Travel Photo of the Week: Cradle Mountain, Tasmania, Australia
Dove Lake with Cradle Mountain in the background is located in the Cradle Mountain National Park in the state of Tasmania. The area forms part of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area. The area offers a variety of bushwalking. Some short walks and some overnight camping walks. The abundance of wildlife so close up is fabulous for the visitor – to see paddy melon wallabies nibbling at the grasses, echidnas and bennets wallabies just to name a few.
Gap Adventures is currently running a competition to design your own dream adventure. There are a number of requirements to be met and as I’m all for the adventure, dream, travel destinations, I set to work to create my custom design tour. The tour I have created takes in Senegal and Mali in the heart of West Africa, an area I’ve been longing to visit for many years, especially the amazing Djenne Mosque.
“Enjoy the sounds, colours and aromas of exotic Dakar, the home to the famous ‘Dakar Car Rally’. Take in Dakar’s markets, nearby ocean beaches and tropical rainforests. Enjoy a Senegal drumming class. Visit the first French settlement of Saint Louis, and like Île de Gorée, both were fortified collection points for slaves bound for the Americas…” – PLEASE READ MORE & VOTE
Travel Photo of the Week: Bridgewater Mill, South Australia, Australia
Bridgewater Mill is nestled in the heart of the picturesque Adelaide Hills just outside of Adelaide. The area is well-known for its wineries and is approximately an 1 1/2hr drive to the famous Barossa Valley. The old stone mill with an impressive water wheel, dates back to 1860 and is now home to Petaluma Cellar and Bridgewater Mill Restaurant which offers fine dining. It’s an attraction to be enjoyed whilst sitting on the outdoors decking, enjoying the local food and wine, overlooking the lush garden setting.
Bagan once known as Pagan, is centrally located on a vast plain in Burma in the region of Myanmar. The area is most well-known for the numerous temples and pagodas dotted around the area, creating a mystical skyline. Most of the temples were built between the 11th and 13th centuries A.D. by King Anawrathta who founded the Bagan Empire. The Bagan dynasty fell at the end of the 13th century and many pagodas were also lost.
With more than 2,200 temples and pagodas to visit that remain standing, covering an area of approximately 40 square kilometres, no traveller will have the same story to tell of their visit to Bagan, for no traveller will visit the same temples – there are too many to choose from! Bagan is a travel destination to rival the famous temples of Angkor, Cambodia.
The Weeping Goldsmith: Discoveries in the Secret Land of Myanmar (Hardcover)
One great reason to visit this travel destination is for the 2,200 temples that create an amazing skyline which is best viewed at dawn, creating magical silhouettes.
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