Saturday 16 March 2013

Top 10 - The World's Best Trips, Adventures, and Places


Looking for an extra ordinary summer vacation?
Then you are at the right place. Just check out these destinations handpicked by National Geographic Traveler editors

Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia

Photograph by Ted Wood, Getty Images
Nearly half of Mongolia’s three million residents are nomads, and most of the rest live in Ulaanbaatar—the country's capital and largest city. The cultural, economic, and transportation hub on the Tuul River is the starting point for two-humped Bactrian camel treks and other exotic Gobi desert expeditions, but its ten museums, close proximity to national parks, and collection of imperial palaces and Buddhist monasteries qualify Ulaanbaatar as a destination rather than way station.
Wander through the Narantuul, a 2,500-vendor, open-air market; visit Gandan Monastery—Mongolia’s largest functioning Buddhist monastery—and the adjoining Megjid Janraisig and Kalachakra Temples; and view Stone and Bronze Age artifacts, sacred relics, and fossilized dinosaur bones and eggs found in the Gobi at the National and Natural History Museums. During the July 11-13 National Holiday, Ulaanbaatar hosts the nation’s largest Naadam Festival, a legendary cultural celebration featuring wrestling, archery and cross-country horse racing competitions, plus traditional costumes and dance.
Pictured here: Huge golden Buddha at Gandan Monastery




Plitvice Lakes, Croatia

Photograph by Hans Madej, laif/Redux
Croatia's 1,104-mile (1,776-kilometer) island-speckled Adriatic coast is a popular playground for sea kayakers, sailors, kite surfers, and divers. Additional water wonders await those willing to travel inland (a four-hour bus ride from the coast) to the mountainous, eastern Plitvice Lakes region, site of Croatia’s first and largest national park.
Nature's color wheel is in constant motion at 114-square-mile (296-square-kilometer) Plitvice Lakes National Park (above) where 16 terraced lakes, formed by natural travertine dams, change hues throughout the day from bright turquoise to gray depending on the angle of the sun's rays and mineral makeup of the water. Well-maintained wooden boardwalks and trails link the lakes to the park’s centerpiece cascades, the largest of which—Big Waterfall—plummets 256 feet (78 meters) into the valley below. Home to abundant wildlife, including 261 species of birds, the walker-friendly park is divided into Upper and Lower Lakes sections bridged by the Lake Kozjak ferry.
                            


Sardinia, Italy

Photograph by Christina Anzenberger-Fink, Anzenberger Redux
Glitterati flock by the yachtful to Sardinia’s serpentine northern Gallura coast, where exclusive Porto Cervo and Costa Smeralda are two favorite summer playgrounds. While a winding coastal drive—perfect for a red Ferrari roadster—offers dramatic Mediterranean views and a powerful adrenaline rush, the real rock stars of Italy’s second-largest island are the actual rocks, or more precisely, the prehistoric stone dwellings found in the mountainous interior.
Sardinia is home to more than 7,000 stone nuraghi towers, Bronze Age castles built between 1600 and 1100 B.C. Best known is Nuraghe Santu Antine near Torralba, a well-preserved nuraghic royal palace surrounded by the eerie remnants of a once thriving nuraghic village. To experience modern village life on an island where sheep outnumber humans by nearly three to one, check into Hotel Su Gologone in Oliena, where hearty guests can sign up to shadow a local shepherd for the day.

Tasmania

Photograph by Bennett Barthelemy, Getty Images
In Australia’s smallest state, remote rain forests, secluded beaches, and more than 200 vineyards are accessible by foot. Tasmania’s mild, maritime climate and compact size (comparable to West Virginia) make this heart-shaped island 150 miles (240 kilometers) off the Australian mainland a year-round destination for walkers and hikers of all ages, interests, and fitness levels.
Great Walks Tasmania features seven distinct, guided walking tours ranging from the moderate 14- to 18-mile (23- to 30-kilometer) Bay of Fires wilderness trek along the coastal rim of Mount William National Park to the gentler 12- to 28-mile (20- to 45-kilometer) gourmand’s ramble through Maria Island’s eucalyptus forest and pristine beaches. In 2011, Tasmania hosts the biennial Ten Days on the Island international arts celebration from March 25 to April 3, an event that features nearly 500 artists in 111 venues.
Pictured here: A climber in Bicheno, Tasmania

