Thursday, December 21, 2006

Surprise Canyon


Whoever named Surprise Canyon got it right. Mere miles from bone-dry Death Valley, the canyon cradles two unexpected jewels: a gushing mountain stream and what's left of a once-bustling silver-mining town.

These treasures have attracted visitors for decades — and now they're at the heart of a legal battle between off-road drivers and environmentalists.

Five years ago, environmentalists successfully sued to get the narrow canyon and its spring-fed waterfalls closed to vehicles, arguing that the federal Bureau of Land Management was not carrying out its duty to protect the land.

In response, more than 80 off-roaders purchased tiny pockets of private land at the top of the canyon, and now they are suing the federal government for access to their property, arguing that the canyon is a public right of way.

It is one of several recent cases that could unlock thousands of miles of roads in federally protected parks around the West.

Courtesy: Gillian Flaccus & Heidi Walton, AP

Thursday, December 14, 2006

Happy 107th Audubon


Grab the binoculars, the bird identification guide, and head for the fields — it's time to brush up on birding.

The 107th annual Christmas Bird Count begins Dec. 14. The Audubon Society's oldest ongoing tradition continues through Jan. 5.

Never participated in a bird count event before? Check out last year's summary issue of American Birds at www.audubon.org/bird/cbc/106thSummary.html for a glimpse of what goes on, or up, at one of these group wildlife outings.

The birding wildlife tradition that began Christmas Day 1900 with 27 participants and 90 bird species sightings now has a following of 50,000 observers, according to the Audubon Society. This conservation tradition grew out of the 19th century holiday practice of side hunting, where guests competed to shoot and bag the largest feathered quarry.

Courtesy: Christine S. Diamond, The Lufkin Daily News

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

South Africa "On The Ball" For 2010


South Africa is on track, if not ahead of schedule, in its preparations for hosting the 2010 Fifa World Cup, according to local organising committee CEO Danny Jordaan.

Briefing journalists in Johannesburg on Wednesday along with committee chairperson Irvin Khoza, Jordaan said that planning, environmental impact assessments, contracts, legal issues and matters of compliance with Fifa standards would all be sorted out by the end of 2006, and that the "operational phase" would begin in 2007.

"In the current phase we are dealing with the contracts of host cities, stadiums and companies," Jordaan said. "We are also dealing with legal issues."

South Africa was ahead of where Germany was at a comparative stage, Jordaan said, adding: "We are ahead of the schedule between us and Fifa and they are happy with our progress."

Plans for 10 stadiums in the nine host cities, and their funding, had been completed, Jordaan said,

Courtesy: SouthAfrica.info reporter

No Problemo


La Manzanilla isn't fancy, not even close, despite a growing number of handsome architect-designed rentals and a smattering of new galerias. There are no resorts, no sports bars, no souvenir shops, no time-share pitches, no prepackaged special deals. Regulars, who urge others to keep this pretty hideout secret, pack pesos: There are no banks, no bank machines, no plastic, no traveler's checks.

What you get for those pesos -- and you won't need many -- are friendly townsfolk used to mingling with gringos, a dreamy sweep of beach backed up to tropical jungle, and time, the kind of soak-in time that untangles thoughts, unknots muscles and transforms foot-tapping Type A's into Type Z's, full on empty.

Courtesy: M.L. Lyke, Washington Post

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Thermometer Capital Of The World


Richard Porter loves thermometers. The former junior high science teacher's passion was ignited as he fixed the instruments broken by students. He began collecting them, starting with the piece that had hung for years outside his uncle's New Hampshire gas station. Before his daughter died from a brain tumor in 1990, she made a plea: "She said, 'Dad, do something with your collection,' " Porter recalled.

His answer was to open the Porter Thermometer Museum in the basement of his Onset house. Now the world's largest -- and only -- thermometer museum welcomes visitors every day Porter is home. Porter, meanwhile, has assumed the identity of Thermometer Man, and his collection is listed in Guinness World Records as the world's largest.













Courtesy: Kathleen Burge, Boston Globe Staff
Photos: www.plymouth.wickedlocal.com

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Port to Port


Remember the old stories of adventurers who would hop a cargo ship to get to an exotic port of call, traveling like a sailor or Merchant Marine? Well, the good news is that it’s still possible to do.

Now you can travel from one port to another or around the world by freighter. It’s relatively inexpensive (compared to other cruise ships) and easy to do as more and more freighter companies come on board to offer passenger service.

Courtesy: R.F. Ahern, "The Freighterman"
Photo: www.freightercruises.com

Iceboating


Skimming along on your back a few inches above the ice, even 25 miles per hour seems fast. The shore rushes toward you with startling speed, and when you turn to tack, the sail's boom threatens to scrape your face as the sail switches from one side of the boat to the other.

