The Ancient Olive Taste the Chemistry
The Ancient Olive in Winter Park is where you can taste the chemistry for sure.
Highlighted by its super premium extra virgin olive oils and aged balsamic vinegars, this epicurean adventure includes tastings of its various specialty foods among an array of unique culinary gifts, all found in the ambiance of a fine art gallery.
Their tasting room features 55+ super premium single varietal and flavored extra virgin olive oils and balsamic vinegars. The Ancient Olive has been awarded for thieir excellence in quality and education…most recently by achieving the coveted Ultra Premium designation, one of only 15 retail stores in the US and Canada to have this designation.
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Market Minute 2.13.13
To celebrate heart health before Valentine's Day, we met with the owners of The Ancient Olive in Winter Park, Florida. Jeffrey Schrader and Bryan Behling chat with East End Market's creative director, Emma Kruch Morris, about the health benefits of olive oil and special Valentine's Day recipes using infused oils.
WALKING TOUR OF WINTER PARK
The Townie Tourist strolls through the Winter Park Farmers' Market and heads up Park Avenue with Meredith Vance Wellmeier, Winter Park resident and history buff. We try a few treats, maybe run into some friends, and share the local sights and sounds of this popular walkable destination.
Train Depot
Winter Park History Museum
Briarpatch
Peterbrooke
Palmano's
Morse Museum
Prato
Le Macaron
Winter Park Farmers' Market
The Ancient Olive
Cocina 214
Frank
Barnie's Coffee
Read more at
Cuisine Corner: The Ancient Olive
Join The Ancient Olive of Winter Park for a fun and interactive discussion on olive oil. Learn how to taste it properly and the best ways to cook with it. Get your creative juices flowing as Chef Maria demonstrates recipes using olive oil in less excepted ways and dismiss myths around cooking with extra virgin olive oil.
Honeybees
When you think of growing your own garden, you probably think of the basics like soil, water, and seeds. What you may not think of, are honeybees.
The Naperville Park District did, bringing in 20-thousand honeybees this spring to the Community Garden Plots to help pollinate flowers, vegetables, and fruit trees.
“Honeybees are vital for any human, any country, anywhere. It’s very vital because without honeys we wouldn’t be able to survive. They are the pollinators for a lot of our produce,” Danielle Hlave, Park Specialist 1 for the Naperville Park District.
Honeybees assist in the production of at least 90 commercially grown crops in North America, with favorites including apples, peaches and almonds; but with the increased use of agricultural toxins, bees are dramatically disappearing across the country.
“A lot of pesticide use and herbicide use has been killing the population and you can see a lot of the almonds and other produce haven’t been producing because they haven’t been pollinated this year,” said Hlave.
The Park District invested $8,000 in the project to educate people about the “un-bee-lievable” benefits of natural pollination. This summer’s gardeners reported a much bigger harvest than last year.
“I encourage many people to learn about it because I know people are afraid of bees. And really you shouldn’t be afraid; it’s more wasps and yellow jackets and those types of bees to be worried about, not honeybees,” said Hlave.
Even President Obama and the White House are involved in natural pollination by bringing the first ever hives to the White House garden and launching a national effort to save the honeybees.
Naperville is doing its part too; the Park District grew their bee population to 80,000 by the end of the summer.
Naperville News 17's Kristin Gitchell Reports.
Croatia 2017
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Croatia is a country situated at the crossroads of Central and Southeast Europe, on the Adriatic Sea. Capital city is Zagreb, which forms one of the country's primary subdivisions, along with its twenty counties. Croatia has a total area of 56,594 square kilometres (21,851 square miles) and a population of 4.28 million, most of whom are Roman Catholics.
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► Split
Split is the second-largest city of Croatia and the largest city of the region of Dalmatia. It lies on the eastern shore of the Adriatic Sea and is spread over a central peninsula and its surroundings. An intraregional transport hub and popular tourist destination, the city is linked to the Adriatic islands and the Apennine peninsula.
► Makarska
Makarska is a small city on the Adriatic coastline of Croatia. It has a population of 13,834 residents. Administratively Makarska has the status of a city and it is part of the Split-Dalmatia County.
Makarska is a tourist centre, located on a horseshoe shaped bay between the Biokovo mountains and the Adriatic Sea. The city is noted for its palm-fringed promenade, where cafes, bars and boutiques overlook the harbour. Adjacent to the beach are several large capacity hotels as well as a camping ground.
► Baška Voda
Baška Voda is a municipality in Croatia in the Split-Dalmatia County. It has a population of 2,775, 96.2% of which are Croats. It is located on the Adriatic coastline of Dalmatia 10 km northwest of Makarska.
In ancient times, the little village of Bast nestled by a freshwater spring which supplied the Biokovo area. During the 18th century, after the expulsion of the Turks, its inhabitant left the slopes of St. Ilija's (Elijah's) Ridge and descended to the shore, where they established Baška Voda, today a well-known tourist resort on the Makarska Riviera.
