Imagine swimming with playful sea lions, stepping around comical blue-footed boobies, and photographing gigantic tortoises and prehistoric-looking marine iguanas.
Nowhere else on Earth can you commune so closely with exotic and bizarre wildlife as in the Galapagos Islands. With an expert naturalist as your guide, venture among the cinder cones, lava flows, white and black sand beaches, rocky cliffs and dramatic shorelines of this showcase of evolution.
Wildland Adventures' Galapagos travel specialists Jeff Stivers and Sherry Howland will detail the myriad of travel styles available from voyages on small yachts and expedition ships to land-based adventures utilizing new eco-lodges.
Combine your Galapagos trip with an exploration of the native villages, rainforests and Inca ruins on the Ecuadorian mainland or visit the ancient citadel of Machu Picchu in Peru. Whether traveling as a couple, a family or a group of friends, Ecuador offers a plethora active adventures and cultural explorations from the Andes to the Amazon and the Galapagos Islands.
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Post from Wildland Adventures
Thứ Hai, 28 tháng 2, 2011
Keukenhof flower display |
KEUKENHOF, LISSE – The theme for Keukenhof 2011 is "Germany: Land of Poets and Philosophers." Highlights this year are the various inspirational gardens with a German twist, the flowering bulb mosaic of the Brandenburg Gate incorporating more than 100,000 bulbs, and a special theme route. The official opening of Keukenhof 2011 will be performed by Mrs. Bettina Wulff, spouse of the German President Mr. Christian Wulff in the afternoon of March 23, 2011.
Despite the severe winter weather, there is a lot of organic activity going on under the ground at Keukenhof in Lisse. Around seven million flowering bulbs have been planted during the past months and as spring breaks, these will provide the traditional colorful splendor of the international flowering bulb exhibition.
Corn windmill in Keukenhof Gardens |
Netherlands-Germany Experience
Another highlight in this theme year is the Netherlands-Germany Experience, an exhibition at the Juliana Pavilion in which the many aspects of German-Dutch solidarity will be expressed. Image, light, sound and decor will make this exhibition a truly special experience. Historically, Germany has been one of the most important trading partners of Holland. The ornamental plant and tourism sectors play a particularly important role in this, and it is no coincidence that these are the disciplines that form the basis of Keukenhof. However, it is not only the economic ties that will be in the spotlight: a chapter of the exhibition is also dedicated to the long-term soccer contacts, and visitors can experience the world cup soccer finals of 1974 and 1988.
The Brandenburg Gate at Keukenhof
Tulips in Keukenhof Gardens |
Background
Keukenhof was originally the herb garden ("keuken" means kitchen in Dutch) of the Countess of Holland, Jacoba van Beyeren (1401-1436). In 1840, the horticultural architects Zocher, a father and son, designed the park that forms the basis of the current Keukenhof. They also designed the noted Vondelpark in Amsterdam.
Opening times and admission fees
The Keukenhof Gardens, open to the public from March 24 to May 20, 2011 can be visited daily from 8:00am to 7:30pm (ticket office open until 6:00pm). Entrance fee is 14,50 Euro (approx. CAN. $20) for adults and 7,00 Euro (approx. CAN. $9) for children. Keukenhof can be reached by train and bus, or by car and combination tickets are available when traveling by bus from Amsterdam Airport Schiphol.
Annual flower parade
The famous annual flower parade from Noordwijk to Haarlem, the largest in Holland, will take place on Saturday, April 16, 2011.
Photos copyright Anne Gordon
Post from H. Groenendijk
Thứ Năm, 24 tháng 2, 2011
Winnipeg Festival, Festival du Voyageur |
St. Boniface, across the river from the bustling city of Winnipeg, is Canada's oldest community and the site for a Winnipeg Festival called Festival du Voyageur. It is a celebration honouring the fur traders of centuries ago.
For 10 days in February, Winnipeggers, French and English, celebrate their combined heritage with the Festival du Voyageur, western Canada's largest winter event.
