Benissa – a treat for those who love nature

Автор: admin, 31 May 2009. Рубрика: B • Метки: , , , ,  • Ваш отзыв

Benissa – a treat for those who love nature

If you love to live with nature, and spend your holidays in the midst of beautiful mountains, waterfalls, valley on the one side and a beautiful coast line on the other, there is no alternative to Benissa. This beautiful little town to the north of Alicante is the most preferred place to spend your holidays. This beautiful and picturesque town in the midst of which are the traditionally built houses where many people from Scandinavia, Germany, Holland and Britain live, is the apt place for holidaying. There are many villas which host you at the most reasonable rate.

Villa Casa Albatros:

Comfort for visitors is the watch word of Casa Albatros Villa. Located very close to the famous Moraire Centre, this is a place for quiet holidaying. Rows of shops and restaurants welcome the guests on the beach. A spacious villa, Casa Albatros can accommodate about six persons. The rent is quite reasonable, at ?578 per week and the villa is richly furnished. In addition to the majestic view of nature through the balcony, there is a private swimming pool which is beautifully maintained, and has adequate attendants to attend to your requirements. The rooms are furnished in traditional Spanish manner. Casa Albatros has a fully equipped kitchen to meet all your cooking needs and a dining room to dine in full view of nature. Boating, walking, cycling, water skiing, swimming, mountain biking, horse riding, fishing are some of the many recreational activities waiting for you.

Villa Casa Contessa:

Ideally located with a majestic view of the Montgo Mountain, La Sella golf grounds and the beautiful Mediterranean Sea; Casa Contessa is an ideal place for those who want a peaceful relaxation. Just about 20 minutes of driving takes you to the beach. Shopping is at Denia Javea, Guadalest and Calpe. Private swimming pool, tennis ground, restaurants serving the choicest foods, bars, and shops are some of the many attractions in and around Casa Contessa. Rooms are quite large and each room offers a full view of the landscape and beautiful mountain and beach. The kitchen and the dining room are spacious and the entire villa is generously furnished. The rent is quite reasonable when compared to the luxury the villa offers; it is just ?799 per week.  

Moraira holiday villa:

Centrally located in the midst of a residential area, Moraria holiday villa is an ideal place for comfortable holidaying. Spacious rooms, full open view to welcome fresh air, natural sunlight and a spectacular view of the imposing beauty of the mountains. The villa is fully equipped for comfortable living. The beach is just three kilometers from the villa. There are good restaurants and bars, shopping malls, golf ground, private swimming pool, and walking paths. There is a modern kitchen with all the kitchen gadgets; there is nothing wanting in the villa. Just a visit will convince you of this fact. The rates are quite reasonable at ?650 to ?1200 pounds per week.

Bangkok’s red light districts – the cheap man’s guide

Автор: admin, 25 May 2009. Рубрика: B • Метки: , , , ,  • Ваш отзыв

Bangkok’s Red Light Districts – The Cheap Man’s Guide

With the economy going down the drain, any man… a cheap man that is, can still enjoy a holiday in any of Bangkok’s red light districts. First off you have to know when to go, where to stay, drink and most importantly find company.

The best time to go and save money for hotels in Bangkok is from late March to late October, which is the low season. Even though it will be hot and rainy during those months you’re going to be indoors most of the time. Hotels in Bangkok during low season slash their rates by up to 40% to 50%. Some hotels are even desperate enough to discount their rooms up to 60% for walk in guest.

When you choose a hotel however make sure you book one that won’t charge you a fee for taking a companion back to your room for an overnight stay. This fee is called a joiner fee and a hotel that doesn’t charge this fee is deemed guest friendly. Hotels that charge joiner fees usually ask for B1,000 so it’s in your best interest to stay at a guest friendly hotel.

Now there are short time hotels with rooms to rent for B300 an hour. But if you’re staying in a perfectly fine guest friendly hotel near the sex districts there’s no reason why you should be paying an extra B300. We can use that B300 for better things right?

There are plenty of budget guest friendly hotels in Bangkok, particularly close to any of the 3 sex districts in Bangkok.

In Patpong sex district you can choose to stay at the Wall Street Inn Hotel. Their room rates start from B1,000 and usually includes a breakfast. It is opposite a popular gay nightlife street and just a 5 minute walk to the neon lights and boom of club beats of Patpong’s go go bars. You can even find a lively night market there as well.

The next 2 sex districts, Nana and Soi Cowboy are very close to each other and you can use the Sky Train nearby to get to Patpong easily. A fare only cost B25.

Nana and Soi Cowboy has the most guest friendly hotels and many of them are expensive. There are a few budget ones such as the Woraburi Sukhumvit Hotel and Resort and Swiss Park Hotel. Both charge about B900 to B1200 and includes breakfast. Even better both are very near Nana hotels parking lot, a popular spot where Thai freelance girls and sometimes lady boys stand around. The Nana Hotel cost about B1,400 a night and still worth the price. 