► Brač
Brač is an island in the Adriatic Sea within Croatia, with an area of 396 square kilometres, making it the largest island in Dalmatia, and the third largest in the Adriatic. It is separated from the mainland by the Brač Channel, which is 5 to 13 km wide. The island's tallest peak, Vidova gora, or Mount St. Vid, stands at 780 m, making it the highest island point in the Adriatic. The island has a population of 13,956, living in numerous settlements, ranging from the main town Supetar, with more than 3,300 inhabitants, to Murvica, where less than two dozen people live. Bol Airport on Brač is the largest airport of all islands surrounding Split.
► Hvar
Hvar is a Croatian island in the Adriatic Sea, located off the Dalmatian coast, lying between the islands of Brač, Vis and Korčula. Approximately 68 km long, with a high east-west ridge of Mesozoic limestone and dolomite, the island of Hvar is unusual in the area for having a large fertile coastal plain, and fresh water springs. Its hillsides are covered in pine forests, with vineyards, olive groves, fruit orchards and lavender fields in the agricultural areas. The climate is characterized by mild winters, and warm summers with many hours of sunshine. The island has 11,103 residents, making it the 4th most populated of the Croatian islands.
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BACKPACKER - ENG - FUERTEVENTURA
BACKPACKER - English Version - FUERTEVENTURA
NoPainNoGlory.TK by BackPackerR
Fuerteventura is a subtropical island in the Canary Islands (Spain) in the Atlantic Ocean off the African coast. The surface of the island is 1,660 km ², the population of 100,929 inhabitants. It is part of the province of Las Palmas, and is divided into six municipalities:
Antigua
Betancuria
The Olive
Pájara
Puerto del Rosario
Tuineje
67 individual settlements are distributed among these municipalities. The nearby Islote de Lobos, is part of the municipality of La Oliva. Located just 100 miles off the coast of North Africa, is the second biggest of the islands, after Tenerife, and has the longest beaches in the archipelago. The island is a paradise for fans of the sun, beaches and water sports.
Arid and sparsely populated island. The main activities are agriculture practiced (fruits, vegetables), fishing and tourism. Fuerteventura is widely regarded as the oldest of the Canary Islands. Its strange form was created by a series of volcanic eruptions many thousands of years ago.
The first tourist hotel was built in 1965, followed by the construction of the airport in El matorral, who announced the birth of a new era for the island. Fuerteventura, with its 3,000 hours of sunshine a year, became a major European tourist destinations.
The island is at the same latitude as Florida and Mexico and the temperature rarely falls below 18 ° C or rises above 24 ° C. There are more than 152 beaches along the coast - 50 km of fine white volcanic gravel and 25.
The summer Trade Winds and winter swells of the Atlantic make the island, throughout the year, a paradise for surfers. Sailors, scuba divers and deep-sea fishermen are attracted by the sparkling Atlantic waters where whales, dolphins, marlin and turtles are a common sight.
Much of the interior, with its vast plains and volcanic mountains, consists of protected areas that can be explored by jeep or (for the brave) with motocross.
You can taste many products in these tropical islands, from exotic fruits such as papaya, avocado, mango and plantains (bananas are tropical) to the great variety of tropical fruit juices and many other local products such as palm honey, jam cactus, banana cream tropical islands, and also arrugatas papas (potatoes, sweet and exotic, boiled in salted water and served with garlic sauce and yogurt or hot).
Very interesting is the Aloe vera, a succulent plant native to the tropical Canary Islands, was considered sacred by the indigenous Aboriginal people (Guanches).Aloe vera grows in these islands and has thousands of properties, the juice is used for drinking as energy, tonic, and is also against the stomach, it is very healing, because the gel is used to heal burns and to treat pain muscle, is also used in the beauty cream for face and body.
The island's colorful history can be traced in a number of ancient buildings, monuments, museums and archaeological sites.
It is believed that the first settlers have arrived from North Africa - the term Mahorero 'or Maho is still used to describe the people of Fuerteventura and comes from the term' Mahoso 'meaning is a type of goatskin shoe worn by the inhabitantsoriginating. They lived in caves and semi-underground houses, some of which have been discovered and excavated revealing the remains of ancient tools and pottery.in ancient times the island was known as Planaria, among other names, in reference to the flatness of much of their profile.
On the island is an airport in Puerto del Rosario. Puerto del Rosario is also the main port, with ferries to Arrecife (Lanzarote) and Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Gran Canaria). There are also links between Corralejo and Playa Blanca (Lanzarote) and between the Morro Jable Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.
I have traveled all over the island far and wide with an Opel Astra rented for 22 euros a day, I came up to the tip end of the island after 20 km of gravel road, I was trying to return to sleep and I stopped at El Cotillo, after miles of empty road, without even a motel, in fact El Cotillo, where two young Italians of Turin, which opened the Taco Loco Tacos Mexican restaurant, the only ones on the island, I had taken in their home and offered lunch in exchange for this advertising!
