Archiv für die Kategorie 'pebble beach vacations'.

Explore The Hidden Wonders Of Istria

Chances are, you have probably never heard of Istria. Istria is one of Croatia’s best kept secrets. Istria provides some of the most beautiful landscapes in the world. From rolling hills to snowcapped mountains to plush valleys, Istria is truly a place of diverse beauty. In addition to its amazing natural features, Istria is well-known for its hospitable towns and friendly inhabitants. You will never feel like a stranger when you are in Istria!

So what kind of activities does Istria offer? Because of its locations, the coast and beaches are one of the most obvious attractions. Istria has many different kinds of beaches, ranging from large bays to hidden coves filled with white pebbles. If you like being active, Istria offers much more than beautiful beaches to lay on. Thanks to its mild climate and pristine air, you can enjoy outdoor activities in Istria all year long. Throughout Istria, you can find horseback riding, bike trails and cross country tracks. If you are a thrill seeker, Istria has plenty of activities to take care of your adrenaline needs. You can take part in free climbing, mountain biking, parachuting, hang-gliding, mountain running, caving, paragliding or canyoning.

Once you have had your fill of outdoor activities, Istria has several thriving cities, which include Pula, Porec and Brioni. These cities are filled with excellent hotels that offer a variety of amenities, including indoor pools, fitness centers, spas, ice baths and massage programs. If you want to get out and explore the cities of Istria, you will be met with festivals, wonderful dining, wine cellars, cultural events and much more. So, if you are trying to decide on a location for your next vacation, make sure to give some consideration to Istria. If you go, it will be a trip that you never forget!

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Outer Banks Vacation Rentals

In addition to miles of coastline, one-of-a kind geographic features, and historical charm, the Outer Banks is the ideal place to find a unique and accommodating vacation rental. As you plan your trip to North Carolina’s barrier islands, take a little time to find the perfect home away from home.

For summertime travelers who have the ocean on their minds, the ideal location will provide easy access to the beach. Duck, a region filled with spacious and often luxurious beach homes, is a lovely place to stay to truly appreciate this vacation destination.

Reserve a four bedroom oceanfront property and bring the whole family along, as there will definitely be enough space to accommodate everyone’s needs. Bunk beds will separate the kids at night, and an entertainment room will supply fun for everyone after the sun goes down. An elevated observation room will provide spectacular views, and you just might be able to spot one of the many lighthouses that dot the coast.

Behind the house, a pebbled path will lead you to a day filled with all the beach activities you can imagine. Outdoor showers will keep sand from reaching inside, and the screened porch will make the perfect setting for a home-cooked meal. There are lots of activities in the Outer Banks, such as museums, sailing tours, and wildlife refuges, and they will likely draw you to the outside world for much of the day. Don’t be surprised, however, if you end up stealing a couple of hours away from the outdoors, relaxing in a comfy chair with a book on your lap. This is your vacation, after all, so spend it as you please.

For a different view, try heading south. You’ll still have all the opportunities of the beach and access to museums and notable sights if you reserve a cottage in Kill Devil Hills or Nag’s Head. There are large properties here as well, but if you’re seeking something more modest in terms of price or size, you won’t be disappointed.

A two bedroom might be a perfect fit for a small group of travelers, and a cottage stocked with everything from a hairdryer to extra towels will make packing less of a chore. Add close proximity to prime bird-watching spots or hang gliding take-off points, and this vacation will be virtually stress and traffic-free.

Plus, as the rustic charm and adventurous attitude of the Outer Banks begin to rub off on you, you’ll be glad to return to your private beach side hideaway with its own unique qualities. Mirror-image hotels do not fit in here, which is a quality you will soon come to appreciate. There is likely to be a surprise around every corner in the Outer Banks, be it a fifth-generation fisherperson’s English brogue or the wild horses that roam the more remote beaches.

Let the rich history and constant ocean breezes seep into your bones during your visit to this unconventional locale. As you sit back and relax in your vacation rental, you’ll be proud of yourself for breaking away from the pack. HomeAway.com has hundreds of great options when it comes to choosing your Outer Banks Vacation Rental, so start perusing the listings today in order to realize the trip that has been waiting for you.

