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Judy's View at Dante's View

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Judy's View at Dante's View
vacations to
Image by Old Shoe Woman
Taken during our June 2006 vacation. See the set: www.flickr.com/photos/judybaxter/sets/72157594167212092/

While in Las Vegas, Jim, Carl flickr.com/photos/carltyson/ , Judy flickr.com/photos/pinkpepperphoto/ , and I drove to Death Valley. On our 2005 trip, we were not able to drive to the top and look out from Dante's View because the road had been washed away from the rains. It was an awesome sight to see the salt pan (flats) that are the bottom of an inland sea.

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From Dante's View one can see the central part of Death Valley from a vantage point 5,500 feet (1,700 m) above sea level. From here Badwater Basin can be seen, which contains the lowest dry point in North America. Telescope Peak can also be seen from here which is 11,331 feet (3455 m) above sea level. This is the greatest topographic relief in the conterminous U.S.

The mountain that Dante's View is on is part of the Black Mountains which along with the parallel Panamint Range across the valley form what geologists call a horst and the valley that is called a graben. These structures are created when the surface of the earth is under extensional, or a pulling force. The crust responds to this force by sending a large and long roughly v-shaped block of crust down which forms the bedrock of the valley floor (see Basin and Range). en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ubehebe_Crater#Dante.27s_View


158 Parasailer Over Lake George
vacations to
Image by Fractal Artist
This set of vacation pics was taken at Lake George, one of the big tourist spots in the Adirondacks. We took a little hour cruise on the day most of these pics were taken. The next night we went back to see the lake at night and the weekly fireworks. The few night shots were taken then.

I would SO love to do this, it looks like heavenly fun! Never mind that it's been about 50 years since I waterskied and I would likely drown or break my neck. I can dream can't I?


The Lone Lenser at Coconuts
vacations to
Image by Funkybug
From a vacation file that I haven't processed ... a vacation taken in the summer of '05 I believe. Wow. That's pathetic.

Anyhow, this is my husband, sipping a fruity drink at a bar called Coconuts.

Cozumel, Mexico

Permission MUST be sought and granted for use.
All images used by contain the following © Robin Ervolina, funkyfotography. Please follow the link for terms of use in order to avoid violation of copyright.
Specific copyright information here

Cool Vacations Cheap images

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Lunch in London
vacations cheap
Image by Wootang01
9.4.09
The flight arrived on time; and the twelve hours while on board passed quickly and without incident. To be sure, the quality of the Cathay Pacific service was exemplary once again.

Heathrow reminds me of Newark International. The décor comes straight out of the sterile 80's and is less an eyesore than an insipid background to the rhythm of human activity, such hustle and bustle, at the fore. There certainly are faces from all races present, creating a rich mosaic of humanity which is refreshing if not completely revitalizing after swimming for so long in a sea of Chinese faces in Hong Kong.

Internet access is sealed in England, it seems. Nothing is free; everything is egregiously monetized from the wireless hotspots down to the desktop terminals. I guess Hong Kong has spoiled me with its abundant, free access to the information superhighway.


11.4.09
Despite staying in a room with five other backpackers, I have been sleeping well. The mattress and pillow are firm; my earplugs keep the noise out; and the sleeping quarters are as dark as a cave when the lights are out, and only as bright as, perhaps, a dreary rainy day when on. All in all, St. Paul's is a excellent place to stay for the gregarious, adventurous, and penurious city explorer - couchsurfing may be a tenable alternative; I'll test for next time.

Yesterday Connie and I gorged ourselves at the borough market where there were all sorts of delectable, savory victuals. There was definitely a European flavor to the food fair: simmering sausages were to be found everywhere; and much as the meat was plentiful, and genuine, so were the dairy delicacies, in the form of myriad rounds of cheese, stacked high behind checkered tabletops. Of course, we washed these tasty morsels down with copious amounts of alcohol that flowed from cups as though amber waterfalls. For the first time I tried mulled wine, which tasted like warm, rancid fruit punch - the ideal tonic for a drizzling London day, I suppose. We later killed the afternoon at the pub, shooting the breeze while imbibing several diminutive half-pints in the process. Getting smashed at four in the afternoon doesn't seem like such a bad thing anymore, especially when you are having fun in the company of friends; I can more appreciate why the English do it so much!

