Archive for Travel Resources – Page 4

Most people experience New Zealand via a combination of a roundtrip flight and vehicle rental, driving around their destination to see the area. This is a most effective approach where flexibility is key and time isn’t a constraint. But to see a vast region like New Zealand in a limited timeframe, there is no easier nor more enjoyable method than combining road and rail.

One of the down sides of rail travel in New Zealand is it does not hit all of the tourist destinations, such as the Bay of Islands or Queenstown. But for those who arrive into Auckland and would like to relax while enjoying New Zealand’s North Island before jumping into a campervan and exploring the South Island, rail is the perfect mode of travel. New Zealand’s rail routes provide some of the most spectacular scenery in the world. The trip may include sightings of whales, dolphins, and seals, and will certainly include rugged rocks, mountains, ocean, riverbeds, farmland … breathtaking natural beauty everywhere. Be sure to remember your camera!

Rail stops on ‘The Overland Connection’ route from Auckland to Christchurch include Hamilton, National Park, Ohakune, Palmerston North, and Wellington in the North Island. The two islands are connected between Wellington and Picton via ferry, which is a great way to change up the scenery; the ride lasts about three hours. (Journey between the rail station and the ferry is included via free shuttle.) The ferries feature refreshments or full meals, a children’s play area, and plenty of deck space to enjoy the scenery and meet other travelers, amongst other amenities. The crossing includes about an hours voyage through the magnificent Marlborough Sounds. Following the Interislander ferry crossing the train passes through Blenheim and Kaikoura before arriving in Christchurch, the largest city in the South Island.

“Hop on, hop off” rail passes can be purchased via the publicly-owned Tranz Scenic rail network, so it is not necessary to pre-determine your schedule although that is an option; you can “take it as it comes” and decide on the cuff how long you’d like to spend in each destination. Trains are modern and comfortable with central heating and air conditioning and include a selection of meals, snacks, and beverages for sale. Peak season trains operate seven days a week from December through April (except Christmas Day) and off-peak run three days per week.

It is possible to take a train from Christchurch across the Canterbury Plains westward to the alpine township of Arthurs Pass before descending through lush beech rain forest to the West Coast town of Greymouth, but that’s as far as the railway goes. So it makes much more sense to hire a campervan for this part of the journey as you can then push on down the West Coast and explore the magnificent Southern Alps and their glaciers at your leisure. The beautiful Haast Pass then takes you back over the Southern Alps to Queenstown, the adventure capital of New Zealand. From here you can go on to explore Fiordland (famous for the iconic Milford Sound), Southland, Stewart Island, and all the way up the east coast through Otago via Dunedin back to Christchurch.

However you decide to enjoy your New Zealand adventure it’s sure to be a memorable experience that will have you coming back for more!

Why not rent a campervan in Christchurch and tour New Zealand’s South Island for yourself? New Zealand has an extensive network of holiday parks in all major tourist centres, and in most towns, where you can park up your rental campervan while you go explore.

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/destinations-articles/new-zealand-via-road-rail-a-journey-through-natural-splendour-970705.html

Fertile Opportunity: Orosi Valley in Costa Rica

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

A Traveler Special Feature by By Kat Sunlove and Layne Winklebleck

Costa Rica, a land of verdant rain forests and pristine beaches, enjoys a well-deserved reputation as a prime retirement option for the tired-of-the-rat-race crowd. But as its popularity has soared so has its real estate, especially in those areas most favored by retirees, primarily the Guanacaste province in the northwestern prong of the country. Because of its notably drier climate, many ex-pats began buying land and building homes there some years back, when property was quite affordable, even bargain by U.S. standards. Now, a decade or more into the migration, it is hard to find a well-built 3-bedroom, 2-bath house in the Guanacaste region for under $400K. These days you can buy a mansion in California for that kind of money!

But if you head the other direction out of the capital of San Jose, east and south across the busy central plateau, past historical Cartago and Paraiso, only an hour and a half from the airport, you will find the Orosi Valley, an emerald jewel of hillside coffee plantations, traditional pueblos graced with historical churches, rushing rivers and vistas of banana trees and friendly Ticos (as locals call themselves), largely undiscovered by visitors or investors. My husband Layne and I have spent some time exploring Costa Rica in our search for the perfect retirement locale. We’ve decided the Orosi Valley may just be it!

