Showing posts with label travel tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel tips. Show all posts

5.11.14

Swimming with Giant Whales in Oslob, Cebu, Philippines


 photo CUSTOMPOSTTAG-BUCKETLIST-1.jpg

WHERE  IN THE WORLD SHOULD YOU BE NEXT SUMMER? 


And why should you start booking now?

Whale shark watching in Tan-awan, Oslob, Cebu has become one of world's best nature encounters. It's true of its name since Tan-awan  roots from the word "Tan-aw" meaning to watch or to look. 



At the present, there are resorts and touring websites you can avail services from to make sure you get the best excursion. Wee hours is the operative word of some sorts for this adventure so you'd likely not want to just go eyeball-ing these acquiescent sea giants on your first date. You'd also want to take the privilege to go swimming with them. Though the local government implements rules to protect and conserve them and there are few etiquette which you have to practice once there. 

Tukis or Butanding, as the natives call it, are more visible in the shores when the temperature is up and the water is clear. You better book your flights before tourists flock during Philippine summer on the second quarter of next year (April- June). 

Take a look at Matt-Tinik and Matt-Takaw Adventures to get a picture of how you'd likely want to arrange your itinerary. 

Gentle giants has probably been banned in cyber space for reason of overuse but you can swear by the remote chances of you becoming the human version of Marlin and Dory. As the phrase suggest, they are, gentle giants. 


Don't miss the next place we like to feature for you in our Bucketlist series : LIKE and FOLLOW The Writing Gypsy on Facebook , Twitter, Pinterest and Instagram.


                  Photo Credits:                  

1st Photo- www.philbooking.com
2nd Photo- www. enchantingphilippines.wordpress.com



                                                                                   

20.9.13

5 Quiet Landmarks to Go in Paris


There is something uniquely satisfying about being able to find outstanding but quiet landmarks in such a busy city like Paris. You get to explore and savor them without having to compete with an uncontrollable influx of tourists. It creates a personal experience. 

There is also benefit in bumping along people you don't know, who without them would make your travel experience rather less enjoyable. 

But there are times when you simply want to be intimate with your travel and find the chance to go somewhere you can sprawl alone-- a kind of secret affair between you and the place you travel to. 

Below are few of the landmarks with lesser crowd that you can visit in Paris:

1. Statue of Liberty in Ile Aux Cygnes

Mini Statue of Liberty
The mini Statue of Liberty in Ile Aux Cygnes also called the Swan Island is located in a quiet area right at the heart of Seine River. It's about a kilometer away from the Eiffel Tower; it's best to take a bus or metro to arrive there quickly. There's also another replica of the statue in Luxembourg Gardens.  I'm not sure with you, but I feel that tell- tale rush of excitement when I see little versions of huge and famous landmark icons like this in other places. 

The one in New York is actually a gift given by France to the USA in celebration of the centenary of USA's independence.

2. Le Pantheon National

Le Pantheon Paris l Photo by Adil Rasheed
Pantheon is taken from a Greek word which means "Every God". It was originally built in the Latin Quarter  in the middle of Paris left bank as a church dedicated to St. Genevieve, the patron saint of Paris. Today, it serves as a secular mausoleum which houses the remains of France's greatest you may know in the history of politics, art, science and literature: Marie Curie, Victor Hugo, and others. Inside the museum verges three amazing features: the paintings that depict the life of St. Genevieve, an invention by a physicist that shows how the earth rotates and lastly, the magnificent statue called "The National Convention" which shows the symbol of France, Marian.

You can take the closest metro in Luxembourg on RER B to get there and be sure to secure museum pass in advance. 

3. Notre- Dame Cathedral

Notre Dame Paris l Photo Source: My Hotels in Paris (dot) com
This is one of Paris' most famous landmarks so it's oftentimes difficult to come by here with not much people walking past on you. It's best to go there an hour earlier the opening time at around 9AM, or late in the afternoon at around 5:30.

It is a Roman Catholic Marian cathedral and is considered one of world's largest. 

4. Pere Lachaise Cemetery

Pere Lachaise Cemetery l Photo Source: Prompt Guides (dot) com
The word cemetery alone would tell you that it's somewhere you'll never fail to find peace and serenity. Whilst the name can dread you slightly, it's something which can be worthy of your visit. It is considered as the most visited cemetery in the world and the largest one in Paris. You can find the tombs of famous people like the great Oscar Wilde, Moliere and Delacroix, and the legendary singer Jim Morrison. It'd be great if you go to the cemetery's summit for a better view. 

