Planning on visiting the United States from abroad? The U.S. does not have free
health care, so visitors from other countries should check to see if any health
care requirements in the U.S. would be paid for. If not, supplemental insurance
might be advisable. It is available from such companies as
Enhancedbenefits.com.
(We have no affiliation with this company and point to it as a sample. We have never
done business here and cannot comment on its coverage.)
|
- Alabama Live
- This is a comprehensive site with an amazing spin on history. We
particularly enjoyed the page about Alabama's struggle for civil rights. Not
surprisingly, there is a great deal of coverage of stock car racing and
football, where people are referred to by first name, since we all know who
they are. The site is a promotional site for Alabama, and it may be aimed more
at the people who live there than at people who might wish to visit -- most of
the coverage seems to be of local interest (the day of our visit, a prominent
news story was teachers rallying to protest court- ordered training on how to
handle religion in schools -- "It broke my heart to tell my students they
couldn't pray in class for a dead classmate.") While there is not a great deal
of material here that would help a tourist plan a trip to and in Alabama, you
certainly will get an idea of what your visit will be like from the people
perspective.
|
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The State of Alaska has declared 1996 through 2005 to be the years of
centennial celebration of the Klondike Gold Rush, when over 100,000 persons set
off into the vast wilderness to seek their fortunes, many finding their deaths
on the Golden Stairs of Chilkoot Pass.
- Alaska Nature Tours
- This site offers summer and winter tours of Alaska. Although the tours may
be taken by bus, guided hikes are also available, tailored to suit the guest.
Cruise passengers may sign up for shore excursions on board or through the
travel agent. Reservations may be made online for hikes, but reservations for
cruise excursions must be made through the ship or travel agent. Prices are
given where applicable, and so are the telephone number and address if you do
not care to reserve your tour online.
- Alaska Charters
- This is, overall, an attractive site, but the use of MS FrontPage to
generate the markup has lead to some interesting layout ("a better understanding
of the world we sha</strong>re. ," for example). The site is
attractive, but all the non- breaking spaces FrontPage puts in makes the
appearance a little strange if you do not have your window set to the same
dimensions as the author. Each page has navigation links to all other pages,
so it was very easy to jump from photos of the vessel to the schedule of
cruises and prices, to the page with general information on the company. We
could not find a way to make reservations online, seeing only toll- free and
local telephone numbers; there is also a mailing address. The site says you get
a full information package after you make your reservations, a
somewhat unfriendly way for you to find out more about the cruise you have paid
a deposit for.
- Alaska Yacht Charters
- This site offers a motor yacht for your charter to explore the waterways of
the Alaskan coast. There are maps, a description of the vessel with layouts,
and tons of photographs. The site offers sample menus and itineraries, but we
were unable to locate pricing information. In addition to the boating, the site
offers day hikes, float plane and helicopter excursions, flyfishing, and more.
- The Alaskan Center
- This is an attractive site that is an excellent place to begin your safe
and comfortable virtual tour of Alaska. There are links to culture, history, a
calendar of events, explanations of how to plan a trip to this huge expanse of
a state, accommodations -- this site is packed with helpful
information.
- Alaska Discovery
- This is a GORP site for wilderness adventures in Alaska. Several tours are listed with itineraries, prices, brief descriptions, and photographs. The trips appear to be for all ages, so while you must be active, you do not seem to be in trouble if you are not a 20 year old athlete.
- The Alaska Volcano Observatory
- This site contains links to satellite imagery of volcano eruptions as well
as links to "Highlights of eruptions over the last 6 years." But the bulk of
the site is devoted to volcanism in Alaska, especially the Aleutian Islands. As
you will discover, there has been a lot of activity there in the last one and
a half million years.
- Alaska Adventure Vacations
- This is an excellent jump site for further information from specific
outfitters. The home page is brief and well- organized, with a link to further
information for each of the businesses. Activities range from backpacking,
through fishing, to summer activities and winter activities. Some of the
businesses have further links and email, and some give addresses, phones, and
fax numbers. You can pick activities ranging from sightseeing bus tours to
extreme skiing, and everything in between.
- Information About Alaska
- An educational page with everything you ever wanted to know about Seward's Folly.
- Rudy's Alaska Fishing and Snowmobiling Page
- This is a noncommercial page with lots of photos for fishing and snowmobiling in south central Alaska. Some of those fish are huge!
- Bell's Alaska Travel Guide
- Labelled "A complete guide to The Alaska Highway and byways," and we
believe it, with the emphasis on complete. This site is an
advertisement for Bell's Alaska Travel Guide, a book of some 432 pages.
The Web site contains an extremely detailed description of every sign, marker,
intersection, and location along the Alaska Highway, with another listing
describing in considerable detail the towns along the road.
|
|
- Discover Alberta
- The official site for travel planning. The site has maps, links to transportation (and rentals), weddings, attractions and activities, and accommodations, among a plethora of other information. Selecting a city to visit brings a searchable database for lodging and eating, camping, and more. Unfortunately, the entire site is set up like that: click on a link on the home page, get a searchable database for lots of vendors. We could not find an overview of Alberta, so we advise this site for people who already know why they want to go there.
- Alberta.com
- This is a portal to all things Alberta, and it is rather scattered and
disorganized. Sports, news, services, shopping, cinema show times, and such are
spread around upon the page.
- Alberta, Canada
- Another portal, but somewhat more organized by using a table at the top of
the page: General, Agricultural (Alberta Wheat Pool, 20/20 Seed Labs Ltd),
Classifieds, Clubs, Education, News & Weather, People, Travel &
Tourism, to name a few. The links are to other sites with information on the
chosen topics.
- Calgary, Alberta, Canada
- This is a nice page by the Calgary UNIX Users' Group. The history is well-
written and not at all dry; very personable. A list of things to see and do,
with links to additional information, and links to additional information round
out the page, making it a nice jumping off point for further research on your
visit during the stampede.
- Alberta Provincial Hotel Directory
- This is a large listing of hotel accommodations in Alberta. Pick your town
and see what they have available. Thorhild showed one hotel, with street
address and telephone number. Most listing are by name, address, and telephone
number and nothing else, but some places have a URL with additional information.
- Wild Rose Stallion Station
- A full service facility in central Alberta, these people can handle your
mare onsite or send cooled semen anywhere in Canada and the United States.
- Canadian Rockies Net
- The opening page takes a long time to download and render (it is a table
with images in the cells), and it has a large gap at the bottom where the
authors think they have hidden key words which will make the site turn up on
your Web search. The site is somewhat puzzling in its apparently random color
schemes and layouts, showing little or no thought on consistent user interface,
but it is awash in information. Lots of links to companies that will guide you
on hikes and tours of the Canadian Rockies, information on child care and
family services, accommodations, weddings, and expeditions.
- See Alberta
- This is a pleasant site on the province of Alberta. There are photographs
taken of various places in the province, maps, a calendar of events, and
information on golfing, camping, and accommodations. On our visit, the calendar
was up- to- date, with events for the year in place, and the directories for
the other sections of the site were quick to download and easy to navigate.
Curiously, we could find no general information on the province. If you have
been to Alberta, this will be a good site to find new places to explore, but
if you have not been there, you will be lost at this Web site.
- Kootenay National Park
- A very nicely organized site with information on the park, its services,
sightseeing, camping, current weather, fees, and more. Much of this site is
text, but there are maps and photographs where appropriate, making for quick
downloads.
- Banff Center for the Arts
- The Banff Centre for the Arts is in a stunningly beautiful location. The
Centre offers writing, publishing, theatre, visual arts, music, and a festival.
- Banff National Park (in English)
- Banff National Park (en français)
- Lovely pictures of Banff, Lake Louise, and a grizzly couple. This
park is a wonderful vacation spot, and the page does it justice.
|
|
- Jerome, Arizona
- "The mile high town with fifty mile views." Jerome is an interesting town to visit, and we recommend the town. This Web site provides information on the history, current lodging and things to do, and the surrounding area.
- Jerome Chamber of Commerce
- The official site of the Jerome Chamber of Commerce. On the day of our visit, the calendar of events from July 2002 through January 2003 was completely barren. The site offers a few nice photos, the history of the town, links to food and lodging, and more. The town is a fascinating glimpse into mining life in the 19th Century, and we recommend a visit.
- The Ultimate Arizona Vacation Guide
- Almost a complete disaster, by the Arizona Tourist Bureau. The opening page
is a frame with blinking text on the left and scrolling text on the right, all
ads. Car rentals, online hotel reservations, and conventions. We saw a listing
for Bullhead City, one of our favorite towns we have never been to, so we
followed that link. The resulting page had nothing on it about the city; just
links to car rentals, hotel reservations, and so on. We decided to take the
photo tour of Arizona. The page says Java is required, then used JavaScript to
open a new window with completely backwards navigation:
Next picture || Previous Picture || Close Window
After closing the window looking for the next picture, we got the hang of it
and quit. The links for activities are to commercial vendors who will supply
you with an activity; fees are given. (The tour of the ASARCO open pit mine
looked interesting.) Overall, we found nothing about Arizona on the site.
- Titan Missile Museum
- A disappointingly sparse page about the museum located south of Tucson.
The page gives a brief overview of the tour, days and hours of operations, and
directions from Tucson. The site does contain links to other pages, one of
which has images of the tour, apparently grabbed from a video tape.
- Megaton Fun
- This site is poorly marked up, having set a background color, but not text
and link colors, so some of the page may seem to be missing. In this page, a
visitor to the Titan II museum just outside Tucson tries to come to grips with
a nuclear age which has past. Too late, my friend. The page is interesting for
the reaction of the author to what was a daily job for thousands of Air Force
people for decades, but his "factual" statements are sometimes wrong, and
prices for the tour have gone up since this page was written.
