35 Best Places to visit in Eritrea
35 Best Places to visit in Eritrea
Eritrea remains one of the most inspiring destinations in Africa, particularly for travellers that want something a little different.
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Eritrea Tourist Attractions: 7 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit Eritrea? Check out our Eritrea Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in Eritrea.
Top Places to visit in Eritrea:
Fiat Tagliero Building, Matara, Eritrea, Adulis, Debre Bizen, Cinema Impero, Governor's Palace, Asmara, The Shuq Market
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Eritrea, Keren
Keren (formerly Cheren) is the second largest city in Eritrea, lying north west of Asmara. It is the capital of the (Senhit)Anseba province and home of the Bilen tribe. As of 2007, the population of this city has been estimated to be 120,000.The majority of the population are Muslim.
Keren is one of the major agricultural centers of Eritrea, particularly for fruits and vegetables. To the west the region is known for its banana plantations. In addition its dairy herds supply fresh milk, butter and the cheese factory produces provolone and other cheeses.
There is a town market, where silver items may be purchased, and a wood market, where camels gather on the dry river bed. On Mondays there is a livestock market in a walled compound on the hillside along the road leading south from town. Cattle, sheep and goats, camels and donkeys are bought and sold.
The city grew around an Eritrean Railway to Asmara, now dismantled (although there are plans to rebuild). It is an important commercial centre and was the scene of regular battles in both World War II and the Eritrean War of Independence. Keren was the site of a key battle between Italian and British troops in 1941
Attractions in the city include the Tigu nineteenth century Egyptian fort, the St Maryam Dearit chapel, lying in a baobab tree, the 1930s former railway station, the old mosque, Said Bakri Mausoleum, British Army and Italian Army cemeteries and local markets. The nearby sixth century Debre Sina monastery is known for its cave dwellings.
he town's outlying districts include:
* Elabered
* Hagaz
* Halhal
* Melbaso
hamelmalo, gangreen & so on.
The town also shares some of the Art Deco architecture.
From Wikipedia
Schiedam Tourist Attractions: 10 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit Schiedam? Check out our Schiedam Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in Schiedam.
Top Places to visit in Schiedam:
Schiedam Windmill, Jenever Museum, Stedelijk Museum, Winkelcentrum Spaland, St. Janskerk, Liduina Basiliek, Bibliotheek Schiedam in de Korenbeurs, St. Jacobuskerk, Dorpskerk Kethel, Ruine Huis te Riviere
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Keren Camel Market, Eritrea
Walking through the camel market in Keren
سوف تنبهر عندما ترى هذه المعالم السياحية فى استراليا
قناة الهجرة الي أوروبا | موقع هجرة معلومات حول السفر والهجرة موقع الهجرة الي أوروبا الهجرة الي كندا ، أوروبا الهجرة السياحة الهجرة الي الاكوادور Immigration News سوف نقدم لك شروحات ومعلومات حول كيفية السفر والهجرة واللجوء والدراسة فى الخارج والحصول على الجنسية وكيفية استخراج التأشيرات فى أنحاء العالم #elhijraa #الهجرة_الى_اوروبا الهجرة اللجوء الحصول على الجنسية الدراسة فى الخارج أوروبا شنغن فيزا
تأشيرة كندا أمريكا الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية
يرجى متابعة موقعنا على الانترنت لمزيد من المقالات الحصرية
*صفحتنا على الفيس بوك //
*صفحتنا على انستجرام //
*صفحتنا على تويتر //
*[جروب الهجرة الى أوروبا //
وطبعنا متنساش الاشتراك فى القناه وتفعيل زر الجرس ليصلك كل جديد فى عالم السفر والهجرة والدراسة والحصول على الجنسية كل ما هو يخص السفر والهجرة جميع المعلومات مجانا
Eritrea 2018
A travel video showcasing the beautiful city of Asmara and Massawa. Like comment and subscribe to our channel. Find us on social media IG/FB/SC: @travelhabesha. Special Thanks to Cactus.
Hotel Asmara Palace, Asmara, Eritrea
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Hotel Asmara Palace, Asmara, Eritrea - 5 star hotel
Warsay Street, Asmara, Eritrea
We are Fearless Nomadic Woman!
My teams tenth month on the race was in Mongolia. We lived with a Nomadic family and helped them with practical chores. Me and my team also provided daily English classes for the family and the surrounding neighbors. During our month we faced some of our fears when partnering with the family in daily activities. These activities include but are not limited to slaughtering animals, herding sheep and goats, producing cheese, milking cows, sheep shearing, and fetching wives water. I hope you enjoy!
