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Living Desert

Just outside of Palm Desert in The Living Desert lies this beautiful spot…

Yup…this is part of the Fault Line

Beautiful animals in somewhat normal habitat roam. This cheetah was looking for a nap.

This African Cerval is showing off his beautiful coat.
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Indian Canyons

Indian Canyons on the Agua Caliente Indian Reservation just outside of Palm Springs, California was home to the Agua Caliente Cahuilla Indians. Here, one of the four distinct areas, Palm Canyon of the Andreas Canyon, includes the world’s largest California Palm Oasis. Rock formations like this one line the walls of the canyon. One can only imagine the force it took to heave these heavy rocks into formations such as this one.

The Andreas Creek, a perennial creek, rushes over rocks and boulders past the base of these skirted palms.

Skirted palms huddle together as their feet stay cool in the water.

Reds, grays and brown hues of rocks rise above the canyon. California Golden Eagles and Red Tailed Hawks ride the currents above. One Golden Eagle sat high upon a rock…watching for a mid afternoon snack.

Strands of skirted palms and fan palms march along the creek. With over 150 species of plants within a half mile, this is a great hike for exercise, bird watching, photography and cooling off near the creek. Touching the water it was cool, but not cold. On the lower side of the creek, as you climb over rocks through the palms you are treated to a cooling effect for your hike. Dramatically different, the upper side takes you through more open desert area where the temps rise significantly. As you might expect the views are equally as diverse.

This is definitely an area of contrasts…beauty…mystery.
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While this is not Vancouver…

Been watching the 2010 Winter Olympics? Now that you’ve seen the gorgeous Whistler mountain vistas and the vibrant Vancouver cityscapes, you might be thinking about visiting…spring, summer, winter or fall.

Fodor’s is a good resource so check out these sites for possible deals:

Winter deals in Whistler

It’s common for people to shy away from host destinations in Olympics years because they think it’s going to be too crowded. But…the Whistler/Blackcomb Web site has lodging deals, ski-and-stay deals, and even airfare deals. In addition to saving money, quieter slopes mean more fresh powder for you.

Hotel bargains in post-Olympics Vancouver

Did you know there were somewhere in the neighborhood of 20,000 hotel rooms available in Vancouver for the Olympics? Some specials include The Wedgewood with a Spring promotion for the month of March. Check out the Tourism Vancouver Web site for more deals on hotel rooms and packages with hotel and entertainment, or spas.

Skate the Richmond Olympic Oval

The Richmond Olympic Oval, located just off the Canada Line, has a huge fitness facility with hard courts, ice, and an indoor track area. A one-day adult pass is CDN$12.50.

Try mountain biking

Head north in summer for plentiful opportunities in outdoor excitement. Whistler Blackcomb as not only among the first to realize the potential of converting ski runs to fat-tire trails, they also established Whistler Mountain Bike Park, the best downhill-biking center in the world. Located on lower Whistler Mountain, the trails are marked green through double diamond and groomed with as much care as their winter counterparts. Beginners can find plenty of comfortable dirt lanes to follow and you can keep your fingers ready at the hydraulic brake to keep speeds under control.

Or hiking

If hiking is more your speed, head to the ski lifts that take hikers and bikers up to the alpine, where marked trails are graded by difficulty. The brand-new Peak2Peak Gondola, the largest free-span gondola expanse in the world, crosses Fitzsimmons Valley to connect Whistler and Blackcomb mountains in just 11 minutes. The newest addition to the high alpine-trail network is the High Note Trail, an intermediate, five-mile route with an elevation change of 1,132 feet and fabulous coastal mountain views. Trails are clearly marked—take the lift up and choose whichever way you want to come down, just as if you were skiing.

Festivals, festivals, festivals

Vancouver and Whistler are, each, the scene of many festivals worth planning a trip around, in all seasons. In Whistler, you’ll find everything from Cornucopia, the renowned food-and-wine festival spread over four delectable days in November, to the Telus World Ski & Snow festival, which takes the end of ski season out with a swoosh. For more Whistler festivals check out whistler.com.

In Vancouver, you’ll find everything from one of North America’s largest Chinese New Year celebrations, in February; to August’s MusicFest Vancouver, with two weeks of orchestral, chamber, choral, world music, opera, and jazz performances in venues around the city; to the Vancouver International Comedy Festival, in September; and the Vancouver International Film Festival, in September and October, which draws more than 150,000 people to view films from more than 50 countries.

