Sunday, October 30, 2011

Sioux Falls, South Dakota - Five Tips to Travel to Sioux Falls by Amtrak And Jefferson Lines

Sioux Falls, South Dakota is the state's largest city and is part of one of the country's fastest growing metropolitan areas. Augustana College and twelve other institutions of higher education call this eastern South Dakota city home. The city has not had passenger train service since the mid-1960s and the only low fare airline to the city flies directly only to the Southwest and Florida.

For residents of the Sioux Falls area, utilizing a combination of Amtrak trains and buses is the cheapest way to travel to other parts of the county. Here are five tips/hints for effectively traveling to/from the city by land:

Northwestern Airlines

One: Ignore Amtrak's recommendation to connect with the train at Fargo. On Amtrak's schedule for the Empire Builder that runs between Chicago and Seattle/Portland, there is an indication that connecting service is available between Fargo, ND and Sioux Falls. Jefferson Lines provides this service. Unfortunately, Jefferson Lines' schedule at Fargo does not work well with Amtrak's timetable.

The only direct bus to the city leaves Fargo in the mid-afternoon. Also, the one direct bus from Sioux Falls arrives in Fargo around the same time. But the Empire Builder arrives in Fargo for both directions in the middle of the night. Thus, there will be a half-day wait (that includes some early morning hours) in Fargo before a connection can be made.

Two: If you are coming from the Northwest on the Empire Builder, the best place to connect to a Jefferson Lines bus is Minneapolis/St. Paul. The eastbound train arrives in St. Paul around 7:00 am. After a short cab ride to the Minneapolis Greyhound Bus Terminal, the bus leaves around noon for the 6 ½ hour trip to Sioux Falls. In order to connect with the westbound train, travelers should board the 4:00 pm bus to Minneapolis that arrives around 9:00 pm. That will give you plenty of time to transfer to the St. Paul Amtrak station to catch the 11:15 pm.

Three: If you are coming from the east, the California Zephyr from Chicago is the Amtrak service you should utilize. The train arrives in Omaha around 10:30 pm. After a brief hotel stay in Omaha, you can board a 5:45 am bus for the 3 ½ hour trip to Sioux Falls. For eastbound passengers, the bus leaves the the city's depot around 8:30 pm and arrives in Omaha after midnight. The train for Chicago leaves Omaha a little after 6:00 am.

Four: If you are coming from the west, the eastbound California Zephyr provides the most convenient connection to Sioux Falls. The train arrives in Omaha around 6:00 am. At noon, the Jefferson Lines bus leaves for Sioux Falls. For westbound passengers, the bus leaves the city at 3:45 pm and arrives in Omaha at 7:15 pm, which is plenty of time to catch the 10:30 pm California Zephyr.

Five: Both the Empire Builder and California Zephyr are all-reserved trains. Whether you are experiencing Amtrak's coach service or the Superliner sleeping accommodations, you must make advanced reservations. By buying your tickets in advance for both Amtrak and Jefferson Lines services, you may be able to receive discounted advance purchase fares or special fares for students and seniors.

Sioux Falls, South Dakota - Five Tips to Travel to Sioux Falls by Amtrak And Jefferson Lines

Charles Self is the editor of the Amtrak Train Stations Across America website. At http://www.passengertraininfo.com/siouxfalls.aspx you will find additional information on traveling to Sioux Falls and Amtrak train stations.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Track and Field Records

At present Louisiana is one of the least populous states in the United States. Some years ago, the state suffered the fury of some of the devastating hurricanes in the Caribbean cost. But despite this misfortune, people are sporting enough to continue their sports and games activities. Recently in nationwide athletic meet, three students of Southeastern Louisiana University finished among the top five positions. While Henry Rop and Kalphys Kemboi took the first and second positions, respectively, Nelphat Boit finished fifth to mark a memorable performance by Southeastern Louisiana University. The icing of the cake was the victory of Dorcus Kapkiai of the same university, who rounded off an impressive performance by the university by winning the cross-country gold in the womens category. This is one of the brightest moments in the history of Louisiana track and field records.

The breeding ground of a majority of sport stars is the universities in the state. These universities are well represented in the NCAA games. NCAA is the National Collegiate Athletic Association. It is an association of about 1200 colleges or universities. It is one of the prestigious university-level sporting events in the United States. A number of universities from Louisiana participate at various levels of NCAA games. Those universities include the following: Louisiana State University at Eunice, Nicholls State University, McNeese State University, Northwestern State University, Centenary College of Louisiana, Southeastern Louisiana University, Louisiana State University in Shreveport, University of New Orleans, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Louisiana State University, and Loyola University New Orleans. Considering the population of the state one can see that the state is well represented in the competition. A number of track and field records have been created by Louisiana athletes over the years during this competition.

Northwestern

The universities are known by interesting nicknames in NCAA competition. Nicholls State University is known as Colonels while McNeese State University is known by a more informal name, Cowboys. Northwestern State University is Demons, and Centenary College of Louisiana takes the name Gentleman. Southeastern Louisiana University is known as Lions, while Louisiana State University with a nickname Tigers and Loyola University New Orleans with a nickname Wolfpack are not far behind in the pecking order. The most attention-grabbing nickname goes to University of Louisiana at Lafayette with a nickname Ragin Cajuns.

The NCAA games are extremely competitive and provide an opportunity for the budding athletes to showcase their skills and talent to the world. Many Louisiana athletes have made use of this arena and gone on to become famous athletes.

The Louisiana track and field records are too numerous to record here. A comprehensive database of the records is available on the internet in searchable formats in some websites. A simple search on Google will take you those websites.

Track and Field Records

Candis Reade is an accomplished niche website developer and author. To learn more about Louisiana Track and Field Records [http://mytrackandfieldtoday.info/louisiana-track-and-field-records], please visit My Track and Field Today [http://mytrackandfieldtoday.info] for current articles and discussions.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Flight Attendant Jobs: Who Is Hiring

The news for US legacy carriers continues to worsen. Northwest and Delta recently filed bankruptcy while several others are teetering toward insolvency. Finding employment with one of these carriers is difficult, particularly if you are seeking a career as a flight attendant. Still, there are jobs with some air carriers, if you know where to look. Let's take a look at some airlines that are likely to hire flight attendants over the next year or two.

The legacy carriers, which include American, Delta, Northwest, United, Continental, and USAirways, are probably not good places to look for stable employment. Earlier in 2005, Continental was hiring flight attendants, but the job market for the legacy carriers remains generally bleak. United remains in bankruptcy and USAirways recently exited bankruptcy and merged with America West Airlines.

Northwestern Airlines

On the other hand, the following discount, charter, and regional carriers have all hired flight attendants recently or are planning to do so over the next year:

* AirTran Airways

* Air Wisconsin Airlines

* Alaska Airlines/Horizon Airlines

* Champion Air

* Chautauqua Airlines

* Colgan Air

* Comair

* EOS Airlines

* Falcon Air Express

* Frontier Airlines

* Independence Airlines

* JetBlue Airways

* Maxjet Airlines

* Mesa Group

* Mesaba Airlines

* Miami Air

* North American Airlines

* Omni Air International

* Piedmont Airlines

* Pinnacle Airlines

* Shuttle America

* Skywest Airlines

* Southwest Airlines

* Spirit Airlines

* Transstates Airlines

* U.S. Airways

* USA3000 Airlines

* United Express

* Virgin America [awaiting FAA approval to fly]

* World Airways

Job fairs are a popular way for carriers to recruit, interview, and hire new employees. Check each company's website for detailed information about upcoming dates or visit an aviation job board such as the Aviation Employment Board for the latest job postings. Hiring plans can change at any time, so make sure that the information you gather is verified directly by the air carrier.

Web sites dedicated toward providing more information about becoming a flight attendant are legion on the internet. Some of the better sites include:

FlightAttendants.Org

Airline Flight Attendant Room MSN Group

If you are seeking a career as a private flight attendant, the Corporate Flight Attendant Community at http://www.corporateflyer.net is a full resource center offering informative articles, helpful links, training information, job listings, as well as an active message board: http://www.corporateflyer.net

Flight Attendant Jobs: Who Is Hiring

Copyright 2005 -- Matthew Keegan is the owner of a successful article writing, web design, and marketing business based in North Carolina, USA. He manages several sites including the Corporate Flight Attendant Community and the Aviation Employment Board. Please visit The Article Writer to review selections from his portfolio.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Don't Do This As a Sales Manager

A couple of shows ago we talked to you about the Secret Sauce of Sales Management which was, as we uncovered in that show, getting your sales people to set goals for themselves on a quarterly, maybe monthly, or annual basis that are very specific towards targets that are above expectations and above where you want them to be which is, for must of us, 100% quota attainment. We talked about setting perfection goals and the importance of setting goals in general.

When you are setting goals, there are a lot of factors to keep in mind that are danger spots and pitfalls of goal setting. As part of the "don't do this as a sales manager" this is one of the important parts to helping you and your sales people set goals, and to make sure that you keep a very tight leash on those goals. Have control over those goals, and oversee the actions that are being taken to achieve those goals is very important.

Northwestern Airlines

Among psychologists, the link between setting goals and achievement is quite clear.

The Harvard example that we talked about a couple of weeks ago, that was used to prove that we as humans, in general, concentrate better, and work harder and longer when we set these SMART goals for ourselves.

The issue is that there is a dark side to goal setting. As a top performing sales manager, as an aspiring sales manager, or the manager of a company, or as owner of an organization, you need to be aware of the downside.

We are going to talk about that in today's shows.

There is recent evidence that individuals, companies, and governments can actually hurt themselves by setting and following blind goals. Thought they may seem to make sense at their creation, these are goals are out of context, goals that are not as reachable and realistic (The "R" in SMART), that can sabotage the attainment of goals.

It's not that the goal setting doesn't work, but it can focus your attention on the wrong things and maybe be lead to behaviors that aren't healthy and they can be destructive.

Something that we talk about in the academy quite a bit is "prescription strength" goals.

Aristotle believed in goals and said, "First have a definite, clear, practical idea, a goal and an objective." That is the first thing that you need to you.

Where are you heading?

That is why goal setting is so important for your sales people. Where do you want to be 1 month from now, 3 months from now, 6 months from now, 1 year from now?

Abraham Lincoln said, "A goal properly set is halfway reached."

There is no doubt that goals work and the idea is commonly accepted by management gurus as well as the less than guru's.

It is well documented that when people are told to "go out and do their best" they more often than not, don't. And that is why goal setting is so important.

When people have specific goals that energize them, it keeps them engaged far longer.

There have been great companies such as General Electric and Southwest Airlines that have used goals to energize employees around a central purpose and central theme and they have pulled off amazing feats of genius in the process and done very well for themselves as organizations. Some goal setting experts realize that there is a downside and a "dark side" to setting these goals.

One of the experts in this regard is Adam Galinsky, who is a professor at Kellogg at Northwestern University; he cautions that goal setting has been treated like an over-the-counter medication, when it really should be handled with more care like a prescription strength medication.

