Showing posts with label Sydney Travel information. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sydney Travel information. Show all posts

Thursday, 25 June 2015

Travel information Australia

Crocodile Dundee actor Paul Hogan once worked as a Harbor bridge painter, and returned to inaugurate the vertigo-inducing Harbor Bridge Climb.  Outfitted in stylish blue overalls and a chunky harness, climbers edge their way over arches, ladders and catwalks to the summit, 134 M (440 ft) above the water. They're rewarded with 360-degreeharbor views and the right to say "I did it." Prices vary from $100 and $150 per climb (it's cheaper to do it during the week). But be careful, Sydney and Northern New South Wales SYDNEY apparently the exhilaration can go to your head: over 100 marriage proposals have been made at the summit so far.
Views from under the Moreton Bay fig trees on Observatory Hill, the highest point in the city, are especially lovely at dusk, which is also the best time to visit the 1858 Sydney Observatory C (02) 9217 0485.lts heritage exterior belies the twentyfirst-century technology within. During the day visitors can view solar systems up to 4.5 million light years away and atnight zoom in on Neptune, The permanent exhibition includes interactive displays and compares the Greek mythology of the northern sky with the Aboriginal mythology of Australia's southern sky. Free entry 2 PM to 5 PM weekdays, 10 AM to 5 PM weekends, night programs vary but generally cost around $7.
The inside of the nearby pseudo-Gothic Garrison Church, built between 1840 and 1843, is adorned with the dusty flags of the British regiments who once worshipped here; the church is still used by the Australian Army. The main commuter terminal for harbor ferries, Circular Quay is also the only place Sydney’s bus, ferry and train services intersect (it was originally called Semi-Circular Quay, which makes a lot more sense). To confuse visitors, its five wharves are numbered from two to six Wharf 1 having succumbed to the gentrification of Circular Quay East.
Opposite the wharves, the imposing colonial Customs House building is now a cultural and gallery for those who dare, the Harbor Bridge Climb affords unparalleled views across central Sydney and the Opera House on Bennelong Point.  Diamu means "I am here" in the language of Sydney’s traditional owners, the Yurahouses the Australian Museum's collection of indigenous art and cultural exhibits from Australia and the South Pacific, the largest of its kind in Australia.

From time to time the gallery hosts free cultural programs, including concerts and Aboriginal storytelling. Past Circular Quay, on Bennelong Point is the pearl-like sails of Australia's most famous urban icon, the Sydney Opera House. Inlaid in the paving from the Quay towards the Opera House are tributes to writers,Who are from or have written about Australia, among them Banjo Patterson, Robert Louis Stevenson, Ted Hughes (of The Fatal Shore), Mark Twain, and dozens of others.

Monday, 22 June 2015

Travel information and places of tourism interest

The decision was a powerful moral and legal victory for the antislavery forces. The Amistad abductees were repatriated to Africa, and the committee formed to help them was incorporated in 1846 as the American Missionary Association. The AMA went on to found more than 500 schools for those emancipated by the Civil War and, later, many noted institutions of higher learning, including Atlanta University, Fisk University and Howard University. schools of medicine, divinity, law, art and architecture, music, forestry, engineering and drama and a graduate school. By 1887 it was time to rename it Yale University.
Now a member of the Ivy League, Yale has one of the finest libraries in the country, with many rare manuscripts. Yale may be the best-known school in the vicinity, but New Haven is also home to the University of New Haven and Southern Connecticut State College. Orientation Entering New Haven along 1-95 or 1-91 (which joins 1-95 right in the city), take l-95 exit 47 for cr 34, the Oak St Connector, to reach New Haven Green, the city center, with Yale to its west. From the Wilbur Cross Parkway, take exit 57, 59 or 60 and follow the signs to the center. Most hotels and sights are within a few blocks of the green. The bus and train stations are near 1-95 in the southeast part of the city.
Information Tourist Offices The Greater New Haven Convention & Visitors Bureau. Yale University has a Visitor Information Center Elm St at Temple St, on the north side of the green, where you can get free campus maps and a self-guided walking-tour pamphlet. Guided tours depart the center at 10:30 am and 2 pm weekdays, at 1:30 pm weekends. Travel Agencies There's a Council Travel office at 320 Elm St. Bookstores To get in touch with the student population, the Yale Co-Op Broadway, has not only a great number of books but also Yale sweatshirts and souvenirs. The Atticus Bookstore Cafe is a huge favorite; see Places to Eat, below. Dangers & Annoyances As a working city, New Haven has urban pleasures and problems, including street crime. You should Connecticut Coast New Haven 391 meet with no problems during the day in the city center, but avoid run-down neighborhoods and empty streets after dark, and don't leave anything visible in your parked car to tempt thieves.
 New Haven Green New Haven's traditional town green, the spiritual center of the city, is spacious and framed by its beautiful churches. The Trinity Church (Episcopal), on Chapel St, resembles England's Gothic York Minster. The Georgian-style Center Church on the Green (UCC), a good example of New England's interpretation of Palladian architecture, harbors many colonial tombstones in its crypt. At the northeastern corner of the green is United Church (UCC), another Georgian Palladian work. Grove Street Cemetery, at 227 Grove St three blocks north of the green, has the graves of several famous New Havenites behind its grand Egyptian-Revival gate (1845), including rubber magnate Charles Goodyear, the telegraph inventor Samuel Morse, lexicographer Noah Webster and cotton gin inventor Eli Whitney.

