Vanuatu adrenaline holidays




Zoom across the aquamarine waves aboard a jet ski or defeat a surging waterfall. Surf the slopes of an active volcano or hike through the jungle. Whatever your choice of excitement, the glorious island chain of Vanuatu in the South Pacific, near Fiji, is perfect for adrenaline-filled adventures.

Make a splash

Hop aboard the Vanuatu Jet speed boat and prepare yourself for 30 minutes of wave jumping and dizzying 360˚ turns. Like a waterborne rollercoaster, the boat ploughs around the Port Vila Bay area at high speeds on this intense adventure outing. If you want a customized tour, hop aboard a Zego Craft jet ski and enjoy a guided trip of the harbour and fascinating marine life.

Explore the depths

The Pacific Ocean is host to thousands of beautiful marine species and the perfect way to start a day of adventure is to explore the stunning reefs. Vanuatu is connected to the Great Barrier Reef chain and plays host to reef sharks, manta rays and a large variety of tropical fish and colourful coral. With good visibility and warm waters the conditions for scuba-diving are the perfect place to explore the deep blue year-round.

Surfs up

Although there is plenty to do in the water, nothing can compare to the thrill of ash surfing down the slopes of Vanuatu’s most active volcano. Starting close to Mount Yasur’s volcanic peak, 361m (1,184ft) above sea level, use a board and glide down the volcanic ash as the magma churns hundreds of feet below. True thrill-seekers can whizz down even faster by leaning backwards on the specially designed board.

Moving on up

While in the jungle try one of the cascade tours in which a guide will lead you up to the picturesque Mele Cascade waterfalls and pools. Take a dip in the pools, enjoy the stunning scenery, before propelling yourself down a majestic waterfall to explore the caves and fauna below.



Take a hike

Explore Vanuatu’s lush interior on an extreme jungle tour. The islands have been isolated for thousands of years and are perfect for spotting fascinating species of reptiles and exotic birds. Thankfully, there are no poisonous snakes or spiders so the jungle is great for exploring on foot or bicycle. Alternatively, jump in a kayak and flow upstream to explore the jungle, getting lost in the green paradise. Those seeking more speed can try a quad bike tour on the island of Espiritu Santo and hit the trails, which are surrounded by luscious rainforest terrain.


Read more:

http://www.worldtravelguide.net/holidays/adrenaline/vanuatu-adrenaline-holidays#ixzz19Ujxa9Xx

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Sao Paulo Travel Guide


Look beyond São Paulo’s daunting reputation to discover a booming centre of culture, cuisine and cosmopolitanism that makes this manic megalopolis an ultimate urban experience.

The city doesn’t possess Rio’s samba beat or beaches but this inland skyscraper metropolis of 20 million inhabitants is Brazil’s economic and business powerhouse. The poverty-stricken favelas (shanty towns) and gridlocked traffic are pressing concerns. Yet São Paulo’s central neighbourhoods represent a wealthy and vibrantly functioning amalgamation of migrant communities from Japanese and Italian to Lebanese and Nordestino Brazilians.

Visitors can safely explore a different and unique neighbourhood every day via an impressive subway system. Ever-changing art exhibitions and myriad museums cement the city’s reputation as the cultural capital of Latin America. While thousands of restaurants cater to every whim and taste: from sushi to pizza to homegrown Virado Paulista. Above all, Paulistanos know how to have fun. Nightclubs and stadium venues attract world-class acts while abundant bars ensure the city’s 24/7 cacophony continues all night long.


Read more: http://www.worldtravelguide.net/sao-paulo#ixzz19Nxn02ir

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Paraguay Travel Guide



Paraguay is a little-known landlocked country, which has found itself somewhat isolated from even its neighbours in the past by geography and politics.

However, Paraguay has taken a number of steps to overcome its political, economic and geographic downfalls and is building a more welcoming image, in the face of often negative press.



Its capital, Asuncion, is a neat, compact and pretty colonial city and relatively safe by Latin American standards. Paraguayans are unerringly polite and interested in tourists, and many will happily invite a stranger to dinner – especially if conversation about football is on the menu.

Outside the capital are grassy plains and an untamed wilderness of marshes, lagoons, dense forests, jungles, national parks, Jesuit missions and the Chaco; one of South America's great wilderness areas. It is an adventuresome country, unlike any other on the continent.


