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Ten Global Tourist Destinations
France
- Rich
in culture and has some of the finest places to see. The landscapes
range from the fretted coasts of Brittany to the limestone hills
of Provence, the canyons of the Pyrenees and the half-moon bays
of Corsica, from the lushly wooded valleys of the Dordogne to
the glaciated peaks of the Alps. Each region looks and feels different,
has its own style of architecture, its characteristic food and
often its own patois or dialect.
If you need more than urban stimuli to activate the pleasure buds
- clubs, shops, fashion, movies, music, hanging out with the beautiful
and famous - then the great cities provide them in abundance.
Paris, of course, is an outstanding cultural centre, with its
stunting contemporary buildings and atmospheric back streets,
its art and its ethnic diversity. And the great provincial cities
like Lille and Lyon, Bordeaux, Toulouse, Marseille and Nice vie
with the capital and each other, like the city-states of old,
for prestige in the arts, ascendancy in sport and innovation in
urban transport.
Spain
- If
you are coming to Spain for the first time, be warned: this is
a country that fast becomes an addiction. You might intend to
come just for a beach holiday, or a tour of the major cities,
but before you know it you'll find yourself hooked by something
quite different - by the celebration of some local fiesta, perhaps,
or the amazing nightlife in Madrid, by the Moorish monuments of
Andalucia, by Basque cooking, or the wild landscapes and birds
of prey of Estremadura.
USA
-
Every traveler in the United States - be they foreigners on a
coast-to-coast road trip or locals exploring their extraordinarily
diverse land - has some idea of what to expect. American culture
has become so thoroughly shared throughout the globe that one
of the principal joys of getting to know the country is the repeated,
delicious shock of the familiar. Yellow taxis on busy city streets;
roadside mailboxes straight out of Peanuts cartoons; wooden porches
overlooking the cottonfields; tumbleweed skittering across the
desert; endless highways dotted with pick-up trucks and chrome-plated
diners; the first sight of the Grand Canyon, or the Manhattan
skyline - now more than ever an indelibly iconic image.
Italy
- Of
all European countries, Italy is perhaps the hardest to classify.
It is a modern, industrialized nation. It is the harbinger of
style, its designers leading the way with each season's fashions.
But it is also, to an equal degree, a Mediterranean country, with
all that that implies. Agricultural land covers much of the country,
a lot of it, especially in the south, still owned under almost
feudal conditions. In towns and villages all over the country,
life grinds to a halt in the middle of the day for a siesta, and
is strongly family-oriented, with an emphasis on the traditions
and rituals of the Catholic Church which, notwithstanding a growing
scepticism among the country's youth, still dominates people's
lives here to an immediately obvious degree.
China
- The
first thing that strikes visitors to China is the extraordinary
density of population: central and eastern China do not have landscapes
so much as peoplescapes. In the fertile plains, villages seem
to merge into one another, while the big cities are endlessly
sprawling affairs with the majority of their inhabitants living
in cramped shacks or in depressingly uniform dormitory buildings.
The most enduring images of China are intrinsically Chinese ones:
chopsticks, tea, slippers, massed bicycles, shadow-boxing, exotic
pop music, karaoke, teeming crowds, Dickensian train stations,
smoky temples, red flags and the smells of soot and frying tofu
- as well as the industrial vistas you would expect from one of
the world's largest economies. Away from the cities, there is
the sheer joy of crossing such a vast and ancient land - from
the green paddy fields and misty hilltops of the south, to the
mountains of Tibet, to the scorched, epic landscapes of the old
Silk Road in the northwest.
UK
- The
UK today is a diverse patchwork of native and immigrant cultures,
possessing a fascinating history and dynamic modern culture, both
of which remain hugely influential in the wider world.
