International Destinations

Antigua and Barbuda

Did You Know ... ? Antigua’s craggy coastline provides 365 beaches, literally one for each day of the year. It is illegal to wear camouflage or military apparel in Antigua. Barbudans count only a half dozen surnames; all are descended from a group of slaves who arrived in the 17th

2012-01-17T11:44:45-05:00January 17th, 2012|International Countries, International Destinations|

Antarctica

Did You Know ... ? The continent has 25 airports and 53 heliports; runways are solid ice. The marker for the geographic South Pole is moved each year because the ice is always moving. The ice holds about 70% of the world's fresh water; if it melted, Earth's oceans would

2012-01-17T11:44:22-05:00January 17th, 2012|International Countries, International Destinations|

Anguilla

Did You Know ... ? Amerindians colonized the island 4,000 years ago; artifacts date to 1300 B.C. The provisional government in 1967 asked to be an administrative territory of the U.S. but was turned down. In Latin, Anguilla means eel, referring to the shape of the main island. The indigenous

2012-01-17T11:43:58-05:00January 17th, 2012|International Countries, International Destinations|

Tortola, British Virgin Islands

Did You Know...? An international banking center, Tortola counts around 500,000 registered financial businesses. More than 80% of BVIslanders live on Tortola. Laurance Rockefeller purchased and donated the land for B.V.I.’s Sage Mountain National Park (1964). Road, as in Road Town, is the nautical name for a protected and safe

2012-01-17T11:41:29-05:00January 17th, 2012|International Destinations, International Touring Areas|

Swiss countryside/villages

Did You Know ... ? Muhlebach boasts Switzerland’s oldest village center, with houses from the 14th/15th centuries. The Nestle company was founded in Vevey on Lake Geneva, where it is still headquartered. Gruyere is the traditional choice for cheese fondues and French onion soup. Daniel Peter, cofounder of Peter, Cailler

2012-01-17T11:40:57-05:00January 17th, 2012|International Destinations, International Touring Areas|

Swiss Alps

Did You Know ... ? The Rhine and Rhone rivers originate in the Swiss Alps within 15 miles of one another. Early ski racers were dairy farmers skiing on summer grazing grounds; the Swiss still cheer skiers with cowbells. Jungfraujoch, at 11,333 feet above sea level, is the highest train

2012-01-17T11:40:27-05:00January 17th, 2012|International Destinations, International Touring Areas|
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