May-that cater to homosexual travelers.

Switzerland's rather posh reputation may give budget-minded travelers pause, but the truth is that a trip to Zurich can be just as affordable as any other European destination. There are a number of stylish and moderately-priced lodging options available to travelers, such as the small and charming Hotel Seehof (11 Seehofstrasse, 8008 Zurich, http://www.hotelseehof.cf). Each of the hotel's 20 rooms (doubles from $215 per night) is simple and elegant, featuring sleek Swiss furniture and wireless internet access. The hotel also contains its own bar and Japanese food restaurant.

One easy way to explore what Zurich has to offer is by purchasing a Zurich Card. This one or three-day pass grants you admission to 40 museums, unlimited access to the city's excellent public transportation system, and special deals at many restaurants and shops. The Zurich Card can be purchased online by e-mailing the orders and information department at contact@zw.ch. A one-day pass costs approximately $12 for adults and $8 for children, while a three-day pass runs around $24 for adults and $16 for children.

The city is home to over 50 museums, which range in focus from art to technology. One of it's most unique is the Circus Museum (Fischmarktplatz 1, 8640 Rapperswil SG). Circus arts travel have a long, proud history in Switzerland, with Knie-the Swiss National Circus-setting up shop in 1919. Zurich also provides its visitors with a huge number of restaurants offering cuisine from virtually every country in the world, including Brazil, Korea, and Lebanon. For a taste of authentic Swiss travel food, head to Adler's Swiss Chuchi (Rosengasse 10, 8001 Zurich) for some of the city's best travel regional cuisine. And of course, no trip to Zurich would be complete without a pilgrimage to the city's most exclusive shopping district: Bahnhofstrasse (Bahnhofstrasse, 8001 Zurich).

You may publish this article on your website or ezine providing you travel leave the article "as is" and retain the resource box with live link back to the Search Switzerland Hotels website.

Friday, May 18, 2007

Ukrainian Brides Looking For What?

Head to the happy life.
"A good wife is a treasure, so you have to look for it"

How many times did you think to yourself that life without a family and children is not something you really enjoy, how many times did you realise that loneliness is something that scares you a lot, how many times were your cold and lonely at night in a big but empty house??? Some tough questions, but let's face it, you have not done a lot to change it. It's easy to be not happy and wait for something to happen, but it's really not the way you should act.



There is an old saying: 'A good wife is a treasure, so you have to look for it', I am sure in your professional life you are not just sitting there and waiting for things to happen, you are working hard to have a good career, so why do you think passive looking for a right girl is the way of success.

A Mordinson Introduction offers men a unique chance to meet nice looking, young and marriage minded girls from Ukraine who are in the same point of their life where they want to have a family and settle down. As you probably heard ladies from Ukraine are not only very beautiful and charming, but very intelligent. One thing that guys from abroad always notice is that ladies here take a pride in the way they dress, very elegant and classy. But of course the looks is not all, the girls are dreaming about finding the right man to create a happy family with, almost all girls have jobs, but they all say family is going to be their main priority in life after they get married. In Ukraine it's not a tradition to have baby-sitters to take care of children while parents are away at work, most of mothers stay at home full time to take care of the kids. Of course when children go to school, women may have a part time job.

Feministic ideas are not popular here at all, a lady will be pleased to get your attention. Ukrainian women are very feminine and they want to be appreciated.

Every girl who you see at our web site is personally interwied in our office in Kharkov, we make sure that she has serious intention to get married if she finds the right man, we also check their documents to see how old is a lady, if she has been married before, we check if she has children too. All that is to make sure that only serious and honest ladies join A Mordinson Introduction.
We invite you to visit our web site and look at the girls from the Gallery, after you choose the girl/s who you liked most of all, please send the list to us to our e-mail, also include the introduction letter for the girls and your picture. Your letter will be translated into Russian, printed and delievered to the ladies you chose along with your photograph. Ladies who are interested in you will write back and soon you will get their answers. Sending a lady the introduction letter and receiving her reply is absolutely FREE!

