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Cheap deals lure tourists to Asia

Cheap deals lure tourists to Asia
Hundreds of thousands of WA holidaymakers are taking advantage of unprecedented travel bargains and flocking to Asian instead of Australian meccas such as Broome, Cairns and Rottnest Island.
Read more on thewest.com.au

Tourism facing the fight of its life
QUEENSLAND hit hardest as more Aussies travelling overseas than the number of international visitors coming in, says report.
Read more on News.com.au Travel

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CHEAP FLIGHTS CANADA.MPG

Travel Agent Only Rates Travel agent cards give you up to a 75% discount on flights and hotels. It only takes 15 minutes to get one of these cards.PLEASE VISITtinyurl.com TO GET details on how to receive THIS AMAZING TRAVEL AGENCY Getting a travel agent card is quick and easy. It takes only 15 minutes.PLEASE VISITtinyurl.com TO GET details on how to receive THIS AMAZING TRAVEL AGENCY Then you can Save 50% to 75% on your next vacation and every single trip after that! These are the secrets that travel agents don’t want you to know about! PLEASE VISITtinyurl.com TO GET details on how to receive THIS AMAZING TRAVEL AGENCY DISCOUNT CARD!! The savings you get with a Travel Agent Card are Incredible: * 50-75% on Hotel Stays * Up to 55% Discounts on Airfare * Free First Class Upgrades * Deeply Discounted Rental Cars * Half-Priced Theme Park Admission * Cruises for /Day * Free Show Tickets * Free Meals and Much, Much More! Keep reading to learn the “insider” secrets to becoming a licensed Travel Agent and how these secrets give you a wealth of travel benefits and courtesies. Since I have discovered how to get travel agent discounts I have saved a fortune on my travel expenses, not to mention all the upgrades and other perks I have received from knowing this information. I now get discounts all the time on everything from accommodation and tours to theme park entry and flights. I get anywhere from 10% off up to 80%. Getting these discounts has meant that I can afford to travel

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Lastest Cheap Holidays In Australia News

Live – England v Pakistan
England look to gain a big lead over Pakistan after bowling them out for just 72 on day one of the second Test.
Read more on BBC News

Confessions of a frequent flyer point addict
I have a confession to make. I love collecting frequent flyer points. I arrange my credit card choice and sometimes my spending in order to maximise the points I earn. It’s an addiction my whole family shares.
Read more on Marlborough Express

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Where can i get cheap package holidays?

Question by Amy W: Where can i get cheap holidays?
I want to go abroad again next year but i am on a tight budget anyone know where I can get a great deal. I would like to go to the canary islands. Thanks

Best answer:

Answer by bernard
Go to www.lovechangingdestinations.com< see what they have, also if you became or owned a online travel business you can really get good deals, you can do that on that site, and there others thats the one me and my wife likes, but there are others.

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Lastest Cheap Holiday Deals In Australia News

So where the bloody hell are they?
TOURISM guru has a confronting message for ’s flagging tourism industry - step out of the comfort zone or bow out.
Read more on Daily Telegraph

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What’s the best solution for cheap accommodation in Mykonos for about 20 people in the summer holidays?

Question by Jessica: What’s the best solution for cheap accommodation in Mykonos for about 20 people in the summer holidays?
To celebrate the end of school life, before going off to university, my friends and I are interested in going to Mykonos for about 1 week. The only problem is that with university coming up, we can’t spend that much on accommodation. What would be the best solution, renting out flats, booking hotel rooms or anything else? And would you happen to have any advice on which places to stay?

Thanks in advance xxx

Best answer:

Answer by airpole
Renting rooms should be the most economic way. If you start now and make arrangements for the days wanted you will get a good price. Check below.

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Holiday in the UK

Historic Heritage Tours: Holiday in Britain and be inspired

Unique, traditional, cutting edge, refreshing, imaginative, surprising – Britain is all this and much much more. Whether you’re looking for inspiration, action, relaxation or want to discover Britain’s hidden treasures, explore Britain your own way.

Take your next vacation in Britain, and soak up some history.


See Britain with a Great British Heritage Pass

Sites of natural beauty and cultural riches

Did you know that Britain has 25 UNESCO World Heritage Sites? These range from sites of natural beauty like the Dorset and East Devon Coast to cultural riches such as the Tower of London and Stonehenge. Join us for a run-down of these show-stopping sites.

Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury

Canterbury Cathedral has been a place of pilgrimage since the 12th century – just ask Geoffrey Chaucer! His Canterbury Tales, written in the 14th-century, feature a motley crew of pilgrims who journey to the Cathedral to visit the shrine of Thomas Becket. Follow in their footsteps to discover a truly remarkable building ripe with history and atmosphere. See the spot where Becket was brutally murdered, the ancient crypt, vivid stained glass and the tomb of Henry IV.