This year's festival started with a gathering of locals and visitors at the Forks Market close to the confluence of the Red River and the Assiniboine. Attired in fur coats; mink, fox, wolf and coyote, thick felt coats with pointed hoods and fringed shoulder decorations, and coats fashioned from Hudson Bay blankets (ever-popular even now in the 21st century), the candle-lit walk to St. Boniface was about to begin.
Walkers and modern day voyageurs, protected their upper extremities with Davy Crockett hats complete with luxuriant tails, red woolen Voyageur hats with pom poms, hats decorated with the head skin of coyotes and stylish Russian fur chapeaus. Footwear in many cases was beaded deer skin moccasins. Local police on duty were impressive in bulky buffalo fur coats.
As dusk crept over the city, we set off on the traditional Torch Light Walk along the middle of the iced-over Assiniboine River to St. Boniface Cathedral; hundreds of men, women and children, in a snaking line with candles flickering in the deepening dusk and snow gently powdering our procession.
Torch Light Walk to the Cathedral in St. Boniface |
Photos copyright Anne Gordon
Posted by Anne Gordon on Thursday, 24th February
Good enough for the mustache competition |
Competitions are an important feature of the Festival du Voyageur. On December 9th, those competing in the Beard and Mustache competition – categories “Wild and Woolly” and “Groomed mustache and beard” - were publically shaved at the Le Garage Cafe in St. Boniface in preparation for the event. Titles are to be awarded on February 25th. Other competitions include a Jigging contest on the 26th February, a Pea soup test and taste on the 27th, and a Fiddling contest featuring Alex Lamoureux on the 27th February.
Not to be missed are the Kitchen Parties where the dancing is wild and the fiddling spectacular. If I go by the energetic and expert fiddle playing that I heard at a number of different Kitchen Parties, I would say that Manitoba has some of the finest fiddlers in the land.
Dave Bart, a fabulous fiddler |
At Kitchen Parties in the park, dinner served at long tables in heated tents with sawdust floor, comprised thick pea soup, tortiere and sugar pie, a traditional dessert of such sweetness that it had to be eaten slowly at two sittings.
The formal Governor's Ball at the Fairmont Winnipeg was attended by the grand and the good in old-time finery; the walls of the ballroom appropriately decorated with bundles of furs; Arctic fox, beaver and coyote.
Fur trader in Fort Gibralter Festival du Voyageur |
Photos copyright Anne Gordon
Posted by Anne Gordon on Thursday, 24th February
ICE SCULPTURES AT WINNIPEG'S FESTIVAL DU VOYAGEUR
Strolling on a frigid morning among the massive winter artworks in the park, I couldn't help but admire the dedication of the ice sculptors from around the world who stood atop tall ladders putting the finishing touches on their ice sculptures. Sculptors from Mexico and Argentina had never seen snow, but that was no deterrent. Flood-lit at night, a set of leering masks and another of medieval warriors and their horses appeared like strange creatures from another world. Looming at the entrance to Voyageur Park was my favourite, a 15 metre long, 5 ½ metre high rendition of a musher on a sled pulled by a team of husky dogs.
Another of the Festival's interesting and tasty diversions was a culinary event. In a rustic log house cum restaurant, Fort Gibraltar’s wine expert, Shawn Brandson, invited our tour group to a wine tasting and lunch. Starting with three different wines; Sandhill (Pinot Blanc), Angels Gate (Riesling) and Rigby (Mead Framboise) with a selection of cheeses; Bothwell Madagascar Green Peppercorn, Oka and Riviere Rouge Cheese, and Clover, Espresso, and chocolate honey, we sipped, dipped and sampled. A green salad followed, involving the participation of a volunteer from each table whose task was to prepare a dressing under the directions of the head chef.