- The Ultimate Arizona Vacation Guide
- Produced by the Arizona Tourist Bureau, the opening page is too busy and
too active for comfort, but it contains a ton of links to tons of
information on Arizona, including maps, photos, car rentals, lodging, and what
seems to be every town in the state. The site provides you with little
information on Arizona, but you get a large assortment of links to companies
that are anxious to sell you what you want -- tours by jeep, horseback, or
raft; lodging, camping, or RV parking; meals; car, RV, or four- wheel- drive
rental, and so on. This is not a site to use to determine whether you want to
see Arizona. Visit this site if you have already decided to go, and you want
to plan all your time with things to do, places to go, and sites to see.
|
California TOC:
| San Francisco Bay Area |
San Jose/Silicon Valley | Wine Country | Other California Locations |
We have reviews of several guide books for San
Francisco that we have found to be very helpful.
|
- Real-time traffic congestion
- This site provides a map of congested traffic around the San Francisco Bay.
- Paul's Bay Area Weather
- A site for weather links for the San Francisco Bay Area. This is a very complete compendium of weather information for the area.
- an idiosyncratic guide for
the goth-geek-freak-hipster-nerd
- This is a would-be cynical view of San Francisco which is chock full of
useful information for everyone. You may find the assumed world-weary tone a
little off-putting, but it works. This is a lengthy list of directions, reviews,
and commentary on the City by the Bay, taking into account where to spend the
night without a hotel, how to get to Oakland without a car, driving, parking,
how to find out what is going on, the neighborhoods, how to get around on
public transit, and much, much more. Recommended.
- 511 TakeTransit
- Very helpful site for using public transportation in the Bay Area. It provides schedules, route maps, fares, services for special needs, PDA- accessible information, and you can plan your trip from place to place, including transfers.
- Live Flight Track Data
- This page has a link to a Java applet showing little green, red, white, and
black planes on a map of the Bay Area. It tracks arrivals and departures from
SFO, OAK, and SJX, with a delay of ten minutes. Read the explanation of the
colors and icons before you click on the radar screen so you know what you are
looking at.
- San Francisco Music, Dining, Arts, Movies ...
- A Web site devoted entirely to things to do (mostly) in San Francisco (it
does offer some reviews in other areas of the Bay). Reviews of restaurants,
links to shopping guides, current movies, music, arts, local citizens, hotels,
transportation, and much more.
- San Francisco CyberCafes
- Our list of cybercafes in San Francisco.
- San Francisco Convention & Visitors Bureau
- This is the official Web site of the city. We found the site to be very
helpful, a surprise given our penchant for finding bureaucratic sites to be dry
and promoting the interests of the bureaucrats rather than providing helpful
information to would- be tourists. There are maps, events, a hotel reservations
system, visitors guides by mail, photographs, and other information, including
statistics for convention planners and photographs which travel professionals
can download and use in print for promoting travel to San Francisco. Several of
the pages failed to render correctly on our browser, a problem with our window
size and the attempt to put images along side text. There are an index, a site
map, and a searchable database available if you do not want just to browse.
- The Mexican Bus
- The Mexican Bus provides tours of Latin and Caribbean night clubs, murals
in the Mission District, and wine tours in Sonoma Valley. The bus is also
available for private charter. The site is new, and more is promised.
- Green Tortoise
- This is a bus company based in San Francisco. How to describe it? The motor
coaches convert to sleepers; you chip in for food, and it is cooked by the
passengers and driver; "the bunks which hang from the ceiling [of the bus] are
always available for a nap"; trips to Burning Man, Alaska, Yosemite National
Park, Baja, Costa Rica, and Mardi Gras in New Orleans are among the
itineraries.
- Laughing Squid
- Links to underground culture and art in San Francisco, with a substantial
amount of information on performance art, including the Cacaphony Society and
the Billboard Liberation Front.
- San Francisco
- The Civilized Explorer has put together a page of links and excursions for
the traveler with a few hours' layover at the airport. We include nice walks
and nice restaurants for a break from long hours strapped in your seat.
- z San Francisco
- Dubbing itself an eclectic guide to an eclectic city, this is a local guide
San Francisco with its local finger on the city's pulse, from government to
gay, from food to computers, from health to email lists. It's depth of
information makes this site a must for your first visit.
Recommended.
- Live Video and Weather -- San Francisco
- Live video feed changes about every minute, with local time and weather
conditions; a forecast and radar and satellite images are available.
- Shaping San Francisco
- This Web site is part of a larger work with includes a CD- ROM and a book.
The effort is an interesting attempt to tell the history of a city from the
point of view of the ordinary people who lived there while that history was
being made. The result is rather more hit- and- miss than a regular text, with
volunteers filling in information which is of interest to them. So we have
pages about feral parrots in San Francisco, the history of labor unions,
beatniks and bohemians, and the like, with no real unifying theme. The site is
searchable, so it may not matter that there is no unification of the parts, and
the site's lack of linearity works much better in the hypertext world of the
Web than one would expect of a book. People leave messages about the stories,
adding their own versions of the history of San Francisco, making this site an
endless saga.
- Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
- This is an attractive site covering the de Young Museum and the Legion of
Honor, claiming to have an image base of 70,000. The Legion of Honor has been
reopened after refurbishment of earthquake damage, and the de Young has
external bracing to shore up its walls. This site has a history of the
discussion of what to do about the de Young, including a page devoted to
letting the viewers demolish the building and rebuild it (Shockwave required).
The site does a very good job of promoting the exhibitions; the pages are very
attractive and include well- scanned images, often using mini- windows to
display them, with the ability to zoom in on details.
- Emperor Norton
- Emperor Norton was a San Francisco loony from the Nineteenth Century. He
decreed himself Emperor of the U.S. on 17 September 1859 and from time to time
issued proclamations (which were printed in the local papers) and his own
currency (when US specie was in short supply around his household). At his
death in 1880, his funeral cortege was reported to be two miles long. This
site contains information about the man and the wonderful times in which such
a person could not only be tolerated but be venerated. This site is part of
the Norton Webring with links to other San Francisco city web sites.
- CitySearch San Francisco
- An arts and entertainment index to the city of San Francisco, with
information about theatre, motion pictures, readings, galleries, night life,
dance, music, museums, and much more. This site has excellent content, with
well- written reviews and considerable depth. Recommended.
- San Francisco International Airport
- There is considerable construction going on at the terminals, and this site
brings you the master plan, along with maps of the area (with gas stations),
local ground transportation, airlines serving SFO, and how to get a job there.
- Golden Gate Railroad Museum
- This is the virtual space of a real museum in San Francisco dedicated to
steam and passenger railroad equipment. Since the real museum is available by
appointment only and on weekends only, this Web site may be just the ticket
for you. There are lots of photos of the capture and restoration of old
locomotives (these behemoths have to be trucked into the museum since
they are not in working order when found), lots of links to other sites,
photographs of two diesels used in the museum's yard, and more. You can even
rent a steam locomotive for only US$300 per hour (diesels are also available,
and they are cheaper). Order videos, audio tapes of a ride on steam Engine 2472,
hats, whistles, shirts, and even more. This site is not for railroad buffs only,
and it is an outstanding example of a saying: The difference between men and
boys is the price of their toys. (And hiring a lawyer to make your toys tax
exempt.)
- Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation District
- Despite the name, this is actually an interesting site by a government
entity. And what other bridge do you know of with a page listing its special
events? An interesting FAQ, history, list of links, and pages of photographs
round out the site.
- San Francisco Chamber of Commerce
- This is a helpful site, not only for tourists, but for businesses. There are
links to information on doing business in and with the city of San Francisco, a
monthly calendar of meetings and events, programs, local ballot issues (this is
written as elections approach), business and commercial space in the city, and
information on the port and airport for those in the export/ import business.
You will also find a list of annual events that you can plan for on your trip
to San Francisco. Recommended.
- Pier 39
- For the residents of America's northeast, picture the Atlantic City
boardwalk: high- price T- shirts and sweats, post- cards, greasy fried food,
and souvenirs. You will feel right at home on Pier 39. This site has a list of
every shop, restaurant, store, street vendor, amusement arcade, and sea lion
on, in, under, and around San Francisco's Number One tourist attraction.
- Digital Lantern on San Francisco
- A restaurant guide to San Francisco, claiming to "locate and review every San Francisco restaurant -- 3274." The site is searchable by quality, name, cuisine, and newness. So we searched for La Liberté by name and turned up -- Nothing! This is not a hole- in- the- wall dive -- it's a nice restaurant. Hmmm... . Digital Lantern describes San Francisco as "most romantic," "culturally unique," "most European," "city with a heart," and then says Digital Lantern has geocoded restaurant data -- Breaks the spell, doesn't it? If one searches by cuisine for an Italian restaurant, one finds 18 different kinds of Italian cooking -- Abundanza! If you want the best, there are listings for best afternoon tea, best dim sum, best for fun, best Korean, best tapas, best Vietnamese, and on and on. The reviews give days and hours, prices, credit cards, average prices, and handicap accessibility is mentioned only if present. The reviews are brief and snappy -- perhaps too brief to give a great deal of help on some restaurants. If you see a long review and actual descriptions of the food, it must have been good.
- WebCastro
- This site is devoted to the businesses, culture, and people of the Castro
district of San Francisco. Castro is sometimes called the "gay mecca of the
world." (Well, of San Francisco, anyway.) This site celebrates the community
with a rich and diverse history. In addition to local Castro resources, the
authors provide links to gay and lesbian web sites world wide, a calendar
marking the passing of celebrities who died during the month (Hurry and check
the Marilyn Monroe listing; she died on 5 August, and they have a sound bite
of her saying, "You can come in now, daddy darling"), and a recollection of
living in the Castro during the 60s, 70s, and 80s. This fascinating history
should not be missed.
- Alcatraz
- This site looks boring, but it has lots of information, almost all text.