Thursday, April 26, 2007

The Unique Australia

Australia might be the smallest continent in territory but it does attract attention with its unique style and characteristics.
The thing that struck me most about that continent is the way nature developed there. Australia is located far away from the other continents and thus the life there took a bit different direction during its evolution. Also the climate is really diverse in the different parts of the continent which also explains the huge variety of the wild life. We all know about the kangaroo and the koala and consider them normal animals. But they are among the many other animals and plants that are typical for Australia and actually cannot be found in other places.
Australia can impress not only with its wild life. There are also many beautiful places to go to.
One of these places is the Great Barrier Reef. It is a chain of reefs, near the coast of Queensland and it is actually huge - 2000km long. The place is included in the World Heritage List of UNESCO and is top-visited place among scuba divers, explorers and people who just want to admire the underwater life, including the gorgeous colourful corals.
A lot visited resort also in Queensland is the Gold Coast. The place is heaven for tourists - it has tender sands, crystal clear waters and smiling sun. What is more, it has a kind of cosmopolitan air with many restaurants and places to spend some thrilling night hours.
There is a bunch of attractions just in the centre of Australia. Uluru is a single monolith, standing in the middle of the desert. It is considered sacred by the local Anangu Aboriginal people. But on the rock there are areas from where you can watch the sunset and sunrise and it is a sight you can’t forget. In fact, Uluru is the second biggest single rock in the world. And guess what?! The largest one is again in Australia - Mount Augustus in the Western Australia national park. Near the Uluru monolith are the Alice Springs - also very popular. Also in close proximity are the Uluru Kata Tjuta National Park (World Heritage site) and the Valley of the Winds.
In the state Victoria there is the Phillip Island, where you can become a spectator of a fascinating scene. Every day at dusk tiny penguins come one by one on the shore. I cannot describe the feelings and excitement this sight evokes, but it is quite amazing.
Again in Victoria there is a formation of limestone, called the Twelve Apostles and they really are an unforgettable sight. If you decide to go there you should take the Great Ocean Road - it can give you a pleasure just from driving because there are marvelous scenes on both side - mountains and ranges from one side and the ocean and coasts from the other.
One should also visit most of the big cities in Australia. The capital is Canberra and another cosmopolitan is Sydney - the capital of New South Wales. The Opera House in Sydney is may be the most famous cultural attraction on the continent.
The list of places of interest in Australia is literary endless, but the important thing is that this continent can be proud of its style, places and unique characteristics.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

The Second Golden Age

By 1185 the power of the Byzantine Empire again waned because of external conflicts. The noble brothers Asen and Peter led a revolt that forced Byzantine recognition of an autonomous Bulgarian state. Centered at Turnovo (present-day Veliko Turnovo), this state became the Second Bulgarian Empire. Like the First Bulgarian Empire, the second expanded at the expense of a preoccupied Byzantine Empire. In 1202 Tsar Kaloian (1197-1207) concluded a final peace with Byzantium that gave Bulgaria full independence. Kaloian also drove the Magyars from Bulgarian territory and in 1204 concluded a treaty with Rome that consolidated Bulgaria's western border by recognizing the authority of the pope. By the middle of the thirteenth century, Bulgaria again ruled from the Black Sea to the Adriatic. Access to the sea greatly increased commerce, especially with the Italian Peninsula. Turnovo became the center of Bulgarian culture, which enjoyed a second golden age.

The final phase of Bulgaria's second Balkan dominance was the reign of Kaloian's successor, Ivan Asen II (1218-41). In this period, culture continued to flourish, but political instability again threatened. After the death of Ivan Asen II, internal and external political strife intensified. Sensing weakness, the Tatars began sixty years of raids in 1241, the Byzantines retook parts of the Second Bulgarian Empire, and the Magyars again advanced. From 1257 until 1277, aristocratic factions fought for control of the Bulgarian throne. Heavy taxation by feudal landlords caused their peasants to revolt in 1277 and enthrone the "swineherd tsar" Ivailo. After 1300 Tatar control ended, and a new period of expansion followed under Mikhail Shishman (1323-1330) and Ivan Aleksandur (1331-1370). As before, however, military and commercial success paralleled internal disorder; the social chaos of the previous century continued to erode the power of Bulgarian leaders. Meanwhile, Serbia had risen as a formidable rival in the Balkans, and the Ottoman Turks had advanced to the Aegean coast. In the late fourteenth century, Bulgaria was weakened by the division of its military defenses between the two perceived threats.