5. Les Egouts- the Sewers Paris

Les Egouts Paris l Photo Source: Flickr
Egouts is among the first underground sewer system in Paris that dates back since 1370. While it may not be everyone's dream of how a Parisian travel would be, it has interesting exhibits. It's probably one way to discover a large parcel about Paris as described in the misfortunes of Jean Valjean in Victor Hugo's Les Miserables-- an experience that is surely off the beaten path.

Thank you for keeping in touch with The Quiet City [Paris] Travel Series. Here's a video I thought I'd share to you to end it:




Click to read more travel guide to Paris. Profiter de Paris!
Photo Credits:
commons (dot) wikimedia (dot) org
adilrasheed (dot) com
myhotelsinparis (dot) com
promptguides (dot) com
flickr (dot) com

20.8.13

5 Quiet Outdoor Spots Every Book Reader Should Go in Paris


I'm closest to travelers, and travelers who are book readers. Oftentimes, too, travelers who are book readers who are peace- seekers. But with a city full of rubbernecks, finding an outdoor spot with hardly any crowd is a threat to people like that. 

If you happen to be in Paris and would still want to be unapologetic with your reading routines, here are the right places you can drop by to dote on your first editions without necessarily having to stare constantly at  a lifeless wall.


Stay tuned for more of The Quiet City [Paris] travel series here on Pens n' Paper!

Watermark copyright Pens n' Paper l Image: All Things Hub








Photo Credits:
Creative Commons
Paris Perfect
The New York Times

6.8.13

Get Firsthand Travel Tips on Trip Gems


Traveling is no longer a fad but a need that lets people move beyond the comforts of their cities and learn some things they didn't know existed. But the more people discover how to map out their trips, the less special places become. They hoard to top destinations, add to the crowd, pollute at some point, and learn things they can relate with other travelers who have been to the same destination that they have been. Everyone else has seen the same place-- too common that nothing makes Chianti, or the Taj Mahal, or the Singapore Merlion extraordinary. But that's the real point of traveling, I guess. People travel and encourage other people to travel so that there is a way for amazing and unexpected stories to come out. Otherwise these tourist attractions will not be accounted for what makes them the most frequented destinations on earth, or for the wonders of the world to not be justified for being called a wonder.


Each person who travels has the right to every excitement she can feel at the prospect of boarding in the plane, or having to speak a foreign word or two to a local. As traveling will open the best and worst of experiences, everyone of us will always have that distinctive way with words of telling our travel stories to others-- because we'll have somehow different points of view about our experiences. And that's when sharing travel tips becomes even more fun and reliable. 

Most importantly today, we are offered with so many options from where we can collect information or a guide for our travel. Odds are these pieces of information go outdated overtime or get lost along the way. But that's when TripGems become one good solution. 

What is TripGems?

TripGems is where you can get all travel tips in on place-- ask your friends, build your own timeline, and get deals on your next destination. It was launched last June 1 this year by travel enthusiasts from Amsterdam. Their goal is to bring as many travelers together and use this collective travel wisdom to give you the best tips for your destination. You give one tip and you receive a thousand of others. The good thing is that the more travelers ask or give tips, the greater the possibility that fresh travel inputs are updated and shared.


They have been selected for Web Summit 2013-- a tech conference in Dublin, and was nominated for the Accenture Nomination Awards 2013 under the 'new concepts' category. You can like, tweet, or share their submission to vote.

What else can you get from TripGems?

Recently, they have added new features to the platform and raised seed capital that allows to put their developer on it 24/ 7. You can add photos to your travel tips and pin them to your own map and see how many percent you have seen of the world through a BETA travel timeline. 

Soon they are putting up more updates like travel status, notifications, follow possibilities, and new features to allow you to find travel deals, create your travel map, tag your friends, or access them on your mobiles. 

You have something worth to share. Be a traveler.

 
Get helped by travelers, and help other travelers in return. Log on, NOW!
 









Photo/ Video Credits:
1st photo- paris2london hub
video from Celesty Lee