Lifecruiser » virtual travel http://lifecruiser.org Ranked Top 100 Travel Blog Lifecruiser. Travel information & photos. Europe, North & South America. Thu, 08 Aug 2013 19:52:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.6 New travel video search engine helps when planning a trip http://lifecruiser.org/archive/new-travel-video-search-engine-helps-when-planning-a-trip/ http://lifecruiser.org/archive/new-travel-video-search-engine-helps-when-planning-a-trip/#comments Wed, 24 Jul 2013 21:06:48 +0000 Lifecruiser http://lifecruiser.org/?p=15750 The founders of urbita.com (7 million users/month local info & travel platform), also launched a very promising and useful travel videos site: travideos.com. Despite it being so new it has already got an impressive number of visits: over 2 million unique visitors!

Travel Videos Screen

I usually get contacted rather often with promoting emails of all kind of services, sites or apps. Not every one makes it through to my writing, but Pablo Grandinetti’s (co-founder of Urbita/Travel Videos) email did. Read why below…

Being the first search engine for travel videos organized using Urbita’s database of around 180,000 cities/towns, it sure did catch my attention fast. On top of that they also categorize the videos by location and add other information of interest like available tours, music festivals or sports events.

This approach is of course very useful for us travelers, gathering much of the info we want for our research for any city we plan to visit. Not only that, but the info we get is like insider-info, local knowledge of a place which is essential for any traveler that wish to plan the best holiday at that particular place.

I like the fact that I can get a search result with better videos than just searching for videos generally in different common video sites. Travideos.com is after all, specialized in travel videos, making it more suitable as a travel planning tool. Try it out!

©Lifecruiser Love Travel Videos
 

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Travel Time http://lifecruiser.org/archive/travel-time/ http://lifecruiser.org/archive/travel-time/#comments Tue, 02 Jul 2013 21:26:37 +0000 Sundowner Cowboy http://lifecruiser.org/?p=15291 Cowboy On The Llama Time Trail.

“SIXTEEN years ago – that is to say, in the year 1836 – a huge pile of dirty-looking sacks, filled with some fibrous material which bore a strong resemblance to superannuated horse-hair, or frowsy elongated wool, or anything else unpleasant and unattractive, were landed at Liverpool. When those queer looking bales had first arrived, or by what vessel brought, or for what purpose intended, the very oldest warehouseman in the Liverpool Docks couldn’t say. There had been once a rumour, a mere warehouseman’s whisper, that the bales had been shipped from South America on spec., and consigned to the agency of C. W. and F. Foozle and Co. But even this seemed to have been forgotten; and it was agreed on all hands that the three hundred and odd sacks of nondescript hair-wool were a perfect nuisance. The rats appeared to be the only parties who at all approved of the importation, and to them it was the very finest investment for capital that had been known in Liverpool since their first ancestors had migrated thither.”
Charles Dickens
(Household Words: The Great Yorkshire Llama.)

Cry God for Harry, England, and Saint George!

Standing looking at St George’s Hall in Bradford you could be excused for not taking due notice. It’s impressive enough, Neoclassical style in local ashlar sandstone but somewhat overshadowed by the elaborate Venetian style of the the Town Hall opposite which steals its thunder. St George’s was opened in 1853 by Queen Victoria and is still in use attracting many of the world’s top performers throughout it’s history; the oldest concert hall in Britain, third oldest in the whole of Europe. Charles Dickens appeared here in December 1854 and gave his first ever reading of “Bleak House.” When we mention Dickens we think of London but, in truth he drew inspiration elsewhere, particularly Northern England. I fancy sharing his company today; if only in the imagination and a leap of time travel. Scrooge’s London counting house in A Christmas Carol was inspired by a location in Malton, North Yorkshire. Perhaps I can tempt the master wordsmith to add adjectives, metaphors, similes, dialect and ‘substandard’ speech with a dash of sentimentality to a Bradford location?