City of Bath

Honey-hued Bath is so chock-full of historical and cultural treats that the folks at UNESCO made the whole lot a World Heritage Site. And who can blame them? Visit the city of Jane Austen with its ancient Roman Baths, the elegant Pulteney Bridge, gorgeous Georgian architecture and Bath Abbey . And when you’ve soaked up enough history, take a relaxing dip in the thoroughly modern Thermae Bath Spa.

Castles of King Edward I, Wales

Harlech CastleIn a land of castles, Harlech, Conwy, Caernarfon and Beaumaris stand out for their sheer scale and sophistication. Well preserved, atmospheric and enormous they represent the pinnacle of medieval military architecture. The fortresses were built by Edward I of England as an ‘Iron Ring’ to pacify the Welsh and they remain a haunting presence.

Maritime Greenwich, London

Just 20 minutes from central London , Maritime Greenwich is awash with eye-popping architecture surrounded by the green expanse of Greenwich Park. Christopher Wren’s elegant Old Royal Naval College heads up a star-studded line-up of majestic buildings including Inigo Jones’s elegant Queen’s House and the Royal Observatory. Relax in the park, check out the view of Canary Wharf across the river and savour the historic flavour.

Edinburgh Old and New Towns

Edinburgh’s an obvious candidate for a World Heritage City and it’s not hard to see why. The Old Town topped by the castle oozes history and a stroll along its cobbled streets and dark alleyways is a walk through time. The New Town is equally evocative with its graceful crescents, squares and terraces. The two combine into a city that’s unique, instantly recognisable and impossible to resist.

Pontcysyllte Aqueduct, North Wales.

Britain’s newest World Heritage Site is the longest and highest aqueduct in Britain. Towering 126ft above the River Dee it’s a 200-year-old engineering marvel and is considered Thomas Telford’s masterpiece. Pontcysyllte looks fantastic from a distance but walking or travelling by canal boat over the top is truly exhilarating.

Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal, Yorkshire

The ruins of Fountains Abbey are Britain’s largest monastic ruin and one of the most enchanting spots in the country. Founded in 1132 the abbey thrived until Henry VIII’s Dissolution of the Monasteries. It now stands ruined and uninhabited save for a large colony of bats. Lose yourself in dark passageways, winding staircases and an aura of spiritual peace. You can also explore the 18th-century water gardens and the Jacobean mansion Fountains Hall.

Liverpool, Maritime Mercantile City

UNESCO recognises Liverpool as being a ‘supreme example’ of a British port at the time of Britain’s greatest global influence. See the towering Liver Building, the Albert Dock and take a ferry across the Mersey. The World Museum Liverpool, The Walker Art Gallery and The Maritime Museum are all in the area and provide a fascinating insight into Liverpool’s place at the heart of world business, immigration and the slave trade.

Westminster Abbey, London

Graves and memorials of the great and the good sprout from every wall, jostling for position in this living show of British history. Charles Darwin, Geoffrey Chaucer, Lewis Carroll, Charles Dickens, Isaac Newton…the list goes on. It’s also been the venue for every royal coronation since William the Conqueror and includes the spectacular fan-vaulted Lady Chapel – the last great masterpiece of English medieval architecture.

Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, London

Kew’s only a few miles west of London’s frenetic centre, but it seems a world away. Wander through 300 acres of enchanting gardens, pause under shady, ancient trees and lose yourself in a jungle of green in the Palm House. Don’t miss the treetop walkway, a swaying, canopy-level structure with a tree’s eye view of the gardens.

Heart of Neolithic Orkney – Scotland

Orkney is a group of islands in Northeast Scotland. The ‘Heart of Neolithic Orkney’ consists of prehistoric monuments that predate the Egyptian pyramids. The 5,000-year-old burial bound of Maes Howe is one of the most impressive chambered tombs in Western Europe and during the winter solstice, the sun sets along its stone passageway, striking a cairn in the central chamber with incredible accuracy. Remote, magical and with a sense of elemental beauty, Orkney is definitely worth the short trip from mainland Scotland.

St Kilda

St Kilda is a group of islands that form the remotest part of the British Isles lying 41 miles west of Benbecula in Scotland’s famous Outer Hebrides. It’s 1 of only 24 locations in the world to be awarded World Heritage Status for both natural and cultural significance. Its islands with their exceptional cliffs and sea stacks form the most important seabird breeding station in north-west Europe. Uninhabited since 1930, St Kilda bears the evidence of more than 2,000 years of human occupation in the extreme conditions prevalent in the Hebrides.

New Lanark

New Lanark is a small and beautifully restored 18th-century cotton mill village set in the sublime Scottish countryside. Social pioneer Robert Owen moulded this model industrial community in the early 19th century and the site provides a fascinating example of 19th-century philanthropy. Don’t miss the spectacular Falls of Clyde, inspiration to Victorian poets and painters.

