Saturday 28 December 2013

The Beauty of Kanas Lake Captivate Tourist Hearts

Kanas (Also called Hanas which is the name used by local Kazakhsare) is a nature reserve which means beautiful, rich and mysterious in Mongolian, could be most fascinating resort in Northern Xinjiang. Kanas are located in the Altay Mountains of Northern Xinjiang in China. Travelers rave about the wonderful alpine scenery at R&R-perfect Kanas Lake, a long finger of a lake found in the southernmost reaches of the Siberian taiga ecosystem. The Kanas nature reserve bounding is the only one in China to border three other nations - Russia, Mongolia and Kazakhstan.
It is most popular natural ecosystem formed by lakes, glaciers, grasslands, forest, and rivers. But the main highlight of nature reserve is Kanas Lake, located 1,375 meters above sea level, and covers an area of 45.73 square KM. Kanas Lake is 140 KM away from Burqin County, and 246 kilometers away from Altay City. Well you can take a plane to Altay City or take a coach to Burqin County at Urumqi, and then rent a motorcar to get there. Moreover; there are free bus rides available after you buy the tickets of Kanas. The service is quiet good and all the places are quiet well connected. You can also ride horses with local guides. The attractiveness of Kanas Lake is more boosted by the changes in its color according to the season. During the thaw in May it is a deep grayish blue, which by June, when it reflects summers mountain greenery, has turned sky blue.
The long bean-shaped lake provides rise to the Kanas River which flows out for about 125 kilometer across pristine, alpine forest before discharging into the Irtysh at Burqin Town. In autumn, the attractive landscape bursts into a riot of colors with gold, red, blue and green. Many tourists to be here just to hoping for to catch a glimpse of the Kanas Lake Monster, a mythical beast that myriad tourists swore to have seen. It’s same to Scotland’s Loch Ness Monster. After 1980’s the hype of stories sightings have regularly appeared in Chinese media. July is the flooding season, when deluges from the White Lake upriver bleach Lake Kanas milky white. High rainfall in August deepens its color once more to an aqua green, which turns bright emerald in the drier months of September and October. Amongst the numerous contributing features to this marvel are the various minerals that are carried downstream from the upper rivers, the varying colors of plant life on the mountains around the lake, and the varying angle of sunshine on the water surface throughout the year.
These stories attract more tourists and settlers came to this area bringing countless journalists and conspiracy hounds although researchers have dismissed the Chinese Nessie as a large member of the salmon family. Apart the temptation of monster, Kanas Lake is breathtaking place with its vivid, minty green water surrounded with forest and snow packed mountains. There is a 2000-meters long bank of dead trees on the one side of the lake, which have accumulated over the years, carried by strong wind and waves. The massive dike of dead trees is an uncommon spectacle. In winter it is extremely cold, so be sure to take proper protection, it abruptly becomes excessively cold during the night. The beautiful Kanas Lake is also home of thousand Mongolians, whose stout log houses are clustered into numerous villages. They quite habitual of eat fish from the lake, keep herds cows and sheep, and trade animal products for wheat grown in the south. 3 to 4days' trekking around the area is the perfectionist way to witness the beauty and an extraordinary experience practiced by all backpackers who travel to Kanas.

July is the flooding season, when deluges from the White Lake upriver bleach Lake Kanas milky white. High rainfall in August deepens its color once more to an aqua green, which turns bright emerald in the drier months of September and October. Amongst the numerous contributing features to this marvel are the various minerals that are carried downstream from the upper rivers, the varying colors of plant life on the mountains around the lake, and the varying angle of sunshine on the water surface throughout the year.
























Sunday 22 December 2013

Amazing Fallingwater House Pennsylvania's USA

Fallingwater is famous as the Edgar J. Kaufmann Sr. Residence, is a beautiful house designed by American architect Frank Lloyd Wright in 1935 in rural southwestern Pennsylvania, 50 miles southeast of Pittsburgh, and is part of the Pittsburgh Metro Area. Fallingwater is situated in southwest Pennsylvania’s Laurel Highlands and 90 minutes from downtown Pittsburgh.