I know most guys want to pay a visit to go go bars but for a cheap man you’ll be paying a lot. Beers and liquor are quite expensive in go go bars these days. A locally brewed Heineken will cost you B120. My suggestion is to go to 7 Eleven store where you can find a liter of cold Heineken for B45, sit outside and oogle at the many beautiful ladies around Nana and Sukhumvit. It’s free to oogle after all. 

Also remember in a go go bar you have to pay a B500 bar fine to take a lady out. For lady boys a bar fine is B600. But there’s still a way for you to meet go go bar girls and not pay a bar fine.

Nana Entertainment Plaza is a go go bar haven, located right across from the Nana Hotel. Every night around 1am to 2am the girls working inside will stream out into the Nana Hotel’s parking lot, which is just right across the street. They do so to make extra money. Since they’re outside of the bar you won’t have to pay a bar fine!

Now freelance ladies and lady boys usually ask for B1,500 for short time (1 hour) and B3,000 to B4,000 for long time (overnight). Obviously you don’t want to pay that much. So for instance if you find a lady you like and she’s standing firm on B1,500 for short time, but you only want to pay B1,000. I suggest you tell her if she can’t find a customer she can always come back to your offer of B,1000. It may not work all the time but your patience will reward you with a B500 savings.

Buddhist monasteries in india

Автор: admin, 21 May 2009. Рубрика: B • Метки: , , , ,  • Ваш отзыв

Buddhist Monasteries in India

India is a known buddhist destination. There are number of monasteries and gompas in India that follow and preach Buddhism. Some of them are mentioned below.

Ajanta and Ellora Caves : Located 107 kms away from Aurangabad, Ajanta and Ellora caves are rock cut caves offering panoramic view and Buddhist architecture, caves-paintings and sculptures. Designated as UNESCO World Heritage Sites, the cave temple in India are best example from yore days. Ajanta are primarily Hinayana and Mahayana Buddhist caves, the Ellora cave temples belong to Hindu, Buddhist and Jain religions.

Hemis Monastery : Situated 47 km from Leh, Hemis Monastery lies on the west bank of Indus River. Founded by the first incarnation of Stagsang Raspa Nawang Gyatso, Hemis Monastery in leh is thronged by number of visitors all the year round.

Tawang Monastery : Situated in Arunachal Pradesh, Tawang Monasstery lies in the Bomidilla District. Situated at an altitude of approximately 10,000 ft, it is one of the largest buddhist monasteries in India.

Rumtek Monastery: Also known as the Dharmachakra Centre, Rumtek Monastery is a Tibetan Buddhist Monastery located in the state of Sikkim. It is amongst the cherished pilgrimage site and one of the important buddhist sites eats of Kagyu school of Buddhism outside Tibet.

Tabo Monastery : Perched in the Spiti valley, the monastery was founded by the great scholar, Richen Zangpo. It has number of exquisite ancient murals, some of them dating back to the 11th century.

A ride on the train at the end of the world in argentina

Автор: admin, 19 May 2009. Рубрика: A • Метки: , , , , ,  • Ваш отзыв

A Ride on the Train at the End of the World in Argentina

Take a rail journey, on the world’s narrowest-gauge tracks, which commences in the world’s southern-most city; threads its way through spectacular, national park scenery, amid blinding, white, horizontal, end-of-the-world-characteristic snow; and traces its history to a penitentiary, which had been purposefully built just to populate the area, and you have a travel experience of fascinating proportions.

                The A-framed, wooden logged, alpine-resembling terminal building at the Estacion del Fin del Mundo, with its corrugated iron roof, had been located in the Municipal Camping Ground of Tierra del Fuego National Park in Argentina eight kilometers from Ushuaia, current capitol of Argentine Patagonia, which had been comprised of the Neuquen, Rio Negro, Chubut, and Tierra del Fuego provinces.  The very narrow End of the World Train, consisting of the tiny steam locomotive in the front and its eight wooden, green-painted, boxy-like passenger coaches behind, had been cradled by the slender, almost toy-like track behind glass doors leading from the terminal lobby to the platform which uniformed conductors opened 15 minutes before its scheduled 1255 departure, punching tickets and emitting the throngs of passengers.

                The End of the World Train itself arose out of the dual-parameter need to populate the then-inhospitable island of Tierra del Fuego, located at the southern tip of South America, and to establish a penitentiary to which the country’s criminals could be sent.  On October 12, 1884, the Tierra del Fuego government had been founded, along with Ushuaia, the world’s southern-most city, which is located 3,000 kilometers south of Buenos Aires and 4,000 kilometers north of the earth’s southern pole.

