Caribbean travel tips and tricks

Caribbean travel, islands, all inclusive vactions and more!

Archive for July, 2009

07 23rd, 2009

The Best Places To Go For Caribbean Culture On Your Next Visit To Virginia.

Duration : 10 min 50 sec

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Air OP

Author: admin
07 23rd, 2009

the opening of anime AIR

Duration : 1 min 32 sec

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I was checking out this Bangkok Holiday Trip Offer and they have the following:

Return Airfare inclusive of airport taxes
02 nights in Bangkok with Breakfasts
02 nights in Pattaya with Breakfasts
City tour of Bangkok
Coral Island Tour of Pattaya with Lunch
Return Airport Transfers

My question is does that include "Going" Air Fare? They said only return air fare is included. Do I have to pay extra fare for going from here to Bangkok?

Thanks.

Your hoilday package is basically saying it is a round trip air-fare.



I was checking out this Bangkok Holiday Trip Offer and they have the following:

Return Airfare inclusive of airport taxes
02 nights in Bangkok with Breakfasts
02 nights in Pattaya with Breakfasts
City tour of Bangkok
Coral Island Tour of Pattaya with Lunch
Return Airport Transfers

My question is does that include "Going" Air Fare? They said only return air fare is included. Do I have to pay extra fare for going from here to Bangkok?

Thanks.

Your hoilday package is basically saying it is a round trip air-fare.



07 22nd, 2009

Airfare = music group from Czech Republic :)

Guitar: Epiphone Les Paul
AMP: Line 6 Spider II
camera: Canon Ixus 750 (only 3:00min.)

Duration : 0:3:0

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http://www.DiscoverSosua.com

The Casa Marina all inclusive resort is located in Sosua on the North Coast of the Dominican Republic. Go to: http://www.DiscoverSosua.com for more information about Sosua and the Dominican Republic.

Duration : 0:3:39

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07 22nd, 2009

See our Definitive Caribbean review at http://definitivecaribbean.com/accommodation/PeterIsland.aspx

“An extremely luxurious, private island resort in the British Virgin Islands. Peter Island Resort has just 52 rooms and a handful of villas set around the 1800 acres of the island, including rooms on the spectacular Deadmans Bay beach. A very elegant, sometimes glitzy island getaway with a full service spa….”

Duration : 0:2:51

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07 22nd, 2009

‘Saba - The Unspoiled Queen’ promotional film from the Saba Tourist Bureau

See our Definitive Caribbean guide - http://www.definitivecaribbean.com/guide/saba.aspx

“Saba is a small and extremely quiet and mountainous island, not that well known and quite hard to access (mainly via St Maarten), English and Dutch speaking. Real island charm with extremely pretty houses and gracious islanders. No beaches to speak of but good natural life onshore with hiking and excellent scuba diving. A handful of small and charming, very low key hotels, most with island character, some less expensive guest houses, and some private villas. Just a few restaurants and bars. Ideal for independent travellers interested in the traditional Caribbean. …”

Duration : 0:6:38

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Hi my name is philip. I am asking this question because I saw a movie that dicussed mainly about global warming. The meteorologist told us that global flooding might be caused global warming. Since I adore visiting the caribbean islands I am extremely worried that the islands might flooded because of global warming. Can we prevent global flooding from happening. I would like to know because I am concerned.thanks

So far, the rise in sea level is because warmer water takes up more room than colder water, which makes sea levels go up, a process known as thermal expansion.

"The real question is what’s going to happen to Greenland and Antarctica," Stouffer said. "That’s where the bulk of all the fresh water is tied up."

A recent Nature study suggested that Greenland’s ice sheet will begin to melt if the temperature there rises by 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit). That is something many scientists think is likely to happen in another hundred years.

The complete melting of Greenland would raise sea levels by 7 meters (23 feet). But even a partial melting would cause a one-meter (three-foot) rise. Such a rise would have a devastating impact on low-lying island countries, such as the Indian Ocean’s Maldives, which would be entirely submerged.

Densely populated areas like the Nile Delta and parts of Bangladesh would become uninhabitable, potentially driving hundreds of millions of people from their land.

A one-meter sea level rise would wreak particular havoc on the Gulf Coast and eastern seaboard of the United States.

Some estimates say that melting of all the glaciers, and the Antarctic ice would cause a sea level rise of 70 meters. This would inundate low-lying coastal areas. That would affect coastal areas on the Caribbean islands as well, but the islands would not be submerged. When they give these estimates, they are talking about 100 years or so in the future.



Hi my name is philip. I am asking this question because I saw a movie that dicussed mainly about global warming. The meteorologist told us that global flooding might be caused global warming. Since I adore visiting the caribbean islands I am extremely worried that the islands might flooded because of global warming. Can we prevent global flooding from happening. I would like to know because I am concerned.thanks

So far, the rise in sea level is because warmer water takes up more room than colder water, which makes sea levels go up, a process known as thermal expansion.

"The real question is what’s going to happen to Greenland and Antarctica," Stouffer said. "That’s where the bulk of all the fresh water is tied up."

A recent Nature study suggested that Greenland’s ice sheet will begin to melt if the temperature there rises by 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit). That is something many scientists think is likely to happen in another hundred years.

The complete melting of Greenland would raise sea levels by 7 meters (23 feet). But even a partial melting would cause a one-meter (three-foot) rise. Such a rise would have a devastating impact on low-lying island countries, such as the Indian Ocean’s Maldives, which would be entirely submerged.

Densely populated areas like the Nile Delta and parts of Bangladesh would become uninhabitable, potentially driving hundreds of millions of people from their land.

A one-meter sea level rise would wreak particular havoc on the Gulf Coast and eastern seaboard of the United States.

Some estimates say that melting of all the glaciers, and the Antarctic ice would cause a sea level rise of 70 meters. This would inundate low-lying coastal areas. That would affect coastal areas on the Caribbean islands as well, but the islands would not be submerged. When they give these estimates, they are talking about 100 years or so in the future.