milletaylor from GA san diego is the second largest city in California state. It is famous for its long beaches and ideal climate. This city is full of Read More
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Blacks Beach, San Diego, right next to University of California, San Diego
Surfing the waves in Indonesia
All in a day's work! Nova Scotia Canada
Cold as Ice, but always fun, Nova Scotia, Canada
My home town Halifax, Nova Scotia
Man that wave was so insane
Amateur World Championships
Huntington Beach Pier surf contest
Skipping along the waves in Punta del Este, Uruguay
first thign we saw as we rolled up on the bus. ""OH MY GOSH!
Huntington beach, California, Amateur World Championships
World Surf Championship, Huntington Beach
longboarding at Black's Beach in La Jolla, San Diego, California
Miami beach attractions closed to that place you make cheap hotel reservations at lowest rates.
| DESTINATION REVIEWS |
Beaches | Parks | Surfing | Beaches | Cheap Hotels | Sunbathing | Imperial Beach san diego is the second largest city in California state. It is famous for its long beaches and ideal climate. This city is full of attractions. I went there in the last summers.... More |
By the plane, reached to San Diego city with my wife. It was the fabulous place for us. When we reached to there then first visited few places such as Sea World, San Diego Zoo,... More |
There are lots of attractions in san Francisco but I would like to mention few of them here. Some of the attractions are as following.
Carmel- There are few places on earth... More |
There are lots of places to see in san Antonio but I would like to mention some of them which are as following
san antanio missions national historic park-The wilderness... More |
Are you a food lover? One of the greatest Moroccan treasures is undoubtedly their rich cuisine.You will receive the utmost attention and tutoring in a happy and relaxed... More |
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Beverley Fearis gets on better in the classroom than on the Atlantic waves when she takes a combined surfing and French language course in Biarritz "Attention aux rochers," came the frantic shouts, as I hurtled through the water, on my knees. I knew enough French to realise that I should be watching out for something, but I had no idea what. I also realised that it's not good to surf on your knees, but I just couldn't haul myself up. I had come here to improve my French and to learn how to surf and, so far, I wasn't doing too well on either front. I was in Biarritz, Europe's surfing capital, nearly half-way through a two-week holiday with Cactus Language. Each morning my boyfriend, Warren, and I had French lessons at a school on the edge of the town, and each afternoon we would make our way down to the beach at the Côte des Basques to learn how to surf. I'm not sure which part of the day I struggled with most. Whether you're five or 35, a first day at school is daunting, particularly when you discover that you're nearly twice the age and far less glamorous than most of your fellow classmates. As we gathered for the newcomers' briefing, I surveyed the room and saw a bevy of young, bright-eyed beauties of all nationalities - bronzed, blonde Swedes, rosy-cheeked Irish, Swiss, Danes, Japanese, Australians, Russians, you name it. The boys were in designer combat shorts and T-shirts, the girls in denim hot pants and skimpy vest tops. Warren thought he had died and gone to heaven! Based on an online test before we arrived, he was put in the beginners' class and I was with the intermediates. While he was top of the class (or so he said), I struggled to keep up. Carole, my teacher (also a good few years younger than me) wouldn't allow one word of English to be spoken, and spoke French very quickly. Too quickly for me. We worked our way through the textbook, doing aural comprehensions, watching videos, playing games, learning tenses I had never even heard of. At first, I didn't understand a word of it and humiliated myself on several occasions by giving a clumsy answer to a question I hadn't actually been asked. Homework was tough, and took me more than an hour each night. While Warren was learning whether chemise was masculine or feminine, I was practising how to tell my classmates the story of Jack the Ripper, frantically leafing through my dictionary to find the French words for "strangled and mutilated". While I hadn't studied French for 15 years, most of my fellow classmates were straight out of school or college and still had brains like sponges. Plus, most were in France for the whole summer, staying with a local family so they were forced to speak French outside the classroom. I, on the other hand, was staying in a campervan with my English boyfriend. This, according to Carole, put me at a distinct disadvantage. At least I think that's what she said. In the second week, however, things started to click into place and my confidence grew. We had also made a few friends by then. We would get together with Martina from the Czech Republic, Tobias