For me, as always, the piece de resistance was the dessert of blackberries, cherries, and strawberries with a Sabayen sauce made with egg, sugar and wine drizzled over the fruit. As the chef carefully stirred the sauce on a wood stove until just the right moment, Brandson described the thickening creamy liquid as very tricky to make, and he laughingly told us “if not done very carefully, you could end up with Sabayen ... or scrambled egg”.
Today, although St. Boniface is a neighbourhood where French is the predominant language, close to 100 other languages, from Inuktuk and Mikmaq to Icelandic and Punjabi can be heard throughout this charming Francophone locale. It is a multi-cultural success where the old culture of the voyageurs is lovingly preserved and celebrated by all.
Photos copyright Anne Gordon
Posted by Anne Gordon on Thursday, 24th February
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Mask ice sculpture at Winnipeg's Festival du Voyageur |
Strolling on a frigid morning among the massive winter artworks in the park, I couldn't help but admire the dedication of the ice sculptors from around the world who stood atop tall ladders putting the finishing touches on their ice sculptures. Sculptors from Mexico and Argentina had never seen snow, but that was no deterrent. Flood-lit at night, a set of leering masks and another of medieval warriors and their horses appeared like strange creatures from another world. Looming at the entrance to Voyageur Park was my favourite, a 15 metre long, 5 ½ metre high rendition of a musher on a sled pulled by a team of husky dogs.
Another of the Festival's interesting and tasty diversions was a culinary event. In a rustic log house cum restaurant, Fort Gibraltar’s wine expert, Shawn Brandson, invited our tour group to a wine tasting and lunch. Starting with three different wines; Sandhill (Pinot Blanc), Angels Gate (Riesling) and Rigby (Mead Framboise) with a selection of cheeses; Bothwell Madagascar Green Peppercorn, Oka and Riviere Rouge Cheese, and Clover, Espresso, and chocolate honey, we sipped, dipped and sampled. A green salad followed, involving the participation of a volunteer from each table whose task was to prepare a dressing under the directions of the head chef.
A Voyageur at the Festival du Voyageur |
Today, although St. Boniface is a neighbourhood where French is the predominant language, close to 100 other languages, from Inuktuk and Mikmaq to Icelandic and Punjabi can be heard throughout this charming Francophone locale. It is a multi-cultural success where the old culture of the voyageurs is lovingly preserved and celebrated by all.
Photos copyright Anne Gordon
Posted by Anne Gordon on Thursday, 24th February
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Thứ Năm, 10 tháng 2, 2011
Sanibel Island shelling |
Some of the finest shelling in the world is to be had on the shores of Sanibel and its out-islands. Sixteen miles of shell-strewn beaches are a sure thing for coaxing shellers to emulate the “Sanibel Stoop”, where the majority of beach walkers are bent double in their quest for conches, banded tulips, coquina shells, lightning whelks, scallops and even baby's ears, a smoothly beautiful white shell with an uncanny resemblance to its namesake.
On an early morning boat tour to the out-islands for a day of shelling with Mike Fuery, the island's only shelling captain, I marvelled at the perfect judgement of an osprey that captured a fish, then rose heavily from the sea to fly directly across our path. With its wickedly sharp talons locked on too weighty a catch, the osprey would be unable to rise and could drown.
Photos copyright Anne Gordon
Posted by Anne Gordon on Thursday 10th February
Thứ Ba, 8 tháng 2, 2011
Keukenhof tulips in the spring |
Centuries ago, the gardeners working for Jacoba van Beyeren, the Countess of Holland, were probably harvesting cabbages and herbs in the very place where I sat on the edge of a pond in Holland's famous Keukenhof garden. In the 15th century this was the great lady's kitchen garden, a vital resource for Teylingen Castle where entertaining during the hunting season was a daily occurrence.
