eh Canada Travel Video
ehCanadaTravel.com, the largest tourism website in Western and Northern Canada, marketing video for promotions of Canada tourism, travel, adventure, website and internet services and products.
Tenants Harbor, Maine
The town and port of Tenants Harbor on the Mid-Coast of Maine and the Tenants Harbor Lighthouse on Southern Island at the entrance to the harbor.
Historic Harbors of New England & Canada
Join the Six-Star Crystal Serenity in New York City and sail through the Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of St. Lawrence to Québec City. During your cruise, uncover the inviting ambience of picturesque ports and colorful villages. Admire colonial New England in Rhode Island and Boston. Embrace vibrant harbors and sweeping coastlines in Portland and Bar Harbor, Maine. In Nova Scotia, experience the Scottish charms of Halifax and the tranquility of Sydney. Discover the exciting atmospheres surrounding New York City and Québec City during special overnight stays. For 20 consecutive years, Travel + Leisure magazine has awarded Crystal Cruises the esteemed rank of “Worlds Best” cruise line. Experience the world’s best cruise value with two-for-one pricing, open bar service, all meals, shipboard gratuities, and Welcome and Farewell gatherings. Enjoy gala entertainment nightly, deluxe staterooms, shuttles to each port town, and the services of an engaging Travel Director. With a remarkable itinerary on an exceptional ship this voyage offers a once-in-a-lifetime travel experience.
Spring in Maine's MidCoast & Islands
What's special about spring in Maine's MidCoast & Islands region? It comes a little later here, so it's even more special. We invite visitors to enjoy our iconic natural beauty and vibrant local communities.
Walk through of the Rockland Harbor Hotel, Maine
Refurbished in 2016 Rockland Maine
DETROIT - LEGACY OF INDUSTRIAL DECAY
Like the scene from an accident it is hard to take your eyes off the INDUSTRIAL DECAY LEGACY of Detroit. Normally we have the idea that once factories or railway stations are built they last for a long time. The idea that suddenly some CEO says this is the end, we are pulling the plug on this production facility is a foreign concept for most people. It is a concept that goes against and the general landscape of a city. In the end it turns out to be grotesque and surreal. That surreality abounds in Detroit as there are many abandoned production facilities formerly associated with the automobile industry.
Detroit's industrial decline started in the late 1950's with the closing of the magnificent Albert Kahn designed Packard Motors factory. From that point on it was a slow snow ball effect with other major factories and many smaller associated tool shops closing their door.
The auto industry too was decentralizing away from Detroit proper. This change was facilitated by the great concentration of automobile production into the hands of the Big Three of General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler. The Big Three were able to put nearly every smaller competitor auto-maker out of business. While this corporate concentration was taking place, the Big Three were shifting their production out of central Detroit. Between 1945 and 1957 the Big Three built 25 new manufacturing plants in the metropolitan area, not one of them in the city itself.
The number and character of these new, suburban auto factories was a harbinger of future trends detrimental to the economic health of Detroit. There was an interaction between factory decentralization and the nature of the industry's post-New Deal unionized labor force. Ford Motor was one of the first to undertake major decentralization, in reaction to labor developments. Ford's workers voted to join the UAW in 1941. This led Ford to be concerned about the vulnerability of its huge, flagship Rouge River plant to labor unrest. The workers at this plant were among the industry's most well-organized, racially and ethnically diverse, and militant.[citation needed] A strike at this key plant could bring the company's manufacturing operations as a whole to a halt. Ford therefore decentralized operations from this plant, to soften union power (and to introduce new technologies in new plants, and expand to new markets). Ford often built up parallel production facilities, making the same products, so that the effect of a strike at any one facility would be lessened. The results for the River Rouge plant are striking. From its peak labor force of 90,000 around 1930, the number of workers there declined to 30,000 by 1960 and only about 6,000 by 1990. This decline was mainly due to automation.
The spread of the auto industry outward from Detroit proper in the 1950s was the beginning of a process that extended much further afield. Auto plants and the parts suppliers associated with the industry were relocated to the southern U.S., and to Canada and Mexico. The major auto plants left in Detroit were closed down, and their workers increasingly left behind. When the auto industry's facilities moved out, there were dramatically adverse ripple economic effects on the city. The neighborhood businesses that had catered to auto workers shut down. This direct and indirect economic contraction caused the city to lose property taxes, wage taxes, and population (and thus consumer demand). The closed auto plants were also often abandoned in a period before strong environmental regulation, causing the sites to become so-called brownfields, unattractive to potential replacement businesses because of the pollution hang-over from decades of industrial production.[13] The pattern of the deteriorating city by the mid-1960s was visibly associated with the largely departed auto industry. The neighborhoods with the most closed stores, vacant houses, and abandoned lots were in what had formerly been the most heavily populated parts of the city, adjacent to the now-closed older major auto plants.
New York City - USA
View from the World Trade Center observation deck. Markiplier ferry ride from Wall Street to Port Liberte with amazing view of Statue of Liberty. Times Square at night.
Music:
Alicia Keys - Empire State Of Mind - Cover Gabriela Grzybacz
Travel with Riyadh Road side views.wmv
See this video of the roads and buildings in Riyadh. India should study about the importance of road development with this.
recorriendo el sur de Mahattan en New York sobre un Barco turístico de noche
Mi último día en Manhattan, definitivamente te quedas con ese pique de regresar, pero por ahora no, ahora vamos a ahorrarle para un buen viaje... en fin, todo un sueño de ir a NYC para disfrutar unos días fue logrado con éxito. solo es cuestión de ser perseverante con lo que quieres lograr, y si esto se me hizo fácil lo de más no es nada! vamos por todo.
Mount Desert Island, ME
Home to the beautiful Acadia National Park, Mount Desert Island in Maine, has many beautiful seascapes to offer. This region is unique for its combination of mountainous landscapes and oceanic views. During the summer season, its harbors are bustling with activity, with gift shops, restaurants and other unique local stores. MC Travelers explored Bar Harbor area, and spent lunch by the pier. Then we headed to the real gem of the island, Acadia National Park. Acadia's Park Loop road offers breathtaking views and a drive through the forestry. We spent our night at the top of Cadillac Mountain, which has a scenic view of the Porcupine Islands. Acadia is a most go to if you plan to visit Maine!