Chủ Nhật, 29 tháng 6, 2014

Tourism jobs growing along with family incomes

Glenn Camus checks in at the front desk at Hotel Zero Degrees in Stamford, Connecticut. Hospitality jobs are a growth area for Asheville.

(Photo: Eileen Blass , USAT )

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A solid career with a good paycheck is what Jon Hessler wanted after serving as an Army officer in Afghanistan.

He found his break in an industry often dismissed for lower wages and part-time work.

Hessler had interned at a hotel as a front desk clerk during high school and had stayed in touch with his first employers.

After mustering out of the Army as a first lieutenant, he started work last August as sales manager for Asheville’s three Hampton Inns and the Homewood Suites Hilton.

At age 28, he’s getting married next month and just closed on the purchase of his first house, thanks to an annual salary around Buncombe County’s average of $35,748.

Tourism wages still fall short of those paid in industries like manufacturing, but they have been on the upswing — and managers increasingly are naming their own price.

That’s especially true in the Asheville area, which has been enjoying an increase in income levels. Median family income in the Asheville metro market grew at a faster rate than any other North Carolina metro last year.

“It’s a tight job market in Asheville, but I would encourage anybody to take a look at this field.” Hessler said. “It matches the cost of living.”

Tourism jobs grew at a 6.8 percent clip in 2013, contributing nearly half — 1,500 — of the 3,200 net new jobs added around the Asheville metro area of Buncombe, Haywood, Henderson and Madison counties, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

With 25,500 workers in hotels, restaurant and other tourism jobs, leisure and hospitality posted a record number of area jobs in May.

But with more seasonal and entry level workers, hospitality jobs paid on average only $345 a week in 2013 compared to the far fewer full-time workers in manufacturing, who earned a weekly average of $890 last year.

The median income for an Asheville area family jumped by 3.9 percent over the past year to $56,000 annually, ahead of Greensboro-High Point at $55,100 and Fayetteville at $52,800, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond.

Despite the faster growth, Asheville family income still far lags behind Raleigh-Cary, where the median household income reaches $75,800 in the tech-heavy Research Triangle Park or the financial powerhouse Charlotte, with household median income of $64,700.

Yet tourism jobs sometimes http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/nha-trang-da-lat-excursions-2-days-1-night/ get a bad rap as low pay and part-time as critics point to minimum wage burger flippers and housekeepers. Industry advocates say don’t overlook the sales staff, managers, human resources and financial officers and other professional services in hotels or restaurant chains.

“I think those critics are wrong,” said longtime Asheville hotelier John Winkenwerder, managing partner of South Asheville Hotel Associates.

“While the starting pay may be a little lower than other, the opportunity to mid- and upper tiers of income is wide open,” he said. “We promote people. It’s not usual to hire chi tiet tham khao someone for the front desk, and in less than two years, that person is an assistant general manager.”

With even more training, full-time supervisors in hotels and restaurants can command salaries comparable to other sectors.

“We get more salaried job offers than we can fill,” said Walter Rapetski with the Hospitality Management program at Asheville-Buncombe Technical Community College. “Over the past five years, graduates have been getting positions with salaries ranging from $34,000 to $65,000 because our students graduate with the skills industry wants.”

A path forward

Rapetski appeared as a panelist at the Governor’s Conference on Tourism in Charlotte this spring, pressing his message that hospitality plays an important role in the local economy, but especially Asheville’s.

While tourism’s entry level positions typically pay above minimum wage of $7.25 an hour but often below Asheville’s living wage of $11.85, promotions and higher paychecks may be more readily available with the right work ethic.

“We are heavy with hourly line employees, but people chi tiet can move up quickly,” Rapetski said. “This industry creates more minority and female management positions than any other industry nationwide.”

Brenda Durden would agree. She started in high school, working as a front desk agent 24 years ago. “I was fairly young, but I liked taking care of people. It was part of my DNA, and I knew I could grow in this business. I was not afraid to step up and take on challenges and that does get rewarded in our industry.”

She was the first female general manager for the South Asheville Hotel Associates and now serves as the company’s chief operating officer.

“Tourism is so critical to our area. It makes perfect sense to count on hospitality careers as good choices after we’ve lost jobs in so many other industries,” Durden said. “These are jobs that are here to stay.”

The job market has been tightening for hospitality in the past year, putting pressure upwards on salaries, Durden said. “It’s getting tougher to find the right candidates. We have to be competitive.”

Of the company’s 140 employees about 10 percent work part time. Employees start above minimum wage with benefits including health and dental care, life insurance and paid vacations, Durden said.

No outsourcing

Discerning travelers who come to Asheville have their choice of destinations and are paying good money for their stay here, Winkenwerder said.

“If they’ve selected Asheville over Charleston or Savannah, you’re not going to http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/unique-beauty-excursions-of-the-north-4-days-3nights/ satisfy them with a team of workers who are all making minimum wage,” he said.

It’s not just hotels that decent paychecks for managers, restaurants around Asheville don’t run without well-paid supervisors, Rapetski said.

“These are jobs that aren’t going to get outsourced. These dining rooms are full around Asheville,” he said. “For each of these restaurants, there are probably five to six salaried supervisors. You look at a general manager at Outback steak house or Olive Garden, these people are making between $60,000 to $100,000.

Asheville’s economy has done well in the past year with a falling unemployment rate and rising incomes along with announcements of more manufacturing jobs, said Paul Szurek, chairman of the Economic Development Coalition for Asheville and Buncombe County. “We are hearing about hotel companies having to pay more.”

