Posts Tagged ‘travel’

Puerto Rican Accent

This is an example of a puerto rican accent. Its not the only way puerto rican people speak, but one of many

PUERTO RICO: Noche de San Juan, Puerto Rico's Night on the Beach

Join LatinFlyer.com for Noche de San Juan (Night of St. John), a centuries-old tradition that brings thousands of people to the beach at midnight, for an evening of celebration, friends and family. Get ready to get wet! FOR MORE INFO about travel to Puerto Rico and throughout Latin America, visit www.LatinFlyer.com and www.LatinFlyerBlog.com

Puerto Rico and San Juan Travel Photos 2

Puerto Rico Travel www.visitorinfo.com visit San Juan to find Spanish culture, relaxation, shopping and excitement. We have the specials to make it easier and cheaper for you to travel and enjoy your trip fully. AIR DEALS www.visitorinfo.com www.visitorinfo.com visitorinfo.com HOTEL SAVINGS Search Forms and Hotel Lists www.visitorinfo.com Direct Hotel Link www.travelnow.com Car Rental Specials www.visitorinfo.com and www.travelnow.com Cruise Deals www.visitorinfo.com and cruises.ian.com Area Guides to World Attractions dg.ian.com Tours in Puerto Rico at www.visitorinfo.com
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Caribbean travel

Cindy has been taking photos for about 1 1/2 years, she has taken perhaps close to 100000 with her Sony DSL-R. I did this video in celebration of her Birthday today. Happy Birthday Cindy!
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Travel San Juan, Puerto Rico: Colourful houses, cobblestoned street

 

On this gorgeous Saturday (no rain, finally) we took coastal highway 165 into San Juan from Dorado, a beautiful drive along the waterfront without any traffic whatsoever. We first explored a little stretch of land called “Isla de Cabras” (Goats Island) which is a tiny island strategically located at the entrance of San Juan Bay. Its historically significant position is evidenced by a fortification called “El Cañuelo” which is not accessible to visitors. The island was even used as a leper colony in the late 1800s. From there we drove back past the main power station and the Bacardi Rum factory to the Ferry Terminal in Cataño where we took a ferry across the bay into Old San Juan. I rediscovered many of the places I had already visited earlier, including the fortress San Felipe del Morro and the adjacent San Juan Cemetery. I was enchanted by the narrow, cobble-stoned streets with their brightly coloured stuccoed houses. In the courtyard of the historic building “El Cuartel de Ballaja” I came across a major festival for guitarists who play the local “cuarto” guitar, and two teenage boys played a little Spanish song for me on this unique instrument. I even caught images of a local wedding right in front of the Cathedral of San Juan. At dusk the Christmas lights on the Plaza de Armas and along the Calle Fortaleza came to life. As the sun was going down I positioned myself on the Plaza de la Rogativa to catch the sunset and then walked through the Puerta de San Juan for a

Video Rating: 4 / 5

Our last few hours in Puerto Rico had arrived. We left Dorado and took coastal Highway 165 again for a pleasant stress-free drive into San Juan. We had just about two hours before we had to return our vehicle at the airport and decided to visit another couple of areas in San Juan that we had not seen before. We drove through an area called “El Condado” which is a busy ocean-front community with many high-rise hotels, somewhat reminiscent of Fort Lauderdale or Miami Beach. We then drove further east to another San Juan district called “Isla Verde”, a beachfront suburb that also features many condominiums and some highrise hotels. After returning our rental car we were ready to check in our luggage when the US Airways representative informed us that our flight to Philadelphia was cancelled due to the winter storm that had been blanketing the northeastern US and Canada. Fortunately he found a flight to Charlotte, NC, that would connect us with our destination of Buffalo after all. We had to race to the plane as everybody was already boarding. We finally arrived at about 10:30 pm in Buffalo, and not surprisingly were greeted by a continuing snowfall. Our car was buried under several inches of snow and after finally finding a gas station in Buffalo we crossed the border into Ontario at midnight. Having arrived at 2 am in our driveway in Toronto, we couldn’t even get our vehicle into our driveway because the snow was so deep.

Discover the Mountains in Puerto Rico

Discover Puerto Rico Mountains (Part 1).

When city folk from Puerto Rico’s populated northeastern region yearn
to relax and indulge in nature, it’s more than likely they’ll head “out on the island,”
far from the bustle and congestion of metropolitan buy augmentin Rico’; return true” onmouseout=”window.status=’ ‘” href=”http://www.map-puerto-rico.com/san-juan-puerto-rico.html”>San Juan.

While they may opt for the delights of sun and surf at a nearby beach, they’re
just as likely to head for the less-populated high country of the Cordillera Central (Central
Mountains
), where the air is sweet and cool, the vegetation lush and the pace leisurely.

Like a long, elevated spine, the Cordillera Central traverses Puerto Rico from east to west
for about 60 miles, unveiling a side of the island seen by few tourists.

