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Abha Malpani

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Photo of the day (11.10.08)



This is a shot you expect to see at the beginning or the end of a great film. Taken by fellow Gadling contributor Anna Brones, the picture is of Lake Mcdonald in Glacier National Park, Montana. It's incredible how you can see a crystal clear reflection of the mountains in the lake.

I particularly like this picture because it transmits the calm and serenity of the place, you can feel it though this image without having been there. I imagine sunset or sunrise at this spot would be spectacular. When I travel, I always look out for such spots. I can see myself sitting on the edge of this ramp with my feet dangling in the water, reflecting, contemplating, or just being. Sigh.

Thanks for the photo, Anna!

Have any travel pictures that might stir some emotion? Add them to the Gadling photo pool on Flickr and we might just pick it as our Photo of the Day.



Photo of the day (11.03.08)



I really like this picture because it's made something very normal (rocks in a river) look beautiful. It's hard to appreciate such scenes unless you were there; I'm sure a vertical panoramic view of this place would be naturally beautiful. Taken in Daejon (Korea) by LadyExpat, the water here looks like glass, or even a mirror; the reflections are familiar, and the blue palette adds some emotion to it all. I can remember more than a few occasions where I've sat on a rock, facing such a view, and contemplated everything from life to grasshoppers, haven't you?

Want your pic considered for Gadling's Photo of the Day? Submit it here.

Stand By Me while traveling the world

Award winning producer and film director Mark Johnson, recorded a guy on his street singing "Stand By Me"; then he traveled around the world and recorded about 100 other local artists doing the same. He edited some of the snippets of their footage into a video, and this (video below) is the result. It's just too awesome. There is also a documentary film co-directed by Johnson, expanding on the same idea -- you can see the trailer here.



This initiative of course is part of a larger program called "Playing For Change" which aims to connect the world through music. The foundation provides musicians around the world facilities to play music and enhance their skills, therefore not only making their lives better but also demonstrating how music brings people together regardless of cultural and socio-economic differences. Current projects include building a music school in Gugulethu (South Africa) to provide the youth there an alternative to the daily violence and deprivation they face; rebuilding and enhancing Tibetan refugee centers in Dharamsala and Kathmandu; and building an arts center in Johannesburg.

Here's a recently recorded interview with Johnson by PBS's Bill Moyers, and a Q&A with him on ComingSoon.net.

Shaping the world: The making of globes (video)

This is one of those videos you are unlikely to look for yourself, but once you find it, it spurs curiosity and you watch with interest.

In around 4 minutes, this video shows how globes are made in a globe factory. With country borders and place names changing constantly, putting together an updated globe with precision is quite a challenge. The video is the making of a standard desk globe. A bit of Googling and I found that there are hundreds of types of globes these days.

I remember being gifted a beach-ball size desk globe on my 10th birthday. It had a bulb in it and every night before going to bed I would switch-off all the lights, turn on the bulb in my globe, and stare at it with amuse as I turned it slowly. I would then start plotting routes and making up my own adventure travel stories as I discovered new lands. I still have that globe and will never part with it.

I know it's just a globe. But being able to see the world, topography and all, on a scale (rough) of 1:40 million, is pretty incredible. That's exactly why it's worth watching how it's done. The video lacks details on how they do the technical drawings pre-globe-making, but I imagine you would need a lot more than 4 minutes to explain that.


[Via kottke.org]

Oh, and Happy Halloween!

October 31 onwards: £1 rooms at the Hoxton Hotel

The last time we posted about cheap rooms ($20 rooms at the Leading Hotels of the World), we were thanked for the information, but for nothing as the promotion failed.

Here's an excerpt from an email sent by LHW to fellow Gadling blogger Jerry Guo, apologizing for the situation: "...We are extremely sorry for the inconveniences we have caused and regret to advise you that the US$19.28 email promotion scheduled for tomorrow October 2nd shall be postponed. Although our original back-up plan provided a viable solution for the 150,000 people who were registered, it was met with some confusion over submission procedures and timing. In addition, we have become increasingly concerned that a large number of non-registered respondents plan to submit forms which would inundate the system and greatly diminish your chances of securing a US$19.28 rate."

However, one failed promotion of X company doesn't mean that a similar promotion by Y company will fail too. So for what it's worth, here's how you can *try* (again) to get £1 rooms at the Hoxton Hotel in London.

Starting October 31, at 12 noon (7am New York Time), 500
£1 and 500 £29 rooms at the Hoxton will be up for grabs on their website. The rooms are available between 1st November 2008 – 31st January 2009.

Last July when the hotel ran this promotion, the 1000 rooms were sold within 11 minutes, so other than being able to book quickly, you're going to need a large stroke of luck to get one. However, so that it's fair, you are only allowed to book 1 room for 1 night at £1.

Here's the link with all the information and a step-by-step guide as to how to avail of this promotion.

(Oh and don't forget that when local daylight time is about to reach Sunday, 2 November 2008, 02:00:00 clocks in NY are turned backward 1 hour).