Earlier in the day, we visited the Tate Modern. Its turbine room lived up to its prominent billing what with a giant spider, complete with bulbous egg sac, anchoring the retrospective exhibit. The permanent galleries, too, were a delight upon which to feast one's eyes. Picasso, Warhol and Pollock ruled the chambers of the upper floors with the products of their lithe wrists; and I ended up becoming a huge fan of cubism, while developing a disdain for abstract art and its vacuous images, which, I feel, are devoid of both motivation and emotion.

My first trip yesterday morning was to Emirates Stadium, home of the Arsenal Gunners. It towers imperiously over the surrounding neighborhood; yet for all its majesty, the place sure was quiet! Business did pick up later, however, once the armory shop opened, and dozens of fans descended on it like bees to a hive. I, too, swooped in on a gift-buying mission, and wound up purchasing a book for Godfrey, a scarf for a student, and a jersey - on sale, of course - for good measure.

I'm sitting in the Westminster Abbey Museum now, resting my weary legs and burdened back. So far, I've been verily impressed with what I've seen, such a confluence of splendor and history before me that it would require days to absorb it all, when regretfully I can spare only a few hours. My favorite part of the abbey is the poets corner where no less a literary luminary than Samuel Johnson rests in peace - his bust confirms his homely presence, which was so vividly captured in his biography.

For lunch I had a steak and ale pie, served with mash, taken alongside a Guinness, extra cold - 2 degrees centigrade colder, the bartender explained. It went down well, like all the other delicious meals I've had in England; and no doubt by now I have grown accustomed to inebriation at half past two. Besides, Liverpool were playing inspired football against Blackburn; and my lunch was complete.

Having had my fill of football, I decided to skip my ticket scalping endeavor at Stamford Bridge and instead wandered over to the British Museum to inspect their extensive collections. Along the way, my eye caught a theater, its doors wide open and admitting customers. With much rapidity, I subsequently checked the show times, saw that a performance was set to begin, and at last rushed to the box office to purchase a discounted ticket - if you call a 40 pound ticket a deal, that is. That's how I grabbed a seat to watch Hairspray in the West End.

The show was worth forty pounds. The music was addictive; and the stage design and effects were not so much kitschy as delightfully stimulating - the pulsating background lights were at once scintillating and penetrating. The actors as well were vivacious, oozing charisma while they danced and delivered lines dripping in humor. Hairspray is a quality production and most definitely recommended.


12.4.09
At breakfast I sat across from a man who asked me to which country Hong Kong had been returned - China or Japan. That was pretty funny. Then he started spitting on my food as he spoke, completely oblivious to my breakfast becoming the receptacle in which the fruit of his inner churl was being placed. I guess I understand the convention nowadays of covering one's mouth whilst speaking and masticating at the same time!

We actually conversed on London life in general, and I praised London for its racial integration, the act of which is a prodigious leap of faith for any society, trying to be inclusive, accepting all sorts of people. It wasn't as though the Brits were trying in vain to be all things to all men, using Spanish with the visitors from Spain, German with the Germans and, even, Hindi with the Indians, regardless of whether or not Hindi was their native language; not even considering the absurd idea of encouraging the international adoption of their language; thereby completely keeping English in English hands and allowing its proud polyglots to "practice" their languages. Indeed, the attempt of the Londoners to avail themselves of the rich mosaic of ethnic knowledge, and to seek a common understanding with a ubiquitous English accent is an exemplar, and the bedrock for any world city.