Although goals brought us great success from companies like GE and Southwest, goals also brought us spectacular failures like Enron and General Motors. Two companies who's relatively recent in spite of well meaning and ambitious goals.

The problem is that recent data has shown that if people are close to their goals or in fear of missing their goals, they are more likely to lie to make up the difference.

For example, the recent dysfunctional environment at Enron created through its practice of rewarding its top level executives on meeting revenue target goals. These goals have a direct correlation to the criminal activity that led to the downfall of the organization.

Another great example that Galinsky wrote about was from 1990's, at Sears and Roebucks began setting goals for the service staff, only to realize that the mechanics were overcharging and making unnecessary repairs to customers that didn't know any better just to reach their numbers.

Sometimes if you set a goal that is too high, the sales person may actually create some devious activity to achieve that goal.

When you are setting goals they have to be realistic and attainable. Attainable is the "A" in SMART goals.

Another thing to look out for and be wary about is the BHAG.

The study at Kellogg found that "stretch" goals were also in jeopardy of losing their luster as well. They found that more often than not, these BHAG goals (big, hairy, audacious goals) often times were pursued by desperate companies who were zig zagging their way through to try and energize their employees any way that they could.

BHAG goals are something that you have to be careful with.

Some companies have used them to a great degree with success. In a couple of books that Jim Collins wrote he specifically mentions BHAG goals, these big, hairy audacious goals, but often times they fell flat on their face because they are too audacious and because they are too large. As a result of them being too large people may result in performing activities that they otherwise would not in the face of more realistic goals.

The third thing that we have to look out for is focus versus tunnel vision.

In a famous study of how well people performed certain tasks by Simons and Chabris. Participants were asked to count how many times a group of individuals passed the ball between them. I actually did this in training.

They are shown a video of 12 or 13 people and in that video they have a ball and they are passing it back and forth rapidly. You had to count how many times they passed the ball from person to person. 99% of the time, because people are so focused in the counting the passes between individuals, the study participants never see a woman dressed up in a gorilla suit passing in plain view through the middle of the group. No one even noticed it. It was amazing. When I did it, I didn't even see it.

Because you were so focused on your goal you weren't aware of your surroundings. This is something that we have to look out for when our sales people are setting their goals.

It is true, a simple goal can lead to intense effort in the short term however the risk to the short terms gains may also undermine the long term interests of the individual.

Monthly goals end up sabotaging their long term, or quarterly or annual goal, then you have to be careful on how they state these goals and you need to be the editor in chief when a sales person comes to you with goals.

The fourth thing that you need to look out for: you need to filter for misalignment.

When your sales consultants come to you with their finalized goals, ask yourself if their goals are in align with what you feel is possible for each individual.

Is the goal a jumble of hyperbole to satisfy you, the boss? Or does the goal have substance? Is the goal able to be reached or will there be fudging along the way to make it seem like it has been achieved?

Filter for this misalignment as editor in chief. Used correctly, goals can be very effective, that's why we titled it "The Secret Sauce of Sales Management".

The executives at Enron never asked these types of questions. Or maybe they were too busy or maybe too egotistical to even bother to ask them.

As a top performing sales manager, or as an aspiring sales manager, or as an owner of a business or sales trainer the sales managers must understand be careful to safe guard this process. While being mindful that there is a potential downside to overly ambitious or big, hairy, audacious kinds of goals.

If a sales rep comes to you, and they have never made quota and they say, "My goal for the quarter is 147% of quota", then that is an unrealistic extraction, then you've got to tone them down, and coral them in. Maybe the first time you make quota, maybe just reaching plan should be your first goal. That is what we advocate at The Sales Management Mastery, if someone has never made 100% of plan, their first goal should be get as close 100% of plan as possible, if not reach it.

Then once they reach it, then you set foals that are "setting the bar higher" that are above quota and above plan. They have to get to baseline first so you have to filter for that type of misalignment.

That is our fourth point on the downside of goals.

Just to summarize what we have talked about.

Goal setting is a very important thing to do, and it is the "Secret Sauce" of sales management but it does come with a price and a cost. You have to be aware of that.

As a sales manager, you need to be the editor in chief of your sales people's goals. Be very mindful of that when they are setting their goals.

1. Prescription strength goals. You need to have a clear, definite, practical purpose and objective in mind. Don't underestimate the power of goals.-

2. Beware of the BHAG - big, hairy, audacious goals. Coral your sales people in from the big, hairy, audacious goals. BHAG have worked at times, but sometimes using BHAG's is a desperate attempt by a desperate company. Use realistic measurement that we talked about in your SMART goal setting

3. Have focus, but not tunnel vision. We talked about the study with the woman dressed up in the gorilla suit walking through a group of people passing the ball around. It is dangerous to have such tunnel vision that you don't know what is going on around you.

4. Filter for misalignment. Make sure that your sales people are setting goals that are in harmony with what you feel is possible and that their goals are realistic for current market conditions.

That is the "don't do this" as a sales manager when it comes to goal setting.

Don't Do This As a Sales Manager

To learn more about sales management training, click here to get your choice of free sales management.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

The Large Village of Malpas, Cheshire

The large village of Malpas, Cheshire once used to be what is called a "market town" in England. It has a current population of around 1,700 people. Additionally, it lies on the border with the neighboring county of Shropshire and also with Wales. The village's name comes from the Old French words "mal" and "passe, " which together means "bad passage."

The village has a long history, and though there were no known Roman settlements in the area, most scholars state that a long Roman road passes through the village on its way from the village of Tilston to the market town of Whitchurch. Scholars also believe that Malpas may have been what the Saxons of the day called a 'burh, ' which was their name for a fortified town.

Northwestern Airlines

The first written notice of the village of Malpas is found in the 1086 property survey conducted by the Normans, and which is known as the Domesday Book. At that time, it was called Depenbech. In the Medieval era, Malpas came to be denoted as a market town, holding such an event on regular intervals. It continued to develop through the years, including during the Tudor reign of Henry VIII.

The region became caught up in the English Civil War in the 17th century. The village itself contributed a general who oversaw parliamentarian troops during the conflict, at the Battle of Nantwich in January of 1644. During the Second World War, Malpas saw to the needs of the troops of the exiled Czechoslovakian Army, who were bivouacked in a local park.

The northwestern England ceremonial county of Cheshire, in which Malpas resides, has a current population of around 1 million people. The county itself is mostly rural in nature, outside of certain large towns on the River Mersey and the city of Chester - which is also the county town. Both Malpas and Cheshire are great examples of classic English history.

The Large Village of Malpas, Cheshire

For accommodation in Malpas check this list of Malpas hotels.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

The White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad

1. Origin and Construction

The clouds, draping the mountains like strands of silver steel wool, hung low over the Lynn Canal, gateway to the historic city of Skagway, Alaska, itself the origin of thousands of stampeders who had begun their 45-mile treks over the White Pass Summit toward the Klondike gold fields of the Yukon in Canada in 1897 and 1898. The throngs continued to infiltrate the area today from vessels which also sailed from Seattle, but all disembarked from one of the many daily cruise ships which docked a short distance away.

Northwestern Airlines

The passengers crowding the White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad Depot spilled out to the concrete platform and into one of many departing trains, including those to Fraser, British Columbia. I myself would trace the path of the gold seekers to the White Pass Summit, located 2,865 feet above sea level on the United States-Canada border, but would do so on the rail which had been built to replace the overland foot trail and capitalize on the demand for travel created by the historic event.

The imminent journey had actually had its origin some 110 years ago. Prospectors, searching for gold along the Yukon River, had not yielded their first crop until 1896 when George Carmack and two Indians, Skookum Jim and Dawson Charlie, uncovered some gold flakes in Bonanza Creek in the Yukon, although it had been another year before the world had been alerted to the discovery when the Seattle Post-Intelligencer published its now-famous headline of "GOLD! GOLD! GOLD!" in its July 17, 1897 issue shortly after disembarkation of 68 prospectors from the Steamer Portland in Seattle, Washington. The promise of seemingly instant, easy wealth, coupled with the deprivation of the Depression, sparked an historical event which involved 100,000 players and would ultimately shape parts of Alaska and the Yukon itself.

With the exception of seasonal steamship service on the Yukon River, and road and railroad construction not permitted in Alaska until Congress had passed the Homestead Act of 1898, there had been no internal infrastructure to support the stampeders' access to the klondike gold fields.

The Yukon itself, the vast, thinly populated expanse of land located above the 60th parallel in northwestern Canada which shares its border with Alaska and accurately earns its self-proclaimed slogan of "larger than life," is a topographically diverse, but ruggedly insurmountable territory of barren, treeless plains, boreal forests, rugged mountains, glaciers, and mirror-reflective lakes and rivers inhabited by Canada's First Nations people and abundant wildlife.

Because of its high latitude, it experiences more than 20 hours of daylight in the summer, but fewer than five in the winter, replaced, instead, by the northern lights known as the "aurora borealis." Aside from the major "cities," most communities are only accessible by floatplane or dogsled.

The Yukon's history is, in essence, that of the Gold Rush, and traces its path to five significant locations in both the United States and Canada.

The first of these, Seattle, Washington, had served as the gateway to the Yukon. Advertised as the "outfitter of the gold fields," it sold supplies and gear stocked ten feet deep on storefront boardwalks, grossing million in sales by early-1898, and was the launching point for the all-water route through the Gulf of Alaska to St. Michael, and then down the Yukon River to Dawson City. Despite the high fares, which few could afford, all passages had been sold out.

Dyea and its Chilkoot Trail, the second location, had provided a slower, more treacherous, alternate route, via the 33-mile Chilkoot trail which linked tidewater Alaska with the Canadian headwaters of the Yukon River.

Skagway, Alaska, the third location, quickly replaced Dyea as the "Gateway to the Klondike" because of its more navigable White Pass route which, although ten miles longer than that of the Chilkoot Trail, had entailed a 600-foot-lower climb. Located at the northern tip of Alaska's Inside Passage, Skagway, now a major port-of-call on Alaska cruise itineraries, became the first incorporated city in Alaska in 1900 with a 3,117-strong population, the first non-native of whom had been Captain William Moore, who discovered the White Pass route into interior Canada.

Metemorphosed from a cleared, tent-dotted field to a boardwalk-lined town sporting wooden stores, dance halls, gambling houses, and some 80 saloons in the four-month period between August and December 1897 as a result of stampeders piling off of steamships in its port, it quickly swelled to a city of 20,000, its temporary inhabitants destined for the overland White Pass Trail and the Klondike gold fields themselves.

At Bennett Lake, the fourth location, 30,000 stampeders awaited the spring thaw, constructing 7,124 boats from whipsawn green lumber and launching their flotilla on May 29, 1898, fighting the Whitehorse rapids before following the Yukon River to Dawson City.

Dawson City itself, the fifth location, had been the actual site of the first gold flake discovery and had begun as a small island between the Yukon and Klondike Rivers hitherto only occupied by the Han First Nations people, but exploded into Canada's largest city west of Winnipeg and north of Vancouver with up to 40,000 gold seekers covering a ten-mile area along the river banks. Thirty cords of firewood were used to burn shafts through the permafrost to the mines themselves.