Fjord Norway

Photograph by Peter Adams, JAI/Aurora
Western Norway, known as Fjord Norway, is home to the world’s largest concentration of the saltwater-filled, glaciated valleys. The iconic destination encompasses 1,646 miles (2,650 kilometers) of pristine coastline, glaciers, mountains, and cascading waterfalls, including the 2,148-foot (655-meter) Mardalsfossen, the world’s fourth highest. The region’s six National Tourist Routes offer easy driving access to bouldering, ice climbing, glacier walking, base jumping, caving, and year-round skiing.
Four UNESCO World Heritage sites are located here, including the deep-blue Geirangerfjord (above), considered one of the world’s most unspoiled fjords. Fjords are best experienced from water level, so hop a ferry, book a cruise, or rent a kayak for unobstructed views of the surrounding snow-covered peaks, steep mountainsides, and abundant wildlife. The midnight sun in June and July brings near round-the-clock daylight and the most visitors. Days are shorter in May and September, but the lighter tourist traffic makes for easy meandering from Kristiansand to Trondheim along the Fjord Coast Route.




Uruguay

Photograph by Kevin Moloney, The New York Times
A laid-back vibe, day trip-friendly dimensions (only 68,036 square miles/176,215 square kilometers), and lively beach scene make Uruguay a favorite getaway for the South American jet set.
The capital city, Montevideo, pulses to the rhythm of candombe, the thunderous Afro-Uruguayan, three-drum sound fueling spontaneous street parades, as well as the all-night Desfile de las Llamadas, the featured event of Montevideo Carnaval. In southwestern Uruguay, stroll the winding, cobblestone streets of Colonia del Sacramento’s 17th-century historic district—a UNESCO World Heritage site that’s only a 50-minute high-speed ferry ride from Buenos Aires—to explore the country’s Portuguese roots. Go west to the hilly interior to play gaucho at a luxury dude ranch or a more traditional working estancia, where tourists can trade labor for trail time. For sun and surf, hit the beaches of Punta del Este, the narrow peninsula dividing the waters of the Rio de la Plata and the Atlantic Ocean.
Pictured here: A hand sculpture on Playa Brava, a beach on Punta del Este




Messinia Region, Greece

Photograph by Yiannis Tsouratzis, IML Image Group
Widely known for its Kalamata olives—Messinia produces about 55,000 tons of mainly cold-pressed extra virgin olive oil annually—this road-less-trampled region on the southwest Peloponnesian coast features numerous World Heritage List archaeological sites, including Olympia, Mystras, and the Temple of Apollo Epicurius at Bassae.
Sun-drenched hills and valleys are dotted with stone houses, vaulted tombs from the Mycenaean era, Byzantine churches, and medieval castles (such as the castle of Methoni, above). Retreat to secluded bays, remote beaches, and protected lagoons, including Gialova, Greece’s southernmost major wetland and home to more than 270 bird species.
The latest chapter in Messinia’s 4,500-year history is being crafted by international shipping magnate Captain Vassilis Constantakopoulos, the visionary behind Costa Navarino, an energy-conscious resort that aims to be powered entirely by renewable resources. The luxury destination’s Navarino Dunes on the Ionian Sea opened in 2010. Initial sustainable elements include “living roofs” planted with native fauna and the world’s first large-scale geothermal heating and cooling installed beneath a golf course.