One of the many challenges in iceboating — sailing on frozen lakes with boats that speed on metal runners — is finding the right conditions.

Not only do racers need enough wind to fill their sails, but they also need a nice, big sheet of ice frozen to a safe level of thickness but without a layer of a snow that would bog down the runners.

That's why top iceboaters are willing to haul themselves and their boats across the country — and the world — to Minnesota on the first weekend of every December, when conditions are usually right somewhere in the state for the Great Western Challenge, the kickoff of the iceboating season.


Courtesy: Richard Chin, Pioneer Press

Airport Travel Tips


New York OK, you were smart when you made plans to fly during one of the busiest travel times of the year.
You printed your boarding pass at home, figured out where you were going to park (or how you were going to get to the airport), threw all your liquids in a clear plastic bag and wore socks so you wouldn’t be walking barefoot through security (can you say germs?). You even purchased bright green luggage with a yellow stripe.

Then you get to the airport — three hours ahead of a time — and everything goes wrong: long lines, delays, cancellations, a missed flight.

Sure, you can yell at the ticket agent, fume that someone doesn’t know how to work the kiosk or had no idea there was a liquid ban.

But those probably aren’t the best approaches.

How can you keep from losing your cool at the airport? asap spoke to airline experts about how to overcome a travel nightmare.

Courtesy: CantonRep.com

Coldwater Surfing


Peter Mel was visiting Alaska's Aleutian Islands last winter when he spotted the perfect wave. So he pulled on his wet suit, waxed his board and went surfing. "It was awesome. Frigid but awesome," says the professional surfer from Santa Cruz, Calif.

Mel is part of a growing subculture of coldwater surfers who hit the waves when most people dare not leave the house. "There are definitely a lot more people doing it now," says Peter (Pan) Panagiotis, a Rhode Islander who regularly braves New England's 32-degree winter waters. They're drawn by bigger waves, sparser crowds and improved wet-suit technology that makes off-season boarding less bone-chilling.

Courtesy: Paul Tolme, Newsweek

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

The Hotel Wi-Fi Ripoff

These days, a business hotel without wi-fi is as inconceivable as one without electricity. But should we be paying for its, asks Mark Frary
In the past week alone, I have spent £41 on wireless internet access in hotels across the world. At the Observatory Hotel in Sydney, I paid A$39.95 (£16) for a day’s access while at Taj’s Blue hotel, across the city, I paid A$24.95 (£10).

After heading to San Francisco, I sneakily connected to someone’s private wireless network for free for a day. Moving to eastern California, I then paid US$9.95 (£5) a day at both the Tenaya Lodge in Yosemite and the Village at Mammoth.

Although I don’t travel as much as this every week of the year, the prospect of an internet access bill running into hundreds and possibly thousands of pounds by the end of the year is scary. As a result, the excitement I experience when I find a wireless network with a strong signal that is unencrypted is second to none these days.

The thing is, the rates I have been paying these past few days – except perhaps the first - are not particularly exorbitant. US hotels, in particular, are far ahead of the UK in providing cheap, broadband internet access – in some cases free. For example, America’s Kimpton Hotels chain makes a point of not charging for access and is committed to providing wireless access throughout its hotels and not just in the common areas.

Many UK hoteliers seem to have cottoned on to the idea that internet charges are the new phone charges, a great way of ripping off hotel guests. In its 2007 edition, The Good Hotel Guide slammed wi-fi charges in Britain’s hotels, citing some places that charge £5 an hour for access.

Among Britain’s business hotel chains, Radisson SAS and Britannia both offer free internet access to guests. Many Best Western properties are also free. At the other end of the scale are chains like Marriott and Hilton, which charge £15 a day.

One of the big problems for travellers visiting a number of destinations, such as people in sales and those involved in marketing roadshows, is that there’s very little in the way of roaming. You can sign up to global internet roaming schemes such as Tempest Telecom’s Unlimited WiFi+ Plan, but it’s fairly expensive and individual hotels often are not signed up, preferring instead to set up their own networks and charge what they like for access.

Hoteliers argue that providing internet access is expensive. Certainly, wiring up a hotel with hundreds of rooms with broadband can be a costly exercise but wireless technology has brought down the cost of implementing a hotel-wide internet access solution. However, anyone who has set up a wireless network in their own home will be aware of the problems in getting good coverage. Despite giving a theoretical maximum range of 100 metres, the typical wireless access point blankets an area considerably smaller than that because of a building’s construction and interference from other devices that use the same part of the radio spectrum, such as microwave ovens, cordless phones and Bluetooth gadgets.

