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4 days in Northern Italy

4 days in Italy is not much, but we can guarantee you’ll manage to gain a few pounds and see some amazingly beautiful sights.

Day 1: Venice


Gondola under Ponte Rialto, Venice

Sights:
Fitbit showed 19000 steps in 7 hours. No cars allowed, so you have to discover Venice by foot (or waterbus/taxis/gondolas).
You’ll manage to see most sights in one day, but there’s enough to see if you want to dig down deeper in the Venetian culture and stay longer. 

Food:
We’re huge fans of Anthony Bourdain and following in his steps when searching for good places to eat on travels never fails. In Venice he went to Al Covo, a small restaurant in one of the back alleys not far from Piazza San Marco. Unfortunately it is closed on the Wednesday we were there. (Closed on Wednesday and Thursdays).

Instead we ended up paying for the location and not the food at a mediocre touristy restaurant with a view at Ponte Rialto. But hey, back alleys are everywhere, these beautiful and lively canals are only here. 

Day 2: Florence
20.000 steps.


Ponte Vecchio, Florence

Sights:

  • Piazza della Signoria and Palazzo Vecchio
  • Il Duomo - Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore
  • Ponte Vecchio
  • Galleria degli Uffizi
  • Santa Croce 

Food:
Lampredotto is a typical Florentine dish, made from the fourth and final stomach of a cow. It is cooked in water along with tomato, onion, parsley and celery, and then seasoned.
 

Florentine Steak
A favorite of Tuscan cuisine, bistecca alla fiorentina ‘beefsteak Florentine style’ consists of a T-bone or porterhouse steak grilled over a wood or charcoal fire, and seasoned with salt and, sometimes, black pepper, and (strictly after the steak is retired from the fire) olive oil. Bistecca is invariably served very rare, but it’s incredible tender and by far the best steak we’ve ever had ( Trattoria Dai Coco Filippo)


Day 3: Siena
10000 steps (lot of train sitting)

Visiting Siena was not in our plans, but the temptation to squeeze in one more city during our short stay in Italy grew too big. We jumped on an early morning train from Florence and got to experience a beautiful day in Siena before heading to Bologna. 

Sights:
Walk and eat

Food:
Wild Boar is Italy’s favourite game meat and Tuscan wild boar is renowned all around the world for its taste and quality. It has a deliciously mild savoury flavour, perfectly balanced with a hint of nuts with a relatively soft texture.

 
Day 4: Bologna 
 
150000 steps. (Mostly sitting and eating).


Vegetable market, Bologna

Bologna is a lively and cosmopolitan Italian college city, with spectacular history, art, cuisine, music, and culture. It is the seventh largest city in terms of population in Italy.

Sights: 

  • Piazza Maggiore
  • Basilica of San Petronio
  • Asinelli’s Tower
  • The Pinacoteca Nazionale
     

Food:
Bolognese sauce is a meat-based sauce for pasta originating from Bologna, Italy. It is customarily used to dress tagliatelle and may also be used to prepare “lasagne alla bolognese”. In Bologna, ragù alla bolognese is known simply as ragù.


Pasta Bolognese, Bologna

(Don’t know what it says, but seems a little odd to place a photo of a cute piglet in a pile of ham, don’t you think?)


Travel tip:
Multiple times we came to closed doors, because it was closed for the day, siesta time, too late, out of food etc, so lesson learned is to get out early and check opening hours if you have a specific restaurant in mind.

And of course don’t forget to fill up on gelato in between all this walking and eating.

- Cathrine / Team Jetpac

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Great Wall of China // Photo courtesy of Darren Samuelson

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Great Wall of China // Photo courtesy of Darren Samuelson

 Download Jetpac’s travel photography app to see your friends’  travel photos from China!

