Finding Inspiration at Iguazu Falls

Travel blogger Keith Jenkins shares his life-changing experiencing to Iguazu Falls. To mimic Keith’s breathtaking experience, book a trip there via LAN Airlines.

I’ll never forget my first glimpse of Iguazu Falls. That day in December 2008 was one of the formative experiences of my new life as a globetrotter; a defining moment that has inspired me to travel and blog ever since.

Iguazu Falls-Argentina side

Breathtaking!

I found myself in Brazil during a tumultuous time, both for the world and myself. Halfway through a five-month break from my career as a banker, Lehman Brothers collapsed throwing the financial world – and my future job prospects – into grave doubt.

Although my future as a banker looked grim, the sights and sounds I was experiencing helped to soften the uncertainty, and eventually opened up the door to a new and inspiring future.

When I found myself perched above the astonishing sight of the Iguazu Falls; curtains of water thundering into the vast tropical gorge below, clouds of water vapour throwing up a series of dazzling rainbows before my eyes, the financial crisis was the very last thing on my mind.

Iguazu Falls

Iguazu Falls, Brazil- 2008

Instead I was in Brazil having the time of my life, exploring the world on my own and learning things about myself that I had never considered before.  I pondered upon my future as I peered over the edge. Like the falls before me, I realized that my future was going to be a dive into the unknown.

The thought that I had my future in my own two hands was both exciting and terrifying at the same time. I had no clue what I was going to do but as I watched the water tumble over the edge, I knew that if I simply followed my heart and my instincts, just like I did by embarking on this world trip, the future would be as rewarding as the resplendent rainbows below.

Iguazu Falls, Brazil

Iguazu Falls- Brazil side

With hindsight, I know now that this moment was a turning point in my life.

I revisited Iguazu in July 2012, this time not as a precarious banker but as a professional and successful travel blogger.

 

 

I was excited to re-visit the spot that had become a personal symbol of my career change, though I was apprehensive that this time round would be an anti-climax. Over the previous four years, as I embarked on this new career path, the symbolism of the falls gained almost mythical proportions, at least, in my mind.

Check out other amazing South American wonders such as Machu Pichu & Easter Island

That concern was swiftly banished from my mind the second I laid my eyes on the falls. I was stunned by the ferocity, the power and the incredible volume of water.

For the second time in my life I was stunned by the surreal scenes before me.

Visiting the Falls

The next day, I visited the Argentinian side of the falls. Whereas the Brazilian side offers visitors a panoramic view of the falls, on the Argentinian side you can get up close and personal with the falls, along a series of boardwalks, which lead directly above, and then below the falls.

Argentina-side of Iguazu Falls

The Argentina side of Iguazu Falls

You can visit the falls year round, during the drier summer months (winter in the northern hemisphere) the water level is lower and the falls take a greenish tinge. In the wetter winter the water levels can be significantly higher, the falls are much more powerful and the water is a milky brown.

These are easily among the world’s most iconic waterfalls.  I suggest spending a few days in the area to view the falls from both countries. Don’t miss the highlight on the Argentina side: the breathtaking Garganta del Diablo or Devil’s Throat.

Devil's Throat

Devil’s Throat- Iguazu Falls

 

There are opportunities to go on boat rides to the foot of the falls as well as helicopter rides that provide visitors with a phenomenal bird’s eye view.

The Brazilian side of the falls also has two other attractions: the beautiful Parque das Aves bird park and the impressive Itaipu Dam, both of which I can highly recommend for a visit. Foz do Iguaçu (the Brazilian gateway to the falls) and Puerto Iguazu (the Argentinian gateway) both have airports with frequent connections to major cities in the respective countries.

 

Keith Jenkins- http://velvetescape.com/

Iguazu Falls, Brazil

Me- at the edge of Iguazu Falls

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Based in Amsterdam, in a former life Keith had a successful career in corporate and investment banking. But despite his success, his career began to feel empty. So he made the life-changing decision to get out and follow his new calling: travelling the world and seeking out its sexiest, richest and most opulent experiences.

Keith has visited more than 70 countries across six continents and writes about his travels on his popular blog, Velvet Escape. He also often speaks at travel and social media conferences, and is the co-founder of the Global Bloggers Network, a community of more than 1,300 individual and corporate travel bloggers that helps its members grow and monetise their blogs.

