<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0">
<channel>
<title>egypt</title>
<link>http://www.trifter.com/tags/egypt</link>
<description>New posts about egypt</description>
<item>
<title>Egypt's Backpacker Beach: Dahab</title>
<link>http://www.trifter.com/Africa/Egypt/Egypts-Backpacker-Beach-Dahab.130689</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[<p>This was the best place I could be. Heaven on earth for short. Dahab always comes to amaze you. The town is very versatile with a base for scuba diving, mountain climbing, ATV, wind surfing and what more partying. It's got a very lively scene and most of the inhabitants are young and some not so young but young at heart.</p>
<p><img src="%%IMG1%%" alt="" /></p>
 
<h3>Places of Interest for Snorkeling and Diving:</h3>
 
<ul>
<li>The lighthouse</li>
 
<li>Blue hole (this is the best)</li>
 
<li>The Laguna</li>
</ul>
<h3>For Mountain Climbing:</h3>
<ul>
<li>Mt. Sinai </li>
 
<li>Wind surfing</li>
 
<li>The Laguna</li>
 
</ul>
<h3>ATV:</h3>
 
<ul>
<li>All over the town</li>
 
</ul>
<p>Let's start. The main part of Dahab which is the most happening one is the El Mashrabe Street (sharae). This is the street where all the low cost budget hostels are located as well as the scuba diving centers etc. the corniche connects to the lighthouse to these hostels most of which are located on the corniche or have approaches to it.</p>
 
<p>Hilton is located not far off and also has a party scene but nothing like the one on the corniche.</p>
 
<p>Dahab is a base for scuba diving where one can do introductory dives for around 20 usd the best time to go is June July which is kind of the off season and Nov - Dec should be avoided as prices tend to increase a lot at that time. The diving around the lighthouse is not as enriching probably because of people pollution.</p>
 
<p>The blue hole is the best part for snorkelers and divers. I have heard that no one has been able to touch its bottom and experienced divers have gone down never to return. That sends a chill!!!</p>
 
<p>Anyways the sea life and corals are amazing here and unspoilt at least they were and the fact that the approach road is unmettalled would give the area a longer time to be spoilt. one should also keep in mind not to go near the corals as it could damage them and besides while swimming should avoid getting close to the rocks because if the tide is strong then there have been instances where injuries have been reported due to people colliding with the rocks. There is no better way to spend the afternoon than to be at the blue hole with its calming waters and just appreciating nature at its best. There are some small inns where one can keep bags etc and order a bit of snacks and that are it.</p>
 
<p>The scenery is truly exhilarating. At one side u have mountains with no vegetation on them bare mountains with the sun over them perpetually and at the other side u have the red sea and this hole. I truly recommend people to at least go to the hole three times because the area is so large that one would not be able to scout the whole place I mean snorkel!! Besides entrance to the hole is free although there r lots of checkpoints which in one sense is good since it keeps the crime element away but u have to return at evening because no one is permitted to stay. That's about the blue hole but it's bigger than the words which I have described it with aside from me being a very lousy writer.</p>
 