Monday, April 23, 2007

Romantic France Home Page

It is very rare that one will come across a more scintillating country on earth than France. Countless times attempts have been made to define it, but even today words fail when one recollects the seductive elegance of the boulevards, the radiance of its night life, the endearing architecture, and not the least, the style and mood of its world famous cafes. The stunningly beautiful attractions in France are so fascinating that it is difficult to figure out which one should be included as a stop in the itinerary.

One will surely be simply amazed by the magnificence of the French Alps. Here one can ski for weeks without ever feeling the need to retrace ones tracks. You can gaze in absolute awe at the mythical Mont Blanc. People particularly prefer to visit the French Alps in summer than during the winter season. This is the time when the ice and snow have melted and one can see the beautiful hills and blossoming meadows and just inhale the pure mountain air.


The marvelous French Riviera is an attraction worth viewing and taking in the beauty. A must visit for tourists to Monaco, France is the Oceanographic Museum. The building which has been built on the cliffs and its aquarium and museum are all just stupendous. After enjoying the sights in the morning, people generally head towards the restaurant on the terrace for lunch. It is said that a person who has not visited Paris once in his lifetime has missed out on something. The architecture and landscapes are world famous. The most famous landmark of Paris France, however, is the Eiffel Tower. The chateaus, the perfume houses and the wineries of France all combine to make it perhaps, the most loved destination of the world.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

France - Paris and Nice

From beaches to the alps, France has a little of something for everyone. In this article, we take a look at Paris and the beach city of Nice.

Paris

It is hard to know where to start when discussing Paris. Take a boat down the Seine River and you will pass Notre Dame, the Eiffel Tower and so many other notable spots it is easy to get overwhelmed. The city is simply that dramatic.

Long considered the most glamorous city in Europe, Paris has a little of everything. For the romantic, one can visit the haunts of famous writers, historical sites of just about every nature and the Moulin Rouge.

On the other hand, art lovers can spend weeks visiting the 100 plus museums in the city with, of course, the Louvre being the crown jewel. Personally, I found the Rodin Museum just as interesting, particularly since there was a much smaller crowd.

Perhaps the best way to experience Paris is just to wander around. Yes, take a few days to visit the notable tourist traps…err, destinations. Once you get tired of standing in crowds, walk out of your hotel and just keep on going. You will find little neighborhoods with eccentric characteristics to make you smile. As you plod along, real cafes and gathering places will become apparent. Make sure you visit them as the locals in these neighborhoods are very friendly and funny.

Nice

Nice is a small beach city just to the east of Cannes in the south of France. It is an odd mix of old world charm and beach culture. In and of itself, there is nothing particular about Nice when compared to Cannes with the exception of the prices. They are significantly cheaper and you get pretty much the same thing.

One extremely positive thing about Nice is the launching factor. Nice is close to everything and a natural launching point to go practically anywhere in the general region. You can hop on a train to the east and be in Monaco in 15 minutes. You can take a 20 minute minivan trip inland to learn how to make cheese and soap. Thankfully, this isn’t the same location.

France is a diverse country with a rich history. It can be easy to overdose on the volume of things to see, but you can’t do much worse than just walking out your door and exploring. Remember, those boots were made for walking.