The White Pass trail in Skagway, quickly destroyed because of overuse, screamed of the need for a rail line replacement. Seeking to capitalize on the demand for safe, fast, and reliable transportation from its port to the Yukon, Thomas Tancrede, a London investor representative, and Michael J. Henry, a railroad contractor, had both proposed such a line and, after a chance, overnight meeting, sketched initial plans for the route.

The White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad Company, established in April of 1898, had been comprised of three enterprises: the Pacific and Arctic Railway and Navigation Company, responsible for the Skagway-White Pass rail section; the British Columbia Yukon Railway, whose division linked the US-Canada border at White Pass with the provincial border between British Columbia and the Yukon Territory; and the British Yukon Railway, whose track ran from the Yukon Territory border to Whitehorse.

The railroad's four principle directors included Samuel H. Graves, President; E. C. Hawkens, Chief Engineer; John Hislop, Assistant Engineer; and Michael J. Henry himself, Contractor.

Construction of the million, three-foot-wide, narrow gauge rail, which permitted sharper curves than the standard gauge would have and entailed engineering obstacles of hitherto unimaginable proportions, commenced on May 28, 1898, and involved a ten-foot-wide road bed, an almost 3,000-foot elevation gain over a 20-mile stretch, cliff-laid track, 16-degree turns, tunnels, bridges, bitter cold and snow, and 450 tons of explosives.

Built in three sections, from Skagway to White Pass, White Pass to Carcross, and Carcross to Whitehorse, the first of these proved the most difficult, although its first seven miles of track had actually been completed in only two months. On July 21, 1898, the day after the first locomtove had been delivered, an excursion train for invited dignitaries operated for the first time, pulling three flat-bed cars with wooden benches. Two months later, in September, the prepared track grade stretched 17 miles from Skagway, but a gold discovery in Atlin enticed a majority of the laborers away, complete with the vitally-needed picks and shovels for the project. At Mile 18.7, the deep, v-shaped, 215-foot-high canyon could only be connected with a 400-foot steel cantilever bridge built up of three-hinged arches.

The first train to operate to White Pass did so nine months after construction had begun, on February 20, 1899.

Another significant milestone took place still five months later, on June 6, when the tracks had reached Bennett at Mile 40.6, providing the first intermodal transportation connection with the smaller steamers which navigated the lakes and rivers through Miles Canyon and the Whitehorse Rapids. Some 20 miles later, the track reached Lewis Lake.

With the last spike driven at Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, on June 8, 1900, the second of the three sections had been completed, permitting rail travel to Carcross, British Columbia, for the first time. This became the only overland route between the two cities until the South Klondike Highway had been constructed 78 years later.

With installation of the rails across the bridge in Carcross on July 29, 1900, and the driving of the last spike at 17:30 local time, the second of the three sections had been finished, thus completing the White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad, whose track extended 110 miles from the United States to Canada, of which 20.4 miles lay in Alaska, 32.3 miles ran through British Columbia, and 58.1 miles stretched through the Yukon Territory.

Skagway quickly became the "Gateway to the Klondike" and White Pass became the "Gateway to the Yukon."

2. In Service

The White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad not only proved an engineering feat, but a sound commercial one with numerous, evolving purposes. Initially transporting mining equipment, materials, supplies, and tools on northbound runs, it carried copper ore destined for Washington smelters on return journeys in 1908, the commodity later replaced by silver lead in 1923, which it continued to carry until 1970. In fact, freight constituted an ever-increasing proportion of its revenue base until 1918, when the Depression had exerted its effects, and then re-increased, reaching 21,450 annual tons by 1940.

Perhaps the greatest increase in demand occurred in August of 1942 when the US Army commenced construction of the Alcan Highway, taking the daily tonnage from 200 to 2,000, and on October 1 of that year, the railroad had been altogether leased to the US Army's 770th Railway Operating Battalion, which re-equiped it with much-needed personnel, locomotives, and rolling stock. Indeed, its all-time highest volume, as a result of the temporary transfer, totaled 34 daily train operations collectively carrying more than 2,000 tons of cargo per day-or 47,506 tons per month.

Demand had also been created by the crude oil refinery in Whitehorse and the pipeline connecting it with Norman Wells in the Northwest Territories.

Modernizing its increasingly outdated equipment after the war, the White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad acquired new locomotives and rolling stock, replacing its traditional steam engines with diesel-electric propulsion in 1954. The very last steam operation occurred ten years later, in 1964.

In 1955 it operated the world's first integrated, intermodal container service from Vancouver to Whitehorse when the first purposefully-designed container ship, the Clifford J. Rogers, transferred cargo at the Port of Skagway to the railroad's flatbed cars for ultimate transfer to semi-trucks using the Alaska Highway.

In order to cater to the transportation demands of the lead-zinc open-pit mine operation in the Yukon's Anvil Range, the railroad embarked on a significant modernization program in 1969, acquiring heavier, higher-capacity locomotives, 50-ton flatbed cars, and ore containers; rebuilding bridges and tunnels; constructing a warehouse in Skagway; and dredging a deep-sea fishing wharf.

Passenger transport had equally factored into its revenue base, with 16,000 having been carried as far back as 1901. During the 1970s, it carried passengers during the day and ore concentrates at night, accommodated in trains 80 to 100 cars long.

The White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad had been the principle transportation means to and within northern British Columbia and the Yukon for 84 years, from its 1898 construction to 1982 when the Anvil Mine had closed and obviated its need. Because the remaining demand had been insufficient to sustain profitable services, it ceased operations at that time, ending a long history whose match had been lit by the Gold Rush of 1898.

But an invisible flame continued to flicker in the ensuing years of darkness. Gradually increasing demand, spurred by cruise ship arrivals in Skagway, sparked the railroad's 1988 seasonal, passenger-only service re-inauguration, its centennial year, resulting in an annual passenger count of 39,000. Both the increasing number of ship operations, and their increasing size, took the annual passenger total to over 100,000 in 1991 and 290,000 in 1998, all within a short, five-month season. By 2006, it carried more than 430,000 yearly passengers.

As the self-proclaimed "Gateway to the Yukon" and "Railway built of gold," the White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad had been designated an International Historic Civil Engineering Landmark in 1994, one of only 36 world designs, including the Panama Canal, to do so, because of the obstacles surmounted during its construction, and today it is the only international narrow-gauge railroad still operating in North America.

Its current fleet consists of two steam engines, a restored 1947 Baldwin 2-8-2 Mokado designated Engine Number 73 and a 1907 Baldwin 2-8-0 originally built for the railroad and designated Engine Number 69; 20 diesel-electric locomotives, comprised of 1950 General Electric and 1960 ALCO types; and 80 restored and replica passenger coaches, the oldest of which dates back to 1883.

3. To White Pass Summit

The original White Pass Depot, a wooden, dual-floor train station facing Broadway where the tracks had originally been located, had been constructed in 1899 and had been adjoined to the Railroad Administration Building the following year. Upon its closure in 1969, at which time it had been taken over by the National Park Service, it erected a new, single-story structure on Second and Spring Streets and, with increasing passenger numbers, added a second floor in 1997.

Following the street-embedded, narrow-gauge tracks at 1245 past the White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad Maintenance and Restoration Facility, my 12-car train, pulled by three diesel-electric locomotives, paralleled the shallow, rock-embedded Skagway River beneath the deep green, spruce-carpeted mountains of Tongass National Forest, commencing its slow ascent on the 3.9-percent grade of track.

The six-track coach yard just beyond the maintenance facility had been used for rolling stock overnight storage, servicing, and cleaning.

Curving to the right at Mile 5.8, the train, moving through 402 feet, crossed the east fork of the Skagway River, near the Denver Glacier Trail, which had been marked by the red White Pass and Yukon Route railroad caboose available for nightly rental from the US Forest Service.

Re-curving to the left at Mile 6.9, the train passed Rocky Point, affording dramatic views of Mt. Harding and its glacier-carved canyon. Skagway and its now-tiny cruise ship armada had been reduced to miniature proportions, dwarfed by the treeless, snow-capped mountains towering above them.

Clifton Station, at a 638-foot elevation with a 792-foot-long side track, had formerly served as a section house staffed by foremen, sectionmen, and cooks, but had been removed in the 1960s after track and roadbed improvements had eliminated its need. Its name had emanated from the granite ledge hanging over it.

Bridal Veil Falls, at Mile 11.5, descended 6,000 feet in a series of curved steps, a "humans" of white, foamy water "skipping" down the dark green pine path from their Mt. Cleveland and Mt. Clifford glacier parents. The cloud quilt tore open to reveal patches of blue sky.

The thin, barely visible silhouette of the 1230 Fraser train, equally pulled by three yellow and green diesel-electric engines, could be seen hugging the mountain ahead and at a higher elevation.

The tracks arced into a 90-degree right turn again. At Henry Station, which had been named after a White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad contractor, cargo had been transported down a steep tramway to packhorses stationed at the mostly tent-comprised White Pass City in the valley below for final delivery to the summit.

Shortly before reaching 1,871-foot Glacier Station at Mile 14.0, the tracks doubled, and then briefly tripled. The station itself had served as home to railroad section crew who had maintained the rail bed and replenished steam engines with water during their uphill climbs.

The wider roadbed of Box Canyon catered to the prevalent spring snow slides which carried streams of rock, gravel, and vegetation with them.

Crossing over Glacier Station Bridge, the train, whose 12-unit, vintage-car chain now snaked behind it, surmounted the deep, dark green mountain, covered with western hemlock and shore pine, as evidenced through the left coach windows. It yielded to the gray, lightly snow-covered Mine Mountain ahead, its jagged peaks partially obscured by the soft touch of marshmallow cloud puffs resting atop it. A cable car had once spanned the canyon to the silver mine's portal on the other side.

The two parallel mountains, descending into the gulch 1,000 feet below, formed a velvet green "v" whose base had been cut by the now-minuscule "slice" of light blue river.

Traversing the wooden trestle at Mile 16, the train plunged into the 250-foot-long Tunnel Mountain, the chasm of Glacier Gorge disappearing into it as the horizontal light beams cast on its granite walls flickered into progressive darkness at its center, leaving a dead, perceptionless, breath-inhibiting void.

Inspiration Point, at Mile 17.0 and 2,400-foot elevation, once again afforded breathtaking views of Mt. Harding and the Chilkat Range, while the train passed the branch track leading to the no-longer used cantilever bridge, which had been constructed in 1901 and had constituted the world's tallest such design at the time.

Swallowed again by the unpenetrable, sense-defying blackness of the 675-foot tunnel at Mile 18.8, the three-locomotive, 12-coach chain bored through the mountain, a path obviated by the circumventing suspension bridge prior to 1969, at which time it had closed.

The multiple-layer valley, draped in deep green, stretched out below on the left side.

