Sunday, May 23, 2010
Places I Have Been
Las Vegas, Nevada – World’s largest, most spectacular and dazzling display of neon lighting, casinos and theme park resorts.
Niagara Falls, Canada-USA – World’s largest waterfall by volume; attracts millions of tourists each year.
Buffalo, New York
Boston, Massachusetts
Outer Banks, North Carolina
Reno, Nevada
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Disney World, Florida
Cincinnati, Ohio
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Places to Go. Part 1.
White Sands, USA – Cool dunes of powdered gypsum have created a pristine landscape.
Wat Arun, Thailand – The majestic Temple of Dawn, a Bangkok landmark, contrasts with modern urban development.
Western Wall, Israel – Original wall section of the Temple of Solomon, which was destroyed by the Roman army; Judaism’s most sacred pilgrimage site.
Ur, Iraq – Ruins of an important Sumerian city state over 6000 years old.
Troy, Turkey – A lost city until the 19th century; famous for the myth of the Trojan Horse.
Stave Churches, Norway – Steep wooden buildings of unique design, c.1200.
Serengeti Plain, United Rep. of Tanzania – Includes World renowned national park and game reserve; noted for vast migrations of wild animals.
San’a, Yemen – One of the World’s oldest cities; surrounded by walls.
Samarkand, Uzbekistan – Ancient and exotic city on the silk road.
Sagrada Familia, Spain – Masterpiece of organic architecture; work still in progress; begun 1882.
Red Fort, India – Opulent sandstone palace of the 17th century Mogul Empire.
Potala Palace, Tibet – Winter residence of the Dali Lamas; now a museum.
Petra, Jordan – Remains of classical monuments cut into rock.
Palmyra, Syrian Arab Rep. – Magnificent ruined city of the Roman Empire.
Nazca Lines, Peru – Puzzling lines and drawings of an enormous scale etched on stony desert; origins and function unclear.
Mount Ararat, Turkey – Mountain associated with Noah’s Ark.
Motherland, Russian Federation – Mammoth statue; commemorates the Russians who died in the fierce 1942-43 battle for Stalingrad (now Volgograd).
Monument Valley, USA – One of the World’s serene landscapes; wind-carved sandstone monoliths rise from the desert plain.
Mont-Saint-Michel, France – Famous medieval abbey and architectural marvel atop a massive rock in the coastal sandbanks of Normandy.
Meteora, Greece – Lofty pinnacles of rock dotted with Byzantine monasteries.
Meroe Ruins, Sudan – Pyramid remains of Ancient Nubia.
Leptis Magna, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya – World’s best-preserved remains of a Roman city.
Legoland, Denmark – 30-million Lego blocks recreate the World in miniature.
Lascaux Caves, France – World renowned prehistoric cave paintings; 15-20 thousand years old; discovered by children in 1940.
Lalibela Rock Churches, Ethiopia – Eleven hand-chiseled churches carved into a granite mountain; c.1200.
Kronborg Castle, Denmark – Famous setting for Shakespeare’s Hamlet.
Khyber Pass, Afganistan – Strategic trade and invasion route to India.
Itsukushima Shrine, Japan – Surrounded by sea, Japan’s biggest and most famous torii (gateway) guards the entrance to a Shinto shrine.
Itaipu Dam, Brazil – World’s most powerful hydroelectric dam.
Iguacu Falls, Argentina – World’s broadest waterfall, 4km wide.
House of Slaves, Senegal – Once a center of the slave trade; now a memorial to the 10 million African victims.
Hermitage, Russian Federation – Amongst the World’s largest museums; sumptuous buildings include the Winter Palace and Hermitage Theatre.
Hadrian’s Wall, England – 120-km Roman fortification against barbarians to the north; rugged landscape.
Guilin, China – Romantic yet surreal landscape of steep-sided limestone hills that jut out from a flat plain.
Great Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe – Remains of an impressive stone city, created without mortar, c.1100; origins unclear.
Golden Temple, India – Spiritual center of the Sikh religion.
Giant’s Causeway, N. Ireland – Honeycombed columns of volcanic rock form a gigantic stairway into the sea.
Ellora and Ajanta Caves, India – Huge complex of temple caves.
El Escorial, Spain – Austere and majestic palace/monastery built in 1584; seat of Philip II’s Spanish Empire.
Copan, Honduras – Mayan royal city abandoned c.1000.
Church of the Transfiguration, Russian Federation – All wood construction featuring 22 domes.
Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Israel – Important Christian sanctuary; located near sites of Jesus’ crucifixion and entombment.
Chichen Itza, Mexico – Dramatic Mayan/Toltec city known for its huge ball court and well of human sacrifice; abandoned c.1224.
Chernobyl, Ukraine – Site of the World’s worst nuclear accident, 1986.
Chartres Cathedral, France – One of the most inspiring examples of Gothic architecture; includes some of the finest stained-glass windows in the World.
Chan Chan, Peru – Ruins of the World’s largest adobe city; former capital of Chimu empire (12th Century); fell to the Incas c.1470.
Cappadocia, Turkey – Hundreds of early Byzantine churches carved into a haunting landscape of volcanic rock cones.
Banaue Rice Terraces, Philippines – Amazing 2000-year-old terraces carved into hillsides.
Atomic Bomb Done, Japan – Skeleton of a building serves as a grim memorial to Hiroshima’s atomic destruction in 1945.
Alhambra, Sprain – Elegant palace/fortress of Spain’s Moorish rulers