The EDC and Asheville Area Chamber is focusing more efforts, not just in manufacturing or in tourism, but in building up more technology jobs and start-up companies that could expand here from one and two founders to staffs of 10 to 15, Szurek said.

“We need to make more headway in professional, technology and other similar jobs,” Szurek said. “We’re never going to be a banking center like Charlotte, but there are portions of the financial industry that can expand here, like investment managers.”

“Tourism is part of what’s raising the wages for our community. These are jobs that can’t be outsourced.” Rapetski argued. “What’s lacking for Asheville perhaps is the professional base that cities like Raleigh and Charlotte have.”

BY THE NUMBERS

6.8 percent: Grown of Asheville metro area tourism jobs in 2013.

25,500: Workers in hotels, restaurant and other tourism jobs.

$345: Average weekly salary for tourism jobs, compared with $890 in manufacturing.

$56,000: Median income for an Asheville area family, or $1,077 a week (family income may include multiple earners)

Nguon: citizen-times

Thứ Năm, 26 tháng 6, 2014

Breastfeeding Moms in Summer Travel Tips

The beginning of summer means more family road trips and extended vacations. Though vacations are a great way to rest and recharge, traveling while breastfeeding can be tricky. Here are some tips to ensure that mom can enjoy her vacation while caring for baby:

1. Pack properly.

When it comes to traveling on planes, breastfeeding moms have more to worry about than packing the right shoes. With bottles, brushes, breast pumps and more, it's important to know what products are allowed on board. Thankfully, the TSA relaxes its policies Excursions when it comes to products for little ones. Typically, passengers cannot carry more than 3.4 ounces of liquid in a carry-on aboard a flight. However, according to the TSA, a passenger can take more than 3.4 ounces of breastmilk on a flight as long as she lets the TSA agent know before the X-ray screening process. TSA also allows baby food and formula in excess of 3.4 ounces. For more information, check out http://www.Tsa.Gov/traveling-formula-breast-milk-and-juice.

2. Stash a snack.

Because schedules can change at a moment's notice, it's always good to be prepared with a snack. For those with a bit of a sweet http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/unique-beauty-excursions-of-the-north-4-days-3nights/ tooth, lactation cookies are the perfect treat. MilkMakers are delicious cookies with oats and brewer's yeast that actually help moms provide more milk for baby. Carrots and nuts are other great snacks that are easy to stash in a carry-on or small purse and provide health benefits for nursing moms.

3. Dress accordingly.

Nursing and pumping on the road or during a flight can be difficult and time-consuming. However, with the right products, any mom can feed with ease. The Simple Wishes B3 All-in-One is a multi-functional bra designed to maximize skin-to-skin For Excursions contact, and is strong enough to support flanges during hands-free pumping. This innovative bra allows moms to relax while using their breast pump, and gives moms the valuable gift of time by freeing up their hands for other tasks. Nursing pads like Bamboobies are also great for travel because they discretely soak up any leakage that may occur between feedings.

4. Provide consistency for baby.

Because traveling schedules are often unpredictable, moms may find times when breastfeeding is not an option. Nipple confusion can occur when baby transfers from breast to bottle and back, so a bottle that imitates mom's nipple is essential. Munchkin's LATCH bottles aid http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/halong-bay-excursions-tour-the-classic-experience-4d3n-in-halong/ in the transition from breast to bottle and back with key features: the accordion-style nipple flexes and stretches like the breast to provide a continuous latch and the bottle pumps like the breast by releasing more breast milk as baby pushes against Day Excursions the nipple's base.

5. Be prepared to explain your situation and answer questions.

Because not everyone understands the in and outs of breastfeeding, moms may need to explain their various gadgets. Bringing breast pump instructions to security check points will make life easier for both harried moms and TSA agents. Oftentimes, family members or friends will ask questions about breastfeeding. Though breastfeeding is a personal choice that not everyone will feel comfortable discussing, these discussions can educate others and help moms discover new tips.

Traveling while breastfeeding can be challenging, but it doesn't have to put a halt to all vacation plans. By bringing the right equipment and planning ahead, moms will be able to enjoy their trip with baby in tow.

Source : huffingtonpost

Meet the Spa Whisperer is the Dream Travel Job Created by this Guy

People often dream of leaving it all behind and finding a job in the travel industry. At Yahoo Travel we are profiling people who work in all fields of the travel industry—small jobs, big jobs, any jobs. This week we talked to Nigel Franklyn, the Spa Whisperer (it’s a thing!).

This Guy Created His Dream Travel Job: Meet the Spa Whisperer

The Spa Whisperer at Gili Lankanfushi in the Maldives. (Photo: Nigel Franklyn)

Nigel Franklyn wanted to change his life. Making that decision led him on a journey to create his dream job.

We don’t all wake up one day and think: This is what will make me happy. Franklyn did.

He was working as a journalist and a model in London, New York, and Los Angeles when he attended a conference on spas. Franklyn tham khao o day had always enjoyed spas. Who doesn’t? But he didn’t know too much about them. A chance meeting there landed him a job working with the skincare company Jurlique, helping develop their spas throughout the U.S.

Five years later, he had an epiphany. He would become a Spa Whisperer.

Spa Whisperer? That’s not a job! It wasn’t a job. But Franklyn dreamed it and the inspiring thing is, now he is living it. For the past eight years he has worked as an independent spa consultant with Sodashi, going into some of the best spas around the globe and working with their managers and staff to maximize the spa experience for guests.