Eritrea - Explore The Magnificent Dahlak Islands
More than 200 of Eritrea's 354 islands belong to the Dahlak archipelago, which are all scattered around Eritrea's Red Sea coastal waters. The Dahlak Islands have a great opportunity for yacht cruising (scuba) diving and (pearl) fishing.
Experts say Eritrea has some of the most pristine coral reefs left anywhere worldwide, a global hotspot for marine diversity supporting thousands of species and species found no where on Earth but Eritrea's coastal waters.
Eritrea: Coral reefs
Hope for global marine future
SHEIKH SEID, Eritrea, April 15, 2008 (AFP) - Silver bubbles pop to the surface as a snorkeler glides over a colourful coral reef, bright fish speeding to safety in its protective fronds. Experts say this small Horn of Africa nation has some of the most pristine coral reefs left anywhere worldwide, a global hotspot for marine diversity supporting thousands of species. Known also as Green Island for its thick cover of mangroves, Sheikh Seid is only one of 354 largely uninhabited islands scattered along Eritrea's southern Red Sea desert coast, many part of Eritrea's Dahlak archipelago. The remote reefs are exciting scientists, who see in Eritrea's waters a chance of hope amidst increasingly bleak predictions for the future of coral reefs -- if sea temperatures rise as forecast due to global climate change. Unlike the deeper, cooler waters elsewhere in the Red Sea, Eritrea's large expanses of shallow -- and therefore hotter -- waters have created corals uniquely capable of coping with extremes of heat, scientists say. Eritrea has the most temperature tolerant corals in the world, said marine expert Dr John 'Charlie' Veron, dubbed the king of coral for his discovery of more than a fifth of all coral species. That bodes well, for climate change is set to decimate coral reefs.
Leading scientists warn that most reefs -- vital for the massive levels of marine life that depend upon them and a crucial component of coastal economies -- will be largely extinct by the end of the century unless greenhouse gas emissions are curbed. They say many will be killed by mass bleaching and irreversible acidification of seawater caused by the absorption of carbon dioxide into surface waters, with at least 20 per cent of coral reefs worldwide already feared lost. But with Eritrea's surface water in summer an average bathwater temperature of 32.5 C (90.5 F) -- reportedly peaking at a sweltering 37C (98.6 F) -- corals here have evolved to survive in an environment that would kill others elsewhere in the world.
Eritrea's isolation due to long years of bloody war with neighbour Ethiopia, combined with minimal tourist numbers and government efforts to protect the coastline, have left much of the country's extensive coral reefs untouched. Around most of the world, especially Asian and African coastlines of the Indian Ocean, coral reefs have been plundered in one way or another, the most damaging activity being explosive fishing, added Veron, former chief scientist with the Australian Institute of Marine Science. The reefs of Eritrea look as if they have been in a time warp -- they have not been touched. On a recent three-week diving expedition along Eritrea's 3,300 kilometres (2,046 miles) of mainland and island coastline, Veron found five species new to science -- something the scientist described as most unusual. Eritrea probably has the richest suite of corals of the Red Sea, and its 'coral gardens' are in exceptionally good condition, he added.
Such findings have encouraged ambitious plans offering hope for the future of reefs worldwide, with some believing that Eritrea's corals offer a potential nursery for future re-planting. Alain Jeudy de Grissac, a French marine scientist who has spent the past three years diving along Eritrea's coast, believes small coral buds -- comparable to taking cuttings from plants -- could be placed in areas where coral has died by sea temperature increases. The coral here is already well accustomed to high temperatures for long periods of time, Jeudy said, a former technical advisor to Eritrea's marine conservation body. If you seed the coral it would spread out... it would of course take some time, but they could occupy the area left by others. The principle of re-seeding coral, or ecological restoration, has already proved successful, Jeudy added. It has already been done in the case of accidents, such as if a ship grounds and the coral is crushed, he said. Testing would be needed, as this would be a totally new concept for coral reef researchers, but it could be one future of coral survival for many countries. It also offers a potentially lucrative opportunity for tourists. Veron pointed out that just north of Eritrea, visitors to Egypt's Red Sea reefs generate more cash than visitors to its famous archaeological sites. The Eritrean reefs are a tourist industry gold mine waiting to be opened, Veron said.