As you head downhill on the well-paved highway from Paraiso, the view suddenly opens onto a lush tropical basin with the wild Aguacaliente River rushing through it, surrounded by slopes of deep green coffee fields, punctuated with an occasional brightly painted cinderblock house halfway up the slope. Located only 25 miles southeast of the capital of San Jose, the village of Orosi and other small towns perched on the rise of the fertile mountainsides all around beckon recession-weary Americans with affordable and unspoiled land, incredible views, abundant willing local workers and all the services required for a comfortable retirement or just a frugal tropical holiday. With year-round temperatures in the 70’s, Orosi Valley makes an attractive alternative to the humidity and heat of the tourist-weary beach towns.

Here in the eastern end of the central highland, land is still priced to suit a budget and local construction resources are top-notch. On a recent visit to Costa Rica, my husband and I befriended a tall, transplanted Texan contractor-cum-realtor who can sell you a quarter acre of view land for $25K and build you a gorgeous, seriously engineered 1600 sq. ft. home for about $70K. Gregarious Stephen Riley and his charming wife Nancy own Paradise Peak Realty in Orosi and after 15 years, the pair knows the area like locals. In an all-day real estate outing with Steve and our buyer’s agent Jean-Pierre Pfleger, we visited properties from the river-frontage parcels near Steve’s own 50-acre garden paradise through Sanchiri with it’s magnificent mirador, or lookout point, along the length of Lake Cachi, where sacks of crawfish can be had during the season for a pittance and on through the town of Cachi, one of many small communities that border the lake. We finished our tour in downtown Orosi where we viewed several Tico houses, including an attractive handicapped accessible home on the main street, featuring a central patio bursting with fruit trees. The whole town of Orosi, in fact, seems unusually wheelchair-friendly for a Central American nation, offering periodic metal crossing points over the mandatory rain gutter running between street and sidewalk.

We wondered how the deteriorating economic climate had affected property and construction costs in Orosi so we recently contacted Steve with those questions. According to him, the Valley economy is booming with new migrants from the U.S. and elsewhere coming at the rate of about two a month. He said construction costs had dropped slightly but so far, Orosi continues to enjoy a strong real estate market. Surrounded by tourist attractions such as Lankaster Gardens, home to hundreds of the orchid varieties native to Costa Rica and Tapanti National Park where hikers trek to visit 300-foot high Salto Falls and watch the abundant wildlife, Orosi is positioned for strong growth in coming years. Layne and I hope to be among those contented ex-pats nibbling on Steve’s fantastic Strawberry Cake and homemade brew at the monthly party he hosts for locals and transplants alike!

The Night the Stars Fell

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

By Cecilia Worth

Leonid Meteor Shower: The Night the Stars Fell, a story by Cecilia WorthJust beyond the nose of my old Mazda, its faded green streaked with dried road salt, swayed a Colorado interstate sign that surely lied. The information on the sign, Route 25, matched the Route 25 printed on my map. But never in its wildest dreams could this road pass for a four-lane highway. Across land that might have been ironed flat, a ribbon of bleached asphalt stretched towards New Mexico, proof that parallel lines meet if you can see far enough. Except for snow-encrusted tumbleweeds knocked about by the wind, nothing moved over the endlessness of withered grass and ice. My travel guide, on which I depended as a baby on its mother, had betrayed me.

Only after months of meticulous planning had I set out on this solo trip across the United States. No matter how keen my enthusiasm for adventure, whenever I drove alone into unfamiliar territory something inside me insisted that I would not be seen again. I could never free myself from images of roads dwindling into impassable tracts, losing themselves in fog and gloom. Yesterday that nightmare took on credibility. As I crept over an icy pass into the Rocky Mountains, snow-plastered foothills thousands of feet high, I eyed two huge

Mainline Moving Vans slow-skating across each other’s lanes and knew one thing absolutely. I must abandon my northern route to California, my carefully woven safety net of yellow-markered road maps, detailed directions to every B&B, day-to-day itineraries. I must detour south through territory I had never researched.

Now, far beyond the frozen wasteland waiting to gobble me up hovered the outline of yet another mountain range. Cold seeped into the car. Only a mile back stood a small motel, an island of safety and warmth. Yet, wisdom – or maybe pure obstinacy – argued that my supplies included a full tank of gas, food and a sleeping bag, and that hunkering down in a motel would not get me to California. Latching on to the words less for reassurance than to fight panic, I spun the heater dial as high as it would go and drove onto the road.

Gusts slammed the car into a zig-zag course. Frozen puddles crackled beneath the tires. Snow encroached along the pavement’s edge until I seemed to be crunching across the plain itself. My fingers ached from their vice-grip on the steering wheel.