Related: Checking into the New Shangri-La Hotel, at The Shard

We got the chance to catch up with Franklyn during a recent trip to the Maldives where he was working with the spa at the Four Seasons Resort at Kuda Huraa. As we floated underneath a sunset in the Indian Ocean, he told us about crafting his own dream travel job from scratch (he is on the road 10 months out of the year). We told you his life was amazing!

Yahoo Travel: You know that Spa Whisperer sounds like something made up. What exactly do you do?

Nigel Franklyn: I did make it up! What I do is go into spas and evaluate what is happening there and how they can be better and how they can http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/day-trips-full-cultural-to-nha-trang/ fully develop the ultimate spa experience. I leave what is working alone and then I fill in the blanks. Filling in the blanks is what makes a very unique and memorable spa experience. The real spa experience is what happens off the bed. I do all the emotional work. I make sure the staff connects with the guests and with the spa’s vision. I teach the therapists how to help people surrender themselves to the spa and to the spa journey. I think of myself as a coach.

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This boat takes you to the spa at the Four Seasons Maldives on the island of Kuda Huraa. (Photo: Jo Piazza)

YT: A spa coach?

NF: Spas are vulnerable places. You’re naked. I work with the therapists to help them make people feel comfortable and safe when they’re at their most vulnerable. I mean, you look like sh*t in a spa and you are (hopefully) so relaxed you want to chase imaginary butterflies. These days my own journey is manifesting into spa design Day trips tour Phu Quoc, Day trips and menu design and all aspects of the spa industry, but I always make sure my therapists are connected, inspired, and organically aligned to whatever it is we do together. After all, my spa therapists are my biggest advocates and my biggest and best support in creating something extraordinary and also, perhaps more importantly, something sustainable. My goal is to be one of the world’s top spa consultants, and that is not something I can do alone.

YT: So you are a therapist for therapists. What about the ambience of a spa. How do you influence that?

NF: I make sure that each and every space feels like a treatment room, especially the reception area, which is often used as an office in the middle of the spa and messes up the flow completely. A good example of the tiniest detail I tweak out on is the smell. In a spa, smell is such an important thing, since people become more sensory when they are in an emotional and relaxed state. I am a very earthy person so I like grounding smells. Lemongrass has become such a thing in spa and I have never understood it. People need to feel supported and grounded, not purified and elevated. I like lemongrass and it has great benefits, but I don’t want it in my spas. Every little thing has to support the experience and vision, otherwise the journey is fractured and everything falls short of absolute bliss.

Related: Take a Day Trip From NYC to This Incredible Spa

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The Amanoi overlooking the spectacular Vinh Hanoi day trips, Day trips Hy Bay in Vietnam. (Photo: Nigel Franklyn)

YT: What has trained you to be so successful at doing this? You consult for some of the top spas in the world like Four Seasons, George V, Paris; Four Seasons, Hampshire, UK; Four Seasons, Kuda Huraa, Maldives; all Aman Resorts globally; Emirates Wolgan Valley Resort and Spa, Australia; the Siam, Bangkok; Gili Lankanfushi, Maldives; Trisara, Phucket, Thailand; Chi Spa, Shangri-La, Sydney; Landmark Mandarin Oriental, Hong Kong; Four Seasons Istanbul at Bosphorus,

NF: I had no formal training and I think that is what makes me so good at what I do. I hadn’t learned anything that would get in my way. I work on pure instinct. I never do the same thing twice. I don’t have a set schedule or a set plan before I go in to a spa, much to the worry of spa directors who haven’t worked with me before. I go in and I listen to people, I see what is happening and then I go with my gut. There is no way to plan for what I do. Every spa offers a different aspect of healing and well-being and energy, and my job is to go in, find it, and bring it forward. It’s the only way to create an organic design, business plan, and strategy.

Related: Get Your Zen On at These Top Health Spas

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Amanpuri in Phuket, Thailand. (Photo: Nigel Franklyn)

YT: Was it always glamorous?

NF: No, not at all. I didn’t create this job at this level. Who would fly me around the world like this without a history of success under my belt? When I first started Day trips,Vietnam day trips,Vietnam Tours,Vietnam Travel out as a consultant it took years to gain the trust of the industry. One of my first jobs was for a spa in Orlando, and I stayed in a dingy motel in Kissimmee, just so that I could work with them. It’s important to understand the spa industry at every level. There is no such thing as five-star healing. You need to come in to this from the ground up, and you need to bring the ground with you along the way.

YT: What’s the toughest part about this job? Is there a tough part of the job?

NF: I get very emotionally attached to everyone doc them — all my therapists and spa directors. I cry a lot. I get very emotional. When I am leaving a spa I am never ready to let go. In bringing people out of their comfort zones and showing them their own light and their innate strengths (which they ofter consider their weaknesses), there comes a great responsibility in not abandoning them. I have a great need to stay connected and stay in easy reach of everyone I work with. I adopted the mantra, “leave no therapist behind!” But I feel like I am always leaving something behind. It’s tough being the the Spa Whisperer sometimes — I promise!

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Emirates Wolgan Valley Resort and Spa, Australia. (Photo: Nigel Franklyn)

Related: Dreamy Hotels Worth a Detour

YT: How often do you travel and how long do you spend in a spa?