Good luck!

Photo of the day (10.27.08)



Flickr user t3mujin has done a phenomenal job capturing this wave splash fiercely against a rock. This is the sort of picture we have all seen when by the sea, but almost impossible to catch properly on camera. This one is so clear and well caught, it almost looks photoshoped or painted over.

It's a shame that there is no other information about the photo. From the tags, it looks like it could have been taken in Portugal or in Iceland. Anyway, it's a great shot difficult to get right, so well done t3mujin!

Got a photo you want considered for Photo of the Day? Submit it to the Gadling Flickr pool.

2008 Lowell Thomas Travel Journalism Award Winners


The 2008 Society of American Travel Writers Lowell Thomas Travel Journalism Competition recently announced its winners. In its 24th year running, the competition attracted 1,356 entries in 24 categories from which 81 winners were selected. The competition, named after American writer and traveler Lowell Thomas, is today considered to be one of the most prestigious awards in the world of travel journalism. The entries were judged by members of the Missouri School of Journalism Faculty.

National Geographic
and the Boston Globe took most of the awards, and freelance writer/photographer Christopher P. Baker won the Lowell Thomas travel journalist of the year. Other than him, and bronze winner of the same category -- Sarah Wildman, all other winners are part of established travel titles such as the Miami Herald, the Chicago Tribune, the Globe and Mail, the New York Times, and a bunch of other American news titles.

You can find the list of gold winners with relevant links to their stories at the LA Times Daily Deal travel blog; the LA Times won a gold for the best travel section. A list of all the winners (gold, silver, and bronze, across all categories can be found on the Society of American Travel Writers website.

So, if you're looking to read some good travel-writing, spend some time going through the links of the winners. The full list of winners has the titles of the winning stories so you can dig them up to read. I thought I would go through them all and give you my top three, but there are just too many good ones! Perhaps a good time-spend idea for a Sunday afternoon.

Photo of the Day (20.10.08)

I can't imagine what it may feel like being around a glacier, just like I can't imagine what it may feel like being on Mars. This is a picture of the Franz Josef Glacier on the west coast of New Zealand.

I grew up in the UK, so I know the cold, and have made a million snowmen, but glaciers to me are a whole different planet. When I see pictures like this one taken by flickr user Martin O'Connell, I get overwhelmed by the idea of visiting such a place as it seems oddly dreamlike but it's very real. It excites me and scares me at the same time.

I want to reach into this picture and touch that block of ice. Half of me wants it to feel like a large lump of shaving foam, but I know that it's probably as hard as a rock. I'd also want to break a bit off and put it in my mouth. Yes, I want to eat a bit of a glacier -- please tell me I'm not the only one with such thoughts?

Have any great travel photos you'd like to share with the world? Add them to the Gadling photo pool on Flickr and we might just choose it as our Photo of the Day.

Beware pirates: This billionaire yacht will not be easy prey

Russion billionaire, Chelsea Football Club owner, and the world's 15th richest person -- Roman Abramovich (who's net value is estimated at US$23.5 billion) -- has decided to add another luxury yacht to his 5-yacht "navy".

Called the "Eclipse", the yacht will built at a cost of around US$345 million. It will be 550-feet long (half the size of World War II battleship Bismarck), making it the largest private yacht ever built.

Of course, a man with such wealth and a super-yacht cannot sail anywhere without top-rated protection. Pirates are hiding in international waters: in August pirates raided a luxury yacht in the Mediterranean, and in September Somali pirates seized a Ukranian ship and demanded a US$35 million ransom. According to the International Maritime Bureau, last year, pirates attacked 269 vessels, took nearly 300 hostages and killed five people.

The boat will have bullet-proof windows, armor plating on the bridge and around the 41-year-old Russian tycoon's cabin, radar equipment designed to give warnings of incoming missiles, anti-bugging equipment, and 70 crew members that include former SAS and Special Boat Service personnel. Should his yacht be attacked, he can escape in a yellow submarine that can dive up to 160 feet. The rest of the information on the boat is a secret. All pretty James Bond, eh?

Vahrehvah.com: A superb resource for Indian cooking

Finding this Indian cooking website has changed my world. I can cook basic Indian food, thanks to my mum, but when it comes to anything a little complicated, I get a lazy -- especially because (from experience) -- after a hours of work, the end result has not been worth the effort. I would also blame the disaster dish on me living in Spain: "All the spices are not available and what are available just don't taste the same." It's all rubbish. What I needed was a good guide and I think this is it!

A bad translation of "vah reh vah" in English would be "that's just awesome", but it's enough to give you the gist. The website has recipes of over 230 Indian dishes, but the best part is that many of the Indian recipes have a video guide to go with them.

The "Vah chef" Sanjay Thumma is a great host. Very Indian. But great. His passion and talent for cooking is evident in the videos. For example, in his video that teaches you how to prepare Hydrabadi Biryani (one my favorite Indian dishes), he gets a little emotional in the end; when he tastes what he made, I'm pretty sure that his eyes welled-up with joy!

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