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

Thursday, February 8, 2018

From Rome to London- Travel Guide

Day 1, Sunday, Rome, Italy

Check into your hotel. The rest of the day is free for you to explore this ancient capital. Tonight meet your tour director and fellow travelers.

Day 2, Monday, Rome

Included sightseeing with local guide starts in St. Peter’s Square, followed by a visit to the Roman Forum and the mighty Colosseum.

Day 3, Tuesday, Rome-Piza-Florence Area

Vistas of undulating hills, austere rose of cypress trees, terraced vineyards, olive groves, and rural villages from the backdrop of your journey through beautiful Tuscany. Take a break in Pisa to see the Square of Miracles and the amazing Leaning Tower, then on to the Florence Area.

Day 4, Wednesday, Florence Area- Venice Area

Traffic is banned in part of the historic center so visitors can wander at leisure and admire the city’s timeless beauty in relative peace and quiet. Don’t miss out this morning on the included walking tower with a Local Guide that features most of the city highlights. You will see the Piazza Santa Croce, the Beautiful Pizza Signoria, the Palazzo Vecchio and its courtyard, the Loggia del Lanzi, and to top it all, the Piazza del Duomo and its cathedral with the Giotto Campanile, and the magnificent East Door of the Baptistery known as the “Gate to Paradise”.  In the afternoon you can drive north across the River Po into the Plains of Venetia for overnight in the Venice area.

Day 5, Thursday, Venice.

It is really more like a marvelous film set than a real live city, with its crisscrossing canals, gondolas and water buses, attached bridges, Palaces, and little quiet piazzas. The included tower starts with a boat ride and is followed by a visit to St. Marks Basilica and a chance to watch Venetian glassblowers fashion their delicate objects as they did centuries ago. Don’t miss out on the optional gondola trip, gliding along the picturesque canals with a local troubadour to serenade you.

Day 6, Friday, Venice Area-Innsbruck, Austria

Take a journey northwards today from the flat farmlands of the Venetian countryside to the Dolomites surrounding Italy’s most famous winter resort, Cortina. Stop a while to enjoy the grand scenery. Next, cross the border into Austria to reach Innsbruck for overnight.

Day7, Saturday, Innsbruck-lake Lucerne, Switzerland  

Time this morning to get acquainted with Innsbruck. The orientation tower includes the famous Golden Roof. Later drive through the valleys and villages of the mountainous Tyrol to the Arlberg tunnel, descending into Switzerland. Stop briefly in Vaduz, Liechtenstein’s Capital, before heading for Lake Lucerne.

Day 8, Sunday, Lucerne

One of Switzerland’s finest cities nestled amid its snowcapped Alps, surrounded by its lake, and embellished by the clear mountain waters of the River Reuss. Your sightseeing takes in the impressive city walls, a covered wooden bridge, ornate patrician houses lining cobblestone streets, and the Loin Monument- a masterful stone sculpture in honor of the heroic Swiss Guard of Louis XVI. A grand selection of optional activities completes the day, a cable car ride to the 10,000-foot summit of Mount Titlis, a cruise on the fjord-like lake, and, of course, there is time to shop for that very Swiss watch.

Day 9, Monday Lake Lucerne-Paris, France

Enjoy vistas of green pasture and attractive chalets with rustic timbering and luxuriant flowers. Then move into France on the first and comfortable highway past some of its famous vineyards to Paris. Arrive in time to enjoy the optional cabaret show.

Day 10, Tuesday, Paris

Paris holds a special place in the imagination. It is a city of many facets famed for its culture, beauty sophistication and sparkle. By sitting with a glass of wine in a bistro or sidewalk café, you can absorb the essence of the city and the individualism of its people. The center has wide boulevards and impressive buildings. Included sightseeing with a local expert of many of the best known Parisian sights: La Sorbonne, Arc de Triomphe, Opera, Madeleine, the Eiffel Tower, the Pyramid near the Louvre, Invalides, and Champs Elysees. Optional excursions are also available to the Palace and Gardens of Versailles and, to celebrate the success of your tour, a French farewell dinner might be just the ticket.

Day 11, Wednesday, Paris-London, England

Relax and let the countryside whiz by on the road north to the coast, where you board your Channel ferry through Kent return to London for an evening arrival.                     


Friday, November 17, 2017

A Visit to Beirut- The Capital City of Lebanon

Before Beirut became a synonym for carnage, it was part of a Mediterranean circuit for party hunters, which included Monte Carlo, the French Riviera and Alexandria- it was ‘Paris of the East’. In the 1970s, the Israelis began to attack southern Lebanon, where the PLO was located, and in 1982 launched Operation Peace for Galilee. Fifteen years of civil war followed.