and John from Germany, and Aya from Japan during our mid-morning break, or for an evening drink, and attempt to converse en français. It's amazing how much our French improved after a few pints. In many ways, Biarritz reminded me of Brighton, my home town. It has the same strange mix of architecture - elegantly faded Victorian facades, garish palaces and concrete monstrosities - and the same steep hills (our bike ride to school each morning was a killer). It has the same funky shops, bars and cafes, the same buzz and energy. Of course, Brighton's pebble beaches just don't compare to the beautiful sandy beaches of Biarritz, nor do its surfing credentials. Here on France's wild Atlantic coast you get fabulous year-round waves that attract surfers from all over the world. The Newquay is a favourite drinking hole for Biarritz's international surf crowd, especially when there is football or rugby on. Personally, I preferred to join the more sophisticated (and older) crowd at Les 100 Marches, an alfresco bar overlooking the sea. It's not the best spot when it's raining, though, and we soon discovered that it rains quite a lot in Biarritz. Pretty much every day during our two weeks, in fact, and it wasn't that warm either. Learning to surf is just not the same when it's raining. OK, I accept that you are going to get wet anyway, but those waves look a lot more ominous under a dark grey sky. To make it worse, our second week happened to coincide with a freak time of year, when the Atlantic tides go a bit crazy. This meant it was only possible to surf in the mornings (when we were doing our French) or in the evenings. At other times, the best beach for learning was completely under water, so you would have to surf straight on to the rocks - not good when you are a terrified beginner. Faced with the prospect of surfing in the rain and cold - at night - Warren and I decided we would rather give it a miss, so in our second week we only made it to one lesson. The first few days of our fortnight were sunny, though, so we managed to learn the basics. Kitted out in our wetsuits and beginners' blue T-shirts, we lugged our enormous L-plate boards with the other novices down to the water's edge. Our instructor, Fred, told us we were either regular (left foot forward) or goofy (right foot forward) - whichever one feels more natural. I tried both, and neither felt natural, but in the end, not wanting to be just boring old regular, I opted for goofy. Surfing essentially entails lying on your board, facing the beach, waiting until the wave is around a metre behind you and then paddling like mad in the hope that your board catches it. I mastered that bit quite quickly, and found it totally exhilarating. I would have been quite happy to spend the rest of the fortnight surfing on my stomach, but unfortunately, surfing is supposed to be done standing up, and that's where my problems started. While my fellow students - young, petite and agile - managed to simply jump, on a moving board, from a lying position straight to standing, it didn't come quite as easily for me. On day three, Fred gave me special permission to cheat by getting on to my knees first, and that was about as far as I got. I cracked it once, on day four, managing to finally haul myself on to two feet. By the time I had achieved it, though, I was in about two inches of water, practically on dry land. Luckily for me, that was the day the surf school photographer came along and I look pretty good in the pictures. Warren, on the other hand, had regressed that day, and the snap of him doing "cossack" surfing generated many a comment when it mysteriously made its way onto Facebook. Apparently, the waves weren't that big by Biarritz standards, but they were big enough for me. It was exhausting paddling back out again after each attempt, fighting against the power of the waves. One afternoon, I was stung by a jellyfish, and although it didn't hurt much, it gave me the perfect excuse to take a break. Everyone else was loving it, but surfing just wasn't for me. I gave it one last shot in the second week, when the strange tides meant the beach was reduced to just a tiny strip. Fred warned us that the high tide was now covering dangerous clusters of rocks and advised us to avoid surfing in a particularly hazardous section of the beach. That's easier said than done when you're hurtling along, balancing precariously on your knees, totally out of control. Hence the cries of "attention aux rochers" from Fred, who, in his panic, had forgotten he was dealing with a non-French speaking idiot. Luckily, before I reached the rocks, I had fallen off anyway. EssentialsA two-week French and surfing course in Biarritz with Cactus Language (0845 130 4775; cactuslanguagetraining.com) costs from £1,009 (course only - 20 French lessons and 10 surfing lessons) or £1,589 with accommodation in a host family (including breakfast and dinner), or £1,749 with accommodation in a self-catering flat. All prices exclude flights. The courses run from 30 March to 12 October.