Dominica

Photograph by Justin Foulkes, The Travel Library/Photolibrary
A lack of white sandy beaches and an overabundance of rainfall keep this mountainous island of tropical rain forests off typical Caribbean vacation itineraries—a plus for adventure seekers.
Perpetual geothermal and volcanic activity—there are seven active volcanoes—make 285-square-mile (739-square-kilometer) Dominica, located between Guadeloupe and Martinique, a paradise in progress. Venture into the rugged landscape Spiderman-style on an Extreme Dominica canyoneering tour, which takes visitors rappelling down pristine waterfalls, deep gorges, and volcanic bedrock canyons. The seven-mile round-trip hike from Titou Gorge to Boiling Lake, a vapor-covered cauldron that reaches 198º Fahrenheit (92º Celsius), is strenuous but worth the panoramic Caribbean views from atop 3,000-foot (914-meter) Morne Nicholls, as well as the chance to explore the Valley of Desolation’s brightly colored sulfur springs, mini-geysers, and bubbling mud pools. Recharge at the locally built and staffed Jungle Bay Resort & Spa. The 55-acre (22-hectare) tropical retreat features 35 secluded, hardwood cottages perched high atop posts beneath the jungle canopy.
Pictured here: Victoria Falls, Dominica

Palawan, Philippines

Photograph by JS Callahan, Tropicalpix/Alamy
Palawan’s limestone karst cliffs, coral atolls, mangrove forests, sugar-white sandy beaches, and extensive fringing reefs create one of the Philippines' most biodiverse terrestrial and marine environments. Designated as a fish and wildlife sanctuary in 1967, the Philippines' largest (in total land area) province encompasses nearly 1,240 miles (1,995 kilometers) of coastline stretching across 1,768 islands.
On the main island (also named Palawan) near Sabang, hike the three-mile (five-kilometer) Monkey Trail to Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park's navigable underground river. The five-mile (eight-kilometer) coastal rain forest route is home to long-tailed macaques, blue-naped parrots, and other indigenous wildlife. In the province’s northern Calamianes islands, Coron Island is considered one of the world’s top scuba diving destinations, offering World War II-vintage wreck diving and snorkeling in calm, crystalline waters. Nearby Culion Island, a former leper colony surrounded by sea grass beds and coral reefs, is an emerging ecotourism destination worth a day trip.

Tunisia

Photograph by Schmid Reinhard, SIME/4Corners Images
With 713 miles (1,148 kilometers) of gentle Mediterranean coastline, Roman ruins and fortified casbahs, and glowing ribbons of Saharan dunes, Africa’s northernmost country offers adventure for all ages. Pictured here is a Roman ampitheater in El Jem, Mahdia, Tunisia.
In Tunisia’s sunbaked Matmâta region, explore the troglodyte lunar landscape (featured in the first Star Wars movie) and float—or walk, if the water has evaporated in summer—in the Chott El Djerid salt lake. June through September, hop aboard the historic Red Lizard train (Lézard Rouge) in Metlaoui for a 90-minute round-trip excursion through the Atlas Mountains. The narrow mining track winds through towering rock canyons and across barren flatlands to Seldja Gorge. Saharan expeditions include camel and dune buggy rides and camping in traditional Bedouin tents.
The eight-day Sahara Desert Trek led by adventure outfitter Exodus includes a five-day walking tour from the Sahara gateway Douz to the oasis village of Ksar Ghilane. One of North Africa’s best preserved Roman archaeological sites is Dougga, a window into life over 17 centuries in an indigenous Numidian city.

courtesy: travel.nationalgeographic.com


Tuesday 13 November 2012

Diwali destinations

Hey guys HAPPY DIWALI to everyone !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
       Everyone would be enjoying their vacations this Diwali. And why not to celebrate it with everybody with the phatakas and rockets all touching the sky and the colorful lamps not to forget them as they lit the whole India during Diwali.
 But if anyone is thinking of enjoying their Diwali vacations in peace and harmony don't worry I got few destinations that you will enjoy. No noise no air pollution just you and just you and the beautiful scenary of nature
 

Five places to escape the Diwali fireworks

Deepavali and fireworks are rather synonymous. But if you like to escape the noise and fumes and head away to a remote destination, here is a pick of Diwali escapes to choose from in southern India.

Vattakottai near Kanyakumari is a perfect getaway from the Diwali smoke and noise.
Deepavali and fireworks are rather synonymous. Although I love the bright lights and the glitter of the festivities, I would rather escape the noise and the pollution that comes with it. If you are like me and would like to head to remote destinations, here is my pick of great Diwali escapes in south India. 