You learn the history of the island, about the prisoners incarcerated there,
and about the occupation of the prison by Native Americans. There is also
discussion of plant and animal life on the island other than the humans. Useful
information is given about reservations, ferries, hours of operation, prices,
and so forth.
- Oakland California's Official City Web Site
- Lots of information on the city government: budget, crime watch, city
jobs, maps, festivals, and more. There are also links to art, sports,
recreation, business, community, and more. The site is surprisingly helpful;
the arts page, for example, tells how to get city grants, in addition to
promoting existing facilities and programs. The community page offers
assistance on city- sponsored programs for home ownership. While not aimed at
tourism, this is a very good site to learn about Oakland.
- OaklandCA.com
- This is the "everything is wonderful in Oakland" Web site. There is
information on events, things to do, shopping, music and theatre, night life,
and a visitors map. The site is searchable. Unfortunately, links to topics may
take you to a page with only names (in red) with addresses and telephone
numbers; no links. Other times you get names (in red) with addresses and
telephone numbers; and the red names are links. Oh, well.
- Oakland Museum of California
- This museum is "devoted to the Art, History, and Natural Sciences of
California." The site lists permanent and current exhibits, gives directions
on how to get there (accessible by public transportation), and has virtual
exhibitions geared toward people visiting via the Web.
- Oakland Zoo Entrance
- All links are live on this site, even the links to the page you are on. The
site is extensive, with an alphabetical list if the animals (some pages have
video), an overview of the zoo, a list of special events, and special pages for
teachers and students. The pages about animals give the order, family, genus,
and species for each animal, sometimes with photos, sometimes not, along with
information on the animal's habitat, diet, life and social structure, and
specifics about the animals held by the zoo. Sometimes the backgrounds of the
pages make it difficult to read the text.
- Oakland International Airport
- Flight schedules, cities served, cargo, ground transportation, airlines,
airport concessions, maps of the terminals, and more.
- top
- Well, it should be called "Oakland Unified School District," but
what can one expect from a page generated by FrontPage? At schools nowadays,
the "Latest Virus Alert" is for your computer, not your child. The site also
provides links to all the schools in the OUSD (lots of good information on each
one, by the way), a page for the board to communicate with the residents, wish
lists for the teachers, and (on the date of our visit) coverage of the strike.
- The Oakland Tribune Default Frameset
- We just love these imaginative names for Web sites. This is the
online home of the Oakland Tribune, the daily paper for the city.
- OaklandNews
- News from an alternative newsweekly. Local news, poetry, letters to the
editor, and columns.
- Oakland Post
- The city's independent newspaper focusing on persons of color, young people,
and nontraditional life.
- Port of Oakland
- Everybody has a Web site now. The Port of Oakland promotes itself with lots
of statistics (29 deepwater berths, 12 Post-Panamax container cranes, a guide
to waterside access at the port, projects, employment, and more!
- Welcome to Jack London Square
- Dining, lodging, attractions at the portside square named after famed
resident, Jack London (with a seriously dumb animated GIF of the writer
writing.)
- Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative
- Everybody has a Web site now. Marijuana is legal in California under
limited circumstances, and Oakland residents may obtain information from this
site. No mail orders accepted.
- BayInsider
- A Web site promoting the San Francisco Bay Area, with news, entertainment,
sports, and recreation information. Includes local weather reports, chat, Web
boards, and columns ("Need a hand with Sex?" on the day of our visit).
- The City of Alameda
- Includes a Java-based photo tour, demographics (average household income,
population, growth -- all the vital information you really need), and several
pages devoted to available buildings and lots in the city. Also links to the
people in charge of the marina, the chamber of commerce, various business
associations -- very helpful.
- Mountain Biking in the San Francisco Bay Area
- Browse through detailed descriptions of Ross Finlayson's favorite routes
in the Bay Area and elsewhere in Northern California. Some links are sill
under construction, unfortunately. Ross has also rated each trail on 3
scales: overall enjoyment, technical sill needed, and effort required. Hint:
Click to go to Ross's Mountain Biking home page for a great overview of
mountain biking resources on the web.
- Just Go Bay Area
- The site is a helpful compendium of news and
reviews, with links to movies, restaurants, and events in the Bay Area. This is
a useful site for people who are planning a trip and want things to do at night
other than tourist stuff.
|
Back to California TOC |
- San Mateo Restaurants
- Reviews of restaurants in San Mateo, CA, with Google maps showing their location.
- Soft Underbelly of San Jose
- This site attempts the tone of a hard- boiled detective, and sometimes it
succeeds. The author has done some out of the way exploration of San Jose
(trying to find the city library seems to be an undertaking), looking at the
scrap yard, Quetzalcoatl, and a couple of buildings- soon- to- be- parking
lots. The pages are short, with good photographs, but you have to keep moving
on to subsequent pages to get the full story. And the "Back" link only takes
you back to the previous page; the full navigation menu is at the top of the
page, where you cannot see it. This site will not be on a link from the city's
Chamber of Commerce or Visitor's Bureau. Take a look for locations you will not
find on official Web sites.
- Downtown San Jose
- Services and businesses are in a searchable database, and there are links
to restaurants, museums and galleries, performing arts, sports, nightlife, and
shops. There is also a current calendar of events. Sponsored by the San Jose
Downtown Association, this site provides helpful information on public
transportation and accommodations. There is a significant amount of information
here for visitors.
- San Jose International Airport
- Navigation is a bit frustrating on this site. There seem to be some extra
pages that serve no purpose other than to provide a link to another page. There
is not much information for travelers readily apparent. But if you want to know
the number of runways and the parking fees, this site is for you!
- Silicon Valley Web Directory
- Very helpful, attractive, and has a ton of links -- Everything
from Attractions, to Computer Industry, through History, Parks, Politics, and
Recreation, to Who is Who in Silicon Valley. Just ignore the heavy advertising...
|
Back to California TOC. |
- SteveO's California Wine Touring Guides
- This breezy site has one of the most extensive lists of wineries in California's wine country that we have seen. Some listings are just that -- listings of phone numbers and addresses (which is helpful), and some pages are brief descriptions of the regions.
- NapaNet - Napa Valley
- This interesting site covers the Napa Valley, an area known for its
excellent wines. NapaNet covers more than just the vinyards, however. In
addition to the winery coverage, this site provides its readers with
information on business and government in the valley, as well as on schools,
museums, arts, and music, taxes, religious services, housing, and considerably
more. In addition to the regular tourist information, we think this site would
be most helpful for people living or contemplating living in Napa Valley.
- WineCountryOnline
- This page is authored by a married couple. Check with Vino
for suggestions and recommendations for a trip to California's Wine Country.
Tell him your budget, interests, and dates of travel and you will receive a
response via return email. Vino is apparently very busy; he claims it now
takes several weeks to respond. General information is also provided.
- Napa Valley Virtual Visit
- A wealth of information. Check out specific wineries, buy
stuff on-line, get directions. A good resource for planning a trip.
|
Back to California TOC
We have a review of The Complete Guide Tahoe,
a book we have found to be very helpful. |
- Eureka Vally Thanksgiving 1999
- Eureka Valley Thanksgiving 2004
- Photos and descriptions of campiing in Eureka Valley, just north of Death Valley.
- Live Shot of Yosemite Valley
- A live Webcam updated every three minutes during daylight hours (Pacific
Time), this page shows a live image of Halfdome and a static photograph of
Tuolomne Meadows taken in June 2000. Follow the links on this page to explore
all of this fascinating National Park.
- Terra Cotta Inn
- The Terra Cotta Inn is a luxury clothing optional resort in Palm Springs.
Their Web site provides a great deal of information about the resort, with
photographs of the rooms, pool, and other areas. Rates are given, and
reservations may be made by phone, fax, or email.
- Carson City
- The opening page is a useless splash page saying welcome, enter here. Skip
it and go here instead.
This site is really about the city. It has the local budget, Y2K Compliance
issues, bids for city contracts, and the like. But it also has links to more
tourism- oriented features such as the Goodyear Blimp, shopping, parks, events,
dining, and other things to do. Unfortunately, someone went wild with
fonts,
and the site suffers from the "ransom note" syndrome, looking like it was
pasted together from different newspapers and magazines. We missed the page
with statistics like size of population, but the dining page mentions the Ikea
restaurant, Dennys, and IHOP, among others. On the day of our visit, Special
Events included Second Chance Week in the Community Center Parking Lot --
donate your reusable items with proceeds going to the sheriff's Family
Assistance Program. The date was October 7, but no year is given on this event
or any other listed. With our visit to the site being in June, we do not know
if we are planning ahead or we missed it. It is a homey site for what appears
to be a homey place to live or visit.
- Mercey Hot Springs
- Located about a hundred miles south of San Jose, Mercey Hot Springs offers
soothing soaks in hot mineral water at reasonable rates. The site is under
construction -- no, not the Web site, the resort site -- so rates are reasonable.
- Daytripping - An Ongoing Budget Travelogue
- An ongoing budget travelogue. The author goes on trips and then writes
about them. Links include maps of the area and books about it. A really
useful page contains a link to get travel reports on most of the major roads in
California.
- Guide 105
- This is a commercial site, and it has a very extensive listing of places in
California. The descriptions are brief enough to be useless, but if a city is
listed, there will be links to hotels, motels, restaurants, museums, radio and
television stations, local Internet guides, entertainment, and whatever else
there is to do. The site is useful for the extent of its listings.
- Elk
- Elk? "It still is Greenwood, you know. Only our Post Office had its name
changed to 'Elk.'" A little town on the northern coast of California claiming a
population of 250, but only 93 can be accounted for. Be sure you follow the
links to the Bed and Breakfast establishments -- they look good. An interesting
page about a small town on the coast.