Read more: http://www.worldtravelguide.net/paraguay#ixzz190XI8TST

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Siena Travel Guide


Sometimes it appears as if life in Siena has been unchanged for centuries. The walls that enclose this exquisite medieval city seem to have protected and preserved its culture, as well as its architecture, and local traditions are proudly upheld.

Situated in the south of Tuscany, and surrounded by postcard-pretty scenery, Siena features on many tourist itineraries - visitors should allow more than a day to explore the area and discover Siena's atmospheric maze of narrow lanes and alleyways.

Siena is divided into separate districts, contrade, as it was in medieval times. The fierce rivalry that exists between them is played out each year in the Palio, a brutal bareback horse-race that is run on the main piazza, the Campo, in July and August.

At these times, Siena gets so busy it seems as if it will burst from its walls, but at other times visitors can enjoy more relaxing visits to its stunning cathedral, ancient palaces and tempting shops.


Read more: http://www.worldtravelguide.net/siena#ixzz18kb9zpTR

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Aspen Ski Resort


Aspen is one of the world's best-known resorts, boasting four ski areas, three separate resort developments and a glitzy reputation.

The famous ski town was a busy 19th-century silver mining district 130 years ago. Today you can stay in the original town of Aspen, or at the ever-expanding Snowmass resort 20km (12 miles) away, which recently completed a multi-billion dollar redevelopment, or at the third and smallest resort, Aspen Highlands.

The main resort of Aspen town has several faces. It has become synonymous with excess, being home to some of the world's most opulent and expensive properties, as well as a local airport full of private jets. On the other hand it has a reputation for liberal policies which seems at odds with the first - the resort famously banned fur coats at one time, and currently the Aspen Skiing Company is a leading campaigner against climate change (while simultaneously encouraging increased use of the local airport).




Snowmass is very much like a ‘normal’ ski resort, and a very good one following the huge investment in improvements recently. It also has the largest of Aspen’s four ski areas.

However, most visitors have little interest in these issues and just enjoy the superb skiing, which includes the biggest lift-served vertical in the USA, and a buzzing nightlife.


Read more: http://www.worldtravelguide.net/ski/aspen#ixzz18LPgR6Uy

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Botswana Travel Guide


Outstandingly dramatic, Botswana encompasses striking salt pans, diamond-rich deserts and fertile flood plains which teem with game. The north, in particular, offers superb wildlife-watching opportunities, making this one of southern Africa's top safari destinations.

A sizable proportion of the country - over 40% - is given over to national parks, reserves and private concessions, where tourists crane their necks out of jeeps to check out the roving animals. But Botswana's policy of favoring low-impact luxury tourism ensures that even the most famous game-viewing areas rarely feel crowded.

The jewel in Botswana's crown is, without a doubt, the Okavango Delta - the largest inland delta in the world. Its seasonal lagoons and waterways are crammed with hovering birds, while zebras and giraffes amble across vast grass flats. Northeast of here is Chobe National Park, home to gigantic elephant herds, some of them 400-strong.




Botswana is one of Africa's success stories. Since gaining independence in 1966, it has achieved steady economic growth through successful exploitation of its agricultural potential and its enviable diamond reserves. It has not escaped controversy - the HIV/AIDS pandemic and alleged maltreatment of the Kalahari Bushmen have caused international concern - but it remains a peaceful and stable nation of remarkable natural beauty.


Read more: http://www.worldtravelguide.net/botswana#ixzz18H21ASqN

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United Kingdom December events



From Christmas markets to New Year's Eve celebrations, check out what is happening around the country with VisitBritain's guide to the top events this December.

Westonbirt Spectacular Enchanted Christmas, 26 November-19 December

Take an enchanted trip to the UK’s most important collection of native and exotic trees this Christmas and see Westonbirt’s majestic specimens ablaze with festive colour. From 26 November to 19 December, Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings at Westonbirt Arboretum will feature the Illuminated Trail.

Nos Galan Races 2010, 31 December

The Nos Galan Races commemorate the Welsh runner Guto Nyth Bran and his legendary athletic prowess. Held annually on New Year’s Eve in Mountain Ash, in the Cynon Valley, South Wales, the Races follow a 5km route around the town. There are competitions for boys and girls, a fun run for adults and an elite race for the more serious athletes. Each year a mystery runner competes; past competitors have included Iwan Thomas and Linford Christie.