The home sits in a picturesque, wooded setting on PA Route 381 between the quaint villages of Mill Run and Ohiopyle. Amazingly the house was built partly over a waterfall in Bear Run at Rural Route 1 in the Mill Run section of Stewart Township Fayette Country, Pennsylvania, in the Laurel Highlands of the Allegheny Mountains. The house is hailed by Time magazine right after its completion, and listed among Smithsonian magazine’s life list of 28 places to visit before you die.

It’s the most unique house and it needed people just as unique to make happen. Fallingwater was built in between 1936 and 1939, and then it instantly became prominent place, and today it is a National Historic Landmark. The actual reasons behind its popularity is; that house doesn’t even appear to stand on solid ground, but in its place stretches out over a 30’ waterfall, and it captured everyone’s imagination when it was on the cover of Time magazine in 1938.

Because it is located in a rural area, so there is no public transportation to Fallingwater, visitors needs a car to travel here from your point of arrival. The final cost expense out on the house is $155,000 Including $8,000 architect’s fees, and $4,500 for installed walnut furnishings. The main house covers 5,330 square feet while the guest house uses 1,700 square feet. The Western Pennsylvania Conservancy conducted an concentrated program to preserve and restore the Fallingwater. Since 1988, a New York City-based architecture and engineering firm was main responsible for the materials conservation of Fallingwater.
































Saturday 21 December 2013

Love the Beautiful Landscape of Broads

The Broads is a member of the international family of National Parks, and unique landscape of shallow lakes and rivers is renowned for wildlife. In fact it is a rich mix of attractions are on offer on land and water all year round and the historic city of Norwich is right on the doorstep. The Broads are a network of mostly navigable lakes and rivers in the UK Counties of Norfolk and Suffolk. The Surrounding land was constituted as a special area with a level of protection similar to a National Park by The Norfolk and Suffolk Broads Act of 1988, and main responsibility is to managing the area by The Broads Authority, a Special Statuory, which started the operation in 1989.  It is UK largest protected wetland and a sprawling inland waterway where 6 free-flowing rivers wander 200 KM through a landscape soaked with lakes, fens, and marshes. The fens boggy peat-land rich with reeds and rushes are home to over 250 plant species, including the odd fen orchid. The Broads’ grazing marshes are home to waterfowls and wading birds, while the Breydon Water estuary is a famous stop for important flocks of migratory birds. The total area is 117 sq mi, most of which is in Norfolk, with over 120 mi of navigable waterways, and seven rivers and 63 broads, mostly less than 13 ft deep. Thirteen broads are usually open to navigation, with a further three having navigable channels.

Some broads have navigation restrictions imposed on them in autumn and winter. Moreover; Man-Made The Broads’ landscape is in fact man-made in large part as a byproduct of some two centuries of excavation. In the 12th century, with most of east Norfolk’s woodlands cut, area inhabitants started to dig huge pits and extract peat as a major fuel source. Interestingly the diggings slowly filled with water and eventually became an enormous wetland. The Wide shallow waterways of Broads are best for boating for beginners, boaters from sailors to canoeists. The tour guided are easily available, as park is considered fine place for beginners to learn in a safe scenic environment, and also visitors can sail on one of the legendary Norfolk wherries, which once made commerce move in the region. For nature lovers, Mammals in the Broads include mice and water shrews as well as larger animals such as otters.

Several plants growing like stoneworts are exclusive to the Broads; others are all-encompassing species, like Himalayan balsam, which threaten to tip the local ecosystem off balance. The attractive Broads landscapes include extensive bike trails almost 300 KM of footpaths and villages. It is highly recommended to experience the Broads by boat, because water is the heart of this place. The real essence of Broad is always something happening here, wildlife watchers will find multiple verities and activities in both seasons (spring and summer). Transit time from London is two hours, buses and trains can catch bearby the city of Norwich, as well as smaller stations within the Broads proper. Moreover Norwich also has the international airport facility with global connection via Manchester, Amsterdam, and Paris. Whatever you want to do here, hire a boat for a day, visit a nature reserve, historic buildings, or shopping, birdwatching, walking, cycling, are famous things. To protect this beautiful landscape, everyone has to love the Broads is the visitor offering scheme for the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads. The real purpose behind this scheme is to inspire people to care the environment via small donations by giving money directly. If every visitor to the Broads gave just £1 we could raise £7 million each year for projects to protect the Broads in the future.