Patriotic Atmosphere Of Chihuahua

Posted by Mutual-Funds | Hotel Review | Tuesday 14 July 2009 10:55 pm

Overlooked for long as an important destination, Chihuahua City (?Chi ? Wau ?Wah?) occupies almost 13 percent of Mexico?s total land space. However, it is a very important historical center, its atmosphere having a truly, deeply patriotic air about it. Moreover, a tour of Mexico without including the colonial heritage of Chihuahua would be somewhat incomplete. The colonial center boasts of striking colonial buildings, mansions and palaces along with attractive museums. In addition, there are attractions such as former houses of two of Mexico?s most famous leaders worth a look.

Chihuahua City has many areas, which are ideal for adventure and eco tourism, and the areas are of exceptional natural beauty. Another chief attraction is the famous breath-taking Copper Canyon train ride. The genuine Mexican feel and friendly atmosphere with the city?s historical significance and range of fine attractions make Chihuahua a must on Mexico?s map of tourist attractions. A stay here for 2 or 3 nights in some of the very best of Mexico hotels will help you discover the true hidden pearls of Mexico?s fine colonial heritage.

Amongst other key attractions is the City Cathedral, which overlooks the main plaza and is quite a dazzling structure. This is Mexico?s cowboy country so people fond of cowboy country can look forward to visiting many ranches around the outskirts of the city. The quaint avenue (Paseo de Simon Bolivar) of Simon Bolivar creased with villas and mansions and a park is a place where you can head towards to spend some quiet, quality time to yourself.

http://www.stayresmexico.com/hotels-in-chihuahua/index.html

Cancun Mexico A Little Something For Everyone

Posted by Mutual-Funds | Hotel Review | Tuesday 14 July 2009 6:55 pm

A sleepy island area in the 1970s, Cancun has been transformed into a mega tourist destination. Located on the Caribbean side of Mexico, this resort area has something for everyone.

Cancun

Make no mistake, Cancun is a very tourist friendly destination. Located on the Yucatan peninsula, Cancun is populated with mega resorts and over 20,000 hotel rooms. The economy is based on tourism and the people go out of their way to show tourists a good time.

Cancun proper is actually two distinct areas. Cancun City is located on the mainland and Cancun Island is just off the coast. The island is the stuff of legend.

Cancun Island the classic example of Caribbean beach paradise. Incredibly blue water laps slowly onto insanely white beaches. Light breezes roll in off the water as you lounge on a beach chair and contemplate important things like what you will eat for lunch.

One of the slight downsides of Cancun involves beachfront hotels. They tend to be a bit possessive about the sand in front of them. Put another way, you better be staying at the hotel if you intend to plop down in front of it. Hey, it can?t all be great!

Getting To Cancun

As with any mega resort area, getting to Cancun is very easy. Most major airlines fly into Cancun City and the airport is very modern. You are required to have a passport and must fill out a tourist card at customs. The customs agents are easy going and I?ve never heard of anyone having any problems with them.

If you want to experience a beach vacation in Mexico, you can do worse than Cancun. You will not get much feel for the local culture, but you will definitely enjoy yourself.

Rick Chapo is with NomadJournals.com – makers of travel journals. Visit NomadJournalTrips.com to read more articles about travel Mexico and Adventure Travel.

Night In Satun

Posted by Mutual-Funds | Hotel Review | Tuesday 14 July 2009 2:55 pm

My Mercedes is waiting. The sun beams diffusely down through the moisture laden air causing beads of sweat to drip continuously on my already drenched t-shirt. I am going to Satun and the Mercedes is a classic well kept 1962 model. In fact there is a whole fleet of Mercedes waiting to take tourist to Satun from Hai Jai in Southern Thailand. They are all black with an exaggerated curved body indicative of automobiles of the late 50?s. And believe it or not, they still retain the comfort that Mercedes is famous for.

The year is 1998 and I am going to the Andaman Sea in the Straits of Malacca. There I will plant myself for two weeks on one of the many somewhat deserted islands that dot this reclusive part of the world. A world inhabited by pirates and honeymooners in the Koh Tarutao National Park system in the very south of Southern Thailand.

Which island I am going to, I don?t know, but I am not the only one. Sharing my taxi ride is a young couple in love from Germany and a family from Thailand, husband and wife with their 5 year old son.

