Saturday, December 31, 2011

Plan a fascinating vacation to Vietnam

Posted on Tuesday 25 October 2011 in Vietnam

Vietnam is a great place to spend a vacation - Vietnam Travel News Indian travelers who have an interest in planning a unique and exotic vacation should consider looking into Vietnam. This gorgeous destination has much to offer tourists, including beautiful scenery, fun outdoor activities and culturally important attractions. While there are many different locations around the world where one can experience these things, Vietnam may be especially attractive to individuals who do not wish to leave Asia on their next getaway.
The San Francisco Chronicle reports that Vietnam is rapidly developing a large tourist base. Although the country was not popular among international travelers until recently, things are changing in this Southeast Asian country. Over the next few years, individuals employed in Vietnam's tourism industry expect the nation to become a hotspot for international travelers looking to experience something new and unusual on their exotic getaways.
Individuals who wish to plan a trip to Vietnam should consider exploring the northern region of the country. Although this part of the nation was rarely visited by tourists, a movement is underway to attract travelers to its beautiful white sand beaches and lush, green jungles. VietnameOnline.com, a website that provides a wealth of information on travel in the country, recently released a guide to north Vietnam that would-be vacationers may find helpful.
According to the travel website, Lao Cai is a fantastic place for tourists to visit. In particular, Sapa, a scenic hillside town located in this province, is a must-see for its delicious restaurants, numerous shopping opportunities and upscale hotels. Individuals who wish to experience local culture and history while visiting Vietnam are sure to enjoy exploring Sapa as well, as it has a strong French influence left over from the days when the country was a colonial asset to France.
Ha Giang is another area in north Vietnam that travelers are sure to want to visit. This province has been relatively untouched by industrialization or modernity, leaving it with plenty of natural beauty for tourists to enjoy. There, travelers can enjoy a meal with a local family at an inn or go for a refreshing hike through the jungle.
On the other hand, travelers who wish to experience northern Vietnam like the locals do may want to visit Hoa Binh, a province known for its many festivals, food-related events and entertaining attractions. When deciding on lodging accommodations, individuals may want to consider a home stay, as living with the locals is sure to add a whole other level to one's travel experience.
Other locations in north Vietnam that Indian tourists may enjoy include Mai Chau, Dien Bien Phu and Hanoi. 

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Something New at SeaWorld

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — SeaWorld Orlando on Tuesday announced the most ambitious expansion in the nearly 40-year history of the theme park, including a sea turtle exhibit with a domed 3-D theater and an immersive penguin experience that promises to drop guests down in the middle of frigid Antarctica.
"TurtleTrek," with huge tanks of live sea turtles and manatees, will feature a first-of-its-kind domed theater with computer-generated 3-D images that will "put guests under water with the animals into an amazing journey into their lives," park president Terry Prather said.
The turtle exhibit will open sometime in the spring of next year along with a new area called "Freshwater Oasis" at SeaWorld's adjacent swim-with-the-dolphins boutique park, Discovery Cove. That attraction will put people in a clear spring under a rainforest-type canopy of trees to swim alongside Asian otters and marmosets.
In spring 2013, SeaWorld will open "Antarctica — Empire of the Penguin," which officials said is the largest single expansion project ever undertaken at the Orlando park. An artist's rendering shows an entire section of shops and restaurants with an interactive ride at its center, somewhat similar to the wildly successful Harry Potter attraction at Universal Orlando. Parts of the experience will also include a radical temperature change, which will undoubtedly be welcomed by those visiting in the steamy heat of Florida summer.
"This will be the coldest attraction ever constructed," promised Brian Morrow, the park's chief designer.
Prather would not provide a cost estimate for the projects, which are unique to the Orlando park and won't be added at SeaWorld's parks in San Antonio and San Diego. He said there are no immediate plans for a corresponding increase in admission prices. Following the lead of Walt Disney World and Universal, SeaWorld in September added $2 onto the price of a single-day admission ticket, bringing it to $81.99.
The changes at SeaWorld were announced as attendance at central Florida theme parks continues to improve after suffering in a lingering recession and specter of a BP oil spill that kept visitors away from Florida in 2010.
Dennis Speigel, a Cincinnati-based theme park consultant, characterized SeaWorld's expansion plans as "a big move on their part. It follows suit with what Universal did with Harry Potter and what Disney is doing with some of their properties. I think it was needed, and I think it's very timely for SeaWorld Orlando."
Construction is under way on the turtle exhibit and new Discovery Cove attraction. Work on the Antarctica section will begin soon on the site of a current penguin attraction, which will close at some point. Park officials said there will be other opportunities for guests to see penguins while the park is between exhibits.
SeaWorld debuted its first new themed Shamu show in five years in April, a little more than a year after a killer whale dragged a trainer to her death in the tank. The park is spending tens of millions of dollars on new safety features in preparation for trainers to eventually work with the animals in the water again.