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Yuyuan Garden // Photo courtesy of Wolfgang Staudt
Yuyuan Garden, located in the center of the Old City next to the Chenghuangmiao in Shanghai, China, is considered one of the most lavish and finest Chinese gardens in the region.
The garden was reportedly first established in 1559 as a private garden created by Pan Yunduan, who spent almost 20 years building a garden to please his father Pan En, a high-ranking official in the Ming Dynasty, during his father’s old age. Over the years, the gardens fell into disrepair until about 1760 when bought by merchants, then suffered extensive damage in the 19th century. In 1842, during the Opium Wars, the British army occupied the Town God Temple for five days. During the Taiping Rebellion the gardens were occupied by imperial troops, and damaged again by the Japanese in 1942. They were repaired by the Shanghai government from 1956-1961, opened to the public in 1961, and declared a national monument in 1982.
(From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

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Yuyuan Garden // Photo courtesy of Wolfgang Staudt

Yuyuan Garden, located in the center of the Old City next to the Chenghuangmiao in Shanghai, China, is considered one of the most lavish and finest Chinese gardens in the region.

The garden was reportedly first established in 1559 as a private garden created by Pan Yunduan, who spent almost 20 years building a garden to please his father Pan En, a high-ranking official in the Ming Dynasty, during his father’s old age. Over the years, the gardens fell into disrepair until about 1760 when bought by merchants, then suffered extensive damage in the 19th century. In 1842, during the Opium Wars, the British army occupied the Town God Temple for five days. During the Taiping Rebellion the gardens were occupied by imperial troops, and damaged again by the Japanese in 1942. They were repaired by the Shanghai government from 1956-1961, opened to the public in 1961, and declared a national monument in 1982.

(From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

 Download Jetpac’s travel photography app to see your friends’  travel photos from China!

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“By the time I was a student, I spent more than a year in Scotland. 6 years later, I decided to come back for few days. There are no words to justify the beauty of this country. There are no words to explain how amazed and touched I was to see again these places.

This video is dedicated to all the people I met over there. Friends.”

- Romain Corraze

 Download Jetpac’s travel photography app to see all your friends’ cool travel photos! 

    • #Scotland
    • #inspiration
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    • #country
    • #beauty
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“This video was written and produced while traveling through Chile & Patagonia with my girlfriend. We spent 5 weeks exploring this amazing country, and this is how we chose to document it. Thanks so much for checking it out.”
- Gnarly Bay Productions


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    • #Chile
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Radisson Blu Berlin, AquaDom

The AquaDom in Berlin, Germany, is a 82ft tall cylindrical acrylic glass aquarium with built-in transparent elevator. It is located at the Radisson Blu Hotel in Berlin-Mitte.The DomAquarée complex also contains a hotel, offices, a restaurant, and the aquarium Sea Life Centre.


Aquarium Facts:

  • The aquarium is habitat to more than 1,500 tropical fish and over 50 different species, including trigger fish, hogfish, humphead wrasse (Cheilinus undulatus), blowfish (Tetraodontidae), surgeonfish (Myripristinae), soldierfish (Tetraodontidae) and swarm fish, like Cero mackerel (Scomberomorus regalis) and Silver moonfish (Monodactylus argenteus).
  • The height of the AquaDom is 25 metres.
  • The aquarium is made of acrylic, with a thickness of 16 cm on the top and 22 cm at the bottom.
  • The acrylic cylinder has a height of 16 metres and a diameter of 11,50 metres.
  • The water level is 14 metres.   
  • One million litres of Berlin water enhanced with 33 tons of sea salt (salt content of 3,3 %) is circulated every hour (7 filter/ 2 pumps are circulating 600 m³/ hour - nearly the whole volume of the aquarium).
  • Water pressure is 2,4 bar.
  • The two-story glass elevator inside the AquaDom (5 metres high/ weight of 25 tons) has a capacity of 48 people, including one guide.