 

Machu Picchu: Our Favorite Member Photos

Once upon a time (or 1911, actually,) a Yale professor traveled to Peru, hiked for six days and ultimately became the first Western scholar to experience the “lost city” of Machu Picchu. The famed ruins – inexplicably designed without so much as a hammer – continue to draw thousands of worldwide visitors. The best way to get there is to hop a LAN Airlines flight, relax, and think, “I am about to visit one of the Seven Wonders of the World.”

Over the years, IgoUgo members have hiked the ruins of Machu Picchu and shared their most inspiring photos. Today, we share our favorites with you. It’s like being there…but without all that hiking.

 

photo by nora_yusuf

Baby Llama – photo by nora_yusuf

Although tours are readily available,the amount of visitors allowed to visit Machu Picchu per day is restricted to 400. It’s a fun challenge for the fittest among us, as the climb promises to tire even the most experienced climbers.

 

Final Steps of the Inca Trail- photo by chirmhosen

Peruvian Girl – photo by theartemis

Peruvian Women in Traditional Clothing – photo by iamtrc

Today, we need a team of landscapers to repair our homes and gardens. The Incas essentially use their bare hands to construct an entire city.

photo by chirmhosen

wayna_picchu__huayna_picchu

Huayna Picchu – Towering above the Ruins

Check out LAN Airlines for more information on how you can visit Machu Picchu.

by Heather Green
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What to Do in Nassau

Travel writer Eileen Ogintz tells us the best reasons to visit the Caribbean’s best kept secret – Nassau Paradise Island. Nassau has it all – great hotels, fantastic food, local culture and plenty of family activities.

The best dance partner I’ve ever had was a 14 year old, eight foot long, 492 pound dolphin named Icaro. I met him at Dolphin Cay at Atlantis Paradise Island in the Bahamas and he left an unforgettable impression. Resident dolphins like Icaro enable visitors to participate in one of the largest dolphin interactive programs in the world—as many as 800 people a day, Atlantis officials say. There are also interactions with sea lions if you want to brave it.
They live in a seven interconnected pools containing nearly seven million gallons of seawater. A staff of more than 80 including an on-site vet cares for them.

Swimming with Dolphins

Swimming With Dolphins

Sign up to be a trainer for a day or swim with the dolphins, as long as you are 10. Even babies have done the shallow water interaction. Check the Nassau Paradise Island for all of the options and costs.

You shouldn’t feel guilty about splurging for the experience either as some of the proceeds support the Kerzner Marine Foundation that works to preserve and protect marine ecosystems around the world.

Sea-Turtles

Sea Turtles

Nassau Island Top Things to Do

I love that in Nassau, the Bahamas’ capitol city on New Providence Island, and its neighbor Paradise Island you can do everything from kiss a dolphin to snorkel in beautiful clear water (visibility is over 200 feet in some places) deep sea fish (50 world records were set in these waters), sail, jet ski, canoe (on Lake Nancy) horseback ride on the beach, golf or take a yoga class along the ocean, gamble or learn a little history. (Check out the historic government buildings Rawson Square, Fort Fincastle, the highest point on the island, and the Queen’s Staircase—65 steps carved by slaves in a limestone cliff at the top of Elizabeth Avenue Hill to honor Queen Victoria’s 65-year reign.)

Like pirates? The Bahamas had so many of them in the 18th century there even is a Pirates of Nassau Museum.

You can even make cigars.

That’s right. You can make cigars at the small cigar factory at Graycliff, a historic mansion dating back to the 18th century that now is a small hotel, restaurant and cigar factory. Sixteen master rollers from Cuba turn out a million cigars a year. I’m in awe. They roll out a perfect cigar in four minutes!

Mine aren’t so perfect.  I learn it is all in the feel—bunching the leaves in my hand and then wrapping them in a binder leaf that I ”glue” with a touch of sap.  Fun!

Swimming with Sharks in Stuart Cove, Nassau

I’ve had lots of adventures in Nassau—even scuba diving with sharks with Stuart Cove Dive Bahamas which also offers the option of exploring reefs, wrecks and coral walls.  The company has four sites where you can dive with sharks.  They swam in front of me, behind me, so close I could see their teeth as I kneeled 37 feet under the water.

We weren’t in a shark cage, neither was the dive master.  As long as we stayed motionless and keep our arms to ourselves, they ignored us. “You aren’t in their food chain,” the dive master explained.  Thank goodness!