<p>After returning to the hostel at evening there is just one thing to do grab a bit of rest to b in shape for the night party. there is this bar called TOTA built as a ship where entrance for foreigners is free and thus one can enjoy the fruits of this life for free TOTA is designed like a submarine and the locals who come here are the ones owning the guesthouses and trying to have fun since local women are almost non existent in Dahab!! lolz!!</p><a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.trifter.com%2FAfrica%2FEgypt%2FEgypts-Backpacker-Beach-Dahab.130689"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.trifter.com%2FAfrica%2FEgypt%2FEgypts-Backpacker-Beach-Dahab.130689" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Wed, 28 May 2008 09:50:13 PST</pubDate></item>
<item>
<title>How Middle Eastern Women are Really Treated</title>
<link>http://www.trifter.com/Africa/How-Middle-Eastern-Women-are-Really-Treated.127005</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[<p>To look at the conditions that women live in the Middle East will determine where they live exactly. The Middle East consists of quite a few countries and different ways of thinking. What seems to stick out in my mind are the news reports about how women are told they could never be uncovered out in public and how they must walk behind their husbands as well as marry very young. These only apply in certain countries and for the most part the women are not treated like this.</p>
<p>Afghanistan is probably the worst in how women live. Up until 1996 things were not so bad for women. They worked outside the home and they went to school. However, once the Islamic militia took leadership in this country everything changed. Women cannot leave the house without being accompanied by a man. When they leave the house they must wear a Burqa which allows only their eyes to show. The women that once went to school and once worked were forced to give up everything and were beaten and forced to immediately return home when they tried to continue with their daily routine.</p>
<p>Saudi Arabia is a bit different than Afghanistan. They do restrict their women from such things as voting or dressing as they wish, yet there is a different viewpoint to why the women are expected to do certain things. In Saudi Arabia women are expected to eat and shop away from men. They are expected to remain covered, but they do not have to wear a burqua. This is a place you must understand before ever going to it. Women are thought of as highly sexual beings that need to be away from the men in order for the men to concentrate. When a girl marries a man they are expected to remain together forever. The girl is expected to have many children but she is well taken care of at the same time.</p>
<p>There is going to be no thought of how she is going to survive even if her husband died. She inherits the money. Saudi Arabia is one of the richest countries in the world. The women may not be able to eat with the men at a restaurant or go shopping with the men, but when they are at home they are treated like gold. They are highly respected, but as an American woman, we do not see it that way. There are cases of abuse as there is everywhere. I would say Afghanistan is probably the worst place that a woman could ever live especially when it comes to abuse.</p>
<p>Egypt is far from the likes of Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan. Egypt gives women much more freedom. They prefer marriages that are set up between parents however, the children are free to marry whoever they wish. Since Egypt is primarily Muslim they do request women keep their heads covered by at least a scarf. As a tourist, women can dress as they wish but understand how the culture is. Respect how they see women in a respectful but desirable manner. You will want to keep your head covered and wear pants or a long dress. Women have the right to work, go to school, and they inherit all of the money from their husband in case of death. The women are looked after and highly respected. They are not separated from the men unless they are praying at the mosque. There are a number of Christian families in Egypt too and when the women go to church they dress like everyone else. They all will wear hats or scarves to cover their hair since the hair is considered a desirable part of the women.</p>
<p>Lebanon is a country filled with a variety cultures. Women there are not repressed at all and have numerous groups that fight for more rights to get involved in such things as political and economic issues of the country. Music is popular in Lebanon where female singers promote their songs with risqu&amp;eacute; videos. The women in Lebanon may not have as many rights as an American woman, but they are well on their way.</p>
<p>Basically, depending on where a woman lives in the Middle East will determine on how she is looked at, treated, and how independent she can be. She can either live a very good life or one that is hard and restrictive. It is not very easy to understand how women are treated in some of the Arab countries, but we must also recognize that they are not all the same. Each country should be seen separately and not clumped together as one group that treats women horribly. This simply is not fair to the Arab countries that don't treat women badly or are not highly restrictive.</p><a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.trifter.com%2FAfrica%2FHow-Middle-Eastern-Women-are-Really-Treated.127005"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.trifter.com%2FAfrica%2FHow-Middle-Eastern-Women-are-Really-Treated.127005" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Mon, 19 May 2008 19:45:13 PST</pubDate></item>
<item>
<title>Camels, Bakseesh and Beyond</title>
<link>http://www.trifter.com/Africa/Camels-Bakseesh-and-Beyond.95995</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[<p>When I got off the plane in Cairo, Egypt I knew right away, like Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz, that I was a far way from home. I lived in Maine for most of my life and except for the few trips to Canada, I had never really been outside the United States.  I went to Cairo in March and I had left Maine with a coat on, praying it wouldn't snow and ruin takeoff. By the time I reached Egypt a day later, I had shed the coat, changed into a lighter shirt and wished I had a portable fan. It is warm, warm enough to be in shorts, which is something that both myself and my mother, who is traveling with me, are not used to seeing in the month of March. A man greets us, from the travel company we were using, and takes us to exchange our American dollars to Egyptian pounds. Afterwards we pick up our luggage and walk to meet our Egyptian tour guide, Amr.</p>
<p>Not only was the temperature a shock, but also the whole culture itself. Cairo, with a population of almost 9 million seemed very large and crowed to me, a person who lives in a small Maine town of 997 people.  After being picked up and driven to the hotel, I had a chance to look at some of the 500 Cairo mosques and building, which in a city with the majority of the inhabitants being Muslim, adorned nearly every block.  Along with the Mosques were the many-leveled apartments that housed the Cairo Inhabitants, a place called "The City of the Dead."  Over half the city lives there, a living cemetery that crams people together much like trailer parks.  We drive to our hotel, but this Cairo, a city with twenty million residents, and driving is not easy. &amp;ldquo;Everyone drives pretty fast in Cairo,&amp;rdquo; said Amr, in perfect English. &amp;ldquo;But we hardly ever have accidents.&amp;rdquo; Egyptians do not, however, have many driving laws. There is much horn blowing and sharp turns into traffic; yet surprisingly no one wears seat belts. I exchange looks with my mother and decided it was a small miracle that we made it to the hotel. After resting there the night, Amr assures us that he would pick us up in the morning to tour the great pyramids.</p>
 