- Hollywood on Location
- This is a searchable database of movies filmed on location somewhere in
California. You can search by region, actor, movie, or keyword and find out
that Errol Flynn's version of Robin Hood was filmed in the Shasta region of northern California. You can get an 8.5 x 11 inch map of the region where the film was made, including highways, towns, rivers, and other points of interest. The information on the Web site is not all that interesting, but if you have an all- time favorite movie and you are going to be in the area where it was filmed, you may find this Web site helpful.
- San Diego International Airport
- Also known as Lindbergh Field, the Web site is a tasteful purple with
heavy use of tables with borders. The site provides information on airlines
serving Lindbergh Field, ground transportation and parking, and such helpful
tips as get there two hours early, get your ticket somewhere else, and please
be patient. The "Other Links" table has the text inexplicably changed in
midword to the same color as the background, rendering it invisible. This
gives the other links a sporting chance to avoid being clicked on. On some
pages, the text is black and the links are blue. On other pages, the text is
blue and the links are purple. On one page, some text is purple, some text is
black, and there are no links. The site claims to have been done by a
department of the Port of San Diego; we believe it.
- The San Diego Trolley (Unofficial)
- This site contains considerable helpful information on the San Diego
trolley, including schedules, intersystem transfers, telephone numbers, and
system maps. Very helpful for planning your use of public transportation while
in the city.
- McClellan Palomar Airport (Unofficial)
- Tons of information for the business traveller at this northern San Diego
County airport, including schedules, links to public transportation, and
service by the major common carriers. Local attractions are listed as well, for
those US$100 hamburger flights -- San Diego is a very nice destination.
- @LA
- (AKA at LA) This site covers Los Angeles, Orange, Ventura, Riverside, and
San Bernardino counties. It is relentlessly LA -- it offers tons of links to
tons of topics, it is searchable, and it has relentlessly flashing ads,
including one offering you ad- space for "<$10/month." The site has
a map of itself, and it is searchable by keyword in addition to drilling down
by clicking on links. We did find, however, that some of the links were "coming
soon." Links are to Web pages off-site. We found no original content on this
site; however, for those planning a trip to LA, this is an excellent site to
locate whatever interests visitors may have.
- CoolSpots
- The opening page is more reminiscent of some group shot of flying saucers
over the coast in the early morning than anything about California, but the
site has some interesting information about California. The site covers the
usual tourist spots, but its real use is the "funky" spots with photographs
by volunteer contributors. You can virtually visit Lito's Hubcap Ranch
(designated, by the way, by the state of California as "one of California's
exceptional Twentieth Century folk art environments" -- where else but
California?), along with the more mundane state parks, monuments, and city
sights. For a taste of the more bizarre California, recommended.
- Hearst Monument Foundation
- Well, they have trademarked Hearst CastleTM, along with a couple of other phrases one would have thought generic. The site shows flags from Germany, Japan, and Mexico, but they are not links, and we could find no pages in those languages. The actual castle is a remarkable monument to a remarkable man profiled as Citizen Kane, and the Web site is remarkably poor. Information is always at least two levels away from the home page and usually of no interest. The history of WRH is labelled a biographical abstract, and it is about as dry as the name indicates. Stunningly boring site.
- Tahoe Country Home Page
- A comprehensive guide to businesses, activities, hotels, weather - most
anything you'd like to know before visiting. This is a commercial site that
produces it's own descriptions rather than providing links to other sites. Be
sure to read the description of fly fishing in Pyramid Lake if you've ever
wondered how to use a step ladder to catch trout!
- Redwood Exposure
- An interesting combination of vacations -- If your travel companion
and you can't agree on where to go, check this out. Located in
northern California, Redwood Exposure provides tours of old-growth
redwood forests. If you wish, take a tour of the forest conducted
by "university- degreed" natural scientists; or they'll take you
around the tide pools, national parks, or bird sanctuaries. On the
other hand, arrange tours conducted by "professional Outdoor
Photographers." And on the third hand, just hang out at the B&B,
wander romantically in the redwood groves or the shore, eat a
"gourmet breakfast" and "savor exquisite cuisine" at local restaurants.
They have several packages from one day to seven and provide a
sample itinerary.
- Monterey Peninsula
- Weather and guides to cities and events on the Monterey Peninsula,
California. Includes Pebble Beach, Carmel-By-The-Sea, Monterey,
Big Sur, and others.
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- Crested Butte
- This Colorado town has a very nice opening picture and a well- organized
page providing information about the town. There are links to shops (definite
slant to outdoor gear), dining (with a map of all restaurants in Acrobat
format -- very handy), real estate, community calendar, and so forth. Crested
Butte comes across as a small town with a lot of marketing savvy.
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- Delaware and Ocean City Maryland Beaches
- A fairly complete listing of the towns and beaches in Delaware and the
facilities in Ocean City, Maryland, with links to dining, lodging, shopping,
the towns, and real estate. The opening page is lengthy but mostly text for a
quick download, but there are lots of pictures. There is additional information
on beachcombing, birding, hurricanes, storm damage, surfing, sharks, and much
more. This site is aimed at tourists and so gives only the best of impressions
of each place. You will find tons of information on tourist things to see and
do. If you want a vacation on the Delaware shore, this is a great place to start
your search for information.
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- Washington Post: Destination Scandal!
- An interesting site that pulls no punches. This page lists addresses where
the District's more notorious goings on went on: Watergate, of course, the
Tidal Basin where Wilbur Mills introduced the Argentine Firecracker to society,
Chevy Chase elementary school, and more. The addresses are given for your own
drive by excursion, and there are links to the Post's articles on the events.
Not your regular tour of Washington, DC. Recommended.
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- See Florida
- This is a mildly irritating site. The opening page is a graphic that is too
big, takes to long to download, is animated, and adds nothing that text could
not have done quicker. The site is easy to navigate, with multiple methods of
choosing where to visit. This site covers the entire state, with accommodations,
restaurants, activities, local weather, and transportation. Once we got beyond
the slow downloads, we found much of interest.
- Pompano Beach Chamber of Commerce
- The Chamber of Commerce home page for the City of Pompano Beach, Florida,
USA. This site contains a few nice generic sunset photos and lists of names
and addresses for hotels, motels, restaurants, and entertainment. The page
with the history of the city contains a photo of a lighthouse and three
sentences; however, all the city commissioners and city officials got their
names listed. There is nothing about the city of Pompano Beach on this site.
- The Pennekamp Page
- Specific information on Key Largo and the Pennekamp Park, snorkeling,
diving, fishing, and other attractions. The Pennekamp Park is an underwater
state park adjacent to the Key Largo National Marine Sanctuary. Lots of
information on things to do, places to eat, and where to stay. An attractive
site with nice photographs.
- Virtually South Beach, Miami
- South Beach, in Miami, Florida, wants to be your trendy winter vacation
spot. Sponsored by the South Beach Marketing Council and the Miami Beach
Development Corporation, this site is relentlessly upbeat, relentlessly trendy,
and relentlessly pastel art deco. Information on hotels, restaurants, trendy
beaches (where models hang out topless, they say), trendy shopping, trendy
people. They claim this site "brings you the true essence of South Beach,
with cartoons designed specially for the internet ... ." When searching for
that true essence in hotels and restaurants, we found "To find an individual
business listing, press {Control F}" -- Funny, on our Mac, nothing
happened. Guess we just have the false essence. Oh, well.
- Florida's Space Coast
- You can have it both ways! Home of the Kennedy Space Center and
calling the area the Space Coast, this site wants you to know that it "offers
much more." In addition to links to Space Age Attractions, Getting to the
Florida Space Coast, and Map of Florida's Space Coast, there are also links to
such nonspace- related items as sun, sand, water, and shopping. But it seems
every page has a space connection built in. The message is don't go just for
the launches, but if you do, spend a little more time (and money) while you're
there.
- Morikami Museum and Japanese Grounds
- Morikami Park is in Delray Beach, Florida, USA. It claims to be the
only museum in the USA dedicated exclusively to the living culture
of Japan. The page has a lovely vanity plate and a map of the
floorplan of the galleries, and a map of Delray so you won't get
lost, and a very nice closing graphic at the bottom of the page.
They have two links which show something about the museum: 2
photos of the front and back of the building (quite lovely) that
are on one page of over 200k and photos of folk art exhibits on
one page of over 360k. I started out thinking that it's a shame
the page is virtually all text and no photos of the gardens, but
then I ended up wishing their photos were smaller and more
manageable. I'm sure it's a lovely place to visit; their page
doesn't do it justice.
- Discover: The Keys
- This Web site promotes tourism in the Florida Keys. The site is well-
organized and attractive. It provides a wealth of information while remaining
easy to navigate through many pages. It appears to cover all the keys,
not just the ones that get all the press. Nice photos, nice graphics, and quick.
Each key has links for events, accommodations, activities, and attractions,
plus more.
- Key West Paradise
- Another paean to Key West with tons of links and a great sense of humor -- visit the Chapel By The Sea for your wedding, then stroll over to the Key West Cemetery (the inscriptions are must read items), shop, find
accommodations, bars and restaurants, theatres, events and festivals, and the
obligatory link for Parrot Heads (you know who you are). The site is lots of fun.
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- Atlanta Garden Connection
- The introductory page is lengthy text with an image as its link to Features
and Articles; the image appeared to us as a text separator, so we spent a
minute trying to figure out how to get to the meat of this site. There is a
nice bouquet of information on the Atlanta Botanical Garden, birding, articles
on gardening, book reviews, current events of 15 gardening organizations, and
more. If you are going to Atlanta, drop by this page to find a cooling garden
to visit while you are there.
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- Akiko's Buddhist Bed & Breakfast
- This B&B is located on the Big Island and offers simple sleeping
quarters and opportunities for quiet pleasures. For those who wish, programs
are available for group and individual retreats that can include gardening,
maintenance work, and community service (in a village of 12). Prices are quoted
per day, per week, and per month.