Reducing speed to a crawl and threading its way through craggy rock walls, which appeared to scrap against the outside coach windows, the train inched past the sub-arctic pine toward the 2,865-foot White Pass Summit, named after Canadian Minister of the Interior Thomas White in 1887 and located on the US-Canada border, the narrow-gauge tracks multiplying into three branches. The locomotive gently griped its brakes and the 15-unit chain ceased motion in the cold, stark, thin air.

The silence, a sharp contrast to the steady buzz at its Skagway origin, almost screamed of the closed history chapter which had sparked the railroad's engineering feat, of the gold seekers who had once passed this way, but were no longer existent. It had been at the White Pass Summit where mounted police had cleared the thousands of stampeders, overburdened with their year's worth of supplies and gear needed for survival in the frigid north, to enter Canada and continue their expedition to the gold fields of the Klondike, in hopes of attaining wealth. Of the some 40,000 who had made the journey, only ten percent had actually discovered gold and of that, only a few hundred had actually fulfilled their dreams of becoming "rich."

For the others, the journey itself, and not the destination, had proven the ultimate value of the adventure. Like life, whose ultimate "purpose" remains elusive, it sometimes seems that the path followed to a destination offers a better reward than the destination itself. Yet, without anticipation of destination or purpose, it is unlikely that the trip would be undertaken at all. If anything, the gold rush had provided a life lesson.

Disconnecting and following the 1,296-foot-long spur line, the three locomotives reattached themselves to the (now) front of the train, pulling it over the White Pass Summit and commencing its gradual, path-retracing descent down the mountain toward Skagway. During the return journey, I would think about that lesson...

The White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad

A graduate of Long Island University-C.W. Post Campus with a summa-cum-laude BA Degree in Comparative Languages and Journalism, I have subsequently earned the Continuing Community Education Teaching Certificate from the Nassau Association for Continuing Community Education (NACCE) at Molloy College, the Travel Career Development Certificate from the Institute of Certified Travel Agents (ICTA) at LIU, and the AAS Degree in Aerospace Technology at the State University of New York - College of Technology at Farmingdale. Having amassed almost three decades in the airline industry, I managed the New York-JFK and Washington-Dulles stations at Austrian Airlines, created the North American Station Training Program, served as an Aviation Advisor to Farmingdale State University of New York, and devised and taught the Airline Management Certificate Program at the Long Island Educational Opportunity Center. A freelance author, I have written some 70 books of the short story, novel, nonfiction, essay, poetry, article, log, curriculum, training manual, and textbook genre in English, German, and Spanish, having principally focused on aviation and travel, and I have been published in book, magazine, newsletter, and electronic Web site form. I am a writer for Cole Palen's Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome in New York. I have made some 350 lifetime trips by air, sea, rail, and road.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Penn State Football VS Nebraska Football - The Best Fans?

Are you a Penn State Football Fan? Or do your loyalties lie with Nebraska Football? These two teams will be meeting up starting in the 2011 college football season when Nebraska joins the Big 10 and while on the field analysis will be going on and on, I wanted to look at these two organizations from a different standpoint and see if I could answer the question. Who has the best football fans?

Let me explain my perspective on this controversial question. I am Pennsylvania born and raised - Go Lions! I married a Nebraskan and this obligates me to keep the peace at home - Go Cornhuskers! So I would like to think I can provide an unbiased opinion here...well, at least I would like to think that, you may disagree with me and that's fine.

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Penn State has the best football fans because...

1. Okay, this is simple...the Penn State White Out. This is a tradition that is actually announced on the student tickets. On designated White Out games, every Nittany Lion fan entering Beaver Stadium is encouraged to wear white as a symbol of their Penn State Pride.

2. The student section. ESPN analyst Kirk Herbstreit, declared the PSU student section to be "the best in the country". Beaver Stadium, with a seating capacity of 107,282 is often referred to as the toughest venue for opposing teams. In 2008, the student section was recognized as being the best in college football for the second year in a row.

Nebraska has the best football fans because...

1. They have the longest consecutive sell out record for home games, topping all other college football teams. They celebrated their 306th sellout on September 11, 2010. This streak dates back to November 3rd, 1962.

2. They are widely known as the friendliest fans in the country and this comes from opposing teams as well. When Texas broke Nebraska's home win streak, the year Ricky Williams played, instead of throwing things the ever classy Nebraska fans cheered Ricky Williams and joined in a chant of "Heisman, Heisman". This is cool in my book.

So there you have it, Penn State has the White Out and a powerful student section while Nebraska has loyal fans that fill the stadium and show a whole lot of class.

All I know is that come the 2011 season, I am going to have a tough time when Nebraska and Penn State take the field as part of the Big Ten Conference.

Penn State Football VS Nebraska Football - The Best Fans?

Are you a Penn State fan who wants to show off their team pride? Then visit Penn State Football Depot for team apparel, merchandise and gifts that you cannot find in the University Bookstore.

Are you loyal to the Big Red Husker Nation? Then show your pride with clothing, gifts and more from the Nebraska Football Depot.

Barrow, Alaska [And the Chuck chi Sea]

The Hotel and Clerk

It was a brisk morning in Barrow Alaska, when I first arrived [June, l996] the Chuck chi Sea was close to the Hotel, 'Top of the World,' hotel if I remember right; and you could see snow on the frozen waves of ice from a far distance with the naked eye, but I had brought along my binoculars nonetheless--and that didn't take away from the beauty of the endless view of the frozen sea, while the 'Top of the World Hotel,' the one I was staying at, guarded its shores--yes it was as if I was on top of it as I'd look out the big bay window.

Northwestern Airlines

There was a TV in the hotel lobby and grand sofas to rest on, while a stuffed polar bear, surrounded by a glass encasement guarded the lobby. I sat there while I drank a Diet Pepsi checking the bear out, its height, the window the endless ice that went on over the horizon. Day was long, and night was but gray for a moment, and day was back again. Hard to sleep and hard to stay away at times; anyhow, back in the lobby:

the fist day, the Lady behind the desk came over to me and gave met my keys with the room number attached to a chain, I put the paper down on the table, stood up, I had already signed in at the desk:

"I hope you'll like your stay her sir..." the oriental young woman commented as she turned about, her back now facing me, doing her business.

"Do you have everything you need?" she asked, knowing I was still standing there by instinct.

"Yup...sure--"I said, as I walked away.

"Let me know if there is anything I can do for you," she added as I was halfway down the hall, heading towards my room, still doing her business and not looking at me; she had eyes under that pretty hair I think, in the back of her head.

Here I am, I told myself, walking down this maze of turns and steps going down and back up again, --then to the right, down a corridor, up a level to find my room, my little room on the second floor of the three story hotel.

They were all busy, the people around me: maids, desk clerks, janitors, everyone, so I added to my ongoing mumbling monologue; a ting talking out loud to myself, as I often do: '...that's what makes traveling so much fun, --to go somewhere then to say, I got there (and watching everyone else busy with their everyday life).' And Barrow, Alaska, in the heart of the Arctic was no laughing matter; I mean it was not easy to get there. I had to take a plane from Minnesota, then onto Fairbanks, and then a small plane into the wild of thawing-ice lands, the desert-ice of the Arctic, then landing in Barrow, a community of about 3000-inhabidents (in l996; perhaps more now, or maybe less). It was a cherished moment to say the least when I landed, kind of a feat if I can say that. When I called North Western Airlines, I told them I wanted to go to Alaska, but didn't add Barrow yet into my conversation. I had the Frequent Flyer Miles to use up. And when I told them Barrow, they asked, "Where is that?" Looking on the map I expect, the response over the phone was, "I don't think we go there." And I said, "Oh yes you do," and when she quite friendly and said, "If we do, than you will be going there," she checked it out; she discovered she did, or they did. It was hard to believe it of course; and so that is how I got there.

Restaurants

During my five-day stay at the hotel, I found myself eating mostly at its attached Café, a Mexican one at that, of all places to find a Mexican café, in the middle of the Arctic I thought, in a village of some three-thousand people of which the majority were Inuit's, or otherwise know as Eskimos.

In most of my travels I usually avoided eating exclusively at the hotel I stayed at so I could visit other places, but I found I only ventured to other eating establishments once in my four-day stay; there really wasn't a wide selection. I wanted to eat whale, but there was none to eat, or at least that is what the locals told me; they had killed a whale a few weeks before I had come. I had called up to the area before I came and was hoping to tag along on a whale hunt, but it didn't work out that way. (I would eat whale in Iceland, four years yet in the future, but that is another story). I should add, if you are not a native of the land, it was/is against the law to eat whale in the United States, in Iceland it is not. And so according to customs and the law is how I went about my stay. As I said, I had to wait another four years to eat whale, which I did while in Iceland it was very, very good.

The Midnight Sun

One evening I had stayed up most of the night talking to Jackie (the evening receptionist) and watching TV in the lobby. She was a young woman, well traveled; we had a very light, clear, quiet and tasteful conversation--or should I say discussions...

My tired and droopy eyes listened closely to her travels as she did to mine...I think we both regretted not repeating that night again, a beautiful night with a lovely woman of wise opinion and well groomed conversation. It was all worth while, how she felt I don't know, but it showed by her attentiveness.

"What do you do?" asked Jackie, "How do you like Barrow so far...?" Was a question that came from her that evening?

"It's fine to visit," I commented, adding: "... but I'm afraid a little too speculative to keep a lasting relationship with..."

She turned to the side of me, thought a bit, said:" My boyfriend works up here...," pointing in a certain direction, I think northeast. She seemed excited when she said that, adding "...he's a pilot."

I found that not to be too unusual for this area in the Arctic, for there were a lot of small aircraft around, and a number of small villages for people to fly into-matter of fact, it was the only way to get into the villages, other than by foot or dog sled.

"Do you fly with him?"

"Sure--"

"I wrote a book," I commented.

"Yes, is that's so; what kind?"

"A children's book," I said.

She thought, then said, "That's great," as she got up to attend to business, walking over to the counter to insure all was well, for she had been sitting in them great sofa chairs going on two hours now.

"You think it would be all right to give you some books for your, the hotel and for the children in Barrow, that is?"

"Oh yes..." she commented, "That would be nice, very nice."

The Russian Pilot

The next afternoon I went to a small airport, cargo station more like, along side the unpaved road which was along side of the coast, leaving the residential area. The day was warmer than, the day before, and it was always light out I had noticed, hard to sleep, but I did get to see the famous Midnight-Sun, it is odd if anything, the sun coming up a little after midnight and darkening the day a little to gray and a sharp gloss as if rays were seeping through the atmosphere. Then after the event, the 22.5 hour day starts again.

At any means, the next day I went inside what was called the 'Air Station," and talked to a desk clerk about catching a ride here or there. He then talked to a Russia pilot, who was working as a roustabout for the delivery of mail to three villages in the vicinity. He then made a deal with the pilot to take me along for a mail run. I'd pay for the space that was being used, and that was all and a little tip for the pilot. Thus, he took me on a most adventurous ride; over and around and down to 100-feet to see the caribou running. The beautiful brown tundra, as winter thawed to a minimum. And up we'd go to five-hundred feet, than back down to 100. A roller coaster; we stopped in Port Lay, and a few other stops. It was all worth while.