I celebrated Jesus' resurrection at the St. Andrew's Street Church in Cambridge. The parishioners of this Baptist church were warm and affable, and I met several of them, including one visiting (Halliday) linguistics scholar from Zhongshan university in Guangzhou, who in fact had visited my tiny City University of Hong Kong in 2003. The service itself was more traditional and the believers fewer in number than the "progressive" services at any of the charismatic, evangelical churches in HK; yet that's what makes this part of the body of Christ unique; besides, the message was as brief as a powerpoint slide, and informative no less; the power word which spoke into my life being a question from John 21:22 - what is that to you?

Big trees; exquisite lawns; and old, pointy colleges; that's Cambridge in a nutshell. Sitting here, sipping on a half-pint of Woodforde's Wherry, I've had a leisurely, if not languorous, day so far; my sole duty consisting of walking around while absorbing the verdant environment as though a sponge, camera in tow.

I am back at the sublime beer, savoring a pint of Sharp's DoomBar before my fish and chips arrive; the drinking age is 18, but anyone whose visage even hints of youthful brilliance is likely to get carded these days, the bartender told me. The youth drinking culture here is almost as twisted as the university drinking culture in America.

My stay in Cambridge, relaxing and desultory as it may be, is about to end after this late lunch. I an not sure if there is anything left to see, save for the American graveyard which rests an impossible two miles away. I have had a wonderful time in this town; and am thankful for the access into its living history - the residents here must demonstrate remarkable patience and tolerance what with so many tourists ambling on the streets, peering - and photographing - into every nook and cranny.

13.4.09
There are no rubbish bins, yet I've seen on the streets many mixed race couples in which the men tend to be white - the women also belonging to a light colored ethnicity, usually some sort of Asian; as well saw some black dudes and Indian dudes with white chicks.

People here hold doors, even at the entrance to the toilet. Sometimes it appears as though they are going out on a limb, just waiting for the one who will take the responsibility for the door from them, at which point I rush out to relieve them of such a fortuitous burden.

I visited the British Museum this morning. The two hours I spent there did neither myself nor the exhibits any justice because there really is too much to survey, enough captivating stuff to last an entire day, I think. The bottomless well of artifacts from antiquity, drawing from sources as diverse as Korea, and Mesopotamia, is a credit to the British empire, without whose looting most of this amazing booty would be unavailable for our purview; better, I think, for these priceless treasures to be open to all in the grandest supermarket of history than away from human eyes, and worst yet, in the hands of unscrupulous collectors or in the rubbish bin, possibly.

Irene and I took in the ballet Giselle at The Royal Opera House in the afternoon. The building is a plush marvel, and a testament to this city's love for the arts. The ballet itself was satisfying, the first half being superior to the second, in which the nimble dancers demonstrated their phenomenal dexterity in, of all places, a graveyard covered in a cloak of smoke and darkness. I admit, their dance of the dead, in such a gloomy necropolis, did strike me as, strange.

Two amicable ladies from Kent convinced me to visit their hometown tomorrow, where, they told me, the authentic, "working" Leeds Castle and the mighty interesting home of Charles Darwin await.

I'm nursing a pint of Green King Ruddles and wondering about the profusion of British ales and lagers; the British have done a great deed for the world by creating an interminable line of low-alcohol session beers that can be enjoyed at breakfast, lunch, tea and dinner; and their disservice is this: besides this inexhaustible supply of cheap beer ensnaring my inner alcoholic, I feel myself putting on my freshman fifteen, almost ten years after the fact; I am going to have to run a bit harder back in Hong Kong if I want to burn all this malty fuel off.

Irene suggested I stop by the National Art Gallery since we were in the area; and it was an hour well spent. The gallery currently presents a special exhibit on Picasso, the non-ticketed section of which features several seductive renderings, including David spying on Bathsheba - repeated in clever variants - and parodies of other masters' works. Furthermore, the main gallery houses two fabulous portraits by Joshua Reynolds, who happens to be favorite of mine, he in life being a close friend of Samuel Johnson - I passed by Boswells, where its namesake first met Johnson, on my way to the opera house.

14.4.09
I prayed last night, and went through my list, lifting everyone on it up to the Lord. That felt good; that God is alive now, and ever present in my life and in the lives of my brothers and sisters.