The UK is short for the "United Kingdom of Great Britain
and Northern Ireland" and is formed by the province of Northern
Ireland and the countries of Great Britain - England, Scotland
and Wales. Each of these countries has a very distinct identity
and you should not call a Welshman English or vice versa, and
some may not like being called 'British', even though the Welsh
(and the Cornish) are the original Britons.
The different islands in the Irish Sea and those North of Scotland
are also part of the UK. The
capital city of the United Kingdom (and the largest city) is London
and a perfect place to start your travels.
Russia
- Modern
Russia is very accessible, and although visas are still obligatory
and accommodation often has to be booked in advance, independent
travel is increasingly an option. Nonetheless, Moscow and St Petersburg
remain the easiest places to visit, and these are covered below.
For the adventurous, travel further afield can be booked through
various agencies in Russia and abroad, and there are an increasing
number of Web sites offering advice and travel services for the
less standard routes.
Moscow and
St Petersburg are mutually complementary. Moscow , the capital,
is hugely enthralling. It is not a beautiful city by any means,
and is a somewhat chaotic place. However, Moscow's central core
reflects Russia's long and fascinating history at the heart of
a vast empire, whether in the relics of the Communist years, the
Kremlin with its palaces and churches of the tsars, the wooden
buildings still tucked away in backstreets, or in the massive
building projects of the mayor, Yuriy Luzhkov, which have radically
changed the face of the centre.
Mexico
-
Mexico enjoys a cultural blend that is wholly unique: among the
fastest growing industrial powers in the world, its vast cities
boast modern architecture to rival any in the world, yet it can
still feel, in places, like a half-forgotten Spanish colony, while
the all-pervading influence of native American culture, five hundred
years on from the Conquest, is extraordinary.
The north of Mexico, relatively speaking, is dull, arid and sparsely
populated outside of a few industrial cities - like Monterrey
- which are heavily American-influenced. The Baja California wilderness
has its devotees, the border cities can be exciting in a rather
sleazy way, and there are beach resorts on the Pacific, but most
of the excitement lies in central and southeastern Mexico.
It's in the
highlands north of and around the capital that the first really
worthwhile stops come, with the bulk of the historic colonial
towns and an enticingly spring-like climate year-round. Coming
through the heart of the country, you'll pass the silver-mining
towns of Zacatecas and Guanajuato , the historic centres of San
Miguel de Allende and Querétaro , and many smaller places
with a legacy of superb colonial architecture. Mexico City itself
is a nightmare of an urban sprawl, but totally fascinating, and
in every way - artistic, political, cultural - the capital of
the nation.
Canada
- Canada is almost unimaginably vast. It stretches from the Atlantic
to the Pacific and from the latitude of Rome to beyond the Magnetic
North Pole. Its archetypal landscapes are the Rocky Mountain lakes
and peaks, the endless forests and the prairie wheatfields, but
Canada holds landscapes that defy expectations: rainforest and
desert lie close together in the southwest corner of the country,
while in the east a short drive can take you from fjords to lush
orchards. What's more, great tracts of Canada are completely unspoiled
- ninety percent of the country's 28.5 million population lives
within 100 miles of the US border.
Austria
-
Australia is massive, and very sparsely peopled: in size it rivals
the USA, yet its population is just over eighteen million - little
more than that of the Netherlands. This is an ancient land, and
often looks it: in places, it's the most eroded, denuded and driest
of continents, with much of central and western Australia - the
bulk of the country - overwhelmingly arid and flat. In contrast,
its cities - most of which were founded as recently as the mid-nineteenth
century - express a youthful energy.
The harshness of the interior has forced modern Australia to become
a coastal country. Most of the population lives within 20km of
the ocean, occupying a suburban, southeastern arc extending from
southern Queensland to Adelaide. These urban Australians celebrate
the typical New World values of material self-improvement through
hard work and hard play, with an easy-going vitality that visitors,
especially Europeans, often find refreshingly hedonistic. A sunny
climate also contributes to this exuberance, with an outdoor life
in which a thriving beach culture and the congenial backyard are
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