Showing posts with label hotels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hotels. Show all posts

Friday, 20 February 2015

Canada tourism and travel with money saving discounts on hotel room bookings and air tickets



Canada tourism industry grows faster than expected. Unexplored places of tourism interest now exposed to the tourists and many travel agencies and tour operators offer discounted air tickets for the travelers. Hotels in Canada also offered discounts and gifts to the people visiting Canada. 

The Gallery Stratford 2 FestIVal Theatre 3 Stratford-Perth Museum 6 Tom Patterson Theatre 9 Tourist Office 11 Shakespearean Gardens 12 Court House 13 Post Office 14 City Han 15 Avon Theatre 20 Tourism Stratford 22 Bus NIA Rail Station Organised Tours Festival Tours runs trips around town several times daily through summer, using red British double-decker buses. The tour lasts one hour. Ask at the tourist information office for details. Boat Trips A small tour boat runs around the lake and beyond the Canada Festival Building from behind the tourist office. The 35 minute trip costs $6 and the boat glides by parkland, houses, gardens and swans. Also at the dock, canoes and paddle boats can be rented. Shakespearean Festival Begun humbly tent in 1953, the shows attract international attention. The productions are first rate, Hire the costumes, and respected actors there featured. The season runs from May to October each year.

Tickets for plays cost between $37 and $67, depending on the day, seat and theatre, and go on sale mid-January. By show time, nearly every performance is sold out. A limited number of rush seats are available at good reductions, and for some performances, students and seniors are entitled to discounts. Less-costly tickets are available to the concerts, lectures (including a fine series with well-known writers) and other productions, which are all part of the festival. Bargain-hunters should note that the two-for-one Tuesday performances offer good value. Write for the festival booklet, which gives all the details on the year's performances, dates and prices. Also in the booklet is a request form for accommodation, so you can organise everything at once. There are three theatres - all in town - that feature contemporary and modern drama and music, operas and works by the Bard. Main productions take place at the Festival Theatre, with its round, protruding stage.

The Avon Theatre, seating 1100 people, is the secondary venue and the Tom Patterson Theatre is the smallest theatre. Aside from the plays, there are a number of other interesting programs to consider, some of which are free; for others a small admission is charged. Among them are post-performance discussions with the actors, Sunday morning backstage tours, warehouse tours for a look at costumes etc. In addition, workshops and readings take place. Because of the number of visitors lured to town by the theatre, lodging is, thankfully, abundant. By far the majority of rooms are in and the homes of residents with a spare room or two. In addition, in the higher price brackets there are several well-appointed, traditional-style inns in refurbished, century-old hotels.


For your hotel bookings and discounted air tickets, you may please contact local approved flight agencies and contractors. When you are ready to bargain, you can get much less price on hotel room bookings and stays in the country.  



Wednesday, 18 February 2015

Canada tourism and travel hotels restaurants beaches air ticketing

Try the Noretta, on Hwy 7 towards Kitchener. Rooms cost from $54 a double. Majers Motel, a little farther out, has rooms for about the same price. There are other motels along here, including the attractive but more costly Rose court Erie StY. Near the tourist office, the York St Kitchen (41 York Sf) turns out excellent sandwiches ($5) and picnic plates which might include a bit of smoked salmon or corn on the cob. There is a takeout order window and the park by the river (right across the street) makes a good eating spot. It also has a few tables inside where you could try a lamb curry or pasta dish ($10). Let Them Eat Cake is good for a cheap breakfast or lunch or simply a dessert and coffee.

Visit Trattoria Fabrizio 71 Wellington StY for Italian sandwiches and pastas under $7. It also has various snacks, desserts and espresso. As befits an English-style town, there are quite a few pubs about. Canada Stratford's Olde English Parlour Wellington StY has an outdoor patio. The Queen's Inn, with several different eating rooms, has a pub for inexpensive and standard menu items including a ploughman's lunch. The Queen's Sunday and Wednesday evening buffets in the dining room are good. Dining rooms in some of the other inns also cater to the theatre crowd with more costly fare. Expensive Rundles (9 Coburg StY, where a dinner is about $55 before wine, has a good reputation. Away from the centre, over the bridge and down Huron St about 2km, Madelyn's Diner Huron StY is a friendly little place to have any meal. Breakfasts are served all day (from 7 am) and are good, as are the home-made pies. It's closed Sunday evening and all day Monday. There are a few fast-food joints and a Chinese place on Canada Ontario St heading out of town. For making your own picnic check the Franz Kissling Delicatessen.


 Bus Several small bus lines servicing the region operate out of the VIA Rail station, which is quite central at 101 Shakespeare St, off Downie St about eight blocks from Ontario St. ChaCo Trails buses connect Stratford with Kitchener, from where you can go to Toronto. They also run buses to London with Windsor connections and some other southern Ontario towns. Train There are two daily trains to Toronto from the VIA Rail station. Trains also go west to London or Sarnia, with connections for Windsor. Some 12km east of Stratford along Hwy 8, this village is geared to visitors with the main street offering numerous antique, furniture and craft shops. To the west of Stratford, St Marys is a small Victorian crossroads with a former opera house and some fine stone homes as reminders of its good times last century. The Westover Inn tucked down Thomas St, and surrounded by lawns and trees, is a quiet, five-star hotel with a dining room. Several kilometres from the town, off Hwy 7 and back towards Stratford, is the Wildwood Conservation Area. It isn't particularly attractive for the Canadian tourists and travellers on vacation tours, but you can camp or go for a quick swim.