Doubtless, then, I have felt quite wistful, as though a specter in the land of the living, being in a place where religious fervor, it seems, is a thing of the past, a trifling for many, to be hidden away in the opaque corners of centuries-old cathedrals that are more expensive tourist destinations than liberating homes of worship these days. Indeed, I have yet to see anyone pray, outside of the Easter service which I attended in Cambridge - for such an ecstatic moment in verily a grand church, would you believe that it was only attended by at most three dozen spirited ones. The people of England, and Europe in general, have, it is my hope, only locked away the Word, relegating it to the quiet vault of their hearts. May it be taken out in the sudden pause before mealtimes and in the still crisp mornings and cool, silent nights. There is still hope for a revival in this place, for faith to rise like that splendid sun every morning. God would love to rescue them, to deliver them in this day, it is certain.

I wonder what Londoners think, if anything at all, about their police state which, like a vine in the shadows, has taken root in all corners of daily life, from the terrorist notifications in the underground, which implore Londoners to report all things suspicious, to the pair of dogs which eagerly stroll through Euston. What makes this all the more incredible is the fact that even the United States, the indomitable nemesis of the fledgling, rebel order, doesn't dare bombard its citizens with such fear mongering these days, especially with Obama in office; maybe we've grown wise in these past few years to the dubious returns of surrendering civil liberties to the state, of having our bags checked everywhere - London Eye; Hairspray; and The Royal Opera House check bags in London while the museums do not; somehow, that doesn't add up for me.

I'm in a majestic bookshop on New Street in Birmingham, and certainly to confirm my suspicions, there are just as many books on the death of Christianity in Britain as there are books which attempt to murder Christianity everywhere. I did find, however, a nice biography on John Wesley by Roy Hattersley and The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis. I may pick up the former.

Lunch with Sally was pleasant and mirthful. We dined at a French restaurant nearby New Street - yes, Birmingham is a cultural capitol! Sally and I both tried their omelette, while her boyfriend had the fish, without chips. Conversation was light, the levity was there and so was our reminiscing about those fleeting moments during our first year in Hong Kong; it is amazing how friendships can resume so suddenly with a smile. On their recommendation, I am on my way to Warwick Castle - they also suggested that I visit Cadbury World, but they cannot take on additional visitors at the moment, the tourist office staff informed me, much to my disappointment!

Visiting Warwick Castle really made for a great day out. The castle, parts of which were established by William the Conquerer in 1068, is as much a kitschy tourist trap as a meticulous preservation of history, at times a sillier version of Ocean Park while at others a dignified dedication to a most glorious, inexorably English past. The castle caters to all visitors; and not surprisingly, that which delighted all audiences was a giant trebuchet siege engine, which for the five p.m. performance hurled a fireball high and far into the air - fantastic! Taliban beware!

15.4.09
I'm leaving on a jet plane this evening; don't know when I'll be back in England again. I'll miss this quirky, yet endearing place; and that I shall miss Irene and Tom who so generously welcomed me into their home, fed me, and suffered my use of their toilet and shower goes without saying. I'm grateful for God's many blessings on this trip.

On the itinerary today is a trip to John Wesley's home, followed by a visit to the Imperial War Museum. Already this morning I picked up a tube of Oilatum, a week late perhaps, which Teri recommended I use to treat this obstinate, dermal weakness of mine - I'm happy to report that my skin has stopped crying.

John Wesley's home is alive and well. Services are still held in the chapel everyday; and its crypt, so far from being a cellar for the dead, is a bright, spacious museum in which all things Wesley are on display - I never realized how much of an iconic figure he became in England; at the height of this idol frenzy, ironic in itself, he must have been as popular as the Beatles were at their apex. The house itself is a multi-story edifice with narrow, precipitous staircases and spacious rooms decorated in an 18th century fashion.

I found Samuel Johnson's house within a maze of red brick hidden alongside Fleet Street. To be in the home of the man who wrote the English dictionary, and whose indefatigable love for obscure words became the inspiration for my own lexical obsession, this, by far, is the climax of my visit to England! The best certainly has been saved for last.