Source: iamsuccessiamclass

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    • #aquarium
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  • 2 months ago > iamsuccessiamclass
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Spiral staircase at The Vatican Museums, photo courtesy of Eleanor Joy.
The Vatican Museums in Viale Vaticano in Rome, inside the Vatican City, are among the greatest museums in the world, since they display works from the immense collection built up by the Roman Catholic Church throughout the centuries, including some of the most renowned classical sculptures and most important masterpieces of Renaissance art in the world.
Several paintings by Caravaggio including the majestic Entombment (1602–1603)
Leonardo da Vinci’s portrait of St. Jerome in the Wilderness;
Works by painters Fra Angelico, Giotto, Raphael, Nicolas Poussin and Titian;
The red marble papal throne, formerly in the Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano;
Roman sculpture, tombstones, and inscriptions, including the Early Christian Sarcophagus of Junius Bassus and Dogmatic sarcophagus, and the epitaph of Lucius Cornelius Scipio Barbatus;
The Raphael Rooms with many works by Raphael and his workshop, including the masterpiece The School of Athens
Other Raphael masterpieces including “The Transfiguration”.
The Niccoline Chapel
The Sistine Chapel
The Gallery of Maps: topographical maps of the whole of Italy, painted on the walls by friar Ignazio Danti of Perugia, commissioned by Pope Gregory XIII (1572–1585). It remains the world’s largest pictorial geographical study.
The frescoes and other works in the Borgia Apartment built for Pope Alexander VI (Borgia).
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Spiral staircase at The Vatican Museums, photo courtesy of Eleanor Joy.

The Vatican Museums in Viale Vaticano in Rome, inside the Vatican City, are among the greatest museums in the world, since they display works from the immense collection built up by the Roman Catholic Church throughout the centuries, including some of the most renowned classical sculptures and most important masterpieces of Renaissance art in the world.

  • Several paintings by Caravaggio including the majestic Entombment (1602–1603)
  • Leonardo da Vinci’s portrait of St. Jerome in the Wilderness;
  • Works by painters Fra Angelico, Giotto, Raphael, Nicolas Poussin and Titian;
  • The red marble papal throne, formerly in the Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano;
  • Roman sculpture, tombstones, and inscriptions, including the Early Christian Sarcophagus of Junius Bassus and Dogmatic sarcophagus, and the epitaph of Lucius Cornelius Scipio Barbatus;
  • The Raphael Rooms with many works by Raphael and his workshop, including the masterpiece The School of Athens
  • Other Raphael masterpieces including “The Transfiguration”.
  • The Niccoline Chapel
  • The Sistine Chapel
  • The Gallery of Maps: topographical maps of the whole of Italy, painted on the walls by friar Ignazio Danti of Perugia, commissioned by Pope Gregory XIII (1572–1585). It remains the world’s largest pictorial geographical study.
  • The frescoes and other works in the Borgia Apartment built for Pope Alexander VI (Borgia).
    • #Vatican
    • #staircase
    • #museum
    • #art
    • #Architecture
    • #painting
    • #travel
    • #guide
    • #holiday
    • #vacation
    • #sight
    • #Sightseeing
    • #Rome
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Who took the fun out of travel?


I used to look forward to browsing and imagining new places to explore, but someone took the fun out of it.

 I’ve always been a traveler - an Australian with walkabout in my bones, born in Germany, growing up in England, and I’ve been lucky enough to live and work around the world.  The gift from my grandparents of a subscription to National Geographic opened my eyes to new worlds and beautiful photographs of exotic places. I’ve built up a lifetime of travel stories and a large library of old guidebooks and maps.  But now I live the information part of my life online.  I want access to all the content that exists, fast, and I don’t want anyone getting between me and the people I trust.  I want to be able to look at beautiful travel photos on my ipad when I’m at home on the couch dreaming of my next trip, or when I’m in the hotel room working out what I want to discover today.