<p>In the same city that houses the City of Dead, there are ancient pyramids and a gigantic sphinx. As my mother and I look up at the Pyramids of Giza, I marvel at the fact that such things are still standing today. Some of the stone is falling apart and some of the pyramids are missing pieces.  Still, tourists can walk right up to the pyramids and as the base; vendors and camels roam the outskirts, looking to sell their wares. For those who have not been, the pyramids are a breathtaking work of art. Built in the 4th century BCE, they still stand magically today. &amp;ldquo;Be careful of people looking to sell you things,&amp;rdquo; warned Amr as he let us out of the car. &amp;ldquo; And watch for people looking for baksheesh.&amp;rdquo; Baksheesh isan Arabic word for tips, something that are often asked for by vendors or anyone who happens to help you even for a minute. We get out of the car and walk towards the pyramids, confident that we can handle anything that comes our way.</p>
<p>The first man we encounter gives us a present, a scarab beetle (a good luck charm in Egypt). He then offers to take our picture, but heeding the words of Amr, we say &amp;ldquo;no&amp;rdquo; and walk away. He follows us, realizing we are different than the average American tourist who might come his way. &amp;ldquo;If you will not pay baksheesh, then I went the present back,&amp;rdquo; he demands of us. We oblige and continue to make our way around the pyramid. No sooner have we turned the corner when we come into contact with a man looking to sell us his wears. He picks up one of the gifts he is trying to sell and precedes to place to a white head scarf on my head. &amp;ldquo;No, no, I do not need a scarf, I'm not interested!&amp;rdquo; I protest vigorously, but it makes no difference as the vendor continues to beg me to buy. Meanwhile, my mother is walking ahead of me, gesturing me to come. &amp;ldquo;I must leave now,&amp;rdquo; I tell the man. I am finally able to run away and continue looking at the pyramids. The excitement was not over for the day however, because Amr decides to take us on a ride on a camel near the Sphinx.</p>
<p>Riding a camel is like nothing else I have ever done before in my life, and even though I had seen camels on television, watching a camel and riding one are decidedly, not the same thing. First, one sits down on the camel while it is still sitting down. Then, it will climb up, at which point has to lean forward to keep from falling off the camel. At six meters high, it is a little bit daunting to sit atop such a high animal, even though it does not travel at a high pace. I clung to the camel and held on with my legs. &amp;ldquo;Ahh! My mother, who is behind me, lets out a cry as her camel is heading off on another direction. &amp;ldquo;Help me please,&amp;rdquo; she cries as the camel is loosing control. The camel herder eventually comes to the rescue and controls both of our camels. We slowly make our way on camels back to the waiting car. At this point, we realized that riding a camel was like riding a horse. The camel herder looked at my mother and said, &amp;ldquo;I'll give you two hundred camels for your daughter.&amp;rdquo; I thought he was joking, but the expression on his face looked serious. Needless to say, my mother turned down the offer.</p>
 
<p>Next, we said goodbye to Amr and took a train south all the way to Aswan and Luxor, in southern Egypt. This was much like taking a train from Maine to Washinton, DC, but the train jostled from side to side. My mother and I said and watched the Egyptian scenery fly by, amazed at the vast landscape. After a day, we disembarked in a town called Luxor, a town well known for its ancient history and temples. If it was hot in Cairo, it was even hotter in southern Egypt, with the desert and dry air. We meet another tour guide, a young man, with a name I can't pronounce or spell. He had a fondness for cigarettes and talking on his cellphone. &amp;ldquo;I give tours to English and Russian speakers, &amp;ldquo; he tells us, in a thick Arabic accent. &amp;ldquo;I'm the oldest so I have to support my family.&amp;rdquo; He escorts us t o visit the sights. Southern Egypt is home to the Valley of the Kings, a place where the ancient rulers like King Tut and sixty-three tombs of other powerful rulers.</p>
<p>For centuries, the Valley of the Kings, located near the Luxor and the Nile River has been a place of popular exploration and interest. Even today, one can go down into a few display tombs to get the feeling of being buried six feet under. As we go into one of the tombs, it takes a little while for our eyes to adjust. I see a man standing by the doorway, an Egyptian. He follows us around as we take pictures and then he turns to us. &amp;ldquo;You must pay baksheesh for pictures.&amp;rdquo; I give him an Egyptian pound (equivalent to about 25 cents in American dollars), but he is not happy. &amp;ldquo;No, that is enough for a child.&amp;rdquo; I pay him five pounds and exit before he can ask for more money. After spending the morning there, my mother and I boarded the cruise ship that would sail down the Nile River from Luxor to Aswan to see the various temples. Before we board the ship, I decide to use the public bathrooms. Much to my surprise, one is expected to pay, not just to use the toilets, but also for toilet paper. The bathroom, for the most part, was clean and taken care of, but was not worth the price I had to pay the woman.</p>
 
<p>Next, we boarded the cruise ship where mornings could be spent on the top deck of the boat, then an all-you-can-eat buffet for lunch.  In the evenings, there was often entertainment and the cruise ship workers were lovely and spoke wonderful English. Two workers in particular were enjoyable to spend time with.  First, there was Mohamed, a teddy bear-like young man, not a day past twenty-three, who worked at the front desk. He loved Fifty Cent and American rap music and his dream was to come to America and make lots of money. We exchanged emails and I wrote to him a few times. &amp;ldquo;Egypt loves you Laila,&amp;rdquo; Mohamed said to me once. His friend, Jassim, was a massage therapist who worked upstairs. He was a happy man who played ping-pong with me. Unfortunately, we would hit the ping-pong balls out over the side of the boat, into the Nile River.</p>
<p>Laughing, we ran to the side to look over the boat. I think I lost numerous ping-pong balls that trip. That was not the only exciting cruise experience. One night, as we pulled into port, a group of merchants approached our boat in their small rowboats.  They began to throw up their merchandise, pretty handmade Egyptian dresses.  The idea was to put the dress in a bad, throw it up and then buyers would place their money in the bag and throw it back down. &amp;ldquo;I'm going to try and catch something!&amp;rdquo; I shouted to my mother. I caught it, but the prices were so outlandish that I had to through it back. This was, I soon learned, another Egyptian tradition.  On top of the inflated prices of the dresses, tourists were expected to also pay the ever-present baksheesh. We soon arrived in Aswan, the destination of our cruise.</p>
 