Birding - Thattekad
A Sri Lankan Frogmouth at ThattekadWould you like to be in a forest and wake up only to the call of birds? Then head to Thattekad, one of the most pristine birding sanctuaries located on the banks of the river Periyar in Kerala. Barely an hour’s drive from Kochi, the Periyar river is bathed in fog as I take in the view. This tropical evergreen and deciduous forest is home to over 250 rare and endemic species of birds and the sanctuary is named after the ornithologist Salim Ali, who stumbled upon it almost 80 years ago. 
Elephants roam here rather freely, says my guide, but luckily we do not spot them. The forests come alive with colors and calls. We see a pair of Malabar grey hornbills. Then there is the much-awaited brilliantly coloured Malabar trogon, which is the prized catch of the day. But Thattekad is not just about birds. It is about the lush greenery, the tip-toeing of the mist, and the silence that echoes through the jungles. 

Wildlife - Daroji 
Sloth Bear at Daroji Wildlife SanctuaryHead to a wildlife sanctuary that was once one of the gateways to the Vijayanagar empire. The destination is Daroji, located near Hampi. It was once called Darwaze -- meaning gate -- and the local people tell me that this was one of the kingdom’s forgotten gateways.
 
Boulders give way to the shrub jungles, fowls and francolins rush past us. We see termite mounds and we finally reach a hillock where sloth bears roam freely amid the rocks. Anegundi, across the Tungabhadra River, was believed to be the mythical Kishkinda, the monkey kingdom of Sugriva who was Rama’s ally in the war against Ravana. And if myths are to be believed,  there was one bear in the army called Jambavan. Today, Daroji Wildlife Sanctuary, which includes the Bukkasagara range of mountains near Hampi and Anegundi, is home to several sloth bears. You can also find leopards, foxes, jackals, hyenas and pangolin along with several mammals and a variety of birds and reptiles. This is an ideal destination to lose yourself, far from the madding crowd.

Beaches  - Om Beach 
If you like a wave of mysticism set amidst virgin beaches, ringed in by mountains, then you can chant OM at the beach here. The Om Beach is so called as the waves create a pattern of their own in the form of the mystical “OM “symbol. Tales from Indian mythology lie entrenched in this small temple town of Gokarna as the temples here are ancient and located close to the beach. The Western Ghats overlook the Arabian Sea and you will often find trekkers discovering new paths along the coasts or higher up in the hills. Chalk out your own, or lose yourself in a spiritual wave, or party hard at the other beaches here - chances are that you will not miss the fireworks. 

Heritage - Vattakottai 
Located close to Kanyakumari is the sea-fort of Vattakottai, which offers one of the most stunning views. The sea surrounding us is calm as it caresses the shore. A lone tree stands; its dead branches almost touch the sky. On the distant horizon, one can see windmills dancing to the tune of the breeze. This circular sea-fort, built on the coast, opens into a picturesque view of the Western Ghats encircling the oceans – the Bay of Bengal on one side and the Arabian Sea on the other. Coconut trees grace the shore, and some parts of the wall jut out into the sea.

As we enter the granite fort, the outer walls greet us with the symbol of two elephants with a conch shell, but the fort itself is neither imposing nor formidable. A huge open courtyard, probably a parade ground, leads us to a flight of steps with a ramp. We look down from the walls, built at a height of almost 25 feet, and the sea greets us. Stand here and you can gaze at an endless fabric of blue for hours. 

Mountains - Nilgiris
Nothing can be more exciting than taking a journey up the Blue Mountains. How about a ride down the hills on the Nilgiri Mountain Railway? As the train huffs and puffs along on its own little pace, you can soak in the fresh air and the mist. Get off at any station and explore the surrounding environs. If I were you, I would choose the quaint and quieter ones, but if you like a bit of crowd, head to Upper Coonoor or Kotagiri. Walk by the lakes, stroll by the shola forests, and take a deep breath and enjoy the natural scenery.