Stuart Cove Shark Dive

Stuart Cove Shark Dive

Marching Flamingos at Ardastra Gardens

Like birds?  Nassau/Paradise Island are home to some of the most exotic birds in the world, including marching Flamingos.

Audastra Flamingos

Audastra Marching Flamingos

I’ve had lots of adventures on outer Bahamian islands too—kayaking through the mangroves in Great Exuma, where the path is so narrow we must go single file, scuba diving off of Green Turtle Cay. In fact, I learned to scuba dive at Brendal’s Dive Center on Green Turtle Cay in Abaco, Bahamas.

Once we’d finished our certifying dives, we went to a tiny uninhabited beach where we  met wild dolphins,  and feasted on Bahamian lobster tail and fresh conch salad that our guide had gotten from the sea as we watched.  Amazing!

Keep in mind that there are 700 Bahamian islands starting just 50 miles off the coast of Florida that offer every variety of experience, including meeting the locals in Nassau and beyond.  Join the complimentary People-to-People program and you will be paired with a Bahamian ambassador who welcomes the opportunity to introduce you to their culture through a meal, a visit to a school, a tea party, even a local church service.

Ask the locals where they go at night on Nassau.  You have your pick of clubs and casinos, from the gargantuan Atlantis Paradise Island Casino to the newly renovated Crystal Palace Casino at the Wyndham Nassau Resort.

nassau crystal palace

Wyndham Nassau Resort

About Eileen Ogintz

Eileen Ogintz is a leading national travel expert, syndicated columnist of the weekly column Taking the Kids and the creator of TakingTheKids.com whose special sections including the latest 50-Plus Places to Light Up the Holidays and Fun in the Snow have become a go-to resource for families planning getaways.

She is regularly quoted and featured as a family travel expert in newspapers, magazines and websites across the country. Eileen is the author of nine travel books, including the most recent The Kid’s Guide to New York City, and The Kid’s Guide to Orlando.

Follow @takingthekids

Ava_Roxanne_Stritt

6 Genuinely Unique Spa Travel Tips – Forget the Fish Pedis

If you pay attention to all the usual spa news you’d be forgiven for thinking that fish pedis and dung beetle facials are all the rage as the “latest” body and wellness treatments.

Well, nothing could be further from the truth. If you’re looking for genuinely unique (and maybe wacky?) spa travel experiences, forget the usual fads and look out for these instead. Just remember to bring your credit card.

Born Again at Casa Magna Marriott

What could be more rejuvenating than being reborn? The Rebirth treatment, which is offered at the Ohtli Spa in the CasaMagna Marriott Puerto Vallarta luxury resort, promises to utilize the healing power of water to mimic the therapeutic conditions inside the womb.

I guess it’s perfect for those of us who need a reboot to life itself.

The treatment starts in a pool with the water perfectly warmed to aid meditative focus. The therapist (midwife?) guides you through rhythmic movements to relax your mind and body and bring you into a meditative state which allows your tension and stress to be released, presumably into the amniotic fluid.

The treatment promises to refresh and rejuvenate and leave you feeling younger and revitalized. The spa recommends multiple treatments, but at $1,820 a session, it’s going to get pricey!

Get Stone Age in a Cave Spa in the Austrian Alps

In Austria they have an entirely different take on the best setting for a spa. The cave spas (“Healing Caves”) in Bad Hofgastein, a high-end ski and spa resort in the Austrian Alps, feature sauna-like temperatures to treat aching joints – perhaps after a day skiing in the surrounding mountains.

Healing Caves Bad Hofgastein

Healing Caves Bad Hofgastein

To reach the caves, guests actually ride into the heart of the mountain on a specially-built mine train, which clearly adds to the excitement. The caves are co-ed, so bathing suits are required. Note: claustrophobic people need not make an appointment here.

Reiki Healing Energy at Harbor Beach Marriott

Okay I call this one “unique” since the whole point is to not be touched by the therapist. Usually some contact is good for a spa treatment, but sometimes less is better.

Harbor Beach Marriott

Harbor Beach Marriott

Hailing from the mountains of Tibet to the private beaches of Fort Lauderdale, the spa at Harbor Beach Marriott offers Reiki treatments based on ancient healing techniques that use very subtle, light body contact in an attempt to channel life force energy and create a positive change in your mental and physical well-being.

Harbor Beach Marriott

Harbor Beach Marriott

Sometimes the touch is so light that you are not certain if the treatment is still in session, but trust me – all that energy afterwards didn’t come from a 5 Hour Energy shot.