An unhurried ramble along the western portion of the chain’s Panoramic Route
reveals a world of dense forest reserves, small towns and undulating fields of
coffee. And it offers a step back through history for a glimpse of a lost Indian
civilization that was still flourishing here less than 1,000 years ago.

As you drive along, you’ll be treated to spectacular views of cloud-covered
peaks and subtropical valleys that stretch north to the Atlantic Ocean and
southwards to the Caribbean sea coastline.

Count on two to three days for a foray into this area and keep on hand a
detailed map pinpointing the Panoramic Route, a network of two-lane, blacktop
roads which winds ever upward in a series of switchback turns. Gas stations are
plentiful on the trip’s first leg, but become less so the higher you go.

For snacking, keep an eye out for small grocery stores known as “colmados”
and roadside fruit stands that sell “coco frio” coconut water served ice-cold
from its unhusked shell.

Plan to spend a night or two in a historical “parador,” one of the island’s
small country inns. Several in this region are located in restored, 19th-century
coffee plantations such as the popular Hacienda Gripinas.

Begin your trip from San Juan by taking the Arecibo Expressway and Route 2
to the town of Manati. Turn south on Route 149 as it climbs through haystack-like
karstic hills past the town of Ciales and intersects with Panoramic Route 143.

This 60-mile journey takes approximately two hours and places you at
Divisoria, a small community which straddles 7,000-acre Toro Negro Forest.

Today, the reserve is home to dozens of varieties of plants and majestic
trees, including towering, slender-stalked mountain palm, feathery bamboo and
giant tree fern.

West of the intersection lies the man-made Guineo (banana) Reservoir, the
island’s highest lake, and to the east the Dona Juana Recreational Area with its
ranger station, picnic tables and freshwater swimming pool.

You can follow one of several slippery hiking trails to a deserted watch
tower or to 200-foot Doña Juana Falls.

As you travel west, you will pass Cerro Maravilla,  its flanks carpeted with
lush vegetation and a silvery forest of communication towers crowning its
summit.  Nearby are some striking lookouts onto the south coast and the Caribbean
sea.

Will continue…

Explore Puerto Rico!

RIO GRANDE, Puerto Rico – Here, on the beach at the Wyndham Rio Mar Resort, my husband, two college-age daughters, and I lolled on chaise lounges, a tiki bar and palm trees behind us, the warm surf of the Atlantic Ocean in front of us, and all around us sand the color of light brown sugar and the baby-soft texture of refined flour. Like many families with older children, we find it difficult to carve out family vacation time, so this week in Puerto Rico was a welcome treat.

Less than an hour to the west was San Juan. Directly across Route 3, the area’s main drag, replete with strip mall chain stores and makeshift roadside stands, El Yunque National Forest rose into the clouds.

We were staying in a friend’s condominium a short golf cart ride from the beach, which gave our daughters (who were too young to drive our rental car) some time on their own. A few minutes away was Luquillo, a palm-lined public beach.

We had arrived at a location filled with a rich variety of things to do and plenty of opportunity to do nothing but lie in the or body surf. The latter was the appeal to our daughters, who complain when we pack in too much sightseeing. This time, as our 21-year-old put it, “It didn’t feel like too much.”

El Yunque, the only tropical rain forest in the US National Forest System, began as a 12,300-acre reserve set aside by King Alfonso XII of Spain in 1876. Now a 28,000-acre dense, verdant preserve, its 1,200 plant species include some 240 types of trees and 70 varieties of orchids. The warble of the coquí, the Puerto Rican tree frog, provides the sound track. For an introduction, stop at El Portal, a visitors center entered via elevated pathways that provide a canopy walk 60 feet above the forest floor.  It features an introductory film narrated by actor Jimmy Smits.

Well worth the $5 ticket is the guided walk that leaves the Palo Colorado Interpretive Site on a first-come first-served basis from 10:30 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. daily. On a one-hour slow stroll along a forest path, a guide pointed out miniature orchids and “air plant” bromeliads that attach themselves to trees and take moisture from canopy drippings above.

El Yunque has an extensive system of trails, many paved and dotted with picnic areas built during the Great Depression. The most popular is El Mina, a trail that descends from 2,132 feet to 1,640 feet in less than a mile, sometimes on concrete steps. The trail runs along, and crisscrosses, the La Mina River and ends at the spectacular Cascada La Mina, a 35-foot waterfall.

In the northeast corner of Puerto Rico, where the Atlantic meets the Caribbean, is the town of Fajardo, launching point for ferry service to Vieques and Culebra. The islands are also reachable by 10-minute flights. We chose Culebra, the smaller of the two, for our only full-day trip of the week.