And here ends the trip, with the last night of sleep in the car in the parking lot of the port, water bottle from the last bar of reggae rhythms and Spanish cerveza one euro.
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360 Video: Island Hvar - Discover The Natural And Historical Beauty Of This Croatian Adriatic Gem
Hvar (pronounced [xv̞âːr]; local Chakavian dialect: Hvor or For, Greek: Pharos, Φάρος, Latin: Pharia, Italian: Lesina) is a Croatian island in the Adriatic Sea, located off the Dalmatian coast, lying between the islands of Brač, Vis and Korčula. Approximately 68 km (42.25 mi) long, with a high east-west ridge of Mesozoic limestone and dolomite, the island of Hvar is unusual in the area for having a large fertile coastal plain, and fresh water springs. Its hillsides are covered in pine forests, with vineyards, olive groves, fruit orchards and lavender fields in the agricultural areas. The climate is characterized by mild winters and warm summers with many hours of sunshine. The island has 11,103 residents, making it the 4th most populated of the Croatian islands.
Hvar’s location at the center of the Adriatic sailing routes has long made this island an important base for commanding trade up and down the Adriatic, across to Italy and throughout the wider Mediterranean. It has been inhabited since prehistoric times, originally by a Neolithic people whose distinctive pottery gave rise to the term Hvar culture, and later by the Illyrians. The ancient Greeks founded the colony of Pharos in 384 BC on the site of today’s Stari Grad, making it one of the oldest towns in Europe. They were also responsible for setting out the agricultural field divisions of the Stari Grad Plain, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In medieval times, Hvar (city) rose to importance within the Venetian Empire as a major naval base. Prosperity brought culture and the arts, with one of the first public theatres in Europe, nobles’ palaces and many fine communal buildings.
The 16th century was an unsettled time, with the Hvar Rebellion, coastal raids by pirates and the Ottoman army from the mainland, resulting in some unusual fortified buildings on the northern shore to protect the local population. After a brief time under the Napoleonic rule, the island became part of the Austrian Empire, a more peaceful and prosperous time. On the coast, harbors were expanded, quays built, fishing and boat building businesses grew. At the same time, the island’s wine exports increased, along with lavender and rosemary production for the French perfume industry. Unfortunately, this prosperity did not continue into the 20th century as wooden sailing boats went out of fashion, and the phylloxera blight hit wine production. Many islanders left to make a new life elsewhere.
One industry, however, has continued to grow and is now a significant contributor to the island’s economy. The formation of The Hygienic Association of Hvar in 1868 for the assistance of visitors to the island has been instrumental in developing an infrastructure of hotels, apartments, restaurants, marinas, museums, galleries and cafes. Today, the island of Hvar is a popular destination for tourists, consistently listed in the top 10 island destinations by popular travel magazines.
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Rock Fish Mote Aquarium Laboratory Sarasota Florida
Mote Marine Laboratory is an independent not-for-profit marine research organization based on City Island in Sarasota, FL. The laboratory aims to advance the science of the sea, both through its marine and estuarine research labs and through the public Mote Aquarium and its affiliated educational programs.
Founded by Dr. Eugenie Clark in 1955 in Cape Haze, Florida (and originally known as Cape Haze Marine Laboratory until its renaming in honor of William R. Mote, his wife Lenore and his sister, Betty Mote Rose, major benefactors of the Laboratory) Mote's early research was focused on sharks. Since 1978, Mote has been based in Sarasota, Florida.
Mote Marine Laboratory celebrated its 55th Anniversary throughout 2010. The Lab was recognized for its 55 years of marine science with a resolution in the Florida House and Senate in March 2010. Founder Clark was also recognized in March 2010 with an induction to the Florida Women's Hall of Fame.
As of winter 2009/2010, Mote employs over 200 staff members conducting research on sharks, red tide and other environmental toxins, marine mammals, sea turtles, coral reefs, fisheries, coastal ecology and aquaculture (sustainable fish farming). Since 1978 the Laboratory has expanded to include a 10.5-acre (4.2 ha) campus in Sarasota, with field stations and public exhibits in Key West, field stations in Summerland Key and Charlotte Harbor and Mote Aquaculture Research Park in eastern Sarasota County. Florida's extensive coastline and marine and estuarine environments have enabled Mote scientists to build a platform of marine research conducted in the near shore environment. Mote has about 1,400 volunteers who contribute more than 200,000 volunteer hours to the organization.
Mote has an education division specializing in school and public programs from all ages, including internships, summer camps, school visits, field trips, on-demand learning experiences for all ages, annual Special Lecture Series and a distance-learning program called SeaTrek, which connects Mote educators to students via live videoconferencing.
Mote Aquarium is the public outreach arm of Mote Marine Laboratory, displaying more than 100 marine species with a focus on local marine life. The Aquarium opened in 1980 on City Island in Sarasota Bay. Visitors can see sharks, manatees, dolphins, sea turtles, seahorses, rays, skates and invertebrates. Mote Aquarium also includes windows into Mote's working laboratories. The Aquarium hosts birthdays, weddings, corporate gatherings and other events, and can provide special group tours designed to show visitors how staff tend the animals and exhibits.
