Travelrific® Travel Journal

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Archive for December, 2011

Extreme Driving in London

By Linda Tancs

London’s International Horse Show at Olympia hardly sounds like the venue to be associated with extreme driving.  Yet that’s exactly what’s happening for the first time at this year’s event.   Extreme driving is a high speed indoor driving competition featuring the world’s top three drivers.   A new equestrian disicpline, the action will take place on the evening of 15 December and the afternoon of 16 December.  Sure gives new meaning to the expression, hold your horses.

Building Blocks in Florida

By Linda Tancs

For those suffering from Mouse fatigue, there’s another attraction in the Orlando, Florida area to capture the imagination of young and old alike.  Just 45 minutes from the Orlando theme parks or downtown Tampa is Legoland, a 150- acre family theme park in Winter Haven that’s sure to please even the most discerning LEGO fan.  For starters, why not orient yourself with a 150-foot rotating platform ride that provides a 360° view of the park.  From that vantage point you might capture a glimpse of kids driving LEGO themed cars through city streets at Ford Driving School.  Or maybe you’ll see the Statue of Liberty in Miniland’s version of New York City.  Knights and dragons are battling at the Kingdom, and swashbuckling pirates have taken over Pirates’ Cove.  And what could be better than a factory tour in Fun Town, where you’ll learn how those building blocks are made from factory to finish.  Orlando visitors can take the roundtrip shuttle to the park from Premium Outlets on Vineland Avenue.

A Whirlwind Event in Turkey

By Linda Tancs

A whirling dervish is to Turkey what baseball is to America, a symbol of national pride and part of its custom, history and culture.  Celebrated each year in Konya during the weeklong Mevlana Festival, the dancers commemorate the life and death of Sufi master and poet Rumi, founder of the dervishes.  The event takes place at the sports stadium from 10 to 17 December.

The Other Jersey Shore

By Linda Tancs

This is a true statement:  you won’t find Snooki or The Situation at the Jersey Shore.  Jersey Shore, Pennsylvania, that is.  The picturesque borough along the West Branch of the Susquehanna River in southern Lycoming County offers a wealth of recreational activities that are lacking at its more celebrated namesake, like downhill and cross country skiing, trout fishing, hiking, mountain biking, camping, snowmobiling, hunting, and outlet shopping.  Spray tans are optional.

Historic Trees in New Jersey

By Linda Tancs

Shakespeare spoke of tongues in trees.  Oh, what tales New Jersey’s historic trees could tell.  On the Cranford campus of Union County College near the Sperry Observatory is a historic tree grove born of seedlings from some of the nation’s most historic trees.  Take a gander at tree #7, the Abraham Lincoln Overcup Oak, grown from a seed of the tree that graces the yard of our 16th President’s boyhood home.   Tree #10, the Berkeley Plantation White Ash, represents several seminal events in colonial history in Virginia:  two signers of the Declaration of Independence were born at the Plantation, which also boasts the first three-story brick structure in America.   Other notables include the Antietam Sycamore, Gettysburg Address Honey Locust, Wilbur and Orville Wright Red Cedar and Sergeant Alvin York Tulip Poplar.

New Space at Tel Aviv Museum

By Linda Tancs

A new complex was recently unveiled at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art.   At 20,000 square meters, the Herta and Paul Amir Building is a study in contemporary building technologies, combining 430 polished cement panels into a mix of linear and multi-layered dimensions that ultimately unite to form a striking orientation for the visitor.  Resembling a giant paper airplane, the space puts a fresh spin on the phrase “a new angle.”

King of Wines and Wine of Kings

By Linda Tancs

In the Eger-Tokaj region, a quiet, unassuming wine region less than three hours from Budapest, the world renowned Hungarian wine, the Tokaji Aszú, ages in the cellars as it has done for centuries.  Louis XIV called the sweet white wine produced here the wine of kings. During the first-ever Hungarian Wine Festival in America, you too can experience “the king of wines and the wine of kings.”  On 3 and 4 December, Kossuth House in downtown Miami will host the seminal event featuring wine tastings and techniques designed to show you that Magyar culture is more than paprika and goulash.

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