Monday, April 30, 2012

* Wish List: Wake Up Underwater

Imagine waking up underwater at the Conrad Maldives Resort as seen on the ISLANDS Wish List






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This image of an underwater room at the Conrad Maldives Resort and Spa is one of the most popular that ISLANDS magazine has ever published. Imagine sleeping in this underwater chamber at the Conrad as the sealife of the Maldives cavorts all around you. The overnight suite is expensive but definitely worth it. Find more wishes on the ISLANDS Wish List.
Click the image below for the 1920 x 1200 widescreen Conrad Maldives Resort wallpaper.

 

 

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Slave Quarters Discovered at Monticello

Filed under: History, Learning, North America, United States
Archaeologists digging at Thomas Jefferson's home at Monticello, Virginia, have discovered slave quarters used at the time he was living there.

The remains were found at Tufton, one of Jefferson's farms a mile from the actual house. Jefferson owned several farms around Monticello that were worked by his many slaves. The artifacts dating to Jefferson's time include everyday items such as a button and fragments of ceramic, as well as a slate pencil, which raises the question of whether one of the slaves was literate. A more sobering find was a padlock. The slaves appear to have lived in small, single-family homes.

Jefferson's views on slavery were complex. He correctly predicted that it would divide the nation, but that didn't stop him from owning slaves himself, and while Jefferson wrote against race mixing, DNA evidence indicates that Jefferson fathered several children with one of his slaves, Sally Hemings.

A second slave quarter site was also found, dating to the middle and end of the nineteenth century. Jefferson had died in 1826 and his family sold his 130 slaves to pay off his many debts. Monticello itself was sold in 1831. The family that bought the Tufton farm also worked it with slaves until the end of the Civil War.


Photo courtesy Stefan Volk.Slave Quarters Discovered at Monticello originally appeared on Gadling on Sun, 29 Apr 2012 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments



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* Wish List: Wake Up Underwater

Imagine waking up underwater at the Conrad Maldives Resort as seen on the ISLANDS Wish List






Courtesy of Conrad Maldives








This image of an underwater room at the Conrad Maldives Resort and Spa is one of the most popular that ISLANDS magazine has ever published. Imagine sleeping in this underwater chamber at the Conrad as the sealife of the Maldives cavorts all around you. The overnight suite is expensive but definitely worth it. Find more wishes on the ISLANDS Wish List.
Click the image below for the 1920 x 1200 widescreen Conrad Maldives Resort wallpaper.

 

 

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Is there a point to twin towns? | Rob Self-Pierson

The signs are all over the country, so why not visit the town you are twinned with ? it might be the start of a beautiful friendshipLook at the sign at the entrance of your town and you'll spot a phrase that goes something like this: "Twinned with , ". Maybe you've always been curious about that interesting-sounding place. Maybe you've visited, and met the people, possibly even had some fun.Still, the chances are, as curious as you might be about twinning, you've never visited the region twinned with yours. So you've never met the people or experienced the fun. And you don't know anything about the interesting-sounding places that the signposts around the UK inform you of.Town twinning, as an official relationship-builder, started in Europe after the second world war. The idea was simple: repair damaged relationships between France, Germany and the UK. Find towns that suffered during the wars and pair them. Then encourage people from these areas to meet, mix and get along. That's why town twinning ? at its core ? is a good and important thing.I'm writing this in a flat in San Sebastian in northern Spain. It's wet and cold outside (Jesus is looking down from Monte Urgull through the mist). It's been wet and cold for the past two weeks ? in fact, since I drove off the ferry at Calais, poised for a three-month road trip around 50 European twin towns. A fortnight in, I'm starting to learn about twinning ? the good and the bad.From the experiences I've had, Marie in Douai has told me it helped "create Europe" after the second world war. S�bastian in Issy-les-Moulineaux seems to be using it to attract business to the area and in Huelgoat, Tim had me in tears with stories of a Breton visit to St Just in Cornwall (it involved marshmallows and prank phonecalls). While in Poitiers, Christiane said how difficult it is to have a good, active relationship with Northampton these days (not much has happened between these two in the past five years). Next I'm off to Porto, twinned with Bristol. Time for more stories and more adventures.I'm fascinated by town twinning (or "jumelage" if you live in France). That fascination started a year ago when I popped to Hoerstel in Germany, twinned with my hometown of Waltham Abbey. For years I'd seen the sign. At school I'd even had the opportunity to visit. But I was like many of the people who have suggested their twins for my road trip ? curious, yes, but not curious enough to take the time to cross the Channel. It never felt like something I needed to do. But Norma, a feisty old lady who runs the Waltham Abbey Town Twinning Association, persuaded me otherwise.In three days, I visited the villages that make up Hoerstel, cycled through Bevergern, played basketball outside a shipping container with some German teenagers, ate raw pork, drove for an hour to a spectacular midnight funfair, and shared raclette with people from Germany, Poland and Italy.But it wasn't easy. Getting to know your neighbours isn't easy. Especially if you live in the UK ? because your European neighbour probably speaks a different language to you, and eats different food, and lives in a different culture. Also, it can be cold and wet. And you can feel completely out of your comfort zone.So why do it? And why have twin towns? After all, people can travel all around Europe easily, cheaply and freely these days, as Christiane in Poitiers pointed out. Because town twinning is a relationship. It's long-term. It starts, it grows and it can flourish. When it's good and healthy, it puts its people first. It introduces them to new experiences and new friends. It helps us all to meet, mix and get along. The relationship is about you and the people in your twin town ? not councillors or committees. It's yours to mould. You just need to find Norma-like energy to get involved and make something happen.You and your twin share something. A history, some DNA. You're twinned for a reason and that reason will be positive. So you should pay them a visit. They'll love it if you do.? This article was commissioned after a suggestion by OrokliniEuropeFranceFranceSpainRob Self-Piersonguardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

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Why cat skiing BC Canada is so popular?

Although it is a sport that has emerged almost a quarter of a century ago, cat skiing has gained quickly popularity and today it is one of the most famous winter sports gathering together skiers and adrenaline junkies from all over the world

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Union warns border agency cuts make lengthy queues at airports more likely

Leader of Public and Commercial Services Union blames reduction in public sector staff for delaysLengthy queues at London's airports could become increasingly common, according to the union representing UK Border Agency staff.Passengers flying into Heathrow on Saturday reported having to wait for up to three hours before clearing passport control. The issue has become a major government concern in the runup to the Olympics, with immigration minister Damian Green being summoned before the home affairs select committee about the problem.But the Public and Commercial Services union has warned staff cuts at the Border Agency will make tackling the queues difficult, with 1,500 staff going by 2014. The union's general secretary Mark Serwotka said: "We've warned time and time again that, as elsewhere in the public sector, cutting jobs in UKBA is not only unnecessary, it's hugely damaging. Quite clearly, there are not enough staff."Keith Vaz, chairman of the home affairs select committee, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "This is not just about the Olympics, this is about what happens before and after, about Heathrow as a world-class airport and about our reputation, and we need to make sure we get it sorted."A spokeswoman for BAA, which owns Heathrow, said: "Immigration is a matter for the Home Office. Immigration waiting times during peak periods at Heathrow recently have been unacceptable, and we have called on the Home Office to address the problem as a matter of urgency."Damian GreenImmigration and asylumHeathrowJamie Dowardguardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

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Give Back While Traveling With These Voluntourism Hotel Packages And Programs

Filed under: Activism, Hiking, Learning, North America, Bahamas, Jamaica, United States, Hotels and Accommodations, Ecotourism, Budget Travel, CaribbeanJust because Earth Day has passed doesn't mean we should stop doing our part. In the spirit of goodwill, these hotels are offering voluntourism packages and programs for guests.

Limelight Hotel
Aspen, Colorado

Throughout the summer, the Limelight Hotel is helping guests get their hands dirty and help the environment. In partnership with the Roaring Fork Outdoor Volunteers, guests will be able to do trail work in the beautiful White River National Forest, which spans millions of acres. Volunteer tasks include trail maintenance, trail construction, invasive species removal and more. Hotel guests who participate will receive transportation, a packed lunch and beverages and a complimentary beer in the hotel lounge when they return.