New exhibits at Mote Aquarium created in 2009 include the Seahorse Conservation Laboratory, which displays baby seahorses that Mote staff are raising for other aquariums throughout the United States, and Sea Turtles: Ancient Survivors - an exhibit with live sea turtles and displays highlighting the sea turtle conservation and research at Mote. The Aquarium now also has narrated shark feedings, in which large sharks are trained to go to specific targets for a food reward.
Lugano, Switzerland at night
A video from the Lugano Tourist office which shows quick time aerial filming from the air at night of the town and the lake.
You are going to have a bit of a problem finding somewhere to park your motorhome in Lugano, you may have to leave it outside the town and get the bus in or alternatively find a paid parking spot in the town which is long enough to accommodate your vehicle Lugano is not motorhome friendly, many car parks expressly forbid motorhome parking. Assuming that you get round this problem then Lugano, the largest Italian speaking town in Switzerland, will give you some wonderful lake and mountain views.
Just over 70,000 people live in Lugano and with house prices similar to those in London, one can imagine what type of people they must be. Inhabited since ancient times, the city really took off in the mid nineteenth century as a comfortable lake side retreat. From around 1960 it established itself as the third banking city of Switzerland helped largely through the flood of Italian money leaving that country. In 1956 it was host to the first Eurovision Song Contest. Today more than ninety percent of the working population is employed in the services sector.
Lugano has a humid subtropical climate with relatively mild winters, warm summers and plenty of rain no matter what the season. It has an average of 98.1 days of rain or snow per year and on average receives 1,559 mm of precipitation. The wettest month is May during which Lugano receives an average of 196 mm of rain, while the driest month of the year is February with an average of 52 mm of precipitation.
The centre is relatively flat but if you are planning on going much further afield, including into the suburbs of the city, you are going to need to be quite fit. Steps in many places provide the short cut for those that don't want to follow the winding roads.
Both Lake Lugano and the surrounding mountains provide a wide variety of outdoor activities. The area surrounding Lugano is home to over 300 kilometres of mountain biking trails, the largest net of trails in Switzerland.
Lake Lugano measures 48.7 square kilometres, 63% of which is in Switzerland and 37% in Italy. It has an average width of roughly 1 kilometre and is nearly 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) at its widest. The maximum depth of the lake is 279 meters. The water is generally warm with average water temperatures in the summer ranging from 19.5 °C to 24.0 °C. There is a very pleasant walk along the lake front called the Olive Route which offers explanations of olive cultivation every few hundred metres and has magnificent views (see film and photos). As one gets to Gandia, looking east in the morning one is greeted with an almost dream like appearance of the mountains as they fall down to the lake.
Several companies, including the Società Navigazione del Lago di Lugano (SNL), provide tourist boat services on the lake. A popular excursion is by SNL boat to the picturesque lakeside village of Gandria. Additionally there are numerous shipyards, water taxis and boat rental sites along the lake, as well as hotels and restaurants that offer moorings. Bathing in the lake is allowed at any of the 50 or so bathing establishments located along the Swiss shores.
In addition to the lake, Lugano is surrounded by mountains, which provide a number of opportunities for sports or sightseeing. Two mountains, both providing excellent views over the city and lake, bracket each end of the city's waterfront. Monte Brè (933 metres), to the north, is reputedly Switzerland's sunniest spot and is also home to the old village of Brè. Monte San Salvatore (912 metres), to the south, has an old church and museum atop its summit. Both mountains are accessible by funicular railways, which are themselves easily accessible by frequent city bus or by car.
Slightly further afield is Monte Generoso (1,704 metres), with a view that encompasses the lakes of Lugano, Como and Maggiore, as well as the Alps from the Matterhorn to the Bernina Range, the Lombardy Plains, and, on a clear day, the city of Milan. The summit can be reached by taking either an SNL boat, or a railway train, to Capolago, and changing there onto a rack railway train of the Monte Generoso Railway.
stone house prinos www.panorama.realestate-thassos.com
• 6 Stone houses adjusted to the landscape and using the local stone from the land in order to be integrated to the landscape.
• Traditional Building with stone, wood and ecological materials
panorama.realestate-thassos.com
• Bioclimatic design, for energy saving and better comfort, using natural cooling system, earth cooling ventilation, sunprotection, wind-chimney
• Possibility to be customized according to your needs, tiles, bathroom, kitchen, colours etc.
• Every house has about 1400m2 Land with olives trees
• Private Parking
• Ground floor with living room, kitchen, Bathroom and 2 bedrooms in 70 m2.
• 2 terraces with pergolas
• Fire place
• There is the possibility to build a level over the bedrooms as guestroom and storage
• Pool optional
project oikies in prinos thassos project oikies in prinos thassos project oikies in prinos thassos project oikies in prinos thassos project oikies in prinos thassos
About the plot-land
This property, is located at the higher part of Prinos. It is covered mainly with olive trees Fantastic view of the Golf of Kavala and the mountains around with wonderful sunset.
