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October 23, 2008

Hostaria Di Bacco in Furore

Filed under: Web Of Travel — @ 10:40 am

The hotel is just few minutes away from the towns of Amalfi, Positano and Ravello and offers an incredible view of the entire Amalfi Coast. Our hotel is known far and wide for its restaurant and for our hospitality because we have a continuous commitment to make every guest feel at home. We want everyone who stays with us to come back as soon as possible. The hotel features a garden and solarium and, for more active people, tennis courts and a swimming pool are just 5 minutes away.

To reach our property in Furore on the Amalfi Coast:
From Naples: take the highway until you reach Castellamare, then follow the directions towards Gragnano and Agerola -48 Km.
From Salerno: head towards Vietri sul Mare and Amalfi, and turn at the Agerola crossroad - 29 Km. From Sorrento head towards Positano and turn at the Agerola crossroad - 28 Km.

Location: Panoramic hill 450 meters above sea level.
Services: All the rooms have private bathroom and terrace/balcony, two suites are available, cafeteria with bar and room service.
Restaurant: Typical local specialties as well as international recipes are served.
Cellar: Local, national and international wines are available to our guests.
Parking: Private parking for up to 40 cars (garage available for extra fee).
Radio and TV, direct phone line available in all rooms. Central heating, air conditioning, minibar. Free wi-fi internet connection in public areas.
Credit Cards: We accept all major credit cards Our property is present in the following publications: Michelin, T.C.I., T.C.B., Pirelli, Veronelli, Espresso, Gambero Rosso, BMW, Quattroruote, Dove, Panorama, Il sole 24 ore, Le città del vino, I borghi più belli d’Italia.

Other than Hostaria di Bacco, you can browse our offers for cheap hotel in Furore, pls visit our catalogue of Hotels all over Italy, where you can find also a wide range of Bed and Breakfast in Rome and Hotels in Florence, from cheap to luxury, togheter with Hotels in Tuscany

July 10, 2008

Exploring Frank Lloyd Wright in Buffalo and Serenity on Lake Ontario

Filed under: Web Of Travel — @ 11:10 pm

My theory is a real traveler is able to discover interesting things even in the most unlikely of places. Well, Buffalo probably hasn’t made the “top travel destinations” list for a while, but I have been doing some research on it and I thought it’s high time to explore Buffalo, the closest American city to Toronto, just south of Niagara Falls and right across the Fort Erie border.

So my fellow travel and architecture aficionado Shauna and I headed out early yesterday morning to make the 2 hour trek to Buffalo. We picked the Fort Erie border crossing and fortunately it wasn’t very busy at all. The border crossing was actually a reasonably pleasant experience as the border guards were in a really good mood and very friendly, a nice foreboding to a good day.

Approaching the city we immediately took a wrong turn and headed south on Highway 5 away from downtown. But we got to see Buffalo’s waterfront, which in this area includes a few rather unspectacular marinas and some old run-down industrial buildings. We turned ourselves around and headed back towards the downtown area. Because the tourist information office was closed on Sunday we figured, we’d stop in at the Hampton Inn & Suites Hotel to pick up some tourist brochures and city maps. Another pleasant experience: The lady at the front counter was extremely helpful, provided us with several brochures and a printout of how to get to 2 of the most important architectural heritage sites in Buffalo: Frank Lloyd Wright’s Martin House and his other important Buffalo work, Graycliff Mansion.

Having parked the car on Delaware Avenue at about 10:30 am, the one thing that struck us immediately was how empty the streets were. There was virtually no pedestrian traffic at all and very few vehicles passing by. We figured it must be too early for people to be out, and we headed off into a restaurant called “Flappy’s” to strengthen ourselves for the day with a filling brunch. We booked our tour at the Martin House for 2 pm, so after breakfast we had about 2 hours to do a walking tour of downtown.

As we came out of the restaurant we noticed the city had gotten a bit livelier, but not by much. We parked our car close to Niagara Square and started our exploration on foot. First on the agenda was the Buffalo City Hall, a monumental Art Deco skyscraper completed in 1931, built of orange-hued sandstone with intricate details and colourful ornamentation. An immensely impressive building. We examined all the facade details and friezes which display images related to agriculture.

We did a little downtown circle and covered a few really interesting buildings. The red colour and detailed ornamentation of Louis Sullivan’s Guaranty Building really captured our imagination. We passed by St. Paul’s Cathedral and past the trolley tracks of Main Street we discovered the Elicott Square Building. The east entrance to the building was actually open so we went inside. This building was erected in 1896 according to a design by Daniel Burnham, one of Chicago’s most famous architects. This building is constructed around a large interior court covered by a glass block ceiling held up by ornamented steel girders. We commented on how similar this design was the one of Chicago’s most famous buildings, the “Rookery”, and it wasn’t until this morning that I realized that both buildings were created by the same architect.

