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Mougins

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Executive summary by Darmansjah


In modern times, Mougins has been frequented and inhabited by many artists and celebrities, including Pablo Picasso, Jean Cocteau, Fernand Léger, Francis Picabia, Man Ray, Arman, Yves Klein, César Baldaccini, Paul Éluard, Yves Saint Laurent, Christian Dior, Winston Churchill, Catherine Deneuve, Édith Piaf and Jacques Brel, to name but a few. Pablo Picasso spent the last 12 years of his life living in Mougins (1961–1973), where he died. He lived in a 'mas' (farmhouse) at Notre-Dame-de-Vie, which is a small hilltop just beside the old village of Mougins and next to the 12th-century chapel of the same name.Picasso's studio was in the old village in a building that is now the tourist office, while the studio of Fernand Léger was above what is now the village wine shop, next to the rear of the Mougins Museum of Classical Art (MMoCA).


Mougins has a strong culinary history with such great chefs as Roger Vergé and Alain Ducasse having managed restaurants in the village. Both were synonymous with the restaurant L'Amandier, which is situated in the heart of the old village. This restaurant still exists today and is housed in an important ancient building, as during the Middle Ages this was the court house of the Monks of Saint Honorat, before becoming an almond mill in the 18th/19th centuries. Denis Fetisson, who received the Jacquart Trophy for the Rising Star in Gastronomy in 2006, now manages L'Amandier and is also the manager and head chef at La Place de Mougins (previously Le Feu Follet, regularly frequented by Picasso) which is another important restaurant in the heart of the old village. Fetisson moved to Mougins in April 2010 having just been the head chef at the two-Michelin Star restaurant, Le Cheval Blanc, in Courchevel just prior. Like Ducasse, Fetisson worked at L'Amandier in his early career before returning to Mougins again in 2010.

Mougins hosts the annual 'International Gastronomy Festival of Mougins', or 'Les Étoiles de Mougins', an international gastronomic event taking place every September in the village.

Given its close proximity to Cannes, Mougins is also often the tourist destination for Hollywood stars during the Cannes Film Festival. Dame Elizabeth Taylor hosted the 'amfAR' AIDS Charity dinner for the Hollywood elite for almost 10 years until 2008.

The hilltop of Mougins had been occupied since the pre-Roman period. Ancient Ligurian tribes who inhabited the coastal area between Provence and Tuscany, were eventually absorbed into the spread of the Roman Empire and then became part of an official Ligurian state that was created by Emperor Augustus (X Regio). The Ligurian area withstood several invasions during the Byzantine period, before the City of Genoa took firm control over the Ligurian region and dominated it between the 11th and 15th centuries. Much of the centre of the 'old' village dates back to this period.


In the 11th century the Count of Antibes gave the Mougins hillside to the Monks of Saint Honorat (from the nearby Îles de Lerins just off the coast of Cannes) who continued to administer the village until the French Revolution. During this period, Mougins was a fortified village surrounded by ramparts and parts of the medieval city wall still exist as well as one of the three original ancient gate towers (Porte Sarrazine). During the 18th century War of the Austrian Succession, the village was plundered by the Austro-Sardinian armies and damaged by fire. Following this, some of the ramparts were deconstructed and several new little streets of early 19th-century houses were built.


Your Travel IQ

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By George W.Stone, executive summary by darmansjah


The Sami People of Lapland traditionally divide the year into how many seasons?

A site under excavation in Denmark is believed to be the great hall of king hrothgar and the setting of what anglo-saxon epic poem?

The summit of Chimborazo is even farther from earth’s center than everest’s peak. What nation claims this point?

Named for explore Alexander Von Humboldt, the Humboldt current support a rich marine ecosystem of what continent?

The world’s deepest metro station, Arsenalna, sits beneath what river straddled by kiev, Ukraine?

The frozen Rideau canal is a focal point of winterlude, a festival in what Canadian city?

Sochi, site of the Olympic winter games, is situated between the black sea and what mountain range?
With 700 varieties, where in Europe can the most types of cheese be found?

Byblos has been occupied for more than 9,000 years, in what present-day country is this ancient Mediterranean city?