For sports enthusiasts, the Bank of Montreal Marathon is in early May, the Scotiabank Half-Marathon and 5K are in June; and the popular Vancouver Sun Run (a 10K, with a minirun) is in mid-April. And every New Year’s Day means the Polar Bear Swim, when a phalanx of extremists plunge into the frigid waters at English Bay beach—often in costume.

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Travel Tips

Think about these tips as you get ready to plan your next trip…

Book early and think about traveling in the middle of the week as you may get a better deal than traveling on a Friday or Monday. But do remember that the most important thing to realize is you must purchase a ticket at least three weeks in advance. If you purchase within 21 days of flight date, ticket prices start going up fast. There will be exceptions and last minute deals but for the most part early is better.

If you’re willing to drive to a surrounding airport, you can compare airfares at area airports if you go to ITASoftware.com. This site allows users to compare airports that range from 25 to 300 miles away at both their departure and arrival destination. Log in as a guest. Be sure to calculate gas, time off work and parking when deciding which airport to fly out of.

Some of the best international deals right now are in Mexico, Jamaica and the Dominican Republic. Domestically, Portland, Ore., and Las Vegas, Nev., are economical destinations. Vegas hotel rooms dropped 24 percent in the last year.

Pack your lunch. Eating in the airport or on a plane is expensive; leave drinks behind because you can’t take them through security.

Check out Bing.com, which has some unique features. This search engine has a “Flexible Search” and if you select a 30-day range, it will give you a graph showing when airfares are high or low during that month. It predicts if airfares will drop and lets customers know how confident it is in its prediction. For example, a recent search from St. Louis to L.A. showed it was 60 percent confident fares would drop. A search from Springfield to Portland, Ore., recommended buying now because fares were rising.

When traveling internationally, see what packages are offered by various airlines. Some airlines, such as Cathay Pacific or Singapore Airlines, offer good vacation packages on their Web sites. Right now for $999, Singapore Airlines is offering roundtrip airfare from L.A., airport transfers, daily breakfast, four night accommodations, complimentary “Hop-on Bus” pass in Singapore and 50 percent off certain tours. Prices do not include tax of approximately $110. Add $50 for U.S. departures Friday through Sunday. By contrast, a search on Travelocity found the flight alone on Singapore airlines was $1,230.

Consider a cruise. One of the best ways to travel is on a cruise and not just your Caribbean cruise, but in Europe, South America, Hawaii and Australia. You unpack one time and get to see several different cities and ports. Your food and entertainment is usually included. When booking a cruise, be sure to tell your travel agent if you have taken this cruise line before as some offer discounts for repeat cruisers. If you’re active or retired military, tell your travel agent, too, since some offer discounts for military personnel.

Skip the Passport Card and get a real passport. The Passport Card is a travel document that allows Americans to enter the country from Canada, Mexico, the Caribbean, and Bermuda at land border crossings or sea ports-of-entry. It is less expensive than a passport, but if a passenger gets sick on a cruise and has to fly back to the United States, they’re in trouble. A passport lasts 10 years so it’s worth the investment.

Bring your own pillow. Beginning May 1, American Airlines will charge $8 for a pillow and blanket in coach class on most flights. JetBlue and US Airways charge $7 for a blanket-and-pillow set. It may not sound like much, but it’s easily the cost of breakfast.

Save yourself time searching for a ticket by using a search engine that compares various flights. There are many, but here are a few: www.momondo.com; www.skyscanner.com; www.sidestep.com;www.kayak.com.

Hotels eat a big part of your budget, so spend time researching them. You’re likely to get a good deal from sites like Hotwire.com, but you don’t know what hotel you’re booking until you’ve reserved it, so if you don’t like uncertainty, this may not be for you.

A hotel price comparison site is atwww.hotelscombined.com, which searches numerous listings and allows you to book directly through the hotel. If you find a rate you like, before you book, call the hotel and see if you can get a better discount.

Don’t care where or when you go, just want to get out of town? Check out http://www.airfarewatchdog.com and type in SGF for Springfield or BKG for Branson. The site will pull up a list of deals available (usually within the next two weeks). A recent search showed roundtrip airfare from Springfield to Baltimore for $180 or $146 to Asheville, N.C. Branson to Orlando was $138.

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Spring Time in Napa

Planning a trip to Napa Valley? Planning on visiting wineries? If you want less tourists, beautiful scenery and more one on one time with winery folks make plans to visit in the spring.
Trees and flowers are in bloom, vines are starting to get green, traffic is less…much less. Spring is great time in Northern California. Check it out.