It’s an amazingly impressive building with gorgeous sweeping staircases and an intricate mosaic covering the entire courtyard. From the Ellicot Square Building we headed towards the Lafayette Hotel, a handsome red brick and white terra cotta French Renaissance-style building which was built in anticipation of the expected influx of visitors at the Pan-American Exposition in 1901. Due to financial difficulties, however, it was not opened until 1904. From there we checked out the General Electric Tower, a handsome white Terracotta-clad structure dating back to 1912.

The Electric Tower happens to be right beside another fascinating building: the Buffalo Savings Bank, a building manifesting Buffalo’s boom of the second half of the 19th century. In the late 1890s - the peak of Buffalo’s golden age - the bank held a competition for a grand new headquarters. The contest was won by Green & Wicks, Buffalo’s premier turn-of-the-century architectural firm. Their design projected stability, security, and aspiration.The building’s signature feature is the gold-leafed dome.

After the Buffalo Savings Bank we explored the Genesee Building which today is the Hyatt Regency Hotel. Just as we finished exploring that building the heavens opened up and there was a torrential downpour so we sat down in front of the Hyatt and took in the street scene. We were facing Main Street, the street that is now a pedestrian zone and accommodates Buffalo’s light rail rapid transit line. One thing we consistently noticed in Buffalo was the absence of street-level stores and restaurants. In the downtown core, as a matter of fact, most of the modernist office and government buildings did not have any street level retail at all. A lot of the modern administrative buildings in Buffalo have a rather austere and non-welcoming feeling and some of the newer buildings dating back to the 50s and later have an almost penitentiary feeling to them. The resulting scarcity of street-level store fronts combined with the utter lack of pedestrians (certainly on the weekend) really gives downtown Buffalo a rather eerie deserted feel, and the absence of people downtown was our most striking impression of Buffalo. Judging from the classically styled street lamps with blooming planters, however, the city appears to have been working on beautifying the downtown core.

We started heading back to the car and passed by the Statler Hotel, which isn’t really a hotel any more, but apparently a building full of lawyer’s offices. We had a look inside the impressive lobby which features French chandeliers from the early 20th century. I took a couple of pictures, but the security guard stopped me, telling me no photography was allowed. We had a really interesting chat after this and he commented on long-standing economic problems of Buffalo and how in his opinion, the current mayor had only made things worse. One example of the city’s economic problems is that the stately ballroom of the Statler Hotel had only been recently reopened after having been closed down since 1957. Furthermore, a previous owner of the building had tried to create a food court in the basement and had opened up the main floor, but ran out of money before the food court could be built. So now you have a rather obtrusive opening on the ground floor with a view into an empty basement without stores or food outlets. Our local contact also commented on the reasons why downtown Buffalo was so devoid of people, and he said that all the locals did their shopping at the suburban malls and big warehouse stories. That, combined with the economic woes of the city, has apparently created a flight into the suburbs that has left the city’s core rather lifeless on the weekend.

It was really quite sad to see that a city like Buffalo, which has such a great number of outstanding architectural heritage sites, had virtually no street life, retail or shopping opportunities in the downtown core. A lot of stores were boarded up and the few stores that were there were closed down tight on the weekend.

Well, we had to move on to our tour of another architectural jewel, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Martin House. Darwin Martin was a high-ranking executive with the Larkin Soap Company and his brother-in-law had encouraged Darwin to seek out Wright’s work in Oak Park, a suburb of Chicago. After familiarizing himself with Wright’s work, he brought him to Buffalo in November 1902 to build a house for his sister, the Barton House, with a size of about 4000 feet, and then to build his main house, a 15,000 square foot Prairie Style home, characterized by Wright’s rigorous and consistent use of cruciform plans, piers and cantilevers, and other prairie house principles. After many years of neglect, the Martin house is now under renovation to restore it back to its original early 1900’s authentic splendour.

Right now the building is empty and a few large photographs illustrate the former decor and furnishings. It’s very visible that this building has been neglected for a long time and the Martin House Restoration Corporation is working very hard to restore it back to its authentic 1907 characteristics, even to the degree of rebuilding the pergola and the coach house that were demolished by a previous owner. The tour lasted about 90 minutes and was provided by a very passionate docent and all the volunteer staff in the gift shop and the chaperone were very helpful. We even received a glass of water in the 60s style kitchen of the Martin House which will be torn out and replaced by more authentic furnishings as the renovation continues.