On China’s Forgotten Road

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Executive summary by darmansjah


Scott Wallace searches for traces of his wayward grandfather in China’s Yunnan Province. National Geographic Adventure follows the ancient trade route that crisscrosses these borderlands in “China: The Tea Horse Road and Shangri-La.” On this active journey, travelers track endangered golden monkeys, glimpse rituals at the 17th-century Dongzhulin Monastery, and hike through mushrooms meadows.

PEAK EXPREINCES

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With Tim Medvetz, Host of NAT GEO Wild’s  “Going Wild” and Kris Hartman at Mt. St. Helen’s  National Park

Executive summary by darmansjah


When Tim Medvetz shattered his boy and cracked his skull in a near-fatal motorcycle accident in 2001, he was not expected to walk again. A year later, he was climbing Mt. Everest.

Now, on “Going Wild,” Tim is taking everyday Americans on a rigorous journey, transporting the mto places others can only dream of reaching where they can explore the wonders of the world-and rediscover themselves. In this episode, we meet Kris Hartman, who’s been dealing with the death of his sister seven years ago by immersing himself in his job and nightly Tv-Watching binges. His wife worries that’he’s missing out on his son’s childhood.

“He needs a wake-up call-a little dose of Mother Nature,” says tim. Together, they’ll take a treacherous three-day journey up the summit of Mt. St. Helen’s, an 8,300-foot active volcano in Washington State. Its snowy peaks and dense forests are teeming with dangerous wildlife, including cougars, elk, and bears. Tim knows this deadly environment is just the place to kick Kris into gear.

“I’m going to put you through hell,” Tim tells him-and does. Will Kris reach the peak-and muster the courage to dig deep within and find the strength to LIVE LIFE TO THE FULLEST?

Ile de Re

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Executive summary by Darmansjah


Île de Ré  is an island off the west coast of France near La Rochelle, on the northern side of the Pertuis d'Antioche strait.

The island's highest point has an elevation of 20 metres (66 feet); the island is 30 kilometres (19 miles) long and 5 kilometres (3 miles) wide. The 2.9 km (1.8 mi) Île de Ré bridge, completed in 1988, connects it to La Rochelle on the mainland.

The area is a popular tourist destination. It has approximately the same number of hours of sunshine as the famous southern coast of France. The island is noted to have a constant light breeze, and the water temperature is generally cool. The island is surrounded with gently sloping, sandy beaches, which are a real treat for families and tourists.

The island has a resident winter population of approximately 20,000 residents and a resident summer population of about 220,000. Since the local population is distributed all over the island, it seldom gets crowded.[citation needed] The island is covered by bicycle tracks, with many residents rarely using cars for transportation. Camping grounds and hotels abound on the island, as well as large supermarkets and all modern amenities. Many families stay on the island for the duration of their vacations.

However, the island's native population has also been widely criticised for its allegedly insular nature and fear of outsiders. In May 2012, whisper campaigns and vendetta actions against a family that had immigrated from New Zealand forced it to leave after local authorities refused to assist.

Night life consists of going to Saint Martin, the main port, or to La Flotte, to walk along the quays and to potter around the shops, which are open late. Restaurants abound. At night, visitors can watch the buskers, have a drink or enjoy the island's delicious artisanal ice cream, all set in a family-friendly atmosphere.

Sea salt harvest in Ile de Ré.

As a famous holiday resort on the Atlantic coast, the island has its fair share of celebrities, past and present. Among others, Jean Monnet, the father of European Unity, singers Charles Aznavour and Claude Nougaro, actors Bernard Giraudeau and Claude Rich, actress Carole Bouquet, writer Philippe Sollers or Princess Caroline of Monaco used to or still spend their holidays there. Lionel Jospin, who was Prime Minister of France from 1997 to 2002, retired on the island after his withdrawal from political life. Johnny Depp has also been spotted there.

Oysters and fresh fish are always available. There is also a tradition in which the fishermen, upon returning from the sea, sell a small quantity of their catch directly on the quays, enabling them to buy a drink. Markets are open on a daily basis in the main towns and are a popular place to shop, taste and chat. Even the vendors in the markets come to the island on their holidays. Generally, they work only in the mornings, enabling them to enjoy the remainder of the day. A large variety of items can be bought at the market, such as comics, books, African articles, ceramics, clothes, artifacts, food, local specialities, tools and souvenirs.

