Travelrific® Travel Journal

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Archive for international travel

The Year of Klimt

By Linda Tancs

2012 marks the 150th anniversary of the birth of Gustav Klimt, an Austrian painter and illustrator.  Ten Viennese museums will herald the event with special exhibitions throughout the year, featuring his paintings, drawings and designs.  The Belvedere has the world’s largest collection of Klimt paintings, where a special exhibition is already underway highlighting his collaboration with Josef Hoffmann.  Later, in May, don’t miss the first public viewing of the Wien Museum’s collection of 400 Klimt drawings.  In the meanwhile, don’t miss the Art History Museum event beginning next month, or the spectacular events scheduled for Albertina, the Theatre Museum, Kuenstlerhaus, Folklore Museum, Leopold or the Museum of Applied Art.

Mum’s the Word

By Linda Tancs

You’ve heard it before:  talk is cheap.  Actions speak louder than words.  In London they celebrate action–visual theatre–at the International Mime Festival.  Until 29 January you can experience the circus athletes of Sugar Beast Circus, mask theatre of Kulunka Teatro, the light and shadow of Fleur Elise Noble, acrobat-dancer and magician Claudio Stellato and object theatre of Théâtre Tête de Pioche.  In short, a feast for the senses.

Leapfrogging in Samoa

By Linda Tancs

In Samoa, time really did stand still. The Pacific island lost a day (30 December, to be precise) when it shifted its international dateline on 29 December to be in sync with that of its major trading partners, Australia and New Zealand. The dateline, which runs through the middle of the Pacific, now runs to the east of the island nation rather than to its west.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream in Peru

By Linda Tancs

Lake Titicaca, located between Bolivia and Peru, is the highest navigable lake in the world.  Conveniently accessed from Juliaca airport, take the bus or a taxi to Puno, Peru’s capital of folklore.  Your midsummer adventure there should include the cylindrical Sillustani burial towers, one of the world’s most important necropolises just outside Puno.  The cathedral in Puno, built in 1757, is warm and inviting against a frosty midsummer night sky.  After all, the city is located over 3000 meters above sea level.

Slovenian Capital of Culture

By Linda Tancs

Maribor, the second largest city in Slovenia, is a 2012 European Capital of Culture.  The festivities began this past weekend with music, theatre and dance performances. The year’s events will encompass events as varied as carnival and contemporary dance.   Youth art is a particular highlight, quite fitting as Maribor will follow on this year’s cultural award as the European Youth Capital in 2013.

Portuguese Capital of Culture

By Linda Tancs

Inland from Porto, Portugal, Guimarães is a 2012 European Capital of Culture.  The city is known as the “cradle of Portugal” as it’s the birthplace of the nation’s first king, Afonso Henriques.  The area is well known for its linens and embroidery, too.  In the vicinity is Mateus Palace, whose picture graces the wine label of the same name.  The kick-off for festivities is 21 January with a theatre and multimedia open-air show.  The year’s events focus on four themes:  City, Community, Thought and Arts.

Go Fly a Kite

By Linda Tancs

The transition of the sun into the Northern Hemisphere has heads turning skyward in India on 14 January.  On that day, Indians celebrate this celestial occurrence with a festival called Makar Sankranti, the annual kite festival.  The kite flying event is particularly popular in Jaipur, where Air Force helicopters release kites resembling  wasps, stained glass windows and birds, among other things.  The three-day festival ends with the crowning of winners for the display kite and fighter kite competitions.

The Land Nearest Nowhere

By Linda Tancs

If you have a hankering for a trip to nowhere in particular, then the land nearest nowhere is as good a destination as any.  So where is nowhere?  Answer:  Cape Three Points in Ghana, West Africa, where zero latitude meets zero longitude at zero altitude.  You’ll avoid the rainy season this time of year although a weather phenomenon known as the harmattan, a dry northeast wind, blows almost continuously in January and February.  The drive from Takoradi, dotted with crop farms, rubber plantations and local fora and fauna is just as amazing as the panoramic views from the solar-powered 1925 lighthouse waiting for you at the Cape.  Now that sounds more like somewhere to me.

The Hawaii of Korea

By Linda Tancs

Hailed as the “Hawaii of Korea,” Jeju is Korea’s largest island, situated 64 kilometers or so south of the Korean Peninsula.  Like its sister in the U.S., it offers a temperate climate, breathtaking vistas, volcanoes and a traditional culture.  Unlike Hawaii, it does offer snow–sometimes lots of it.  All the better to enjoy the snow flowers of Mt. Halla, a must-see in winter.

Sri Lanka Requires ETA For Travel

By Linda Tancs

New year, new beginnings.  Sri Lanka now requires visitors (except for Singapore and Maldives travelers) to obtain an ETA (Electronic Travel Authorization) in advance of travel.  The ETA requirement applies to a holiday visit, a short business trip or a transit through Sri Lanka.  Applications may be made online or in person.