<p>In Aswan and surrounding area, the temples are created as an almost shrine to the Gods and ancient rulers. Large figures of the Pharaohs adorn the temples and each one has the Egyptian hieroglyphics on the walls.  The Egyptian slaves who worked tirelessly, expecting nothing in return, built Temples and pyramids, centuries ago. One temple in particular, Abu Simbal, was located on the border of Sudan and Egypt. We woke up at about three in the morning to make the van to see Abu Simbal, about a two-hour ride. Crammed into a small van with about twelve other people, I realized that there was nothing glamorous about Egyptian vans. We had to stop along the way, as one of the passengers was sick. Eventually we arrive, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to visit a temple of this magnitude. The sun was beating down on us, but the temple had much to offer.</p>
<p>Visitors are still allowed to walk into the dark, cave-like temple, but pictures are forbidden so as not to ruin the deteriorating walls. Looking up at the temples, I could never imagine what Egypt would look like without any of these ancient historical landmarks. The next day was our last in Aswan, and we had yet another guide, an older man named Humdee. He took us on a felucca, a sailboat-like boat that, in all honesty, came very close to tipping into the water. The idea was to sail to the botanical gardens, but with the wind, it was very hard to tell just how sturdy the boat was.</p>
<p>I am happy to say we made it to the gardens and back without an accident. &amp;ldquo;So have you ever fallen in?&amp;rdquo; I asked Humdee. He smiled at me and winked. &amp;ldquo;Oh yes. I've fallen in many times.&amp;rdquo; I was glad we were on shore. After that, he drove us to the train station and after that it was back on the airplane with a stop in Milan, Italy.  Once my two-week trip was over, I truly missed Egypt. &amp;ldquo;Remember when we.....&amp;rdquo; &amp;ldquo;Wasn't it fun that we went to...&amp;rdquo; My mother would say to each other, even today. But being in Maine again, I'm happy not to pay for toilet paper and have to pay baksheesh.</p><a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.trifter.com%2FAfrica%2FCamels-Bakseesh-and-Beyond.95995"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.trifter.com%2FAfrica%2FCamels-Bakseesh-and-Beyond.95995" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Fri, 21 Mar 2008 02:42:01 PST</pubDate></item>
<item>
<title>Top 10 Places to See Before You Die</title>
<link>http://www.trifter.com/Practical-Travel/Adventure-Travel/Top-10-Places-to-See-Before-You-Die.87635</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[																																<ol> 
<li> 
<h3>The Pyramids and the Sphinx, Egypt</h3>

<img src="%%IMG0%%" alt="" /> 
<p>You have to visit this amazing place, one of the Seven Wonders of the World, the Great Pyramid of Giza.</p>
	<ol> 
	<li>The Great Pyramid of Khufu (or Cheops)</li>
 
	<li>The Pyramid of Kafhre </li>
 
	<li>The smaller Pyramid of Menkaura. </li>
	 </ol>
<p> There are three main pyramids in Giza: 
Each Pyramid is a tomb to a different King of Egypt. In front of the pyramids lies the Sphinx (or Abu al-Hol in Arabic, "Father of Terror"). Carved out of a single block of stone, this enormous cat-like sculpture has mesmerized millions of visitors.
</p>
</li>
<li> 
<h3>Santorini, Greece</h3>
<p><img src="%%IMG1%%" alt="" /></p>
<p>
 Santorini is one of the Cycladic islands, created by the eruption of the volcano. (Thought by some to be the famous island of Atlantis). Due The Island has a versatile landscape with steep rock formations, lush beaches and small white villages. It also boasts remnants from the old Roman including baths, theatres and markets. Santorini is a group of islands in a circle about 10 KM across - the rim of a large volcano that is still producing small islands in the centre. Settlements are scattered around the islands as a series of small villages. The famous white buildings are huddled close to one another on and over the cliff of the central caldera. Hiking paths and trails lead all over the island, but an interesting time can be had walking the paths that connect the settlements, talking to the friendly locals and exploring the shops.</p></li>
 
<li> 
<h3>Stonehenge, England</h3>
<img src="%%IMG2%%" alt="" />
<p>
 Stonehenge is a well-known stone monument located on a world heritage site in Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire, England. The site as is quite large and contains many other structures from the Neolithic period and the Bronze Age. Stonehenge is considered one of the most archaeologically rich sites in Europe, with many Neolithic and Bronze Age finds. It is also the site of one of the biggest Chalk grassland reversion projects in the world. Stonehenge has been occupied since around 8000BC with early work at Stonehenge beginning in 3000BC when an outer ditch and embankment was constructed, and standing timbers erected. From about 2500BC, Neolithic and Bronze age man started to bring Bluestones and Sarsen stones from Wales and the Marlborough Downs, it was completed in 1600BC. A nearby hill fort was built during the Iron Age, and there is evidence to suggest that the area was extensively settled by the Romans. The reason behind the structure still remains a mystery with many theories developed to explain the phenomenon.</p></li>
 