NF: The first time I go to a spa I stay there for about two weeks. For the Four Seasons, George V in Paris I go twice a year and stay for three weeks at a time. The George V is obviously an incredibly important hotel and spa on the global stage, so they get a lot of my time. Generally though, I find 10 days or two weeks to Phu Quoc Day trips, Day trips be enough time to create something amazing, but my schedule is now so intense that often that is all the time I have to offer. I continue to work closely with my spas even when I am off property. Most of my spas are on opposite sides of the world from where I might be at any one time, so I am always Skyping at 2 and 3 in the morning with my clients and with my therapist. I have about 60 spas now so I am always on the road. I travel for about six months and then I go home to San Francisco for a month to recharge my own energy and play with my amazing dog, Maggie. Then I pack my bag head out into the world again for another six months.

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The Four Seasons George V in Paris. (Photo: Nigel Franklyn)

YT: Do you get sick of being on the road?

NF: No! No! No! I have completely manifested my dream life. How can I get sick of something I created? This isn’t even a job any more for me. Sometimes my friends ask me how I can put my life on hold to travel so much. I tell them that my life isn’t on hold. This IS my life. I am having a mad love affair with the world and the world is having a love affair with me right back. A long, long time ago — and for reasons I can’t even begin to explain — I threw my life into the universe and the universe hasn’t let me down yet. I am not on the road, I am the road, and I am out there fighting the good fight — but you’re right, the battlefield is a pretty luxurious place to be these days.

Follow Nigel’s travels and spa advice on Twitter @spawhisperer or on Facebook at The Spa Whisperer.

Nguon: yahoo

Thứ Ba, 24 tháng 6, 2014

Cuba's Budding Entrepreneurs Travel A Rocky Road Toward Success

Cuban entrepreneur Barbara Fernandez Franco oversees two employees in the small living room of her home in Havana, the Cuban capital. Her boyfriend, Michel Perez Casanova (right), works in the tourism industry but also helps with her business. I i

Hide captionCuban entrepreneur Barbara Fernandez Franco oversees two employees in the small living room of her home in Havana, the Cuban capital. Her boyfriend, Michel Perez Casanova (right), works in the tourism industry but also helps with her business.

David Gilkey/NPR

Cuban entrepreneur Barbara Fernandez xem them Franco oversees two employees in the small living room of her home in Havana, the Cuban capital. Her boyfriend, Michel Perez Casanova (right), works in the tourism industry but also helps with her business.

David Gilkey/NPR

When Americans think of business in Cuba, they think of government-owned enterprise. And the vast majority of Cubans do work for the state.

But in recent years, private business owners known as cuentapropistas have flourished on the island.

Cuentapropismo literally means "on your own account." As far back as the 1970s, Fidel Castro was talking about how socialism and small business ownership could coexist. Today, they do so more than ever: Between 2010 and 2013, the Cuban government expanded the list of privately owned business ventures, such as construction work, restaurants and tailoring, that are legal on the island.

Franco says business was booming when she was able to import clothing from countries like Brazil and the U.S. Once the government cracked down on imports, she learned to sew. Classic tours, Vietnam tours, Vietnam Travel i i

Hide captionFranco says business was booming when she was able to import clothing from countries like Brazil and the U.S. Once the government cracked down on imports, she learned to sew.

David Gilkey/NPR

Franco doc them says business was booming when she was able to import clothing from countries like Brazil and the U.S. Once the government cracked down on imports, she learned to sew.

David Gilkey/NPR

About 1 million people — or 20 percent of the Cuban workforce — can now be classified as wholly in the private sector, according to a report by Richard Feinberg of the Brookings Institution.

Barbara Fernandez Franco remembers being excited when that list of government-permitted businesses first came out. She combed through the 200-odd jobs, and thought carefully about which she could do. She decided on the "tailor and seamstress" category.

We met 28-year-old Barbara in one of the aging but gorgeous buildings that line the narrow colonial streets of central Havana, Cuba's capital. Sitting in the stairway, she tells us it's been a difficult road full of stumbles.

She started off reselling clothing a friend made, but the profit margins were very small. Then, she began buying clothing from abroad — from countries like Dominican Republic, Peru, Ecuador and Mexico — which she then resold.

At first the project was as rocky as any Classic tours, Vietnam classic tours, Journey Mekong startup business. But a few months down the line, she says, the profits were outstanding. Barbara was able to save a good amount of money — which today is helping her purchase a new home with her boyfriend, Michel Perez Casanova.

But that boom in business soon came to an end when the government announced that importing clothing for resale on the island would be illegal as of Dec. 31, 2013.

After Franco learned to sew, she started producing baby clothes and mosquito nets for cribs. I i

Hide http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/essential-highlights-of-vietnam-classic-tours/ captionAfter Franco learned to sew, she started producing baby clothes and mosquito nets for cribs.

David Gilkey/NPR

After Franco learned to sew, she started producing baby clothes and mosquito nets for cribs.

David Gilkey/NPR

Barbara was devastated by the news, she says, but while other businesses shut down, she chose to carry on as best she could: She learned how to sew and created her own line of baby clothing and mosquito netting for cribs.

At a small restaurant in the port city of Mariel, owner Onil Lemus told us everyone he knows is absolutely thrilled about the widening scope of legal business ventures. In fact, he jokes that he liked it better when there where fewer cuentapropistas — because he had less competition.

Even though business is good for Onil, he echoed what several other small enterprise owners said to us: One of the biggest challenges has been the lack of raw materials. In Mariel, for example, Onil said, there's no access to wholesale food markets, which are so important to the restaurant industry.

