By: Scott Coates | 2011-02-15 | Travel & Leisure Flow and pacing - the heart and soul of any winning trip - are often overlooked in international travel. This holds especially true when experiencing the Angkor temples in Cambodia. This article is a guide for you to plan your visit to Cambodia and experience the beauty of their culture and traditions. read more
By: John Prusak | 2010-03-31 | Automotive A tour of the unique Mines & Meadows Resort, which offers a unique ATV riding experience, on Kawasaki Brute Force 750 4x4s. Frankly, the 54 miles of above-ground trails are reason enough to visit the Mines & Meadows Resort, as the varied terrain, featuring hillclimbs, rock crawls and mud pits, provides challenges for seasoned riders but other easy trails with gentle, sweeping turns let anybody come and give it a shot. read more
By: Brenda Retzlaff | 2011-02-06 | Destinations I have been craving onion rings lately and while I can cook them myself, having a kitchen covered in oil splatters and smelling like a greasy diner is not worth the energy to satisfy my hankering. Living in Puerto Vallarta often leads me on a less than fruitful quest to quench my Mid-Western cravings. Not this time, I struck gold! read more
By: Vietnam Heritage Travel | 2011-07-17 | Destinations To get a taste of life in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta. There’s no better place than Chau Doc. As a border town 244km west of Ho Chi Minh City, Chau Doc is a convenient stopover for travel to and from Cambodia. read more
By: Robert Kenneth Henderson | 2010-05-02 | Adventure Tourism We had discovered the bones after a landslide had exposed a cave, whose entrance had previously been covered by a cave-in. The Headmaster at St. Xavier's High School, Brother Patrick Howley, had immediately sent off the tags and some transcriptions of the Japanese writing we had found, but it was several months before we heard anything back about them. read more
By: Debra Corbeil | 2010-03-29 | Adventure Tourism The Cu Chi Tunnels near Ho Chi Minh City are an incredible destination for war and history buffs. During the Vietnam War it was the major battleground between the U.S and Viet Cong. Surprisingly, the U.S. knew that the tunnels were there, they simply could not find them or destroy them. They put everything they had into taking out the tunnels from dispersing agent orange and napalm to relentlessly dropping bombs, but the caves remained in tact. read more
By: dudu | 2011-04-04 | Ask an Expert Earth Hour in 2009 To raise awareness for Earth Hour 2009 during the week leading up to it, Arla Foods coloured their Swedish milk cartons black-grey, as distinct from the typical white-green read more
By: Sean Thompson | 2012-01-13 | Destinations In the current travel climate people are often seeking the more extraordinary, once in a lifetime experiences above your usual beach resort break. A holiday is also about food and indulgence, so why not visit one of the strangest restaurants in the world, for a truly unusual holiday... read more
By: Dave Webb | 2010-04-03 | Reference & Education When I initially started to write this article, I elected to give a full recount of the history of Okinawa. About its prehistoric times, when a land bridge existed between Okinawa, Yonaguni (probably the time when the underwater ruins were above the waves) and China... about it originally being a separate country called the Ryukyu Kingdom, whose king believed in not fighting because "Life itself is a treasure"... about its invasion in the 1600s by Satsuma (the feudal domain in Japan, not the type of orange!)... about the Japan's constant classification of Okinawans as second-class citizens (a practice which still occurs today). But then I decided that the most influential time for Okinawa occurred in the first half of 1945, and the battle of Okinawa. read more
By: xiaohe7383g | 2010-09-20 | Leadership Show content As an early pioneer of free form radio, Fass would air a variety of different features each night. Other notable guests include investigative reporter Mae Brussell read more