Great Little Trains of Wales – Santa Trains

The Great Little Trains of Wales are a very special way of seeing some of the most dramatic scenery in the British Isles. All are narrow gauge steam railways and some have a history spanning well over 100 years. All of them are charming old-time steam trains with plenty of polished paintwork and brass.



At Christmas these beautiful railways are extra special. Seven of the ten train lines are running special Santa Trains. Join the fun on the Welsh Highland Railway where elves will pass through the train giving out presents to the children during the journey - with plenty of laughter and jokes along the way. Adults can enjoy a glass of sherry and a mince pie during the ride.

For full details, bookings and dates check the Great Little Trains of Wales website.

Ba' Games, Orkney, 25 December 2010 & 1 January 2011

Join the crowds in Orkney this Christmas and New Year's Day for mass rugby games known as Ba's. They’re played in the streets of Kirkwall each year, have few rules and can last all day! The Ba' begins on each day with separate events for men and boys.

For more information check the Ba Game website.




York Christmas Markets, 1-19 December

York hosts an international Christmas Market every day until late from 1-19 December as Parliament Street goes global for the International Christmas Fayre bringing you goods from across the globe. Tickle your taste-buds at the food court, where liveried chefs serve global flavours, or amble through the Christmas trees to find that special gift from far away. Open daily from 9am until late. And if you like things more local get along to the ‘Made In Yorkshire' craft market from 2-12 December on St Sampson's Square.

Hogmanay, 31 December

Wherever you go in the world you’ll find people celebrating New Year’s Eve, but nowhere (and trust us on this) will you find people celebrating it quite like they do in Scotland. They even have their own name for it! Across the country Scottish people bring in the New Year with different customs and traditions but always with a great party.

In Edinburgh, Hogmanay is marked by a four-day extravaganza beginning with a torchlight procession and ending with the Hogmanay Carnival on 2 January. In between there’s a huge street party under the castle, a concert in Prince’s Street Gardens with Biffy Clyro, K T Tunstall, The Coral, The Charlatans, Billy Bragg and Roddy Woomble appearing, and as the chimes ring out at midnight a thundering fireworks display will light up the city. There’s also a New Year’s Day run, poetry events and a mini film festival celebrating Edinburgh on film.

For full listings of Hogmanay events around Scotland, check out the VisitScotland website.

New Year’s Day Parade and Festival, 1 January 2011

Join London’s New Year’s Day Parade at 12 noon outside the Ritz Hotel on Piccadilly as 10,000 performers representing 20 countries world-wide assemble for this annual celebration of the New Year. More than half a million are expected to cram London's most famous streets to see the fantastic spectacular as it weaves its way along the two-mile route that takes in Piccadilly Circus, Regent Street, Trafalgar Square and Westminster Abbey.

The parade is free to watch but if you’d rather have a seat, grandstand seating is available at Whitehall and Piccadilly. For more information and to buy tickets for the grandstand seats check the New Year’s Day Parade website.

Stonehaven Fireball Festival, 31 December

Join crowds from all over the world and head to Stonehaven, just south of Aberdeen, for the traditional Fireball Festival New Year celebration. The practice of parading through the streets swinging fireballs has been observed here since at least 1908 but it has its roots much earlier in Stonehaven’s past. Gasp as up to 60 people march up and down the High Street swinging giant, blazing fireballs weighing up to 20 pounds each!

http://www.worldtravelguide.net/holidays/inspire-me/top-uk-events-December-visitbritain#ixzz17xxlBmeA

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Soldeu Ski Resort


Soldeu is part of the great Grandvalira region, which incorporates neighbour and former arch rival Pas de La Casa and has four other resort bases.

Although all the bases are well linked into the ski area and each has its own facilities, it's important to be aware that they are all a few miles apart by bus. Thus Soldeu and El Tarter for example, sometimes lumped together as one resort name, are in fact two separate villages a little way apart.

The combined area has rapidly grown, with an exceptional fleet of state-of-the-art high-capacity chairlifts and swish gondolas, to be one of the world's 50 largest. Despite the rapid expansion, Soldeu has maintained high environmental standards and is one of the few resorts worldwide that has adopted the ISO 14001 international environmental management system.