Eight hour day volunteer projects are available, as well as sunset volunteer times from 5:00 pm to 8:00 pm. Rates start at $150 per night during the summer. Call 970-544-6259 or click here to book. Continue reading Give Back While Traveling With These Voluntourism Hotel Packages And ProgramsGive Back While Traveling With These Voluntourism Hotel Packages And Programs originally appeared on Gadling on Sat, 28 Apr 2012 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments



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Sunday, April 29, 2012

UN to fight exploitation and human trafficking in tourism



Taking a firm stand against human trafficking, especially child trafficking, in the tourism sector, the heads of two United Nations bodies pledged to stamp out this hidden scourge through joint efforts. Yury Fedotov, Executive Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and Taleb Rifai, Secretary-General of the World Tourism Organization (UNWTO), also called for concerted global action at every level of society.
"Today, our two organizations are conveying a strong message to the world that we will not be party to activities that exploit women and children," said Mr. Fedotov at an event taking place this week during the 21st United Nations Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice (CCPCJ).
Mr. Rifai said: ?We are here to reiterate the tourism sector?s commitment to combating human trafficking, an unacceptable affront to human rights and dignity, and to set out clear steps for stronger cooperation in fighting one of the most dreadful crimes of our time.?
UNODC and UNWTO signed a memorandum of understanding to step up cooperation against this form of exploitation.
A staggering one billion tourists, or one in 7 of the world?s population, will travel abroad in 2012 - and the sector is expanding. While this expansion drives economic growth, job creation and development, there is evidence that the tourism infrastructure is also being used for the exploitation of and trafficking in persons - and children are especially vulnerable.�
Victims of trafficking are most often enslaved for sexual purposes, but they might also be found in kitchens or cleaning guesthouses, restaurants and bars. Tourism infrastructure can, in turn, create markets for forced and exploitative begging and street hawking. Even organs from victims of trafficking are used today to attract people who need a transplant.
The tourism sector can and should play a vital role in preventing human trafficking linked to tourism, including sexual exploitation, said Mr. Fedotov. Codes of conducts for tourism companies have been developed - based on the UNWTO Global Code of Ethics for Tourism approved by the UN General Assembly in 2001 - and laws enacted that allow for the prosecution in their homeland of tourists who engage in sexual conduct with children.� These efforts need to be strengthened and built upon, he added.
In India, for example, the Ministry of Tourism, UNODC, the private sector and Save the Children have jointly developed and adopted a national Code of Conduct for Safe and Honourable Tourism, based on the Global Code. Hoteliers and tour operators have pledged to abide by the Code to make sure that no one involved in the hospitality industry is forced to use drugs or is sexually exploited. The model is ready to be replicated in other countries.
Hotel companies are carrying out awareness campaigns and providing vocational training for trafficked persons. Marriott International, for instance, has taken a comprehensive approach since 2006 to such human rights abuses through policy commitments and staff training. Marriot also runs community outreach programmes which helps vulnerable young people, including rehabilitated victims of human trafficking, providing them with new life opportunities and training skills at their hotels.
Dr. Thomas Mayr, National Expert in the Austrian Federal Ministry of Economy, Family and Youth, highlighted an initiative by Germany, Switzerland and Austria to fight cross-border child abuse with a tri-national awareness campaign targeting child sex tourism and pornography, while aiming to reinforce the networks that protect minors.
By enhancing their public image, ethical companies and destinations can ultimately benefit from more business. ?We must raise awareness of human trafficking in the tourism sector. Consumers should be able to make an informed choice about where they choose to spend their money- and crucially, how it will be used,? said Mr. Fedotov.
?It is appalling to see tourism infrastructure being used by traffickers to victimize the vulnerable, yet our sector is firmly committed to reclaim this same infrastructure and use it for awareness raising in the fight against trafficking?, said Mr. Rifai.
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From gamer to racing driver

Jann Mardenborough was a shy Cardiff teenager who loved his Gran Turismo computer game. So imagine his parents' surprise when he won a place in the Dubai 24 Hour raceJann Mardenborough grew up dreaming of driving racing cars. It was an infatuation that had begun with the gift of a Matchbox toy as a baby, but which he pursued with such quiet intensity that even his father Steve discovered only a year ago that motor racing ? not football ? was Jann's first love. Jann was quiet. To his mother Lesley-Anne he was "not particularly outgoing and quite a home boy". Often too shy to answer the front door, he'd spend time in his bedroom, where he played video games. Yet this reserved, awkward teenager from Cardiff had a big surprise in store for his parents.At eight, Jann thought he might have a chance of making it as a racing driver. Steve, an ex-professional footballer, had taken him to a kart circuit, and before long the owner took notice and told Steve his son was a natural. But finance proved the stumbling block. The local track closed down and the nearest alternative was in Bristol. "I stopped when I was 11," says Jann, "because it got too expensive."He returned quietly to his bedroom, where he took to the next best thing ? virtual racing on the video game Gran Turismo. It was the perfect release for the racing-obsessed teen: a singular pursuit offering a test of individual skill in which he could lose himself."One day," says Steve, "he came downstairs and said: 'Dad, I've qualified.' I said: 'Qualified for what?'"In the middle of 2011, Mardenborough had entered an online competition on Gran Turismo 5 that offered one final shot at the real thing. Out of 90,000 other virtual racers, he made it into the top eight in Europe and won the chance to test himself against other gamers in a real car at Brands Hatch. That he had kept it to himself for so long was entirely in character for a boy who did not like to make a fuss. "At that point we had no idea what it was," admits Steve.Seven months later, in January this year, Mardenborough, who'd never set foot in a racing car, was at the wheel of a serious piece of kit in the Dubai 24 Hour race ? and at the beginning of what appears to be a very exciting career.The video-game franchise in which Mardenborough began his journey, Sony's Gran Turismo, was originally designed by Japan's Kazunori Yamauchi in 1997. In an industry often (unfairly) accused of infantilism, Gran Turismo stands out for its quest to mirror a physical rather than fantastical reality. This is a racing "simulator" and its success (more than 60m sales worldwide) owes everything to how well it measures up to the real thing. Its sports cars may be but virtual creations, yet everything about them is designed to behave as closely as possible to the genuine article.The level of accuracy now available in computer modelling means Formula One drivers, as a matter of course, do laps on simulators in preparation for races. Lewis Hamilton himself admitted to learning tracks during his rookie F1 year playing PlayStation with his brother.Visually, the game is stunning. In cockpit mode, with a virtual dashboard at the bottom of the screen, the bonnet and track stretching to the fore and the claustrophobic confines of the interior rendered on the periphery, there is little or no conscious need to suspend disbelief. The pedal goes down and players are "in" the game ? unconsciously leaning into corners and breathless while trying to thread through a pack of competitors.But however accurately the game mimics reality, there is one crucial difference: simulations still lack movement ? the sensation of the car reacting, grip felt through the seat of the pants, acceleration that compresses the body, and the forces generated in cornering.Sensing a marketing opportunity, Sony teamed up with Nissan to form the GT Academy in 2008. It was a one-off project created to answer a simple question: could you take a gamer and put them in a real racing car? A 23-year-old Spaniard, Lucas Ordo�ez, who was just beginning a business degree, won the online and then real-world challenge. After intensive training, he raced as one of a team of drivers in the 2009 Dubai 24.With the marketing objectives achieved, it could have ended there. Except, much as he was just a gamer, Ordo�ez was good. "I'm not a nervous guy, but I was physically sick with worry that we were sending this guy out to his death," said Nissan's Darren Cox.But the way the driver dealt with a problem calmed his nerves. "I remember hearing the radio: 'Left rear puncture, coming into the pits; please change left rear.' He's in a 400 horsepower Nissan 350Z, he's got a crash helmet on, he's got the car moving around underneath him, but he's calm. And at that point I knew we had something," says Cox.The programme was extended to see if this unorthodox method could uncover further talent. French gamer Jordan Tresson won a GT Academy place in 2010 and Ordo�ez himself went on to race for the professional Signature Nissan team, taking a podium at sports car racing's most important meeting, the Le Mans 24 Hours, in 2011. From this came the concept of a car driven only by computer gamers entering this year's Dubai 24. Two new candidates were needed to be brought up to speed and the academy opened its online competition again. Which was how Jann Mardenborough found it.The transition from computer-generated racing to hard, cold, dangerous steel ought to be both difficult and potentially terrifying, yet for Mardenborough it was instinctive: "It felt completely normal," he says. How to read racing lines ? correct entrances and exits to corners; hand-eye co-ordination and a visual sense, plus the ability to look ahead of the car into breaking zones, had all been learned in the bedroom. "I'd never power-steered a car before," says Mardenborough. "I had only ever done it in a game. I was controlling it just with the throttle and it was completely natural to me."He passed the test at Brands Hatch and later, at Silverstone, beat 11 other finalists to the place as a GT Academy driver. "My mouth was hurting because I was grinning from ear to ear so much," he says. "I met Bob [Neville], my team manager, straight after. That was the moment I realised I was a racing driver." Mardenborough was placed on a driver-development programme at Silverstone. In six months he and the winner of the US GT Academy, Bryan Heitkotter, gained their international racing licences, a process that normally takes three years.The gamers are young, malleable and without ego. Even the lack of racing experience has a positive side-effect. Mardenborough's mentor Rob Jenkinson, a former racer himself, was sceptical of the academy concept but became convinced after seeing it in action. He explains that drivers entering through the traditional route have longer to pick up bad habits, sometimes taking years to correct. "With this, in six months we eliminate mistakes," he says. "We make good decisions on their behalf immediately."What cannot be eliminated is the danger. Accidents now mean more than just hitting the restart button. "I know there's a dangerous side to it, but it didn't really cross my mind," Mardenborough says, despite having rolled the car at a race in Holland.The Dubai MotorCity circuit forms part of Dubailand, which was to be a vast theme park stretching into the desert, featuring Tiger Woods's first golf-course design. Today sand blows across empty lots and cranes loom over half-finished buildings, exactly as they were in 2008 when the financial crisis stopped the project in its tracks ? reminders of the dangers of expecting too much, too soon. It's a lesson not lost on the gamers and their RJN Motorsport team.Mardenborough bounces through the paddock and pit lane on his toes, ready for the Dubai 24 Hour race. He shares with Hamilton not only the sculpted good looks but the calm self-assurance the McLaren driver displays. There's no sign of the shy teenager. Motor racing is all about focus, and before he steps into the car Mardenborough has it in spades.For the first part of the race, the crew and drivers are struggling with mechanical gremlins, and tension suffuses the coarse desert air.Endurance racing is like no other. It is a bewildering assault on the senses. The noise never abates and the cars spread out until there seems to be an endless stream streaking past, the atmosphere thick with the smell of rubber and oil. Each team races flat-out stints interspersed with furiously quick pit stops, looking to eke out tiny advantages that over a full 24 hours can make the difference between winning and losing. Through all this, the overriding aim is to at least finish the race ? to see the chequered flag come down ? and fortunately the early fears that technical problems might signal game over are dismissed as the car settles down into quick, trouble-free racing through the night and into the morning.With an hour and a half to go, one driving stint remains and now, in third place, Neville chooses Mardenborough to take the wheel. Having raced so hard for so long, a mistake at this stage would be heartbreaking. The pressure is immense. Mardenborough brings the car home with ease and the team is on the podium."When I was 17 or so I was afraid to answer the phone," he tells me afterwards. "I've come a huge, long way." His mother calls it a "fairy story". Perhaps, as the academy opens its doors again on Tuesday to search for further young talent, it is also a fable for the modern age ? where video gaming isn't all bad.Just over two weeks after the race Nissan confirmed Mardenborough as its full-time driver for the season in the Blancpain Endurance Series ? a full-scale, six-race, professional racing competition that visits some of the most famous circuits in Europe. It might be the start of something great. "Jann's 20 and there's a very wide sphere ahead of him," says Neville. "We have to just keep the lid on him..."Motor sportPlayStationGamesRacing gamesSonyNissanDubaiFormula OneAutomotive industryGiles Richardsguardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

