Archive for the ‘Travel’ Category

Ghandruk bans concrete buildings

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

: Tourist village Ghandruk has banned construction of concrete buildings going against the standard norms. Annapurna Conservation Area Project (ACAP) and Local Tourism Management Committee have issued the directive to conserve the originality of the traditional Gurung village that is known for stone houses with stone roofs, after a surge in construction of concrete buildings of late.

“We have asked for construction of houses without using cement and steel rods and asked the modern homes built during the conflict period to get a traditional look,” conservation officer of ACAP in Ghandruk Sudip Adhikari said.

About half a dozen modern houses were built in Ghandruk during the conflict period flouting the standard norms though the standard had been set up almost a decade ago to conserve traditional homes in the model village of Kaski. POKHARA, May 24The Maoist rebels had bombed the local ACAP office in 2001 and forced displacement of the office, making the act of monitoring difficult. “After the closure of ACAP office, we ourselves were also not in a position to enforce the rule,” president of the Local Tourism Management Committee Davin Gurung said.

Gurung said that the rule has been employed to conserve the 400-500 year-old heritage of the village. “Hundreds of tourists from abroad come here to see these traditional houses. If these houses do not remain, who will come to visit them in the future?” Gurung asked.

The few modern homes built flouting the norms have been asked just to modify the face to give them a traditional look without completely demolishing them and the owners have also agreed to do so. Proprietor of Annapurna Hotel Amrita Gurung said, “I had built the concrete building demolishing the old one after the older leaked water and the woods also decayed.”

She now plans to roof the building with stones by making it inclined and cover the railings with stones to give it a traditional look.

Hotel Mountain´s Ganesh Gurung and Hotel Buddha´s Jimbal Lama have also agreed to modify their concrete buildings bearing expenses of up to Rs 700,000 each. Tourism is the major source of income in the hilly village that yields only potato, wheat and millet due to high altitude.

There are around 80 quality hotels that can accommodate around 1,000 tourists in the area from Syauli Bazar to Annapurna Base Camp, says the local committee putting the number of other registered hotels in the area at 200.

Mount Everest Day on May 29

Friday, May 15th, 2009

A joint meeting of Nepal Association of Tour and Travel Agents, Hotel Association Nepal, Trekking Association of Nepal, Nepal Association of Tour Operators and Nepal Association of Rafting Agents Thursday decided to mark the .

The meeting also decided to take out a rally and hold a get together of tourism entrepreneurs and people affiliated with this industry on May 29 along with other programmes.

Additionally, the Mount Everest Prize of Rs 100,000 and Tenzing Hillary Prize of Rs 50,000 established by the Ministry of Tourism and Civil Aviation would be provided on the Day.

The Day will be observed for the second time in Nepal is also marked in Denmark, Doha, Malaysia, Dhaka and Sydney as a Nepal Festival, the NATTA said.

Best Bar Tour: Rome Copenhagen, Dubai

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

Kathmandu: Who doesn’t want to holiday? With ancient monuments, rich cultural heritage and historical traditions in most happening cities in the world, some of the finest holiday destinations await your arrival.

Copenhagen: Home to the world famous statue of The Little Mermaid, Copenhagen is the most European of the Scandinavian cities. This capital of Denmark is home to rich architecture and artistic brilliance. Since the 20th century, Copenhagen has grown into a thriving modern city with more than 1.8 million inhabitants living in and around the greater Copenhagen area.

Copenhageners just love their easy-going lifestyle and high taxes that pay for their well-being. Copenhagen is considered as a centre of culture and arts with plenty of sightseeing and entertainment activities to offer visitors, together with a multitude of shopping facilities and the longest pedestrian street system in the world.

Rome: A busy city with an enormous number of monuments, churches, squares so famous it’s impossible to shortlist the must-see landmarks.

Even if you see the Colosseum, the Spanish Steps and the famous Trevi Fountain, on your next visit you’ll find plenty of new areas to discover.

When it comes to churches, there is one must see however — St Peter’s Basilica, which is the largest church in the world and the ultimate symbol of Catholicism.

Rome’s glorious past still lives in every corner of this beautiful city. The ancient is mixed with the modern, and what results is something better than both. Rome, The Eternal City, is a vibrant city, a center of culture, art and business. Walking through Rome is like stepping into the past, and experiencing the culture that has influenced almost every part of the world.

Dubai: One of seven emirates that constitute the United Arab Emirates, is a place of fascinating contrasts, a distinctive blend of modern city and timeless desert, east and west, old and new.