The travel experience online today is no fun.  It’s all about price and logistics, and a spammy search maze in which you dodge middlemen looking for the real information.  Picking through pages of text is not travel inspiration.  We get great travel suggestions offline from friends, but online travel isn’t friendly.  It’s all “go now”, and no “looking forward to going”.  Anticipation, that we used to enjoy for months leading up to an adventure, is fraught with when we should book, whether we got a good price, and whether we believe the reviews we read from strangers.  The only anticipation that I’m left with now, is that of finding a better deal than my fellow traveler.


Travel should be better than that.  It provides a brief oasis in our crowded lives, and we deserve more.  Travel discovery and inspiration have been overlooked.  Publishers of guidebooks and magazines have not been able to organize all their great content and present it in a compelling way on new devices.  Social travel startups haven’t yet put the fun in functional.  We need new companies and new ideas to keep the flame of exploration alive.  We salute the notable exceptions who are bucking the trend.  At Jetpac, we’re looking forward to traveling again.  We’ll help you enjoy the months leading up to your adventures, as much as you do once you’ve finally arrived. You can browse beautiful travel photos, see which of your friends has been where you want to go, and connect with those whom you trust, to strike travel gold - trusted recommendations that you can’t wait to take advantage of.


Sign up to get access to our upcoming ipad app!


Julian - CEO Jetpac




 

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Travel Smarter: Over 100 Top Websites and Apps for Your Next Trip

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Goa, India

Goa, a state in India’s West region, is a former Portuguese colony with a rich history. It is 3,700 km² with a population of approximately 1.4 million. Goa has a unique mix of native and Portuguese cultures and architecture that attracts an estimated 2.5 million visitors each year (including about 400,000 foreign tourists).

Palolem Beach-a scenic beach in extreme south Goa with scenic rocks and islands off its shores. Good eating options. It is becoming pricey (by local standards) and getting a bit crowded, but still less crowded compared to other popular beaches.


Goa is a hub of tourism in India. From the 1960s, Goa has been attracting a steady flow of visitors — first the hippies and returning expat Goans, then the charter tourists (starting with the Germans in 1987), pilgrims visiting Catholic and Hindu shrines, those opting to settle in Goa as their home, people going for medical treatment, and a growing number of those who attend seminars and conferences in Goa.

Goa is visibly different from the rest of India, owing to Portuguese rule which isolated it from the rest of India for 451 years.


Palolem, south Goa


The gaunlet. Arambol, north Goa


There are many proprietors in Arambol there for the tourist season who come from Kashmir and Nepal. It’s their money making season.


Rice and duckweed

Cities:

  • Panaji (Panjim, also referred to a Ponn’je in Konkani, and earlier called Pangim and Nova Goa during Portuguese rule) – the state capital
  • Margao
  • Vasco Da Gama
  • Old Goa
  • Mapusa
  • Ponda

Goa also has a number of other smaller, charming and sometimes crowded towns such as those along the beach belt (Calangute, Candolim), and in the interior (Chaudi in Canacona, Sanvordem-Quepem, Bicholim, Pernem town, etc). Some of these are gateways to the nearby touristic areas. In addition, Goa has some nearly 350 villages, often scenic and each having a character of its own.


Local bus, Palolem


Getting there:
Goa can be reached by its lone airport (Dabolim), by train, and by the many buses connecting the state with cities in India (primarily Mumbai, Mangalore and Bangalore). If you are travelling from Mumbai or Pune, car travel would provide you a journey through breathtaking scenery of the Konkan area. Travel from Mangalore to Goa is through Konkan Rail, allowing you to see its breathtaking scenery, including the Doodh Sagar waterfalls.

Distance from Goa to various cities:

  • Belgaum(154 km)
  • Mangalore(305 km)
  • Pune(450 km)
  • Bangalore(592 km)
  • Mumbai(593 km)
  • Mysore(643 km)
  • Hyderabad(747 km)
  • Delhi(1912 km)

(All photos are courtesy of Happy Sleepy, travel info from WikiTravel)

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