Note: While putting together my second book of short stories, I had discovered a short story I had written August, l996 (more like journal notes), tucked away on the sides of the pages in a short story book I was reading at the time. Some times when I run out of paper, or cannot find any, usually I find a book I've brought along, in this case it was lost for eight-years, found on 12/18/02; tucked away again until now, revised 6/10/2005.

Barrow, Alaska [And the Chuck chi Sea]

Author Dennis Siluk http://dennissiluk.tripod.com

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Asiana Airlines - A Simple Way of Flying

Asiana Airlines ranks among the two major airline of South Korea. Headquartered in Osoe-dong, Gangseo-gu, Seoul Asiana is among the six airlines that received a five-star rating from Skytrax. It has two hubs, the domestic hub is at Gimpo International Airport and the international hub is at Incheon International Airport located 43 miles away from central Seoul. Asiana operates more than 500 flights daily to destinations across Asia, Oceania, North America and Europe. There are a total of 13 domestic and 81 international passenger routes apart from 20 cargo routes that the airlines operates.

Asiana Airlines offers a range of services, which makes flying with the airlines an enjoyable experience. The airline allows passengers to book their tickets promptly in a hassle free manner. All they need is an internet enabled computer and credit card, to make the payments online. If you need to cancel your tickets for some reason, there is an easy way of doing this as well. The airline has the best safety measures and ensures that passengers travel comfortably. The fares are reasonable and passengers can easily afford to fly to different destinations.

Airlines

Asiana Airline's frequent flyer program is known as Asiana Club; earlier it was known as Asiana Bonus Club. The program has five tiers - Silver, Gold, Diamond, Diamond Plus and Platinum. To be eligible for these tiers a passenger must traveled certain miles with the airlines or its partner airlines. The miles accumulated while traveling entitles flyers to get bonus tickets, upgraded tickets along with many other products and services.

Asiana's fleet consists of different types of aircrafts that flies to and from many destinations. Some of the are - Airbus A320-200, Boeing 777-200ER, Boeing 767-300, Airbus A321-100, Airbus A321-200, Airbus A330-300, Airbus A350-800, Airbus A350-900, Airbus A350-1000, Boeing 737-400, Boeing 747-400 and Boeing 747-400M. They have a fleet of more than 50 flights in service as of now.

Asiana has won many awards and accolades due to the wonderful services provided by them. The airline was declared as 'Airline of the Year' by Air Transport World in 2009. Asiana was named 'The Best Airline in the World' by Skytrax during the World Airline Awards in 2010. International Organization for Standardization (ISO) ranked Asiana first in class certification in 1996 for fulfilling criteria ISO 14001. The airline was designated as the first environment friendly company by the Ministry of Environment Republic of Korea in the service industry.

Asiana Airlines is growing fast in terms of air routes and network. Asiana Airlines flies to People's Republic of China, Japan, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Canada, USA, Germany, Australia, and Republic of Korea.

Asiana Airlines - A Simple Way of Flying

Know more about Airlines Information

Written By:

Shivendra Mohan Saxena
mail to:- shivenramapx1@gmail.com

Monday, October 17, 2011

How Can You Reduce the Odds of the Airlines Losing Your Luggage When You Travel?

It is estimated that more than a million bags are lost by commercial airlines each year in the United States alone. How much luggage that get lost in the whole world is anybody's guess. Here are some tips that may help you recover your bags if they are ever lost.

You should attach two or three tags with your name, home address, and phone number to the handle and zipper-pulls of each bag that you are checking. There is less of a chance that all of your tags will get torn off in transit. Make sure that you have removed any old airline tracking tags that are still attached to your luggage as they could confuse the baggage handlers.

Airlines

Also, be sure to place the same contact information, including a copy of your itinerary and destination address inside all of your bags. That way, if they do go astray and are found in time, it is possible that they could be forwarded to your hotel.

Pick luggage with preferably a bright or odd color that will stand out among all black and brown bags. Know which brand name of the luggage that you are using and attach a small colorful scarf or ribbon to the handle to make identification easier. Stick decals or a contrasting colored tape to each side of the bags so they are easier to find as it goes around the carousel. Remember these details, or better still, take a digital photo of your luggage just before you go and bring it with you. This will help the lost luggage staff at the airport locate your bags if they get lost in transit and turn up at their office. It will also help if you do have to make a claim.

It helps to make a list of what you have in your luggage and carry that list in you carry-on bag. The chance of your luggage getting lost in transit increases dramatically when you have connecting, or delayed flights. Always pack all of your valuables, including your laptop or Blackberry, travel documents, prescriptions, etc., in your carry-on bag. It makes sense to pack only the things you can afford to lose in your checked baggage. Most analysts believe that the airline industry's problem of lost luggage is not going to be resolved anytime soon.

What should you do if the airlines lose your luggage?

Go immediately to the baggage claim office and file a claim. Many airlines have a twenty-four hour window of time starting from when your flight arrives to file and be eligible for compensation. You will receive a claim receipt to check the tracking of your luggage with the airline by phone, or on the airline's website. Make sure you keep all your flight documents until the lost luggage problem is resolved.

How can you guarantee that the airlines will not lose your luggage?

There are a number of companies like FedEx, DHL, or UPS, that will send your luggage in the United States, directly to your hotel or destination address for a very reasonable cost. If you are staying in a hotel or resort, your luggage will be taken to your room by a bellboy. When you consider that in the U.S. alone, over a million bags are lost by the airlines each year, this service may be well worth considering. If you are planning to travel by air to and from the countries inside Europe, First Luggage, at First Luggage.com, is one of the companies that can provide this service.

How Can You Reduce the Odds of the Airlines Losing Your Luggage When You Travel?

To quickly find and book cheap airfares, for the lowest possible price, whenever you feel like traveling, go to Travel Tips Guide, for more info.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Top 20 Guitarists Of All Time - Guitar Players

It was a dark and rainy night. The courthouse clock struck midnight; a stray dog howled. It was all too beautiful when the staff of Gear Vault convened for their semi-annual secret meeting with the confines of the beloved cinder block chamber they call their "office." Their agenda? To decide the 20 most important people in guitar.

1. Jimi Hendrix

Northwestern Airlines

Widely recognized as one of the most creative and influential musicians of the 20th century, Jimi Hendrix pioneered the explosive possibilities of the electric guitar. Hendrix's innovative style of combining fuzz, feedback and controlled distortion created a new musical form. Because he was unable to read or write music, it is nothing short of remarkable that Jimi Hendrix's meteoric rise in the music took place in just four short years. His musical language continues to influence a host of modern musicians, from George Clinton to Miles Davis, and Steve Vai to Jonny Lang. Hendrix was the revolutionary guitar god, enuff said!

2. Edward Van Halen

Edward Van Halen once likened his guitar playing to "falling down the stairs and landing on my feet." Eddie's had thirteen albums' worth of such happy accidents and in the process has changed the way people play, hear and think about the electric guitar. With his unorthodox technique, dare-devil whammy bar antics and fearless experimentation, Van Halen revitalized heavy guitar after it had run its course in the Seventies. Espousing an I-just-play-that's-all-I-do attitude and favoring basic gear like stock Marshalls. Peavey 5150s, homemade, slapped together guitars and simple, minimal stop box effects, Van Halen became guitar's greatest hero by becoming its unassuming anti-hero.

From the jaw-dropping gymnastics of Van Halen's "Eruption" to the eerie, tidal crescendos of "Catherdral" on Diver Down, through his 1984 chart-topping synth experiments and spirit of 5150 and For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge, Eddie has remained innovative throughout his career. Never one to wait around for the electrician, Van Halen prefers building his own gear-and if it doesn't always look pretty, well, beauty is in the ear of beholder. By "Frankensteining" his first striped guitar from 0 worth of parts, Van Halen launched his quest for the elusive "brown sound-"big, warm and majestic"-and gave rock guitarists a new holy grail of tone to seek in the post-Jim-my page era. His single-pick up and volume control innovation changed the way guitars looked and sounded, popularized the previously obscure Kramer Guitars, and inspired the do-it-yourself guitar gear industry. Eddie's custom-designed Peavey amps and his with Sterling Ball on his Music Man guitars prove that Van Halen still believes the artist should retain creative input on his equipment.

As a player, Van Halen single-handedly-well, dual-handedly-introduced millions of rock players such exciting techniques as two-handed tapping and harmonics. Before 1978, guitar just had to be loud and fast. Eddie's playing is also tasteful and always in context, a fact that distinguishes him from his legions of imitators. While he's unimpressed by the copycat syndrome, it cannot be denied that many players first picked up a guitar after Van Halen's dazzling licks. But none of them can fall down the stairs with such brilliance.

3. Eric Clapton

Eric Clapton has successfully reinvented himself dozens of times: Rave-Up King with the Yardbirds; Holy Father of the Anglo-blues with the Bluesbreakers; free-form improvisational genius with Cream; chameleon rises to every musical occasion.

By 1965 the 20-year-old Clapton was already a legend. He'd introduced the blues to the masses, interpreting and updating what had been a largely unknown form for the rock generation. Simultaneously, his lush, Les Paul-driven tone marked the absolute turning point in the history of rock, transforming what had been a good-time twang instrument into a vehicle for profound expression.

Ultimately, the most enduring image of the great guitarist will be of Clapton the bluesman, standing on a corner of a stage and exposing his psychic wounds to the masses. It is interesting, though, that, while "bluesy" in feel, his most memorable songs-"Layla," "Tears In Heaven"-do not utilize the blues structure.

While most of Clapton's contemporaries talk reunion and revival, he never retreats behind memories of his "good old days." His Unplugged album, which was enormously successful-both for him and acoustic guitar manufactures-included a radical remake of "Layla." Clapton is one artist who has learned how to grow up.

4. Paul McCartney

Paul McCartney has spent very little of his career playing six-string guitar. But as a bassist, he almost single-handedly made guitar players' jobs a whole lot easier.

When the Beatles first arrived on the scene, rarely was the bass even heard on most pop records; players seldom attempted anything more adventurous than a root-fifth accompaniment. But McCartney, who not only played bass, but sang, enlivened the Beatles' material with dynamic, moving basslines on his famous Hofner and, later, a Rickenbacker 4001. By the time the Beatles began work on Sergeant Pepper's, McCartney as pumping out bass melodies that carried entire songs, with the result that the Beatles' guitar parts often became sparser, more subtle. Within months-and to this day-bass players the world over were unshackled.

5. Pete Townshend

Before Pete Townshend came along, feedback was something guitarists shunned like halitosis. Pete turned it into one of rock guitar's most powerful sonic resources.

Soon after The Who debuted in 1964, Townshend became legendary for violently slamming his guitar into his Marshall stack (a form of amplification he was the first to use) and smashing his instrument to splinters at the end of each show. All of this had a profound influence on Jimi Hendrix (aka The Guitar God #1) and just about every other rocker who ever picked up a guitar. Pete's trademark "windmill" strum was actually swiped from Keith Richards. But Townshend made it even bigger and more dramatic-which is what he and The Who did with just about everything they touched. Having mastered the art of the three-minute pop song, Townshend turned his attention to 15-minute mini-operas and, with Tommy in 1969, the worlds first double album rock opera. Townshend's songwriting genius and theatrical flair tend to obscure the fact that he is also a fine guitarist, as capable of supple lyricism as he is of angry mayhem.