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Win a cycling holiday for two in Slovenia

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Where Can You Find Cheap Luxury Holidays

Due to the bad economy that most countries experience today, the number of people that are cutting their budgets is increasing

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Powder: An East Coast Surprise

A huge storm slammed into Upstate New York this week. A few friends of Skiing Magazine took full advantage.

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Family of Fallen Ski Cross Racer Nik Zoricic Questions Nature of Fatal Crash

Toronto (ON), Canada - Nik Zoricic?s father was an alpine ski racing coach when he moved to Canada with his family from the former Yugoslavia in the 1980s. Predag ?Bebe? Zoricic, therefore, is convinced that his son?s death on a World Cup Ski Cross course in Grindelwald, Switzerland in March isn?t the freak accident it has been portrayed as.



Predag Zoricic, his wife Silvia Brudar and their daughter, Katarina, all appeared at a news conference in Toronto today with their attorney, Timothy Danson. The family says that they?d prefer to avoid a lawsuit over Nik Zoricic?s death if authorities would conduct what they consider to be a full and impartial investigation into the incident.
Danson told reporters at the news conference that the course design in Grindelwald was a ?death trap.? Zoricic flew wide off a jump near the finish line and landed in safety netting.
Nick Zoricic (photo: Alpine Canada)
In a letter dated Monday sent to Gian Franco Kasper, president of the International Skiing Federation (FIS), as well as Alpine Canada president Max Gartner, Danson wrote, ?Silvia and Bebe have now had an opportunity to reflect on the circumstances of their son?s death and have reached the conclusion that there must be much more to Nik?s life than his untimely death. After considerable and careful review, investigation and consultation with many members of the Alpine community, it is clear that Nik?s death was entirely avoidable. It is wrong that an elite athlete like Nik can make a perfect landing, but miss the finish line by one meter and be killed for it. A comparison of the finish line from any World Cup Alpine event anywhere in the world, with the finish line at Grindelwald, reveals a deeply disturbing picture. As you know, unlike other courses, the spill zone in Grindelwald was non-existent in the race that killed Nik.?
The letter concludes with a call to the FIS and Alpine Canada to fully investigate Zoricic?s fatal accident with the objective of accountability and skier safety.
?While it is Silvia?s and Bebe?s strong desire to avoid litigation, that does not mean the required investigation will not identify specific negligence or reveal a level of extraordinary negligence, incompetence or even indifference. It just means that if an independent, objective and transparent investigation is agreed to, the litigation option will be taken off the table.?
The FIS has already deemed Zoricic?s death ?a terrible, tragic accident.? In response to Wednesday?s news conference, Gartner released a statement that read in part, ?Our thoughts and support continue to be with Nik?s family and loved ones. Nik?s death has been a tremendous loss for the family, our team and the ski community. Alpine Canada shares the same desire as Nik?s family to learn any lessons from this tragic accident. There is presently an investigation underway by the Swiss police and state authorities; Alpine Canada plans to thoroughly review the findings of the investigation.
?Alpine Canada is also working with the International Ski Federation (FIS) to try to prevent similar accidents from happening in the future and will actively participate in the FIS ski cross advisory group which includes alpine-skiing specialists and snowboard experts,? Gartner continued. ?This group will be reviewing ski cross rules, specifications and processes as part of their post- season evaluation.?
The FIS is expected to appoint a panel to examine skicross safety when the group convenes for its annual congress next month in South Korea.