Let’s jump time to Dickens’ Bradford…

“Now and then you get a mile or so of fresh sweet air as you are whisked along in the train; but only as a short relief from tall, dark, mysterious-looking buildings, like county jails or model prisons, with a curling black  stream of smoke above, and another gurgling black stream of water below, which would induce one to believe the place to be a blacking manufactory, and that they were then busy washing out the old bottles. You  whistle past it, and smell more great-coats and trousers, and then you come to some more green fields, rattle over a canal, wind round a hill, plunge under the high road, whisk round a corner, and there you are – in the  very heart of damp wearing-apparel – in the town of Bradford.”
Charles Dickens
(Household Words: The Great Yorkshire Llama.)

During the textile and industrial revolution in the nineteenth century Bradford’s population mushroomed. It gained the reputation of being the most polluted town in England as over 200 factory chimneys produced black, sulphorous smoke that filled the hole in which Bradford sits. Frequent outbreaks of cholera and typhoid due to none-existent sanitation resulted in  only 30% of children born to textile workers reaching the age of fifteen and the average life expectancy was just 18 years. To have vision at all in this hell hole on earth was a miracle…
But one man managed it!

A Walk With Charles Dickens.

Although it is dark as we round the corner of the Town Hall we instantly know that we walk in 2013. The six acres of City Park lie before us: the largest man-made water feature in any UK city. The 30m high water spout climbs from the center of the 4,000 sq. m mirror pool and laser lighting plays with water. It’s impressive and sparkly but not worthy of the attention of Mr Dickens I think. Our destination is about half a mile away in Goitside (the very name has Dickensian tone.) I want my companion to see the mill that I used to occupy, or more precisely the alley at the back of the property; Silsbridge Lane. The clock slips back to 1844 as we entered the alleyway next to Thompson’s Mill. A horse drawn carriage rattled over the Victorian cobbles and pulled up next to the warehouse door.  On board were two alpaca fleeces by special delivery from Queen Victoria for the attention of a Bradford manufacturer. A plain business-looking young man, with an intelligent face and a quiet, reserved manner in his mid-thirties accepted the royal consignment. Then, seeing my companion, this future Mayor of Bradford approached us and extended a hand of welcome.

“Do I know you Sir?” he inquired of my companion.
“Not yet, but delighted I’m sure,”  replied Dickens

“One day – we won’t care what day it was, or even what week, or month, though things of far less national importance have been chronicled to the very half minute—one day, a plain business-looking young man, with an intelligent face and a quiet, reserved manner, was walking alone through those same warehouses at Liverpool, when his eye fell upon some of the superannuated horse-hair projecting from one of the ugly dirty bales; some lady rat, more delicate than her neighbours, had found it rather coarser than usual, and had persuaded her lord and master to eject the portion from her resting-place. Our friend took it up, looked at it, felt it, smelt it, rubbed it, pulled it about; in fact, he did all but taste it, and he would have done that if it had suited his purpose, for he was “Yorkshire.” Having held it up to the light, and held it away from the light, and held it in all sorts of positions, and done all sorts of cruelties to it, as though it had been his most deadly enemy and he was feeling quite vindictive; he placed a handful or two in his pocket and walked calmly away, evidently intending to put the stuff to some excruciating private tortures at home.”
Charles Dickens
(Household Words: The Great Yorkshire Llama.)

114 Miles To Liverpool.

Titus remained politeness personified but it was apparent that he wanted to “be about” the newly arrived  regal command. So we left him and his textile genius at Thompson’s Mill and traveled the few miles and many decades to Saltaire in the present day. This World Heritage UNESCO Site was the vision of the same quite gentleman that we had just met in the narrow cobbled, smog filled back street. Sir Titus Salt; great industrialist, one time Mayor of Bradford was also a humanitarian. He was shrewd and realized that looking after his workforce was good for business; taking his workers from the Bradford squalor to the Yorkshire fresh air at Malham on a works outing. He bought a tract of land and commissioned architects to design a mill and village to his exact specifications alongside the canal between Leeds and Liverpool where he had bought those very same bales of alpaca wool. Housing for the workers had fresh water, sanitation and a gas supply. The new village had shops,  a hospital, school, library, park, church, public baths and alms houses for the poor and elderly. Consideration was given to health and safety and the working day limited to 10 hours. One can only imagine what this would mean to his workforce and how they would regard him. He saw the task finished just before he died at the age of 73 years. After a funeral in Bradford (100,000 people paid their respects) he was buried in the mausoleum at his own Saltaire Congregational Church.