- Mauna Kea Summit Adventures
- Surprising and attractive opening page -- When the author says "summit" --
well, it is a picture of Hawaii most tourists never see. Don't be one of those
who miss this tour. The guide offers a trip to the top of what may be the
world's best view of the heavens. You are driven up in the evening before the
sun sets, and you stay until after dark. Bring your camera, your tripod, and
lots of film (be sure to look at the photo album). You can make your
reservation online.
- River Estate Guest House
- Absolutely gorgeous page. Great opening photos of the islands and links to
photos of the estate, its rooms, and environs. Described as a hidden hideaway,
the River Estate Guest House offers bed and breakfast and vacation rental type
lodging in the lush tropical landscape of Kauai. In addition to booking
information and rates, this page includes links to boat and helicopter tours of
the island, golfing, and other related links.
- Destination Resorts - Hawaii
- Listing of 245 luxury vacation villas in Wailea and Makena resort
communities on Maui. Daily maid service, concierge, golf, tennis,
and beaches. Lots of pictures showing amenities and rooms to help
you choose among the six different villages.
- Maui
- Commercial presentation by Maui Net & very well done. Extensive
access to everything to do there -- Buying a home, doing business,
sailing, shopping, and touring. A special guide for sannyasin and
a link to Maui Net users' pages (which use tags unique to Netscape
1.1).
- Rafting in Hawaii
- Explore, snorkel, and see the beautiful Kona coast. Half-day tours in
small groups provide an intimate personal experience of sea caves and lava
tubes. Reservations may be made online.
- Eco-Diving in Hawaii
- Night charters, daily dive trips, and SCUBA lessons, including 12 specialties
(night diving, deep diving, videography, photography, blue water, underwater
naturalist, instructor, among others). Reservations may be made online.
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- Chicago's home page
- Lists of museums, galleries, restaurants, hotels, and entertainment
in the Windy City.
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- Blue Skyways of Kansas
- This site is by the Kansas State Library, and it is full of helpful
materials on Kansas, including the little town with the biggest ball of twine
in the world, plus communities, government, poems of Kansas, the state history,
and much, much more. Explore the communities -- the pages are well- done and
tell volumes about America's heartland. We do not get to read much about small-
town America in the newspapers.
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- New Orleans Convention & Visitor's Bureau
- This page finally opens after a couple of redirections. We like the URL,
which is how locals pronounce the name of their town. The site is easy to
navigate and offers discount coupons for your actual visit. There is a link for
travel professionals to help them guide customers to New Orleans, a visitor's
guide for restaurants, shopping, tours, and culture. Unfortunately, the site
did not work properly for all links, taking us to blank pages on occasion. Even
so, the site is packed with information.
- About Mardi Gras Madness
- Although it calls itself the "Official Site of Mardi Gras 1997," this site
is about the celebration only in New Orleans, Louisiana. It is well set up for
navigation and has a plethora of tips, links, and information. The survival
tips seep particularly helpful, the recipes flavorful, and the lingo perhaps
not so wonderful without a pronunciation guide. If you are going to New Orleans
for Mardi Gras, this site is a recommended visit.
- The Mardis Gras
- The official New Orleans Mardi Gras home page. It has a parade guide
listing what parades will be held, where, and when. There are also a clickable
city map, food guide, weather reports, and photographs and sound files.
- World Beat Rough Guide - New Orleans
- A short, actually helpful introduction to Mardi Gras, with references to
minorities -- something lacking in other Web sites.
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- Baltimore, Maryland
- An incredible amount of information about Baltimore -- including
where to find electrolysis for men and women! History, businesses,
arts and entertainment, maps, photos, job guides, and more.
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Massachusetts TOC:
| Boston |
Other Massachusetts Areas | |
- Yahoo! Regional:Boston:Travel
- Yahoo! has a page with several links to Boston information.
- Boston Insider
- There is a great deal of information on this site; unfortunately, it is
entirely commercial -- You select a link for "Top Things to do In Boston," for
example, and instead of getting the things, you get a page with ads and three
links to other pages, which contain links to the things to do along with more
ads. In spite of our aggravation, we find the breadth of information quite
enough to bring us back for more. Strangers to the area will wish for more
informative links than "Essex," or "Plimoth," when one does not know that
Essex is a town 30 miles outside of Boston, not a Boston neighborhood. Each page
is well done and has all sorts of navigation help on it. This site qualifies
for a recommendation based on its breadth and depth of content, but the ads and
lack helpful link information stays our hand from typing the word.
- [Boston] Museum of Fine Arts
- The opening page is, uh, red. Once we got beyond that page, we enjoyed this Web site tremendously. There are problems showing fine artwork on computer monitors. The Museum of Fine Arts has finessed this issue quite nicely; on our visit the Museum was promoting its Picasso exhibit and showed thumbnails of his work (linked to larger images), but presented more reading material than artwork, showing the paintings, and putting them into the context of Picasso's life. The discussion of the paintings in context makes them much more interesting and invites the viewer to visit the Museum for better views of the art. And having read this material, the viewer will likely gain more from the visit. This is an excellent use of the Web in conjunction with the Museum. Recommended.
- Open World City Guides - Boston
- This is a British Web site with a view of Boston from a foreign perspective.
There is such helpful information as climate, currency, electricity, visas,
and so on. The history of Boston runs from 1,000 BCE, when Norse mariners are
credited with exploring the coast to 1897 when the local subway opened. There
is very little about the city. There is a great deal of information on hotels,
restaurants, museums, and attractions, and there are maps of Boston's center.
We would expect this site to be most useful for persons who know they are
going there and not for people who want to find out if they would care to visit.
- Arts & Entertainment
- The Boston Phoenix is a weekly paper claiming to publish "the most
comprehensive arts- &- entertainment listings of any paper in New England." The
page linked to here is the jumping off point for movies, performance, books,
museums and galleries, editors' picks, and more, but the site as a whole is
considerably more extensive. Because of the depth of the site, navigation by
link can be slow, as each page has an image map, but the site is searchable as
well. Browsing movies by link gives an image map with links by movie, starting
time and neighborhood, by theatre, and by special showings, as well as reviews
and listings.
- Virtually Boston!
- Very visual as well as virtual. This is an extremely attractive site with
excellent graphics and many photographs, history, general information on
Beantown, and links to other Boston- related sites. A separate area is
provided for debate and discussion about Boston, its schools, history,
politics, and much more.
- Art & Cultural Events List
- Boston-area only -- List of exhibits in local galleries.
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Back to Massachusetts TOC |
- The Berkshires
- This site is run by a print magazine called SEE The Berkshires. While the
Berkshire Mountains extend throughout New England, this site spends most of its
time in Massachusetts. It is navigable by links, and it has menus for referring
to its feature stories and some of the towns of interest. Stockbridge is well
known for two local personages: Norman Rockwell, perhaps America's most famous
illustrator, and Alice, of Alice's Restaurant fame from a 70s song of that name
by Arlo Guthry. (The last we heard, her restaurant was closed.) The site gives
a great deal of information on where to eat, where to stay, and where to shop.
If you are going to the Berkshires, this site should be on your list of Web
sites to visit before you go.
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- Welcome to the Mississippi Gulf Coast
- The opening page is framed and takes forever to render, mostly because of
the self- congratulatory images of site awards, so skip that opening frame as
soon as the index frame displays. The site is very busy with lots of animation,
background colors, images, but the information is there for it to be worthwhile
-- links to hotel reservations, restaurants, alternatives to New Orleans for
Mardi Gras, fishing in the Gulf, hunting, and public transportation.
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- Lake of the Ozarks Recreation & Resource Locator
- Lake of the Ozarks is located in central Missouri. This site provides lists
of B&Bs, camp sites, hotels, houseboats for accommodations, but you are
given only phone numbers and no other information, a clickable map of the lake
with town names to locate restaurants, but you are given only restaurant names
and phone numbers with no other information, phone numbers of caves with no
other information -- well, you get the picture.
- Missouri Botanical Garden
- A wonderful introduction to these gardens of azaleas, the Swift Family Garden, and the Climatron® (inspired by Buckminster Fuller's designs).
- The Interactive Katy Trail.
- This attractive site is a labor of love for its author -- a virtual
exploration of the trail created on an abandoned right of way formerly used by
the Missouri- Kansas- Texas Railroad (called the Katy). Two hundred miles of
abandoned right of way pass through the Missouri River valley's scenic lands
and towns. You can explore this site by following links or by clicking on an
image map of a map of the trail and towns. There are great photos, but download
times suffer. The pages are very well organized with your next stop at the top
of each page and other links at the bottom.
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Nevada TOC:
| Gerlach/Empire |
Reno/Tahoe/Sparks |
Las Vegas |
Elsewhere in Nevada |
We have a review of Burning Man, a book
published by HardWired, with over a hundred pages of photographs of the event,
taken over several years. |
- The Burning Man Project
- The Burning Man Festival is well beyond the scope of this brief
review. The festival takes place north of Gerlach and Empire, somewhere in
Nevada. Visit this site to find out why 10,000 people trek to the desert every
Labor Day weekend and burn a man in effigy. The site is attractive and makes
good use of graphical images.
- The Civilized Explorer Burning Man Pages
- Our Web pages on Burning Man are updated annually, with photographs from
1996, 1997, and 1998, along with articles about survival in the chaos that is
Burning Man. Some of the photographs show unconventionally dressed (and
undressed) people, but we have tried to be accurate in our table of contents,
so you should be able to choose what you see.
- Soldier Meadows Ranch
- This is a working ranch about 60 miles north of Gerlach. With about 14,000
acres, you can lose yourself in the high desert of Nevada. You have access to
the lodge, remote camping, hot springs, and no telephones. Hunt bird or deer,
or go on the spring cattle drive to the mountains. Rates are given, and you
can pay with plastic.