It takes about twenty minutes for the taxi driver to stuff everyone?s belongings into the trunk. I have made substantial purchases of deliciously fresh dried fruits and filled my water container with pomegranate juice from one of the ?made for tourist? vendors surrounding the taxi. We squeeze into tightly together; the family and myself in the rear of the taxi and the couple from Germany in the front and prepare for a long and fascinating journey.

?Are you comfortable? the driver asks in broken English. I answer like an excited kid, ?Let?s get this rocket rolling.? My feelings were of excitement and anticipation and I don?t know why I said such a strange thing. No one else said anything and I felt as if my words were still echoing in the silence minutes later. But no matter, here I am in the middle of the world, on an adventure that relatively few have gone before.

The journey takes 3 hours of driving through exotic and undeveloped country side; incidentally through a warm and friendly Islamic side of Thailand. At one point we passed two foreigners on bicycles pedaling in racing uniforms. Later they caught up to us in some remote village on the way as we were stopping for refreshment. They came up next to our taxi and said with a heavy European accent ?hello?? I answered, ?Wow! I can?t believe this! What are you doing way out here in the middle of nowhere on bicycles??

The young man in his twenties answered, ?We are traveling around the world. We are on our way to Indonesia.? The other couple traveling in the taxi with me immediately took notice and a very long and interesting conversation ensues between all of us.

It turns out that the bicyclists are a married couple and the last county they pedaled through was Myanmar. After Indonesia, they planned to cycle the islands of Hawaii and then to Mainland USA.

To this day I still have dreams of that encounter and the miraculous and dangerous journey they were taking. I have never heard of them since and have no idea what became of them.

Before we know it, the taxi driver is honking his horn for us to return and we are saying our goodbyes to this marvelous couple. We pile into the taxi for the last leg of our journey. Looking out the window we pass fields of coconut palms, women balancing wood or foods in baskets on their heads wearing colorful loose clothing down to their feet. The homes we pass by are often made of palm frawns or a patchwork of wood and debris. And in the fields are men and women, young and old with their ox and children tilling vegetables in the same way at their ancestors have done for thousands of years.

Finally we reach Satun. I don?t know what to expect. The town is about two blocks long; a fishing village whose main street leads right to the ocean. There fishing boats made of old rotting lumber wait to take us to one of the many islands we will now select in the many makeshift tourist offices that line the street.

Each old rickety tourist office has pictures of the islands they offer and provide for a fee, the means to get their. And if you are uninformed, you will pay in advance for you accommodations. Something better to do when you arrive on the island. Occasionally an owner of one of these offices tries to get us inside by enticing us with words like ?beautiful, exotic, cheap?? We all walk down the main avenue looking and asking questions until each of us select our travel destination destiny.

I study all the pictures from all the offices of all the islands carefully and I choose Langkawi only 5 kilometers away from the southern tip of Tarutao Island. I pay the equivalent of approximately $7 for a round trip boat ticket and I am then led to one of the boats. The boat can fit about 4 people and sits low to the water. There is single engine propeller that is barely hangs attached to the rear of the craft. I wait about 15 minutes before we begin our three hour journey through rough and dangerous seas to the somewhat deserted and exotic island of Langkawi…

My days on the island with boa constrictors, pirates, a lost tribe of Islamic fishermen, my isolated beach cottage right on my own private beach, the couple isolated on the other side of the island studying esoteric Buddhism, the small exotic caf? serving daily fresh fish from the sea, the many tourist from Europe that came and went, lightening in the sky on a clear day and the marvelous skin diving in clear deep tropical sears are topics I will discuss in my next article. Stay turned.

Douglas Anchell writes travel articles for: http://www.all-reservations.com, http://www.world-accommodations.com and http://www.travelviva.com

Angola The Republic

Posted by Mutual-Funds | Hotel Review | Tuesday 14 July 2009 10:50 am

Angola: The Facts

  • Angola is a country that is located in the south west of Africa
  • Angola Borders the countries of Namibia, Zambia, and Congo. Angola also borders the Atlantic Ocean off the west coat and with a west coast along the Atlantic Ocean.
  • Angola has plenty of natural resources; the most common being oil and diamonds.
  • The capital city is Luanda, which is also the largest city
  • Official language is Portuguese
  • Total area – 1,246,700 km?
  • Population – 10,978,552 (ranked 71 in the world for size)
  • Angola is a former portuguese colony
  • Angola is divided into 18 provinces: 1 Bengo, Benguela, Bia, Cabinda, Cuando Cubango, Cuanza Norte, Cuanza Sul, Cunene, Huambo, Huila, Luanda, Lunda Norte, Lunda Sul, Malanje, Moxico, Namibe, Uige, Zaire
  • Angola has three main ethnic groups, each speaking a Bantu language: Ovimbundu 37%, Kimbundu 25%, and Bakongo 13%.
  • The great majority of the inhabitants are of Bantu stock with some admixture in the Congo district.
  • In the coast towns the majority of the white inhabitants are Portuguese.
  • The Mushi-Kongo and other divisions of the Ba-Kongo retain curious traces of the Christianity professed by them in the 16th and 17th centuries and possibly later.