From beaches to the alps, France has a little of something for everyone. In this article, we take a look at Paris and the beach city of Nice.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Bulgaria - A Big-Small Treasure

One can describe many things as big-small. Actually, big-small is something small that has the characteristics of something much bigger than itself. And with that in mind, I come to think of Bulgaria. I am sure that many of you who read this have heard of this country and will ask "Why is Bulgaria a big-small" Well, I will try to explain.
Bulgaria covers a total territory of 111 000sq/km - that is why it is small. But I am sure you have no idea of how many beautiful things there are in this small area - and here comes the big part.
Bulgaria is a country with a long history, full of ups and downs and critical events. The country's culture has been influences by many other nationalities and that is why Bulgaria has now many important historical places. One such place is Etara. It is an open-air museum, but seems more like a whole town, still capturing the traditional spirit and architecture of the Bulgarian national revival. The people there still practice the old Bulgarian crafts, including pottery. Etara is like a place out of time, where the past is still alive. Another such place is the village Arbanassi. It is an old settlement and holds some ancient monasteries. One of them is the St. Nikola monastery that was built during the Assen dynasty - there still can be seen preserved wall decorations and icons dating back to 1716. Near Arbanassi is the town of Veliko Turnovo, where you will be amazed by the great fortress Tsarevets, which was the capital of the Second Bulgarian Kingdom. It still is a mighty settlement and there even is a "Sound and Light" show in the evenings. An amazing place is the Madara Horseman - a picture, carved into the stone during the 8th century with dimensions, which equal these of a real horseman. It still looks breath-taking and is included in the World Heritage List of UNESCO. Some other historical places include the Rila Monastery, Pliska (first capital of Bulgaria), the Troyan Monastery and many more.
Bulgaria has also a gorgeous nature. There are many places to go and admire the beautiful landscape. First of all, there are many mountains in the country. Rila Mountain is a wonderful place - there is the highest peak on the peninsula - Mousala (2925m). You can also visit the Seven Rila Lakes, many huts and ski tracks. Another mountain is Pirin - the most fascinating one in Bulgaria, also part of the World Heritage List. There are many nature reserves in Bulgaria and one of them is Srebarna which houses nearly 100 different bird species, most of which endangered. Actually, I don't need to list any more natural places worth visiting, because when you go to the surroundings of almost every town in Bulgaria, you will find something incredible to look at.
As far as culture is concerned, the best places to visit are the bigger towns - Varna, Burgas, Veliko Turnovo and of course the capital Sofia. Sofia can be compared to many European capitals - it is a large city with many people and numerous places to go if you are a culture-lover or just enjoy the nightlife.
With all this I hope that even some of you will agree with me that the little country Bulgaria holds so many interesting and marvelous things that it can be easily called big-small.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Argentina Travel - Buenos Aires, Mar del Plata, Iguazu Falls, Tierra del Fuego and Patagonia

Argentina is on the way back from the economic crisis of the last few years. If you are looking for a travel destination, Argentina is amazing and cheap.

Economic Woes
While Argentina has unlimited beauty, it also has unlimited corruption. The massive corruption finally lead to an economic crisis at the turn of the century. With the currency devalued and jobs hard to find, Argentina was a decidedly dangerous place for travelers. At one point, the country was going through Presidents faster than I go through coffee. At one point, the country went through five of them in a month! Wait, that might not be such a bad idea. Regardless, things appear to have stabilized and the country is back on the travel map. So, what’s to see?

Buenos Aires
Prior to landing in Buenos Aires, you are strongly encouraged to glue your jaw shut. Buenos Aires is a city of jaw-dropping beauty. In many ways, you will feel as though you have magically been transported to Vienna. The European impression is overwhelming. The city is elegance itself. If you’re a meat eater, make sure you experience one of the steak houses. You won’t be disappointed.

Mar del Plata
You’ve been doing sit ups, right? The Mar de Plata is the hot beach area. Literally. Damn hot, sometimes. If you wish to pursue a little melanoma research, this is the place. If you prefer to pass on the cancer research, you can hit the Mar de Plata Aquarium, play golf on five different courses. The area is also rife with discos. Try the ones on the “Noisy Avenue”, but don’t mention my name. There were…problems last time I was there.

Iguazu Falls
If you like waterfalls, this is the place for you. The Iquaza Falls are twice as wide and taller than Niagara Falls. The Falls actually consist of over 250 cascades that came into existence due to a volcanic eruption. If you can, try to visit the falls in the spring or fall as it is ungodly hot and humid in the summer.