About Prinos
• 1,5 km from sea route to Kavala
• Population of 1,500 permanent residents
• Organized infrastructure
• Health center, high school, harbour, stores, weekly flea market
• Main residents activity: agriculture
About Thassos
Thassos (Thasos) is one of the most beautiful islands of Greece, combining sea and mountains. The excellent beaches with crystal clear water, the remote tiny bays, the picturesque villages and the busy night life make Thassos an ideal and popular resort. Thassos is situated close the mainland, its nearest point is 10km from the mouth of the Nestos.
- Its area is 399 sq. km; almmost circular in shape, it has a lenght from N to S of c 24km and a width of c 19km. Its highest point is Mt. Hypsarion (1142m), nearly in the centre. The mountain sides are covered with forests, pines, planes, and chestnut trees.
- The population of ca. 18,000 is distributed between the capital Limenas and 11 other villages. In the coastal areas olives are cultivated. The road which encircles the island is sufficient. There is good water in the island.
Access and transportation to Thassos
• Ferryboats connect the island with Kavala (1 hr) and with Keramoti (30 min). There is daily connection by ferry boat between Kavala Thassos, Kavala Primos, Keramoti - Thassos. Hydrofoils connect the island with Kavala (30 min).
• The island has no airport, but is served by the International Airport of Kavala. From this Airport there are flights to and from Athens (50 min) daily. There also are flights and charters to and from important European cities, several times a week. The airport is 3 km from Keramoti, where the ferryboats assure the connection with the capital of the island (30 min). As alternative solution can be used the airport of Thessaloniki which is about 160 Km west from Kavala and has flights also during the winter saison to/from European cities.
• Daily buses via Panagia and Prinos serve all the coastal villages. The 100 kilometre long road network is in good condition. Cars and motor bikes are available for hire on the island.
Project management
• Architect: Apostolos Vourvoutsiotis
• Project Management: Apostolos Vourvoutsiotis
• Sales Manager: Vasilios Karavouzis
• Contact: Vasilios Karavouzis
Prinos Thassos 64010
telfax (0030) 25930 71162
mobile (0030) 6932 577 510
• Email vourvou@web.de, architect-thassos.netfirms.com/project-petra.htm
Hunting, Butchering and Cooking Wild Boar - Gordon Ramsay
WARNING - this clip contains very graphic scenes of animal butchery. Gordon heads to Georgia and learns how to hunt and butcher wild boar, then cooks up a feast.
From Gordon Ramsay’s The F Word
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'Heavy horses' help with tree conservation project at Spring Park, Bromley
Find out how heavy horses are helping a rare small-leaved lime tree conservation project at Spring Park in West Wickham, London Borough of Bromley. Spring Park holds the largest population of these trees in London. The species is vulnerable because it struggles to spread by seed.
Heavy horses are large, strong, heavily built horses of a type or breed used for draught work. Using the horses is more sensitive to the woodland habitat than using heavy machinery, which can damage tree roots, and also helps to keep this skilled traditional craft alive.
Top 10 Travel Destinations in Sicily, Italy
Top 10 Travel Destinations in Sicily, Italy according to Rough Guides
10. Aegadian Islands
The Aegadian Islands are a group of small mountainous islands in the Mediterranean Sea off the northwest coast of Sicily, Italy, near the cities of Trapani and Marsala, with a total area of 37.45 square kilometres. The overall population in 1987 was estimated at about 5,000. Winter frost is unknown and rainfall is low. The main occupation of the islanders is fishing, and the largest tuna fishery in Sicily is here.
9. Valle dei Templi, Agrigento
The Valle dei Templi is an archaeological site in Agrigento. It is one of the most outstanding examples of Greater Greece art and architecture, and is one of the main attractions of Sicily as well as a national monument of Italy. The area was included in the UNESCO Heritage Site list in 1997.
8. Monti Madonie
The Madonie are one of the principal mountain groups in Sicily, part of the Sicilian portion of the Apennines. It is located in Palermo Province. Apart from Mount Etna, it includes the highest elevations in Sicily: the highest peak of the range is the Pizzo Carbonara (1,979 m), followed by closely neighbouring Pizzo Antenna (1,977 m).
7. Aeolian Islands
The Aeolian islands (Isole Eolie) are a group of attractive islands in the Tyrrhenian Sea about 25-50km north of Sicily in Italy. Formerly off the beaten track, this diverse group of volcanic islands is becoming more popular and can be very busy during July and August.
6. Duomo, Cefalu
Cefalù is a fishing village and popular beach resort on the north coast of Sicily, Italy. Cathedral (Duomo) dominates the centre of town. It is the site of Byzantine mosaics different from the Norman/Arab ones at Monreale.