<li> 
<h3>Italy</h3>
<img src="%%IMG3%%" alt="" />
 <p>Italy has a lot to offer its visitors. Italy is a modern country with deep Roman Catholic roots, full of interesting stuff for the casual tourist and even more for the educated visitor.  In the north, next to the Alps and the flatlands of the Po river, both cultural jewels and highly developed industrial cities attract. In Lombardia's capital Milan, city of haute couture and business, you can easily spend weeks without being bored. Bergamo is only an hour away and has an upper Old Town. 
</p><p>
The most famous tourist attractions in the north-east are Venice and Verona, that both let you think of romantic love affairs. To discover the beautiful landscapes around, for example, the Verona province may be even more fascinating. For wine lovers, Piemonte is directly connected with Barolo and Barbaresco, the most famous wines made out of the Nebbiolo grape. Piemonte's capital, Turin offers more than just a starting point to visit these wine regions. Lots of museums, modern art, book and music fairs make Turin one of the leading Italian cities concerning cultural life. The coastal region of Liguria is another highlight.</p><img src="%%IMG4%%" alt="" /><p> The Riviera delle Palme has no reason to envy its French counterpart. Beaches, countryside, the right climate and old towns like Genoa make this region a must to visit. The Lunigiana region,  Albenga and Ceriale are worth a visit and an even longer stay. Gourmets should not miss the Emilia Romagna, Italy's culinary centre. Bologna, "La Grassa" like the Italians say, is a must see as well as Ravenna with its impressive mosaic works and the Byzantine architecture and last but not least Rimini, on the Adriatic Sea. For Tuscany words fail to describe its beauty: You have to go there to see, smell and experience the beauty of the old towns and lovely valleys yourself. Florence, Lucca, Pisa, Prato and Siena, offer more cultural highlights than some countries as a whole. The way of living does the rest to attract every year millions of visitors. Elba, the island of Napoleans first exile, is only one of seven Tuscan Archipelago islands.</p><p> Rome, The Eternal City, with its monumental palaces, churches, squares, and fountains still fed by aqueducts with ancient water sources, has to be visited by every Italy traveler. To discover Rome, "A lifetime is not enough". Campania has attracted visitors over the centuries: Capri, Ischia, Sorrento and Amalfi became the chosen destinations of visitors from many countries. Sicily the largest island in the Mediterranean has been influenced by the culture of the Greeks, the Romans, the Arabs the Normans and many others.  For those who enjoy walking and climbing, go to the Dolomites, this is the Mountain range in Northern Italy that sperates it from Austria and extends westwards to join the Alps. Major centres include Cortina, further South and West is Arco and a few kilometers from the Northern tip of Lake Garda.</p></li>
 
<li> 
<h3>Loch Ness, Scotland</h3>
<img src="%%IMG5%%" alt="" />
 Loch Ness is the largest of three lochs located in the Great Glen which divides the North of Scotland along a line from Fort William to Inverness. The loch is large by British standards, being 23 miles long and a mile in width, and averaging 600ft in depth. Its catchment is hilly and wet, and is drained by 6 major rivers which flow into the loch. It contains over 2 cubic miles of fresh water, and the River Ness outlet, although only 5 miles long, is one of the greatest in Britain for average flow and of course is the home of the famous monster of lore </li>
 
<li> 
<h3>Pyramid of the Sun and Moon, Teotihuacán</h3>
<img src="%%IMG6%%" alt="" />
 <p>
 Towering and mysterious, the Pyramids of the Sun and Moon rise above silent Teotihuacán, an empty city that once bustled with as many as 200,000 people and stood at the center of Mexico's pre-Hispanic empire. Erected by a virtually unknown culture in the first century B.C., the city sprawled over an area larger than imperial Rome. But by A.D. 750 it had been abruptly abandoned, perhaps because of disaster or drought. Five hundred years later the Aztecs came upon Teotihuacán -- with its pyramids, temples, apartments, and ball courts -- and adopted it as a center of pilgrimage. At roughly 210 feet high, the Pyramid of the Sun ranks as one of the largest pyramids in the world. (It is about half as tall as the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt.) </p><p>The builders raised the Pyramid of the Sun around A.D. 100, somehow transporting and erecting three million tons of stone, brick, and rubble without benefit of the wheel, beasts of burden, or metal tools. In 1971, archaeologists found a previously unknown entryway some 320 feet long that leads to a cave directly beneath the apex of the pyramid. At one time the cave held a natural spring, and there are still piles of charcoal in the chamber -- perhaps indicating ceremonies involving water and fire. No one knows, although scientists enjoy speculating.</p>
 </li>
<li> 
<h3>Incan Ruin - Machu Picchu, Peru</h3>
<img src="%%IMG7%%" alt="" />
<p>
  Machu Picchu, The lost city floating in a kingdom of clouds, high in the Andes Mountains of Peru, a mysterious settlement that the Incas built, occupied, and deserted, all in less than a century. For hundreds of years the city was hidden in the jungle. Then, in 1911, Hiram Bingham led a university expedition to the Peruvian Andes. On a valley floor along the Urubamba River, he met a farmer who guided him up to the ruins of the hidden city, the only Incan site that hadn't been looted or destroyed during the previous four centuries. </p><p>Machu Picchu spans a mountain saddle between green jungle peaks. The settlement has only 200 residences, suggesting a population of about 1,000 people. The city contains a large number of religious buildings that were constructed with great care. One of them, the Temple of the Sun functioned as an observatory focused on the heavens. A mark cut on a rock at the center of the tower lines up, through a window, with the exact spot where the sun rises on the June solstice. In the temple's recesses the Incas placed religious statues or offerings. </p><p>Another small cave at Machu Picchu served as an observatory for tracing the December solstice. Ritual religious bathing may have been done at the Fountains, a series of 16 small waterfall baths where the sacred focus may have been water. But the principal shrine at Machu Picchu was probably the intihuatana, the "hitching post of the sun", a stone that the Incas may have used to observe the heavens and mark the seasons. No one knows for certain how the stone was used. Near the settlement lie other intriguing sites. The Intipunku, or Sun Gate, is a notch cut in a mountain ridge that frames the rising sun during fixed periods on the calendar. The famous Inca Bridge is located along an ever-narrowing mountain trail that, at some places, is cut into a sheer cliff. The builders cleverly left a gap in a buttressed section of the trail that they could bridge with two logs. As needed, the logs could be removed to make the road impassable to outsiders. Perhaps it is no wonder that this nearly inaccessible mountain city remained hidden and unknown to outsiders for centuries after the Incas abandoned Machu Picchu. </p></li>
 