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Resorts in Crimea - a Place for Any Type of Tourism, From Solitude to Crowded Beach Fronts

The most famous resort in Crimea is the city called Yalta. The city was a prestigious vacation destination in 19th century Tsarist Russia after the first road was built from Simferopol to this region in Crimea.
The cities Sevastopol, Alushta, Sudak, Feodosiya, Yevpatoriya, Saki, Koktebel, and Feodosiya are also well-known resorts.
Sevastopol situated in the western part of the peninsula is a regular city for tourists than a resort. The city is a navy city with shipyards and the headquarters of the Russia’s Black Sea fleet.
Sudak is a sight for eyes, with its awesome sights. Its beach front area has been very nicely developed.
Yevpatoriya and Saki on the west coast of Crimea are best known for their soft sand beaches which distinguish from most other beaches in Crimea which are made of pebbles.
Each Crimean resort town has its unique set of sights and historical monuments, but they are similar in certain ways. They all have a beachfront area full of restaurants, discotheques, hot dog stands, musicians, jugglers, caricaturists, “find out how powerful your punch is” stands, and locals selling everything from trinkets made in China to fresh milk.
If you enjoy hanging out at crowded beaches in the daytime and having fun at night, these resorts are for you. You’d probably enjoy spending a couple days in each town as you move down the Crimean coast.
If you’d like more solitude lifestyle, Crimea has plenty to offer for this too. There are hundreds of secluded health resorts and hundreds of kilometers of undeveloped coastal areas. Here you may come across folks who spend the entire summer living in caves by the beach, groups that spend weeks practicing yoga or meditation in remote corners of the peninsula, and of course nudists who have congregated in Crimea since Soviet times.

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20 Out of a Thousand Things to Try in Boracay

Strip yourself from the sweltering heat of Manila and step into even hotter territory, where you can get toasty-brown and cozy with friends and family.

Touted as one of the world’s best beaches, Boracay is certainly a place where possibilities are endless!!! Here are just a few of the thousand things you can do where the sand is “sugar-white” and delicious adventures are always in sight.

1. Sip a cold fruit shake by the shore.

2. Watch the sun rise and sun set.

3. Build sandcastles, or pose by one for that keepsake photo.

4. Shop for surfer-dude duds (Boracay is a place where shades and native bracelets abound on every sandy corner. Not to mention sarongs, loose white shirts that show off your tan, and shell home decorations to hang on your walls when you get back home.)

4. Play 18 holes of golf.

5. Skim-board (it’s surfing on sand on a piece of fiberglass. You can make a day of it by learning how, doing it well, or simply have a blast watching others get washed up and end up sharing a few good laughs).

6. Pack your sunblock, camera, and sarong, and island-hop.

7. Go parasailing.

8 Ride horses by the beach.

9. Try the chori-burgers cooked fresh on the side streets.

10. Visit the batcaves.

11. Explore new places to stay,tap into this resort called Grand Boracay resort

Grand Boracay is a resort that’s located right in D’Mall of Boracay’s famous Station 2, an idyllic getaway that gives you an option to splash around in a lagoon-shaped pool and snooze in a comfy, airconditioned guestroom when the sun gets too scorching on the beach).

12.Take a ride on the banana boat.

13. Get a henna tattoo.

14. Get your usually-straight hair in braids that’ll shame Bob Marley.

15. Visit and see the dead forests south of the island, next to the fishponds for some artsy photo ops.

16. Get a massage, either by a licensed masseuse or those by the beach whom beachcombers swear are just as qualified.

17. Dance under the stars with friends in any of the Boracay bars and discos.

18. Windsurf.

19. Swim.

20. Hop on an all-terrain vehicle and explore the dunes, there are 2-seater ATVs for rent on the island.

However which way you decide to fill your time in sunny Boracay, you can rest assured that you’ve already a lot of pebbles to fill your memory glass jar, colorful stories to tell, that could be as bright as the sun, and as dramatic and mysterious as its famous sunset.

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Patmos - Greek Island Holiday Destination Revelation

We stood in a candle lit cave, our usually sceptical, rational selves already feeling vaguely challenged by the possibility that supernatural phenomena might, after all, exist. The darkness and coolness was a stark contrast to the dazzling brightness and heat of the midday sun we had left to descend into this underworld of prophecies and priests.

The silence of the grotto was suddenly interrupted by a heavily accented voice, speaking in English. “Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast: for it is the number of a man; and his number is six hundred threescore and six.”

Half expecting a beast with 666 stamped on its forehead, we turned to see a bearded man, dressed in the priesthood robes of Greek orthodoxy. He was not looking in our direction and at first it seemed that the biblical quotation had been a soliloquy. But the puzzle of why a Greek would talk to himself in English was solved seconds later, when the first of a party of Americans came into view. As soon as they began to fill the limited space of the cave, we recognised them as being a group of “Christian Tourists” we had seen earlier that day. The spell had been broken; the cave had lost its supernatural feeling, replaced by something as mundane as an evangelical meeting. It was time for us to go back up to the world of dazzling sunlight.

Our visit to the Sacred Grotto of the Revelation, where John the Divine is supposed to have foreseen and written of the Apocalypse, was part of a wonderful day we spent exploring the beautiful island of Patmos.

Patmos is part of the group of Greek Islands known as the Dodecanese. Our holiday base was on the neighbouring, and much larger, island of Samos where we had hopped on a boat to take us across the ten miles or so of the Aegean sea that separates the two islands. A one day visit was all we needed to know that Patmos was our kind of holiday destination.