Monday, October 3, 2011

Theme park 'super sizes' its coaster seats for overweight riders

Responding to an increase in its customers' girth, a popular British theme park is accommodating overweight riders with two larger seats on its Nemesis Inferno rollercoaster.
By Craig T. Mathew, Mathew Imaging
"The reality is we are super sizing - that's a fact we're embracing," Thorpe Park's Mike Vallis told the Daily Mail. "Why shouldn't people be comfortable when they are enjoying a day out with their friends or family?"
The Surrey park - in the news earlier for white-knuckle experiences of the paranormal variety - plans to roll out the bigger seats on other rides as well.
Of course, the U.K. isn't the only place where theme park guests "of size" have had a tough time squeezing into too-tight quarters.
Here in the Home of the Big Mac, "I don't think it's as much an issue of changing seats on old rides as it is designing new rides to accommodate people of larger size," says Robert Niles of ThemeParkInsider.com. "Every new coaster I've seen in the past several years either has special seats or rows for larger riders, or extension options so that the restraints can hold larger riders. "
"Lack of accommodation for larger riders is another factor that parks consider when deciding which rides to close," adds Niles. "A ride that can't handle (them) comfortably would have to be very popular to be worth renovating. Otherwise, that lack of accommodation becomes another excuse for the park to junk that ride and invest instead in building something new."
That said, some "pudgy muggles" trying to board the signature attraction at Universal Studios' Wizarding World of Harry Potter theme park in Orlando have been turned away because of their size. "Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey" uses restraints to keep riders in their seats, and they aren't large enough to accommodate heavier guests.
"The very blunt truth is that for overweight patrons, it makes sense to review the park's guidelines and ride restrictions before buying tickets," notes The Fat Girl's Guide to Amusement Parks.
Readers, weigh in: Have you ever been turned away from a ride because you were too big to fit?

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Crazy Items Confiscated at Customs

by Terry Ward Subscribe to Terry Ward's postsPosted Nov 22nd 2010 01:57 PM
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Sakchai Lalit, AP
Your palms may sweat a bit when you get to the front of the customs line, knowing you have one bottle of wine too many in your luggage. But that's nothing compared to what some travelers try to get away with. Think bear paws, live snakes, exotic animals, and some creatively packaged drugs.

Read on for a list of the craziest contraband confiscated by customs agents around the world.





10. Shoes Stuffed with Heroin
Drug smugglers might be a scheming bunch, but that doesn't mean they always use their brains. In October 2010, a 32-year-old U.S. citizen and her younger brother were busted with some serious contraband when disembarking from Royal Caribbean's Serenade of the Seas cruise ship in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Custom agents pegged the duo for a secondary screening process as they were leaving the boat, and when the woman's luggage was opened they found some pretty unlikely contents -- 15 pairs of 1980s-style men's shoes. The fact that such unusual items were being carried by a woman raised suspicions that led to the discovery of over six kilograms of heroin, worth $324,000, which had been duct taped inside the shoes.

9. Human Skulls
They would have made for some very creepy Halloween decorations, but the six human skulls confiscated in September 2010 from the luggage of two American tourists at the Athens International Airport in Greece never left their country of origin. Greek police charged the tourists, who had purchased the skulls at a souvenir shop on the island of Mykonos and thought they were fake, with desecrating the dead. The skulls were found during an airport scanner check when the Americans were on a layover at the Athens airport. A police official speaking anonymously said that a coroner had confirmed that the skulls were human.