5. Monreale
Monreale is a town and comune in the province of Palermo, in Sicily, Italy, on the slope of Monte Caputo, overlooking the very fertile valley called La Conca d'oro (the Golden Shell), famed for its orange, olive and almond trees, the produce of which is exported in large quantities. The town has a population of approximately 30,000, and it is located 15 kilometressouth of Palermo.
4. Ragusa Ibla
Ragusa Ibla hosts a wide array of Baroque architecture, including several stunning palaces and churches. The Cathedral of San Giorgio was built starting in 1738 by architect Rosario Gagliardi, in substitution of the temple destroyed by the 1693 earthquake, and of which only a Catalan-Gothyic style portal can still be seen.
3. Riserva Naturale dello Zingaro
Riserva naturale dello zingaro (Zingaro Nature reserve) is the first natural reserve that has been set up in Sicily in May 1981. It stretches along about 7 kilometers of unspoilt coastline of the Gulf of Castellammare and its mountain chain which is the setting of little bays and steep cliffs.
2. Siracusa
Syracuse is a medium sized city in Sicily, Italy with an interesting mixture of ancient and modern. Syracuse is a city on the eastern coast of Sicily and the capital of the province of Syracuse, Italy. It was once described by Cicero as the greatest Greek city and the most beautiful of them all.
1. Lampedusa
Lampedusa is the largest island of the Italian Pelagie Islands in the Mediterranean Sea. Lampedusa, which has an area of 20.2 square kilometres (7.8 sq mi), has a population of approximately 4,500 people. Its main industries are fishing, agriculture, and tourism. In 2013, Rabbit Beach, located in the southern part of the island, was voted the world's best beach by travel site TripAdvisor.
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A walk along Lake Lugano, Switzerland
SEE MY TRAVEL SITES :
You are going to have a bit of a problem finding somewhere to park your motorhome in Lugano, you may have to leave it outside the town and get the bus in or alternatively find a paid parking spot in the town which is long enough to accommodate your vehicle Lugano is not motorhome friendly, many car parks expressly forbid motorhome parking. Assuming that you get round this problem then Lugano, the largest Italian speaking town in Switzerland, will give you some wonderful lake and mountain views.
Just over 70,000 people live in Lugano and with house prices similar to those in London, one can imagine what type of people they must be. Inhabited since ancient times, the city really took off in the mid nineteenth century as a comfortable lake side retreat. From around 1960 it established itself as the third banking city of Switzerland helped largely through the flood of Italian money leaving that country. In 1956 it was host to the first Eurovision Song Contest. Today more than ninety percent of the working population is employed in the services sector.
Lugano has a humid subtropical climate with relatively mild winters, warm summers and plenty of rain no matter what the season. It has an average of 98.1 days of rain or snow per year and on average receives 1,559 mm of precipitation. The wettest month is May during which Lugano receives an average of 196 mm of rain, while the driest month of the year is February with an average of 52 mm of precipitation.
The centre is relatively flat but if you are planning on going much further afield, including into the suburbs of the city, you are going to need to be quite fit. Steps in many places provide the short cut for those that don't want to follow the winding roads.
Both Lake Lugano and the surrounding mountains provide a wide variety of outdoor activities. The area surrounding Lugano is home to over 300 kilometres of mountain biking trails, the largest net of trails in Switzerland.
Lake Lugano measures 48.7 square kilometres, 63% of which is in Switzerland and 37% in Italy. It has an average width of roughly 1 kilometre and is nearly 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) at its widest. The maximum depth of the lake is 279 meters. The water is generally warm with average water temperatures in the summer ranging from 19.5 °C to 24.0 °C. There is a very pleasant walk along the lake front called the Olive Route which offers explanations of olive cultivation every few hundred metres and has magnificent views (see film and photos). As one gets to Gandia, looking east in the morning one is greeted with an almost dream like appearance of the mountains as they fall down to the lake.
Several companies, including the Società Navigazione del Lago di Lugano (SNL), provide tourist boat services on the lake. A popular excursion is by SNL boat to the picturesque lakeside village of Gandria. Additionally there are numerous shipyards, water taxis and boat rental sites along the lake, as well as hotels and restaurants that offer moorings. Bathing in the lake is allowed at any of the 50 or so bathing establishments located along the Swiss shores.
In addition to the lake, Lugano is surrounded by mountains, which provide a number of opportunities for sports or sightseeing. Two mountains, both providing excellent views over the city and lake, bracket each end of the city's waterfront. Monte Brè (933 metres), to the north, is reputedly Switzerland's sunniest spot and is also home to the old village of Brè. Monte San Salvatore (912 metres), to the south, has an old church and museum atop its summit. Both mountains are accessible by funicular railways, which are themselves easily accessible by frequent city bus or by car.
Slightly further afield is Monte Generoso (1,704 metres), with a view that encompasses the lakes of Lugano, Como and Maggiore, as well as the Alps from the Matterhorn to the Bernina Range, the Lombardy Plains, and, on a clear day, the city of Milan. The summit can be reached by taking either an SNL boat, or a railway train, to Capolago, and changing there onto a rack railway train of the Monte Generoso Railway.