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Saturday, April 28, 2012

Angela Hartnett's Creole kitchen

When MasterChef put Mauritius on the foodie map, Michelin-starred chef Angela Hartnett decided to investigate. Lucy Cavendish went along for a tasterAngela Hartnett and I are sitting under the canopy of a small restaurant called Resto Sept in the depths of the Mauritian countryside. It consists of nothing more than a few tables, some plastic chairs and a bar.We have ventured out from the grand but lovely enclave of the Belle Mare Plage hotel in search of? well, something more Mauritian. Back in the UK, Hartnett's Italian-style food has garnered her praise and a Michelin star at her restaurant, Murano. But here, away from the hotels that line the shores of the Mauritian coastline, she is looking for something more natural, more native.This is why we are in the tiny town of Trou d'eau Douce. The 2012 MasterChef winner Shelina Permalloo, whose fusion cooking is rooted in her Mauritian culture, has sent us here. Permalloo wowed the judges with her aubergine spicy fritters with wild garlic and tomato salsa and papaya. Since her win earlier this year, she has wanted to do more for Mauritian food. "It's an interesting mix," she says. "It's really delicious."Angela, myself and Angela's friend, the chef Neil Borthwick who works at London's two-star Michelin restaurant The Square, are the only people here. This is mainly because it is pouring with rain. "No one goes out in this type of rain," the proprietor of the restaurant says as water pours down from the roof.But we trust Shelina, who has told us to make sure we are served traditional Creole food. "Some places water it down for the tourists," she says. "You need to ask for the real thing. It's hot and spicy."And we certainly get it. The starters ? a selection of Indian dosas ? come with a stunning array of fresh pickles, a chilli dip that takes the roof off my mouth and a shockingly tangy sauce that resembles horseradish. Angela looks delighted as she ladles it on to her dosa. The main course is a thali ? butterbean stew, fish curry, octopus ? accompanied by the ever-present tomato-based Creole sauce of the island. "It's called rougaille," says the girl serving us (it's a family-run business; she's an elder daughter). She ladles the rougaille over my plate of fish curry ? a chilli-flavoured yet sweet sauce with a hint of paprika. Angela and I agree that it's delicious.In the daylight the following morning when, for about five minutes, the rain stops, I see that Trou d'eau Douce is beautiful. A man at a local caf� where we stop for a soda tells me the town's name means "sweet water", and there is water flowing everywhere. It's a small place tucked away among banana plantations with barely a tourist to be seen.Many tourists never encounter local places to eat in Mauritius and given that Michelin-starred food is a rare luxury ? the multi-Michelin-starred Alain Ducasse's Spoon at the Saint G�ran hotel closed recently ? it's worth venturing away from your hotel. The Deer Hunter restaurant at the Constance Belle Mare Plage resort focuses entirely on local food.Gastro-tourism, in terms of people looking for a more "island" experience, is booming here. It only takes one trip to the Port Louis market in the Mauritian capital, to find out why. It's quite an experience. It's hot, sweaty, noisy and smelly, and the stalls are heaving with unusual fruits, vegetables and spices. Angela walks around smelling everything. Huge bunches of thyme scent the air. Sacks of rice, split peas and lentils bulge over. Every stall seems to sell a wide variety of squashes in every hue ? purple, green and yellow.Shelina has suggested trying the street food. "Gateaux piments [chilli cakes], dal poori: you should get all the toppings, usually butterbean curry, coriander sauce and chilli sauce ? the combination is brilliant." I try a chilli-infused tropical fruit bag, and my eyebrows nearly blow off.Salted fish and gajaks (the equivalent of tapas) are sold on every corner, as are dosas, Indian sweets and drinks, some of which look delicious (the juices) and some of which look disgusting (the milk-based ones).Angela is here for the Festival Culinaire Bernard Loiseau, which involves her cooking with an island chef as part of a culinary competition established by Dominique Loiseau, the widow of Bernard. The idea is for the Michelin-starred European chefs to combine their style of cooking with the emerging style of the island chefs. Thus she spends half her time trying out dishes in the kitchen of the Belle Mare Plage and the rest adapting local recipes to suit her style. She and her island chef, Kamlesh Doorjean from the Constance Le Prince Maurice hotel, cook up breadfruit, patole (a bit like marrow), pipengaille, christophina, baton mouroum.Angela's feeling about Mauritian food is that "it is a very diverse way of cooking ? lots of spices, herbs and a different way of using sauces".Much of the diversity comes from the island's history. It has been ruled by the Dutch, the British and the French. Most chefs have been trained to cook in the French style with a twist.At the Deer Hunter we eat chilli cakes, saffron-infused rice and lobster with coriander. Lime and mango feature prominently in the menu, as does the spicy rougaille sauce. Doorjean tells us that everything cooked in his family home is served with this Creole sauce. "We like our food very spicy," he says."It's incredible the range you find," says Angela, sitting down to tuck in to noodles, vegetables and garlic-infused water, a break from the rich Michelin-starred food she has been eating all week. She sighs and closes her eyes. "I think I might actually be able to relax now," she says.Just then, the sun comes out.Shelina Permalloo's top tipsTROU D'EAU DOUCEChez Tino The seafood is lovely, along with typical plates such as Creole rougaille sauceLe Caf� des Arts Worth trying, but you need to bookLe Touessrok Best restaurant, and a beautiful placeResto Sept Hot and spicy home-cooking UNION FLACQ Chez Manuel A great example of the Chinese influence. Try the mine frit ? delicious with garlic waterPORT LOUISLe Capitaine Pricey, but great seafood and very elaborate cocktails For details of the Deer Hunter, Constance Belle Mare Plage or Prince Maurice hotels, go to constancehotels.com. For the annual Festival Culinaire Bernard Loiseau, go to bernard-loiseau.com/uk/index.php. Lucy Cavendish flew from London with Air Mauritius (airmauritius.com). Returns from �650guardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

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Luxury Travel: Stay at Starwood Hotels & Resorts, now With 100% More Bentleys

Filed under: Hotels and Accommodations, Luxury TravelA new partnership between Bentley Motors and Starwood's St. Regis and The Luxury Collection Hotels & Resorts means one thing for guests: you can now arrive and drive in style.

St. Regis selected Bentley as the brand for their house fleet in. The house car of choice? The Continental Flying Spur. Last year, the brand also hosted a Bentley Italian Driving Tour in Rome and Florence for model owners and guests.

The Luxury Collection will offer mainly targeted promotions, including an upcoming scenic Springtime Bentley Grand Tour from Vienna to Salzburg.

What do you think? Would you choose a hotel because they offered to chauffeur you in a Bentley?Luxury Travel: Stay at Starwood Hotels & Resorts, now With 100% More Bentleys originally appeared on Gadling on Sat, 28 Apr 2012 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments



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Flow State

// In case you missed it, Warren Miller recently announced their 63rd film title, Flow State. Featuring state of the art cinemetography, and world class athletes from around the word, this cinematic endeavour promises to light up your senses. For more info go to warrenmiller.com Oh? You need another 30 second Dubstep laden multimedia extravanganza? Check out another favorite here.

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The Radar: Slo-Mo Tokyo, Grab a Beer in Bend, 5 Secrets About Iceland

The Radar: The top travel news, stories, trends, and ideas from across the Web. Got Radar? Follow us on Twitter @NatGeoTraveler and tag your favorite travel stories from the Web #ngtradar. Check back on the blog for our roundups. Photograph by Jean Philippe Schweitzer, My Shot

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KPMG: Improved outlook for the golf travel industry



Golf tourism is on the increase and is bouncing back from the economic downturn, a new survey by KPMG has revealed. According to the Golf Travel Insights report, 60% of golf tour operators experienced an increase in the number of golf breaks booked in 2011, compared to 38% in 2010.
Similarly, just 12% of tour operators reported a decrease in bookings in 2011 compared to 54% the year before.
The survey, published by KPMG?s Golf Advisory Practice, included the feedback of 90 golf tour operators in 35 countries, the majority of which are based in Europe. The results areseen as an indicator of the golf travel industry?s performance and outlook.
Spain and Portugal remained the most popular destinations, ahead of the UK & Ireland, while Turkey, as well as Thailand and Vietnam, continue to emerge as popular destinations for golf holidays, the report revealed.
However, Spain and Portugal saw an average price drop of 10-20% for golf holiday packages in 2011, while destinations in South East Asia increased prices by 30-50%.
Turkey also experienced a price hike of 10-20%. However, most golf tour operators (51%) maintained similar prices in 2011 to 2010.
North African tourism suffered as a result of political unrest in the region, while Italy and Bulgaria, considered upcoming golf travel destinations, proved increasinglypopular with golf tour operators.
While North America maintains a strong domestic golf travel market, Argentina and the Dominican Republic are becoming popular outbound tourism destinations for US citizens, tour operators reported.
Golfers from the USA and Canada, the UK, Scandinavia (predominantly Sweden) and Germany remain the biggest golf travellers. KPMG also found that golfers spend significantly more on a holiday than regular leisure tourists, typically 600-900 euros on a four to seven-night golf break. More than a third of these breaks (35%) are group bookings of 8-12 people.
Andrea Sartori, head of KPMG?s Golf Advisory Practice in EMA, said: ?Our survey shows there is price sensitivity in the market and the popular destinations of Spain and Portugal have had to reduce their prices to maintain competitiveness.
?The quality of the golf courses is the most important factor for a consumer when choosing a destination, but the package price is now almost equally important.?
Andrea Sartori added: ?The outlook among golf tour operators is generally positive, with nearly three-quarters of those surveyed anticipating growth in the coming year.?
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WILD Fall Preview

Can't wait till fall? Neither can we! Check out what's coming soon to the WILD lineup: Meet the freshest faces of Nat Geo WILD. Three rugged, adventure-seeking experts answering the ?call of the wild.? And one veteran who will give them all a run for their money. Also coming up: Animals Say the Wildest Things: Coming this August-September, Wednesdays at 10 & 10:30 p.m. A chimpanzee therapy session, a polar bear that lost her cell phone, a choir of singing sharks and a bird tribute to the ?king of Pop,? Michael Jackson. That?s just a bit of what comes out of the mouths of comedians voicing over natural history footage?with their own humorous interpretation of what the animals are thinking and doing in the new series Animals Say the Wildest Things. We?ll also meet the ?Prince of Barkness? when special guests Sharon and Ozzy Osbourne give their own interpretation for a scene. Nature?s Miracle Babies: Premieres Tuesday, September 13 8-11 p.m. & Wednesday September 14 8-10 p.m. These are special babies ? more than just adorable, they are critically important to the survival of their species. Nat Geo WILD takes viewers around the world to follow dedicated people working to save them. Each animal they raise to adulthood is a step away from extinction, with the ultimate challenge to return them to the wild. We?ll see ambitious programs to save diverse species from the outback of Australia, the savannahs of East Africa, the Brazilian Amazon and some of the most successful zoo breeding programs in the world.

