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Photo Of The Day: Grand Canyon After The Storm
Sometimes, the wait is worth it. After surviving a snow, hail and wind storm, Flickr user oilfighter captured this breathtaking image of the sun breaking through the clouds into the crests of the Grand Canyon in Arizona.
In the Gadling Flickr Pool, he recounts the adventure:
It has snowed the whole day at Grand Canyon, causing us to be confined to the Grand Canyon North Rim Lodge. Finally, during the late afternoon, the clouds broke a little, and the snow finally stopped. We jumped into the car and drove out to Point Royal. As I walk towards the view point, the weather was beginning to turn south again, and I saw a group of photographers take cover and shouting at each other to run back to the car.
I got setup on the edge as the overlook was clearing out. Finally, it was just me left. It began to hail as I was setting up, and the wind was really strong, which was a good thing. I was betting that the wind would clear a hole in the clouds. Not long after I got setup, the scene unfolded in front of me. It was amazing! The light streaks lasted all but 1 minute, but it was enough for me to take a few pictures. This is probably one of the most dramatic pictures I've taken.
Do you have any great stories behind your travel photos? Upload your shots to the Gadling Flickr Pool and your image could be selected as our Photo of the Day.
Today Hindus Celebrate Diwali, The Festival Of Lights (PHOTOS)
Across the world today, Hindus are celebrating Diwali, one of the religion's most important holidays. Popularly known as the "festival of lights," Hindus mark the occasion by decorating their homes with flowers, paper lanterns, powders and earthen oil lamps called Diyas, which signify the triumph of good over evil. Other traditions associated with the holiday include cleaning your house, wearing new clothes, sharing sweets with your family and lighting off firecrackers to drive away evil spirits.
Officially, the holiday celebrates the homecoming of the God Ram after vanquishing the demon king Ravana. That's the abridged version of the story, as it took the God Ram 14 years to do so. The holiday also honors the Hindu goddess of wealth, Lakshmi.
In India, the festival also marks the end of the harvest season, so many people give thanks for the year gone by and pray for a good harvest in the year to come. However, the festival is celebrated across the globe – from Nepal to New Zealand, and also in Fiji, Britain, Sri Lanka, Trinidad and Tobago, and the United States.
Interested in seeing more of Diwali? Click through the gallery below to see how the festival is being celebrated in various countries, including India, Bangladesh and Pakistan.
Gallery: Diwali 2012: The Indian Festival of Lights
Around The World Without Flying, Irish Guy Wages War On Thoughtless Living
"I work online, meaning I can work from anywhere with Internet access," says Doherty on his website, simply titled ndoherty.com. "I make most of my money from web design, but a few other income streams include affiliate marketing, donations and an online course I created to help people overcome fear."
It's that whole notion of helping others overcome fear that caught our attention. Based on his book, "Disrupting The Rabblement," Doherty brings key ingredients needed in any recipe for an extended trip around the world where self-reliance is required.
Is There A Perfect Way To Board A Plane? Researchers Say Yes
The idea is to accommodate the heightened Chinese flying demand and relative scarcity of planes. Western Australia's ScienceNetwork reports that researchers are doing something new by looking into boarding patterns, as opposed to just luggage congestion and takeoff scheduling.
The findings? Move over, screaming children and slowpokes.
The researchers found that there is an "optimal" way to board a plane, and it involves categorizing passengers by their "individual properties."
Under our current model of assigned seating, passengers at the front can reach their fastest possible boarding speed, but after that things slow down. The "optimal" system would categorize you by your luggage type, timeliness at the gate and other factors, and sort you into boarding order that way.
Although this is nice in theory, there are some obvious problems. Math can't, after all, account for factors like passengers' personalities, how distracted they are or even how large they are. Oh, and the fact that humans aren't generally as predictable as variables in an equation.
[Image credit: Flickr user Reuben Whitehouse]
5 November Festivals That Have Nothing To Do With The Season
Fall Festivals in September and October welcome changing colors on trees and events better done in cool fall weather. November rolls in with Thanksgiving taking much of the spotlight for our travel attention as holiday plans firm up. But November is also host to a variety of festivals and events that really have nothing at all to do with holidays, turkeys or shopping.
Suncoast Dixieland Jazz Classic in Clearwater Beach, Florida, is one of the largest jazz festivals on the East Coast, drawing professional musicians from all over the United States, as well as aspiring young musicians. More than 20 bands will play in several venues.
Big Sur Half Marathon in Monterey, California, on November 18 goes through historic downtown Monterey, over to Cannery Row, down the shore of Monterey Bay, into downtown Pacific Grove, and back along the coast to the grand finish at Custom House Plaza, Monterey State Historic Park.
Chicago Fine Chocolate Show is a fine chocolate & culinary event that features chocolate creations from around the world. Showcasing over 100 world-class chocolatiers, samples are offered to taste and specialty items are available for purchase.
Looking Inside Online Reviews To Find Out What Travelers Love (And Hate)
The good news for hotels is that the number of positive comments outnumbers the negative by a landslide. Great service, for example, has nearly nine times the number of comments than unprofessional or incompetent service.
The company, which has pioneered a product called TrustScore (similar to Klout for hotels), has tracked top rants and raves by number of mentions on online review sites, tracking data from more than 200 review websites in 23 languages worldwide. Are any of these your pet peeves?
Top Rants:
- Unprofessional or incompetent service
- Small rooms
- Expensive or overpriced
- Tasteless or bad breakfast
- Bad food
- Dirty rooms
- Unfriendly service
- Bad bathrooms
- Loud or noisy room
- Great service
- Great location
- Good room
- Great food
- Great breakfast
- Clean room and/or hotel
- Good, affordable price
- Good bed
- Nice view
In general, we'd agree that we become upset about the complaints listed above as well, and most of these are things that travelers could avoid by careful online research prior to booking.
