Sex in a Hotel is Better Than At Home - According To Science
Get more Tips here! destinationtips.com
According to a new study, sex is better in Hotels than at Home!
Being in a new place increases your body's release of dopamine.
Checking into a Hotel is synonymous with vacations, making you think you've escaped your daily worries.
Which contributes to improved intimacy.
A clean room, fresh sheets and friendly anonymity also helps.
Book a hotel room today!
;P
Island Travel: Around the Philippines in 60 days (visit & win prizes)
Island Travel is a blog about our family's great adventure this summer vacation. We're taking a 60-day road trip to see the many islands of the Philippines starting from our home base in Davao City in Mindanao and heading north via the Eastern Nautical Highway to Luzon. We're gonna visit, Butuan, Surigao, Sohoton Cove, Tacloban, Legaspi, Mt. Mayon, San Pablo, Los Banos, Tagaytay, Silang, Lipa, Manila, Makati, Quezon, Tarlac, Alaminos, Baguio, La Trinidad, Gamu, Ilagan, Munoz, etc. We're heading back via the western side to see Mindoro, Boracay, Roxas, Bacolod, Dakak, Oroquieta, Dapitan, Dipolog and Iligan in May. The challenge is how to manage four young kids 10, 7.5, 2.5 and 1 year old on the road for the whole two months.
Join us in this adventure by visiting and win prizes by joining contests and promos.
It's More Fun in the Philippines | Antipolo City
Antipolo is in the northern half of Rizal Province, close to its meridional center.
It is found on the slopes of the Sierra Madre Mountain Range. Much of the city sits on a plateau averaging 200 meters. It has the second largest area in the province with an area of 156.68 km². The northern and southern sections of the city are in the dense forest areas of the Sierra Madre.
Antipolo is landlocked; bounded to the north by San Mateo and Rodriguez; to the east by Tanay; to the south by Angono, Taytay and Teresa; and to the west by Cainta and Marikina City in Metro Manila.
The Bitukang Manok of Pasig, also known as the Parian Creek, had once linked the Marikina River with the Antipolo River. Before the Manggahan Floodway was built in 1986, The Parian Creek was actually connected to the Sapang Bato-Buli Creek (which serves as the boundary between Pasig's barangays Dela Paz-Manggahan-Rosario-Sta. Lucia and the Municipality of Cainta), the Kasibulan Creek (situated at Vista Verde, Brgy. San Isidro, Cainta), the Palanas Creek (leaving Antipolo through Brgy. Muntindilao), the Bulaw Creek (on Brgy. Mambungan, besides the Valley Golf and Country Club), and the Hinulugang Taktak Falls of Brgy. Dela Paz (fed by the Taktak Creek passing close to the Antipolo Town Square), thus being the detached and long-abandoned Antipolo River.
Since the early 1600s up to the period of Japanese Imperialism, over a thousand Catholic devotees coming from Maynilad (Manila), Hacienda Pineda (Pasay), San Juan del Monte, Hacienda de Mandaloyon (Mandaluyong), Hacienda Mariquina (Marikina), Barrio Pateros, Pueblo de Tagig (Taguig), and San Pedro de Macati (Makati), followed the trail of the Parian Creek to the Pilgrimage Cathedral on the mountainous pueblo of Antipolo, Morong (the present-day Rizal Province).
The Antipoleños and several locals from the far-reached barrios of Poblacion de San Mateo, Montalban (Rodriguez), Monte de Tanhai (Tanay), Santa Rosa-Oroquieta (Teresa), and Punta Ibayo (Baras), had also navigated this freshwater creek once to go down to the vast Kapatagan (Rice plains) of lowland Pasig. Even the marian processions of the Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage passed this route back and forth eleven times.
The creek has been also used during the British Occupation of Manila in 1762 to 1764 by the Royal British army, under the leadership of General William Draper and Vice Admiral Sir Samuel Cornish, 1st Baronet, to transport their red troops (and also the Sepoys they've brought from East India) upstream to take over the nearby forest-surrounded villages of Cainta and Taytay. They even did an ambush at the Plaza Central in front of the Pasig Cathedral, and turned the Roman Catholic Parish into their military headquarters, with the church's fortress-like Campanilla (belfry) serving as a watchtower against Spanish defenders sailing from the walled city of Intramuros via the Pasig River.
But ironically, the Sepoys backstabbed their abusive British lieutenants and sided with the combined forces of the Spanish Conquistadors (assigned by the Governor-General Simon de Anda y Salazar), local rice farmers, fisherfolk, and even Chinese traders. After the British Invasion, the Sepoys remained and intermarried with Filipina women, and that explains the Hindu features of some of today's citizens of Pasig, especially Cainta and Taytay.
MAMBUGAN NATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL
Project of the Students of 10-Binirayan in ESP-10