Above the cave is the Byzantine monastery of Saint John and the wonderful medieval village of Hora. Laying fifteen to twenty minutes walk below Hora is the island’s capital, Skala. This charming little port is the largest settlement on Patmos. Scooters wiz noisily around narrow, street corners where men sit at pavement cafés on rickety chairs playing backgammon games. Pickup trucks, pull up to unload fruit and vegetables without paying any heed to the honking horns of other motorists who shout and gesticulate that their way has been blocked. Yet somehow, in a quintessential, Greek Island way, the noise and bustle blends seamlessly into an atmosphere that is totally laid back and relaxing.

Patmos has other several other pretty villages that are worth exploring but its most attractive feature is its convoluted coastline. A new vista of wonderful beaches appears from around every headland. Some are sandy and some are adorned in pretty white pebbles. Several are fringed by lush vegetation whilst others are found amongst rocky, yet no less attractive, settings. Some have sun beds and parasols but none have overdone this concession to modern tourism.

Many of the beaches are lapped by very calm, shallow seas, ideal for small children to paddle in but the prettiest beach of all, Psili Ammos, is washed with sometimes, huge waves and is surrounded by wild, beautiful scenery. Psili Ammos is one of the most remote beaches on Patmos and is twenty minutes walk from Diakofti, the nearest village over a mountain footpath. If you prefer a less energetic way of reaching Psili Ammos, you can hop aboard one of the regular boats from the main port.

Nearly every Greek island offers glorious holiday destinations. Each one has its own special charm and beauty but even by Greek island standards, Patmos is very special. Our short visit was enough to tell us that we just had to come back and spend a full vacation there. We didn’t need to believe the dreams of Saint John to realise that Patmos is a dream island, just perfect for dreamers like ourselves. But the kind of dreams Patmos inspires are far more likely to be those of an earthly paradise rather than the hellish world of the Apocalypse.

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Croatia, Island of Pag

Visit beautifull Island of pag one of the best place in the world for summer vacation , we are tourist agency for private accommodation service on the island
http://www.tomitours.hr

more of island of Pag

More than one thousand islands and reefs make the Croatian coast the most indented on the Mediterranean, and the second most indented coasts in all of Europe. Island of Pag is one the largest Croatian island covering and area of 270 km2. It’s mix of attractive beaches, green fields, dry rocky areas of fantastic shapes, a view of mighty Velebit mountain and a score of surrounding islands make it an oasis of outstanding beauty.

Island of Pag belongs to the Kvarner archipelago. It is distinguished by a variety of natural attractions: sand and pebbles, crystal clear sea, numerous wonderful beaches,

deforested hills, here and there macchia, immortelle and sage give the island a special charm and a mysterious atmosphere. So Pag is an ideal place for you to enrich your life with a multitude of experiences and enjoy relaxing in the quiet atmosphere and the scenery of thousand years old olive tree, oaks and black pine trees.

On Pag you can also visit notable historical monuments and archaeological sites.

The island is also well-known for its rich folklore and in particular for lace.

Cheese and lamb are among its gastronomical specialities.

Apartments are equipped with all modern conveniences.

Novalja is a tourist center and the main port on the Pag Island. Its beautiful sand beaches, mild Mediterranean climate, rich cultural and historic heritage, a score of cultural, sporting, and recreation activities coupled with good transportation links attracts thousands of tourists from all over the world.

Novalja is also known as Croatian Ibiza, because of best music events , parties on famous Novalja’s party beach Zrce where thousands young people dance and have fun all day and night.

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Travel to Indonesia - A Country of Thousands of Beautiful and Exotic Islands

Indonesia, a Country of thousands of beautiful and exotic Islands, that spark off your imagination with thoughts of fine sandy beaches, huge temple complexes, great diving and the giant dragons of Komodo. The islands of Indonesia are spread over a vast expanse of ocean and technically speaking is divided by two Continents.

Some parts of the Country can be as different from each other as black is from white. The hustle and bustle of the modern capital Jakarta is like another planet when compared to the traditional Papuan tribes of the Baliem Valley. Jakarta – Not only is it the largest City in the Country, Jakarta is also the heartbeat. Indonesian’s from all over the archipelago come to the City to try and find their fortune or just to survive. The face of the City is constantly changing due to the construction of new skyscrapers, shopping malls and hotels.

Jakarta is mainly a business and political City and not really a tourist destination, but the older colonial parts of the City are very interesting and the museums have a lot of fascinating exhibits.

Jakarta, like you would expect, is the most expensive place in Indonesia, as well as the most polluted and most congested. It can be very hard to cope with all of the hustle, dirt, crime and cost, but if you can you will find an exciting City with plenty to offer.