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Copper Mountain Fundraiser for Sally Francklyn

Editor's Note: Sally Francklyn is a former online editor for both Ski and Skiing MagazinePress Release from Copper Mountain With participants braving the snow-themed obstacles in last weekend's CopperMan adventure race, the inaugural end-of-season event was an outstanding success! The most noteworthy achievement of closing weekend was the support and love extended to Sally Francklyn, a long-standing member of Copper Mountain's Ski Patrol team who was injured in a ski accident in late March. Over $2800 was raised by CopperMan participants, the National Ski Patrol and Copper Mountain Resort.Copper Mountain would like to extend a sincere thanks to everyone who participated in the "Super Hero Sally" heat, and to the National Ski Patrol who raised $718 at their annual banquet over the weekend. Many of these NSP members did not know Sally personally, yet her story has touched their hearts. The balance came from CopperMan cape sales and the total was matched by Copper Mountain Resort. "It is humbling to see the community come together in support of a long standing super star" states Pete Woods, Copper Mountain Marketing Director.

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Latrigg and the early mass trespasses

I very much enjoyed reading about the part played by Benny Rothman in the quest for access to Kinder Scout (In praise of ? Benny Rothman, 25 April). But mass trespasses were held much earlier at Fawe Park and on Latrigg, Keswick, in August 1887 by the travel writer Henry Irwin Jenkinson and thousands of Keswick residents.Members of the Keswick and District Footpaths Preservation Society successfully opened, against strong opposition from the landowner, the path from Nichol End with the support of 400-500 supporters.Latrigg presented a more difficult task. On this occasion among around 2,000 supporters was Samuel Plimsoll, member of parliament for Derby. The trespassers eventually attained the top of Latrigg, but several "worthies" were taken to court in Carlisle (the co-founder of the National Trust, Canon Hardwicke Rawnsley, among them). An agreement was reached. One footpath was closed and another, by Spooney Green Lane, was declared open to walkers.On all occasions the trespassers were asked by Jenkinson to behave responsibly, which they did. Jenkinson and Plimsoll told the crowd that they were showing the world a spirit that would kindle such a fire as would light up the British Isles. It is sad that the world had to wait so long for Benny Rothman and friends to make their mark on Kinder Scout.Jenkinson was involved in many schemes for the benefit of the people of Keswick. They are recounted in the book Keswick Characters, Volume Three, which is to be published by the Keswick History Group later this year.Brian WilkinsonKeswick, CumbriaWalking holidaysLake Districtguardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

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Friday, April 27, 2012

What?s the Best Cruise Line for Kids?

If you have children, and you want to take a cruise, it?s gotta be with Disney. Right? That conventional wisdom is strongly reinforced when yousail on Uncle Walt?s newest ship, the gleaming, year-round, 4,000-passenger�Fantasy.�I attended the�Fantasy’s�christening in New York earlier this year, and then the whole family hopped aboard for a preview sail in the…

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Amish Country, Here We Come!

It?s strange to me that many New Yorkers have not been to the top of the Empire State Building or taken a ferry to the Statue of Liberty. But, then again, during the time I spent outside of Philadelphia attending college, I never bothered to visit Pennsylvania Dutch Country — a mere 30 minutes away…

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Lake District tempts recession trade with buses, trains, paths - and petrol expenses

You can get �60 off a trip to see the ospreys at Bassenthwaite. Or try out the new minibus which is venturing into the wilds of WasdaleTwo different approaches to travel are being tried in the Lake District as the UK dips back into recession, with a consequent threat to the appeal of holiday breaks in remoter parts of the country.The Overwater Hall hotel by Bassenthwaite Lake and Skiddaw is going for the eye-catching and obviously appealing. They will pay 20p a mile towards petrol for the journey to Cumbria, for guests staying at least four nights between the start of May and the end of September.That knocks �60 off the �400 cost of the minimum stay for visitors from London, and the hotel's co-owner Angela Hyde says:We're calling it fuel relief and hoping that it goes some way to encouraging people to visit our beautiful region. We want to do all we can to make sure that tourists have access to one of the UK's most stunning national parks.At the more modest end of things, just about every organisation you can think of in the Western Lakes, which are relatively under-visited compared with the honeypots around Windermere, Langdale and Derwentwater, has got together to support a multi-vehicle travelling scheme. It uses trains, buses and feet to connect some of the area's loneliest and most beautiful places, in a manner which avoids car travel on small and windy roads but still allows enough time for a day's there-and-back-again trip.The lynchpin is a new minibus into Wasdale from Seascale station on the coast, operating this year only on Saturdays but set to expand into the rest of the week if usage this year suggests sufficient demand. Its timings are co-ordinated with trains on the Cumbrian Coast line and ? via advice of timings for those who take the lovely walk from Wasdale over to Eskdale ? the 'Little Ratty' miniature trains of the Ravenglass and Eskdale line between the coast and the hamlet of Boot.The bus stops at Nether Wasdale, Wasdale Head and, by request, points in betwee, which opens the way to many other walks. Two years ago, I had my hike-of-the-year from Boot to Keswick, and its many buses, over the Scafells. As Katie Read, West Cumbria's tourism manager, says: Community transport is especially important for a rural county such as�Cumbria. The most beautiful parts of the county in the�Western Lake District�are often in accessible to those who wish to use public transport. Innovative projects such as this scheme in Wasdale are a great example of what can be achieved and enables access to some real hidden gems, whilst minimising the environmental impact. Something that we at West�Cumbria�Tourism whole heartedly support.Credit then to Northern Rail, Wasdale Meeting, West�Cumbria�Tourism, the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway, Mid-Copeland Parish Partnership,�Cumbria�County Council, the Lake District National Park and Copeland Borough Council, who sorted this out. More info is here on the website of Sims Travel who run the bus.Lake DistrictTransportTransport policyNational parksHotelsPetrol pricesMartin Wainwrightguardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

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Beer of the Week

What we're drinking now.

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Vonn Pays IRS $1.7M

Seems like Lindsey Vonn sets records every time she clicks in her skis. But when it comes to keeping records of, say, her income and taxes, well, not so much.Turns out Vonn and her estranged husband, Thomas Vonn owed $1.7 million to the IRS for 2010 earnings. "The money owed was for the 2010 tax year, which was filed on time, and it has been paid in full," Vonn posted on her Facebook page. "This is an important lesson for me. Not being in control of my finances and relying on someone else who you believed had your best interest at heart was a mistake and one I will not make twice."Vonn's still one step ahead of us, however: She filed both her 2010 and 2011 taxes on time.

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Vonn Pays IRS $1.7M

Seems like Lindsey Vonn sets records every time she clicks in her skis. But when it comes to keeping records of, say, her income and taxes, well, not so much.Turns out Vonn and her estranged husband, Thomas Vonn owed $1.7 million to the IRS for 2010 earnings. "The money owed was for the 2010 tax year, which was filed on time, and it has been paid in full," Vonn posted on her Facebook page. "This is an important lesson for me. Not being in control of my finances and relying on someone else who you believed had your best interest at heart was a mistake and one I will not make twice."Vonn's still one step ahead of us, however: She filed both her 2010 and 2011 taxes on time.