After the humid heat inside the Martin and Barton Houses we were glad to get outside to cool down. We drove through the Park Side East Historic District surrounding Delaware Park, a creation of the famous landscape designer Frederick Law Olmstead, who also designed Central Park. The area around Delaware Park and the Forest Lawn Cemetery is a beautiful part of the city with gorgeous mansions and manicured lawns, and this beauty is most visible on Millionaires’ Row along Delaware Avenue. There was much more traffic and street life in this part of Buffalo, the atmosphere was pleasant and the residential areas impressive.

We headed over closer to the Niagara River and drove along the Seaway Trail, crossed Grand Island and continued on the outskirts of Niagara Falls, NY, right along the Niagara River towards Lewiston. The drive north of Niagara Falls to Fort Niagara State Park on Lake Ontario is gorgeous, with beautiful old homes overlooking the Niagara River, huge trees overhanging the 2-lane country road, with well-kept properties on either side of the road. We stopped for a snack just outside the very quaint town of Lewiston, in a place called the Silo, which is right next to the river, overlooking a launch area for the high-speed boats that whisk visitors into the rapids of the Niagara Gorge. We had a lovely greasy lunch outside, enjoying the breeze (hey, you don’t have to eat healthy every day) and then continued our drive all the way to Fort Niagara State Park, admiring the villas and estates.

We had chosen to cross the border at the Queenston-Lewiston Bridge, but construction work had caused confusing detours and a local New York State father and son team stopped their car when they saw us by the road, staring at the map, trying to figure out how to get to the border crossing. They rolled down the window and said they’d guide us to the bridge, which they did. We followed them for about 10 minutes through the maze of detour signs until we found the bridge and headed back over to Canada. Both of us were very impressed with the friendliness and helpfulness of the locals.

Back on the Canadian side we drove along the Niagara Parkway and stopped in the beautiful little village of Niagara-on-the-Lake. NOTL calls itself the “prettiest village in Ontario”, and they might just be right. The village is home to beautifully maintained Victorian homes, overflowing flower baskets, souvenir shops, cafes, bed and breakfasts, as well as the famous Shaw Festival, and for many Ontarians it is a favourite destination for a quick weekend getaway.

From Niagara-on-the-Lake we headed through vineyards and orchards to St. Catharines, and to its Port Dalhousie waterfront entertainment area, not forgetting to stop by a road-side fruit stall to buy ripe red cherries and nuclear-size apricots fresh from the tree. About 20 minutes from NOTL, Port Dalhousie harbours a marina and a long pier and numerous outdoor patio restaurants, ice cream parlors, souvenir shops and other entertainment. Hundreds of people were parading along the pier, couples, parents with children, dog owners, retired folks and a very interesting young lady with red hair, whose friend had given her poodle a matching-colour hairdo with the leftover hair dye.

The atmosphere in Port Dalhousie was almost like in a Californian seafront resort town with rollerbladers, walkers, beach volleyball players, boaters and relaxed pedestrians taking a stroll through the village and on the pier. I did not even feel like I was in Ontario. The sun was starting to set and lake was laid out in front of us like an ocean, with no shoreline visible on the other side. It was a beautiful hot evening and I felt like I wanted to spend a whole week in this happening spot. But no such luck, we had to get back to Toronto after our exciting girls-only excursion to Buffalo and the Niagara Peninsula.

We got to explore some fabulous architectural gems, connected with the legacy of Frank Lloyd Wright, had a lovely greasy lunch right next to the Niagara River, enjoyed the hospitality and the helpfulness of the local New York State residents, and back on home territory, we hopped along the Lake Ontario shoreline to enjoy fresh fruits, frozen yogurt and an amazingly relaxing late afternoon by the waterfront. It doesn’t get much better than that…

Susanne Pacher is the publisher of a website called Travel and Transitions(http://www.travelandtransitions.com). Travel and Transitions deals with unconventional travel and is chock full of advice, tips, real life travel experiences, interviews with travellers and travel experts, insights and reflections, cross-cultural issues, contests and many other features. You will also find stories about life and the transitions that we face as we go through our own personal life-long journeys.

Submit your own travel stories in our first travel story contest(http://www.travelandtransitions.com/contests.htm) and have a chance to win an amazing adventure cruise on the Amazon River.

“Life is a Journey Explore New Horizons”.

The interview with photos is published at Travel and Transitions - Interviews

June 15, 2008

Experience a Safari Holiday in Tremendous Zambia - Get Up Close to the Gorgeous Lions

Filed under: Web Of Travel — @ 5:59 pm

Zambia is a brilliant country, the marvellous open landscapes buzzing with wildlife and one of the lowest population ratios in the continent. South Africa comes with some of the nicest natural landscapes in South Africa, the cheerful blend of clear fields, terrain and swamps makes the complete country come to life. Not only will you be marvelled at the surroundings, you yourself will additionally be facinated at the charming lakes and waterfalls. This is a real sanctuary on earth.