Soldeu has also moved dramatically upmarket, opening a selection of extremely nice hotels and other quality services. As the price of the weekly lift ticket has risen to match, it can no longer realistically be thought of as cheap - with the exception of the continuing duty-free shopping.
Location:

Soldeu is part of the Grandvalira ski resort which takes up much of the eastern half of the small principality of Andorra. Andorra is sandwiched between Spain to the west and France to the east in the Pyrenean mountains and is about 160km (100 miles) north of the Mediterranean Sea.


Read more: http://www.worldtravelguide.net/ski/soldeu#ixzz17mIAFASE

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Vail Ski Resort



Vail is one of the biggest ski resorts in the USA, and often voted one of the best in popularity polls. Built in the 1960s as a faux Austrian village for an upmarket clientele, Vail has broadened its appeal in recent years into a destination for everyone, while continuing to serve the well-heeled.

The traffic-free village which meanders along the slopes is mostly attractive, with smart hotels, shops and restaurants. It does have some of the most expensive lift tickets in the US if you buy in resort, but bargains are to be had by buying in advance online or through a tour operator.

There's a good choice of skiing, from the conventional pistes on the front face, to the big, open Back Bowls, to the pleasure of skiing through widely spaced trees in Blue Sky Basin.

The resort has tried to promote a greener agenda on its slopes and in its properties in recent years and has some solar panels on mountain restaurants and hybrid low-pollution buses.

Location:

Vail ski resort is located on I-70, two hours west of Denver, in Colorado's Rocky Mountains.

Read More
http://vail.snow.com

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The Tiger's Nest Travel Guide



The broad Paro valley is the entry point for all visitors flying into Bhutan on the national carrier, Druk Air. As the plane takes a dramatic sweep into Paro, the flight captain usually warns relieved passengers not to worry if the aircraft’s wings appear to be almost touching the mountainsides. Paro lies at an elevation of 2,280m.

Places to visit include the Paro Dzong, the National Museum housed in a round fortress called the Ta Dzong, and the ruins of the Drugyal Dzong, a 17th century fortress that used to keep invading Tibetan forces at bay, destroyed in fire in 1951.

The Tiger’s Nest or the Taktshang is one of the most popular spiritual heritage sites, perched precariously on the rock face of a sheer cliff 2950m above the ground. It is a short climb of 1.5 hours to 2 hours to the top. For those less inclined to climbing, you can catch a good bird’s eye view from the bottom of the monastery

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Waitomo Glowworm Cave, New Zealand




World renowned and a magnet for both local and overseas visitors, the Waitomo Glowworm Caves occupy a high placing in the New Zealand vacation wish-list.

The glow worm, Arachnocampa luminosa, is unique to New Zealand. Thousands of these tiny creatures radiate their unmistakable luminescent light as our expert guides provide informative commentary on the Caves' historical and geological significance.





The Waitomo Glowworm Caves were first explored in 1887 by local Maori Chief Tane Tinorau accompanied by an English surveyor Fred Mace. Local Maori people knew of the Caves existence, but the subterranean caverns had never been extensively explored until Fred and Tane went to investigate. They built a raft of flax stems and with candles as their only lighting, floated into the cave where the stream goes underground.

As they entered the caves, their first discovery was the Glowworm Grotto with its myriad of tiny bright lights dotting the cave ceiling. As their eyes adjusted to the darkness, they saw a multitude of lights reflecting off the water. Looking up, they discovered that the ceilings were dotted with the lights of thousands of glowworms. Debris and logs littered the waterway, but by poling themselves toward the embankment they were able to leave the raft and explore the lower levels of the cave. Here they found themselves surrounded by the glorious cave decorations.

Waitomo Glowworm Caves are a must see for any traveller. Enjoy the world famous boat ride under thousands of magical glowworms and become a part of over 120 years of cultural and natural history.

More info: http://www.waitomo.com/waitomo-glowworm-caves.aspx

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Canada's Hotel De Glace

Skip trying to build an igloo yourself. Canada's Hôtel de Glace, built exclusively of ice and snow, does it for you.


At the beginning of December each year, workers build the entire hotel's rooms and columns, furniture and sculptures out of ice and snow. For the opening this January, when the hotel celebrates its 10th anniversary, workers used 15,000 tons of snow and 500 tons of ice.



Hôtel de Glace opened Jan. 4 and will remain open until April 4 for overnight stays, public tours, corporate events, weddings, art exhibitions and film and TV productions.




