You may wish to have a good travel vocation to spend your new year at your dream place for the first month of 2010. If you do and your wallet allowed, here I’ll give you travel guide for the month of January in the New Year. You can make your new 2010 be an unforgettable one, just take these ideas and celebrate your New Year lavishly:
If you are planning to have a low profile New Year, travel across India that promises you a great holiday that too with a low budget. With cities like Agra, Jaipur, Jaisalmer you can have an opportunity to have a look of the magnificent architecture from ancient India or you can enjoy colorful carnival and cruise in Goa. Weather is just perfect to travel across India at this time of the year.
If you are love food then it’s the time for the ice wine festival in Canada. You can taste over 100 different wines in this 10 days event. Canada is also famous for its ski lands. With its deep and terrific ski slopes; it is also a perfect spot for the ski lovers.
If you want to play golf with your taylormade r9 irons in cold winter but just want toescape the cold and snow in the US. Then Mexico is the perfect place to hide yourself in this hot spot. It’s climate being rated as the second best in the world by National Geographic. Other options are Florida or Dominican Republic.
Golf is always a perfect vacation in California or Arizona. If you are a Golf aficionado then head out west for a golfing vacation. We recommend Gray hawk Golf Club in Scottsdale Arizona and Pebble Beach Golf course in Pebble Beach California. You can pack your golf equipment travel to there or just go to there and rent some cheap golf clubs. Great course and beautiful place, get your perfect first shot of the year.
For all the nature lovers it’s the best time to visit Northern Tanzania, Kenya that offers a spectacular view of the migration of the thousands of wild animals like zebras, lions, leopards, cheetahs ,hyenas and many exciting wild beast.
In Cartagena, North Colombian, it’s the time for the famous hay festival, visited by many great writers, speakers and musicians. Don’t miss the chance to be a part of this captivating festival.
Hope these are great destinations for you. Just escape the lazy and dull winter routine, you should make your first two month of 2010 memorable by visiting one of these incredible vacation destinations. Wish you have a pleasant journey and a happy beginning.
I booked two rooms at this hotel. I know its fairly new. We got the room for 0 a night when every other hotel is now at over 0. Wanted to know if anyone knew about the hotel and could provide some insight. I know its not right on Time Square but we don’t mind walking 14 blocks…that’s like 2 miles or so right?
Those who love beach vacations usually want a great little town to go with it — a place with ambience and cultural flair to go with magnificent scenery.
We found all we needed in Ventura, one of those places that we always wondered about as we drove through this area on our way up to other scenic destinations on the Central California Coast. For us, this was drive-by country – scenic, yes, but always someplace we just passed on the way to someplace else.
Ventura is located in a place that really is advantageous for travelers. For Southern California residents, it’s an easy drive that takes you just beyond the megalopolis where back-to-back cities finally give way to a coastline that is less overwhelmed by development. Beaches along the Central Coast are great, but if you’re coming from the south and don’t have a lot of time, Ventura is a fun beach destination all on its own.
For Northern Californians, Ventura is a just close enough to the “Big City” to be a reasonable base of operations for visits to many L.A. tourist attractions, most within an hour’s drive. Yet, you’re staying in the quintessential California beach community that is far removed from the hustle and bustle of the city. Don’t want to go into the city for a day? Just chill out on some of the state’s most scenic beaches.
The one reminder of the city was our hotel – the Crowne Plaza, a former Holiday Inn that is being converted to the more upscale brand name. At 15 floors, it’s the only high-rise in the area and could not be built again with today’s stringent coastal regulations. The hotel offers incredible views of the ocean, the Channel Islands and the verdant hillsides at Ventura’s northeastern edge. The Crowne Plaza is situated so that every room above the second floor offers guests spectacular coastal views.
Within minutes of arrival we were walking the promenade that stretches far from the hotel in both directions along the shore. A great beach is just footsteps from the hotel, and there are restaurants and plenty of activity at the nearby Ventura Pier. Bikes and other contraptions are available for rent and, on this Sunday, vendors offered a variety of wares in the plaza just between the beach and our hotel.
Just up California Street from our hotel was a colorful small-town shopping district with shops of all kinds, restaurants and a high concentration of antique stores that are fun to browse. Several surf shops are nearby and, like other California beach towns, the feel is more retro than trendy. The historic City Hall sits majestically on a slight hill at the edge of the downtown district, serving to remind us that Ventura really is a town and not just a stretch of uncoordinated beach development.
Intersecting with California Street is Main Street and, if you walk just a few blocks, you come upon the Mission San Buenaventura. This mission was established on Easter Sunday, March 31, 1782 and became the ninth California mission founded by Father Junipero Serra. Fires and earthquakes have taken their toll on the mission but, over the years, local residents have restored the building to much of its former glory. In any event, the mission “feels” original and is worth a stop when you’re downtown.