6. George Harrison

When George Harrison strummed his first chord during the Beatles' historic appearance on the Ed Sullivan show 44 years ago, he became the catalyst for the electric guitar's metamorphosis from stringed instruments to tool of teenage liberation. And, as the folks at Gretsch and Rickenbacker will readily attest, it didn't exactly hurt sales, either.

While Harrison has never been a virtuoso guitarist, he was an innovator-constantly pushing the limits of studio sounds and stylistic boundaries. In many ways, he also was the first modern session musician, his chops as diverse and far-reaching as Lennon and McCartney's songwriting. He could dish up brilliant Scotty Moore-style rockabilly ("All My Loving"), heart-rendering gut-string lines ("And I lover") and sheer fuzz and fury ("Revolution")-always adding something memorable to the material. Later in his career, he developed an original slide style that is more melodic than bluesy. Like the Beatles as a whole, Harrison never settled into a comfortable groove. He glided across the musical spectrum-from country and western to spaced-out psychedelia to smooth and sweet slide-shattering conventions and then moving on.

7. Angus Young

Two decades after Angus Young first emerged AC/DC's axe-wielding dervish at age 14, the we Scottish Aussie remains one of the sturdiest bridges between young metal-ists and rock's blues roots. Although he did great work before and since, Young will always be best known for 1980's Back In Black, a blue-collar masterpiece which, with killer classics like "You Shook Me All Night Long," remains an all-purpose primer for riff writing and tight, scalar lead playing. Never mind the fact that the man does it all while spinning around like chinchilla on speed. Though he may be dwarfed by his signature oxblood SG, Angus Young is a giant among men.

8. Jimmy Page

Arguably the most emulated guitarist in rock history, Jimmy Page is additionally assured a place in the music's pantheon of greats for his roles as a musical director, produce and all-around guru of Led Zeppelin.

His Rampaging, blues-based work on anthems like "Whole Lotta Love," "Communication Breakdown" and "Rock And Roll" defines heavy metal. His real genius, however, was his ability to expand the parameters of the genre to include elements of traditional English folk, reggae, funk, rockabilly and Arabic classical music.

Page the guitarist has never been a facile as Edward Van Halen or Steve Via, but few players in rock history have been able to match his restless imagination or visionary approach to guitar orchestration. Whether he was exploring the exotic joys of open tuning on tracks like "Kashmir" and "Black Mountain Side," pioneering the use if backwards echo on "You Shook Me," or coaxing other worldly sounds from his '58 Les Paul with a cello bow on "Dazed And Confused," Page consistently transcended the limitations of his instrument and the recording studio.

More than 30 years have passed since Page recorded the seminal Led Zepplin IV, but the album's gigantic imprint can still be detected in the work of such cutting edge bands as Jane's Addiction, Stone Temple Pilots and Soundgarden, to name a few. Page, of course, remains active. His dense, mutli-layered work on the Coverdale/Page record demonstrated his refusal to rest his laurels.

9. Kurt Cobain

Kurt Cobain was the intense and unkempt grunge lord who brought Nirvana from obscurity to the top of the charts, was all the rage-literally. The king of the guitar anti-hero, he didn't play his Fender Jaguars but he mauled them in a chord-crunching fury. Inevitably, he smashed his guitars, littered stages around the world with his splintered victims.

Cobain was a guitar pioneer because he managed to fuse into one dynamic style the aggression of Seventies punk rock, the speed and simplicity of Eighties hardcore and the bottom-heavy crunch of Nineties metal-and done so without a trace of silliness or bombast to which all three genres are prone.

There's little doubt that scores of new players have been inspired to plug in by the chugging chords of Cobain's "Smells Like Teen Spirit." Segovia he wasn't. But Segovia never captured the angst of an entire generation with one burst of ungodly feedback.

10. David Gilmour

What makes David Gilmour truly remarkable is his uncanny ability to marry two seemingly contradictory genres-progressive rock and blues. Perhaps the most dramatic example of this unusual union can be heard on one of Pink Floyd's biggest hits, "Money" (Dark Side Of The Moon). As the song begins, Gilmour slowly builds a delicate network of spacious, effected guitars, only to topple them with a series of emotionally charged, vibrato-drenched solos, whose rich, shimmering tone and impeccable phrasing recall B.B. King, rather than King Crimson.

Gilmour is the rarest of rockers. Like Jimi Hendrix, he ahs the natural ability to balance the cerebral with the emotional, the technical with instinctual, while keeping an eye on both the past and the future. It is this awesome juggling act that is the secret to Pink Floyd's lasting appeal.

11. Keith Richards

Keith Richards is the archetypal rock outlaw, the quintessential skinny English rock guitarist in a tight black suit. He's filled that role since the Rolling Stones first established themselves as the dark, dangerous alternative to the Beatles in 1963. With his deep love of the blues, Keef initiated a generation of white, middle-class kids into the wonders of Muddy Waters, howling' Wolf and Chuck Berry. His unique five-string, open-G tuning lies at the heart of such all-time power chord classics as "Jumpin' Jack Flash" and "Street Fighting Man." As a soloist, Keef has worked a few miracles; witness the icy, amphetamine mesmerism of his licks on "Sympathy For The Devil" and his buoyant bending on "Happy." And he is the author of the most-played riff in all rock: the tritone mating call of "Satisfaction." Much has been made of Richards' fondness of controlled substances, but his ultimate drug is music; his knowledge of rock, blues and reggae is encyclopedic, his passion for them boundless. They have sustained him through imprisonment, addiction, tempestuous lines of his leathery face, the history of rock and roll is etched.

12. Eric Johnson

In a realm often dominated by ham-fisted machoismo, Eric Johnson stands apart as rock guitar's elegant poet laureate. He has managed to create an original style from such radically dissimilar sources as country chicken picking, Jimi Hendrix and jazzman Wes Montgomery. A legend long before he became famous, Johnson's seemingly endless, melodious lines and distinctive "violin" tone made it an absolute requirement for guitarists stopping near the Texan's hometown of Austin to attend his show there in the early/mid 1980s.

After turning down numerous offers to tour as a sideman, he rose to prominence in 1986 with his critically acclaimed, Grammy-nominated album, Tones. His follow-up, Ah Via Musicom, thrust the self-effacing innovator further into the spotlight, yielding one Grammy-winning cut ("Cliffs Of Dover") and eventually going gold. Combining passion and lyricism with what can only be described as an overwhelmingly positive vibe, Johnson's music is progressive without being academic, uplifting without stooping to sentimentality.

13. Buddy Guy

"Part of my reason for forming Cream was I suddenly had this mad idea about being English Buddy Guy; my goal was to be Buddy Guy with a composing bass player... And to this day, when he's on I don't think anyone can touch him. He takes you away to somewhere completely different." -Eric Clapton

"Buddy Guy is as close as you can come to the hear of the blues." -Jeff Beck

"He plays one note and you forget about the rent." -Carlos Santana

"Nobody can get out of tune as cool as Buddy Guy." Stevie Ray Vaughan

14. Yngwie Malmsteen

Two schools of thought have sprung over the years regarding Yngwie J. Malmsteen. On the one hand, the Swedish native's incredibly precise, rapid-fire playing has earned him as a profound and brilliant artist, the founder and most important exponent of neo-classical guitar. From the point of view of this school, the effortless blend of raw spead, finesse and passion that has characterized Malmsteen's style since his 1984 solo debut, Rising Force, represents the pinnacle of fretboard achievement. Yngwie is also credited with popularizing the scalloped guitar neck.

But Yngwie is also scorned by many in the guitar community, who loathe him with an intensity that matches the ardor of his most dedicated boosters. To group, Malmsteen was the architect of cold, empty guitar style, which emphasized technique over art, speed over feel. They rejoice over the apparent demise of neo-classicism. And how do you plead-for Yngwie or against?

15. Dimebag Darrell

This authentic, crimson-bearded lone star madman had rewritten the book on heavy metal riffing in the short space by many major-label releases. By combining the virtuosity of Edward Van Halen with the rhythmic drive of a glue-sniffing punk rocker, the legend Pantera guitarist had created a highly individual sound that that appeals to classic rockers, fans of death metal and industrial headbangers. On Pantera's March 15, 1994 release, Far Beyond Driven, Darrell solidified his reputation as one of metal's true originals on tracks like "Good Friends And A Bottle Of Pills," which combines hell-and-damnation riffing with the kind of abrasive avant-garde noodling that put Sonic Youth on the map.

16. John Petrucci

Known with Dream Theater, John Petrucci is proud to be progressive. "Our style is completely different from grunge and alternative music," says the 41-year-old Berklee-trained musician. "But I think our music has as much attitude as any of those bands."

Dream Theater is known for a complicated, textured style of hard rock that embraces flawless musicianship, lengthy improve sections, daring arrangements and other flashy elements made popular by Yes, Kansas, Rush and other old-school rockers. Leading the progressive charge is the technically masterful Petrucci, whose playing encompasses angular melodic phrases, liquid chromatics and manic dispays of speed-picking into an exciting, coherent style.

Despite his reputation, the Ibanez-wielding shredder remains modest; "Being looked at as a guitar hero is very flattering, but being singled out away from the rest of the band doesn't appeal to me," says Petrucci. "I'd prefer to have people view me as a talented musician in a good band-not as some flashy soloist." Not a chance.

17. B.B. King

As the universally hailed ambassador of the blues, B.B. King has introduced his favorite music to more people the world over than all other artists combined. In fact, he's so highly visible-popping up everywhere from ads for Northwestern Airlines and McDonald's to episode of "Sanford And Son" and "Married With Children"-that it's easy to take for granted and forget why he became so revered in the first place.

B.B. King has an incredibly expressive, vocal vibrato and an unmistakable, ringing tone, both of which have been imitated by legions of admirers. He is also the master of the perfectly placed bent note, stretching his strings with eloquence, brilliant timing and consistently perfect intonation. But what is perhaps most impressive about B.B. King is that despite hanging over 300 nights a year for decades, and despite having attained cultural icon status long ago, he has avoided slipping into complacency. He never plays the same solo twice and to this day stretches himself, demonstrating night after night exactly why he is the King Of The Blues.

18. Joe Satriani and Steve Vai -- Both rockers are equal careers and talent.

Starting with Joe Satriani, a walking warehouse of virtually every rock guitar style and technique ever developed. From delicate, classical-style finger-picking to the most profane vibrato-bar molestation, Joe knows it all. He elevates the level of whatever he's playing with his passion for sonic adventure and dead-eye sense of song and orchestration.