The hotel is in Sainte-Catherine-de-la-Jacques-Cartier, 23 miles from Quebec City and 149 miles from Montreal. Quebec's winter temperatures can range from minus-13 degrees Fahrenheit in February to 41 degrees in March.

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Spotted Lake




During the summer, peculiar white, green and yellow spots appear on this salty lake in British Columbia.

The explanation: When the lake water evaporates during the summer, natural walkways form on the lake from crystallized mineral deposits. The spots, made up mostly of magnesium sulfate, vary from white to green based on the mineral composition. The Okanagan Indians considered the lake sacred for its therapeutic qualities.

The Okanagan nation owns the lake, which is closed to visitors, but the spots can easily be viewed and photographed from Highway 3, which runs next to it.

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Bolivia Travel Guide





Bolivia, landlocked at the heart of Andean Latin America, remains something of a well-kept secret. Throughout the country's colonial history, Bolivia was known as 'Upper Peru', until after Simon Bolivar led the country to independence in 1825, when it was named in his honor.

Today, those who venture beyond the mass tourism of neighboring, modern-day Peru will find a country offering a far more authentic take on Latin American culture. While upscale hotels and international-standard restaurants do exist, there are also plenty of long bus journeys along mountain passes, rough-and-tumble jeep trips across empty landscapes and chilly nights in low-frills hotels under llama-wool blankets. The infrastructure may need some work but the country's innate charm lies in its staggering breadth of contrasts: the clash of indigenous and European culture, the sweep of landscape from jungle to high-altitude mountains and the diversity of activities from adrenaline sports to ancient monuments.



With around two thirds of the population being of indigenous origin, the authentic culture has not been watered down. Native religions, dialects, clothes, music and medicines all form part of the daily life on the street. While the Spanish influence is strong in the colonial architecture, most notably in Sucre, Bolivia has remained close its roots, electing its first-ever indigenous president, Evo Morales, in December 2005.



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Mammoth Ski Resort






One of the world's leading ski resorts, Mammoth's north-facing slopes spread over one of the biggest ski areas in North America. The resort began in the late 1930s thanks to the efforts of pioneer Dave McCoy, who went on to build Mammoth up to its current global status and attracting more than 1.5 million visitors annually.

In the last decade McCoy was helped by resort developers Intrawest who took a stake in the resort (recently sold on when Dave retired in 2005, aged 90) and began to build a full resort base village where previously most lodging was down in the town of Mammoth Lakes. A long-planned gondola link to Mammoth Lakes has also been built, cutting out the need for a drive up to the base area car parks and most recently a ski run back down too.



Mammoth's great snow record means that the ski area offers one of the longest ski seasons in the world, typically opening in the first half of November and staying open into June, although it has reached August in the past.

Although the resort's facilities in terms of the number of shops and restaurants are not quite on the scale of South Lake Tahoe, Aspen or Vail, they are more than adequate, and the ski mountain is certainly a match.

Location:


Mammoth is located on the eastern edge of California's Sierra Nevada range and to the east of Yosemite National Park (access road closed in winter), inland from a point midway between Los Angeles and San Francisco on North America's west coast.


Read more: http://www.worldtravelguide.net/ski/mammoth#ixzz171cVObZ9

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Montevideo Travel Guide

Worlds Travel Guide

Montevideo






Perched on a peninsula jutting out into the River Plate, Montevideo's mix of Old- and New-World charms has been captivating visitors for centuries.

The city’s Ciudad Vieja (Old Town) is a throwback to the past, with narrow cobblestoned streets, historic buildings and atmospheric plazas. Across the mouth of the River Plate, pavement cafés are plentiful, particularly around the pedestrianised avenue Peatonal Sarandí.

Moving east, Montevideo’s city centre boasts wide, tree-lined avenues, soaring skyscrapers and the bulk of the city's accommodations, while the long seafront promenade known as La Rambla is dotted with clean beaches either side of the upmarket neighbourhood of Carrasco.



Montevideo is a curious mixture of old-fashioned formality and laid-back South American style. Uruguayans may seem reserved at first, particularly if you're coming from Argentina where people are much more openly effusive. This thin veneer soon wears away, however, revealing a warmth and curiosity that makes the locals the highlight of many people's visit.



Read more: http://www.worldtravelguide.net/montevideo#ixzz16w41E5Ip

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