Known in the region as the “city of merchants”, Dubai has, for generations, welcomed seafarers and traders to its shores. The city has superb facilities for sports, shopping, dining and entertainment.

From the holidaymaker seeking a relaxing break away from the clouds and crowds, to the active tourist looking for a new and exciting experience, this modern travel destination has something for all generations.

If you think you’re lucky, all you need to do is buy a bottle of Carlsberg and these destinations could be the ultimate holiday experience could be yours.

Climate change: UK experts for total phasing out of CO2

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

London, May 1 (PTI) Lowering the emission rate of carbon dioxide is not enough and the world needs to phase out the hazardous emission altogether to prevent climate change, according to experts at the University of Oxford.

Two studies published in ‘Nature’ show that the risk of dangerous climate change is primarily determined by the accumulation of carbon dioxide emissions over time, not by short-term emission rates.

The first study, led by Dr Myles Allen from Oxford’s Department of Physics shows that total cumulative emissions of one trillion tonnes of carbon (1 Tt C, or 3,670 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide) over the entire ‘anthropocene’ period 1750-2500 causes a most likely peak warming of two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial temperatures.

Most of the world’s governments are committed to avoiding warming in excess of two degrees Celsius. Of this budget, emissions to 2008 have already consumed approximately half (0.5 Tt C).

A second study, led by Dr Malte Meinshausen from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impacts Research and co-authored by Dr Allen and Dr David Frame from the Oxford’s Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, finds that a total emission budget of about 0.9 Tt C gives a best-estimate peak warming by 2100 of two degrees Celsius, including the effects of other human influences on climate.

Cathay Pacific refuses to let cabin crew wear masks

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Cathay Pacific cabin crew are demanding that they be allowed to wear face masks and gloves on flights to protect themselves against swine flu, but Hong Kong’s biggest airline has refused.

The 5,000-member Cathay Pacific Flight Attendants Union (FAU) said that cabin crew were increasingly fearful after the WHO raised its pandemic alert to level five, the second highest.

However, Cathay Pacific has refused their request, saying they can only wear face masks and gloves in specific instances of dealing with passengers suspected of suffering swine flu.

There have been no reported cases of swine flu in Hong Kong, but the airline flies to the US and Europe, where cases have been confirmed.

FAU chairperson Becky Kwan said the company appeared to be too concerned about ‘image’ to allow face masks and gloves to be worn by cabin crew.

‘If they continue to refuse our reasonable request, we will ask the Department of Health to intervene on our behalf,’ she said.

‘I think (Cathay’s refusal) is to do with image. But if we send out the message that we are safe and hygienic by wearing masks and gloves, it will improve our image with passengers.’

A spokesperson for Cathay Pacific said: ‘The airline has increased the stock of face masks available on flights as a precautionary measure under normal situations, cabin crew should not wear gloves during the flight, including meal service and tray collection, as the use of gloves for airline workers and cabin crew has not been recommended by the Department of Health or any other international health agency.’

New Zealand fears swine flu will affect tourism

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Wellington, April 29 (Xinhua) New Zealand’s Prime Minister John Key warned Wednesday that the swine flu outbreak might have side-impact on the country’s tourism.

He made his comment following the laboratory confirmation Tuesday night of three cases of swine flu and the health ministry revealing that 179 people in New Zealand were in isolation.

Key, who also serves as tourism minister, said India had issued a travel warning and some Japanese tourists had cancelled trips to New Zealand.

‘It is important to put it in perspective,’ he said. ‘It is highly likely that most countries will have some outbreak of swine flu.’

New Zealand was handling it well and had high stocks of Tamiflu, the most effective drug recommended by the World Health Organisation. ‘But obviously it is of concern to us that there could be a side-impact on tourism here in New Zealand,’ he said.

Key said he understood that India had issued a travel warning on a large number of countries, including the US, Canada and Britain.

New Zealand is the sixth country in the world to have confirmed cases of the virus.

On Wednesday morning, health officials confirmed 14 cases of influenza A in the Auckland region, including the three people who had the new swine flu strain of influenza A.

Twelve of the influenza A cases are from a 25-person Rangitoto College group which returned from Mexico last Saturday.

Apa to fly climate banner on Everest

Saturday, April 11th, 2009

WWF Nepal launched its year-long Global Awareness Campaign on Climate Change in the Himalayas Friday. At the launch of the campaign 18 times Everest summiteer Apa Sherpa was presented a banner with a message on climate change.

The campaign aims to raise awareness all over the world on climate change in the Himalayas through a series of events throughout the year.