Kota – This is the old Town of Batavia, which was the capital of the Dutch East Indies and the best example of the colonial era in Indonesia. Though much of the old town has been destroyed or demolished over the years, some of the old Colonial buildings are still in active use, and the area has a definite Dutch feel to it.

The centre of the old Town is the pebble stone square known as Taman Fatahillah and this is the key to being able to orientate yourself around the sights of the old Town. The canal of Kali Besar is one block to the west of the square and runs alongside the Ciliwung River.

This was a very prosperous area and on the west bank are some of the high class homes that date from the eighteenth Century.

The Chicken market bridge is the last remaining drawbridge from the Dutch era, it is at the north end of the Kali Besar. Buses always come by on their routes and the city train also has a stop here.

Jakarta History Museum – This museum is housed in the old town hall of Batavia, which is on the south side of Taman Fatahillah. It is a well built building, which was originally constructed in 1627 and added to in the early 1700s. It was from here that the Dutch administered their colony, and the cities law courts were also here as well as their main prison compound.

It contains plenty of heavy, carved furniture from the colonial, as well as other memorabilia from the Dutch period. Open, 9am till 3pm, Tuesday to Sunday. Admission: 1,000Rp Wayang Museum – This museum is also on the Taman Fatahillah, and has a great assortment of Wayang puppets. It also has examples of puppets from other Countries like Cambodia, China and India.

This building was formerly the museum of old Batavia and was built in 1912 on the site of the former Dutch church which was demolished in 1808 as the
Dutchman “Daendels” plan to rid the City of its unhealthy areas. In the downstairs courtyard, there are memorials to previous governors who were buried on site. Open, 9am till 3pm, Tuesday to Sunday. Admission: 1,000Rp

Fine Arts Museum – Built in the 1860s, the palace of Justice building is now the Fine arts museum. It has a nice collection of contemporary paintings from prominent artists. They also have some ceramics on show from Chinese items to Majapahit offerings. Open, 9am till 3pm, Tuesday to Sunday. Admission: 1,000Rp

Gereja Sion – This church was built in 1695, and is the oldest Church in Jakarta. It is on Jl Pangeran Jayakarta near the Kota train station. The exterior of the Church is actually pretty plain but inside copper chandeliers, the original organ and the baroque pulpit makes it very appealing. Though thousands of people have been buried here there are very few tombs left remaining.

Sunda Kelapa – Just a 10 minute walk from the Taman Fatahillah, the old City port of Sunda Kelapa is full of wonderful Macassar schooners and the brightly coloured sails of these boats make for great viewing. The ships are still a vital means of transporting goods to outlying Islands.

Guides hang around the docks and for a few thousand rupiah will show you around and tell you some insightful stories. You can also take a ride out to the offshore fish market for around 5,000Rp. Admission, 250Rp to the dock area.

Maritime Museum – This is an old VOC warehouse that was built in 1645 and is by the entrance to the Sunda Kelapa. It has examples of Indonesian crafts from around the ages and has photos of the voyages from Europe to Jakarta. The building itself is well worth the visit and the lookout posts are part of the old City wall.

Just before the entrance to the museum proper, is the old watchtower that was built in 1839, it has brilliant views over the harbour. Opening hours are hit and miss, so try to find the caretaker.

National Museum – This museum, constructed in 1862, is considered the paramount museum in Indonesia, and one of the finest in South East Asia. It has a huge ethnic and relief maps of Indonesia on which you can track your travels. The museum has a variety of different cultural displays that show a diverse collection of clothing, instruments, model houses and religious items. In addition the museum has a fine collection of Chinese ceramics that even date back to the Han dynasty of the third Century.

The museum is sometimes known as the Elephant house due to the giant bronze elephant that was a gift from the King of Thailand, and that now stands outside. Open, 8.30am till 2.30pm, Tuesday to Sunday. Admission: 750Rp. Guides are around who can conduct tours in various different languages.

National Monument – This 130 metres high monument stands over Merdeka square and is Jakartas chief landmark. The construction was started in 1961 but was not finished until 1975, when it was officially opened by President Soeharto. At the base is the National History Museum which tells the story of the Indonesian struggle for independence. On national holidays and at the weekends the queues can be long. Open, 9am till 5pm, daily. Admission: 600Rp or 3,100Rp which includes a ride to the top.

Lapangan Banteng – Just east of Merdeka square is this nineteenth century colonial square. It has some of the best examples of Dutch colonial architecture in the whole of Jakarta. The Catholic Cathedral was built at the turn of the twentieth Century, and is opposite the principal place of worship for Jakartas Muslim community, the Istiqlal Mosque. To the east of the square is the Supreme Court that was built, along with the Ministry of finance, in 1809 by that man “Daendel” to replace those buildings torn down.

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