Frontiers of the Roman Empire – Hadrian’s Wall

This World Heritage site consists of the border line of the Roman Empire when it was at its biggest in the 2nd century. The most well known part of the Frontiers of the Roman Empire in Britain is Hadrian’s Wall , built under the order of the Roman Emperor Hadrian in AD122. It took soldiers 6 years to build the wall, which was 80 Roman miles long (73 modern miles) on the border of what is now England and Scotland.

Durham Castle and Cathedral

The Cathedral is widely known as the largest and finest example of Norman architecture in England. The spectacular Nave never fails to impress, with huge carved pillars that measure 6.6 metres round and 6.6 metres high. Durham Castle stands behind the Cathedral . This ancient Norman fortress was once the residence of the prince-bishops of Durham.

Saltaire

The ‘model village’ of Saltaire in West Yorkshire is a complete and well-preserved industrial village, and an important part of England’s industrial heritage. Built by Sir Titus Salt in 1876, the village still remains in its original form and is still inhabited by industrial workers today.

Derwent Valley Mills

The Derwent Valley in Derbyshire, East Midlands, is home to a series of 18th- and 19th-century cotton mills, and the area is now an industrial landscape of high historical and technological interest.

Ironbridge Gorge

Set in the heart of the beautiful Shropshire countryside, Ironbridge is known throughout the world as the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution and the home of the world’s first iron bridge. Once described as “the most extraordinary district in the world”, the Ironbridge Gorge is still a remarkable and beautiful place to visit today.

Blaenavon Industrial Landscape

The Blaenavon area lies about 40km northeast of Cardiff and has been moulded by the coal and iron industries. It highlights the importance of South Wales in the world’s production of coal and iron in the 19th century. There’s so much to see and do related to this fascinating historical period that even if history isn’t your thing, you’ll be engrossed. You can see everything from coal and ore mines, quarries, a primitive railway system and furnaces to workers’ homes and what their communities were like.

Blenheim Palace

The birthplace of Winston Churchill, Blenheim Palace near Oxford is a perfectly preserved 18th-century stately home set in a 2,100-acre park landscaped by ‘Capability’ Brown. Gorgeous gardens, artistic treasures and a truly striking piece of English baroque extravagance add up to a truly memorable day out.

Stonehenge

Stonehenge is the most famous megalithic (literally meaning ‘big stone’) monument in the world. Dating back an amazing 50,000 years, it’s drawn visitors for literally millennia. A place of ritual sacrifice and sun worship or a massive calendar? Nobody really knows its purpose, but no one who has ever been there will deny, it is truly awe inspiring.

Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape

Cornwall and West Devon was the centre of mining technology and it was from here that mining technologies spread across the world. The deep underground mines, engine houses, foundries, new towns, smallholdings, ports and harbours, and ancillary industries together reflect an innovation which, in the early 19th century, enabled the region to produce more than half of the world’s supply of copper.

Dorset and East Devon Coast

Dorset and East Devon CoastThe Dorset and East Devon Coast , also known as The Jurassic Coast was the first ever site to be inscribed as a ‘natural’ World Heritage Site. It spans 95 miles of dramatic coastline all the way from East Devon to Dorset . What makes this coast so special is the way its cliff exposures provide an almost continuous geological ‘walk through time’ spanning the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous periods – a time capsule holding 185 million years of the Earth’s history.

Giant’s Causeway and Causeway Coast

Giant’s Causeway lies at the foot of the basalt cliffs along the rugged Antrim coast of Northern Ireland . This intriguing rock formation is made up of some 40,000 massive black basalt columns sticking out of the sea and has been shrouded in myth and legend for centuries. And as soon as you see it you’ll understand why – it’s hard to believe this bizarre rock structure was naturally formed.

Tower Of London

The Tower of London has been a part of British royal history for nearly 1,000 years, and has become a national symbol of royalty and power. The massive White Tower is a typical example of Norman military architecture. It was built on the Thames by William the Conqueror to protect London and assert his power.

History

Britain’s story

Great Britain was the dominant industrial and maritime power of the 19th century and played a leading role in developing parliamentary democracy and in advancing literature and science.

Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament

At its peak, the British Empire stretched over one-fourth of the earth’s surface. The first half of the 20th century saw the UK’s strength seriously depleted in two World Wars. The second half witnessed the dismantling of the Empire and the UK rebuilding itself into a modern and prosperous European nation. As one of five permanent members of the UN Security Council, a founding member of NATO, and of the Commonwealth, the UK pursues a global approach to foreign policy.