For hours, the land remained the same, the odometer’s changing digits my only proof of progress. When at last the road burrowed into the Sangre de Christo mountains, I pushed on, never stopping for fear the lack of motion would bring on paralysis. Snow berms towered above the car, the road’s surface packed firm as a ski trail.

By twilight, emerging into New Mexico’s winter-brown range land, I was a zombie, wanting only a roof and a bed. A sign, Casa del Gavilon, pointed down a rutted dirt lane that dipped into a grove of cottonwoods sheltering an adobe hacienda. Inside, darkly stained beams, fireplaces of hand-laid stones, and rugs in warm reds and blues created an immense comforting quiet.

“People don’t usually visit at this time of year,” said the grey-haired housekeeper, as she laid a newspaper next to a tureen of steaming soup, her movements unperturbed by the trials of daily life. Below a loosely

knitted brown cardigan that lapped across her ample frontage like a favorite blanket, her feet overflowed the embrace of squashed carpet slippers.  “I expect you’ve come for tonight’s meteor shower.”

The paper’s headlines took up half a page. Leonids hurtle by on annual visit. Unique meteor storm predicted. Thousands per hour. Rare event only once every thirty-three years. Best viewing after midnight. Why would I want to venture out into the cold and wind just when I had escaped? Oblivion was what I craved.

The housekeeper patted a yawn back into her mouth. “Most folks around here don’t get too excited about losing a good night’s sleep to see a bunch of shooting stars.”

Her indifference prodded something in me that rebelled against dullness. There was that curiosity again, that call of the wild. Thoughts of the moonless dark and the lonely waiting pressed me to reconsider. But to disregard this opportunity, and the circumstances that had brought me to it, would be almost sinful.

That evening I went to sleep early wearing all my clothes, including my boots. I knew that, when the alarm went off at midnight, if I even had to tie my shoelaces, I would never tear myself out of that warm, cozy bed.

So it was, with the silence of the old house hissing in my ears and my heart hammering, I tiptoed out to my car. The motor sounded like a dozen backhoes coming to life.

Headlights dim, I drove slowly through the dark until I was far out on the range. The strange world of late hours seemed alive with unseen eyes, stealth and menace.

I could scurry back to my warm bed and in the morning give myself credit for trying. Probably I would see nothing anyhow. The only human being for miles around foolish enough to be out in the middle of nowhere waiting for a miracle.

Cautiously, I backed the car off the road and down an incline, until the windshield slanted towards the sky, transforming my seat into an upholstered recliner. Above me the sky was as ordinary as a thousand other night skies, a blanket of darkness spattered with starlight, blending with the horizon. The prairie grass rustled and the wind moaned, finding its way into the car. An ordinary night.

Then it happened. Off to the left, a globe of yellow fire burst out of the darkness and shot across the sky, trailing behind it a swath of white light longer and wider than any banner I had ever seen. Before I could exhale, the globe exploded, scattering fiery pieces of itself in a perfect widening circle. Then all was darkness.

For a second I sat, frozen. Next, I heard myself shouting, “I saw one! I saw one!”  No matter if others never came.

But they did, arcing across the sky like nothing I had ever imagined, huge ribbons of white light flung through the darkness, streaming behind globes brilliant as head lights. Like gigantic fireworks, they erupted into golden chrysanthemums, illuminating ghostly fences undulating across miles of range land, the dirt road slicing away to a thread. All of them streaking and exploding in eerie silence, no sound carried across the vast void through which they traveled.

As they leapt by the hundreds to their grand finale, I experienced a strange sense of myself perched on the outer skin of my home planet journeying with them through time and space. For the briefest moment, I knew I was part of that incredible beauty and power, an immense, timeless vitality beyond anything I had ever believed was missing from my own life.

I stopped worrying about losing my way en route to California, falling off the edge of the earth. And I went back to my cozy room with its fireplace and patchwork quilt and slept dreamlessly all night.

Image Credit: NASA

Hawks and History at Gold Discovery Park, California

Saturday, March 7th, 2009

By P.K. Wink

Falconry is a family affair at Gold Discover ParkHawking, a hunting sport from distant antiquity with a history going back some 4000 years, is alive and well thanks to dedicated aficionados like Steve Robello and Mark Duval. These two local falconers periodically give public demonstrations sponsored by the American River Conservancy, a non-profit organization dedicated to protecting and enhancing natural habitats where wildlife can flourish, at the Gold Discovery Park, located along historic Highway 49 in Coloma, Californa. No actual hunting went on during the recent lecture and demonstration since permitted hunting areas and legal seasons for hawking are tightly controlled by law. But the wide-ranging talk and exhibition stirred visions of old English barons hunting wild game with predator hawks, falcons and even eagles.