For better swimming, try the spring-fed limestone quarry just outside St Marys. It costs a couple of dollars and there are change rooms and a snack bar. 

Friday, 13 February 2015

Australia Tourism information Sydney places of interest travel packages-hotel bookings with discounts

BACKGROUND CREATIVE, ELOQUENT AND VIVIDLY DESCRWIWE

Captain James Cook must have had an off day when he named New South Wales in 1770. The man who came up with "Botany Bay," "Cape Tribulation," "Whitsunday Passage," "Glass House Mountains," and "Magnetic Island," might have been overwhelmed by the responsibility of attaching a label to the 4,000 km (2,500 miles) of lushly forested tropical and subtropical coastline, sandy coves and coral islands and cays he had spent four months navigating. 

The new-found land was neither new nor more than vaguely resembled South Wales, but the misnomer stuck.

Britain showed little interest in the far-off land at first - giving the Yura and Dharuk Aboriginal people of the lands around Botany Bay and Port ski fields of the Snowy Mountains near the Victorian border, including Australia's highest peak, Mount Kosciusko at 2,228 m (7,310 ft). The Great Dividing Range's proximity to the coast gives birth to broad fast-flowing rivers, carving the deep bays and magnificent harbors that are the most identifiable feature of the New South Wales coast. Along the north coast, the blue-green eucalyptus forests mingle with more extroverted of the subtropical rainforest. Cooler coastal weather patterns rarely make it across the divide; sudden downpours are common in Sydney - when it rains it pours - but over the rains, the dry western plains of the wheat belt gradually merge into the legendary outback.


Canberra may be Australia's capital, but Sydney is its heart. Most flights to Australia arrive at its Kingsford-Smith Airport, looping down over the city on their final descent towards runways that jut into Botany Bay. On a clear day, this is the best introduction to Australia. Against a backdrop of densely forested mountains and fronted by the Pacific Ocean, leafy suburbs and red-tiled rooftops gradually give way to the urban landscape of inner Sydney.

The first fingers of water seem unconnected:spotsofdeep blue edged with parkland that break up the concrete and traffic. But quickly the water widens out to the expanse of Port Jackson, held together at its narrowest point by the arch of the Sydney Harbor Bridge. Near the bridge, flashes of sunlight on the oversized seashell that is the Sydney Opera House shine white against the blue of the harbor's deep waters, which are dotted with islands and peppered with sailing boats, ferries, windsurfers, motorboats and tilting seaplanes. 

Sydney is a sprawling city with over four million inhabitants.

 It was Australia's first city and remains its largest, measuring 70 km (43.5 miles) from north to south and 55 km (34 miles) east to west. To the rest of Australia it's a fast-paced urban jungle. By international standards, however, Sydney is definitely laid-back, Far more San Francisco than New York, and with a better bay. Sydneysiders enjoy almost year-round sunshine, without the tropical humidity of Brisbane and Cairns - or only rarely. With such a combination of climate and topography, it's hardly surprising they are such outdoors fanatics.

The never-ending estuaries, coves, islands and inlets of Port Jackson (or Sydney Harbor) form a watery maze that divides the city in two, and today's Sydneysiders live by, on, in, above and occasionally below the sparkling waters of its harbor. They commute by ferry or drive over its soaring bridge. They roller blade, skateboard, cycle, jog or simply lunch along its banks. Office parties and even weddings are frequently held on boats, and cafes along Bondi and Manly beaches open early to serve coffee and breakfast to the body-conscious who brave the surf from sunrise year-round. For its legitimate claims as a cosmopolitan, multicultural, innovative and exciting city, Sydney is above all, the best this planet has to illustrate the maxim most dear to sun-seekers: "life's a beach." It has 70 of them, Jackson few years grace. But by the mid-1780s, following the loss of their colonies in the 1776 American War of Independence, 

London's prisons and workhouses were overflowing. The solution chosen by the British dramatically and irrevocably altered Aboriginal history.

The first fleet of convicts and settlers arrived at Sydney Cove in 1788, and the colony of New South Wales grew rapidly to cover over half of Australia -encompassing modern-day Queensland, Victoria and parts of South Australia. Although today the state occupies only 10°;', of the continent - it's roughly the size of California - over a third of Australia's population live here, 96% of them within an hour’s drive of the coast. Geographically, New South Wales has a bit of everything.
The rugged Great Dividing Range stretches along the state's eastern seaboard. 

Marked by vertiginous outcrops, deep gorges, and rich soil supporting diverse cultivation, it rises to form the 74 For many visitors New South Wales is a land of perfect beaches, great surf and outstanding nature (its 70 national parks cover nearly 40,000 SQ km or 15,400 SQ miles). Yet the state has a rich, multi-faceted and often brutal history. Archeological relics, Dreamtime stories, and rock paintings remind visitors of the complex culture of the numerous Aboriginal clans who lived freely on these lands until 1770. The early penal colony, which eventually became the city of Sydney, constructed solid Georgian buildings that remain today - inmates' quarters, churches, and government buildings.


The subsequent era of exploration, free settlement and westward expansion, followed by the colorful gold rush years, left in its wake historic townships and tall tales throughout the state. 

BACKGROUND Captain Cook sailed into Botany Bay in 1770, naming it after botanist Joseph Banks' excitement at the strange and lush plant growth. Cook noted what he thought was a smaller harboring a little further north, .1I1d named this Port Jackson.