Windmill at the Keukenhof |
Photos copyright Anne Gordon
Posted by Anne Gordon on Tuesday, February 8th
Thứ Bảy, 5 tháng 2, 2011
AUSTRALIA AND SOUTH AFRICA'S CRAZY BIRDS
On the lawn at “Cooee”, one of New South Wales’s premier sheep stations, when the heat is intense and the sprinkler has been turned on to water the grass, parrots love nothing more than drenching themselves in the spray’s flying droplets. Lightheaded with the pleasure of the cool water, they lose all vestige of normal parrot behavior and start doing back flips on the wet grass.
The birds of Australia are an amusing and sometimes interesting bunch. Apostle birds, large and black with occasional white markings, fly in flocks of 12 – hence the name. Only one pair in the flock of 12 will mate.
I watched a snowy sulphur-crested cockatoo – another of the ‘stupid’ birds – while out on an evening walk in the Blue Mountains. Our guide’s words, “Those birds are not too bright. They can be taught to speak, but they sometimes fly upside down, suddenly plummet from a great height, or occasionally they fall off branches.” As we watched, a flock of sulphur-crested cockatoos swooped and dived in the darkening canyon. Separating from its companions, one bird alighted on a spindly branch overhanging the canyon. Then, without warning or reason, it toppled over sideways and dropped for a good distance before seemingly gaining control and flying off.
The stupid behavior of the Australian Gallah on the other hand is counteracted by its beauty. With a pale pink head and raincloud grey plumage, a flight of Gallahs has the pastel subtlety of a cloud in the early morning. But gorging is their downfall. A field of wheat is an irresistible temptation for these birds, leaving them unable to fly.
The vultures of South Africa exhibit an equally greedy behavior. They also gorge until waddling along is their only means of motivation. When their meal is finally done, they inevitably have to vomit so that they’re able to fly.
My husband James tells of his own first-hand experience of such an occasion. When working as a game warden in Africa he was responsible for tagging vultures. On this particular occasion, the group were having trouble catching the fleeing vultures after they had swallowed a heavy meal and James threw his bush hat over the head of one lumbering male. Within seconds the startled bird vomited pounds of putrefying flesh into his bush hat. Much lightened, the bird hopped away and took off leaving James shaking the stinking contents out of his hat.
Because of the intense heat, the hat was promptly placed back on his head, leaving him for a lengthy period, persona non grata among his companions.
Photo copyright Anne Gordon
Posted by Anne Gordon on February 5th
Parrot |
On the lawn at “Cooee”, one of New South Wales’s premier sheep stations, when the heat is intense and the sprinkler has been turned on to water the grass, parrots love nothing more than drenching themselves in the spray’s flying droplets. Lightheaded with the pleasure of the cool water, they lose all vestige of normal parrot behavior and start doing back flips on the wet grass.
The birds of Australia are an amusing and sometimes interesting bunch. Apostle birds, large and black with occasional white markings, fly in flocks of 12 – hence the name. Only one pair in the flock of 12 will mate.
Sulphur crested cockatoo |
The stupid behavior of the Australian Gallah on the other hand is counteracted by its beauty. With a pale pink head and raincloud grey plumage, a flight of Gallahs has the pastel subtlety of a cloud in the early morning. But gorging is their downfall. A field of wheat is an irresistible temptation for these birds, leaving them unable to fly.
The vultures of South Africa exhibit an equally greedy behavior. They also gorge until waddling along is their only means of motivation. When their meal is finally done, they inevitably have to vomit so that they’re able to fly.
My husband James tells of his own first-hand experience of such an occasion. When working as a game warden in Africa he was responsible for tagging vultures. On this particular occasion, the group were having trouble catching the fleeing vultures after they had swallowed a heavy meal and James threw his bush hat over the head of one lumbering male. Within seconds the startled bird vomited pounds of putrefying flesh into his bush hat. Much lightened, the bird hopped away and took off leaving James shaking the stinking contents out of his hat.
Because of the intense heat, the hat was promptly placed back on his head, leaving him for a lengthy period, persona non grata among his companions.
Photo copyright Anne Gordon
Posted by Anne Gordon on February 5th
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