Raptors were a status symbol in ancient times dating from at least 1700 B.C., as shown on bas-relief in Assyria, continuing on through the 15th century. During their heyday, there were harsh penalties for disturbing nests or poaching falcons as the birds were quite valuable; such protective policies marked the beginning of modern-day rules on conservation. According to our lecturer, the advent of more efficient weaponry, i.e., firearms, in the 1400’s almost overnight ended the popularity of raptors and made their use as hunters less widespread.

Today there are some 3000 licensed falconers in the U.S. who have taken classes, undergone testing through state Fish and Game Departments, found a sponsor, completed a two-year Apprenticeship, upgraded to General level and after five years, finally achieved status as Masters. The conservation efforts of these experts have rescued species such as the Peregrine Falcon from endangered status.

As part of ongoing historical activities at Coloma, site of the 1848 gold discovery by James Marshall at Sutter’s Mill, the American River Conservancy offers a number of programs throughout the year. Living history events, sponsored by the Gold Discovery Park Association, occur around holidays and always on Gold Discovery Day, January 24th. The park museum was recently renovated and makes a worthwhile hour-long visit. Its vivid historical displays include an authentic stagecoach, period costumes, photographs and well-used gold mining tools. The adjacent gift shop offers gold jewelry, books, toys and period dress patterns.

A hawk takes to the sky

Following the falconry lecture, two gleaming golden brown raptors were released into the sky as a highlight of the event. These were Harris Hawks, known as “wolves of the sky” because unlike most hawks that hunt in solitary, the Harris hunts in packs, working in tandem to capture their prey then sharing the kill.

Freed from their perches, away the two birds went, tethers dangling, flying low and banking purposefully one direction and the other, oblivious to legal hunting areas or seasons. They paused in nearby treetops, hungrily scanning the terrain for unwary ground squirrels or other appetizing morsels. The intimidating pair was lured back with treats of gory meat-bundles before they had a chance to snag any unsuspecting critters. In fact, we learned those sharp-toothed clawed critters could be hazardous for the hawks, who risk injury to their legs in attacking such well-armed prey. In open fields during legal hunting seasons, the birds prefer gentler fare of rabbit, duck, quail or grouse.

“Are they sort of pets? Do they like you?” someone asked Mark.
“Oh no,” he laughed. “If they could hold me down, they would eat me.”

Perhaps so and the caution was sufficient to restrain any effort at petting the beautiful, yet sinister-looking creatures. But the brief flight by these “wolves of the sky” was enough to make the pulse race and the breath quicken from the sheer primitive bloodlust of it. The thrill of watching those powerful wings and the cold, hungry look in raptor eyes brought a distant world of hunting into sharp relief.


Year-Round Acitvities at Gold Discovery Park

  • Melodrama at the Olde Coloma Theater. Five different shows are presented from mid-May through late December. This is one of only three theaters in the state that allows audience members to interact with the cast by cheering the heroine and booing the villain.
  • American River Music Festival in September, held at nearby Henningsen-Lotus Park, features a day of rafting and music, naturalist-led hikes and music, musicians teaching in schools, and of course a wide range of performers on the main stage and in many smaller ones in local campgrounds.
  • American River Acoustic Music Camp in August is a learning opportunity open to individuals and families.
  • Coloma Gold Rush Live, which takes place in October, is full of sights, sounds, scents, and hands-on experiences as costumed volunteers living in a tent encampment and working a recreated mining camp demonstrate history.
  • Christmas in Coloma offers an old-fashioned Christmas celebration each December, with period crafts, music, strolling musicians, historic trade demonstrations, 19th-century children’s games, and wreath making, highlighted by a visit from Santa and Mrs. Claus.

By Diane Covington

Bracebridge 03 THUMB_Lani Spicer - Andrea Fulton Productions.jpgIn these tough and challenging economic times, it may seem rather frivolous to think about going to an extravagant holiday celebration such as the Bracebridge dinner in Yosemite Valley. And yet, this once in a lifetime opportunity could be a Christmas gift that you and a loved one could cherish, rather than a thing that could just take up space in your house and be forgotten by New Year’s. You’d be purchasing an experience, creating a memory, and that can be priceless.

