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The Laughing Camel's Virtual Road Trips & Destinations |
| The Laughing Camel Virtual Road Trips & Tours combined with in depth destination & places of interest information has been a concept FOUR long years in production. Basically, a start and end point are sent to Google Maps. The route map is then used to research and highlight place of interest along the route. Users can pick 'n mix or follow a road trip all the way to the final destination. |  | |
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Welcome to the Laughing Camel's Virtual Destination and Road Trip Home!
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The Road Trip News -
Latest Routes and Destinations
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Written by Lesley
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The Captain Cook Highway is a short highway in Far North Queensland which starts at Cairns and ends in Mossman, 75 km to the north. From Mossman the Highway continues via the Mossman-Daintree Road to the Daintree and Cape Tribulation, tamed fringes of the Cape York Peninsula
The Cook Highway is a vital link between the two tourist locations of Cairns and Port Douglas, 70 km to the north. The highway travels through flat cane fields and tropical seaside rainforest, some 20 km of it tightly hugging the rugged coastline, providing spectacular ocean views. This beautiful drive past isolated beaches where hang-gliders patrol the headlands attracts the greatest interest from tourists and perhaps some of the greatest distractions for the motorist!
This a route you don't even need a car for, as tours from Cairns will show you the sights. If you want to take longer to take in the rich scenery and atmosphere, Coral Coaches runs frequent buses through the day to Port Douglas and Mossman, and at least two daily services between Cairns and Cape Tribulation, all of which allow multiple stopovers. The smaller and faster Airport Shuttle also run to Port Douglas and Cape Tribulation three times a day. |
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Destinations -
Australian Destinations and Road Trips
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Written by Lesley
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If you're looking for the perfect place to get away from it all with a superb tropical climate all year-round, an amazing array of nature and wildlife, and easy access to the Great Barrier Reef, Port Douglas in North Queensland more than fits the bill!
Picturesque Port Douglas is just 70 kilometres north of Cairns' international airport, along a spectacular coastal road surrounded by forest and the Coral Sea. Its natural beauty and an excellent year round climate have made it popular a favourite international destination for tourists. It's the only place where two World heritage listed sites exist side-by-side: the Great Barrier Reef and the rainforest of Daintree and Cape Tribulation, and enjoys a relaxed coastal ambience blended with tropical style and sophistication. |
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Destinations -
Australian Destinations and Road Trips
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Written by Lesley
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Cairns has come a long way from its origins as a settlement serving miners heading for the Hodgkinson River goldfield! Today it's a rapidly expanding city, primarily reliant on the sugar trade and tourists attracted by its tropical climate and proximity to many attractions. It is the fourth most popular destination for international tourists in Australia after Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane
Cairns attractions rank as some of the most original and exciting in Australia. The Great Barrier Reef is less than an hour away by boat, for those wanting to experience a tropical rainforest, the Daintree National Park and Cape Tribulation are within easy reach 130 kilometres (80 miles) north of Cairns, and Cooktown, Cape York Peninsula, and the Atherton Tableland are easily explored from Cairns. Cairns has an outstanding number of world-class tour specialists, offering a wide range of day (or longer) tours to the region's most popular destinations such as Kuranda, the Barrier Reef, and the World Heritage listed Daintree Rainforest and Cape Tribulation. Cairns has a thriving nightlife that caters to just about every taste! The city has nightclubs and sophisticated places for dining, or you can visit the Cairns Night Markets, which showcase local and indigenous artworks, tourism trinkets and good food. |
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Destinations -
Australian Destinations and Road Trips
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Written by Lesley
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Kuranda Village is a picturesque mountain retreat just 25km northwest of Cairns in Far North Queensland, Australia. It is surrounded by World Heritage Rainforest rich in wildlife, with numerous walks and lookouts. Although tourism has been in Kuranda since the 1920's, it first attracted interest as a centre for those choosing an alternative lifestyle in the late 60’s, It's come along way from those days and though it is still laid back, it has a style and sophistication that sets it apart from other Cairns Highlands Venues and Attractions.
Visitors can travel to Kuranda on the Historic Scenic Railway from Cairns, or by car or bus via the spectacular 11.5 km long Kuranda Range Road, or over the rainforest on the Skyrail Rainforest Cableway. The most exciting and rewarding way to get there is to take the leisurely one and a half hour railway trip up to the village, and the Skyrail cableway with its great views of the rainforest canopy back down. |
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Destinations -
USA Places of Interest
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Written by The Laughing Camel
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Seattle, Washington State seems to be a city of contradictions where adult coffee houses mix with parks and playgrounds. A British newspaper recently reported on a growing trend in Seattle to "liven up" the multitude of coffee houses by introducing half naked waitresses and waiters. This is opposite to the view of a Laughing Camel author, who urges people to bring their children to Seattle for a holiday vacation. Seattle is like most other cities around the world. If you know where to look, have a desperate need and enough money, you can find anything your heart desires.
Seattle Some Dry Roasted Facts Seattle is a coastal port city and the largest city in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. It is located in the state of Washington between an arm of the Pacific Ocean called Puget Sound and Lake Washington, about 96 miles (154 km) south of the Canada – United States border in King County, of which it is the county seat. Seattle has a reputation for heavy coffee consumption; coffee companies founded or based in Seattle include Starbucks, Seattle's Best Coffee, and Tully's. There are also many successful independent espresso roasters and cafes. |
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Destinations -
European Destinations
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Written by Passepartout
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Of all the areas of France, Provence is the most irresistible, and Western Provence is one of the most delightful and diverse parts of the region, long popular with tourists for its stunning and colourful landscape, relaxed lifestyle and rich and varied history. Highlights of the region are the Roman cities of Orange , Vaison-la-Romaine , Carpentras and Arles , and the papal city of Avignon, with its brilliant summer festival. Aix-en-Provence is the mini-Paris of the region and was home to Cézanne, for whom the Mont Ste-Victoire was an enduring subject, while St-Rémy and Arles have strong links with Van Gogh. Around the Rhône delta, the Camargue is a unique self-contained region, as different from the rest of Provence as it is from anywhere else in France.
This road trip, from the one of the region’s most charming old towns to the stunning flamingo-filled lagoons of the Camargue, is short in length - about 80km - but each of its stops is worthy of several days of exploration! It begins in the heart of the Vaucluse region, in the lovely city of Avignon, home of the celebrated Palais des Papes (Popes' Palace) and the famous bridge of Pont St Bénezet (the bridge in the ditty ‘Sur le pont d'Avignon'). It continues to the Roman city of Arles, in the Bouches-du-Rhône department. Now a UNESCO World Heritage site, Arles has wonderful churches and some impressive Roman monuments, including an arena which is still used for Provencal-style bullfights today. At Arles, the Rhône divides itself in two arms, forming the unique and Camargue delta. The capital of the Camargue is the seaside resort of Saintes Maries-de-la-Mer, a town with a romantic history and a very strong Romany tradition. |
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