Aquabella Circuit Treatment at Westin Playa Bonita

Back to the water we go, but this time for the amazing Clarins treatment called Aquabella, a hydrothermal wellness circuit offered at the luxurious Westin Playa Bonita in Panama.

Aquabella Treatment Room_Westin Playa Bonita

Aquabella Treatment Room at Westin Playa Bonita

By merging holistic therapy with advanced technology, the treatment promises to stimulate your circulation via a sequence of treatment chambers, each one delivering either a hot or cold hydrotherapy treatment.

Aquabella Spa - Westin Playa Bonita

Aquabella Spa – Westin Playa Bonita

They can be enjoyed in any order you please, but each has its own place in your personalized therapy so be sure to request advice on your ideal sequence. Up first is the “rain dance experience shower” for cleansing before moving on to the vitality pools. A good sweat in the herbal sauna will boost your blood circulation before the skin gets hydrated in the “amethyst crystal steam room.”

A first for me was the “pediluvio stream,” where round river stones massage your tootsies. The last stop is a lounge in the relaxation area.

Temazcal Sweat Lodge at Viceroy Rivera Maya

The end of the Maya calendar (and the world?) is just around the corner, so what better way to spend it than experiencing a purification ritual in a traditional Temazcal Sweat Lodge at the Viceroy Riviera Maya.

Above we were reborn, but now it is time to return to Mother Nature’s womb. This treatment is revered as a sacred act and must be performed by a Shaman. The ritual is said to allow us the opportunity to free ourselves from unnecessary emotional baggage and give us the ability to live in only the present.

These are some genuinely unique spa treatments for you to try, but if you are also looking for some unusual companionship maybe these monkeys would be willing to join you!

Ava_Roxanne_Stritt

Ava Roxanne Stritt

Ava Roxanne Stritt
Ava is a travel writer and editor of the blog Spa Travel Gal. She believes that travel, spa and skincare experiences are not a luxury, but essential to a healthy body and mind. If her family needs to find her they just call the local luxury spa.
A renowned expert in spa and luxury travel, Ava is featured in USA Today, the Los Angeles Times, Spa Week, Fox News, and the Atlanta Journal Constitution, among many other publications.

You can follow Ava on Twitter, Facebook and Google+

 

Ant-Tacos

5 Top Travel Bloggers Name “The Worst Thing I Ever Ate”

Popular Food Network and Travel Channel shows featuring famed food adventurers like Anthony Bourdain and Andrew Zimmern have made it cool to eat like a local. We asked our famed travel bloggers “What’s the craziest thing you ever ate?” The answers were brave…can you say cobra a la carte?

Ant-Tacos

Ant Tacos


Lost in Translation, Marrakech
Nellie Huang

We were in the chaotic Djemma el Fna food market in Marrakech, hunting through the smoke and blinding lights for some local food at a budget price.

At Stall 34, blazing flames were clouding the sky in smoke and the aroma from the barbecued meat skewers was too tempting to pass up. My friends ordered several brochette de viande or meat skewers (the only item that we could read in French) right off the sizzling grill but I was craving for something new and exciting.

I scrolled through the menu, which was written only in French, and randomly picked a dish.

“Cerveaux de moutons s’il vous plaît!” The cook looked at me and smiled. Clearly, I had no idea what was coming.

Soon enough a dish was produced: it looked like a lightly sautéed chunk of mincemeat, but in the dim lights, I could hardly make out what it was and the cook didn’t speak any English. I was too hungry to care. I took a bite on the tender meat and almost threw it up. It had a soft, tofu-like texture and a strong gamey taste. No, it wasn’t beef. Neither was it lamb. It had a subtle hint of herbs. Bull testicles? Pigeon?

It was only when I returned home and checked up on the translation of the word did I solve the puzzle. It was sheep brains, and apparently it was a delicacy in Morocco.

No wonder the cook was pointing to his head the whole time!

A Cobra Bloodbath, Hanoi
Stephanie Yoder

Stephanie-Yoder

I’m comfortable with the implications of being a carnivore but still it’s unnerving to look your meal right in its still squirming face.

I’m not sure what I was expecting upon being invited to a Vietnamese snake restaurant. The building was just another generic store front on a dark street in the suburbs of Hanoi. I would never have found it (or sought it out) on my own. We were the only foreigners there yet dozens of groups sat in their own private areas, all feasting on the same thing: cobra.