Jon Miceler, the managing director, Eastern Himalayas, WWF-US presented the banner to Sherpa. Sherpa will fly the banner that reads “Stop Climate Change – Let the Himalayas Live!” at the Everest summit.

Citing the Himalayas as the youngest and the most vulnerable mountains to climate change, Anil Manandhar, country representative, WWF Nepal said, “The world has not paid attention to the plight of the Himalayas and we want the humanity to know that the Himalayas are bearing the brunt of our wrongdoings.”

Sherpa who has lost several members of his family members due to Glacial Lake Outburst Flood (GLOF) said, “This is my 19th ascent to the top of the world and over the years I have seen a measurable difference in the climatic conditions there.”

Speaking at the event, Dawa Steven Sherpa, managing director of Asian Trekking said, “The disastrous impacts of climate change are visible in the Everest region. The Himalayas pose a warning to humankind before it reaches a tipping point.”

Besides, WWF plans to co-organize the “Beat the GLOF- Action Run” alongside iDEAS and North Face, to raise awareness on GLOF issues. Athletes of national and international fame will be participating in the event carrying the climate change messages running through tracks and landscapes that will be lost in the event of the Imja glacial lake outburst.

Facebook registers 200 million users

Friday, April 10th, 2009

Five years after it was founded in a Harvard dorm room, the online social networking site Facebook has registered its 200 millionth user, the site confirmed Thursday.

‘Growing rapidly to 200 million users is a really good start, but we’ve always known that in order for Facebook to help people represent everything that is happening in their world, everyone needs to have a voice,’ said Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

‘This is why we are working hard to build a service that everyone, everywhere can use, whether they are a person, a company, a president or an organization working for change.’

The company is considered to be the largest social networking site on the Internet, dwarfing the 130 million members affiliated with rival site MySpace.com.

Facebook says that 100 million users visit the site every day, and users have an average of 120 ‘friends’ on their networks. The service is available in 40 languages, with 70 percent of its users outside the US.

Facebook is also one of the largest privately-held companies active on the internet and has reportedly repeatedly rebuffed buyout offers from web giants like Google, Yahoo and Microsoft.

In 2007, Microsoft invested $240 million in the site in 2007 in return for a 1.6 percent equity stake in a deal that valued Facebook at approximately $15 billion.

Robot being readied for first lunar construction project

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Researchers are readying a robot with the help of an artist to place a little red cottage on the moon, as a symbol of what humankind can achieve.

The goal is for the robot named Roony, to be able to place the cabin on the moon in 2012, under the project ‘House on the Moon’, a collaboration between Malardalen University and versatile artist Mikael Genberg.

Genberg’s little cabin, barn red with white trim, will be rolled off the space rocket by Roony, into a stable lot, where it will assemble the first building on the moon.

‘We want to teach students who think creatively to work together, use the very latest technology, and dare to set their sights high. If you aim for the stars, at least you’ll reach the treetops or even the moon,’ said Lars Asplund, professor at Malardalen University.

Working together, the students are to go all the way from idea to construction and programming to finally having a real robot.

‘We’re good at that here at Malardalen University,’ asserts Asplund, Sweden’s leading robot inventor and a good role model in the program.

Mikael Genberg is an artist from Vasteras, who is best known for his alternative living environments. Today Hotel Woodpecker is located 13 metres up in the highest tree in Vasa Park in Vasteras, said a Swedish Research Council release.

China reopens Tibet to foreign tourists

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

“Foreign tourists have begun entering Tibet” afterlifting of the suspension. A total of 25 tourist groups willarrive in Lhasa, capital of Tibet Autonomous Region, onSunday,” the official Xinhua news agency reported.

A group of 11 German tourists will be the first foreigntourist group allowed in Tibet after the government announcedto reopen local tourism to foreign visitors, it said.

Foreigners who want to visit Tibet has to obtain specialpermission from authorities. Xinhua said that more than 500foreign tourists were expected to visit Tibet this month.

China announced the latest travel ban on foreigners inFebruary and March because of the Tibetan New Year on February25 and anniversary of the anti-government riots in Lhasa onMarch 14 last year and Beijing’s crackdown on pro-Dalai Lamademonstrators.

Tourism plays key role in Tibet’s economic development.While tourism earnings accounted for 0.2 per cent of the GDPin 1990, it made up 5.7 per cent of the GDP in 2008.

Tourism earnings jumped from USD 1 million in 1990 toUSD 332 million in 2008, a 329.2-fold increase.