Musee d’Unterlinden and the Wine Road of Alsace

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Executive summary by Darmansjah


The Unterlinden Museum (officially Musée d'Unterlinden, also cited in English as Musée Unterlinden) is located in Colmar, France, in the Alsace region. The museum, housed in a 13th-century Dominican religious sisters' convent, is home to the Isenheim Altarpiece by Matthias Grünewald and features a large collection of local and international artworks and manufactured artifacts from prehistorical to contemporary times. The museum bears the quality label Musée de France and is one of the most visited in France outside of the Île-de-France.

The museum was established in 1849, the buildings (abandoned following the French Revolution) having been saved by the Societé Schongauer (founded in 1847 by Louis Hugot ) and bequeathed to it by the municipality. The collection at first centered around a Roman mosaic found in Bergheim, Haut-Rhin, still displayed today at the place to which it was originally moved, and plaster copies of antique sculptures on loan from the Louvre. In 1852, the focus of the collection shifted dramatically, when the Isenheim Altarpiece as well as most of the other large painted and/or sculpted altarpieces from former Colmar or Upper Rhenish churches, abbeys and monasteries, were installed in the building. The museum opened its doors to the general public in the following year, 1853. As the museum's official website states : "Today the museum covers a surface area of about 5,620 m², including exhibition spaces (4,000 m²), conservation, storage and other work areas (1,370 m²), and offices (250 m²)".

In the 1950s and again in the 1980s, the need appeared for the museum, which had seen a steady growth of the number of its displayed artifacts in every domain, to gain more space by using available surface more appropriately, and was each time addressed as far as the classified character of the building in itself could allow. Today, the Unterlinden Museum currently spreads out over three levels and makes use of every space available in the large complex of buildings. The city of Colmar is currently working to transform the adjacent, Art Nouveau former baths building, into an annex of the museum, in which, by 2014, the modern masters can be displayed permanently. According to the museum's website, "The total area open to the public, which now amounts to 4,000 m², will be enlarged to 6,300 m²"

Normandy’s D-Day Beaches

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Executive summary by Darmansjah


The Normandy landings, codenamed Operation Neptune, were the landing operations of the Allied invasion of Normandy, in Operation Overlord, during World War II. The landings commenced on Tuesday, 6 June 1944 (D-Day), beginning at 6:30 am British Double Summer Time (GMT+2). In planning, as for most Allied operations, the term D-Day was used for the day of the actual landing, which was dependent on final approval.

The landings were conducted in two phases: an airborne assault landing of 24,000 British, US and Canadian airborne troops shortly after midnight, and an amphibious landing of Allied infantry and armoured divisions on the coast of France starting at 6:30 am. Surprise was achieved thanks to inclement weather and a comprehensive deception plan implemented in the months before the landings, codenamed Operation Bodyguard, to distract German attention from the possibility of landings in Normandy. A key success was to convince Adolf Hitler that the landings would actually occur to the north at the Pas-de-Calais. There were also decoy operations taking place simultaneously with the landings under the codenames Operation Glimmer and Operation Taxable to distract German forces from the real landing areas.

Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Forces was General Dwight D. Eisenhower while overall command of ground forces (21st Army Group) was given to General Bernard Montgomery. The operation, planned by a team under Lieutenant-General Frederick Morgan, was the largest amphibious invasion in world history and was executed by land, sea and air elements under direct Anglo-American command with over 160,000 soldiers landing on 6 June 1944: 73,000 Americans, 61,715 British and 21,400 Canadians. 195,700 Allied naval and merchant navy personnel in over 5,000 ships were also involved. The invasion required the transport of soldiers and materiel from England by troop-laden aircraft and ships, the assault landings, air support, naval interdiction of the English Channel and naval gunfire support. The landings took place along a 50-mile (80 km) stretch of the Normandy coast divided into five sectors: Utah, Omaha, Gold, Juno and Sword.

Paris

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Executive summary by Darmansjah

The Eiffel Tower as seen from the Champ de Mars

Paris  is the capital and most populous city of France. It is situated on the Seine River, in the north of the country, at the heart of the Île-de-France region. Within its administrative limits (the 20 arrondissements), the city had 2,234,105 inhabitants in 2009 while its metropolitan area is one of the largest population centres in Europe with more than 12 million inhabitants.