Salt's Mill©Charimage 2013

Victorian Saltaire.

Dickens wasn’t interested in the David Hockney Gallery that has replaced the 1200 looms attended by 3000 workers producing 18 miles of cloth each day; or the  collections of books, furniture, jewelry or clothing. The modern day Saltaire is picturesque and charming with tourist appeal but the thrum of industry and purpose is somehow lost. We took a stroll around Robert’s Park where willow strikes leather at the side of the River Aire under the watchful eye of Sir Titus’ statue. I asked Dickens if he had missed a good story here; a tale that would sit well on the shelf next to Bleak House, Great Expectations, David Copperfield? The Great Yorkshire Llama should have been indulged and deserved novel status. Alas my companion got diverted into touring and giving recitals rather than trusting his pen to making a living.

 

Victorian Saltaire©Charimage 2013

***

“This vast building stands upon six acres of ground, running east and west, and is nearly six hundred feet in length, and eighty in height: the several floors and sheds will comprise a superficial extent of nearly fifty-six thousand feet.

Such is, and such will be, Saltaire; and the whole of this, it must be borne in mind, is created by the genius and industry of one quiet man of business. All these vast machines, these huge piles of works, these myriads of working instruments, this wonderful whole, spring from that one source—those three hundred and odd dirty bales of frowsy South American stuff.”

Charles Dickens
(Household Words: The Great Yorkshire Llama.)

 

©Lifecruiser Cowboy Trails

 

Other Cowboy Trails Posts at Lifecruiser:
Sea Fever
God’s own Country
Rivers of Life
I Want to be Alone
Why Do We Travel?


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Europe Trip Preparations: Video Camera GoPro Hero 2 http://lifecruiser.org/archive/europe-trip-preparations-video-camera-gopro-hero-2/ http://lifecruiser.org/archive/europe-trip-preparations-video-camera-gopro-hero-2/#comments Sun, 24 Jun 2012 19:01:17 +0000 Lifecruiser http://lifecruiser.org/?p=11648 Our trip preparations before our long Europe road trip of approximately 750 km this summer continues. Now we got a new video camera, an action video camera actually: a GoPro Hero 2 Outdoor Edition. Small, effective, practical and very outdoorsy.

GoPro Hero 2 video action camera

Photo taken with my iPhone, not very good but you get the picture – how small it is (2.4 x 1.6 x 1.2 inches ), when you look at that suction cap in the front which is HUGE comparing to the mini video camera! The size is why we were interested in the first place.

As they say themselves at their website:

Wearable and gear mountable, waterproof to 197? (60m), capable of capturing professional full 170º wide angle 1080p video and 11 megapixel photos at a rate of 10 photos per second, the HD HERO2 is the world’s most versatile camera.

It can even handle under water filming though there seem to be a loss of sharpness with underwater images according what I’ve read on the internet about it. There is also another con: it’s difficult to aim without a LCD…

We’re not exactly sports-persons in the true meaning of that word, but we will nevertheless try on the Head Strap in some situations.

©Lifecruiser Love Europe Trip Preparations

 

Earlier post about Lifecruiser Europe Trip 2012:

Europe Trip Preparations: Double Trip Packing
Europe Trip Preparations: Camera Gears
Europe Trip Preparations: New Notebook PC
Another meetup for the Europe road trip
Europe Trip Preparations: Champagne Coolbox Snacks
New car for the Europe trip
Europe Trip 2012 Summery
Europe Trip Accommodations
Mapped Europe Roadtrip Route 2012 by Lifecruiser
Routes and stays booked for our Europe trip 2012
Planning our Europe trip 2012
 


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Lifecruiser Travel Photo Folders http://lifecruiser.org/archive/lifecruiser-travel-photo-folders/ http://lifecruiser.org/archive/lifecruiser-travel-photo-folders/#comments Sat, 17 Mar 2012 22:52:11 +0000 Lifecruiser http://lifecruiser.org/?p=6698 We’re busy planning our Europe trip (plus fixing my computer), so I just thought that I should remind you about all our earlier travel photos, which you can find at Flickr.