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India: archaeology versus homes - interactive map

Communities across India are being threatened with eviction if the Archaeological Survey of India decides they are too close to ancient archaeological sites. With legislation recently passed and a growing public awareness of the value of India's architectural heritage, such conflicts are increasingly common. This map shows some of the places of contention ?Paddy AllenJoanna Ruck

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Thursday, April 26, 2012

Safari Destination: Ruaha National Park, Tanzania

Filed under: Arts and Culture, Africa, Tanzania, Camping, Ecotourism, Luxury TravelFor decades Tanzania has been one of the top destinations for travelers looking for a classic African safari experience. After all, the country's Serengeti National Park is home to hundreds of thousands of animals and is one of the few places where you can witness the amazing spectacle that is the Great Migration. But anyone who has ever visited the Serengeti knows that during the peak season it can get rather crowded, which can certainly diminish the mystique of the place.

Travelers looking for an alternative destination may want to consider visiting Ruaha National Park instead. Located in central Tanzania, Ruaha is the country's second largest park and a spectacular natural environment in its own right. Named for the Great Ruaha River that passes along its eastern border, the park marks the transition from forests in the south to the more arid grasslands of the north.

Covering more than 13,000 square miles of wilderness, Ruaha is home to a dizzying array of wildlife including the largest population of elephants in East Africa. With an estimated 10,000 elephants living within its borders, Ruaha is one of the best places on the continent to spot those enormous creatures. The park is also home to a large number of predators, including hyena, leopard, cheetah and several very healthy prides of lions. There are even a few packs of the increasingly rare and endangered African wild dogs too.

Even though it is located in a remote area of Tanzania, there are no less than six lodges to stay at when visiting Ruaha. Those lodges include places like the Tandala Tented Camps, Ruaha River Lodge and Jongomero Camp, each of which offer rustic, yet still luxurious, accommodations for adventurous travelers.

It may be a bit more challenging to get to but for those looking for a unique and decidedly uncrowded African safari, Ruaha is well worth the journey.


Safari Destination: Ruaha National Park, Tanzania originally appeared on Gadling on Wed, 25 Apr 2012 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments



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* Wish List: Sleep on a Reef

Dream of staying on the Great Barrier Reef of Australia as seen on the ISLANDS Wish List






Jon Whittle








ISLANDS photographer Jon Whittle lived out this Wish List journey to actually sleep on the Great Barrier Reef, in a unique trip to Australia with Fantasea Reefworld. As Jon says, "The Great Barrier Reef, in all its magnificence, is, of all places, in front of my feet. One more noncaffeinated stride would have me swimming on one of the world?s natural wonders." See more photos from his trip, get wallpaper and much more in the ISLANDS Wish List.
Click the image below for the 1920 x 1200 widescreen Great Barrier Reef wallpaper.

 

 

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Lake District tempts recession trade with buses, trains, paths - and petrol expenses

You can get �60 off a trip to see the ospreys at Bassenthwaite. Or try out the new minibus which is venturing into the wilds of WasdaleTwo different approaches to travel are being tried in the Lake District as the UK dips back into recession, with a consequent threat to the appeal of holiday breaks in remoter parts of the country.The Overwater Hall hotel by Bassenthwaite Lake and Skiddaw is going for the eye-catching and obviously appealing. They will pay 20p a mile towards petrol for the journey to Cumbria, for guests staying at least four nights between the start of May and the end of September.That knocks �60 off the �400 cost of the minimum stay for visitors from London, and the hotel's co-owner Angela Hyde says:We're calling it fuel relief and hoping that it goes some way to encouraging people to visit our beautiful region. We want to do all we can to make sure that tourists have access to one of the UK's most stunning national parks.At the more modest end of things, just about every organisation you can think of in the Western Lakes, which are relatively under-visited compared with the honeypots around Windermere, Langdale and Derwentwater, has got together to support a multi-vehicle travelling scheme. It uses trains, buses and feet to connect some of the area's loneliest and most beautiful places, in a manner which avoids car travel on small and windy roads but still allows enough time for a day's there-and-back-again trip.The lynchpin is a new minibus into Wasdale from Seascale station on the coast, operating this year only on Saturdays but set to expand into the rest of the week if usage this year suggests sufficient demand. Its timings are co-ordinated with trains on the Cumbrian Coast line and ? via advice of timings for those who take the lovely walk from Wasdale over to Eskdale ? the 'Little Ratty' miniature trains of the Ravenglass and Eskdale line between the coast and the hamlet of Boot.The bus stops at Nether Wasdale, Wasdale Head and, by request, points in betwee, which opens the way to many other walks. Two years ago, I had my hike-of-the-year from Boot to Keswick, and its many buses, over the Scafells. As Katie Read, West Cumbria's tourism manager, says: Community transport is especially important for a rural county such as�Cumbria. The most beautiful parts of the county in the�Western Lake District�are often in accessible to those who wish to use public transport. Innovative projects such as this scheme in Wasdale are a great example of what can be achieved and enables access to some real hidden gems, whilst minimising the environmental impact. Something that we at West�Cumbria�Tourism whole heartedly support.Credit then to Northern Rail, Wasdale Meeting, West�Cumbria�Tourism, the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway, Mid-Copeland Parish Partnership,�Cumbria�County Council, the Lake District National Park and Copeland Borough Council, who sorted this out. More info is here on the website of Sims Travel who run the bus.Lake DistrictTransportTransport policyNational parksHotelsPetrol pricesMartin Wainwrightguardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

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Peak District 'mass trespass' to highlight dangers of new planning laws

Thousands of ramblers expected to attend inaugural rally recognising how law-breaking led to free access to countrysideThousands of ramblers from all over the world are expected to join a week of activities in Derbyshire's Peak District, which became the UK's first national park as a result of deliberate law-breaking in 1932.Increasingly ranked with the Chartists, Suffragettes and Tolpuddle Martyrs as a reclamation of the stolen rights of "free born" Britons, the mass trespass is also being marked as a "torch which today's campaigners must carry forward".An inaugural rally, with a march to the moors behind a local male voice choir, will be told that privacy and barbed wire are regularly trying to re-enclose ground lost by landowners to eight decades of conservation campaigning, footpath revival and the right to roam.Leaders of the National Trust, Ramblers and the Open Spaces Society, which was founded in 1865 to protect common land, are expected to fire up an opening rally at Edale with warnings about the potential effects of new planning laws and the slow progress of mapping most lowland areas for open access.The Trust's chair Sir Simon Jenkins recently invoked Kinder's tradition of defiance in foreseeing "a new army of 'Swampies' ? the anti-bypass and airport expansion campaigner ? who will defend rural England with the same anarchy as Eric Pickles ? the communities secretary ? is attacking it".Writing for the Guardian earlier this month, Jenkins said: "With the countryside facing a return to the ribbon-and-sprawl of the 1930s, litigation and direct action will be conservation's only defence."The trespass events will also be used to publicise the benefits of half-a-century's free access to Kinder, where landowners in the 1930s claimed that walkers would destroy vegetation and wildlife and pollute water supplies.The chair of the organising Kinder 80 committee, the writer and walker Roly Smith, says: "The sacrifice made by the five ramblers who were imprisoned after the trespass should not be forgotten, but we also want to look forward to what has been achieved on Kinder by bodies such as the National Trust since then."Other events, ranging from a "trespass-themed ceilidh" to specialist lectures on grouse, climbing and the trespass's unusual alliance of Young Communists, tweedy ramblers and local people, will attempt to recreate the mixture of oppression and good humour which marked the day. Brief skirmishes left a gamekeeper with a broken leg, and there was natural outrage at the jailings by a court whose jury consisted of two brigadier-generals, three colonels, two majors, three captains and two aldermen. But the Manchester Guardian reporter described how the police inspector drove back with the returning procession, keeping his "baby" Austin carefully behind the vanguard as they sang The Red Flag.The trespass will be recreated on Wednesday 25 April, with two columns following the original protesters' pincer movement from Hayfield and Edale, meeting on the summit peat hags for sandwiches and songs. Rain is forecast but that has always had its place in the history of walkers' campaigning too.Planning policyConservationPeak DistrictRural affairsMartin Wainwrightguardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

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Love Camping And Biking? Try Kamp-Rite's Midget Bushtrekka

Filed under: Biking, Gear, Photos, Camping, EcotourismFor those interested in ecotourism as well as the great outdoors, here is a piece of gear that is perfect for you. Kamp-Rite has introduced a unique kind of bike trailer that allows campers to set up a special Kamp-Rite Oversize Tentcot tent on top of the trailer. While this may sound like you'd be sleeping on unsteady ground, the company insists that the product's fully adjustable leveling jacks ensure a comfortably horizontal sleep on any terrain.