Like a human melting pot, Satriani has managed to integrate such disparate influences as surf guitar, world beat and Jimi Hendrix into his playing. His much-lauded 1987 breakthrough album, Surfing With The Alien, almost single-handedly rehabilitated instrumental rock as a mainstream genre and help bury the myth that a thoughtful, educated player couldn't rock. In the manner of the Blow By Blow-era Jeff Beck. Satriani employs his superior technique and seemingly inexhaustible vocabulary of licks, riffs and styles in the service of memorable songs (rather than the other way around). And he continues to do this exhibitionism, traps that have foiled too many of his peers.

Steve Vai's unparalleled technique and effortless flash made him rock's paramount pair of hired hands in the 1980's. He rendered PIL more accessible, empowered David Lee Roth, gave Whitesnake artistic credibility and even shredded for the Devil in a sensational performance in the film Crossroads.

But it was with 1990's Passion And Warfare-perhaps the most anticipated guitar release of all time-that Vai crystallized his technical skills, incredible drive and explosive vision into a sensitive, acutely personal guitar statement. He shifts gears with the greatest of ease, gliding from delicate lyricism to the back. Like a demented circus master, Vai has the power to amuse and frighten with his most dangerous menagerie of sound.

19. Joe Perry

For 35 years, through not one or two, but several climbs to the top, Aerosmith's Joe Perry has been a living testimony to the power of a Bad-Ass Attitude. Perry's perpetual sneer is expressed not merely on his chiseled face, but also through his guitars and overdriven amps. Of course, he's also written some pretty decent riffs, the best of which completely defines their song; it's impossible for even non-guitarists to think of "Walk This Way" or "Sweet Emotion" without humming Perry's etched-in-stone guitar lines.

20. Zakk Wylde

Zakk Wylde's hellacious guitar playing and charismatic stage presence made him a keeper of the heavy metal flame with Ozzy Osbourne for many years. But you ain't heard nothin' yet. Zakk stared a few bands of his own, Pride & Glory and his most recent, Black Label Society (BLS), frenzied, high octane slab of guitar mayhem. It's a molten mix of Zakk's two selves: his heavy, energetic Ozzyfield side and the hell-bent Southern rocker and ruthless side. Step out of the way and make peace with yo' maker, son.

Top 20 Guitarists Of All Time - Guitar Players

Chaz is a passionate music lover and guitar player. He's been playing guitar for over 25 years. Chaz is also the owner of one of the most respectable guitar review websites on the entire internet. Read his professional and comprehensive guitar and amplifiers reviews before you buy your next guitar or piece of musical equipment. If you are a Dimebag fan like I am, then check out history of the Dimebag Dean ML Guitar.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Airlines Hiring Flight Attendants - Where Do You Look?

Web searchers interested in becoming a flight attendant the world over are Googling 'airlines hiring flight attendants' for the express reason that becoming a flight attendant has either been a lifelong dream or they consider that now is as good a time as any to break free and do a job that has lifestyle.

And while an airline job lifestyle is a big draw card to having an office with a view, so too are the benefits of becoming a Flight Attendant. Obviously the vacation travel benefits and participating hotel discounts are pretty hard to beat, but so too are the little known perks like car hire, great credit union deals, profit sharing plans and human resources support to name a few.

Airlines

It's common for those interested in becoming flight attendants to simply want to find out those airlines hiring flight attendants because that's what you do when you want a job in most industries. Find out where it is, submit your resume and go for the interview. Sadly for most however, that is a long way from reality and there is a rather different process that the airlines hiring flight attendants go through.

Mostly because of the sheer weight of numbers that apply for the position. Certainly there are the recognised favoured airlines that attract large applicant numbers because they are either sentimental or frankly they just pay better and have 'those great travel benefits' that appeal to everyone. But applicant numbers may also be large because the variety and type of flying available is about as diverse as the number of airlines that fly the skies which can be just as appealing.

Again, it depends on what you value as lifestyle. For some it's living out of a suitcase on long international routes and for others it's travelling their own country and enjoying layovers in places that they have always wanted to go but have not yet been to.

There is also variety in the responsibilities on offer as a flight attendant. With airlines that fly the bigger aircraft types such as the Boeings, Air Buses and Larger Embraiers, you become part of a crew of three or more and will be lead by a Cabin Manager who rightly takes care of the management of the flight and the crew.

However if you are the sort of person that wants to get out on their own and run the show by yourself then you'll step right into that responsibility from day one with smaller commuter and hub airlines. Many of them are a one flight attendant operation and sometimes two so it really can be a pleasant and enjoyable experience to literally crew your own office.

As far as Googling 'airlines hiring flight attendants' - about all you'll find is flight attendant schools telling you that they are the only ones with this hiring information and if you do a course through us we can put you in touch with those airlines actually hiring now.

The best advice; stay clear of such banter, save your money and search the airline that you want to work for. You'll find out a lot more from their web site career sections with a few exceptions as some airline career pages are either brief or not there. However that is the minority. Obviously when they put the word out that they are looking for flight attendants the news travels fast however, so hook into some flying forums and even social network sites where like minded people network.

By all means receive information from trusted sights about whose hiring and what you need to do to get the job because there are some great content sites out there but hang onto your money from those offering to either fast track you if you do their course or that they have exclusive 'contacts' or affiliations with airlines. Unless of course you can see real value in what they offer you in the course content or associated information they have to offer.

Certainly becoming an aircrew member is a competitive field and you will have to do all you can to get ahead of other applicants because a flight attendant position is recognised as just too good to miss out on by so many. If this is your dream waiting to happen however, go for it, you won't regret it.

Airlines Hiring Flight Attendants - Where Do You Look?

TJ is a committed aviation tragic who has flown for nearly two decades and is passionate about the industry. His web site http://www.Flight-Attendant-Careers.com and self Authored manual, 'Flight Attendant Interviews Made Easy,' reveals the airline application process from A-Z for those who want their dreams to take flight too.

Visit airlines hiring flight attendants for more info on this subject.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Area 51 - Place For Experimenting the Secret Weapon

The U.S. Government once had declined the existence of Area 51. What is it that they try to hide? Or it is the army of extraterrestrials? If one asks that which U.S. soil is the most secret area; the answer might be Area 51 as there are many people claiming that they see UFO (Unidentified Flying Object) flying over such area frequently and so many people guess that Area 51 might be army or commanding area of UFO.

Working morning Every morning of working day, there are at least 500 people passing the entrance going up to the airplane with strict guard which is at the wing of the Northwestern area of Maccaran Airport in Las Vegas. The owner of this restricted area is EG&G - Edgerton, Germesausen and Grier.

Northwestern Airlines

These people have to provide password of Jnet followed by three-digit id. Number before entering into Boeing 747-200s without any sign identifying whose aircraft it is. This airline has flight very half hour with destination at Groom Lake, the secret area that the U.S. Government agency declines the existence many years ago. Experimenting area of secret aircraft Area 51 or called Groom Lake is 90 miles far to the north from Las Vegas. In fact, Area 51 was once the location of soldier army of the U.S. established in 1955 with the purpose to test U 2 Spyplane

And it is used as the place of research as Aurora Project. These fighting planes would be tested the performance at Groom Lake. When they complete the test of fighting aircraft, then they would announce to the public that the army has built new weapon already.

History of Area 51

In March, 1955, Kelly Johnson, the designer of U2 Spyplane, had been assigned from CIA to design U2 Spyplane. Besides, he had been assigned to work in looking for testing place for this U2.

Kelly had sent staff, Tony LeVier, the pilot to test U2 with Dorsey Kammerer to explore the area in the middle of desert at the South of California, Nevada, and Arizona. Two weeks later, Tony came back with report sent to Kelly and Kelly compared 3 places then decided to choose area near the Lake Groom in Nevada.

Lake Groom has many names as from the time when the base was founded. Kelly called it the Paradise Ranch. However, after testing U2 in July, 1955 then it was called in brief as Ranch. In fact, this air base (secret) was officially called Watertown Strip according to the name of one town located at the North of New York which is the native town of Alen Dulles, the Director of CIA at that time.

Background and origin of Area 51

In June, 1958, the Atomic Energy Commission - AEC had used the area around Groom Lake together with U.S. army in order to experiment new secret projects; they called this as Nevada Test Site. The Commision had divided the area into various parts then designated number to each part, the area which is air base obtained 51.

As from that time, every time when Hollywood creates movie concerned with secret project of the U.S., they often refer to Groom Lake but just in a brief way as Area 51 called by the AEC although the secret experiment of AEC was ended in 1970.

In 1970, the U.S. air base had occupied this area permanently in order to sue as testing new fighting aircraft and experimenting Mic 21 Aircraft and other modern weapons of Russia confiscated by U.S. in 1967.

In 1975, Area 51 had been determined as area for replicating the air fighting under Red Flag. Then this Area 51 was called in brief as Red Square, the semi-formal name was "Dreamland. And during 1970s, there had been experimenting of project on space and the most modern aircraft as Tacit Blue.

Expanding territory The air base of Groom Lake was expanded during 1980s again and the airport was built, building for storing airplane was built on flying field to be easy for hiding from the sight of stealth satellite and radar. It is expected that it is used as the commanding area of Testing Center of fighting aircraft called Detachment 3.

Although the security was increased, the area was still be taken photograph because the surrounding area of Groom Area was mountain. Inn 1984, the U.S. Army had to expand this restricted area with the hope to prevent anyone from seeing into the area. However, there were another 2 spots that could be spied which was 12 miles far from the Groom Lake to the South which was White Side Peak and Freedom Ridge. In 1995 then the army announced this as restricted area as well.

But such restricted area was only equipped with warning sign without any fence as such restricted area extends widely. The security guards were arranged to safe the place including the anonymous security guards with modern weapons. This patrol anonymous area is called Cammo Dudes with supporting helicopter as Silkorsky MH-60G Pave Hawk

Various secret projects use Area 51 as experimenting area are gradually ended such as the testing of Tacit Blue was complete in 1985, the testing of Advances Cruise Missile or ACM.

Advances Cruise Missile

Was canceled in 1992 The test of Stand-Off Attack Missile is terminated in 1994. However, the air force of U.S. still established the Operation Center there. It is possible that air force still had other missions that had never been disclosed. In 1989, the Television Station of Las Vegas had broadcasted the interview of Robert Lazar.

Robert Lazar- The man who claimed that he once worked in Area 51

Robert said that he had been assigned to study into spacecraft engineering of extraterrestrials in Area 51 with 9 cycle spacecraft falling down in restricted area called S4 or Papoose Lake which was 10 miles far from Groom Lake to the Southwest.

The story of Robert was highly criticized. It made story concerned with UFO become more tangible. The cycle spacecraft might be the test of resistance system of gravity. Of course, this remarkable technology must be covered as top secret. Besides, there was test of spy plane with more speed than sound for 5 times using new engine such as Pulse Detonation Wave Engine and with high-speed airplane driven by hydrogen power; the test of air plane with more speed than sound many times is called High-Mach Vehicle.

The structure of air plane with characteristics as mixing between A12 and D21 or called Super Valkarie. There were many people once look at around Area 51 which was often the area for testing spacecraft from other planets. According to the statement of Robert, S4 was the place for testing the study and research into UFO under the name of Moondust.