The Louvre palace (Richelieu wing)

An important settlement for more than two millennia, by the late 12th century Paris had become a walled cathedral city that was one of Europe's foremost centres of learning and the arts and the largest city in the Western world until the turn of the 18th century. Paris was the focal point for many important political events throughout its history, including the French Revolution. Today it is one of the world's leading business and cultural centres, and its influence in politics, education, entertainment, media, science, fashion and the arts all contribute to its status as one of the world's major cities. The city has one of the largest GDPs in the world, €607 billion (US$845 billion) as of 2011, and as a result of its high concentration of national and international political, cultural and scientific institutions is one of the world's leading tourist destinations. The Paris Region hosts the world headquarters of 30 of the Fortune Global 500 companies in several business districts, notably La Défense, the largest dedicated business district in Europe.

 pont neuf

Centuries of cultural and political development have brought Paris a variety of museums, theatres, monuments and architectural styles. Many of its masterpieces such as the Louvre and the Arc de Triomphe are iconic buildings, especially its internationally recognized symbol, the Eiffel Tower. Long regarded as an international centre for the arts, works by history's most famous painters can be found in the Louvre, the Musée d'Orsay and its many other museums and galleries. Paris is a global hub of fashion and has been referred to as the "international capital of style", noted for its haute couture tailoring, its high-end boutiques, and the twice-yearly Paris Fashion Week. It is world renowned for its haute cuisine, attracting many of the world's leading chefs. Many of France's most prestigious universities and Grandes Écoles are in Paris or its suburbs, and France's major newspapers Le Monde, Le Figaro, Libération are based in the city, and Le Parisien in Saint-Ouen near Paris.

Paris is home to the association football club Paris Saint-Germain FC and the rugby union club Stade Français. The 80,000-seat Stade de France, built for the 1998 FIFA World Cup, is located in Saint-Denis. Paris hosts the annual French Open Grand Slam tennis tournament on the red clay of Roland Garros. Paris played host to the 1900 and 1924 Summer Olympics, the 1938 and 1998 FIFA World Cup, and the 2007 Rugby World Cup. The city is a major rail, highway, and air-transport hub, served by the two international airports Paris-Charles de Gaulle and Paris-Orly. Opened in 1900, the city's subway system, the Paris Métro, serves 9 million passengers daily. Paris is the hub of the national road network, and is surrounded by three orbital roads: the Périphérique, the A86 motorway, and the Francilienne motorway in the outer suburbs.

Vieux Lyons

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Executive summary by Darmansjah


The Vieux Lyon is the largest Renaissance district of Lyon in the 5th arrondissement.

This zone is served by the metro line D

In 1954, Vieux-Lyon, the city's oldest district, became the first site in France to be protected under the Malraux law to protect France's cultural sites. Covering an area of 424 hectares at the foot of the Fourvière hill, it is one of Europe’s most extensive Renaissance neighborhoods.

The Saint Jean quarter: in the Middle Ages, this was the focus of political and religious power. The Cathedral of St Jean, seat of the Primate of Gaul, a title still conferred upon the archbishop of Lyon, is a good example of Gothic architecture. The Manecanterie adjoining the cathedral is one of Lyon's few extant Romanesque buildings. Formerly a choir school, it now houses the museum of the cathedral’s treasures. Saint Jean is also home to the Museum of Miniatures and Film Sets, located in a building that was the Golden Cross Inn in the 15th century.

The Saint-Paul section: in the 15th and 16th centuries predominately Italian banker-merchants moved into sumptuous urban residences here called hôtels particuliers. The Hôtel Bullioud and the Hôtel de Gadagne are two magnificent examples and the latter now houses the Lyon Historical Museum and the International Puppet Museum. The Loge du Change stands as testimony to the period when trade fairs made the city wealthy. The Saint Paul church with its Romanesque lantern tower and its spectacular spire mark the section’s northern extremity.

The Saint Georges section: silk weavers settled here beginning in the 16th century before moving to the Croix Rousse hill in the 19th century. In 1844, the architect Pierre Bossan rebuilt the Saint-Georges[disambiguation needed] church on the banks of the Saônein a neo-Gothic style. In the Middle Ages, when there were only a few parallel streets between the hill and the Saône, the first traboules were built. Derived from the Latin trans-ambulare, meaning to pass through, traboules are corridors through buildings and their courtyards, connecting one street directly with another. Visitors are delighted to discover an architectural heritage of galleries and spiral staircases in these secret passageways, as unexpected as they are unique.