<li> 
<h3>The Golden Pavilion, Japan</h3>
<img src="%%IMG8%%" alt="" />
<p>
 The pavilion is probably the most recognizable temple in Japan as it is entirely covered in gold. Shining in the light, the Golden Pavilion, or Kinkakuji, looks like beautiful jewel box. In 1950, a disturbed Buddhist temple novice burned the 14th-century pavilion to its foundations. Within five years, however, the Golden Pavilion rose again. On the new roof, appropriately, perches a phoenix. The pavilion was originally built as a retirement villa for the shogun Ashikaga Yoshimitsu, who, after withdrawing from public life, exercised power in the background by installing his ten-year-old son as shogun.</p><p> When he died, his retirement villa was converted into a temple, in accordance with his wishes. The much-admired pavilion rises in three stories, each having a different architectural style and reflecting a different aspect of the shogun who built it. The first floor is a residential palace, complete with a covered dock for the shogun's pleasure boat; the second is a Buddhist prayer hall or samurai house; and the third is a small Zen temple with sliding doors and bell-shaped windows. Set on pillars, the Golden Pavilion extends over the pond, a popular design of the Shinden style during the Heian period of Japanese history. A person approaching sees two pavilions, as the water reflects the image. On the exterior of the graceful building, a layer of shimmering gold leaf creates an unforgettable picture.</p></li>
 
<li> 
<h3>Bimini: The Road to Atlantis</h3>
<img src="%%IMG9%%" alt="" />
<p> Famed American psychic Edgar Cayce predicted that evidence of the lost continent of Atlantis would appear in the Bahamas in 1968 or 1969. In 1968 pilots photographed structures that looked like buildings, walls and roads under the waters off of Bimini Island. Others have claimed to have seen pyramids and stone circles on the sea bed, but the only thing that has been confirmed for sure is what has become to be known as the Bimini Road. Skeptics claim that the Bimini road is merely a unique natural formation. There is no denying, the "roads" are straight and look man made.</p></li>
 
<li> 
<h3>Iceland</h3>
 <img src="%%IMG10%%" alt="" /><p>Iceland was settled in the 9th century by Norse Vikings. The first settlement and major city is Reykjavik. Reykjavik has a bustling nightlife, an exciting arts scene, and offers visitors the opportunity to explore the countryside in short trips to areas such as Thingvellir, Gullfoss and Geysir. If you are interested in nature, Iceland is a great place to visit. The terrain in Iceland is so rugged due to centuries of volcanic activity; this is where the US tested their lunar landing module that eventually drove on the moon. Because of Norse woodcutting and volcanic activity, there are virtually no trees on the island. There is one small "forest" that is a national landmark. </p><p>Iceland, Greenland's neighbor, benefits from the gulf and jet streams with huge 100mph winds constantly blowing, being sustained for more than a day. Most travelers go to Iceland in the summer, however, Iceland in the winter is equally as beautiful, and there is the added bonus of less tourists and tones of snow. The interior of Iceland is not assessable in the winter months but the ring road is always passable, but careful driving and a 4WD is needed in the ice and snow. Over the Christmas period there is hardly any traffic on the roads in the South and the drive from Reykjavik to Vik is stunning. Glaciers, mountains, volcanoes and countless waterfalls keep the six hour drive interesting. Hofn is a good place to stop to explore Iceland's biggest glacier. Better still, Hoffell is a remote town close by, which, is very close to the foot of the glacier. In Hoffell you can also find naturally heated hot tubs, perfect for sitting in to watch the northern lights away from any artificial light, if the conditions are right.</p></li>
 </ol>																													<a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.trifter.com%2FPractical-Travel%2FAdventure-Travel%2FTop-10-Places-to-See-Before-You-Die.87635"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.trifter.com%2FPractical-Travel%2FAdventure-Travel%2FTop-10-Places-to-See-Before-You-Die.87635" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Wed, 27 Feb 2008 03:26:35 PST</pubDate></item>
<item>
<title>Discovering the World's Most Mysterious Places</title>
<link>http://www.trifter.com/Practical-Travel/Adventure-Travel/Discovering-the-Worlds-Most-Mysterious-Places.70025</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[					<p>When we were small, we used to assemble wooden blocks to establish a building, but have we ever thought of building up a 100-meter high building like these Egyptian Pyramids? How do we build up the building with huge bricks weighing 100 tons each? These grand and marvelous building structures are amazing and their establishments constitute myths and legendary rumors until now.</p>
<p><img src="%%IMG0%%" alt="" /></p>
<p>In North Africa, there are 80 blocks of such pyramids scattered around the Egypt's Nile River, which have become one of the most miraculous places in the world. The highest pyramid called Cheops Pyramid and it was build by overlapping pile of boulders together. In the making of pyramids, Egyptians were not using any adhesive, glue or nails to attach the pile of boulders and one could even hardly find cracks or gaps among the rocks or stones from the overlapping plot. Nevertheless, the structure is extremely firm and strong that the sharp blades or swords could not even pass through. In addition, Egyptian Pyramids have experiencing 5,000 years of strong wind's erosions and yet these artifacts are remained not touch by the nature. They appeared to stand alone like warriors in the desert. These towering pyramids are such spectacular and superior buildings human had ever made on the Earth.</p><img alt="" src="%%IMG10%%" />
 