There are a multitude of portraits hanging around the house like ornaments on a tree. Every likeness has its own story, meticulously retold on the crib sheets in each room. Celebrities abound, including David Garrick and Sir Joshua Reynolds, who painted several of the finer images in the house. I have developed a particular affinity for Oliver Goldsmith, of whom Boswell writes, "His person was short, his countenance coarse and vulgar, his deportment that of a scholar awkwardly affecting the easy gentleman. It appears as though I, too, could use a more flattering description of myself!

I regretfully couldn't stop to try the curry in England; I guess the CityU canteen's take on the dish will have to do. I did, however, have the opportune task of flirting with the cute Cathay Pacific counter staff who checked me in. She was gorgeous in red, light powder on her cheeks, with real diamond earrings, she said; and her small, delicate face, commanded by a posh British accent rendered her positively irresistible, electrifying. Not only did she grant me an aisle seat but she had the gumption to return my fawning with zest; she must be a pro at this by now.

I saw her again as she was pulling double-duty, collecting tickets prior to boarding. She remembered my quest for curry; and in the fog of infatuation, where nary a man has been made, I fumbled my words like the sloppy kid who has had too much punch. I am just an amateur, alas, an "Oliver Goldsmith" with the ladies - I got no game - booyah!

Some final, consequential bits: because of the chavs, Burberry no longer sells those fashionable baseball caps; because of the IRA, rubbish bins are no longer a commodity on the streets of London, and as a result, the streets and the Underground of the city are a soiled mess; and because of other terrorists from distant, more arid lands, going through a Western airport has taken on the tedium of perfunctory procedure that doesn't make me feel any safer from my invisible enemies.

At last, I saw so many Indians working at Heathrow that I could have easily mistaken the place for Mumbai. Their presence surprised me because their portion of the general population surely must be less than their portion of Heathrow staff, indicating some mysterious hiring bias. Regardless, they do a superb job with cursory airport checks, and in general are absurdly funny and witty when not tactless.

That's all for England!

Nice Vacation Village Resort photos

Some cool vacation village resort images:


El Tovar Lodge Entry & Sign - Grand Canyon Village
vacation village resort
Image by Al_HikesAZ
I went up early to the Grand Canyon South Rim for a big backpacking trip and visited several of the tourist destinations. This is the historic El Tovar Lodge in the Grand Canyon Historic District.



www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/harrison/harriso...
El Tovar opened its doors in January, 1905, as the luxury hotel at the Grand Canyon for the Santa Fe Railway. The building's style remained steeped in the late Victorian predeliction for the exotic with its roof turret and chalet-like balconies and terraces. Whittlesey's use of log-slab siding and log detailing on the first floor created that rustic frontier atmosphere that the railroad sought. The dark color of the building and the dark interiors contributed to the woodsy ambience. The dark exterior color gave added architectural importance to the building s silhouette--easily distinguishable by its turret and varied roof forms as the most important structure on the south rim by the way it was outlined in the sky.

Over the years El Tovar has housed such dignitaries as George Bernard Shaw, Ferdinand Foch, Gugliemo Marconi, Presidents William Howard Taft and Theodore Roosevelt, and even Arthur Fiedler. Once described as "the most expensively constructed and appointed log house in America" the hotel has retained most of its original character.

El Tovar's significance lies in its eclectic architecture--a combination of the Swiss chalet and Norway villa as the promotional brochures boasted--and the way in which that transitional architecture bridged the gap between the staid Victorian resort architecture of the late nineteenth century and the rustic architecture later deemed appropriate for the great scenic and natural wonders of the United States. Interlocked with that significance is the building's s importance as the Santa Fe Railway's key structure of its "destination resort" at Grand Canyon which dramatically increased tourism and in turn had an indirect bearing on the area's establishment as a national monument in 1908 and a national park 11 years later.

The Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railway was following the same course that other railroads were at the turn of the century. By increasing passenger traffic on main lines to the west coast the railroads increased revenues. The demand for rail service to the remote western locations like Yellowstone and the Grand Canyon included a need for accommodating the passengers who had travelled so far. The usual length of stay for vacations at that time varied from several weeks to an entire season. The simple camps that often greeted the visitors before rail service were primitive in comparison with the excellent resorts in the east and on the west coasts. The railroads in promoting passenger traffic to these places also assumed the responsibility of building resorts that enhanced the scenic and natural wonders and provided levels of comfort and even luxury that made the trip particularly noteworthy. The stiff competition between the railroads for passenger traffic and the unique locations each served also created the perfect reasons for pursuing types of architecture synonymous with the image the railroad sought to create.

The concept of large luxury hotels was not new to the United States, but the concept of national parks was. The typical luxury hotel in a resort area in the country at the turn of the century was a large wood-frame building with a sprawling plan with applied Victorian ornament for distinction. The construction of Old Faithful in Yellowstone in 1903 altered that architectural concept. The architects and the railroads began using structural materials left in their natural state, similar to the rustic buildings of the Adirondacks. The image that those materials projected when used in that way was of a western, frontier, rustic character. Combined with that was the hold-over of romanticism from the nineteenth century that contributed to the way people perceived and experienced these natural and scenic wonders later set aside as national parks.

The Santa Fe Railway's extension of a spur to the south rim of the canyon and the knowledge that image, romanticism, and a taste of the western frontier were selling points, resulted in the need of a major hotel that fulfilled passengers ' dreams of the exotic west at that destination resort. The Railway chose one of its talented staff architects as designer of the building--Charles Whittlesey.


IMGP0448


First Dip In Italian Village Pool
vacation village resort
Image by Vox Efx
Photography/Travel Blog~Flickr~Twitter

Siquijor - Sandugan Beach

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Siquijor - Sandugan Beach
vacations on the beach
Image by adamgn
the beach outside my resort on Siquijor Island


Siquijor - Sandugan Beach
vacations on the beach
Image by adamgn
the beach outside my resort on Siquijor Island


Siquijor - Sandugan Beach
vacations on the beach
Image by adamgn
the beach outside my resort on Siquijor Island

vacation 2009

Some cool vacations images:


vacation 2009
vacations
Image by icedsoul photography .:teymur madjderey
here we go party people :-)

at last a very very smal selection of my/our vacation photos of our last summers trip to the us. nyc, san diego, los angeles and back to nyc.
I just did not have the time to go through them before and these were selected from an initial 6893 photos I/we took over the course of the 20 days.

hope you enjoy 'em and let me know what you think. just to be sure the photos are kinda colorcoded like the different CSI's :-)

oh and if these 49 are not enough... I have posted another public selection of 576 photos of this trip to my "private" account which you can find HERE

feel free to add that account also and leave comments as you like!

all the best, teymur!

Nice Vacation Specials photos

A few nice vacation specials images I found:



You A Hideous One Horned Dall Sheep
vacation specials
Image by jfravel
This photo is licensed under a Creative Commons license. If you use this photo within the terms of the license or make special arrangements to use the photo, please list the photo credit as "Jon Fravel" and link the credit to www.flickr.com/photos/jfravel


Ari, JT, and a guy with a hat
vacation specials
Image by Jeremy Toeman
Special thanks to the one guy who chose to walk in front of the camera, despite others stopping for the clearly visible guy who was kind enough to take our photo.

Club Liquid (2 of 7)

A few nice vacation village resort images I found:


Club Liquid (2 of 7)
vacation village resort
Image by Vox Efx
Club Liquid! A night club for teens (early eve) and adults (late eve), we crashed the Teen hour (had the place to ourselves)
Photography/Travel Blog~Flickr~Twitter


Inside Reflections Restaurant II
vacation village resort
Image by Vox Efx
Photography/Travel Blog~Flickr~Twitter

Cool Resort Vacation Rentals images

Some cool resort vacation rentals images:


Holiday Inn Resort Hotel, Pensacola Beach
resort vacation rentals
Image by Innisfree Hotels
holidayinnresortpensacolabeach.com/. The Holiday Inn Resort Beachfront Hotel is located directly on the Gulf of Mexico in beautiful Pensacola Beach, Florida. Our guests enjoy captivating views of emerald green waters and miles upon miles of sugar white sand blanketed by the Florida sun. The hotel is centrally located and walking distance from restaurants, night life, shopping and recreational activities. We are only a 30 minute drive from the Pensacola International Airport.