Barossa Valley

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The New Wine Wizards of Oz

Executive summary by darmansjah


Kingsford Homestead in South Australia’s Barossa Valley.


BAROSSA VALLEY, AUSTRALIA Like a fine wine, this valley an hour north of Adelaide is aged perfection. Wineries here are housed in sandstone cottages built circa 1860, and multigenerational families still use Old World techniques and fruit from century-old vines planted in the shadow of ancient gum trees.

Visitors follow rows of gnarled grapevines to find more than 150 wineries and 80 tasting rooms-called cellar doors-from some of the country’s most vaunted Shiraz names. But lately, the younger generation has set a new course that’s equal parts heritage and renewal. “We’re about more than traditional shiraz,” says Kirsty Radford, part of a family of fifth-generation winemakers. “We’re trying differentiation and growing methods and producing varietals not usually done here.” Tap into the revitalization at the Artisans of Barossa, a bluestone-meets-glass-and-steel co-op where seven experimental winemakers pour such small-batch surprises as Grenache and Roussane. Away from the vine, 28-year-old native chef Lachlan Colwill celebrates the region’s bounty with dishes like foraged mushrooms sprinkled with trarragon at Hentley Farms Restaurant. And the Kingsford Homestead, a seven-suite hotel in a meticulously restored 1856 homestead, draws bush baths under a canopy of gum trees and serves dinner in a stone walled wine cellar.

Try the barossa’s other top product, fortified wine. With a price tag of $168,000, the 2004 Block 42 Cabernet Sauvignon from Barossa-based Penfolds is one of the worl’s spendiest vintages

Discovery tours by gate 1

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Executive summary by darmansjah


Discover the World in Small Group for less no more than 22 Travelers Active Itineraries & Unique Features Accommodations with Local Character 33 years of Worldwide Expertise. Free Brochures 877-425-0663 discovery-tours.com

Peru·Cuba·China·Southeast Asia·Nepal·Mongolia·Indonesia·Myanmar·Italy·Ireland·France·Spain & Portugal·Baltic·Croatia & Slovenia·Turkey·Israel·Morocco·Zimbabwe·Botswana·South Africa

Tulsa, Oklahoma

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This Town Was Made for Music Lovers

Executive summary by darmansjah


An interactive map at downtown Tulsa’s Woody Guthrice Center

TULSA, OKLAHOMA An alternative steak fuels this oil town. A mural on downtown’s new Woody Guthrie Center shows the Oklahoman songwriter holding a guitar tagged “This machine kills fascist”-words he scrawled on his instrument in 1943 but not the one his name usually conjures. “This Land is Your Land isn’t just aqq campfire song; Guthrie really was a radical,” says Dena McCloud, executive director of the museum. Tulsa likewise is often misunderstood. With an art deco skyline of gargoyles and spires, the icty has long been rich in the arts, from Cain’s Ballroom-displaying paraphernalia from famous headliners including Bob Wils, the Sex Pistols, and Wilco-to a glassblowing school and the 19,000-seat BOK Center. Additions such as the Woody Guthrie Center and a downtown branch of the Philbrook contemporary art museum have reinvigorated the historic Brady Arts District. The 19-story Mayo Hotel, a 1925 landmark with Doric columns, seemed fasted for demolition a few years ago; now renovated, it attracts post-arena-concert crowds to its rooftop bar (part of suite where Elvis Presley once stayed). And on any given night at SoundPony, whether punk or electronic, the music is always free and original. “We were weird before Austin,” says sculptor Colleen Stiles. “We just kept it to ourselves.”

DORSET, ENGLAND

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Britains’s Ultimate Cliff-Hanger

