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Gifts of excitement PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Monday, 24 November 2008 04:27

 

The holidays are sneaking up on us and, if you're like me, you're already struggling to find the perfect gift for those in your life who seem to have everything. This year it might be a bit easier for us all, thanks to Excitations.

Excitations provides unqiue experiences for kids of all ages craving a bit of adventure. From racing a Formula One car for the afternoon or taking fighter pilot training to instruction in juggling or arranging flowers, there's something for everyone -- and every price range.

 
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Swept Away on the Tremiti Islands PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Monday, 24 November 2008 04:24

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On one unconventional Thanksgiving, my husband Joe and I were not carving the big bird or taking extra helpings of yams. We were strapped into a small helicopter, piloted by a young woman with billowing red curls, on our way to a remote island off Italy's Adriatic coast. We departed at dawn from Foggia's empty airport on a cold and cloudy November day. In 20 minutes we landed on San Domino, the largest of the five Tremiti Islands. And it was overcast here, too.
We realized we were probably the only two people on earth who would venture to this little-known island on the cusp of the dreary fall-winter season. Arturo Santoro, the owner of Pensione Belvedere, met us on the bleak air strip and loaded our bags into his clunky white van, with one door hanging off its hinge. We then sped along the wild vegetation-lined gravel roads of this Robinson Crusoe-like isle.
Arturo, a world-champion scuba diver, lamented this sudden cold spell that would prevent us from seeing the island's preserved red-coral reefs up close. A vigorous man in his mid-60s, he sported longish hair dyed a Grecian Formula orange and smoked a Parodi.

Our room faced the island of San Nicola, visible over the thick clusters of electrified trees. From our perspective, its stacked medieval church, castle and fortress looked like the remnants of a discombobulated movie set. Then we could see our breath and realized Arturo didn't turn on the heat. After all, we were the only guests. With some gentle prodding on our part, he agreed to turn up the thermostat - enough for us to no longer see our breath. But we still wore our fleece jackets inside.

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Though we reveled in the prospect of discovering an island in the middle of nowhere, we felt the pangs of being alone here during the off season. Since no restaurants or bars were open, we agreed to take all of our meals at Pensione Belvedere, prepared by the multifaceted Arturo himself - who was already tossing around pots and handfuls of flour when we bid him farewell to take a walk. As we gritted our teeth against the chilly wind, Joe and I wondered if Arturo ruled this strange place alone - a modern-day Prospero commanding the rocks, trees and ocean breezes. Then something happened that made us believe San Domino was enchanted.


As we walked toward a bluff, passing two curious horses grazing in an open field, an Irish setter came loping along. Then another one darted out from behind a trash-strewn yard.  Soon a boxer, with low-hanging nipples, appeared and discreetly trailed us across the high grasses -- like the hound of the Baskervilles. Two black labradors joined in. By the time we returned from the foam-splashed precipices and Afro-topped Aleppo pines, a whole pack of dogs began to follow us. We soon reached a vacant soccer field, where the dogs encircled us. Could we have been the chosen victims of a bizarre dog-spirit sacrifice? To our relief, they rolled on their backs and just wanted their tummies rubbed. One of the black labs, with a velvet-smooth coat, stayed at my side. Her longing eyes seemed to be those of a transformed mythic figure, such as Isis or Minerva. The army of canines dispersed peacefully once we returned to the pensione. But our loyal lab remained beneath our green-shuttered window. She gazed up every time we looked outside.


By now, Arturo had cooked up a storm. We dined in a room whose walls were painted with giant green, orange, yellow, blue and red fish. Joe and I sat in front of a monster-sized mural of a lobster, its claws poised to strangle us. We were serenaded by a spunky canary and surprised to discover more humans. At the next table sat four young men, in navy-blue pea coats, from the Coast Guard. They nodded our way as they puffed on cigarettes and ate their insalata di mare while watching a soccer match on Arturo's wide-screen television. The rugged, unassuming Arturo clad in a jogging suit served us lunch while chewing on his attached Parodi. We started with an antipasto of grilled calamari, capers, oregano and olive oil and continued with seafood risotto. Once we polished off our mint-and-olive-oil-spiced swordfish, we noticed the words "Arturo Santoro: Campione Mondiale di Pesca Subacquea" inscribed on the bottom of our white-ceramic plates. We were in the presence of a celebrity, who shrugged off our admiration by saying he was just a guy who dives in the ocean for a living. In fact, he was out earlier in a wetsuit spearing fish for tonight's dinner.

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We figured it was best to walk off our lunch. So Joe and I continued toward the other side of the island, past rows of empty brick homes, discarded refrigerators and a cavalcade of animals: kittens sleeping in a box; rabbits in cages; a solitary cow; finches buzzing around a makeshift aviary; and more dogs. An old Irish setter sat erect like a sphinx on a stoop. An elderly fisherman, the only other person we encountered, tipped his cap our way as he repaired nets on his front porch. His white angora cat lounged alongside prancing hens and a rooster. Nature flourishes here, and there's a certain outer-space iridescence to the red-and-gold vegetation.