<p>This is a mysterious place encountered in the Antarctic Island. People call it “a dry valley with no snow cover.” Antarctic is a place with fewer inhabitants and dwellers and thus some unexplainable phenomenon happenings in Antarctica remain mystery to the outsiders. Approximately 14 million square kilometers of the total area of the Antarctic continent have the snow cover. When viewing from the high sky, the central of the Antarctic is like a pot's lid plateau. Most of the areas vividly have their surfaces covered with snow with its thickness reaching 2000m and sometimes may attain the thickness up to 4,800m. In winter, the surrounding ice combines with the ice from the ocean to form up one smooth, large plateau to which people can hardly distinguish between the land and the sea.</p>
 <img alt="" src="%%IMG11%%" />
<p>Bermuda Triangle is located in Western North Atlantic, which comprises of seven major islands, 150 small islands, some islands composed of reefs group. Any high-tech devices or equipments will become malfunction when reaching this mysterious place and thus the survivors may have encountered problems to communicate with the outside world. Because of its extremely mysterious characteristic, people have called this place as a devil triangle.</p> <img alt="" src="%%IMG12%%" />
 
<p>In China, people have named this desert as “Moguicheng” or a city of devil. “Moguicheng” is famous in Xinjiang, China. When someone is strolling towards the castle in a sunny day accompanying with a gentle blowing breeze, one may heard a nice rhythm coming from the distance. The melodies are just like 10 million shaking bells, and sometimes one may feel the music like gentle flicking of 10 million guitars' strings. However, when cyclones come, bulks of sands are rising up in the sky by the strong winds, the sky turns pitch dark suddenly like a hell, and the nice music no longer heard but turns into strange sounds. The sounds resemble the roaring of the tigers, trumpeting of the elephants, and sounds by pigs that are being slaughtered, babies' crying, shouting of the women who are going to die, and alternately the sounds change to shouting, mourning and quarreling. The storms are then swirling aggressively by shooting up to the sky accompanying by terrified wolf growling sounds in the cloudy nightfall. People are wandering who had built this city and where do the sounds come from?</p>
  <img alt="" src="%%IMG13%%" />
<p>This island is legendary full of Surreptitious and specter. Westerners prefer sailing by venturing many historically strange events occurred here in the history of seafaring. In 1707, the British captain of the Andean Julius had discovered this land; however, it was strange that he could hardly reach this land. He later affirmed that this was not an optical illusion, so he marked the “land” on the map. 200 years later, the admiral Makaluofu and his inspection team who were sailing to the North Pole on their icebreaker vessel called "Ye Ermake," accidentally came across this piece of land. In 1925, Navigator called Woershi, too, passed through this land and he memorized the outline of the land. Nevertheless, the investigation team comprising of scientists, who sailed to this land in 1928 never found any islands as claimed by the previous navigators.</p>
 
<p><img src="%%IMG1%%" alt="" /></p>
 
<p>This place is located in Henan, China, and local people called it “bingbing bei” or the back of the ice. When midsummer approaches, people tend to move to places that are cool and refreshing. Although the change of four seasons, namely summer, autumn, spring and winter is an unchangeable law, in certain parts of the world, this theory seems not to be applicable. They are some fortunate people live in “warm” zone. This phenomenon is applying to people dwelling in the eastern mountain areas of Liaoning Province, China. They are experiencing warm temperature while other areas of China are experiencing the changes of seasons. Thus, this area has named after this phenomenon as "temperature anomaly zone." This "geothermal anomaly zone" extends from 1.5m out of the town of the left riverbank of Hunjiang to the end part of the right riverbank of Hun River and to the foothills near Guandian Province. The entire length for this "temperature anomaly zone" is approximately 15km, occupying the areas of approximately 106,000 square meters. The advent of summer is always accompanying with a decline of temperature in the area of "temperature anomaly zone." When the temperature reaches as high as 30 degree Celsius during the summer, the temperature is minus 12 degree Celsius at one-meter deep into the underground of this area, and the ice froze underground. When someone dips a drop of water one-meter deep into the underground of this area, the water will immediately turn into ice.</p>
 
<p><img src="%%IMG2%%" alt="" /></p>
 
<p>Shennongjia is located at the intersection of Sichuan, in Hubei zone, with the meeting of two rivers, namely China's Yangtze River and Hanjiang River. This region comprises an area of 3,250 square kilometers, accounting for more than 85 % of woodland. The average elevation is 1,700m, with the highest point of 3,105 meters, and with the characteristic of various types of climate. When speaking of Shennongjia, people here will think of “savage.” Since ancient times, large numbers of documentations have revealed the existence of savage roaming around this area. Legendary, people could even hardly identify the authenticity of the savage. The effort of collecting evidence on the existence of savage was initiating by the relevant departments from 1977 to 1980. They had collected savage hairs, footprints and feces left by the savage. This proved to us that a kind of bizarre animal might have existed in Shennongjia not long ago.</p>
 