The Earth is NOT What we Think? There Are no Forests on Earth?
THIS IS ABSOLUTELY MIND BLOWING!!! This will totally change your thinking about our earth and how you see it. Even if you are a Flat Earther, this is going to blow your mind! The pictures speak for themselves. It is fantastic and explains why these large rock structures are not lava formations, but are something much different than we’ve been told. No Forests on Flat Earth is a masterpiece of efficient storytelling.
Many assumptions have been made about how trees could have been this large and where they went. This is a view of these giant tree stumps from a Biblical perspective.
The evidence pointing to these large buttes and mountains being giant petrified tree stumps is astounding. Not only do they look just like tree stumps, but they exhibit characteristics only found in biological organisms and trees. It’s possible these ancient trees were made from silicone and were nearly as hard as stone.
This is a voice over for those who can not understand the original creators thick Russian accent. We follow his words and pace of speech.
There is much to discuss on this new paradigm. Is it all correct? Time, critical thinking and much discussion will tell. Even Earth's wounds are healed beautifully...
Thanks to Asgard and WakeUpHumans for their hardest work!
Original video:
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Full Interview of Admiral Byrd Talking about Antarctica Secrets - Flat, Globe or Hollow Earth?
A Short Story of Creation - A Flat Earth - Rene Nadeau
When astronauts rise from the other world
The Luminaries Mysterium - Flat Earth Advanced Documentary 2019
The True World - Noiseless Flat Earth - Documentary
Understanding The World We Live In - The Strange Truth Project - Flat Earth
The Earth is Round or Flat? Learning Flat Earth For Beginners
How the Sun Works on the Flat Earth? part 1 - Timelapse of the Sun
Nikola Tesla - The world's first man who made UFO?
200.000 Year Old Levitation Technology - Michael Tellinger
Uncovering the impossible - 6 of the Heaviest Ancient Stones Ever Made - Lost Civilizations
Healing is Voltage - The Physics of Emotions
Mans Right to Know - Dr. Wilhelm Reich and Orgone Energy - Cloudbuster
How i have cured the eye cataract from my dog with a lemon and the lethal disease of leishmaniasis
How To Make New Super Strong Giza Style Copper Pyramid Design With Triskelions and Tensor Ring
Measuring the energy on 27 different fruits and vegetables with a voltmeter, Everything is Energy
Orgone Energy - A breakthrough that has already happened, conference
How to make a self running 3 phase dual permanent magnet generator for free energy - Tutorial
The Physics of Crystals: Before, Through and Beyond by Les Brown - Full Documentary
4 simple ideas for making horizontal and vertical axis for wind generators
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Wild vs Domesticated Foods Ep.3
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From the initial discovery of a wild food through its cultivation to today I’ve got more foods for you starting with the Apricot.
Apricot (Prunus armeniaca)
Source:
Footage:
Danijel Kopilovic
Lettuce (Lactuca serriola L.)
Source:
Footage:
Internet Archive Book
Archives New Zealand
Asian Pear (pyrus pyrifolia)
Source:
Cashews (Anacardium occidentale)
Footage:
Reinaldo Aguilar
Steven Paton
Rolando Pérez
Source:
Lemon (Citrus medica)
Source:
Deliberate Thought Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
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Check out some of our other videos:
Top 10 Fruits Part 12
Top 10 Fruits Part 11
Top 10 Fruits Part 9
Top 10 Vegetables Part 2
World's Dirtiest River
World's Largest Dump Truck
World's Deepest Swimming Pool
Bamboo Scaffolding
World's Largest Eagle
Worst Zoo on Earth
Homemade Human Powered Amusement Park
World's Weirdest Animals: Red Panda
World's Weirdest Animals: Asian Leopard Cat
World's Oldest Lake
5 Crowdfunding Projects You Need to See
#domestication #cultivation #wild
[121] Черногория на машине с Детьми. Биоградское озеро. Фига, Смоква или Инжир. Как готовить мидии?
Как мы ездили на север Черногории или путешествие с детьми. Лето в Черногории, особенно середина июля - август, оказалось невыносимо жарким. После 9 утра уже не хочется выходить на улицу. Диву даёшься , как в полдень в это время пляжи заполнены телами, ещё и маленькие дети .
Мне, выросшей при сухой среднеазиатской 40 градусной погоде, мечталось о лесной прохладе на Будванской Ривьере - сказывается высокая влажность воздуха. Все у кого есть возможность сбежать с побережья, едут в горные леса.
За столицей Подгорицей Путь на север Черногории лежит под мостом « Морачица» - это новая достопримечательность всего Балканского полуострова. Не от слова «заморачиваться», а от названия реки. Хотя сложностей при его сооружении не мало. После завершения стройки - это будет самый высокий мост на территории бывшей Югославии.