Source: Yahoo.com
See more images of Nilgiri passenger tour (Click HERE)

Monday 12 November 2012

Fbcover: Create a customized timeline cover photo

Fbcover: Create a customized timeline cover photo: Hey guys ,  cover photos is very common on the social networking site like Facebook, but to attract your friend circle and to get maximum ...

Saturday 4 August 2012

Shangrila Resorts and Waterpark-Mumbai






Regular Tariff

Room Type (All AC)
No. Of Rooms
AP Plan
EP Plan
Deluxe36Rs. 4400Rs. 3200 + 10% tax
Exclusive Room28Rs. 5000Rs. 3800 + 10% tax
Family Room (8 Bedded)1Rs. 11,200Rs. 5800 + 10% tax
Suite Room2Rs. 5600Rs. 4400 + 10% tax
Exclusive Suite Room3Rs. 6100Rs. 4800 + 10% tax
Maharaja Suite1Rs. 12000Rs.10,000 + 10% tax
Royal Prince Suite Room1Rs. 8500Rs. 7000 + 10% tax
Presidential Suite1Rs. 17500Rs. 15000 + 10% tax
Extra Person
(above 8 years)
-Rs. 1500Rs. 800
Child (3-8 yrs)-Rs. 1300 
Rs. 800

  • EP - Includes only accommodation and Complimentary B/f.
  • AP - Includes accommodation with all Veg Meals.
  • AP - Rs.400/- per couple will be charged extra for Non Veg Package.
  • Above includes use of water park for two persons.
  • Service Tax as applicable on EP and AP plan.
  • Check in: 11 AM and Check out: 10 AM.

Day Picnic

Particulars(Veg) Package(Non Veg) Package for minimum 100 paxOnly Water Park
Adult (above 4 ft )Rs. 550 per headRs. 700 per headRs. 350 per head
child (3ft - 4ft)Rs. 500 per childRs. 650 per childRs. 300 per head
IncludesBreakfast, Lunch, Evening Tea with Snack and Use of Water park only.

Extra:

  • Coin Operated Games at actual.
  • Charges for Soft Drinks, Beer, Liquor and meals/snacks ordered on ala carte basis & chargeable at actual.

Water park Timings

  • 10 AM to 6 PM

Note:

  • Outside Food not Allowed.
  • Payment Accepted at the resort by Credit card and Cash.
  • Child above 3 feet Chargeable.
  • Any Extras other than the package will be levied as per the resort rate.

Amenities:

  • Ac Restaurant and Bar, Fast Food Center, Private Party Hall, A/c Conference Hall, Massage and Spa Centre, Children's Park, MP Theatre and Lots more.

Wednesday 25 July 2012

Tungareshwar Vasai

tungareshwar vasai

Tungareshwar is one of the highest mountain plateaus in Vasai.The best time to visit this place is in the monsoon because it feels like heaven. Tungareshwar is at an altitude of 2177 ft, one of the highest mountain plateaus in Vasai. So most of the trekkers, mountaineers and nature lovers visit this place. It is also a holy destination to visit for the devotees of lord Shiva, there are also many other small temples like Ganesha temple and Mata Khodiyaar Maa temple.
tungareshwar vasai

For the real trekker to Tungareshwar this is the first halt. From this point there are two options:
1. A trek right up to the top that is 8 km long (2 hours for average person one way)
2. A jungle trek to the Chinchoti waterfall (1 hour for an average person one way)
Both these treks are enjoyable and have their own charm. No amount of written words can describe this wonderful experience.
tungareshwar waterfall


How to Reach: An hour distance from Mumbai. Like Chinchoti which is also a similar place people coming with private vehicles need to take a right turn towards Tungareshwar village from Vasai highway. You can also go by autorickshaw fro Vasai east
Eat:Their are small eateries near the temple where you can get snacks. One should never forget to enjoy Sweet Imli’s, Aavlas and Other Such Yummy timepass stuff while climbing the mountain of Tungareshwar, which is available on the way sold by Local adivasis and Villagers, these are actually natural resources of jungle 

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Thursday 19 July 2012

Now In Theatre: Rajesh Khanna: Rest In Peace

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