Tierra del Fuego

Welcome to the end of the world. At least, that’s the hook for Tierra del Fuego. Ushuaia, the capital of Tierra del Fuego, is the southernmost city in the world. From the city, you can take the “end of the world” train to see incredible snow covered mountain ranges in the Tierra del Fuego National Park. Words fail me, but the area is definitely worth visiting. Come on, you rode the elephants in Thailand, didn’t you?

Patagonia
No, we are not talking about the clothing line. Patagonia is located in a vast area below Buenos Aires and is famous for uncompromised beauty. Greater Patagonia is actually split between Chile and Argentina. The section in Argentina is filled with glaciers, national parks and so on. I can’t possibly describe it, so I’m not even going to try. Just know that you will not be disappointed.

Argentina
From glaciers to beaches, from elegant cities to friendly little towns, Argentina is a top travel destination. With the economy stabilizing, now is the time to go.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

A Visitors Guide To Buenos Aires Argentina

Visiting other parts of the world is all about taking in a different life style, and seeing attractions that you would otherwise miss out on. There are many places in the world that you can do this, but none are better than Buenos Aires, Argentina. Buenos Aires is one of the most highly visited cities in South America, and for good reason. The tourism industry in Buenos Aires is always growing, and it appears that this is not going away anytime in the near future. The bottom line is that if you want to experience something different, Buenos Aires is definitely an option that you should be open to.

Buenos Aires is the capital or Argentina, and also the biggest city in the country. In addition, Buenos Aires also serves as the port city for this country making it one of the most diverse in the area. The fact that Buenos Aires also serves as a port makes it one of the most popular cities in South America for both tourists and business. This goes a long way in ensuring that the money continues to flow in and out of the city.


Have you ever heard of Buenos Aires being called the Paris of South America? The reason that Buenos Aires is called this is because the city is always on the move; it is always developing into the next big thing. No matter what your beliefs, you will be able to find something in Buenos Aires that suits your needs. If you like fun, Buenos Aires has a nightlife that any city would be jealous of. And of course if you are heading to Buenos Aires to see the attractions you will have plenty of options to choose from as well. And this is just a small taste of the city!

If you are looking for the most popular attractions in Buenos Aires the best place to start is in the historic city core. This is the area of the city that houses all of the great, old architecture. Within a few blocks of each other you will be able to visit the best of the best in Buenos Aires. For example, the Casa Rosada is the building that houses the government of Argentina. It was built in 1873, and is not even one of the older structures in the city. When taking your tour you will come across many buildings in Buenos Aires that are hundreds of years old.

There are over 200 hotels to stay at while in Buenos Aires; this shows just how much they are committed to the tourism industry.

To get into the city, the Buenos Aires international Airport is available. Direct flights are available from many cities.

The city of Buenos Aires is one of the most popular tourist destinations in South America, as well as the world. By visiting this city you will surely learn a lot about yourself and how each area is different.

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By: Thomas Smith

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Malaysia. Tourist Info. Travel Tips


Customs formalities Customs regulations in Malaysia cruelty no different. Of course, prohibits the importation of drugs (punishment very severe-Death), weapons, pornography. Also, you can not import goods from Israel, coins or currency of the country, clothing printed on the texts of the Koran, radios, gold over 100 grams, antiques, wild birds and animals, plants and seeds rubber.
Some of the goods imported duty-free : carpets, clothing, jewellery, chocolate products, handbags. Imports of the products required to pay a certain amount for the "temporary import", which will be returned to you at the time of departure, and the goods must be presented for examination and a proof of payment. Cameras, watches, pens, lighters customs duties are not. Duty can be imported litre spirits, 200 cigarettes, perfume and cosmetics in the amount of not more than 200 ringgit. The import or export of foreign and local currency Health regulations Needless learnt from the cholera and smallpox prior to the visit to the country, but that the vaccination against malaria in the summer months (July-August) tourists traveling to the east coast of Peninsular Malaysia, Sarawak west and the north-east Sabah. Currency The local currency is the Malaysian Ringgit (RM), in one ringgite senov 100. Course Malaysian ringgit is around 3.75 ringgit to the dollar. In big cities, hotels, shops and restaurants to freely accept credit cards. There are banknotes 1.2 5,10,50,100, 500 and 1,000 ringgit, as well as coins 1,5,10,20, 50 senov and 1 ringgit.
Money changes in the banks and their offices at the airport, hotels and shopping malls. From Monday to Friday banks operate from 10:00 to 15:00, Saturdays from 09:30 to 11:30. Cash dollar and the euro to trade at ringgita exchange bureaux. There, and the course is better and commissions% of the clients were excluded. "Obmenniki open daily from 11:30 to 22:00. Major shopping centers are working every day from 10:00 to 22:00 without interruption, shops opening hours at 10 am and ends at 18:00. Souvenirs as a gift from Malaysia usually get fabrics and articles of tin and silver. Particularly good Malaysian batik (paintings on silk) and kain songket (silk with zoltami and silver threads).