Robert worked in the lab together with Barryy Castillio, the scientist. Each research group was separated and worked in various divisions. They were limited to have just a few colleagues. Barry was only one colleague who helped Robert in studying and searching for the driving of spacecraft.

The first day that Robert travel to S4, he was taken to nursing room to examine his skin. He was coated with many kinds of substances around many spots on his arms. On the following day, the staff checked his skin. And he was ordered to drink some substance that would make him to have better immune system. The substance drank by Robert had smell like the pine. In that night, after he drank such substance, he had cramp at his stomach. It was the side effect of the substance. Subsequently, Robert was introduced to Rene. He did not know that who is Rene and what is his duty in S4. There were only 22 staff working in S4. The supervisor of Robert was Dennis Mariani.

He knew Dennis at the time of interview at EG&G Company. At that time, there was office located at Maccarran Airport in Las Vegas. At present, it was moved to Nellis Air Force Base

Area 51 - Place For Experimenting the Secret Weapon

In early days, there were staff taking Robert to small room. There was only one table and chair with more than 100 files of documents... to be continue : http://www.nnhit.com.
Aimmy

Yacht Charter in Sardinia

Campidano is a fertile plain in the southwestern part of the island. Livestock raising and the cultivation of grains, olives, grapes, and tobacco are significant. In addition fishing, the mining of lead, zinc, and copper, and processing industries are also important economic activities. More recently a significant tourist trade has been developed. The capital of Sardinia is Cagliari.

Sardinia was conquered by Rome in 238 BC, after the fall of the Roman Empire Sardinia was overrun by first the Vandals and then the Byzantines. From the 11th to the 14th century, the Genoese and Pisans battled each other for control of the island. The Spanish ruled Sardinia until the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, which ceded the island to Austria. In 1720 it became part of the Kingdom of Sardinia and came under the rule of the house of Savoy. When the Kingdom of Italy was created in 1861 the Kingdom of Sardinia came to an end.

Northwestern Airlines

There are airports at Alghero, Olbia and Cagliari making for easy access to your chartered yacht. Alghero is used by the budget airline Ryanair so low cost flights are available to and from the UK.

The yacht charter season in Sardinia generally runs from April to the end of October. High season is July and August, when the temperatures (around 35ºC) and prices are at their highest. May and June, September and October are well worth considering. Prices are lower, the temperature more comfortable and for those wanting to sail rather than motor round Sardinia the winds are likely to be more suitable.

This article will now take a look at individual locations likely to be of interest to those chartering a yacht on Sardinia. Starting at Algehero on the northwestern coast and moving round the island in a clockwise direction.

Alghero is an old fishing town that has recently seen significant tourist development. However the old town dates back to the 12th century and is well worth exploring. There are a number of churches and historical places of interest to visit. Consider a guided excursion to make sure you do not miss anything. Close to Alghero is Porto Conte with its natural wildlife reserve that spreads along the coast. It can be reached either by land or by boat excursion. Alghero is a Catalan town and although today most of the cuisine available is Italian there are still a few Catalan influences to be found. Paella Algherese or Catalan lobster, which is served cold with tomato and onion. Sardinian specialities include roast suckling pig or Seadas, a pastry filled with Goats cheese and then dribbled with honey. Yachts can berth in the marina that is situated in the main harbour. Extended information on the marina can be found here

Stintino is a charming old fishing village stretched over two inlets with two harbours, Minori and the more modern Mannu, Sardinian for small and large respectively. There is an interesting museum, located at the new harbour, telling the story of tuna fishing through the ages. The local beaches are renowned and La Pelosa Beach is amongst the most beautiful beaches on Sardinia. La Pelosetta, Le Saline, and Ezzi Mannu are all worth a visit. Time your charter to coincide with one of Stintino's festivals; the Rural Festival of Saint Isidoro in May, June sees the Tuna Festival, the village hosts the Latin Sail Regatta in late August and the Patron celebrations in honour of the Blessed Mary of Defence take place in September.

The island of Asinara lies of the of the NW coast of Sardinia. The western side is made up of steep rocky slopes with many landslides, ravines and crevices. In contrast on the eastern side you will find wide bays and many beaches. Asinara is known for its rich wildlife of which some species are both rare and endangered.

Marina di Porto Torres lies on the NW coast of Sardinia. The marina is the heart of the civic harbour in Porto Torres and overlooks the gulf of Asinara. More information on this marina can be found here.

Santa Teresa Gallura lies on the northern coast of Sardinia. There are lovely beaches nearby backed by the rounded rocks of the Gallura region. A ferry runs from the harbour to the French island of Corsica. Or take the yacht across the Straits of Bonifacio to Corsica and visits both the town of Bonifacio and Porto-Vecchio a little further to the NE can easily be included in your charter.

The Straits of Bonifacio, the narrow stretch of water separating Sardinia and Corsica, has many smaller islands. These form the Archipelago of La Maddalena, made up of various forms of granite that over the years have taken on fantastic shapes. This is a stunning piece of nature. Those islands in the west include; Budelli, Barrettini, Barrettinelli, Corcelli, La Presa, Paduleddi, Razzoli, Santa Maria, Spargi, Spargiottello and Spargiotto. And further to the east; Cappuccini, Caprera Monaci, Chiesa, Delle Bisce, Della Paura, La Maddalena, Pecora, Porco, Santo Stefano and Sperduti di Caprera.

La Maddalena is the largest of the islands. The town La Maddalena lies on the south coast. Linked to it is the smaller island of Caprera. On the southern coast is the attractive Porto Palma. Caprera is best known as the home of Italian nationalist leader Giuseppe Garibaldi who lived on Caprera Island from 1856 until his death on the 2nd June 1882. His residence and tomb are often visited national monuments.

Cannigione lies on the west shore of the gulf of Arzachena and is a natural harbour. It was originally a fishing village and is today a popular holiday destination. In the port is a well equipped marina.

The island of Tavolara lies of the NE coast of Sardinia. On the south coast there is a small harbour at Spalmatore di Terra. Some of the island is inaccessible due to military restriction in place. Just south of Tavolara, lies another island Molara. Here you can see mouflons, rare wild goats, found only in Sardinia and large flocks of Cormorants. Both islands have good beaches and are popular diving locations.

Porto Cervo on the NE coast of Sardinia has a marina, see here for extended information. Yachts can also anchor in the bay. The town lies in the heart of the Emerald Coast, home to the rich and famous during the summer season. As you would expect there are numerous bars and restaurants and a busy nightlife. Inland you can visit the Giants Tombs of Coddu Vecchju at Capichera and La Prisciona, a typical Sardinian prehistoric construction of circular shape constructed with dry stonewalls. Other sites in the area include the Giants Tombs of Li Lolghi, the small temple of Malchittu and the funeral circles of Li.

There is a marina at Porto Rotondo with some 630 berths. It lies on the NE coast of Sardinia and is safe to enter in all winds. Extended information can be found here.

Olbia, situated on the east coast of Sardinia, has a marina. More information can be found here

Marina di Arbatax lies on the eastern coast of Sardinia. It has over 500 berths and is sae to enter in all winds. More detailed information can be found here. The harbour faces the 16m high Scogli Rossi or red rocks.

Slightly inland from Arbatax is Tortolì. Back in 1995 the streets and the piazzas of Tortolì started to exhibit works of contemporary art by Italian and foreign artists. Much of the town now feels an open air gallery. The area is well known for Bottarga, dried grey mullet eggs, and Cannonau, the local wine.

Just to the north of Arbatax is Baunei, set on the slopes of Mount Santo. The area is rich in prehistoric remains including the cave of Su Marinaiu where there is evidence of the first human presence in Sardinia. In the Golgo valley there are many nuragic monuments. Also in the area are the karst caves including the Su Meraculu Grotto and the Cave of the Fig, the latter is home to a flock of monk seals.

Villasimius, lies on the south coast of Sardinia, to the east of Cagliaria. A modern marina lies close to the town. The town is surrounded by mountains and is indeed very picturesque. Its lively nightlife makes the place popular with the young.

Cagliari, on the south coast of Sardinia, is the island's capital. Following the founding of the Kingdom of Italy in 1861 Cagliari saw rapid growth. Castello, the old part of the city, lies on top of a hill, with a wonderful view of the Gulf of Cagliari. Most of the original city walls are intact, and feature two 13th century white limestone towers, the Elephant tower and St. Pancras tower. The city walls and many buildings are also constructed from the locally quarried limestone. In Castello you can visit the Cathedral, repaired during the 1930's. The palace of the Provincial Government is near the Cathedral. The Sardinian Archaeological Museum houses an important collection of artefacts from the prehistoric Nuragic civilisation of Sardinia. Marina, Stampace and Villanova are early districts of the town and retain much of their original charm. Evidence of Roman occupation can be seen at the Roman Amphitheatre. It is unique in as much that it was carved into the limestone on which Cagliari itself was built. Nearby are mountain parks, such as Maidopis or Monte Arcosu, heavily forested with abundant wildlife, Sardinian deers and wild boars. If you wish to obtain a feel for Cagliari prior to your yacht charter read one of the novels by Sergio Atzeni who has based many books on life in the city both modern and ancient. There is a marina at Cagliari. It is safe to enter in all winds and more detailed information can be found here.

On the south coast of Sardinia lies the deep Gulf of Teulada with its bays and coves. The wide bay is set between Capo Malfatano and Capo Teulada; these capes mark the most southern point of Sardinia. Although much of the area is under the restrictions of NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation) this has in part kept the area unspoilt and free from tourist development. Porto Zafferano for instance can only be accessed by boat and has some of the highest white sand dunes in Sardinia.

Teulada is a small village a few km inland. Today it is a tourist centre, there are shops selling locally hand made jewellery worn traditionally by the local women together with a wide brimmed felt hat with its clear Spanish influence. The village is also well known for its food; roast meats, suckling pig and suckling goat spit roasted on the fire and flavoured with the many local herbs that can be found. And don't miss the tomato focaccia that is baked daily. It is a folded over focaccia filled with roasted cherry tomatoes, baked together it is one of never forgotten.

Buggerru lies on the western coast. It has a small harbour and good beach set between two impressive rocky promontories. The surrounding mountains are littered with historical ruins, relics of the mining of precious minerals such as the black obsidian that was exported all over Europe. The now defunct mines have left attractive caves and tunnels that have been turned into tourist attractions. The Henry Tunnel well worth a visit for the magnificent views of the bay.

Bosa lies to the south of Alghero on the west coast. It is a set on the Temo river valley, a short distance from the sea and is overlooked by the Serravalle Castle. The town is set on the slopes between the castle and river and is particularly charming. The river and sea have always played an important role in the life of Bosa and on August 15th every year there is a procession of boats honouring Our Lady the Protector of the Sea, with a carried on a boat statue of the Virgin accompanied by singing.

Yacht Charter in Sardinia

Ken Jones runs a Crewed Yacht Charter Guide. Follow this link for info on Yacht Charter in Sardinia. And this link for info on Mediterranean Yacht Charter.