Executive summary by darmansjah


West Bay Beach in southern England

DORSET If these cliffs in West Bay Beach look familiear, it’s because they brood over the key crime secne in the transatlantic TV hit Broadchurch. Rising as if ripped from Earth’s crust, the formation has always seemed positioned for dramatic effect. In fact, show creator chris Chibanall calls the murder mystery a love letter ot his home in West Dorset. Beyond the bluffs lie all the trappings of a classic British seaside town : thatched cottages, shops brimming with buckets and spades, strawberry jam on scones, and generous lashings of clotted cream-all served up in one of England’s most family-friendly settings. Still, like the shadowy characters of Broachurch, Dorset thrives on secrets. Other red sediment, gravel-encased fossils, and preserved dinosaur footprints contribute to the 200 million years of semiburied history that earned this 95-mile shoreline its status as a World Heritage site and its nickname of Jurassic Coast. With luck, a guide, and occasionally a geological hammer, hikers can uncover fossils amid the craggy coves, sandy beaches, and blustery walkways while puffins lurch overhead and dolphins slice through choppy waves. Although experts unearth fossils around the West Bay cliffs, beginners can maximize their luck a few miles west in Lyme Regis, aka the Pearl of Dorset.
Stay at the bull hotel, where some rooms have four poster beds or roll-top tubs, in a renovated coaching inn.
In the 1040s, Benedictine monks raised swans for banquet food at Dorset’s Abbotsbury Swannery, where a colony of mute swans nests today.

PANAMA CITY

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Panama at Another Crossroads

Executive summary by darmansjah


Panama City’s waterfront causeway has views of downtown

PANAMA CITY After a decade of stop-and-go development, the Frank Gehry-designed BioMuseo opens February 3.  The debut marks a defining moment for the capital in the centennial of another game changer: the Panama Canal. Actually, the museum’s protracted birth fits the subject matter of its galleries, which tell a story that began some 20 million years ago. Tectonic plates clashed and underwater volcanoes roiled to form the land bridge between continents today known as the nation of Panama, reshaping global climate and propelling massive biodiversity. Now, as Panama City transforms into a vibrant boom town, Gehry’s riot of Play-Doh colors, convoluted shapes, and helter-skelter arrangement makes a new anchor for the evolving skyline. Sensory overload continues inside the BioMuseo. In the Panamarama gallery, wall projections of native ecosystems such as tropical cloud and rain forests envelop visitors with the point of view of sea turtles, leafcutter ants, and other indigenous creatures. Elsewhere, lopsided columns tower over gallerygoers to represent the igneous rock that thrust up fro mthe depths of the sea to forge the country. “Panama has always been more that a canal,” says spokesman. “Now you can experience its history, people, biodiversity, and culture-within a work of art.”

Where to go now

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BEST OF THE WORLd

Executive summary by darmansjah

The Barossa is the cream, the whole cream, and nothing but the cream of South Australia.” Explorer Johan Menge

Barossa Valley, Australia


Tulsa, Oklahoma


Dorset, England


Panama City

Scottsdale

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Embrace the Adventures 

Executive summary by darmansjah


Backcountry Trails - Urban Explorations -  Come for Scottdale’s Sonoran Desert playground. Stay for the great outdoors – go treasure hunting at our open-air shopping centers, savor innovative cuisine on sun-drenched bistro patio, indulge in a moonlight massage. Your Scottsdale adventure is waiting. AdventureinScottsdale.com 800 309 1428

Navigating the Globe

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SMART TRAVELER

“A nation’s culture resides in the hearts and in the soul of its people,” MAHATMA GANDHI
Fgr. A portrait from Holi, the festival of colors, in Jaipur, India

Executive summary by darmansjah

My City: Quebec


Canadian Prairie


Tokyo Ramen


Caribean Inns


China’s Green Scene


World Calender


Problem Solved


Strange Planet

MY CITY

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High-Speed French Connection

Quebec city is a bit of france bundled in Canadian clothingby Taras Grescoe, Executive summary by darmansjah

Tobogganers race down Quebec city’s Glissades de la Terrasse, built in 1884.

A 19TH-CENTURY traveler from France once remarked of Quebec City, “It looked like St.Malo strayed up here and was lost in the snow.” Though I’ve settled in Montreal, an easy three hour drive away, every time I return to Quebec City I too succumb to the illusion that I’ve been teleported t othe narrow streets of that walled city in Brittany, bewitched by the vista of steeples, horse-drawn caliches, and four-centuries-old ramparts.

The province’s self-proclaimed capitale nationale, Quebec City may be more bureaucratic and conservative than its cosmopolitan big sister, Montreal, but it’s also more compact and picturesque. Writer H.P. Lovecraft in 1931 thrilled to the “chance glimpse of one of these silver spires at the end of an ancient uphill or downhill street.”