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Back to Nevada TOC
We have a review of The Complete Guide Tahoe,
a book we have found helpful. |
- The Civilized Explorer Reno Page
- Although this page is geared toward those persons passing through Reno on their
way to Burning Man, we think many others will find helpful information here --
car rentals, RV rentals and RV parks, inexpensive motels, restaurants, clothing
consignment shops, shopping malls, and ice.
- City of Reno
- The official Web site of the City of Reno. Lots of boards and commissions, neighborhood advisory boards, interactive maps, and special events.
- City of Sparks
- The official Web site of the City of Sparks. Agendas and calendars of meetings of the various commissions and councils, what's going on, where to stay, what to see.
- Reno Spaghetti Bowl
- The official Web site of the traffic mess being made out of I-80 and US 395. The site includes traffic and project information, suggested detours, and lots of photos of rebar and sound walls.
- Nevada Department of Transportation
- The official Web site of, uh, the Nevada Department of Transportation. In addition to the usual bureaucratic stuff, there are links for truckers and for travelers (which includes construction projects and delays, maps, road conditions, weather, and the Freeway Service Patrol). They also include airport information.
- Reno/Tahoe International Airport
- This site provides a groundplan of the airport so you can find your gate,
a list of airlines serving the airport, with their toll- free reservation
numbers, where to park (and how much), where to rent a car, and where to get
your private plane serviced if you fly in yourself.
- Tahoe Country Home Page
- A comprehensive guide to businesses, activities, hotels, weather - most
anything you'd like to know before visiting. This is a commercial site that
produces it's own descriptions rather than providing links to other sites. Be
sure to read the description of fly fishing in Pyramid Lake if you've ever
wondered how to use a step ladder to catch trout!
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Back to Nevada TOC |
- Las Vegas Nevada's premiere Web site
- This searchable site also has navigation by topics: Hot stuff, visiting,
and living in and moving to Las Vegas. The sections are very thorough, with
tons of information. Not all the links are the same color, however, which can
cause some confusion and missed opportunities. If you are a first- time visitor,
this site will get you started on what is going on and what to do in Las Vegas.
- A Las Vegas Leisure Travel Visitors Guide
- The site claims to have information in Spanish, German, French, and Italian,
as well as in English. The site has a wealth of information on entertainment
(with access to online ticketing agencies), hotels, nightlife, maps,
recreation, shopping, sightseeing, and marriages.
- Las Vegas SUN
- This is a Las Vegas newspaper with information on imploded buildings, boxing
matches, showbiz, resorts, community, and more. The site also provides digital
video of happenings, such as a time lapse video of the erection of Paris, local
jet crashes, and building demolition. Not your usual tourist stuff.
- Las Vegas Information
- This site claims to provide "all there is to know about Las Vegas ... ."
There is helpful information on the climate, the history of the city and its
location, establishing residency, housing, cost of living, and much more. If you
are considering a move to Las Vegas, this is a very helpful site.
- Las Vegas Travel
- This site provides reservation services for visitors to the city. They have
a lengthy list of hotels, with discounts for conventioneers on special trips. On
the day of our visit, COMDEX was still listed, along with Winston Cup, as having
special offerings.
- Las Vegas Central
- This site provides free listings for businesses in Las Vegas, and the pages are hosted here for you to browse. If you need apparel, car repairs, a computer, loans, or lawyers, this site provides your online entree to small business in Las Vegas.
- Las Vegas Showbiz
- This site is sponsored by the Luxor Hotel and Casino. The site, however,
lists shows, headliners, and other entertainment at other venues, and it is
searchable by category and date. In addition to shows, there are pages on
dining, attractions, gambling, and hotels. Since the site promotes Las Vegas,
all the shows, all the attractions, and every thing else is wonderfully
interesting.
- HotelGuide Las Vegas
- Available in English and Spanish. The site is searchable by hotel name or
by location. In addition, the site offers guides for shopping, dining, night
life, and more.
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Back to Nevada TOC |
- Yucca Mountain Project
- This page downloads a useless Java "enhancement" that scrolls a table of
contents for you; this page
lets you look at the table of contents without the relentless scroll. Yucca
Mountain is the location about a hundred miles from Las Vegas where some people
want to store radioactive nuclear waste. Drop by and take a tour. This Web site
gives their budget, tells who is paying for the project, and gives you the time
line for the research to determine if Yucca Mountain is feasible as the
repository of the United States's spent nuclear fuel.
- Nevada Historical Marker Index
- Select a Nevada county by name or by clicking on the map of the State, and
get a listing of Nevada's historical markers within that county. For example,
Pershing County is home to Nevada Historical Marker 17, marking a key point in
the Humboldt Trail, the last stop for travelers before crossing the 40- Mile
Desert. The site was fairly slow at the time of our visit, and we gave up on a
couple of links before getting responses. Nevada has a wealth of history, some
of it as a natural barrier to America's westward expansion. This site gives
short shrift to the human and animal suffering encountered on Nevada's trails:
The emigrants suffered great hardships; many lives and livestock
were lost. It became known as the "Death Route."
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- Florham Park Dog Parade
- The New Jersey Borough of Florham Park had their second annual dog parade
on 23 September 2000, and it made the local news.
- Florham Park Community Information Home Page
- This page is by Digital- Neighbors, and it provides information on
shopping, gives you the names of nearby cities which you may have heard of,
local sports, news, and weather, along with real estate and classified ads.
This is a helpful site, although rather inclined to statistics.
- Beachcomber City Guide to Florham Park
- Search for businesses in Florham Park, make reservations online for local
hotels, and check the local weather.
- Real Estate Online
- This agency covers Florham Park, Madison, and Chatham, New Jersey. The site has searchable listings and links to additional information on the three towns. The site provides a mortgage calculator and relocation help.
- The Florham Park Eagle
- Photographs of local politicians kissing babies, volunteers for local
charities, and students walking to raise funds for a new library.
- The Daily Record
- The Daily Record pops up an annoying extra window inviting you to do
something -- we dismissed it before it fully explained its reason for being.
In addition to local news and sports, local classifieds and weather, the Daily
Record provides national news and "Things to do."
- Florham Park Borough
- Florham Park's "official" Web site contains directions on how to get there,
the official meeting schedule, instructions on how to get a pet license, lists
of local charitable groups and clubs, hours for the municipal pool, a calendar
of events, and links to county and state information of importance to the
community.
- Florham Park Public Library
- The library provides public internet access as well as access to the library
collections of Morris County. The library's collection is searchable by
newspaper and magazine article, along with the usual book catalogue.
- Star-Ledger News
- The Star-Ledger claims to be the newspaper for New Jersey, with state-
oriented news, sports, business, entertainment, and living sections on the Web
site.
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- Aventura Artistica
- This company offers tours of New Mexico's art sites -- museums, private
homes, and aboriginal art in the wild. The site and each page are well laid out,
making navigation easy. If museums seem stuffy to you, the guide offers white
water rafting and restaurant tours, with descriptions that made our mouths
water. Each tour gives dates and rates, but the dates did not include a year,
and we presume some of them have already happened but were not removed from the
site.
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- The Chrysler Building Unofficial Web Site
- The site claims that the Chrysler Building is the most beautiful building
in New York City, and I agree. The author is a big fan, and his love of the
Chrysler Building is written all over this site. Sadly, many of the photographs
are not well scanned and do not show the beauty claimed in the glowing
descriptions. The site is well worth visiting for the photographs and the
history.
- Historic Hudson Valley
- This site is chock full of information, and some pages take awhile do
download. We got repeated JavaScript errors, apparently from an animation at
the top of each page. The site has a calendar of events, listings for tours,
and a great deal more. If you are considering or planning a trip to New York's
Hudson Valley, this is an excellent resource.
- Yahoo - New York
- Yahoo's page localized for New York City has links to business, community,
education, employment, entertainment, the arts, Manhattan life, transportation,
travel, and more. As with the regular Yahoo
page, the links are to more specific links to more specific information, none
of which originates with Yahoo.
- Camden, New York
- Beautiful Camden, NY, (not to be confused with Camden, NJ). Each page of
this site appears to be sponsored by a local business. We are sure this is a
quaint New York village, but something is troublesome when the opening page of
the site gives its location as only a half hour from a casino, and the Tourist
Information page has "Links to other great attractions within an hours drive
from Camden" and not much else. Many of the photographs were taken in the dead
of winter, with bare trees and lots of snow on the ground, and they do not do
justice to the village and its Victorian homes. The Community Attractions page
works well, though. This is a site which shows how subtle the differences are
between really selling an attraction and not quite making it.
- The Bronx Tourism Council
- A Web guide to The Bronx, a borough of the City of New York. Among other
pleasures, this site offers a video voyage of The Bronx lead by Regis Philbin.
The Bronx Tourism Council has done a remarkable job of selling The Bronx as a
tour destination.
- Long Island Bus Service
- The Long Island bus schedule -- If you are visiting Long Island and want
to take the bus, check this before you go.
- Welcome to Total New York
- This is a site with an attitude! It is about life in New York City. Lots of
"in" references, so it helps to know New York (or to think you do) to get all
the jokes and insults. There are a calendar and links to Web Events and chats,
gossip, and photographs. Totally trendy and fun, but read this site
-- It has things to say, and it says them well. Recommended.
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- The Virtual North Carolina Project
- This is a low key page from the University of North Carolina. There is
information on Orange County, the part of the Appalachian Trail that is in
North Carolina, stories and photos about local towns, and other material. The
site will be of interest to those who prefer small town America with real
people.
- North Carolina Natural
- This is a very uneven site. We first were impressed by the number of links
offered, but then we tried a few. Generally, we were taken to an index listing,
sometimes an empty index listing, sometimes showing on .html file. When there
is something to see, it is interesting, attractively done, and well- written.