Just across the street from the mission is the Museum of History and Art, which offers a broad range of exhibits tucked into a relatively small space. Historical artifacts, farm implements, 18th Century figurines – the museum offers quite a variety.
One thing you notice after spending a few hours in Ventura is that, every place you go, you’ll hear ’60’s music. It’s probably not unrelated to the fact that many surfer and beach types from that era continue to hang out in this popular beach town. But no doubt about it – whether it’s the hot dog vendor on the promenade, the antique store on Main Street or even the downtown sushi restaurant, they’re all playing music from the ’60’s.
The aforementioned sushi restaurant is the Sushi Marina, a local hot spot where we stopped by for dinner. But a word to wise here – the restaurant apparently is quite popular with locals, yet it has relatively few tables and no real space to wait for your table to be called. The food was good but we definitely will time our future visits to avoid the rush.
There are about two miles of beach in the Ventura area that are considered to be part of the local State Park, and visitors are enthralled by the wide, relatively unpopulated beach where one can look out on the Channel Islands and also get a spectacular view of the coastline stretching west and north to Santa Barbara. At sunset, we made a point to stop by Surfer’s Knoll where you can walk through the sand dunes to find an ideal place to view the sun going down in the western sky. Folks around here treat the sunset much as they do in Key West – it’s an event, and people make a point to amble down to the beach each night to celebrate the area’s scenic beauty.
If the beach and a vibrant local shopping district aren’t enough to get your attention, here are a few other visitor attractions from the Ventura area:
The Ventura Harbor Village and Marina – If you like boats — or just being close to them — the harbor area has hundreds of them along with a 33-acre shopping and entertainment complex, Harbor Village. There are lots of boat rentals, fishing charters and an assortment of restaurants. Be sure to check out the “almost” antique Carousel with its 36 animals that was built in 1955. This arcade also offers home-made fudge, fresh popcorn and enough games to keep your youngsters occupied for hours.
Channel Islands National Park Visitors Center – Located in the Ventura harbor area, the center offers exhibits on the flora and fauna of the island as well as a graphic relief map that gives visitors some idea of the islands’ size. The islands are visible from the Ventura area and are a favorite for daytrips, diving, snorkeling, swimming, and bird watching. It’s also possible for visitors to camp, hike and picnic on the islands, with tours leaving from the harbor area.
A.J. Comstock Museum – a look at early firefighters and their methods. It’s a free museum and open all the time.
The Albinger Archeological Museum – Located near the mission, this free museum features artifacts dating back 3,500 years and several different cultures. You can also see the original mission foundation in the dig area. AT A GLANCE
WHERE: Ventura is located about 65 miles north and west of Los Angeles on one of the state’s major north-south freeways, Highway 101. If you don’t want to drive, it’s easily accessible by Amtrak and the Ventura stop is only two-tenths of a mile from the Crowne Plaza.
WHAT: Ventura is the quintessential California beach community with miles of broad beaches and an eclectic shopping district that blends the surf subculture with a touristy downtown. It’s Small Town, yet close to the Big City.
WHEN: Anytime. Ventura enjoys a sunny climate, although its location can make it breezy at times, especially on the beach.
WHY: Ventura truly has its own character and charm. Geographically, Ventura is located in one of California’s most scenic coastal areas.
HOW: For more information on Ventura, contact the Ventura Visitors and Convention Bureau at 800-483-6214 or visit www.ventura-usa.com. For information on the Crowne Plaza Hotel, phone 1-800-980-6429 or visit http://www.cpventura.com.
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im sending my parents to california in January for there christmas present, whats your favorite part of cali or a good place to go for a nice vacation?
If so I have a good question about redwood seeds. Can you refridgerate Dawn Redwood and Coast Redwood seeds like you can refridgerate Giant Sequoia seeds? Will it have the same effect? http://majesticredwoods.synthasite.com
I’m going to the LA area next month, around the 15th. I come from a very small, rural, northern town where fashion means a new pair of camo pants. I don’t want to stick out like a sore thumb. What can I do to appear more like a local and less like a stupid hillbilly? I’d like to wear at least one current fashion.
And how hot is it in April? My county’s average April temp is 43 degrees, farenheit.
If it helps, this is my shape/size/what I wear on average anyways. Please help! Thank you.
http://s123.photobucket.com/albums/o284/sawtooth_honey/?action=view¤t=zzz-1.jpg
Maybe something more grown-upish? I mean, I truly appriciate any and all help I can get, but I do not have a teen-ager’s body. Please see photo.