Posts Tagged Beach

Budget Travel: Roatan is yet another ‘fake village/private beach’ built by a cruise line

Court allows Dakuidreketi to travel
The Fiji High Court has granted leave to Fiji Rugby Union chief executive officer Keni Dakuidreketi to travel for a meeting in Los Angeles.

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Travel News: Thailand insures tourists’ vacations
Thailand is continuing to offer insurance coverage worth $10,000 to anyone who might be harmed in riots and demonstrations as it seeks to attract tourists scared off by political turmoil, officials say. Other carrots range from a waiver on all visa fees to discounts on airline landing fees.

Read more on Detroit Free Press

Dealing with post-travel blues
There’s not a whole lot of sympathy out there when you return from a holiday nursing a serious case of the travel blues.

Read more on Stuff

Cool travel Web site
www.worldeventsguide.com What: Locate festivals and events in cities around the world. Why: Want to know what’s going on while you’ll be in London or Bangkok? Check it out. It also lists hot upcoming festivals, as well as sporting events.

Read more on Detroit Free Press

Budget Travel: Roatan is yet another ‘fake village/private beach’ built by a cruise line
To Labadee in Haiti, Costa Maya in Mexico, and Coco Cay and Great Stirrup Cay in the Bahamas, you can now add “Mahogany Bay” on the island of Roatan in Honduras.

Read more on Cape Cod Times

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Hike from Karon Beach to the Big Buddha

The Big Buddha is now a much visited tourist attraction in Phuket, even though it’s not finished. We have been going up the hill for many years, since work first started in about 2002 or 2003. I have blogged about the Big Buddha many times since this blog started in 2006, showing the progress of the building and the great views from the top (about 400m above sea level). There is of course a road up to the top, which is almost all complete. The road starts from Chalong, about 1km after the Chalong traffic circle, or about 8km from Karon Beach.

Now I know another way up! You can start from Karon and walk up to the Big Buddha! I heard of this quite a few months ago from Steve, owner of the Pineapple Guesthouse in Karon. He’d walked up with a Finnish guy who lives in Karon and had found (by trial and error) a way up. The hills in Phuket are criss crossed with paths used by locals working in rubber plantations or landowners to look after plots of land. The last hike I made up to the highest point in Phuket used a lot of such trails.

We started early to avoid the heat of the day. It was around 7:15am that we left the Pineapple Guesthouse – myself, Steve and Henrik (who was staying at Pineapple and diving with Sunrise Divers). The hike starts up a small side road just opposite and a few meters to the north of the Siam Commercial Bank in Karon, which is just 10 meters from the Pineapple. The road heads up into the hills, easy to follow, passing houses along the way. Kai (our guide, the guy from Finland) lives up here so we picked him up on the way. Some of the steepest sections of the walk are near the bottom. I’ve been up this road quite a few times. After a while you reach a junction and a sign. Turn left at this junction…

Turn left here

If you turn right, the road loops around and down and comes back to the main road opposite Karon post office. Turn left and you keep heading up, past some new houses and a few still being built. By this point you already start to get a bit of a sea view. There are some steep sections here, and then the trail turns to dirt and heads into the trees…

Dirt road heading up from Karon

This trail gets narrower, but we were surprised to meet a moped and a pick up truck on this section when were heading down again. Lots of rubber trees up in the hills here. As the trail narrowed, we passed a spirit house on the left next to a rubber tree, and a few meters after this, a turning to the right – the first right turn you come to – we took this turning up a narrower path. Now we were really into the trees. Not exactly jungle.. I mean, a lot of the hills have been used for rubber or bananas for many years. We passed plenty of rubber and banana trees although some sections of trail were very “jungly”…

Trail heading up Buddha Mountain

Hiking through the trees

Some sections of the trail here had obviously been recently cut back, and in places the trail might not be 100% obvious, but Kai knew the way! By this time, we had some great views back down to Karon Beach…

View over Karon from the trail

At one point here, the trail splits and you have to turn hard left – someone had pretty much barred the way in the other direction by covering the trail with branches. We then walked more or less along the hillside with a steep drop to the left without gaining much altitude for a few hundred meters. Then, you may see this tree on the left.. big roots, cloth tied around it…

Tree - turn left just after this...

Just after this tree, which you see on the left, you turn right. At this point there’s not really a trail for about 50 meters, just head UP (it’s steep, you may think you are on the wrong trail, have faith).. and you come out on a very obvious path…

Ah! A real path!