<p><img src="%%IMG3%%" alt="" /></p>
 
<p>This is the famous ancient city of Teotihuacan in America, which called “death to the road.” This region stretched from a so-called main road of “death to the road” to the north-south roadway. In the tenth century AD, Ards heroes who were the earliest team walking along this way leading to a castle found nobody in the city, and thus they believed that the buildings on either side of the road were gods' tomb lands. In 1974, a Mexican person called Dayton • Halisi said that he had found a suitable unit measurement for all these streets and buildings at this city at the International American meeting. This unit length is 1.059m using a calculation from a computer. For example, the units for the Teaodiwakan snake temple, the moon and the Sun Pyramid is the height of 21, 42, and 63 "units" respectively with the ratio of 1:2:3 based upon the ancient calculation.</p>
   <img alt="" src="%%IMG14%%" />
<p>People not allowed entering this Kunlun Mountains as its name suggested as "The Gates of Hell." This valley is a death valley, which further claims the Kunlun Mountains "The Gates of Hell." The remains found in this valley were the furs, bones, skeletons of wolves, bears and hunters and some scattered lonely tombs, rendering the world in the death of a ghastly terrifying atmosphere. The Xinjiang Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources of a geological team in China had recorded a true story in the year of 1983 on a group of hungry horse that was grazing the grass and disappeared suddenly in the "The Gates of Hell." A herdsman went into the prohibited area of "The Gates of Hell" to search for his horse. After few days, he was found missing but the horse emerged at the foothill of Kunlun Mountains. Later, the herdsman was found lying on a small hill with his clothes badly torn off, barely footed, eyes widely opened with an angry look, a shotgun gripping in one of his hands showing that he was reluctantly to die. The miraculous thing was that no wounds or signs found around his body to show that he had attacked.</p>
 
<p><img src="%%IMG4%%" alt="" /></p>
 
<p>Canada Niagara Falls is the world's most mysterious places in the world. Niagara Falls constitutes a part of Canada and the border of United States, the New York State and Ontario, Canada, separating from the Niagara River by flowing northward from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario with a total length of nearly 30 miles. Located in the north, covering an area of 250,000 square miles, Niagara Falls is a smooth exit to these lakes. Its maximum water flow reaches 250,000 cubic feet per second. Niagara Falls is indeed very awesome.</p>
 
<p><img src="%%IMG5%%" alt="" /></p>
 
<p>This Geysering is a magical spring found in the upper part of the Yarlung Zangbo River in Tibet, China. The spring bursts out in a short while and stops for a while before following by other bursts. The burst goes on, stops and goes on. In other words, its eruption cycle is continuous for a few minutes, auto stop after a few dozen minutes; and followed by another burst and so forth. It bursts like an eruption with a huge, shocked sound. It vents out some high temperature steam from the mouth of the spring. The spring then expands immediately into one to two meters in diameter, and rushes out as water column as high as 20m into the sky. In addition to China's Geysering, in the place near Reykjavik, capital of Iceland, the Geysering is renowned in the world with its diameter of 20m. When there is drizzling rain, this water column can even soar up as high as 70m into the sky.</p>									<a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.trifter.com%2FPractical-Travel%2FAdventure-Travel%2FDiscovering-the-Worlds-Most-Mysterious-Places.70025"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.trifter.com%2FPractical-Travel%2FAdventure-Travel%2FDiscovering-the-Worlds-Most-Mysterious-Places.70025" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Mon, 31 Dec 2007 10:04:12 PST</pubDate></item>
<item>
<title>Five Best Holiday Destinations</title>
<link>http://www.trifter.com/Practical-Travel/Five-Best-Holiday-Destinations.66330</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[<ol><li> 
<h3>The Maldives</h3>

The Maldives are somewhere you just have to go. They’re beautiful, sunny, warm etc etc. But they’re more than just that. They’re a great holiday destination, the people that go there are absolutely lovely, the staff on all the various islands are wonderful, the facilities are unbelievable. The water sports that you can do are brilliant, and the scuba diving is the best I’ve ever witnessed.

</li><li> 
<h3>Malta</h3>

Malta is a wonderful little island. It isn’t great for a long holiday, but it is lovely for a short stay, especially the town of Dragonara near Valletta. The scenery is beautiful, the people are wonderful and the weather is lovely all the time. A very relaxing and enjoyable holiday destination.

</li><li> 
<h3>Croatia</h3>

Although the weather isn’t always perfect, the country is lovely. The landscape is absolutely gorgeous, especially the mountain areas. The people are very nice, the scuba diving is great (except the water gets very cold at depths exceeding 10 metres). Dubrovnik is lovely, especially the old city, and is a most see if you are in the area.

</li><li> 
<h3>Russia</h3>

Although Russia mightn’t be everyone’s favourite country, it is definitely somewhere than everyone should visit, especially in the Winter. Russia has a vivid history, that is clearly visible from Russian cities and monuments. Just make sure you don’t get buried in the fierce Winter snows.

</li><li> 
<h3>Egypt</h3>

Even if you only go for the Pyramids, they really are phenomenal. They really highlight how great the Ancient Egyptians were, and they are fantastic. The weather is lovely, and the Nile is also a wonderful sight. The sea is lovely and the people are lovely, but I would steer clear of Cairo.
	</li> </ol><a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.trifter.com%2FPractical-Travel%2FFive-Best-Holiday-Destinations.66330"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.trifter.com%2FPractical-Travel%2FFive-Best-Holiday-Destinations.66330" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Wed, 12 Dec 2007 11:12:46 PST</pubDate></item>
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