The site is supposed to be about natural living in North Carolina, with
information on culture as well as the outdoors. The information that is
there makes the site worthwhile, but we recommend patience as you go through
directories and broken links to get something from the site.
- North Carolina Vacations
- This site is an index to pages on several towns n the North Carolina coast.
There are links to golf, fishing, and "Senior Citizens Vacation Hot Spots."
The pages for the towns have snapshots of varying quality, and descriptions
of the town which might be 100 words or might be several hundred. The quality
of each page ranges from okay to down from there.
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- A Down to Earth Guide to North Dakota
- This Web site explodes the myth about North Dakota's existence. North
Dakota is a hoax perpetrated upon the American public by the military-
industrial complex. The FAQ list for this site begins with the question, "Huh?"
and goes from there. Lots of pictures of bales of hay and sunflowers
purportedly taken in North Dakota, but who can tell? Although the author of the
site avers that the state tree is the elm and the state bird is the Western
Meadowlark, actual government records show that the state tree is the fence
post and the state bird is the mosquito. Be sure to take the quiz.
- Lileks: Fargo
- A very romantic view of Fargo, North Dakota. The site is very well
done, the writing is excellent, and the "then and now" photographs show a town
changed in 50 years, but still with the flavor of the 1940s. Be sure to see the
picture postcards of Broadway from the beginning of this century to 1999.
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- The Oklahoma Image Map
- Virtually everything you want to know about the Sooner State. Unfortunately,
visited links do not change color, so keep track of where you have been. Links
are provided to information on business, cities, educational institutions,
events and festivals, maps, Native America, recreation and travel, and more.
Each link takes you to a page which contains many more links or much more
information. This is a very deep site.
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- Niagara FallsCam
- The video gives you the time of day of capture, and it is acquired from the
roof camera of a local hotel. Pick the time of day so you don't get the sun's
glare instead of the falls. The page is a quick download, and the image can be
quite attractive, depending on time of day. (Late evening seems to be best.)
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- Cape Blanco
- Cape Blanco is a state park with rich resources for the traveler. The site
promises great views, hiking, camping, horseback riding, and whales. There is
also this curious statement:
Cape Blanco has a long history of great quakes and tsunamis.
Just another attraction, we presume.
- Official Oregon Tourism Web Site
- The site uses frames; unfortunately, the index on the bottom does not
scroll. We hope you know the magic size to set your window for. The right
most frame is the container for information, and it is formatted with a table
which prevents the information from begin visible without scrolling to the
right (again, unless you know the magic size and have the right monitor).
The text we could see seemed to be standard travel brochure "everything is
wonderful" hype, but we admit that we were aggravated by the lousy layout of
the site and that may have affected our opinion.
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- Fall in PA
- Although we are given pause by the claim "100? Pure" (pure what?),
this is a site claiming to be about fall foliage in the Keystone State. Lots of
live Webcam shots all over Pennsylvania, downloadable images for wallpaper (on
your computer [if it is for your desktop, why is it wallpaper?]), and routes to
follow for the trek during the autumn. But the site gives itself too short a
shrift, in our humble opinion, but limiting its claims to fall foliage. The
site offers driving tours of the state stretching well beyond such usual
tourist destinations as Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Dutch Country,
and the like. We recommend this site for hikers and bikers, birders, and
people who like driving tours during the spring and summer, when the
Pennsylvania woodlands are lush and green.
- The Pennsylvania Dutch Country Information Center
- An oxymoron if ever there was one -- a web page for the Amish, complete
with photographs of members of a religious order believing that photography is
a violation of the Second Commandment. Put up by the Visitors Bureau and
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, this site is to encourage you to visit. In
addition to "General Information," you are given links to attractions,
accommodations, restaurants, shopping, and so on. This information is given in
very complete text listings. But the General Information is the more interesting
browsing. You will find a great deal of fascinating information (along with
more pictures) about a people who live in the 19th Century.
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- Visitors' Guide to Prince Edward Island, Canada
- Browse through descriptions of cycling, hiking, birdwatching, seal
watching, clam digging, and skiing on Prince Edward Island. A great page
with lots of helpful information!
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- Welcome to CityVU, Montreal - Bienvenue
- In English; en français. Claiming to be the first truly virtual city on the Internet, Montreal has put up a puzzling Web site. There is a clickable map, an alphabetical listing, and a searchable database -- of streets. Selecting one brings you to a page with a short paragraph on the history of the street's name. Unless the street selected brings you to an "under construction" page with even less.
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- Lakeside Resort -- Watts Bar Lake
- This is a homey looking lodge with cottages, aimed at the outdoor family.
Lots of nice pictures, links to guides for hunting and fishing, sight seeing
(Dollywood is close by), and prices for your stay. Bring your own boat and rent
a slip or just ramp in every day for free. Beach for the kids, kitchen in some
of the units for the wife.
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- Corpus Christi
- This is the Official Corpus Christi Convention & Visitors Bureau Web site
for Corpus Christi, Texas's best know Gulf coast town. The site provides
information for tourists, meeting planners, and travel professionals. For
tourists, the site provides an overview of the area, links to accommodations,
area national and state parks, restaurants, shopping, and nightlife. The site
is searchable, and you may make reservations online. Meeting planners find
links to convention centers, accommodations, FAM tours, and the convention
calendar.
- Padre Island
- This site opens an annoying popup window with the hours and price of
admission. And you thought Padre Island was, well, an island, not a money-
making attraction. The site is remarkable for its blandness. Photographs of
kids in swimsuits on the beach, shiny happy families on the beach, kids on the
beach, a young couple on horses riding on the beach, kids on the beach, a
couple dancing on the beach, kids on the beach -- you get the picture. Then
lists of attractions with sentence fragments as descriptions: "Has popular
Padre Island beaches." "A favorite area for national and local windsurfing
competitions." "Numerous migrating birds." Links to fishing, dining,
accommodations all take you to a page with names, addresses, and phone
numbers; not even sentence fragments of descriptions.
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- Red Rock Reflections of Southern Utah
- Absolutely stunning photographs! Some may be familiar with the names of
Monument Valley, Arches National Park, and Cathedral Valley, all a part of Red
Rock country. This site provides photographs, essays, and descriptions of hikes
in the Moab area.
- Utah Travel and Adventure Online
- This is an attractive site from The Utah Travel Council. It promotes the
state in the usual glowing terms, with a disclaimer that some of the activities
may lead to injury, and the state, the council, the site authors, and basically
everyone else accepts no responsibility for any injuries suffered as a result
of anything. The site is a little too promotional for our tastes, but it is
easy to navigate and pleasantly attractive.
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- VermontGuides
- The is the Web version of print magazines promoting Vermont for tourism
and for business. The local news is truly local -- the town of Milton voting a
local injection molding company a fixed tax rate, for example. There are pages
on doing business in Vermont, places to eat, where to go, where to stay, how to
get around. Overall, the site is a rather dry recitation of places with little
color; we have traveled in Vermont on several occasions and find that this site
does not do the state justice.
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- Buoy 10
- Named after the Number 10 buoy marking the beginning of the shipping
channel at the mouth of the Columbia River, the site is somewhat difficult to
navigate. We have the impression that you have to have been to the area to
understand what the site is about. Links to "Long Beach" and "Astoria" are not
meaningful to those outside the Columbia River area and are confusing to those
from the East Coast of the US. The site uses frames without borders, thus the
Page Up and Page Down keys to fail to function unless one clicks in a frame,
and there are no other hints of the use of frames. The list of "Things to Do"
in Long Beach is brief: ride a horse on the beach, hike out to a lighthouse,
and fish. We looked at the map, but it failed to locate Long Beach, though we
did find Astoria (but not all of Astoria's links).
- Olympic Peninsula
- Link and text colors are the same, making navigation somewhat more
confusing than necessary, and visited links do not change color. The site
provides a great deal of helpful information concerning ferry schedules and
fares, parks, businesses, recreation, restaurants, maps, weather, museums, a
calendar of events, and more. The information is rather dryly presented, and
there are few photographs.
- Washington State Tourism Home Page
- This is a nice, low impact site. The site is searchable by image map,
keyword, or city, and the links to larger pages give the file size, a very
nice touch. We did not find any pictures on the site, and we found it
helpful to plan a trip, with lots of pages with things listed to see and do.
We missed getting to see any pictures of the areas, however; the eternal trade-
off of bandwidth vs. content.
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- Charleston, W.Va.
- No, Charleston is not the capital of South Carolina, and
Wheeling is not the capital of West Virginia. Charleston, W.Va., is
a fine old town with a rich history and lots of pleasant surprises.
This page gives you a great deal of information about the area and
a nice list of annual events. There's even a street map so you can
find the places you want to visit.
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- Yellowstone Journal Online
- This is an online version of a print periodical, hoping to entice you to
subscribe. Articles include discussions on the health of the bison, the re-
introduction of wolves, the grizzly bear count, but there are also articles
oriented to the visitor, such as hiking trails, the recovery of the park after
the 1988 fire, birding, and a history of the park. There are attractive photos,
but download times are quick; the articles are earnestly written by people who
clearly care deeply about the park.
- Cody, Wyoming
- This page is maintained by a University of Wyoming undergraduate and has
nice photographs and lots of links to further information on the rodeo,
Yellowstone National Park, dude ranches (Oops! they're called "guest ranches,"
now), fishing, and much more. Well worth a visit if you are going to Cody or
its vicinity.
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- Tour Yukon
- This site popped up an obnoxious mini- window asking us to
Register Now! while it loaded the main page in
the regular window behind it. We declined. At the bottom of the page we learned
that we would need special software to take full advantage of the site and that
we could go to a separate page to learn how the site works. We declined. We
explored on our own and found a page inviting us to pre- register for
an invitation to its launch, a page with links to both "Pre-trip Info" and
"Trip Information," and the same pages from apparently unrelated links. Maybe
we should have read the instruction. The sad thing is, this site has a
ton of information on companies doing business in the Yukon.