Pointing to the delicious lamb stew he'd prepared for us, he explained that he'd had to go to a farm to buy the meat, but foods like rice and beans — staples in Cuban cuisine — are hard to buy in large Journey Mekong, Classic tours quantities at good prices.

Similarly, Barbara said certain fabrics and ornaments are so expensive, it would be impossible for her to make a profit if she were to use them.

The widespread sentiment here is that the U.S. Embargo — which has been in place for more than 50 years and is known as el bloqueo, or "the blockade," on the island — is largely responsible for these kinds of difficulties.

Since taking over for his brother Fidel in 2008, Raul Castro has been pushing to modernize the economy. Onil said he's confident that as the number of private business owners grows, the government will address these issues.

Barbara's boyfriend, Michel, on the other hand, seemed more disheartened.

"Some tourists say that this country's growing up now and it's going to get better and better," he said. "But, you know, the system here is so slow. Step by step. Very, very, very slow."

Source : npr.Org

Thứ Hai, 23 tháng 6, 2014

Summer's Worst Travel Accessory: The Barely There Short Shorts

Summer's Worst Travel Accessory: The Barely There Short Shorts

(Photo: Thinkstock)

I love traveling in the summer for so many reasons but one of the main ones is the fashion. The cute outfits I can put together for any destination, the inspiration I get from other cities when I see what people are wearing and the individual styles I see. But this summer I’ve noticed a nefarious trend. Something so annoying and insidiously obnoxious that I felt I had to point it out: The barely-there, booty hanging out, short shorts. 

Once the weather started warming up, I saw a parade of shorts so small and so prevalent that I started to become concerned: Maybe these women thought their frayed jean bikini bottoms were actual pants? Or perhaps they had one of those Adventure Tours, Vietnam Tours, Vietnam travel, Journey Mekong crazy carnival mirrors at home where everything seems longer than it is? Maybe there’s a pandemic medical condition — where they can’t turn their heads and someone is playing a practical joke on them by swearing, “You look fine — everything’s all covered!” while laughing behind their backs? At first I felt bad and thought, Should I say something?

Related: 9 Swimsuits You Need For Hitting This Summer’s Hippest Beach Locales 

But then I finally realized that although it looked like these women got into a fight with some garden shears and lost, Adventure Tours, Adventure Holidays, Journey Mekong this was all by really sad and bad design. That the Daisy Dukes with ADD are the latest insidious, God-I-Wish-You-Wouldn’t-Do-That trend to hit the streets. Especially as it seems a lot of women are also doubling up on the functionality of these short shorts and also using them as underwear. Which gives any of us unlucky enough to be walking behind them on, say, subway stairs click here or an escalator an unfortunate gynecological view.

women-in-short-shorts

Lately, we’ve been seeing shorts that make these look like capris. (Photo: Thinkstock)

Related: The Perfect… Travel Jacket

It’s gotten so bad, Times Square in New York City is starting to make a Playboy cover shoot seem practically G-rated.

Lest you think, “Oh, this is just a crazy New York thing,” let me assure you it’s not. I’ve been optically attacked by this trend in Los Angeles, Cincinnati, Denver, Aspen, and San Francisco.

girl-in-daisy-dukes

The Adventure Tours, Adventure Travels, Journey Mekong latest travel accessory: Daisy Dukes (Thinkstock)

I’ve seen `em hanging out in Dallas and swaying in the breeze in Miami. Even worse, some people think they are acceptable travel gear and are now sporting them on planes, trains and busses across the country and worldwide. I’ve seen American butt cheeks flapping at me in a church in Cannes and on the streets of Paris.

And yes, I know. I sound like a crazy old lady spoilsport. And that’s part of the problem. I think I hate these shorts Adventure Tours, Adventure Tour, Journey Mekong so much because they make me feel old, even though half the women committing this fashion crime http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/gentle-colour-of-adventure-tours-sapa/ are my age. But still, it makes me feel old, as all I want to do when I see ladybirds prancing around in these tiny shorts is to channel my 80-year-old Aunt Dee and scream, “JESUS H CHRIST, PUT SOME CLOTHES ON HONEY, THERE’S CHILDREN ROAMING AROUND HERE!”

girl-in-booty-shorts

Have chi tiet fun when you travel, but try not to wear shorts shorter than your bikini (Photo: Thinkstock)

Related: Travel Rant: The 14 Most Annoying People to Avoid at All Costs While Traveling

But really, it’s time to say “enough is enough.” Ladies, I beg you: put some underwear on, stop airing your tush and get some real shorts. Because, really — no one wants to see xem them it except your boyfriend. And as I explained to that weirdo pervert on the train the other day, “Didn’t your mother teach you that some things should only be done and seen in private?”

 

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Source : yahoo

Thứ Ba, 10 tháng 6, 2014

Hovership holidays: North Korean architects shake up tourism | Art and design | theguardian.com

Cliffs of blue mirror glass plunge towards a waterfall, as space-age hoverships dock on glistening conical towers. Buildings shaped like spinning-tops nestle between lush mountainsides, connected by ski slopes, while a glass bubble train snakes through the valley. These could be scenes from a Dan Dare comic, showing the holiday hideouts of the Mekon and his chums. In fact, they are rare glimpses of how North Korean architects imagine their future.

“We gave them a completely open brief to dream up designs for what tourism might be like in their country,” says Nick Bonner, the Beijing-based curator and tour operator who commissioned the paintings, which are currently on show in the Korean Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale (which won the Golden Lion for best pavilion). “We asked them to go crazy, to see what they would come up with given absolutely no constraints.”