The ferry docks in the tiny hamlet of Dewey. Those interested in snorkeling can stop by the dive shop opposite the ferry to rent gear and get directions to close-to-shore reefs. We hopped on one of the myriad taxis waiting to take visitors to Playa Flamenco, an exquisite white-sand beach routinely ranked as one of the world’s most beautiful. An entrepreneur rents umbrellas and chaise lounges by the day. Taxis run in a continuous loop between Dewey and Flamenco, so there’s always a way back to town. One snorkeling site is a 15-minute walk away.

Just east of San Juan is the little town of Piñones. From the road it is not much to look at, just one modest business after another. But behind them is a beautiful stretch of beach, and we enjoyed one of our best meals at the Soleil Beach Club. My mahi mahi in a caper and white wine sauce was tasty and tender and served with the traditional Puerto Rican mashed plantains with cassava.

My husband and I returned to Piñones, where a scenic boardwalk runs along the water and into a mangrove forest. We ate lunch at the Reef, sensationally set on a small waterfront knoll with a magnificent view of San Juan, and rented bicycles for $5 an hour just over the bridge from San Juan.

We left Old San Juan for the end of our week. Our first stop was El Morro, the stunning thick-walled Spanish fortress built between 1540 and 1783. It sits on a bluff with a panoramic view of the harbor and across a lush expanse of lawn that is a popular spot for flying kites. Visitors are free to roam El Morro’s maze of tunnels, dark passages, and stone stairways.

Ponce de Leon may never have found the Fountain of Youth, but he founded this island’s first settlement. Casa Blanca, an old white mansion where de Leon’s descendants lived, sits on the site of the wooden house he had built for himself in 1521 but never occupied. De Leon’s tomb is in the Catedral de San Juan Bautista.

We ate a scrumptious dinner in the garden courtyard of Baru, whose eclectic fare is served tapas style. We loved the shrimp skewers in orange liquor, mixed greens with mango and balsamic vinaigrette, tuna carpaccio with seaweed salad, empanadas, and chicken skewers marinated in green curry and peanut sauce.

Before we left, we stopped at Mi Pequeno San Juan and bought a handmade plaster replica of a yellow, flower-draped Old San Juan facade.  It hangs now in our powder room to remind us of our delicious week on the island.

Irene Sege can be reached at sege@globe.com.

Places to visit in Puerto Rico

There are a lot of places to visit in Puerto Rico on your trip. Most people concentrate on the main attractions on the metropolitan area of the island and here we feature other nice places to visit out of the way, they are worth the driving and the experience. Visit Map Puerto Rico (http://www.map-puerto-rico.com/) for more information.

Las Cuevas de Camuy National Park

This national Park features on of the largest cave systems in the world.  Visitors will walk into parts of the caves and explore a small part of the system. The surrounding areas feature some nature settings that make for very good views. At this awe-inspiring underground Camuy cave park you can experience a magical ambiance created by nature. The caverns are unbelievably huge.  The Clara Cave is so large that a 17 story building could fit inside of it.

La Parguera, Lajas, Bioluminescence Bay

Another very unique place to visit on the island. this bay has micro organisms on the water that when disturbed they “light up” and produce a beautiful display on the water. this phenomenon happens on various places around the world, but in Puerto Rico is the only place that is guaranteed for it to happen every night.

Arecibo Observatory

In the north par of Puerto Rico you can visit the famous radio telescope part of the National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center (NAIC), the largest of this kind in the world. Its large receptor plate it’s larger than 12 football fields, used to spot signals from planets and in the SETI research for extraterrestrial life. Inside the Observatory there are science related exhibitions of different subjects to watch.

Mayaguez Zoo

Mayaguez is home to the only public zoo in the island.  The zoo 2 main animal selections are the African Forest and the African Savannah. Also it features a Beautiful bird sanctuary.  Cages and open compounds stand in an attractively landscaped setting of small islands, a lake, tropical vegetation and children’s playground.

Ponce Art Museum

Any street in Ponce, Puerto Rico is in itself an outdoor museum of sorts. The city’s architectural treasures are lavishly decorated with wrought iron balconies, window grilles and ornamental trim. The Ponce Art Museum has the largest art collection of the Caribbean between pictures and sculptures.  Its collection has many European works such as works by Velasquez, Rubens and Rodin, and others.

Fajardo, Puerto Rico

It is also the home to the largest Marina in the Caribbean, called Puerto del Rey. The town contains various hotels; the El Conquistador Resort is one of its most famous hotels. Off shore near Fajardo few islets can be found: Icacos, Palominos, Palominitos and Diablo, uninhabited coral islands.

For the divers, there is excellent clear water all around the cays, with plenty to explore.  An excellent place to snorkel, the shallow waters at Seven Seas are swarming with tropical fish, coral and an abundance of other marine life.

Offshore reefs help keep the waves down and strong trade winds make it an ideal spot for sailing and windsurfing.

Visit Map Puerto Rico (http://www.map-puerto-rico.com) for more information.

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