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A Free Content Articles Directory for Authors and Publishers » Travel
1: Menorca Summer Vacations - Tempting Back the Tourists
2: ITALY-FOR TRAVELERS
3: Tea Time In India -For Travelers
4: Indian Cuisine-For Travelers
5: INDEPENDENCE OF INDIA
6: Health Concerns in India-For Visitors
7: An Introduction to India
8: ECOTOURISM- Now in India…
9: HORSLEY HILLS OF INDIA
10: GULMARG (HIGHEST GOLF COURSE)
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Travel Categories: Total Articles Count 979
1: Menorca Summer Vacations - Tempting Back the Tourists
Fewer people will be taking a holiday in 2009 than last year, and the Menorca holidays industry is keeping its fingers crossed that their main British market won't be holding back on visiting the holi
2: ITALY-FOR TRAVELERS
Let me guide you how to a visit Italy if you have just 3 days
Dreading the delirium of the half-a-day-per city method.
First day: Choose Verona, because it’s small and less sought-after, and thereby devise the dummy approach to seeing Italy.
Dreading the delirium of the half-a-day-per city method.
First day: Choose Verona, because it’s small and less sought-after, and thereby devise the dummy approach to seeing Italy.
3: Tea Time In India -For Travelers
It is the prettiest industry-and now a tourist attraction.
The ancient Lu U spoke of tea (cha), in the Chinese classic Cha Ching, as the herb that allows one to fly on the wings of immortality. The Chinese jealously guarded their bushes and manufacturing secrets, though they willingly traded tea to the Gwyalo (‘white devil’) for gold. By 1832 tea was part of daily life in England, imported by East India Company ships. John Company’s monopoly ended in the 19th century, but he wasn’t about to give up on such a lucrative trade. He began to look elsewhere-and what better place than in India?
The ancient Lu U spoke of tea (cha), in the Chinese classic Cha Ching, as the herb that allows one to fly on the wings of immortality. The Chinese jealously guarded their bushes and manufacturing secrets, though they willingly traded tea to the Gwyalo (‘white devil’) for gold. By 1832 tea was part of daily life in England, imported by East India Company ships. John Company’s monopoly ended in the 19th century, but he wasn’t about to give up on such a lucrative trade. He began to look elsewhere-and what better place than in India?
4: Indian Cuisine-For Travelers
India offers of the most varied cuisines of any place on the planet. However, many visitors have not been exposed to the full variety of foods that are available in India and tend to stick to the same dishes they order in their favorite Indian restaurant at home. To help you break new ground in ordering, here are a few regional specialties you can look for as you travel.
5: INDEPENDENCE OF INDIA
The Rajs demise was partially a result of its remarkable success. It had gained control of the country by viewing it as a source of profit. Infrastructure had been developed, administration established, and an entire structure of governance erected. India had become a profitable venture, and the British were loath to allow the Indian population any power in a system that they viewed as their own accomplishment. The Indians didn’t appreciate this much, and as the 20th century dawned there were increasing movements towards self-rule.
6: Health Concerns in India-For Visitors
It is certainly possible to travel in India without getting sick. But it is also possible, even being terribly careful, to get sick here. Besides personal hygiene (wash hands often, keep finger nails short, treat minor cuts and scrapes immediately) travellers should be concerned with three key areas-clean water, cooked food, and avoiding mosquitoes. The most common and incapaciting diseases are gastro-instestinal upset, hepatitis and mosquito borne diseases are gastro-instestinal upset, hepatitis and mosquito borne diseases like dengue fever, Japanese encephalitis, filarial and malaria.
7: An Introduction to India
India is an intriguing country. It is and ancient land, with great cultural richness and a fascinating history. It is also a young country, struggling to form an egalitarian and democratic society. Part of the fascination of India lies in the fact that both ancient and modern India coexists here in perfect harmony. Pleasures of modern technology. The resulting images are confusing, both to the outsider looking in and to Indians themselves- and therein lies the mystery.
8: ECOTOURISM- Now in India…
In India, ecotourism is still mostly hype and inaction. The National Tourism Policy of 2002 is quite ambitious about eco-tourism. Himachal Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh also have ecotourism policies. But these are plans in government files. Outside the red-taped files, most of India’s forests are battlefields, with wildlifers/ conservationists on one side and forest-dwelling communities on the other. It is essential to ecotourism that the people living in the area take a lead in conservation and tourism. This still looks some way off.
9: HORSLEY HILLS OF INDIA
Yes it’s in the state of Andhra Pradesh of India.
In an earlier avatar when Horsley Hills was not the commercial hill station it is now, it used to be an undeveloped rustic hillock. According to local legend, a pious woman called Mallamma used to live on the top of the hill where she was protected and looked after by an elephant. Word soon got around and the place was rather simplistically dubbed Yenugu Mallamma Konda (hill).
In an earlier avatar when Horsley Hills was not the commercial hill station it is now, it used to be an undeveloped rustic hillock. According to local legend, a pious woman called Mallamma used to live on the top of the hill where she was protected and looked after by an elephant. Word soon got around and the place was rather simplistically dubbed Yenugu Mallamma Konda (hill).
10: GULMARG (HIGHEST GOLF COURSE)
Up the down slope
State: Jammu and Kashmir,India
Location this meadow of flowers lies at a height of 8,694ft, 57 km SW of Srinagar
Route from Jammu NH1A to Srinagar via Patnitop, Batote, Ramban and the banihal Tunnel; Baramulla Road to narbal; state road to Gulmarg via Tangmarg
State: Jammu and Kashmir,India
Location this meadow of flowers lies at a height of 8,694ft, 57 km SW of Srinagar
Route from Jammu NH1A to Srinagar via Patnitop, Batote, Ramban and the banihal Tunnel; Baramulla Road to narbal; state road to Gulmarg via Tangmarg
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