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Article from Travel news, travel guides and reviews | guardian.co.uk
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It's a mystery why Figueira da Foz's amazing waves aren't packed with surfers, but good news for beginners at Europe's cheapest surf camp Learning to surf ain't easy dude. As a wave naif you expect wriggling into a gut-accentuating wetsuit to be the biggest problem of the day. Oh no. Carrying the board is awkward - like dirty dancing with a wardrobe. Getting into the sea is tricky - it's cold, possibly rocky and probably seaweedy. Spider fish may bite you. Then you must learn to lie straight on your board without wobbling and paddle hard until you reach the battleground - the white water where angry marine walls batter your bonce. Unless you can master the trick of seesawing over them, or diving bravely straight into their face beneath the briny, clinging to the board like it's your baby, you'll probably be dragged back towards shore. Several times. Finally making it "outside", beyond the breaks, you sit and wait for eternity until that sweet big wave arrives and (if you recognise it, manage to turn around in time and stand up) attempt to catch it for a few seconds of blissful exhilaration. Followed by a churning, choking underwater dunking. This is all very fun, but a bit hard; choose the right place to learn, however, and the path to surf-dudedom will be smoother. Or wavier. Or gnarlier. Whatever you want. Croyde is an option, of course, but Figueira da Foz on Portugal's central coast sounded sunnier, less crowded and best of all, startlingly cheap. Unlike the more famous Peniche an hour down the coast where the pupils of dozens of surf camps compete incompetently for waves, Figueira has just one surf school. Its partner, the Paintshop Hostel, claims to run the cheapest surf camp in Europe - from just €351 a week for 10 hours' tuition, transport, surf gear, breakfast, accommodation - plus dinner for a few euros more. As I understand as much about the intricacies of swells, breaks and off-shore breezes as I do quantum mechanics, that was enough for me. "There must be at least 12 surf spots within 20 minutes drive of Figueira," said Jacques Woolston, who runs the hostel with wife Kate in between ski seasons, "and a wave for everyone, beginners to experts." The only box it didn't tick, I thought initially, was prettiness. There are a few unlovely buildings along the seafront, and a main road separates the town from the beach. But turning into Figueira revealed steep cobbled streets lined with beautiful old townhouses, many tiled doorstep to roof in floral or moorish patterns, their wrought iron balconies overflowing with potplants. The Paintshop, a tall pink property, was bought by the original owners (Jacques and Kate's mates) while appearing on A Place in The Sun five years ago. Simple but funky, it has all the necessary slacker accoutrements - free internet, library, pool table, walls painted with street art, surf and cult film DVDs, open plan common room with a kitchen, a couple of dorms and several tall airy double rooms, stylishly done on the cheap - Ikea furniture, embroidered cream bedspreads. I spent the first night in the cute courtyard bar out back with the other guests, tucking into Sagres and paper-thin pizzas, baked expertly by Jacques in the outdoor bread oven. Sam, an Aussie, had been at the hostel for two weeks having planned to stay only one night. "That's nothing," said Jacques. "Last winter a group who intended to be here for just a day or two ended up staying for months." Next day, as on every morning of surf camp, Filipe, the dry-humoured Keanu-esque instructor, collected us with his van full of boards, partner Lara, and various travellers who'd booked lessons. We headed off to whichever surf spot he decided would be best - cleverly calculated using an equation of wind, tides and, in friendly rivalry, the opposite of whatever Jacques thought. Buarcos, near the main beach (also one of Europe's widest) was our first spot, with easy waves, soft white water and a hip bar, Kahlua Kaffe, for snacks and hot chocolate. After a mean warm up, running up and down the beach in a wetsuit, I caught a few waves - kneeling rather than standing. Plenty of time for that, I thought, opting to spend the afternoon on the beach eating peaches from the streamer-hung mercado, visiting the