The snake came out nearly immediately. “Who will eat the heart?” the server asked, passing around our very alive, very alert, and very poisonous entree, “Vietnamese Viagra!”

I laughed nervously and downed a shot of rice wine. Next to me, my boyfriend Michael raised his hand to volunteer.

Do snakes feel fear? I flinched when they brought the knife out. It was just a quick hand motion and the beating heart was outside the body, still attached, still pumping. Michael bent over and ripped it with his teeth. Vietnamese Viagra? No way I was kissing him now.

“How did it taste?”

“Slimy.”

In the confusion afterwards the snake was bled out, the blood mixed with the wine and handed out in thumb-sized cups. We toasted and drank. The wine overpowered any taste but the act itself felt primal. Next up, wine with venom and bile. This shot tingled on the way down. I tried not to think about it too hard.

The snake disappeared into the back to be cooked into an (ultimately delicious) 6-course meal. The rest of us, who were clearly having a better night than him, went back to drinking wine.

Bulls Balls in Brazil
Keith Jenkins

Keith Jenkins

I saw them for the first time at a grill house or churrascaria in Foz do Iguaçu, the Brazilian side of Iguazu Falls. The restaurant chef accompanied me and explained the different parts of the cow on the massive grill.

With a chuckle, he proclaimed, “bulls balls”!

“Testicles? No way!”

I glanced at them and made a beeline for the juicy-looking tenderloins. But when I returned to my table I was horrified to see the person next to me sitting with an enormous testicle on his plate. Seeing me recoil in shock, he grinned and asked me if I’d ever tried it.  I shook my head, trying to regain my cool and appear uninterested.

His grin grew wider, he cut a slice from the testicle and handed it to me.

I shook my head but no words came out of my mouth. The sight of his knife slicing through the testicle made me squirm in my seat. I looked at it on my plate and thought, “Get over it. It’s just a meatball!” I put my fork into it (ouch!) and raised it to my mouth. I munched on it twice and swallowed it quickly. The only thing I remember was a salty flavor, which I swiftly washed down with a big gulp of beer!

Having the Guts to Try Something New, Buenos Aires
Jessica Festa

Jessica-Festa

One hungry afternoon in Buenos Aires, my friend and I caught a whiff of grilling meat and followed our noses to a street vendor selling the usual selection of choripan sausage and other snacks.  Although delicious, choripan is pretty greasy and very fattening so I thought I’d brave something called morcipan. It was cheaper, darker and less greasy; vegetarian sausage I assumed, without stopping to ask either my friend or the vendor.

One bite was all I needed to realize something wasn’t quite right, but it tasted enough like black beans that I kept chewing. And I mean chewing. They were the chewiest black beans I’d ever eaten.

At one point I was yanking a very stretchy piece of “black bean” with my teeth trying to rip it out of the bun until the food actually snapped apart, whipping my head back. Annoyed, I turned to my friend and asked him why they made their vegetarian sausages so chewy in Argentina.

After nearly choking on his own food he finally explained what was wrong. This was no vegetarian dish, it was congealed pig blood and intestines. Let’s just say from then on I stuck to the fattening choripan.

Mexican Fried Critters
Mike Richard

Mike-Richard

It would appear that bugs are the last bastion of “extreme eating” nowadays. And I’d say that I’m a traveler willing to try (almost) anything.

Which is how I found myself in Puebla – the literal epicenter of Mexican cuisine – this past summer with a mouthful of multi-legged critters. The good chefs at El Mural de los Poblanos an upscale restaurant in the heart of the city – serve some of the most traditional fare in the entire country.

As an “appetizer”, we started with gusanos – worms fried table side and served in corn tortillas with salsa, guacamole and ground worm powder. They’re crispy, crunchy and well … fried. Once I got beyond the fact that I was eating worms, they were surprisingly tasty.

But the real prize was the escamoles – fried ant larvae served with all the same fixin’s as the worms.  It goes without saying that, among the dozen travelers in our group, few opted to taste this admittedly terrifying delicacy.

I knew if I was gonna do it, I was going all the way – a heapin’ helpin’ of ant eggs with a dollop of salsa and guac spread liberally on a fresh tortilla. It all combines into a buttery, nutty, and slightly spicy mess of flavors. To be honest, it’s still one of the best things I’ve ever eaten in Mexico!

By Heather Green