Last Updated on Monday, 24 November 2008 04:26
 
Cheaper than staying home? Spain for a week, including air, from $699 PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Monday, 24 November 2008 04:22

Spain is on sale - this Costa del Sol Value Vacation  through Gate 1 Travel offers eight days and six nights in Spain, including airfare, hotel, daily breakfast, and even a full-day sightseeing tour. And it  excludes airport taxes and fees, so expect to see that price rise by about $150 or so a ticket. Even then, it makes me want to go grab the suitcase I just unpacked and stowed away, and start repacking it for Espana.

That would be a little premature - the departure dates for this trip begin in January, 2009, and go through March. If you haven't decided what your first trip of the new year will be, this might be the one to choose.

The base price of $699 applies to the January 13th and January 20th departures; other dates are more.

 
Nashville, TN PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Friday, 13 April 2007 12:51
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Set amid the gentle hills and fertile farmlands of central Tennessee, NASHVILLE attracts six million people each year – a mixture of devoted fans and the just plain curious – to immerse themselves in country music. They come to enjoy themselves, and the city makes sure that they do, offering not just the relatively mainstream Country Music Hall of Fame and  Grand Ole Opry, but all the wonders of "Tacksville." To make the most of this facet of Nashville, you need to abandon any idea of detachment, and get out there among the nightspots and gift emporia, joining the quest for souvenir T-shirts, Stetsons, rattlesnake belts and photos of your favorite star.

However, there is a real city beneath the rhinestone glitter. Nashville has been the leading settlement in middle Tennessee since Fort Nashborough was established in 1779. State capital since 1843, it is now the financial and insurance center of the mid-South, as well as a fast-growing manufacturing base. Giant Nissan and Saturn motor plants have been attracted to its immediate hinterland, and rapid growth since World War II has transformed a once-compact city into a sprawling conurbation stretching out in all directions along the undulating roads, here known as pikes.

For all its blue-collar "Nash-Vegas" image, Nashville has maintained a strong reputation for learning since planter times, and is home to sixteen higher education establishments, including Vanderbilt University and the renowned black colleges of Fisk University and Meharry Medical School. The city likes to see itself as the "Athens of the South" – and, endearingly, has built a replica of the Parthenon to bolster its claim. Even at night, Nashville offers more than country music, with enough going on to satisfy most tastes. It has also boosted its image by attracting an NFL team (the Tennessee Oilers) and NHL side (the Nashville Predators) here.

The other conspicuous element in Nashville's make-up is religion. There are over seven hundred churches, more per capita than anywhere else in the country. But what really earns it the tag of "Protestant Vatican" is the proliferation of colleges for training preachers and missionaries, church administrative offices and Bible-publishing plants.

Last Updated on Saturday, 22 November 2008 15:28
 
Nashville History PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Friday, 13 April 2007 12:48
Like much of the southeastern U.S., the area around Nashville was inhabited by Mississippian tribes some 1,000 years ago. Stone tools, pottery shards and burial mounds have been unearthed around what is now the Tennessee Bicentennial Mall. The region was a prime hunting ground for later Native Americans, including the Cherokee, the Chickasaw and the Shawnee. Fort Nashborough, the first permanent European settlement in the area, was built on the banks of the Cumberland River in 1779 (a replica of the original fort stands at the foot of Broadway). Tennessee became the 16th state of the Union in 1796, and the town—renamed Nashville—was later chosen as its capital.
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During the War of 1812, many of the city's residents left for New Orleans to fight, helping Tennessee earn the nickname "The Volunteer State." The soldiers fought under Gen. Andrew Jackson, who went on to become a U.S. president.

Initially held by the Confederates during the Civil War, Nashville was occupied by Federal troops in 1862 and remained in Union hands for the rest of the war. Several brutal battles were fought in the rolling hills of middle Tennessee in late 1864, however, including the Battle of Nashville, a decisive Union victory. Reconstruction brought recovery, progress and growth to the city. Several colleges based in the city became prominent in this period, including Fisk University, an influential school attended primarily by African Americans, and Vanderbilt University. Today, the city is home to some 16 colleges and universities.

Promoting its educational facilities and cultural refinement, the city championed itself as the "Athens of the South." To drive the point home, it built a full-scale replica of the Parthenon for the Tennessee Centennial Exposition in 1897. Then came country music—much to the horror of some of the city's high-minded promoters. The main reason Nashville became the home of country was radio station WSM, which began broadcasting the hugely popular Grand Ole Opry in 1925. In time, record labels and recording studios established themselves there, and Nashville had a new nickname: "Music City."

In the early 1960s, the Nashville sit-ins were among the first nonviolent protests for civil rights in the country. Around the same time, Nashville and Davidson County merged their operations to form a more unified and effective local government. Since then, the city has added communications- and computer-related businesses to its portfolio and has experienced significant growth. It continues to be a top choice for corporate relocations and expansions.

The city's visibility increased further in the mid-1990s, when Nashville became home to two professional sports teams, the Tennessee Titans NFL football team and the National Hockey League's Nashville Predators. In 2001, the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Frist Center for the Visual Arts opened, strengthening the city's cultural offerings; those offerings were boosted with the 2006 opening of the Schermerhorn Symphony Center, the European-like concert hall that the Nashville Symphony now calls home.

Today, music continues to be the city's most visible industry, and one that reaches beyond country to embrace all types of music. Nashville's diverse economy also remains on an even keel as the city continues to grow, attracting visitors and new residents alike.

Last Updated on Saturday, 22 November 2008 15:34
 
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