Just at the point you come out is the start of a line of small palm trees.. worth making a marker for the way down at this point. When you hit this path (photo above), turn right, heading up, and it’s not too long before you meet the road…

Trail meets road - Steve, Henrik and Kai

The last kilometre of the walk is up the road. We stopped to pose for some photos before the top. Was about 8:45am when we hit the summit. At this time of day, there are few (if any) visitors. We were the first at the Buddha. Getting up early is often worth the pain.

Posing near the top

View across the hills from near the top of Buddha Mountain

We spent a while at the top. Henrik (who had not been up there before) managed to let out a “Wow!” at the sight of the 45 meter high marble covered Buddha. I do wonder when work will ever be complete here. Could be a few more years I think. We all hope it won’t be allowed to get too tacky – there are already plenty of stalls selling souvenirs, thank you. Well, at least we got there before anyone else – any tourist attraction looks better without the tourists! Even Patong Beach looks OK at 7am!

The Big Buddha with some scaffolding

Lots of building still going on around the main Buddha image, I noticed some major changes since last time I visited – a large area of dirt behind the Buddha has now been concreted and another layer of 5 meter high lotus blossoms added around the base. The views are still great, and always will be. The view below looks across Chalong Bay.

View from the Big Buddha across Chalong

Up top I met Glenn, who I had hiked with to the 540 meter plus summit of Phuket in September.. We’d half planned to meet for this walk.. but unfortunately had met at different starting points.. we might do this Buddha walk again in the coming week. Glenn was fresh from a hike in the north of Phuket where he’d been attacked by a gibbon!

On the way down, Steve, Henrik, Kai and I stopped for an early beer at the Nakkerd Seaview restaurant near the top of the hill. There are now quite a few little restaurants open along the road – the Nakkerd Seaview was the first and we still like to eat here sometimes with views across Karon and across the Andaman Sea. Refreshed and slightly wobbly (I do NOT drink beer at 9am normally!) we headed down, back to Karon Beach where I enjoyed an English breakfast at the Pineapple guesthouse. The hike was a bit easier than I had imagined. I mean, it’s a climb to 400m above sea level, starting at (more or less) sea level, so yes it was a bit sweaty, but starting early helped as we were hiking on the east side of the hill, out of the sun almost all the way up. Good exercise, and great views and of course walking is free – your average tuk tuk will want 800 Baht for a round trip.

I hope to do this one again soon and have (sort of) arranged to do a much tougher hike with Glenn in the near future over the hill from Tonsai waterfall to Bang Pae waterfall in the north of Phuket.. and there you really do find some proper jungle!

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Busan Nightlife nightclub Places and beach

Busan Metropolitan City, or Pusan (부산) is the largest port city in the Republic of Korea. It is known also as “Rio De Janeiro of South Korea”, because it has beautiful seashores and ports. Busan (Pusan) is Korea’s second largest city with close to 4 million people. It also serves as the country’s main port for international cargo, as well as passenger ferries to Japan and Jeju Island. The city is famous for its seafood and beaches, as well as the Hallyosudo Waterway with its picturesque islands

Busan has a lot of wonderful nighlife places. In many parts of the city, you can find big Nightclubs in the Korean style. This usually means you are expected to have a table, and usually must order anju (side dishes) with your drinks. They tend to insist on proper dress (no tank tops, ratty clothes, etc.) and tend to be a bit pricey. Sometimes they have lip-synch bands, ‘animators’, or some other stage entertainment. There is of course a lot of dancing, usually with the people you came with although it is possible to meet people.

The Korean nightclub scene, like the general social scene in Korea, leans toward established groups and not so much free mingling as Westerners may be accustomed to. Feel it out. There have been cases of foreigners being ejected from nightclubs for dressing too ‘down’ or being a little too aggressive in their social advances. On the other hand, you can meet many Koreans who will be happy to make a new friend, buy you a drink, or spin around the floor with you.

Busan’s close proximity to the ocean give it milder winters than other places in Korea, enabling people to enjoy the night life in more comfort than other areas. As a major port of call for international shipping, the harbor area has a thriving district that caters to the thousands of sailors and other visitors who pass through each year. Busan’s younger generation frequents the “3 daes” of Busan: Haeundae, Taejongdae, and Pusandae (the Korean name for Pusan National University).

Busan favourite Night Life , Busan Spa, Busan Beach are listed here :
1. Dongnae Spa
2. Gukje Market
3. Gwangalli Beach
4. Haeundae Beach
5. Pusan National University
6. Seomyeon
7.Texas Street

Nightlife view in Busan City

Busan Nightlife
Busan Nightlife

Watch Busan Beach Haeundae Nightlife video here

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