Click here to see Lifecruiser Travel Photo Folders at Flickr, as a kind of virtual travel – or as inspiration for your future travel destinations.

Don’t miss that you can watch them as slideshows too!

©Lifecruiser Love Travel Photographing
 


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Painting for travelers: Marilyn Monroe in New York http://lifecruiser.org/archive/painting-for-travelers-marilyn-monroe-in-new-york/ http://lifecruiser.org/archive/painting-for-travelers-marilyn-monroe-in-new-york/#comments Thu, 20 Oct 2011 17:48:34 +0000 Lifecruiser http://lifecruiser.org/?p=4844 Recently we found a perfect painting for us travel freaks. We had a blank spot on our bedroom wall right above our bed, which is now filled. Think about it: waking up every morning and the first thing you see is Marilyn in New York…

Lifecruisers New York - Marilyn Monroe painting

She is following you with her eyes where ever you go. It’s 3D, not you being blurry in your head. *giggles*

There are a lot of Marilyn-things out on the market nowadays. I have a bag with her on too.

©Lifecruiser Love Vintage Travel
 

Lifecruiser’s other travel related paintings posts:

Ship Deck Passenger Paintings
French Art Gallery Exhibition
Stockholm Body Painting Contest 2008
Halloween Car Painting

 


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Ship Deck Passenger Paintings http://lifecruiser.org/archive/ship-deck-passenger-paintings/ http://lifecruiser.org/archive/ship-deck-passenger-paintings/#comments Thu, 06 Oct 2011 21:24:43 +0000 Lifecruiser http://lifecruiser.org/?p=4733 What kind of paintings have true travelers hanging on the home walls? Yes, travel related paintings like those two ship deck passengers – it could have been us two…

lifecruiser-ship-deck passenger paintings

Those two paintings are hanging on our bedroom wall, above our desks where we have our computers, so when at home not traveling we can look at them, lucky ones, standing on deck looking out.

©Lifecruiser Love Ship Photos
 


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11 Top Travel Magazine Blogs http://lifecruiser.org/archive/11-top-travel-magazine-blogs/ http://lifecruiser.org/archive/11-top-travel-magazine-blogs/#comments Thu, 09 Dec 2010 22:13:18 +0000 Lifecruiser http://lifecruiser.org/?p=1025 Lifecruiser Travel Blog present this list with 11 links to the Top Travel Magazines Blogs we’ve found – in no particular order. All the travel blogs are worth a visit!

I really like the fact that those travel magazines also have travel blogs where travel interested people can leave their comment.

Many times the comments are as useful as the travel article content!

  1. The Guardian
  2. Condé Nast Traveler
  3. BudgetTravel
  4. IHT Globespotters
  5. L.A Traveler Daily Travel & Deal
  6. Washington Post Travel Log
  7. USA Today in the Sky
  8. Brave New Traveler
  9. Perceptive Travel Webzine Blog
  10. National Geographic Traveler: Intelligent Travel
  11. WEND – Beyond adventure

Go visit! Have a nice travel inspiring read! Dream away!

Lifecruiser Travel Magazines
 


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Drinks Round the World: The Rolls Royce of Sangrias http://lifecruiser.org/archive/drinks-round-the-world-the-rolls-royce-of-sangria/ http://lifecruiser.org/archive/drinks-round-the-world-the-rolls-royce-of-sangria/#comments Sun, 31 May 2009 23:36:57 +0000 Lifecruiser http://lifecruiser.org/?p=2061 Welcome to the 1st international cocktail party meme: Drinks ‘Round the World, hosted by Lifecruiser Travel Blog & Travel Experta the 1st every month.

I simply can’t resist to offer you my favorite drink of all: Sangria! The Spanish national drink? Well, at least for the tourists, but I don’t care, I love it anyway!