Feel free to reprint this article as long as you keep the following caption and author biography in tact with all hyperlinks.

Ryan Fyfe is the owner and operator of Pixibot. Which is a great web directory and information center for information on all types of topics.

Travel Safety For Women: Hotel Room Key Cards Can Be A Threat

Posted by Mutual-Funds | Hotel Review | Tuesday 14 July 2009 6:50 am

Most of us have been issued and used a credit card type hotel room key when traveling. During checkout, the clerk will often ask if you have your key(s) to turn in or the hotel has a box or slot near the reception counter to drop them off. It saves the hotel a few cents being able to reuse the cards. No big deal, right? Maybe not for the hotel but the situation presents a real threat to your personal security.

Recently, Southern California law enforcement professionals assigned to detect new threats to personal security discovered what type of information is embedded in the credit card type of hotel room keys used throughout the industry. While the information recorded varies from hotel to hotel, the law enforcement officials found room entry cards containing the following information:

  • Customer?s (your) name
  • Customer?s partial address
  • Hotel room number
  • Check-in and check out date
  • Customer?s (your) credit card number and expiration date!

Generally, hotels do not erase your information on these room entry cards until an employee re-issues the card to the next guest and overwrites your information. This is what the hotels mean by recycling when you read ?Please turn in your hotel key cards as we recycle them.? Depending on a specific hotel?s procedures, any number of individuals could have access to the room entry card before your information is overwritten. A simple scanning device can pull your information off these cards?allowing someone to go shopping at your expense or worse.

Bottom line: keep your hotel entry card, take it home and then destroy it. Cutting the card up is the best method, being sure to cut the electronic information strip. Dropping a room entry card the trash whole is not a safe method?credit card and identity thieves have no problems rummaging through trash. Never leave room entry keys in your hotel room and don?t turn them into the front desk when you check out. Legally, the hotel cannot charge for the room card and you won?t be leaving behind valuable personal information that can be easily lifted with a card scanning device.

A graphic artist and writer with a marketing degree, Jennifer Johnson performs a wide variety of tasks for Women Traveling Together and other clients. Founded in 1997, Women Traveling Together is the perfect solution for women who want to travel but don?t want to travel alone. To learn more, visit: www.women-traveling.com

Kota Bahru Hotels: All Satisfying

Posted by Mutual-Funds | Hotel Review | Tuesday 14 July 2009 2:55 am

The state capital of Kelantan, Malaysia, Kota Bahru is full of wonderful sights, be it modern or ancient ones. Lively nightlife, fabulous shopping arcades, palatable cuisines and royal museums, all are available at the doorstep where you stay in Kota Bahru. With a traditional Malay Culture and modern architecture, this city looks like any of the east coast cities.

However you have variety of entertainment media available in the city which prolong your stay over here. Istana Batu, a royal museum comprises of many royal arts and artifacts that interest people a lot. Many evidences of Royal articles, structures and opulent jewels that belonged to former sultan are on display in this museum. For shopping you can head towards the New Central Market where all sort of items in their latest fashion and of daily uses are available. The palace Istana Balai Besar is something which attracts the crowd of visitor everyday. Kota Bahru is famous for handicrafts. You can buy many rare items from the village of Kampung Kraftangan. However, one more aspect without which all attractions of the city will hardly have any meaning is the place for staying.

Kota Bahru deserves appreciation for satisfying the visitors completely at this front too. Crystal Lodge Kota Bahru, Hotel Perdana, New Pacific Hotel and several others are part of the bunch of excellent accommodations in the city. Kota Bahru hotels are equipped with all sorts of amenities to provide you full relaxation.

For more information on Malaysia visit : http://www.stayresmalaysia.com

Niraj Singh is working as Sr. SEO in Binary Semantics Ltd. Gurgaon, India. He has 5 yrs. of experience in the field of Search Engine Optimisation. His expertise is in the travel domain make him specialist in the field of Websites related to Travels.