These companies offer winter and summer expeditions by canoe, float plane,
dog sled, hiking, and more. If the links on the main page were better organized
and led us to where they said, this would be an excellent site.
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Other Resources TOC
| Regional Guides |
Outdoors |
Lodging |
Special Interest/Resources | |
- Travels in the American Southwest
- The Civilized Explorer team toured the American Southwest in the summer of 2002, and we did a Web page to prove it. Snapshots of Arizona, New Mexico, the Grand Canyon, and more!
- Nude Beaches of the Northeast
- This site offers a guide to beaches in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New York,
New Jersey, and Vermont where one can sunbathe in the nude. There are also guides
to etiquette, laws, and events, along with a bulletin board to post messages.
- New England What Where When
- This is an attractive site for happenings in New England. There is a calendar, links by state (Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Massachusetts, by the way), and links arranged by activity: walking tours, driving tours, golf, motorcycling, and shopping, among others. This is a tourist site, so you get a happy, sunny view of all those fun down East activities, but it is worth the visit for the wealth of information on things that are going on, as well as things to do if you are visiting.
- The Houston Chronicle's Route 66 Virtual Voyage
- Two reporters for the Houston Chronicle got their kicks on Route 66
and then wrote it up. The stories are filed by state, and they (the stories,
not the states) vary in usefulness and entertainment value. (Well, okay, the
states do, too.) You will not want to use this site as your primary source in
planning your own personal trip on Route 66, but it is helpful in spots and
gives local color when there is any.
- The American Southwest
- This guide resides on a server at Bristol University in the UK. The author
visited Arizona and Utah, and made a lengthy RV trip across the US from Texas
west. He took many photographs. Each page has a nice navigation menu at the
top, and there is a description of the area visited, with directions for
getting there, fees (if any; a national park, for example), and other
information. The photographs are small, load quickly, and are linked to larger
files. The pages are rather reportorial, and little of the flavor of the area
comes through.
- Y'all
- If your heart ain't in Dixie...The South with attitude! Find the Southerners'
guide to the South and learn where you can get sweet tea and other assorted specialties.
- Texas Monthly's
Travel Guide.
- It's a whole nuther country...
- Roadtrip America
- A delightful guide to off-the-wall places in the US. Excellent commentary and
photos from a couple and their dog who tour the US and Canada in various vehicles
(the Phoenix and the Nicovan!).
- Welcome to Out West On-Line
- This site seems to be authored by a husband and wife team who tour the
American West in a motorhome, hitting all the non- tourist sites (even though
some would like to be tourist sites). Areas covered include eateries,
ghost towns, museums, people, and attractions. There are some glitches in the
mark up and some of the links are to ghost anchors, but if you're hankerin' to
tour the Wild West by car, set your sights here first, pardner.
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- DesertUSA
- A great deal of information on deserts in the American West, some of it
nearly scholarly, some of it fun. Camping tips, recipes, maps, places to go.
- Go West
- This site is bi-seasonal, offering Go West Winter and Go West Summer.
Skiing, snow boarding, resorts, snow reports, or hiking, biking, rafting,
camping in the western United States and Canada. The site is searchable and has
pages for "Cheap- N- Deep" for inexpensive winter experiences, chat pages, tips
on gear, and profiles of people doing what the site covers. The author also
buys freelance articles. It is an attractive site aimed mostly at the college
crowd and young working adults, and it seems to hit its target audience dead on.
- Canadian Rocky Mountain Resorts
- This site showcases lodges in Banff and Yoho National Parks in their elegant
splendor. The locations are breathtaking. The detailed information on each
resort includes accommodations, activities, facilities (for your meetings, of
course), rates, and on line reservations.
- National Parks Conservation Association
- Claims to be "America's only private nonprofit citizen organization
dedicated solely to protecting, preserving, and enhancing the U.S. National
Park System." This site has links to Congressional actions, news of national
parks, activities, marches, and so on, as well as other Net sites. Excellent
jumping off point for getting involved in protecting the National Park System.
- Vertebrates & Vascular Plants in National Parks
- WAIT! Don't touch that dial! This is an interesting site -- don't let the
name turn you off. This is a WAIS- indexed searchable database for the NPFauna
and NPFlora databases. You can search by amphibians, birds, fish, mammals,
reptiles, or plants, or by park. There are links to other park pages,
environmental protection pages, and satellite weather pictures. Maintained by
the Information Center for the Environment at the University of California,
Davis, CA, this site contains a wealth of information for people with an
interest in more than just camping in a park. Very useful for students, as
well, without being a "kid's" site.
- National Park Service Home Page
- If you need any help, just click on the Ranger. This is a nice site. In
addition to a database searchable by name of park, region, state, and theme,
there's a Park of the Month for you to visit. This site also has links to NPS
policy, planning, and preservation practices and has a very good explanation
of the official U.S. policy. It contains links to planning projects on parks
which have high traffic and are being destroyed by their popularity.
- GORP U.S. National Park List
- Extensive (but not all inclusive) listing by state, but searchable as well.
Links to activities, attractions, books and maps, gear, clubs, and much more.
The information is taken from material supplied by the NPS and personal
experience of the GORP staff; much of the writing appears to be by persons
who know and care about their subjects. Highly recommended.
- John Donohue's National Park Photos
- An incredible Web site. There's a clickable image map to get you to
thumbnails of photos or alphabetical lists by park or by state. There are
additional links to L.L. Bean's Park Search, Volcano World, Gary Lipe's
Wildflower Page, and much more. Selecting a park brings you to a page with
several "thumbnail" (they're larger than my thumbnail) pictures which
are clickable for fuller sized views. Very attractive photos --
truly professional. Haleakula
is typical of the beauty. Recommended.
- Creekside Fly Fishing Shop
- Information on fly fishing in Oregon and Washington, USA. Creekside
also has an online catalog and fly fishing packages with free USA
shipping on all orders over US$100. Links to guides, fishing holes,
and more.
- At the Beach
- A list of amenities at the beaches in Maryland and Delaware, USA. You can
explore the Web site by state or by index of beaches, if you know the name.
State beaches are organized by community, activities, parks, lodging, and
restaurants, and there are more links for events, specific sports, and more.
- Chesapeake Bay Boaters' Resource
- This site is stuffed with information on marinas, weather, events, charter
services, brokers/dealers, yacht surveyors, clubs, and more. The site is
divided geographically into the upper, middle, and lower Chesapeake, with text
listings for each grouping of information. We were unable to find information
on the bay itself, however. If you already know the Chesapeake, this is a great
site for addresses and phone numbers.
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- Inns & Outs, The Bed & Breakfast Source
- This site claims to contain information on 15,000 B&Bs in North
America. The database is frames- capable. You can search by property,
reservation service, association, and area. The search facility is very
good, but the page linking to it does not explain the choices you are given --
Take the time to explore it; your effort will be well repaid.
- B&Bs
- Interesting and well- organized listing of Bed & Breakfast
inns in the United States, with plans for expansion to all of North
America and the Caribbean. Photos of locations, rates, reservation
numbers, and check- out times.
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- The Circle of Burning Fuel
- Incredibly, this site "explores the connection between drag racing and Native American spiritual traditions." If you know about the traditions of aboriginal Americans, the artist makes some sense -- top fuel dragsters emerging from the cloud of smoke pointing in four directions, "Engine Mandalas," and kinetic sculptures.
- Menopausal Tours
- Although the company intends to offer tours worldwide, its base has been
escorted tours in the United States. We will not tell you who the tours are
geared for -- you will have to guess. They provide ground transportation,
activities, and lodging in a selection of choice destinations ranging from New
Orleans to the San Juan Islands. Join a group or get your own group together --
you know who you are.
- Pollen & Spore Counts
- Isn't the Internet great? Now you can check in on your destination and find
out if your allergies will be giving you fits when you arrive.
- The American Highway Project
- A serious site with a serious effort to photograph the disappearing
American road culture. The author takes photographs with a 5x7 view camera
when possible, a rollfilm camera when practical. The buildings he photographs
are disappearing (sometimes between his visits), so drop by and see what people
were doing in the 1950s and earlier.
- Road Trip USA
- This site is a promotion for a book of the same name; the site's pages are
rather to brief in their descriptions of the areas covered by the book, but
then we would not buy the book, would we? However, the site is chock full of
absolutely essential links for people planning a road trip just about anywhere
in the USA.
- Roadside America
- Roadside attractions from small town America. Readers get to submit
photographs of the curious, often bizarre signs used in bygone days to attract
your attention on small two- lane roads. Tons of places you have never heard of
but may well find to be a must- see stop on your roadtrip across the USA.
- Green Tortoise Adventure Travel
- We have heard of San Francisco- based Green Tortoise for some time, but our
first direct contact with the organization was when the bus pulled into Burning
Man in 1996, disgorged several German tourists into one of the world's most
bizarre settings, and we offered them wine. The motto is "Affordable adventures
with extraordinary people," and we have to agree. The seats convert to beds,
and bunks hang from the ceiling of the bus for naps any time of day or night.
Take the green bus for a real trip. Be sure to spend some time on this
site for a fresh take on alternatives to the usual highway travel.
- The Electronic Embassy
- Excellent idea. "The Electronic Embassy has been established to
link the staffs and resources of the Washington D.C. embassy community to their
constituencies in business and industry, education, the press and government."
Very attractive site with links to embassy web sites, all of D.C.'s embassies,
education, press, travel and tourism, and so on. Unfortunately, it's still
early in life for this site, and the information is still forthcoming.
- VISA ATM Locator -- U.S.
- VISA has a Web site allowing you to locate the three ATM machines nearest
your location anywhere in the United States. Now all you need is a Web
connection anywhere you are in the United States.
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