Woodland retreat … 'An aerial hotel where you are embraced by nature'.

 

Woodland retreat … 'an aerial hotel where you are embraced by nature.' Photograph: Koryo Group

One scene shows plans for the Silk Co-operative, a high-tech, low-energy artisans' commune, Excursions with circular buildings modelled on traditional Korean spinning wheels and wrapped in blue solar panels. In between these mirrored discs stand towers topped with wind-turbines-cum-helipads, rising above a watery landscape.

“The tourist benefits from being in the company of artisans, and the ability to learn new skills or just indulge in the beauty of the area,” write the architects. “They can travel by river, solar-train, or helicopter, then go on mountain walks.” It is a lavish dream in a country where transport is still limited and freedom of movement severely restricted. Despite the high-tech appearance of this new community, its architects are also keen to point out that the construction “uses natural stone, not concrete” – a strange claim, explained only by the fact that the country has yet to embrace reinforced steel.

Mountain Conicals … 'Featuring open air parks attached to the buildings for rare mountain plants. The packed earth acts as insulating material slowly giving off heat.'

 

Mountain http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/nha-trang-da-lat-excursions-2-days-1-night/ conicals … 'featuring open-air parks attached to the buildings for rare mountain plants. The packed earth acts as insulating material slowly giving off heat.' Photograph: Koryo Group

Oozing retro Jetsons-style glamour and sprinkled with curious anachronisms, the paintings provide a fascinating window on what contemporary architectural culture looks like in a place cut off from the world since 1948, a land immune from the churning feedback loop of design blogs and glossy magazines. It is a quaint vision of a future that never happened, employing forms and materials that smack of World Fairs gone by, or the sets of Thunderbirds.

There are swathes of blue mirror-glass and bubble cable-cars, interiors lined with http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/nha-trang-da-lat-excursions-2-days-1-night/ tangerine paint and brown veneer – all drenched in a decidedly 1970s flavour. There is a pink boudoir worthy of Lady Penelope, with a swooping ceiling and a moulded side table – on which an old-fashioned dial-up telephone sits. The general aesthetic is as if Bjarke Ingels had travelled back in time and worked as an apprentice to Frank Lloyd Wright, sci-fi cartoons inflected with a homely crafts sensibility.

Birdnest Riverside Guesthouse … Bjarke Ingels meets Frank Lloyd Wright.

 

Birdnest Riverside guesthouse … Bjarke Ingels meets Frank Lloyd Wright. Photograph: Koryo Group

There are also underlying hints of the social values of the DPRK and Juche ideology of collective self-reliance established by Kim Il-sung. The Bird's Nest villa is designed as a communal retreat, a cluster of interconnected pagodas for group Halong Bay Excursions holidays and corporate team-bonding trips. “We all are in the nest together and have to learn to be together harmoniously,” say the architects, explaining how the open interiors are “light, airy and fun”. Spurning the usual hotel corridor, the rooms are arranged around staggered atriums, “to allow you to come into visual contact with your friends much more naturally, which aids communication.” In the Democratic People's Republic, collective conviviality trumps solitude.

Elsewhere, there is the Woodland Retreat, described as “an aerial hotel room where you are embraced by nature”, which takes the form of a series of terraces held aloft on chunky columns – again hinting at the limits of North Korean structural possibility. Other designs are eerily prescient. There is a great bridge that mysteriously conflates two projects by Norman Foster (neither of which the architect would have seen), channelling the slender cable-stayed structure of the Millau Viaduct, in southern France, and the jaunty wobble of London's own Millennium Bridge. “Visitors walk across the morning mist as if on clouds connecting mountains, [and] experience the feeling of flight,” says the blurb. “[It is] a different kind of experience using modern constructional material. There is slight vibration and sway like the Korean swing, so you know you are in the air.”

Mount Myohyang Tourism Bridge … Foster's Millau viaduct meets the wobbly Millennium Bridge.

 

Mount Myohyang Tourism Bridge … Foster's Millau viaduct meets the wobbly Millennium Bridge in London. Photograph: Koryo Group

The paintings are a rare commission to have emerged from the notoriously tham khao secretive country, the result of four years' work by Bonner and his team. They have been produced by architects at the Paekdusan Construction and Architectural Research Institute, an http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/unique-beauty-excursions-of-the-north-4-days-3nights/ anonymous machine from which most of the state's major projects are issued, by people trained at the country's main architecture school, the Pyongyang Construction and Building Material University. It is a place where architects are weaned not on Corb and Koolhaas, or Mies and Morphosis, but on a diet of ancient Korean buildings and socialist architecture with Korean influence, alongside classes in western classical architecture and proportion – and declarations from their late “Dear Leader,” Kim Jong-Il.

“There cannot and should not be a modern form of architecture that is devoid of national characteristics,” writes Kim in his 1991 treatise, On Architecture, a 170-page guidebook-manifesto full of mangled aphorisms and strangely familiar archispeak. “Architecture that has been created to reflect the people's requirements in a new age, in keeping with the modern aesthetic feelings and modern civilised life,” he adds, “is architecture that embodies modernity, namely, modern architecture.”

Birdnest Riverside Guesthouse Interior … Thunderbirds glamour of Lady Penelope's boudoir.