However, Beirut is back with a vengeance.  Today, Lebanon’s ministry of tourism advertises it as “The City that would not die”. Relative peace has brought to the fore all the elements that make Lebanon a traveller’s paradise: a small country (150KM by 60KM) you can travel the length and breadth of in a few hours; pristine mountains; beaches set by the Mediterranean; ancient cities; the spirit of warn-torn people getting the most out of life. (The war did not really stop the Beirutis from partying—they just went underground and put the music on louder to drown out the shelling.) With low crime rates and political stability, Beirut is now safe, glamorous and very happening.

Situated at the eastern end of the Mediterranean, Lebanon is at a crossroad of three continents. It has always been strategic, with a history of unrest dating to Old Testament times. The rocks in Dog River Valley bear testimony to centuries of struggles- messages left by occupying armies down the centuries. It was also the refuge of minorities fleeing persecution between the 9th and 11th centuries—the Christian Maronites, Shi’ite Muslims and the Druze settled here. Thanks to the various peoples who occupied Beirut- the Phoenicians, Romans, Greeks, Arabs, French—Lebanon offers a long list of things to see and do. But what Beirut, and Lebanon, offers best is Atmosphere.

The first day we walk from our hotels to one of the many restaurants on the Corniche. After a leisurely gourmet lunch (after a few days, I wonder- whether there is another kind) followed by shisha and Turkish coffee, we walk along the Corniche. It carries on to the city’s central district, the approach to which is marked by the Hard Rock Café. By late afternoon, families start drifting in which stoves, backgammon, coffeepots and narghileh/shisha; others come to stroll or jog. Power-walking is very popular, especially with fashionably dressed Lebanese women. (You rarely see the Lebanese not dressed to kill; they even iron their workout clothes!) I noticed food carts draped with the Lebanese flag. 

Vendors and illegal, and they use the national flag so that the police will respect their patriotism and leave them alone. We watch the sunset over the famous Pigeon Rocks and take a cab downtown. Since 1997, the Lebanese have gone about rebuilding the city. Exquisite architecture stands next to glittering high rises and shell-shocked structures whose time has not yet come. The visual contrast is surreal around the national Museum, reconstructed to its previous glory, but surrounded by shelled buildings especially around the Green Line, which divided Christian East Beirut from the Muslim West.


The cab drops us off a Solidere, the city center. This area has been rebuilt in golden sandstone and pink marble- as it used to be before the war erupted in April 1975—complete with cobbled streets, pavement cafes, wrought-iron railings, Ottoman arches and terracotta roofs. You could be forgiven for thinking you were in Paris. The cobblestoned pedestrian streets are lined with shops selling traditional crafts, designer fashions, and jewelry. Solidere is also home to Roman ruins that have been uncovered and preserved, several notable mosques and churches, and the National Parliament Building.

There are over 50 restaurants, bars and sidewalk cafes, but it is hard to find a place to sit. The tables are filled, and men and women strut up and down the street in their finest. I’m not an expert, but it doesn’t take one to figure that everyone’s dressed in the height of fashion. It feels like the whole town is here. The war has taken its toll and there are 15 million Lebanese who live and work outside Lebanon, compared to a resident population of 5 million. The summer sees the Lebanese expats return. It’s also a popular holiday destination for Gulf Arabs who come for pleasures— bars, casinos and unveiled girls—they cannot sample at home (they like to call it coming up for ‘flesh air’).

After a few drinks and dinners, it’s time for Beirut’s legendary nightlife. The Solidere crowd heads for a night of revelry at one of Monot Street’s clubs until dawn breaks behind Mount Lebanon. Monot Street has a huge selection of nightclubs: BO 18 which use to be a refugee camp; Crystal, the current favorite of fickle Beirut’s; Zinc, a bar in a French colonial villa which was taken and retaken so many times during the war it was called the Bitch of Beirut. Casino du Liban has a floor-show that would give any in Parish a run for its money. At Crystal, there is no dance floor, but on the erstwhile dinner tables men and women are dancing—the men in designers shirts and jeans and the women in mini-skirts or artery-restricting jeans.

The next day we spend walking around town, exploring the shopping options. Street food is popular and essentially consists of stands offering shawarma (slabs of chicken or meat sizzling on vertical skewers, to be grated and stuffed into Pitta bread with tahineh and pickles) and, of course, the Lebanese favorite, falafel (fried grated chickpeas). When the war ended, the fast shop of to reopen in downtown Beirut was a falafel stand. The city had become an uninhabited wasteland of bombed-out buildings and overgrown streets, but once the shooting stooped, a small shop appeared in a bullet-riddled building. Sahyoun, the falafel stand, was back.

We end the afternoon indulging in a Turkish bath at the Al-Nouzha. It provides a real glimpse of old Beirut. Although not traditional in style, the scrubbed down is authentic.

In the next morning’s paper, I see a readers’ poll: “Are you a Metrosexual?” The word could have been coined as Crystal. Appurtenances are very important in Lebanon. 


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