                The train, initially running on wooden rails, itself served two purposes—namely, to carry materials to the construction site of the military prison, which had been completed in 1902, and to transport prisoners and workers between the newly formed city and the facility.  The rails, replaced by steel in 1910, facilitated the permanent service which commenced the following year and rapidly earned the reputation of the “Convict Train.”

                Four German steam locomotives provided initial power: a 0-4-0 manufactured by Orenstein and Koppel in Berlin; two 20-horsepower, 1910 0-6-0Ts, also built by Orenstein and Koppel; and a 1928 0-8-0T Arn. Jung.

                Prisoners would typically depart on the Convict Train before dawn, sitting on its flatbed cars with their feet dangling over the sides during the 27-kilometer run to Lapataia, where they would cut wood amidst the sub-Antarctic cold throughout the day, while others would replenish the locomotive’s firebox with wood during the journey.  In winter, the narrow track often had to be shoveled.  Upon return, the men either rode atop the cut wood or ran alongside the train, closely guarded.

                The prison’s location, in the middle of an island permanently surrounded by frozen seas, blanketed by forest and mountains, fraught with brutal cold, and accessed only six times per year by Argentine Navy ships which had to navigate the treacherous Strait of Magellan, precluded escape and earned it the reputation of “Argentine Siberia” and the “black hole of the south.”

                On March 21, 1947, Juan Domingo Peron, then Argentine president, signed the decree which closed Ushuaia Prison after 45 years of operation, obviating the need for the rail line which had served it.

                Seeking to restore the line to operational status, preserve history, and provide rail service to both locals and tourists, Tranex Turismo created the Ferrocarril Austral Fuerguino (FCAF), laying its first track in 1993 from the Municipal Camping Ground of Tierra del Fuego National Park and following the rail embankment of the original Convict Train, most of whose rails had eroded beyond safe re-use.  The rails, which had previously been used by the Ferro Industrial Rio Turbio located in the nearby province of Santa Cruz and weighed 17 kilos-per-meter, spanned seven kilometers–six kilometers of mainline track and one for auxiliary use.  The track, comprised of 1,400 ten-meter-long rails, had been connected by 1,400 fishplates, each with four bolts for a 5,600-total.  The 6,500 sleepers had been separated by a 75-centimeter gap.  Its one-meter width, following a maximum 2.8-percent slope, constituted the world’s narrowest gauge rail line.

                Several locomotives and cars had been used during its construction.  Two Ruston and Hornsby units, originally built in Britain, but later restored by Tranex in Carupa, featured two-cylinder, air-cooled engines and were subsequently retrofitted with rudimentary, weather-protecting cabs.  Used to pull flatbed and low-loader wagons, they transported material needed for the railroad construction project.  Cars, also manufactured and restored in the Carupa workshops, featured welded steel chassis and sheet steel floors and varied in length according to intended mission, from carrying stone and loose ballast to transporting the rails themselves.

                Scheduled service had been reinaugurated on October 11, 1994, the 110th anniversary of the founding of the city of Ushuaia, and had been operated by locomotive “Rodrigo,” a 1938 steam engine built by Orenstein and Koppel, but incorporating a modified driver’s cab to more closely approximate the engines which had powered the original Convict Train.

                The 12 1.2-meter-wide coaches, of steel, box-welded tube construction, featured mahogany walls with seven coats of interior clear varnish, and contained eight, dual-facing, red-cushioned, two-abreast, 60-centimeter-wide seats separated by a fixed wooden table for a total capacity of 16 in the first class cars, which were accessed by a very narrow aisle and a central, outward-opening door on either side.  The tourist class coaches featured triple banks of blue-upholstered, three-abreast, 40-centimeter-wide, aisleless, tableless seats accessed by four dual-side, outward-opening doors.  The single dining car, which featured passenger seating, a galley, and a wine cellar, sported a red exterior livery.  I rode in the first class type, numerically designated car 1100.

                The standard locomotive fleet had consisted of three engines: the steam-powered “Ingeniero Livio Dante Porta,” the equally steam-powered “Camila,” and the diesel hydraulic “Tierra del Fuego,” which had been primarily used for maintenance and servicing purposes.

                Pulling away from the wooden-log, alpine Estacion del Fin del Mundo at 1255, the eight-car train, propelled by the tiny, whistle-emitting steam locomotive, followed the one-meter, narrow-gauge track through dense, dark-green forest into a whirling snow blizzard on its six-kilometer stretch to the National Park Station.  The low shrubs, rivers, and grazing horses wore coats of white, while the gray-granite and dark-green mountain face rising almost vertically from the right coach windows had been reduced to an indistinguishable charcoal silhouette.

                Following the narrow, almost toy-like track, which multiplied into two, the train arced to the left of the two branches, which were separated by a crude log fence, and ceased movement at Puente Quemado, its only stop, with access to waterfalls.