Imagine trying to do that in a hotel with hundreds of guests trying to connect from hundreds of rooms. A £30 wireless access point from PC World is just not going to be sufficient – coverage will be patchy and connection slow. There’s also the question of security. The basic security provided by cheap routers will not be enough.

Typically, hotels have to use several industrial-strength access points. Still, you are looking at an investment of perhaps a few thousand pounds at most. Hotel investment of that scale is small potatoes so it’s hard to see how rates of £15 a day per guest are justified. The reason hotels are able to do it is because business travellers are a captive audience. Many travellers need to be able to access their corporate email and hotels will be aware that it is usually a guest’s company which is picking up the bill rather than the guest themselves, which keeps rates artificially high.

But should we really be pushing for free wireless? Some cynics might argue that you don’t get something for nothing and that the hotel chains that offer free wireless have simply bumped up their rates by the same amount as those that charge to cover the extra cost. Although hotel rates tend not to rise immediately after the introduction of free wi-fi, there’s nothing to stop rates creeping up at a later date. Yet there is evidence that an increasing number of hotels are offering wi-fi as the loss leader to attract business.

These days, a business hotel without wi-fi is as inconceivable as one without electricity. I don’t recall ever paying a hotel bill with a line setting out an electricity charge although maybe this was the case when electricity first started being piped into hotels. If so, perhaps wi-fi charges will disappear one day, too.

Courtesy: Times Online www.timesonline.co.uk

Family Safaris


We took the photos home in our cameras, but we took the people home in our hearts.”

Lynne Leakey, a Silver Badge Naturalist Guide with the Kenya Professional Safari Guides Association (KPSGA) is accustomed to hearing sentiments like these from visitors during the 30 years she has been escorting safaris throughout Africa.

“I do a lot of multi-generational tours,” Leakey says. “Just to see grandparents having time with their children and grandchildren without distractions, those things that keep families from interacting like IPods and cell phones, is very rewarding.

"I see families on these safaris when everything is put aside and time is given to evolve with each other and with the amazing animals as a background and just enjoy the fun of a safari.”

Monday, December 04, 2006

Ecotourism


The local Maasai community has set aside the Selenkay Conservation Area as a reserve for wildlife and in return is receiving an income from tourism activities. This is used to fund community projects such as schools and water supplies. Employment opportunities have also been provided for the local Maasai people as game rangers, trackers, and camp staff. Apart from the management couple and Head Cook, all other staff in the camp and Conservation Area are members of the local community. The 70 kms of roads in the Conservation Area were constructed using local labour so that members of the community gained employment. As a result of the establishment of the Conservation Area, wildlife numbers have recovered significantly in recent years.

Elephants are now seen frequently after an absence of nearly 20 years. Selenkay Conservation Area lies in the heart of Maasailand, well off the beaten track, and has not been visited by tourists until very recently. The animals are truly wild and tend to behave more naturally than those in the parks, which are often habituated to the presence of vehicles.

Sunday, December 03, 2006

What's In A Name?


Most of us have a special affection for the city we grew up in. Even if we don't stay there, we end up liking it better than where we moved to.

I grew up in Albany, New York. We call ourselves "All banians". Not "Al-banians" like in the Country, Albania.

There's another city named "Albany" in Georgia. There are a lot of repetitions in city names in the United States. It must be confusing for the post office: Columbia South Carolina, Columbia, Missouri, Columbus, Georgia, Columbus, Ohio. There's a Lafayette Indiana and another in Louisiana. Portland, Maine, Portland Oregon. Rochester, New York, Rochester, Minnesota. Charleston, West Virginia, Charleston, South Carolina.

Story & Photo Courtesy: Andy Rooney, CBS 60 Minutes

To Go Or NOT To Go


There are many beautiful places to see in this big world, but touring these breathtaking locations may carry a dangerous price tag.

Journalist Brad Will died in Oaxaca, Mexico on October 27, 2006. He was filming a documentary of the area and people, where the violence is at an all time high. Will was unfortunately shot and killed while filming. His story was recently told at a lecture/documentary presentation held at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts.

'Public announcements: These are temporary notices meant to let travelers know about ''terrorist threats and other relatively short-term conditions that pose significant risks or disruptions to Americans.''
This is where State told people to expect massive crowds in Germany during the recent World Cup, but also where it advises U.S. citizens to ''avoid travel'' altogether to Mexico's Oaxaca City, where a labor revolt has killed at least nine people in recent months.'

Photo Courtesy: Chapman Miller
Story Courtesy: Steve Hendrix, The Washington Post