The Midget Bushtrekka also features a pivoting wheel set, which the website explains makes it excellent for off-roading.

"By utilizing two wheels under each side of the trailer, harnessed to a pivoting rocker frame, the trailer can easily absorb most of the uneven terrain in its environment," says the Kamp-Rite website.

These "midget" contraptions are actually quite large, weighing 56 pounds with 41 gallons of storage capability. The tent itself is comfortable for one person, and a tight-squeeze for two, at 90 inches in length, 32 inches in width and 40 inches in height. While at $899.99 the product is pricey, though it does include the tent.

For a better idea of this innovative product, check out the gallery below.

Gallery: Kamp-Rite's Midget BushtrekkaLove Camping And Biking? Try Kamp-Rite's Midget Bushtrekka originally appeared on Gadling on Tue, 24 Apr 2012 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments



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Love Camping And Biking? Try Kamp-Rite's Midget Bushtrekka

Filed under: Biking, Gear, Photos, Camping, EcotourismFor those interested in ecotourism as well as the great outdoors, here is a piece of gear that is perfect for you. Kamp-Rite has introduced a unique kind of bike trailer that allows campers to set up a special Kamp-Rite Oversize Tentcot tent on top of the trailer. While this may sound like you'd be sleeping on unsteady ground, the company insists that the product's fully adjustable leveling jacks ensure a comfortably horizontal sleep on any terrain.

The Midget Bushtrekka also features a pivoting wheel set, which the website explains makes it excellent for off-roading.

"By utilizing two wheels under each side of the trailer, harnessed to a pivoting rocker frame, the trailer can easily absorb most of the uneven terrain in its environment," says the Kamp-Rite website.

These "midget" contraptions are actually quite large, weighing 56 pounds with 41 gallons of storage capability. The tent itself is comfortable for one person, and a tight-squeeze for two, at 90 inches in length, 32 inches in width and 40 inches in height. While at $899.99 the product is pricey, though it does include the tent.

For a better idea of this innovative product, check out the gallery below.

Gallery: Kamp-Rite's Midget BushtrekkaLove Camping And Biking? Try Kamp-Rite's Midget Bushtrekka originally appeared on Gadling on Tue, 24 Apr 2012 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments



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Barbara Smith obituary

The death of my friend and colleague Barbara Smith, after a long illness, aged 65, brings to an end a record of service to the Youth Hostels Association (YHA) lasting nearly five decades.Barbara was still in her teens when she first became involved with the YHA in Yorkshire, at the Dewsbury and Batley local group and the West Riding Regional Group. At that time, West Riding was one of 16 groups, almost entirely unaided by paid staff, that were responsible for running youth hostels in their geographical region. Barbara took on a commitment few would contemplate today. She eventually became a trustee on the YHA national executive committee (now the board of trustees), on which she was appointed assistant treasurer and later vice-chair in recognition of her talents and hard work.Barbara was an active volunteer: she managed a programme in the north of England for smaller youth hostels; and was chair of the Friends of Slaidburn, a group that supported a small hostel in the Forest of Bowland, Lancashire.Barbara was born in Dewsbury, West Yorkshire. She was a bright grammar school pupil who had a clear idea of what she wanted to do in life, and showed the determination to achieve her aims ? even if that meant adopting an unconventional path.She pursued her great interest in languages not through academia, but by working as a secretary with responsibility for international contacts in the local woollen industry, learning shorthand and typing in the process. She completed courses with the Institute of Linguists, initially in French and then in German, earning the equivalent of a degree. Barbara would later lecture in languages at Dewsbury College (now part of Kirklees College) ? she spoke French, German, Spanish and Italian fluently ? but continued to make handicrafts and particularly enjoyed working with wool.Barbara brought a quiet competence to her work, a determination to see tasks followed through and completed thoroughly. In meetings, she contributed less frequently, yet more effectively, than most: she would usually get right to the heart of the issue, often displaying an original and relevant point of view. Never showy, she was content to see a job well done, and never sought the limelight for her many achievements.She is survived by her husband, Ian, whom she met through the YHA, and son, Andrew.Hostelsguardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

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Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Transport: European Commission sets out priorities for passenger ship safety



EU Transport Commissioner Siim Kallas, set out the Commission's priorities for passenger ship safety. The keynote speech was delivered at a major passenger ship safety conference in Brussels, hosted by the Commission, to launch a consultation with stakeholders on the priority actions to come.
Vice-president Kallas said: "Tragic accidents, from the Titanic, to the Estonia or the Costa Concordia, put ship safety in the spotlight. There are always lessons to learn from such disasters. But we are not just waiting for the next accident to happen. It would be foolhardy merely to respond after the event. The EU has the toughest ship safety rules in the world and this is the result of a process of continuous improvements, proactive and preventative measures to raise maritime safety standards."
The Vice-President set a three-pronged approach to enhancing passenger ship safety, based on:
promoting industry voluntary measures,
intensifying enforcement and implementation; as well as
�regulatory measures.

The proposals are based on more than two years of intensive work on passenger ship safety, though a Commission review started in 2010.
The priority actions include:
1. Voluntary industry commitments
Vice-President Kallas welcomed the announcement by the European Cruise Council, of further voluntary commitments going beyond what is legally required in terms of issues such as: route planning, security of bridge access and access to lifejackets on board. Importantly, the European Cruise Council commitments include the appointment of four independent experts to oversee the process and monitor progress and implementation. Voluntary industry commitments can have an important and very immediate effect if they are strictly implemented.
2. Enforcement actions
Safety rules require rigorous enforcement. The Commission has initiated, with the European Maritime Agency (EMSA), and as part of its ongoing work, inspection visits to monitor the implementation of maritime legislation, including in particular in 2012: the targeting of registration of passengers on board. This work is part of a broader programme of targeted enforcement actions for the passenger ship sector.
3. Regulatory measures
The Commission is working on a staged approach, with proposals planned for 2012 and additional specific measures possible in 2013. Shipping is by its nature global so a twin-track approach is necessary, working closely with the International Maritime Organization (IMO) ? the UN body which sets international rules for shipping.
The Commission will present legislative proposals on domestic passenger ship safety rules before the end of 2012 ? primarily extending existing EU rules beyond domestic passenger ships constructed out of steel. These ships ? e.g. smaller passenger ships and ships built in materials other than steel, as well as sailing and historic ships ? form an increasingly large share of the market particularly for tourism.
The Commission envisages making a proposal to update EU passenger ship stability rules for roll-on roll-off (ro-ro) ferries with a view particularly to improving stability after damage. At the same time, the Commission will provide its research on ro-ro passenger ship stability in a damaged condition to the IMO, with a view to enhancing the IMO international rules. Stability is particularly important for these ferries due to potential problems with water on deck. The EU has had its own EU regional safety rules for ferries since the Estonia tragedy.
Future considerations: The preliminary findings of the EU funded research project (GOALDS) on cruise and ropax ship stability is scheduled to be completed in the autumn of 2012. The Commission will await the results of these technical studies, as well as the current accident investigation by the Italian authorities of the Costa Concordia shipwreck on 13 January 2012, before considering if further proposals may need to be considered. See MEMO/12/270 for details.
What happens next?
The 12-week public consultation on passenger ship safety will end on 5 July 2012. This will be followed by a workshop for stakeholders to present input received. On the basis of this consultation, as well as the two years technical work, the Commission will present its first legislative proposals before the end of 2012.
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Cutty Sark Reopens After Disastrous Fire

Filed under: History, Learning, Europe, United Kingdom
The famous tea clipper Cutty Sark will be once again open to the public this Thursday after years of restoration work to repair damage from a fire in 2007. The Queen will perform an official reopening ceremony on Wednesday.

Located in Greenwich, London, this beautiful ship has been a longtime favorite of Londoners. It went on its maiden voyage in 1870 and is the last surviving tea clipper in existence, a reminder of a time when sailing ships brought loads of tea to London from China. Steam-powered boats passing through the Suez Canal soon took over that route, though, and the Cutty Sark was transferred to the Australian wool route. It broke the speed record for that run and became one of the most famous ships on the high seas.

But as steam ships became increasingly common, the Cutty Sark became more and more outdated, being relegated to lesser runs for poorer shipping companies. The ship was saved from a sad end when it was bought by an admirer in 1922 and lovingly restored to its former glory. It opened to the public in 1957.