I went to the Bracebridge dinner in 2006 and will never forget it. I had heard about it for decades and wondered what all the hoopla was about. Well, the buzz was well deserved. The seven-course feast was scrumptious and the performance, spanning four hours, was professional and riveting. One minute I was laughing hysterically at the antics of the jester, the next moved to tears at a rendition of Ave Maria or O Holy Night.

In the heart of Yosemite Valley, the historic Ahwahnee Hotel, where the Bracebridge is performed, sits right up against the three thousand foot granite cliffs, its rock façade blending with the massive stones behind it. The Ahwahnee, the ‘Grand Dame’ hotel of the park, was built in 1927 for a sum of 1.5 million dollars. The elegant dining room, with giant sugar pine beams criss-crossing the 34-foot ceilings, can feel like a scene from a fairy tale.

The Ahwahnee dining room becomes the medieval great hall of fictional Squire Bracebridge, who comes to life from the pages of ‘Old Christmas’, a story penned in 1819 by Washington Irving, (who also wrote ‘Rip Van Winkle’ and ‘the Legend of Sleepy Hollow’). The jovial Squire devotes himself to the preservation of the old English hospitality of ‘making merry’ and spares no expense when he invites his family and friends to feast with him on Christmas Day, 1718. If you’re attending the Bracebridge dinner, that’s you.

The fanfare of trumpets heralds the beginning of the feast. Women in jeweled velvet gowns and men in tights and feathered caps escort you to your tables inside the candlelit hall. Fresh pine boughs and colorful banners decorate the hall where more than 100 players sing and dance for your enjoyment.

Bracebridge 01 THUMB_Lani Spicer - Andrea Fulton Productions.jpgThe feast, a seven-course affair that is a delight for all the senses, has kept the same order and substance since the first dinner in 1927. Serving folk present the four main courses–fish, poultry, beef and pudding –on elaborate platters, for the Squire’s approval. Singers add their voices to these processions, minstrels wander and jesters entertain, adding to the festive atmosphere.

The sounding of chimes signals the presentation of each course. Within minutes, over 350 guests have been served by a hundred servers with a hundred more working behind the scenes in the kitchen.

The celebration, which began in 1927, has been performed annually, except during World War II. Famed photographer Ansel Adams wrote the rhymed four-beat cadence of the characters’ lines and chose fine music such as “The Coventry Carol” and “O Holy Night”. Adams also played the part of the ‘Lord of Misrule’(the jester) for many years. The program he created, of carols, music and Renaissance rituals, is still used today.

What was once just a Christmas Day performance, has grown to eight performances a year. Tickets used to be so hard to come by that a lottery system, now discontinued, was in effect for over 25 years. The program does sell out, usually on ‘Christmas Eve, but there are plenty of spaces on other evenings. The squire now “Bids ye welcome to Bracebridge Hall” for those who would like to celebrate with him.

In the words of Director Andrea Fulton: “the Bracebridge represents a Christmas that never was, but a Christmas that lives in everyone’s hearts.”

To balance out your winter feasting, take advantage of the full schedule of daily activities in the valley, most of them free, open to park visitors. Or choose from the many different levels of winter sports activities for all ages. (See box for details.) The park keeps the roads clear, but carry chains.

Whether for feasting or for outdoor fun, the majesty of Yosemite in winter will transport you to an earlier time and place, full of wonder and magic. And the Ahwahnee hotel will add her elegant and romantic welcome. That might be just the ticket for this Christmas after all.

Winter activities in Yosemite National Park:

  • Badger Pass Winter Sports: From the valley, catch the free shuttle up to Badger Pass Ski Area, for snowboarding, downhill and cross-country skiing. Or enjoy a free snowshoe walk with a Park Ranger, daily at 10:30am. (You can rent snowshoes for $5.)
  • Valley sports and fun: pretend you’re an Olympic skater at the Curry Village Ice skating rink. Or get a head start on the hiking season this year. Depending on the level of snowfall, many valley hiking trails may be open.
  • Ranger Walks and talks: Each day in the valley, choose among various indoor talks or valley walks, even ‘Wee Wild Ones’ for children under six. Or catch an evening Ranger program at Yosemite Lodge. Check the website for all current information.
  • Museums and gallery: Browse through the Visitor’s Center, Ansel Adams Gallery or the Indian Cultural Museum or watch the half-hour film, ‘The Spirit of Yosemite’.

Diane Covington 2008