 Yale University Established in 1702 by Connecticut's colonial government as the Collegiate School, this institution was first at Killingworth, then at Say brook. It finally moved to New Haven in1717. A year later it was renamed in honor of Elihu Yale (1649-1721), a wealthy British businessman, philanthropist and benefactor whose donations of books and capital allowed the school to construct a college building. The third-oldest university in the nation, Yale can boast many distinguished alumni and alumnae, including Presidents Bill Clinton, George Bush, Gerald Ford and William Howard Taft, as well as Hillary Rodharn Clinton, Noah Webster, Eli Whitney and Samuel FB Morse. Crowded with University Gothic buildings, Yale's old campus dominates the northern and western portions of downtown New Haven. 

Monday, 16 February 2015

Sydney Travel information for Travelers - Travel packages- Tourism information-hotel bookings-Restaurents


Britain later decided to establish a penal colony in New Holland, as Australia was then known, Cook proposed Botany Bay as an ideal site. But on arriving with the First Fleet in 1788, Captain Arthur Phillip was apparently not convinced of Cook's choice. The fleet waited six days while Phillip explored the surrounding coastline, until finally, on January 26, 1788, he declared Port Jackson to be "the finest harbor in the world" and sailed the fleet through its headlands.

Once ashore, Phillip raised the Union Jack and proclaimed the Colony of New South Wales in the name of King George, and him- self Governor of it. Phillip established his colony on lands controlled by Yura (alternatively spelt Eora or lora) clans - some of the rock carvings in Sydney are over 40,000 years old. Although he endorsed a policy of non-violence towards the Aborigines, the settlers cleared the Yura's forests, restricted their access to traditional hunting and fishing grounds, and even pilfered their fishing nets and baskets and eventually their women.

Retaliation was inevitable. Isolated attacks were prevented from escalating into full-blown warfare by a smallpox epidemic in'1789, which almost annihilated the Aboriginal population (influenza, pneumonia and tuberculosis added to the devastation). Guerrilla attacks continued, though, led by angered warriors like Pemulway, who speared the Governor's game- keeper in 1790 and fought against the New South Wales Corps until he was killed in 1802. Although Britain continued to transport convicts to Sydney until 1840, the colony's steady growth owed more to land grants and other schemes that attracted thousands of free settlers. 

Convicts provided the necessary labor (just below convicts on the social scale, young Aborigines were employed as servants and farmhands). Pioneers built homesteads up and down the coast, and in 1813, a track was finally cleared through the Blue Mountains, opening up the fertile plains to the west.

In 1850-1851, the news of sizeable nuggets of gold found near Bathurst changed the face of the new colony. Fortune-seekers the world over set sail for Sydney Harbor. Sydney's population doubled over the next 10 years.

GENERAL INFORMATION

 Sydney's main tourist information office is the Sydney Visitor Centre  106 George Street, The Rocks, open 9 AM to 6 PM daily; it's often referred to by its former name, The Rocks Visitor Centre.

The CityRail network operates between 4:30 AM and midnight. Lines are color-coded. They also have trains to the Blue Mountains and Hunter Valley. For other rail or bus travel, you'll need Countrylink C 132232. Curving above the Sydney city center, the futuristic 3.6-km (2.2-mile) Monorail C (02) 95522288 links a number of sights, including the Sydney Aquarium and the Powerhouse Museum. It offers good views of the harbor. Locals tend to disparage it, but the ride is pretty cool.
Tickets cost $2.50, a day pass $6. 

Displays at most bus stops provide timetable information, and Nightrider services take over from midnight. Night buses have radio links to taxi companies, so you can arrange for a cab to meet you at your destination. Bright green and yellow Air- port Express buses run every 10 minutes between 7 AM and 7:30 PM on weekdays, less often at other times. Route 300 runs from Circular Quay via George Street, Town Hall and Sydney Central stations, route 350 from Kings Cross via Oxford Street.


Star City Casino operates a covey of free shuttle buses throughout Sydney so that punters can hang onto their cash until they get there - the casino is conveniently located at Darling Harbor, so make use of the free ride. Ask if one runs nearby. It's usually easy enough to flag down a taxi in Sydney, and there are cab ranks outside most train stations and wharves. The 20-minute drive from central Sydney to the airport will cost around $20 unless it's peak hour when you can double that. Be sure to tell the driver clearly whether you're going to the domestic or the international terminal; the free shuttle service connecting the terminals takes 20 minutes.