 

Birdnest Riverside guesthouse interior … Thunderbirds glamour of Lady Penelope's boudoir. Photograph: Koryo Group

Elsewhere, he appears to http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/halong-bay-cat-ba-excursions-3-days-2-nights/ draw on the Vitruvian triad of “firmness, commodity and delight,” declaring the four demands of the masses to be “convenience, cosiness, beauty and durability” – although it is hard to say that many of the megalithic monuments over which he presided look all that cosy.

So would he have approved of the buildings imagined here? Given the hypocrisy of his treatise, it's hard to tell. In one breath, he argues for the importance of originality, before summoning words that could come straight from Prince Charles' personal architectural manifesto: “We must combat and promptly do away with fame-seeking, formalism, art for art’s sake, imitationism, and all the other unhealthy creative attitudes that find expression among architects.” Whatever the case, given that Pyongyang now sports a glistening rocket-ship hotel, it can only be a matter of time before inhabited spinning wheels and high-tech tree-houses become reality.

• Utopian Tours forms part of the Korean Pavilion, Crow's Eye View: the Korean Peninsula, at the Venice Biennale's Giardini, until Sunday 23 November. Koryo Tours is organising a seven-day architectural tour of North Korea in October. For more information and itinerary click here.

Thứ Hai, 9 tháng 6, 2014

Michal Kwiatkowski's non-altitude training for the Tour de France

While his rivals were flying high, Michal Kwiatkowski took a different approach to train for the Tour de France.

“I’ve never trained at altitude. Maybe I’ll do it later in my career, but right now, I’m sticking to what works,” said Kwiatkowski, 11th overall in the Tour last year.

“Have I tried an oxygen tent? No. I don’t know how altitude could help me or how I would react. It’s a risk to try something new before the most important race of the year.”

Chris Froome, Vincenzo Nibali and Alberto Contador trained at 2165 metres in Tenerife, Spain, in the last month. Others went to Mount Etna and Sierra Nevada. Team Omega Pharma-QuickStep‘s 24-year-old, however, went home to http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/day-trips-robinson-tour-phu-quoc/ Poland and previewed some of the Tour de France’s stages.

“If I were to try altitude training, maybe I’d go in August or at another point in the year.”

This spring, Kwiatkowski succeeded in improving in the Ardennes Classics. Instead of the cobbled classics, he raced the traditional Ardennes warm-up race, the Tour of the Basque Country. After finishing second overall in the tour, he placed fifth in the Amstel Gold Race, third in La Fleche Wallonne and third in Liege-Bastogne-Liege.

He continued to the Tour of Romandy and two days later, beat Froome and won the prologue. Afterwards, he took a break to get ready for the Tour de France.

“I click here went http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/day-trips-robinson-tour-phu-quoc/ home to Poland for two weeks and went seven days without touching my bike.”

Instead of an altitude camp, Kwiatkowski stayed in the team’s hotel in Calpe, Spain, and travelled to France to recon part of next month’s race.

He returned to racing o day in the Criterium du Dauphine yesterday. He said that he went too hard too soon and paid on the climb mid-way into the 10.4-kilometre time trial in Lyon.

The next stages, including the Col du Beal summit finish today, should indicate if his training approach is paying off. After the race ends, he will preview the Tour’s stages in the Alps.

“Froome has just one goal. He prepared specifically for the Tour and previewed even the Pyrenean stages,” said http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/halong-bay-tours-day-trips-deluxe/ Kwiatkowski.

“I don’t compare myself to him. He’s at the same level with Contador. I’m on another level and I’m looking at my own progression. I believe in my chances and have support from the team.”

Michel Kwiatkowski in the Prologue of the 2014 Tour de Romandie

Michel Day trips from hanoi, Day trips Kwiatkowski in the Prologue of the 2014 Tour de Romandie

Michel Kwiatkowski in the Prologue of the 2014 Tour de Romandie

Michal Day trips to Nha Trang, Day trips Kwiatkowski wins Tour de Romandie prologue

Michal Kwiatkowski has won the Tour de Romandie prologue to take the first yellow jersey of the race that Chris …Continue reading »

 

Michal Kwiatkowski, Amstel Gold Race 2014

Michal chi tiet tham khao Kwiatkowski looks ahead after Amstel Gold Race disappointment

"He will be there again to fight with the biggest riders" says Omega Pharma-QuickStep sports director Tom Steels …Continue reading »

 

 

Chủ Nhật, 8 tháng 6, 2014

Here are 3 things to do to stretch travel budget

Call Classic tours, Vietnam classic tour, Journey Mekong 12 for Action has a team of volunteers that works to help people resolve disputes with companies.

(Photo: azcentral)

chi tiet tham khao  7 LINKEDINCOMMENTMORE

Vacations Journey Mekong, Classic tours are something to look forward to. But as we all know, they can cost a lot of money.

So if you've made a point to budget a certain amount for that trip, you want to stay on target and stay as stress-free as possible.

SmarterTravel.Com made a list of "9 secrets to a Happy Vacation" and, http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tours/classic-tours/ no surprise, they mostly revolve around planning ahead of time.

When you do, you can save and be less stressed tham khao o day because you're not surprised by fees or charges that you didn't account for as you booked your trip.

Here are three things to consider before you leave:

• Read up on your airline's baggage policy so you can budget for fees.

The rules may have changed since the last time you flew.

• Plan for how you'll get around while you're at the destination.

Taking a taxi, compared with public transportation or walking, can make a big difference to your wallet.

Since you're spending all of that money on a vacation, it can be an investment.