                The locomotive pulling my train, a classic British steam design built by Winson Engineering and named “Camilia,” featured an aft-installed firebox which held combustible material in the form of wood, coal, or fuel oil.  When lit, it produced the required temperature to heat the water housed in the two large, side-install
ed boiler tanks in whose domes, located at their highest points, the driest steam collected.  Throttle-controlled, it had been ducted through two cylinders and turned the wheels via connecting rods.  Valve-controlled injectors, using boiler pressure to generate a water flow greater than that of the steam itself, forced the water into the boilers, as measured and indicated by gauges in the driver cab.  An auxiliary compressor provided air for the brakes, while batteries generated electric current.  The smoke box-located chimney provided the channel through which smoke and steam ultimately escaped.

                Emitting an initial, train-trailing explosion of white smoke and translating piston motion into wheel-turning power, the train chugged out of the Puente Quemado station through the whirling, white snow blur, which obscured the mountains and reduced them to but specks of darker hues barely distinguishable through the blinding, horizontal streams of frozen flakes.  Snaking rivers were reduced to silver-gray mirrors.

                Entering Tierra del Fuego National Park after a two-kilometer run, the train moved through flat, barren, tree stump-ubiquitous terrain known as the “tree cemetery.”  The sky cracked into a brilliant blue and the fleecy-white mountains again became visible, reflected by the winding, silver, mirror-like Pipo River.  The white-blanketed valley, a veritable winter wonderland, stretched to the rising peaks.

                Tierra del Fuego National Park itself, formed by glaciation, had first been inhabited some 10,000 years ago by the Yamana, a tribe which lived in dome-shaped huts made of boughs and leafy branches, hunted sea lions, wore sea lion pelts, and traveled in canoes made of lenga tree bark.  After having been hunted by, and exposed to disease brought by, the Europeans, the race rapidly diminished, decreasing from 3,000 to just 100 in the 30-year period between 1880 and 1910.

                The park itself had been created in 1960 with the signing of Law #15,554 and encompassed the 63,000 hectares between Lake Kami in the north and the cost of the Beagle Channel.  Its diverse vegetation varied from high Andean steppe and southern beech woods abundant with lenga and evergreen trees to peat bog, while its main indigenous mammals included the Fuegian red fox and the guanaco.

                Belching streams of thick, white steam, which swept over the chain of tiny, narrow, green coaches like a draped veil and temporarily obscured visibility through their windows, the miniature locomotive climbed the moderate track grade, pulling its eight, tourist-packed cars into an arcing right curve through a skinny, brown-barked tree forest.  Following the multiplying track, from the single spur to the current four, the engine branched to the left-most of them and decreased speed, pulling into the platform of the National Park Station at 1335 with a final chug.

                As all the doors were simultaneously opened and the some 100 passengers climbed down to the gravel, locomotive Camila expelled a last, tired hiss of steam.

Brazil's hidden secret, buzios

Автор: admin, 05 May 2009. Рубрика: B • Метки: , , , , ,  • Ваш отзыв

Brazil's Hidden Secret, Buzios

The little town of Buzios is just two hours north of Rio de Janeiro on some of Brazil’s most premier coastline. Buzios is a peninsula that juts out into the Atlantic, and forms many beaches, some of which have terrific surfing, while others have calm and sheltered waters. Some of the beaches are busy nearly all year-round, while others are seldom ever visited.

Buzios was a whaling and fishing town until the 1960s, when the French actress Brigitte Bardot visited it and propelled it to worldwide fame. Bardot had been staying with her boyfriend in Rio de Janeiro, but could not go outside of her hotel because she was been stalked by the paparazzi. She decided to make a deal with the press, allowing one journalist to interview and photograph her during her stay in Brazil. She and her boyfriend snuck out of their hotel and headed for Buzios, where they spend the rest of their holiday in relative seclusion. Bardot enjoyed the little town so much that she stayed for months after, and returned after many years to vacation there.

Since the sixties, the beachtown has transformed into an exlusive, high-end resort town. Perhaps due to the posh celebrity influence of Bardot, Buzios is now the summer home of many celebrities, both of Brazilians and those outside the country. It is not uncommon to see famous Brazilian soccer stars enjoying a casual game of futbol on the wide, sandy beaches. Fancy resorts, manions, and villas line the foothills.

There are lots of bikini boutiques, French and seafood restaurants, bars that are open late into the night, and other trendy spots that locals and travelers both enjoy. Because of the exclusive nature of the town, and also because of its location outside of Rio, the town is often well-attended during the high season, but is never very crowded, at least not like on the beaches of Rio.

Several of the 25 or so beaches of Buzios are quiet and secluded. Canto, Ferradura, and Tucuns are the best for those who really want to get away from it all. It’s also possible to take a catamaran or schooner tour around the peninsula, stopping at various island, beaches, and coral reefs to dive, snorkel, or fish.