I seek out such atmospheric streets as Rue Sous-le-Cap, a sinuous alleyway that dramatically abuts granite cliffs topped by fortifications. After lingering in Place Royale, a square surrounded by fieldstone facades and steeply pitched roofs, I ride the funicular-in operation since 1879-to the Upper Town. Here, venerable inns line little-walked Avenue Ste. Geneiveve, which also offers precipitous views of the St.Lawrence River. I make an essential pit stop at Chez Temporel, in the dogleg Rue Couillard, for a little French folk music and a bowl of café au lait.

Rainy days call for a few hours in the concrete-and-limestone confines of architect Moshe Safdie’s Musee de la Vivilisation, wandering among artifacts of Quebecois life (such as a circa 1736 long boat or a Montreal Canadiens hockey sweater). In witer, I’ll stand in line for the Glissades de la Terrasse, an 820-foot-long toboggan ride that sends people careering down an icy slope at 45 miles per hour. It’s located on Dufferin Terrace, a cliff-hugging boardwalk that serves as the perfect platform for watching nightly fireworks in summer. In all kinds of weather, I’ll shop for Jacques Bred records, vintage Crock-pots, and night  lights shaped like the Madonna at Le Comptoir Emmaus, a multistory cross between a thrift store and Ali Baba’s cavern.

Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac anchors Dufferin Terrace. 


A sidewalk café evokes the Old World.

Climbing the town’s hills burns calories, so I feel no guilt about reserving a table at L’Initiale, Panache, the Saint Amour, or one of the other restaurants where chefs work with continental French traditions but stock their pantries with ingredients from the local terroir. To see, smell, and purchase the best of these-including ice cider from the Eastern Townships, Paillasson cheese from the Ile d’Orleans, and blueberry honey from Charlevoix-I browse the indoor stalls of the Marche du Vieux-Port. Sampling the microbrewed ales, lagers, and stouts at Le Sacrilege bar requires some belt-loosening, as does ordering the churros at Le Cercle, an alternative music venue in the newly thriving St.Roch district.

I like to end the night at the Farimont Le Chateau Frontenac’s oak-paneled bar, sipping my cocktail of choice, a Pierre-Elliot Trudeau (an effective combination of vodka, triple sec, and Campari). Through windows topped by stained-glass ships, I gaze over the riverfront where the history of New France began.
My Quebec City, after all, brings me the best of both worlds, old and new.

Quebec city’s ramparts are the most complete fortified city walls remaining in the Americas north of Mexico.
Taras Grescoe’s lates book is straphanger: Saving Our Cities and Ourselves From the Automobile.
Go to intelligenttravel. Nationalgeographic.com for “I heart my city” posts.

Removing Dusk at Tanah Lot

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Spend everyday on vacation on the island of Bali is fun. Start with greet morning enjoy the sunrise so eagerly anticipated, especially relaxing on the beach. However, waiting for the night, do not forget the red seems herflushed sunset at Tanah Lot.

 
By Ayu Sulistyowati, executive summar by darmansjah

Together Kecak dance set in twilight red as the sun sets in the Pura Tanah Lot, Beraban village, Tabanan regency, Bali, vacation unforgettable.

Pura Tanah Lotis a leading tourist attraction after the Kuta Beachin Badung regency. Second distance travelers favorite location was not too far away, about 30 minutes to an hour by bus or rental car. Therefore, they could be an option to pick up dinner.

Well, the choice he exclaimed, sunset at Tanah Lot can get the beach or charm Pura Tanah Lot stands on a rock. Waves and Kecak dance songs to perfection landscapes.

Ticket prices vary between domestic and foreign travelers. Tike domestic for adults and children sold US$ 1.5 per person and US$ 1.0 per child. While foreign tourist US $ 3.5 per person and US $ 1.4 per child. If you want to enjoy the Kecak dance, all the tourists were priced the same, US $ 5.5 per person, with curtain time at 17:30 local time.

After purchasing tickets, visitors must walk through paths available. Souvenir shops, clothes that read 'I Love Bali', coconut ice and drinks are available along the route. But remember, the visitors were expected to keep their participation. The call over the loudspeaker will be reminded every hour.

However the region is actually the leading worship for Hindus. Tanah Lot area of ​​about 36 acres (3,600 square meters) with six temple (place of prayer). Ostensibly the sequence from the southeast to the west is Tahah Lot temple, Pura Enjung Galuh, Pura Jro Kandang, Pura Batu Bolong, Pura Batu Mejan, and Pura Pekedungan.