Selling all this beauty every step of the way. Manners While in Malaysia, you must adhere to the rules of polite behavior that are different from the European. Located in the Malaysian house always want to remove shoes, as well as at the entrance to mosques and temples. It should not be run on the people and objects index finger of his right hand. Of the commonly used thumb, the remaining fingers bent underneath it. Women who go beyond the tourist zones, better dress and behave poskromnee. Needless sun at the local beaches Topless and the more the naturizmom.
Another recommendation to the tourists : from local residents better not get into religious debate. Especially if you believe that Islam needs to be serious changes and improvements. Tipping Tipping, as in most countries in the world, accounts for 10% of the order value. Hotel accommodation is a coin dignity 2 ringgit.
Transport Visit to the country could be leased to a car - if you are at least 18 (some agencies 23 years) and no more than 60 years. Taxis in Malaysia inexpensive. Hitchhiking not merely distributed, but possible. Single women travelled to categorically not recommended. In Kuala Lumpur convenient travelling in buses and subways ground. Price depends on the number of station and donations.

Malaysia. What to see?



STUDY TOUR TO KUALA LUMPUR Golden Triangle Kuala Lumpur : travel along the most famous hotels and shopping malls, in the heart of the city. Chinese town : a picture of the old part of the city inhabited by Chinese.