Опирается мост на 5 колонн, Максимальная высота которых 161 метр, а в месте с дорожным полотном будет 175. Длина - почти километр. Ширина 24 метра. Строительство ведёт Китайская компания. К слову о лете: жара такая, что работы, бывает, идут при фонарях в ночную смену.
Мост через реку Морача нужен в рамках глобального проекта автомобильной трассы, чтобы сделать Черногорию более доступной, в том числе для нового, для прогресса. Строить автостраду начали 11 мая 2015 года.
Пока Межгосударственная Дорога Петляет серпантинами вдоль рек, по ущельям. очень живописная, но никак не скоростная. В недалеком будующем добраться в побережья Монтенегро из других стран Балканского полуострова, и главное из Сербии, можно будет в два раза быстрее.
Калашин. Население всего около 10 тысяч. Самый популярный зимний курорт Черногории, он расположен на магистральной трассе в Сербию. Летом привлекает своей тихой провинциальностью.
Кажется, дождь начинается, а лошадей покормить дикими яблоками не успели. Вот бы в Приморье сейчас такой ливень?
Биоградска Гора . На высоте 1094 метра лежит ледниковое Озеро.
Желающим покататься по озеру приходится долго ждать очереди. Но вокруг озера есть пешеходная тропа в 3 километра, доступная даже дошкольникам.
Бук, некоторым экземплярам более 400 лет, а стволы выше 60 метров.
Огромные деревья покрыты мхом- это единственный влажный лес в Европе. Нетронутые флора и фауна, даже бурый медведь в заповедных лесах водится.
Аж в 1878 году князь Никола побывал здесь, и обьявил, что отныне эти Территории - под его защитой. А с 1952 года Парк Биоградска гора получил
статус национального.
На западе Черногории - красивейший Боко-Которский залив. Здесь , защищённые от сильных течений, находятся фермы по выращиванию мидий и устриц. Где еще можно купить свежее?
Идём на ферму мидий.
Живут мидии до 6 лет . Подрастающая особь прикрепляется к камням, скалам, бетону , и на этом месте остаётся навсегда.
Когда мидия оказывается без воды ( например в отлив) она плотно сжимает створки, и может со своим запасом воды продержаться больше суток. Так что до кухни довезем в лучшем виде. Это моя первая в жизни покупка мидий вне ресторана. Буду учиться? Нам визитку дали, как готовить.
Мастер класс по приготовлению мидий беру у своей соседки. Новичкам, как вы понимаете, всегда самая «приятная» работа. А шеф-повар в это время обжарила на оливковом масле чеснок с зеленью.
Мидии питаются планктоном и пропускают через себя огромное количество воды. Всасывается при этом не только планктон , но и все вредные вещества, которые есть в воде. Они накапливаются в организме двустворчатой. Известны случаи, когда холерой заражались, употребив мясо мидии.
Я тщательно промываю ракушки. Очень важно, чтобы вода была чистая, там где добываются ваши мидии. Ферма, где мы были , находится вдали от населенных пунктов.
Питательная ценность моллюска - почти десять процентов белка, обилие витаминов, минеральных солей, микроэлементов (особенно меди, столь необходимой для кроветворения).
Заливается белое вино. Самое время - на 3 минуты класть мидии. Створки открылись? Готово.
Так получается, что когда отправляемся в свободное время исследовать новые места, обнаруживаем заброшенные деревни. А вокруг плодовые деревья .
Смоква или инжир, она же Фиговое дерево, растёт даже на самых бедных почвах, хотя у водоемов урожай лучше. Предполагается, что это - одна из самых древних культур на земле. Обычно фиговые деревья живут до 60 лет, но в особых случаях и до 300. Именно листьями фигового дерева прикрывали наготу Адам и Ева, исходя из библейских текстов. У нас с одеждой все в порядке, собираем плоды на еду.
Плоды смоква плодоносит на Средиземном море с августа по ноябрь. Спелый ли плод видно, когда срываешь: если течёт млечный сок, значит такие плоды рано собирать. От сока попавшего на кожу, начинаешь чесаться, лучше для сбора надевать вещи с длинным рукавом .
Железа в смокве больше, чем в яблоках. И только орехи обошли фигу по содержанию калия.
подробно с картами, gps метками, ценами смотрите здесь:
Scotland's Islands
Check your local public television station for this Rick Steves’ Europe episode or watch it on We'll begin on the tranquil Isle of Iona, where Christianity first reached the shores of Scotland. Then we'll visit another of the Inner Hebrides, road-tripping across the Isle of Skye, where we'll explore Iron Age forts, peat fields, a venerable distillery, thatched crofter huts, and the dramatic Trotternish Peninsula. Finally, we'll sail to Orkney — more Nordic than Celtic — with its stony remnants of a thriving Iron Age civilization and evocative reminders of the 20th-century wartime harbor at Scapa Flow.
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Rick Steves, America's most respected authority on European travel, writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio.
Как увеличить рост (подрасти)? Упражнения для увеличения роста
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