art gallery and cafes, before going for a run along the coastal walkway, past a funfair where locals licked ice creams. Overhead a plane circled with a banner: "Stop fat! Controlo apetitio!" Felipe drove us further out the next day, south over a massive bridge spanning the Rio Mondego to Leirosa, a deserted white beach. I've heard of locals punching tourists who got in their way in busy French resorts, but here the sea was empty. The only other surfers were a couple of boys from Coimbra, who offered nothing more than "well dones" and encouragement. I was catching and riding more waves, still not standing up properly, yet the rush of the movement, along with the peaceful waiting, sitting and bobbing among a friendly group, had won me over. I understood a quote from pro-surfer Kelly Slater: "surfing's like the mafia, once you're in, you're in." After morning lessons under the brilliant tutelage of Felipe, afternoons were easily whiled away. Ignoring Jacques' recommendations to eat at Johnny Ringos or McDonalds ("it's a good one!"), I searched the backstreets for the perfect place. Plates of succulent chargrilled squid, puffy garlic baked potatoes and heaps of salad at Restaurante Boca Cheia, with fresh mango and beers cost €15; an all you can eat fish barbecue at Vinha das Garcas €7.50, or meals for a few euros at the hostel, kept costs down, as did fantastic Douro wines from the supermarket for €3-4. We ruined one day's surfing by having a big night out on the main drag, which morphs into a giant outdoor club after dark. Kate had to give up and return to shore to be sick. One afternoon Jacques drove me to the more popular surf beach Cabadelo, teeming with the surf shops and cafes lacking elsewhere, then up what locals optimistically call "the mountain". More of a hill, I'd walked it in a couple of hours the day before, crunching over pine cones for views south down the coast. This time we climbed higher, rising through pine forests to a lookout where the sand and surf stretched north into invisibility at the horizon. "Before we worked here we drove down the whole Atlantic coast in a camper van," said Jacques. "We'd just turn off down random tracks and end up at amazing surf beaches with no one on them, and park up for a few days." Figueira may not have that unspoilt beauty, but it does have great waves, including an infamous mile-long right hand break. "I got in touch with a guy from a surf mag a while back," explained Jacques. "When I mentioned this place he suddenly remembered surfing here as a kid. 'Oh Figueira!' he said, 'The Forgotten Land of the Never-ending Right Hand Break!'. It's funny; there are serious Aussie and Californian surfers who travel across the world to ride it, yet Europeans haven't heard of it." By last morning at Buarcos I still hadn't ridden a wave while properly standing - no matter how many I threw myself onto. "You are suicidal," said Lara, "You have no fear." But she was wrong. It was sheer desperation to crack this before leaving. I'd catch one, get one leg up, career along then find myself suddenly lost again underwater. I emerged, frustratingly, just after the others spotted a pod of dolphins out to sea. Eventually they left. "We're getting tired," warned Filipe. "It's a long way to paddle. Just one more." I had a train to ride, a plane to catch. But I couldn't give up, somewhere out there was my last chance, just one more wave . . . ? The Paintshop (00351 2334 36633, paintshophostel.com) offers a seven-day surf camp from €351pp including B&B, 10 hours of lessons and seven days board hire. Fly to Porto with ryanair.com, and book trains to Coimbra at cp.pt/cp


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Article from Travel news, travel guides and reviews | guardian.co.uk
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The allure of a winter day at this warm-weather getaway is the absence of crowds, the lack of traffic and an abundance of uninterrupted vistas.
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With pristine beaches and exhilarating views, this tiny island is one of those famously paradisiacal places that actually lives up to the hype.
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They are free, have spectacular views and are surf - and shark - free. When in Sydney, do as the locals do and take a dip in one of the city's sea pools... more
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