Pura Tanah Lot stands on a large rock. Berates-hundred years the waves hit, but the temple was still standing. Yet in 1976 and 2001, the local government to build a breakwater to withstand the waves so as not to erode the rock temple. If the tides, people who want to pray to a Hindu Pura Tanah Lot must be crossed by canoe and high otherwise they could walk her through the water at about 0.5 meters.

However, local people believe, pretending it still will stand forever. Condition, they agreed never to forget Sang Hyang Widi to pray and hold appropriate ceremonies Balinese calendar.

Another temple scenery is equally interesting, as Pura Batu Bolong. Pura is also similar, standing on a large rock, but elongated and perforated them. Regular visitors are expected to respect the places of worship.

Pray
 
Early September, visitors are not allowed into the temple area and the door remains closed.
They were allowed to enter only the visitors whose purpose is specifically praying.

Every day, visitors can reach more than 1,000 people ranging from counter opening hours 07:00 to close at 19:00. However, if the school holidays or the holiday season in some countries, visitors to 10,000 people per day.

Having said that, comfort continue to be addressed. This year, managers improve several sections of the track.

The 15th century
 
Tanah Lot has a story.
Around the 15th century, Bhagawancame anamedDangHyangDwiJendra. He wants to spread the teachings of Hinduism. However, some residents oppose the moment. Dwi Jendra then meditated upon the removal of a large rock into the sea (named  Tengah Lod) and protect themselves by spreading snake.

Finally, people who oppose even recognize his power and want to follow his teachings. Dwi Jendra Before leaving, he left the dagger named Ki Baru Gajah placed Pura Luhur  Pakedungan. On the feast of Hari Raya Kuningan (10 days After Galungan), local residents held a memorial service at the temple by walking around the temple. It is located about 300 meters from the Pura Tanah Lot.

One more thing, if forgotten or do not pick the photo camera, at least 200 people who worked as a photographer ready to capture the moment vacation in Tanah Lot. Only pay U.S. $ 2.5, visitors can immediately take home background photo Pura Tanah Lot complete with frame paper with Tanah Lot. Want to stay or eat just enjoying the view, there is also surrounding the inn and restaurant. Complete vacation!.



So why hesitate .... Let's appreciate and enjoy nature island of Bali at Tanah Lot Tabanan with tasting cakes, green and black klepon of sticky rice. Then flushed any hue-hue adorn the ceiling around pretending. Tanah Lot, beautiful ....!

TOKYO RAMEN

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Local Flavor Tokyo’s Hot Noodle Dish. Comfort in a Bowl of Ramen Soup

by Daisuke Utagawa, Executive summary by darmansjah

prepairing ramen at Inoue

WHEN SOMEONEmentions ramen, you probably think of those store bought dried noodles you bring to life with boiling water and a packet of spices. In Tokyo, ramen noodle soup is not fast food; it’s an art form. Complexly flavored, the perfect bowl of ramen combines clear broth with wheat noodles, slices of roasted pork, seasoned bamboo shoots, and chopped green onions. This aromatic stock-meat, vegetable, or seafood-contains up to 40 ingredients and is simmered for hours. The noodles, from thin to wavy, are aged for up to ten days in a cool place to achieve their peak flavor and textures.

It’s thought that missionaries brought ramen from china to Japan in the 17th century. But it wasn’t until 1910 that Japan’s first ramen shop-Rairaiken-opened in Tokyo’s Asakusa district, an area of merchants and artisans. It served simple Chinese noodle soup modified with traditional Japanese ingredients-dried fish, seaweed, and soy sauce. Today, the nation boasts more than 30 regional varieties of ramen, and nearly 4,000 places sell it in Tokyo alone. The dining routine never varies: Wait in line, order, squeeze into a seat, and slurp quickly so the next person can take your place.

In Tokyo, locals line up at Inoue’s outdoor stand near Tsukiji Market for classic shoyu (soy-based ramen), its golden noodles nestled in auburn broth and topped with pork and bamboo shoots. Sixty-year-old Raishuken, in Asakusa, adds wonton-men to its menu, silky dumplings floating over traditional ramen. In a narrow alley in Jinbochou, the tiny Saubchan serves hanchan, the ultimate ramen and fried rice combo.
Note : the noodles is one package of instant ramen would stretch the length of two tennis court.

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