Cool Vacations Beach images

Some cool vacations beach images:


Van Dyke Cafe, Miami Beach
vacations beach
Image by davereid2
A fun place for breakfast, lunch and dinner on the corner of Lincoln Road and 16th.
Occupation Vacation


Grand Cayman 2009 vacation 025-300
vacations beach
Image by Paul-W
Early morning on 7 Mile Beach, Grand Cayman.
July 2009

Nice Vacation And Travel photos

Check out these vacation and travel images:


P7044392
vacation and travel
Image by jon|k


南庄_隨拍_13
vacation and travel
Image by nhellen_lee


Shenandoah - Jun 07 079
vacation and travel
Image by Team Frosick

Murrells Inlet, SC

A few nice vacation specials images I found:


Murrells Inlet, SC
vacation specials
Image by jculverhouse
The band had a wedding reception to do in May, so we all headed down to Myrtle Beach to do the show. Once we setup the stage, Bubba took us to out to Goat Island to feed his goats and for a quick buzz around the area.

If you are ever in the area, be sure to visit Bubba's Love Shack - tell him The Worx Band sent you!

I went back a few months later with my kids and had the special of the night, Stuffed Grouper and, just WOW! So incredible!!


P1030704 - a pirates fate
vacation specials
Image by Ambernectar 13
"Piracy was robbery at sea and was considered so serious that the penalty was not only death but also ritualistic execution. A special Admiralty Court tried and executed pirates. After they were hanged on the beach between high and low tide, the bodies were tarred and hung in chains called a "gibbet" at the harbour entrance as a warning to other mariners.

This is a replica of the pirate Edward Jordan executed in Halifax in 1829. He was "gibbeted" at Black Rock in Point Pleasant Park. The same year, the Royal Navy also gibbeted four mutineers on McNabs Island. Any ship entering Halifax Harbour in 1829 was greeted by this gauntlet of rotting corpses swinging in the wind. Jordan's skull was later retrieved and given to the Nova Scotia Museum.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Jordan


DSC_0066
vacation specials
Image by fry_theonly
Quality Inn, our hotel in Springdale.
Our room was good and the bus stop to the park is in front of the hotel, very convenient.
The pool, if your interested, is small and nothing special.

If you'd like to stay in the hotel inside Zion Park, that's really cool, remember to book 18 months in advance...



Cool Vacation Resort Florida images

A few nice vacation resort florida images I found:


Walt Disney World resort trip 2008
vacation resort florida
Image by HeySandra
Fireworks at Illuminations.


Walt Disney World resort trip 2008
vacation resort florida
Image by HeySandra
Main street, while we wait for Spectromagic

Nice Spa Resort Vacation photos

Some cool spa resort vacation images:




Disney Aulani resort - 2010-07-22 update pictures
spa resort vacation
Image by coconut wireless
east side view of the resort

Off to the Beach

Check out these vacations beach images:


Off to the Beach
vacations beach
Image by JeremyMP
ISO 100 - 17mm - f/4.5 - 1/125 - Canon 7D - Tamron 17-50mm f/2.8


alone on the beach
vacations beach
Image by Scott*

Nice Vacation To Jamaica photos

Check out these vacation to jamaica images:


New House
vacation to jamaica
Image by TenSafeFrogs
They build them here, then put them on a truck and deliver to wherever you want it. (Actually, I think you have to hire the truck and deliver it yourself...)