[Image Credit: TrustYou]
The New New Orleans: Life Takes A New Direction After Katrina
Until Hurricane Sandy slammed into New York and New Jersey in October, New Orleans was perhaps the biggest urban natural disaster story the country had ever seen. Seven years after Hurricane Katrina, the city has gotten back on its feet, regrouping after the storm of a lifetime.
Now, New Orleans isn't just rebuilding what it was before. It's beginning to move forward. Across, the city, new people, places and points of view are adding flavors to an already rich gumbo. People who weren't in New Orleans before Katrina are helping to craft the city's future. And places that have been derelict since the storm, and even before it, are coming back to life.
This New New Orleans has many of the elements of other successful cities. It's attracting entrepreneurs, through the same kind of incubators you find in Silicon Valley. Young professionals, like the Emerging Philanthropists of New Orleans, a grassroots giving circle, are contributing money and time. Big name companies, like General Electric, are making investments and creating jobs.
But the most visible evidence of the New New Orleans is in the city's food industry, which has doubled in size since before Katrina, and which has broken away from some of the traditions of the past. If New Orleans once rested on its food laurels, as critic Alan Richman proclaimed a year after the storm, it's not doing so any longer.
"The best thing that happened with that experience, with Katrina, was that it forced people who were on their knees to come back and compete," says restaurant owner and entrepreneur Joel Dondis (above).
"Whoever came back was going to get better. The beauty is what you see today."
Gallery: The New New Orleans
A Run-In With The Iraqi Police
All I wanted was to buy an Iraq National Football Team uniform for my son, a perfectly normal thing for a father to do on his first day in Baghdad. The problem is, doing something normal in Baghdad can land you in serious trouble.
We were in one of the city's many souks, those famous Middle Eastern markets where you can buy just about anything. There were shops for metalwork, books, hardware, music, antiques real and fake, and even a stall where you could buy Iraqi police and army uniforms without actually being in the police or army.
I was with a group of nine other adventure travelers. Accompanying us were two plainclothes officers from the Interior Ministry who were supposed to keep us in their sight at all times. We also had a driver and an interpreter/guide named Mohammad. I'd already drafted Mohammad into the task of finding my kid something none of his buddies had.
As my companions visited a medieval mosque, Mohammed told me of a street of sports shops nearby. In the strange geography of souks, shops selling the same items tend to cluster together, so off we went to the sports street.
We didn't take our guards. That was a mistake.
Gallery: The Markets of Iraq
Watch Man Break Record For Freediving Under Ice
If you're one of those people who goes down to the local swimming pool and attempts to swim the length of the pool twice without coming up for a breath, I have news for you:
Stig Severinsen owns you.
In the YouTube video above, the record-holding, freediving Dane (who also casually has a PhD in medicine) shatters the Guinness world record for longest freedive beneath ice on a single breath of air.
Oh yeah, and he's in a Speedo.
Sure, this happened in March, 2010, but who cares? The concept alone is insane and the video is astonishing and wildly entertaining. Notice that when he successfully pops out of the icy cold water he opts to flash the "OK" sign, speak in English for some unbeknownst reason, and then casually relax with his bare arms on the ice sheet as if it's a post-massage hot tub session at the resort.
Just for fun, let's just look at a few more pieces of trivia for the intriguing Dr. Severinsen. According to his Wikipedia page, this 39-year-old human lung enjoyed such childhood pursuits as underwater rugby (in which he competed for the Danish National team), and also dabbled in underwater hockey (where he strangely enough competed for the Spanish National Team).
Combining his love of breath holding with yoga and physiology, the adult Stig set out to redefine the realm of possibility by shattering numerous freediving and Guinness World Records.
Around the same time of this stunt, Stig set a second Guinness record by holding his breath for 20 minutes and 10 seconds in a tropical swimming pool. Oh wait, that's right. It wasn't a swimming pool. It was a tropical shark tank. As if being the only human to ever hold his breath underwater for 20 minutes wasn't enough, he decided to immerse himself in a cauldron of sharks.
Not one to rest on his laurels, however, Stig would break his own record two years later by holding his breath for 22 minutes, and for his efforts he was subsequently declared to be "The Ultimate Superhuman" by the Discovery Channel.
Move over Dos Equis man; Stig Severinsen might just be the most interesting man in the world.
Is Illegal Poaching In Africa And Asia A Threat To US Security?
While meeting with a group of conservationists, environmentalists and ambassadors at the State Department last week, Clinton called for a unified strategy across a host of regions to help combat the illegal trade of elephant ivory and rhino horns. Those two items in particular have sparked the recent rise in poaching in Africa as suppliers look to fill the rising demand in parts of Asia. In launching this new initiative, the Secretary of State pledged $100,000 to help get new enforcement efforts off the ground, but perhaps more importantly was her announcement that the U.S. intelligence community would lend their talents to the fight for the first time.
At first glance, using U.S. intelligent assets to fight illegal poaching doesn't necessarily seem like a good use of resources. But much of the poaching is done by rebel forces and local bandits who then use the funds to purchase better weapons and more advanced equipment. Well-armed and funded militias can be a direct threat to the stability of allies throughout Africa and Asia, where a number of fledgling governments are struggling with so many other important social and economic issues. Additionally, because poachers move across borders with impunity and ship their precious cargoes around the globe, the U.S. intelligence community seems best suited to track their movements. Their efforts could lead to not only finding the poachers while they are in the field, but also tracking down buyers in Asia who are funding these hunts.