So here's one more a tip about deciding on travel insurance.

"Really think about something like travel insurance at the time of purchase, because you're thinking about money," said Anne Banas, executive editor for SmarterTravel.Com.

"You're thinking about your budget. That's when you're going to see all the fine print. So if you do it at that time and make a decision, I think that's going to be your best bet."

What else do you make sure to budget for when you travel? Send a tweet Classic tours, Journey Mekong to @stacia_naquin. Watch for more consumer stories and headlines on 12 News Today from 5 to 7 a.M. Monday through Friday.

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Face to Face: Murat Ersoy, Atlasjet | Travel Daily UK

Murat Ersoy

 

Murat Ersoy

Turkey-based Atlasjet recently launched flights from Luton to compete on the growing travelling market between the UK and Turkey. Travel Daily caught up with the airline’s president to find out more.

 

Why http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/hidden-northwest-tour-12-days-11-nights/ did you choose to fly from Luton and what has the response been like so far?

We chose London Luton because of its convenient location, as little as 25 minutes by train from central London stations. Passengers can be at St Pancras International in less than an hour. The airport also offers good train and bus connections between the East Midlands and north of England, making it widely accessible.

London Luton Airport is a favourite of business travellers as it is easy to travel there from the heart of London’s business community in the city and from the north-east of London.

London Luton also offers a big advantage for our business class passengers who can check-in Adventure Tours, Adventure Travel, Journey Mekong up to 45 minutes before departure. This makes a pleasant contrast to other airports, where passengers can face long waits.

Passengers can expect high standards of service at London Luton overall. This is something we at Atlasjet pride ourselves on and value greatly. Arrivals are impressively well-organised, ensuring a smooth and speedy transition from landing to exit.

 

Do you have plans to add frequencies or perhaps fly from UK airports in the future? What are your plans for the UK? 

We are already increasing the frequency of our London-Istanbul route, from four times a week when it started in May to daily, with effect from June. We aim to be a permanent player in this market and we have doc them plans to start operating from London Luton to Antalya next year.

Furthermore, these flights continue on to Ercan, North Cyprus without the need for passengers to change aircraft. We also offer various connections within Turkey and internationally including Antalya, Izmir, Gaziantep, Nizhnekamsk, Tehran and Tbilisi via Istanbul, with very convenient waiting times.

This approach shows our confidence in the UK market. Load factors are already pretty high and we’ve had fantastic feedback from passengers so far.

 

You have some strong competition in Turkey, what makes your offering different from others?

Our product is different from that of any other private Turkish operators. Firstly, we are not a low-cost airline. In fact, our motto is “first class service with economy prices.” Key to this is the EconomyPlus concept – the Atlasjet http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tours/adventure-tours/ equivalent of economy class, if you like. EconomyPlus tickets include delicious complimentary meals and beverages on board; 25kg luggage allowance; comfortable seats with generous, 30-inch leg-room; and allocated seats. Passengers can choose from a complimentary soft drink, beer or wine served with their delicious in-flight meal. In addition, each aircraft Adventure Tours, Vietnam adventure tours, Journey Mekong has a dedicated Business class section with even roomier seats and 35kg luggage allowance.

To further enhance the passenger experience, we started a brand new service on board London flights, the “Flying Chef”. The chef prepares daily, signature dishes from our menu of Turkish and international cuisine, giving demonstrations on board.

Last but by no means least, we operate to Ataturk Airport – Istanbul’s main airport, which is conveniently located close to Adventure Tours, Vietnam adventure tours, Journey Mekong the old town for sightseeing, and has easy transport connections to the business districts of Istanbul.

 

Are the travel trade in the UK aware of your brand and how do you plan to increase this awareness?

We have strong promotional campaigns in London aimed at both the http://www.Journeymekong.Com/tour/combined-adventure-tours-northern-landscapes/ British and local Turkish communities. We have advertisements on London buses, on rail and underground stations, in newspapers, on websites, tai day social media and some local Turkish TV channels.

We believe one of the key factors to business success is to establish strong partnerships. We have forged close relationships with sales agencies and tour operator partners in the UK market. We are part of a sales network of major OTAs (online travel agencies), so passengers from all over the world have easy access to Atlasjet tickets. I believe we have made a positive start with regard to brand awareness in the UK and we will continue with our promotional and marketing plans.

 

What other developments or news are in the pipeline for Atlasjet?

Our main goal is to make Atlasjet a brand that’s known and preferred worldwide. We envisage Atlasjet becoming a global brand that operates firstly in countries close to Turkey, before going on to operate at a wider level internationally.

We took the first steps last year by establishing a company in Northern Iraq called “Zagrosjet”. Zagrosjet started to operate scheduled and unscheduled flights for passengers and cargo in June 2013. Now, its flight operations cover a network including the Middle East, Turkey and Europe. Zagrosjet will start operating from Erbil to London Luton Airport in July 2014.

Our second step is “Atlasjet UA”, our Adventure Tours, Adventure Tour, Journey Mekong new airline established in the Ukraine. We recently received the AOC (Air operator’s certificate) for Atlasjet UA and we plan to start operations soon. Based in Kiev, Atlasjet UA will operate with three aircraft to start with and grow its fleet each and every year. To start off with, it will operate to destinations within three hours’ flight time, with long-haul destinations added to the network thereafter.

In addition to Zagrosjet and Atlasjet UA, we have laid the foundations for exciting new projects to further our plans for globalisation. We will announce these in the weeks to come.