Area Independence : The Sultan Abdul Samad (built in 1895 and is currently building the Federal Court); Club Royal Selangor State (architectural style of the late English Gothic-1884); The English Church of St. Mary, in 1894. Rail Stations Capital : The Case of the Mauritanian architectural style, in 1911. National Monument : on the lives for peace and freedom Malaysia. Architectural ensemble includes - monument, fountains, pavilions in the form of Crescent, a monument Unknown soldier and the Asian garden. Parliament House : 1963 National Mosque : known for its unique architectural style, where the dome in the form of horse-1965. Royal Palace : Official residence of King. Home tour - 10:00. Duration : 3.5 hours. The minimum number for the round-2 trip by speaking tours Duration Tura strictly followed, as outlined in the table. Each extra hour excursion tourist paid more. TOUR ON CITY OKRESTNOSTAM This tour to the eastern outskirts of the city, where visitors will be able to observe the local way of life of Malaysians and traditional Malaysian homes.
Tin Royal Selangora : olovannaya largest factory operations. Visitors will have a unique opportunity to observe the work of artists of processing high-quality tin, as well as seeing the work of jewelry and art works of plaster. Then you prosleduete in duty-free shop of the factory. Fruit market : stops on request. Batika Center : the original method of construction Battle is one of the top arts-will be shown to you, masters craftsmen. Saloon sales Gotovh products will also be submitted to your attention. BEP Cave : Batu Cave is located approximately at a distance of 13 km from the city of Kuala Lumpur, in the state of Selangor. It is a huge limestone cave is a sacred place for the Malaysian Indusov. Stairs leading to the cave has 272 seats and leads to a Hindu shrine located deep in the cave. Batu Caves, venue of the annual Hindu festival, known as Thaipusam. The holidays there are thousands of Hindus and tourists who have witnessed great Kawadis parade, where prizes anything samoumerschwlenia and spiritual trance. Batu Cave is an ideal place for photos and inspection dostoprimechatelnost it Home tours, 09:00. Duration 3.5 hours. The minimum number for the round-2 trip by speaking tours Duration Tura strictly followed, as outlined in the table. Each extra hour excursion tourist paid more. KUALA LUMPURSKI HABITAT PARK, ON TOUR GORODU AND ON TOUR OKRESTNOSTAM Kuala Lumpurski Park Industry : approximately 10 minutes from the city centre of Kuala Lumpur is the world's largest bird park is a place of great birds - is a tropical paradise for nature lovers and exotic. The park covers an area of 20 hectares at the foot of Orhiday Park. There are more than three thousand different species of exotic birds living in the wild. Next on the programme is a combination of tours
Expect colour metropolitan life and lifestyles Malay villages. Home tours, 09:00. Duration - 6 hours. The minimum number for the round-2 trip by speaking tours and lunch ticket at Bird Park is included in the duration of the Tura strictly respected, as outlined in the table. Each extra hour excursion tourist paid more. KUALA LUMPUR AFTER ZAKATA Visit Induistsky temple : the oldest church in a unique style of South India, and popular among local Hindus. China Town or Chinese town : Chinese bazaar outdoors renowned for its shoddy goods broad range along with the exotic differences. English once dubbed the place Monte. Quala-lumpur-si-si (Kuala Lumpurski city center) : at the heart of urban ensemble velicistmuyut very high in the world powers. The height of 453 meters, 88 floors. Kuala Lumpurska Telebashna : fourth highest in the world 125m-421 m. unique design, which combines architectural tradition of East and West. At Telebachne You will be presented with dinner in the rotating restaurant at the dome, where you can enjoy the panoramic view of the heights of avian flight. Home tours, 18:30. Duration : 4:00. The minimum number for the round-2 trip by speaking tours Dinner included in the price. All beverages except tea and coffee are not included Dress-length formal Tura strictly respected, as outlined in the table. Each extra hour excursion tourist paid more. GENTING HAILEND-CITY ENTERTAINMENT tour to Genting Highands is a unique opportunity to swim in the world of entertainment. is 2,000 metres above sea level, surrounded by beautiful scenery of tropical forests and mountainous terrain. It is a place ideal for families. The minimum number for the round-2 trip by speaking tours in the price ticket in the theme park "OutDoor" and the cable way Lunch also included in the price Home tour-09:00. Duration : 8:00. The news followed strictly, as outlined in the table. Each extra hour excursion tourist paid more. DINNER TO NATIONAL TANZAMI Dinner at the Theatre-Saloma Restaurant, where you can taste the local cuisine, and the Chinese, Indian, European, and to see the national game show. Home tour-19:30. Duration : 2 hours. The minimum number for the round-2 trip by speaking tour price includes dinner, beverages in the price does not include The Tura strictly followed, as outlined in the table. Each extra hour excursion tourist paid more. KUALA LUMPUR-Living NATURE AND Park Beauty of Nature Kuala Lumpur has won the hearts of many visitors, in particular its aromatic foliage and wildlife. Bird Park : covers an