8. Tiger Cub
He was even cuter and fuzzier than his poly fill brethren. The roughly three-month-old tiger cub that was found sedated and hidden among stuffed animal tigers inside a woman's luggage at Bangkok International Airport was discovered when the oversize suitcase went through an X-ray machine. Airport officials saw what appeared to be a live animal inside the bag and took it aside for further inspection, according to wildlife trade monitoring group TRAFFIC. The suitcase's owner was bound for Iran where, according to officials, the tiger cub could have brought in more than $3,000 on the black market. The cub was sent to a wildlife conservation center instead, and the woman faces wildlife smuggling charges and fines.

7. Fake $100,000 Bills
In 2009, a passenger arriving at New York's John F. Kennedy Airport from Seoul, South Korea, had two counterfeit $100,000 bills confiscated from him before he could embark on what could have been one very ambitious shopping spree. Back in 1934, rare $100,000 bills were produced to be circulated between the U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve Banks. But the bills never made it into general circulation. Agents discovered the man's faux money during a luggage screening -- the passenger had marked on his customs form that he was entering the country with more than $10,000. He claimed to have found the bills in an old book belonging to his father. They were deemed to be counterfeit and turned over to the Secret Service.

6. Cocaine Cast
Rolling up to a security line with a cast on your leg can win you some sympathy and a spot at the front of the queue in some airports -- but it can also raise suspicions. In 2009, a Chilean passenger arriving from Santiago was busted at the airport in Barcelona, Spain when it was determined that the cast on his leg was made from cocaine instead of plaster. While the man really did have bone fractures, officials were investigating if his injuries had been done intentionally to ease trafficking through checkpoints. The proof was in the pudding when they decided to spray the cast with a chemical that turns bright blue when in contact with cocaine (it did). In addition to the illicit cast, the passenger also had on him six cans of beer and hollowed-out stools containing cocaine.

5. Bear Paws
Forget images of delicious bakery pastries studded with almonds. The bear paws that were confiscated in October 2010 from a man's luggage at Ho Chi Minh City Airport in Vietnam were the real furry deal. A scanner detected the paws (a dozen in total) inside the checked luggage of a Vietnamese man arriving from Hong Kong, according to reports. Bear paws are stewed as part of Vietnamese bear paw soup, which is also considered a delicacy dish in Cambodia, China and elsewhere in Asia.

4. Snakes and Lizards
And you thought snakes on planes were bad? Imagine being the bold would-be smuggler who taped some 14 snakes and ten lizards onto his body in an attempt to sneak the reptiles into Norway in 2009, after arriving in the country by ferry from Denmark. Granted, the snakes were non-venomous king pythons -- and the creatures were rolled up in socks and taped onto the man's torso. The lizards (albino leopard geckos) were hidden in boxes that were strapped to the man's legs. Perhaps the wackiest part of the whole thing is that it wasn't the snakes that betrayed the man's intentions to officials -- a tarantula spotted in his luggage is what led to the full body search that revealed the whole slithering affair. A customs official was quoted as saying that they "quickly realized the man was smuggling animals, because his whole body was in constant motion." Creepy crawly, indeed.

3. Bonytongue Fish
An airline losing your luggage is never a good thing. But for one would-be wildlife smuggler, it was definitely a worst-case scenario. Chee Thye Chaw from Queens was arrested in 2009 after officials at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York determined that he was trying to bring 16 bonytongues (an endangered fish species) into the country. Chaw was returning from Malaysia, but his baggage did not show up at the claim in New York. The next day, a customs agent performing random checks on lost baggage discovered 16 fish packed in individual plastic bags cushioned with Styrofoam inside the luggage. Chaw claimed to have no intention of selling the fish, which are considered good luck charms in Asian cultures and sell for between $5,000 and $10,000 apiece.

2. Rhinoceros Horns
Ireland is one of the last places you'd expect to find bits of safari animals. But over the course of several weeks in late 2009 and 2010, three Irish passengers were busted at Shannon Airport when ten rhinoceros horns, including six from the endangered white rhino and four from black rhinos, also considered critically endangered, were discovered in their suitcases. The value of the horns was placed at roughly 500,000 Euros, or close to $678,000. Rhino horns are often ground down and used as a prized ingredient in Chinese medicine. According to a report on a National Geographic blog, the illegal rhino horn trade "is responsible for decimating the world's rhino population by more than 90 percent over the past 40 years."