Cruise 316
vacation to jamaica
Image by amy jetting around
This one is included in the TravelandLeisure.com online guide to Jamaica
www.travelandleisure.com/guides/jamaica


welcome to jamaica
vacation to jamaica
Image by Lil' El

DSC04510, Le Sport, The Body, Holiday, St. Lucia

Check out these spa resort vacation images:


DSC04510, Le Sport, The Body, Holiday, St. Lucia
spa resort vacation
Image by lyng883
The beautiful island of St. Lucia hosts the all-inclusive spa and resort named Le Sport. Wonderful facility, great rooms, romantic dining and daily spa treatments all combine for a wonderful and relaxing vacation!

The BodyHoliday at LeSPORT Castries


DSC08328, Le Sport, The Body Holiday, St. Lucia
spa resort vacation
Image by lyng883
The beautiful island of St. Lucia hosts the all-inclusive spa and resort named Le Sport. Wonderful facility, great rooms, romantic dining and daily spa treatments all combine for a wonderful and relaxing vacation!

The BodyHoliday at LeSPORT Castries


DSC04527, Le Sport, The Body, Holiday, St. Lucia
spa resort vacation
Image by lyng883
The beautiful island of St. Lucia hosts the all-inclusive spa and resort named Le Sport. Wonderful facility, great rooms, romantic dining and daily spa treatments all combine for a wonderful and relaxing vacation!

The BodyHoliday at LeSPORT Castries

Nice Vacation And Travel photos

Some cool vacation and travel images:


Summer Vacation
vacation and travel
Image by faungg's photo


Tân gwyllt, Bryste
vacation and travel
Image by Dogfael

Nice Vacation Specials photos

A few nice vacation specials images I found:



Knife Cut on Screen - Special Effects Stage
vacation specials
Image by HighTechDad
Photos from a trip to Universal Studios Hollywood in Los Angeles by HighTechDad and his family. More about the trip and Universal Studios can be found at: www.hightechdad.com/2013/04/08/the-front-of-the-line-expe...


Ai Barbacani, the 'fish special'
vacation specials
Image by jamesmelzer

Palma de Majorca

Some cool vacation travel images:


Palma de Majorca
vacation travel
Image by bortescristian
May 2013



Palma de Majorca
vacation travel
Image by bortescristian
May 2013

Grand Cayman Vacation

Some cool vacation beach resort images:


Grand Cayman Vacation
vacation beach resort
Image by c&rdunn
View of a beach wedding from the balcony in our room.


Grand Cayman Vacation
vacation beach resort
Image by c&rdunn
View of the beach at the Westin.


Grand Cayman Vacation
vacation beach resort
Image by c&rdunn
View of the beach at the Westin.

Nice Vacation Village Resort photos

Some cool vacation village resort images:


Downtown Leavenworth Wa
vacation village resort
Image by Photographer Ed Devereaux
I miss living in Germany and sometimes we have to make due with what we have. So on my way I decided to make a side trip to a Germanisk(is that even a word, using it anyway) type of village. Do not expect to walk into the Alps.


Outside Reflections Restaurant
vacation village resort
Image by Vox Efx
Photography/Travel Blog~Flickr~Twitter


Blue Curacao
vacation village resort
Image by Vox Efx
Photography/Travel Blog~Flickr~Twitter

Cool Vacation Spots images

A few nice vacation spots images I found:


Great Vacation Spot
vacation spots
Image by Let Ideas Compete
The island of Landsort in the Stockholm archipelago. (I've been calling the island Landsort but it may be called Öja and just the village is Landsort???)



Most of these homes are summer homes for Swedes. However, some are rented out.

Landsort is famous as a stopping place for migratory birds.



A conversation with dad usually centers around cars, electronics, lasers, batteries, mission trips, the next vacation spot, and family. ;)
vacation spots
Image by Anne Ruthmann
A conversation with dad usually centers around cars, electronics, lasers, batteries, mission trips, the next vacation spot, and family. ;)

Blue Light Special

Some cool vacation specials images:


Blue Light Special
vacation specials
Image by M. Keefe
Lots of lights


Jeffrey and his "special" ABCs
vacation specials
Image by Sheree K

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