The timeline of Britain

Neolithic, Bronze & Iron Ages: 8300 BC – 42 AD
‘Britain’ itself did not exist until around 6500 BC, when the English Channel formed separating Britain from the rest of Europe. The first settlers here were hunter-gatherers, who spent much of their lives travelling in search of food. Around 750 BC iron was introduced into Britain, which led the way for the production of sophisticated and durable tools and weapons.

Romano Britain: 43 – 1065 AD
In 43 AD the Roman army crossed the Channel and quickly defeated any resistance from local tribes. The Romans founded Londinium (London) and built military roads throughout the country. Within ten years, Roman rule had reached far into the territories of England and Wales. The Roman way of life continued in Britain until the 5th century, after which Britons were left more or less to fend for themselves.

Anglo-Normans & Middle Ages: 1066 –1347
In 1066 Duke William of Normandy invaded Britain and famously defeated King Harold of England, who legend has it was shot with an arrow through the eye during the Battle of Hastings. William of Normandy went on to rule England and Scotland, radically changing the class system and changing the official language to French. In 1216, Henry III was crowned king, but was unpopular throughout his rule.

Late Medieval: 1348 – 1484
The bubonic plague – or Black Death – reached England in 1348 and quickly spread to Wales and Scotland, killing up to a third of the population by the end of 1350. The plague persistently re-emerged in Britain until the 17th century, severely affecting the country’s economic balance. In order to combat the devastating effects of the plague, the ruling classes attempted to restore economic stability through parliamentary legislation.

Tudors Stuarts: 1485 – 1713
In 1485, Henry Tudor invaded England and defeated Richard III to assume sovereignty. He went on to marry Elizabeth of York – daughter of Edward IV. In 1603 Elizabeth I – the Virgin Queen – died. With Elizabeth leaving no successor, James VI, King of Scots (son of Mary, Queen of Scots), succeeded as James I, King of England, effectively making him the first King of Great Britain.

Georgians: 1714 – 1836
After the death of Queen Anne, George I became king, whose reign saw the development of the function of prime minister. Although the term ‘prime minister’ was not used at the time, Sir Robert Walpole assumed the role typical of a prime minister thanks to his successes in developing economic growth for the country.

Victorians: 1837 – 1900
Victoria – the longest reigning British monarch – became Queen in 1837, aged just eighteen. During her reign, she introduced a number of constitutional changes and the spirit of these changes led to the publishing of the people’s charter, which laid out six demands including universal manhood suffrage and annual parliamentary elections. The charter was continually rejected in parliament, but today five out of the six original demands are firm parts of the British constitution.

Early 20th Century: 1901 – 1944
The early twentieth century saw advances in science and technology that were unimaginable in previous eras. Among the ground-breaking achievements of this period were: the invention of the television by the EMI-Marconi Corporation; and subsequent founding of the British Broadcasting Company (BBC); the discovery of penicillin by Alexander Fleming; and insights into the structure of the atom, which led to the development of nuclear weapons and energy.

Post World War II: 1945 – 2010
In 1945 the Labour Party won their first general election, going on to form the National Health Service, which many regard as Labour’s greatest achievement. Post-war rationing continued, but the era was marked by public enthusiasm and hope for the future. Since then, Britain has faced a number of economic crises, but survives today as one of the world’s leading trade and financial centres, with advanced public services and a thriving economy.

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On what site can i get cheap charter holidays to Egypt from Sweden?

Question by Pandaa: On what site can i get cheap charter holidays to Egypt from Sweden?
Preferably to Hurghada or Luxor :)

Best answer:

Answer by ~MuslimaRose~A.
try thomas cook(i recommend it) , or travco (it’s good) ,…… check their sites online.

welcome to egypt anytime.:)

Give your answer to this question below!

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where can i book a cheap holiday to australia in 2011?

Question by eddie280392: where can i book a cheap holiday to in 2011?
i want to book a holiday for me and my boyfriend to as he has always wanted to go there. i was thinking about may 2011, can anyone tell me the cheapest airport to land in from Gatwick and cheapish accomidation as i am on a fairly low wage but really want to do this for his birthday thank you.
sorry what i meant was what part of is the cheapest, for example would ir be cheaper to got to perth or sydney ect. and cheap accomidation and where can i book it for may 2011?

Best answer:

Answer by rustupd
cheapest airport to land in ? landing is included in the ticket price as is take off & the flight

please rephrase your question so it is understandable as to what you want to know

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cheap holidays to canada from uk?

Question by nuggetsmummy: cheap holidays to from uk?
Hi everyone. I am wanting to go to Toronto, , at the end of Sept/October from Manchester or a London airport. Any ideas of any websites for cheap holidays? I am looking at flight+hotel+transfers. Thanx in advance xxx

Best answer:

Answer by arya s
call a local travel agent!! or zoom airlines

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