1. Snake Wine
For many oenophiles, a glass of snake wine might not have quite the appeal of, say, Sauvignon Blanc. But in Southeast Asian countries, a whole snake soaking in alcohol is a specialty unto itself -- which isn't to say that it's welcome across international borders. For Miami customs officials, it was just another day at the office in May 2009 when a routine inspection revealed a cobra and other poisonous snakes packed into a jar of liquid that had arrived inside an express mail package from Thailand. The package was bound for an address in the Southeastern United States. In certain cultures, poisonous snakes are dissolved in alcohol to bring the poison out. The liquid is then used for medicinal purposes.

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Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Two thirds of British cruisers ‘don’t trust’ female captains
Tuesday, September 06, 2011


A newly launched cruise website has conducted a study of British cruisers in a bid to discover their attitudes towards cruising staff onboard a ship. According to the study, 17% of the respondents ‘don’t trust’ their cruise ship Captain, 64% of which claimed they would lack trust in female Captains more so than males.

Αlmost two thirds, 64%, of British cruisers do not trust female cruise ship Captains, according to research conducted by a newly launched cruising website. The study of 1,238 British cruisers was carried out in a bid to discover their attitudes towards cruise ship staff, specifically the Captain of the ship.

bonvoyage.co.uk, the website behind the study, conducted the research in order to gain a stronger understanding of British cruisers and how they felt about certain aspects of cruising. bonvoyage.co.uk was created by the founders of online travel agency sunshine.co.uk.

Initially, the respondents to the study were asked ‘When on a cruise holiday, do you trust your Captain completely?’ to which the majority, 83%, said ‘yes’.

With an aim to investigate the topic further, the 17% of respondents who stated that they did not trust their cruise ship Captain were asked if they trusted female Captains less so than male Captains, or vice versa. Two thirds, 64%, said they did not trust female captains completely. 

Furthermore, of the 17% of respondents who admitted that they didn’t trust their cruise ship Captain, 36% said that they lacked trust in male Captains more so than females.

The 64% of respondents who admitted that they trusted male Captains more so then female Captains were asked why they felt less trust in female Captains. According to the research, 19% claimed they lacked trust in female Captains because women are ‘easily distracted’.

A further 21% of the respondents who cited that they had less trust in female Captains than males, said they felt that way because women had ‘less experience in the cruising industry’ than males.

Chris Brown, co-founder of bonvoyage.co.uk, spoke about the launch: “It was interesting to see that 17% of those we asked don’t trust their cruise ship Captain; however, their lack of trust cannot be too large as they still embarked on a cruise and I would assume that they enjoyed it.  It was surprising to see that the gender of the Captain can influence their trust levels; both male and female Captains would have had to endure the same training process thus meaning they are equally as qualified.”

He continued, “We are extremely excited about the launch of bonvoyage.co.uk and we feel confident that the site will be as successful as sunshine.co.uk. The research we have conducted for sunshine.co.uk has proved to be extremely beneficial, as it has allowed us to get a better understanding of our customers. With this in mind, we are very excited to get to know British cruisers even better.”

Sunday, August 28, 2011

D.C. Dispatch: Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Opens

Washington-DC-MLK-memorial.jpgForty-eight years after the famous "I Have a Dream" Speech, the much-anticipated Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial opens this Saturday, August 28th. After Saturday's ceremony, the first memorial on the Mall to a non-president will open to the public. Expect some lines in the coming months.
Start with our Washington, D.C. Travel Guide; you can learn more about the site with our Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial review.
Inspired to learn more about the African American influence on the Washington, D.C.? Also see our Black History Walk

Add the New Memorial to Your Monumental Stroll

Start at the unmissable Washington Monument, just south of the The White House. The elegant obelisk built in memory of George Washington dominates the skyline. If you want to go to the top, go early to the nearby visitor center to reserve free timed tickets. To the west, see the World War II Memorial and continue along the Reflecting Pool, with the imposing Lincoln Memorial dominating the view ahead of you. Look for the plaque marking where Dr. King stood for his famous "I Have a Dream" speech at the Lincoln Memorial, before visiting the newly opened Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial.
On either side of the Lincoln Memorial are the Korean War Memorial and Vietnam Veterans Memorial and Constitution Gardens. Also make time to visit the Tidal Basin, home to the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial and Thomas Jefferson Memorial.
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Photo Credits: Memorial courtesy Johnny Bivera / Washington, DC Martin Luther King, Jr. National Memorial Project Foundation, Inc.