A fire broke out in 2007 while it was being refurbished. Its decks were burnt through but since much of the ship's fittings and contents had been moved away while work was being done, these were saved. Now after a long restoration, you can stand on the deck of this remarkable vessel again and learn about daily life aboard her with a guided tour. The BBC has an interesting slideshow of the restoration work here.


[Photo courtesy Visit Greenwich]Cutty Sark Reopens After Disastrous Fire originally appeared on Gadling on Tue, 24 Apr 2012 19:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments



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Mother's Day Hotel Deals Around The United States

Filed under: Festivals and Events, Food and Drink, Stories, North America, United States, Hotels and Accommodations, Luxury TravelWant to do something special for Mom this Mother's Day? Check out these U.S. hotels offering promotions, packages and programming for the holiday, to help plan a special weekend getaway.

Forrest Hills Mountain Resort
Dahlonega, Georgia

Located about one hour north of Atlanta, Forrest Hills Mountain Resort is a relaxing accommodation surrounded by the North Georgia Mountains. This Mother's Day the property is offering a "Taking Care of Mom" package, which includes:


Champagne or sparking cider upon arrival

Half-dozen long-stemmed roses in the room upon arrival

Gourmet sampler basket with chocolates, tea and hot cocoa mix

One-hour massage for both Mom and her guest

Candlelight dinner in the Secret Garden Dining Room (when booked online)

Mother's Day Feast in the Rose Garden Dining Room

Breakfast daily

Package rates start at $457 for two nights (Saturday and Sunday). Call 706-864-6456 or click here to book. Continue reading Mother's Day Hotel Deals Around The United StatesMother's Day Hotel Deals Around The United States originally appeared on Gadling on Wed, 25 Apr 2012 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments



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The Turks & Caicos Sweepstakes

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OFFICIAL RULES The Turks & Caicos Sweepstakes








Windsong: Of all the Turks and Caicos resorts, Windsong offers a unique, boutique property on the island?s best reef. Slumber on a luxurious, pillow-top king bed. Sip mimosa?s on a private oceanfront terrace with spectacular views. Relish luxury interiors. Dine at Jojo?s Caf�. Laugh at the Havana Club. And, enjoy a watersports wonderland.
Stay and play at the Windsong Resort: 2 bedroom, 2 Bath, 1600 sq. ft. Junior Oceanfront Suite for 5 nights/6 days.
The Veranda: Featuring residence-style accommodations, private oceanfront cottages, beachfront dining, unprecedented amenities and breathtaking views, The Veranda?s fully-inclusive concept redefines the five star travel experience. In 2011, The Veranda was the recipient of several sought-after awards, includingTravel + Leisure?s list of ?Top 20 Places to Look Out For? and ?Best Independent Hotel of The Year? byClassic Vacations.
Grace Bay Club: Perched on 11 acres of immaculate beachfront, Grace Bay Club was the first luxury all-suite resort in Turks and Caicos. The acclaimed hotel hosted the First Annual Caribbean Food & Wine Festival in 2011, and teamed up with California-based fashion designer Trina Turk to launch the limited edition Trina Turks & Caicos collection.



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Cruise Line Snags Olympics To View At Sea

The Olympics in London this summer is a hot ticket on land and now at sea. "It's estimated that more than one-billion people will tune in for this year's Olympic Games in the host city of London, and Celebrity Cruises has arranged the rare opportunity for guests sailing on its modern luxury fleet to be among them," reads today's announcement. This translates to a huge win for Celebrity Cruises and their guests.

From the Opening Ceremony to the Closing on August 12, Celebrity will broadcast live via satellite the swimming, diving, gymnastics, rowing, cycling, athletics and basketball events.

Celebrity's guests will be able to view the Olympic Games within the comfort of their staterooms or in several of the ship's bars and lounges that are on every Celebrity ship. The specific locations and event times will be listed within each Celebrity ship's daily newsletter.Continue reading Cruise Line Snags Olympics To View At SeaCruise Line Snags Olympics To View At Sea originally appeared on Gadling on Tue, 24 Apr 2012 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments



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Look out, Royal Mail ? it's Penny Farthing Post!

Meet the Cornwall postman who delivers letters for 25p a shot ? on his penny farthing bikeWith the hike in stamp prices coming into force on 30 April, most of us will have no option but to stump up the extra cash. But Graham Eccles of Bude in Cornwall has decided to offer his local community a cheaper, alternative postal service.Launched on 1 April, the Penny Farthing Post is a mail service with a difference: letters around town are personally delivered by Eccles on his penny farthing bike. The stamps, designed and printed by the postman himself, cost 25p ? a saving of 35p on the new first-class stamp price."When I heard about the rises, I realised that my idea, which was initially just aimed at tourists, had legs," says Eccles. "Three weeks in I deliver around 100 letters a day."Eccles initially printed only 480 stamps. Within two days they had sold out and the local shops that act as his post offices, selling stamps and collecting items for delivery, were clamouring for more. "At the end of my first week, I was dropping to bits. I wasn't used to cycling 15 miles a day, and my penny farthing needed a new back wheel.""The reaction has been nothing but positive," he says. "I'm now designing post boxes made from converted gas bottles ? painted bright yellow to avoid confusion with the Royal Mail."For the time being, Eccles sorts the letters in his kitchen ("hair-raising when the kids want to help") but his dream is to have his own post office in the centre of town with his partner, Jayne, as postmistress. "I want to encourage the younger generation to love the written word. Everyone's growing up with huge thumbs from texting but receiving a letter is special."Postal serviceCornwallUnited KingdomEuropeRoyal Mailguardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

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The state of journalism in Ukraine

"They want journalists to tell only one story - their story.?

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Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Cricket in India: more than a game

Audio slideshow Aside from Bollywood, cricket is the one thing that truly unites India. Alex Bath visits Mumbai's community grounds

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The Meaning Of Mate In Argentina

Filed under: Arts and Culture, Food and Drink, Stories, South America, ArgentinaWhile upon first glance many people believe the locals in Argentina are drinking tea, but the concoction is actually a blend of herbs. Mate, an infusion prepared with yerba mate leaves called "Ílex paraguariensis," contains caffeine, herbs and proteins as well as hot water. It has been drunk since Pre-Colombian times by the Guaraníes, a local group in South America. Argentina is the world's number one producer of yerba mate, making this a great cultural experience to have while traveling in the country.

During my visit to Argentina, I saw people everywhere carrying thermoses of hot water and mates, metal cup-like things with bombillas, which are the long metal straws poking out. In every shop and market you will also be able to find ornate mates for purchase. Luckily, I got to try mine with a local friend and learn more about what mate means to locals in Argentina.

"It's merely an infusion, but it has a huge meaning of sharing," explained my local friend Javier Viñuela, whose mother had prepared some mate for a group of us in her home. "As it usually happens with food, drinking mate is a way or excuse to share with friends and family."Continue reading The Meaning Of Mate In ArgentinaThe Meaning Of Mate In Argentina originally appeared on Gadling on Tue, 24 Apr 2012 17:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments



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Where To Get Singapore's Favorite Historical Cocktail: The Singapore Sling

Filed under: Arts and Culture, History, Learning, Food and Drink, Asia, Singapore, NightlifeDeveloped sometime before 1915 by Ngiam Tong Boon, a bartender who worked at the Long Bar in the Raffles Hotel Singapore, the Singapore Sling is a historical cocktail that has made a revival over the past few years. The original recipe used only the best ingredients - gin, Cherry Heering, Bénédictine and fresh pineapple juice. While by the 1980s the quality of the drink had begun to suffer - for example, substituting soda water and bottled juice instead of the fresh variety - a reappearance of Cherry Heering and fresh ingredients has revived the cocktail favorite.

Want to know where to get a quality Singapore Sling on your next trip to Singapore? Try these top venues.

Raffles Hotel Singapore

This should be the first stop on your mission to find the perfect Singapore Sling, as this is where the drink was created over 100 years ago. Inside the hotel is the legendary Long Bar, the birthplace of the cocktail. For those who enjoy sipping their drink in a laid-back atmosphere, the two-story venue features Earthy decor inspired by the Malayan plantations of the 1920s.Continue reading Where To Get Singapore's Favorite Historical Cocktail: The Singapore SlingWhere To Get Singapore's Favorite Historical Cocktail: The Singapore Sling originally appeared on Gadling on Mon, 23 Apr 2012 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments



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