The best Sangria we’ve had ever, was the one a family at Cafeteria Sra Calendaria, Avenida Maritima, Corralejo, in the northern tip of Fuerteventura Island, Spain, served us every day while we were there several years ago.

We could clearly feel the difference from all the others we have tasted, this one was more rich of ingredients, kind of the Rolls Royce of Sangria’s, if you get what I mean.

(Not the one in the photo below)

Sangria, Tenerife, Photo Copyright Lifecruiser

One day when we already had been drinking almost a liter Sangria, the nice son in the family suddenly gave us another liter for free…. What to do? We didn’t want to be impolite of course, so we did drink more Sangria…

We tried to get the recipe, which wasn’t that simple, since we don’t speak Spanish and he didn’t speak much English plus the fact that we got too drunk and had to go home and have siesta. Ha ha.

We managed to get the ingredients at least, but you have to experiment to get the right taste. We have made it one time ourselves at home and came rather close, but didn’t write down the amount of everything.

Sangria Ingredients: Red wine, Brandy, Cointreau, Liquor 43, Banana liquor, Extra dry Triple Sec, Grenadine, sugar, oranges and apples. (I think that it might benefit to have some Cinnamon sticks in it too).

If you think it’s too strong, try to put in some 7-Up or any lemon-lime soda in it too.

- or simply try to drink less of it – but I guess that might be too difficult… *giggles*

So do you have any drinks from somewhere in the world to share with us? Read How to participate in Drinks ‘Round the World Meme.

This is all about having fun together, so you can just show us a photo or write something – it’s up to you. If you’re making your drink while writing, drinking while commenting: even better….

Leave a link to your drink post in the comments, so we all can come over and have a sip!

Be sure to mingle – and please be aware of the fact that we have different time zones, which is why I’m posting this early, so be sure to check back later too.

Let’s have FUN! Cheers my dears…

Lifecruiser Sangria
 


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Start Drinks ‘Round the World! New cool meme! http://lifecruiser.org/archive/start-drinks-round-the-world-new-cool-meme/ http://lifecruiser.org/archive/start-drinks-round-the-world-new-cool-meme/#comments Wed, 27 May 2009 21:53:21 +0000 Lifecruiser http://lifecruiser.org/?p=2053 Drinks Round the World Meme

Lifecruiser Travel Blog and Travel Experta have decided to host a new meme, where the 1st every month the party animals (you) makes a blog post, with text and/or photo of a drink from somewhere in the world.

Join the Drinks ‘Round the World Meme, don’t be shy. It will be like having a party – the more, the merrier the party will be!

You have to tell in your blog post that Lifecruiser Travel Blog and Travel Experta are the cohosts, so people can find all the other drinkers participants easier.

Everyone should make the rounds and leave comments at the other participants blogs – and friends: remember to have fun, keep the party dress and mood on!

Don’t forget to stumble and twitter each post to tell all your friends about it, spread the word around the world!

We count on you, that you’ll attend this giant international cocktail party the 1st every month and take all your friends with you!

More drinks to the people!

Lifecruiser Drinks ‘Round the World
 


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Sweden Beauty Video http://lifecruiser.org/archive/sweden-beauty-video/ http://lifecruiser.org/archive/sweden-beauty-video/#comments Tue, 10 Mar 2009 19:14:31 +0000 Lifecruiser http://lifecruiser.org/?p=1882

Don’t miss our beautiful capital of Sweden, Stockholm, in the end of the video – or the Swedish girls before that… *giggles*

Both of us are born, raised and live in Stockholm right now. Maybe for the rest of our lives too or maybe not. We have been thinking of moving somewhere else. We’ll see when and if it happens.

Since we always are writing about how wonderful it is to travel and see other places, it might sound like we’re not fond of our home country or city. That’s not the fact, we love our home country and are very proud of it.

What we don’t love about it, is the long winters. Like today: it has been snowing all day, just when we thought that finally maybe the spring had arrived…

I wouldn’t want to trade away the summer in Sweden. Never.

Lifecruiser Sweden
 


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