area of 20 hectares at the foot of Orhiday Park, the construction of which has 6.3 million Malaysian rinngit. They will be different types of exotic birds, local and other. Park Babocek : employs approximately 6,000 butterflies of 120 species and 15,000 plants of more than 100 species. Park Orhiday : 800 varieties of excellent local orchids and rare exotic species Mt. Park : exciting attractions and entertainment on land and on water. After shesticsovogo spend time in Aquapark You also get the opportunity to visit supersovremenny trade center , at the heart of which is the ice rink! Home tour - 10:00. Duration - 6 hours. The minimum number for the round-2 trip by speaking tours park closed on Tuesdays Price includes entrance fee in the Parks. Lunch in the Park Bird Life Tura strictly followed, as outlined in the table. Each extra hour excursion tourist paid more. NEW TOWN - PUTRA JAYA Putra Jaya translation is a new city, located 25 kilometers from Kuala Lumpur, and is the administrative capital of Malaysia. Putra Jaya is a new concept in the construction of towns. It is aptly described as . In the 4581 hectare has seven parks, each of which is unique in its kind. Putra Jaya, the city future, the city of comfort, quality and beauty created for its residents and the prosperity of the country. Dataran Putra-Prince area : one of the most beautiful places in the city, planned for the celebrations, parades and national holidays. Putra Mosque-visit mosques, affecting its majestic beauty, built in the spirit of Persian Safavidov period. Sri Putra Perdana, the residence of the Prime Minister of Malaysia. Cruise on the lake, a boat on the lake, where you can view of the mosque, bridges and other dostoprimechatelnost and city. Home tour - 10:00. Duration : 3 hours. The minimum number for the round-2 trip by speaking tours Tickets for cruising on the lake in the price is not Duration Tura strictly followed, as outlined in the table. Each extra hour excursion tourist paid more. LESSON FOR HISTORY - MALACCA Malacca is the most famous of its historical past, the Malaysian state. Their land with the town fortami tells tourists of a splendid and mysterious time of the peninsula. In ancient times, many invaders set foot on dry land Malacca, in the hope to remain here forever. The Portuguese were in the splendid place more than a century, and because they were Catholics, it remains a legacy of Catholic facilities. Later, the Dutch were Protestants, British, Japanese, and each left its mark in the history of this city. Before coming here Portuguese Malacca was the main gate Tradami Malaysia, attracting merchants from Asia, India, China. Founded Prince Parameswara, Malaysia will become a trading centre, which is on the way from the East to the West. It sold gold, spices, opium, tea, silk, tobacco, perfume. The Catholic Church of St. Peter-1710 The oldest operating Catholic Church in Malaysia. Bukit China is the largest Chinese cemetery outside China, founded in the 17th century (12,500 graves) Portuguese village - 300,000 residents Jong Ho Tin Street Garmonii. Here you will see Muslim mosque, the Christian Church, the Buddhist and Hindu temple facing wall to the wall in harmony, peace and harmony. Dutch area, in 1753, here is Protestant Church Stariny museum Nenyi testimony is a clear explanation of mixing Chinese and Malaysian cultures Church St. Paul, it was a body buried St. Francis Xavier, the body transported to India Minimum for a round-2 trip by speaking tours in the price of tour includes lunch and entrance fee. Home tours-8:00. Duration : 9:00. The news followed strictly, as outlined in the table. Each extra hour excursion tourist paid more. EXCURSION Pulau PAYAR TO LANGKAWI Tour Pulau Payar in Langkawi is the most zanimatelnaya tour in a day "Pulau Payar- Marine Park Island Langkawi famous for its clean beaches and white sand, we suggest Drive out of the beauty of the island itself. Departure for Koralloway zapovednyk- Island Pulau Payar. Pulau Payar is a small, wonderful underwater world. Located just south of the. Langkawi. The tour starts in the morning, 08:00, a bus takes you from the hotel and stay at the boat station, which departs a Catamaran. Transfer the catamaran Payar to take 55 minutes. Upon arrival at the Pulau Payar catamaran stops a large floating rafts - platform, which you need to get off. They will be offered to tables where you can sit and ibid find kits for bicycles. Catamaran all of this time, will be parked to the raft, and you being in the heart of the coral reefs, enjoy great spectacle underwater kingdom. Naraya with a mask and flippers, you will see a great fish-shaped and coloured corals, sea stars and urchins more. At 13:00 you will be offered a meal for your tables. Lunch-buffet. All time for the Bank to move off every 15 minutes. Just every 15 minutes touring boat with a transparent glass bottom. Always lots with a little bread so enjoy feeding fish. Departure ago, in 16.00. The price includes : Transfer of catamaran, bus, lunch kit-diving mask and flippers, life jacket taxes for visiting sanctuary with a need : towels cream to tan (to avoid a sunburn) More bread to feed the fish Things replaced Drinking bottled water Home Tours - 8:00. Duration : 8:00. This tour without speaking escort. The news followed strictly, as outlined in the table. Each extra hour excursion tourist paid more.