In Southern Africa you will be able to enjoy the greatest waterfall of all, the Victoria Falls. This excellent waterfall has been a place for countless wildlife with loads of big cats & elephants coming to bathe in the wonderful waters that run here. Also make sure you view the snakes and hippos around the Zambezi River, & remember to book a guide as the river might often be a little rough. one may furthermore wish to take a walking tour in South Luangwa National Park and get yourself near with the diverse wildlife. On a walking safari one will see lions & extremely rare wild dogs. If one are lucky enough you yourself should view a heard of giraffes with their young. The opportunity to be so close with these charming animals is amazing.

Accommodation in Southern Africa will often range from five star luxury hotels right through to tents without any electricity. Whichever accommodation type you yourself select you yourself can be sure of a great time. Explore Zambia with a Zambia safari.

June 6, 2008

Staying Afloat this Summer

Filed under: Web Of Travel — @ 9:00 am

Today is the 5th day of my holiday and my tan is coming along nicely. I haven’t felt this relaxed since a heavenly massage I received back in October last year back home. Italy really is one of my favourite places to holiday in. The hotel here Hotel Villa Sant Andrea is right next to the sea. I am a great fan of swimming and get up early each morning before Roger even starts to stir. When I reach the beach I climb up on some rocks and dive straight in, I come up gasping from the chilly waters depths.

Now swimming I love, but I have a great fear of touching the sea bed, which provides a problem when I need to leave the sea. I am a strong swimmer so can stay out for some time, and in any case the waters around here are relatively calm, so floating is always an option. You may wonder why I have such a fear, and I believe it just a nervousness of touching things that I cant see, in any case even if I could see the sand swirling around my ankles, what lies beneath that delicate top layer of sand is anyone’s guess. A poisons fish? A sharp object? A net I could get tangled in?

So once out there I wait, for as long as it takes for Rodger to come and rescue me, like a re-inactment of Baywatch he strolls down the beach and comes crashing into the sea in what seems like slow motion, oozing every inch of David Hasselhoff except the red swimming trunks. I hope my holidays will always be this blissful!

May 29, 2008

Visit Glendale California

Filed under: Web Of Travel — @ 4:34 am

Glendale, California is a bedroom comunity of approximetly 200,000 residents, situated between the San Fernando Valley and the San Gabriel Valley. In and of itself it is not a popular tourist destination. There are no amusement parks, beaches, camping areas or famous museums in the city. There are only a couple of hotels, the best one is a Hilton, but there are several high end motels and all of the hotels and motels are very reasonably priced. There are several hundred restaurants, and although there are no high priced restaurants there are dining establishments like Damons on Brand Boulevard that serves aged prime cuts of beef and provide excellant service (They just do not charge an arm and a leg for the meal.) and restaurants like Tony Romas, the Olive Garden and the Panda Inn, as well as numerous high end coffee shops (Try Conrads, they have a brightly lit coffee shop area, a nice outdoor patio and a dimly lit lounge area that will remind you of a good steak house. You can get a filet mingon dinner for under $20.00 thats as good as the dinners served in most high end steak houses. Additionally, their fried chicken is as good as you can find almost anywhere and their service is excellant.) and ethnic cuisine of almost every type.

The best thing about Glendale is it’s location. It’s less than a ten (10) minute drive on Los Feliz Blvd. to Hollywood and on the way there is the Los Angeles Zoo, Griffith Park and the Griffith Observatory And Planetarium. Take a ten (10) minute drive east on the 134 freeway or on Colorado Blvd. and you will find yourself in Old Town Pasadena after having driven past the Rose Bowl and the Norton Simon Museum. Ten minutes to the south you will find yourself in downtown Los Angeles after having gone past Dodger Stadium. Go west on the 134 freeway and you have the entire San Fernando Valley (Universal Studios is also less than ten (10) minutes from Glendale.). Additionaly there is an Amtrak train station in Glendale. Parking is only a few yards from where you board the train, the station is never crowded and you can travel down the coast to the Mexican border or up the coast past San Francisco.

Of course you could just stay in Pasadena, Hollywood, Universal City or downtown Los Angeles but, you will find Glendale to be much less expensive and quieter with less traffic and fewer parking problems.

By the way, if you are into shopping, this city is the home of the Glendale Galleria, one of the largest and best shopping malls in southern California.

For more information about the city of Glendale, California see http://glendale.usacitydirectories.com, a directory of links to city of Glendale, California guides and directories listing hotels, restaurants, resources, services, things to do, places to go and more.

David G. Hallstrom, Sr. is a retired private investigator and is currently the publisher of several internet directories, including http://www.usacitydirectories.com a directory of national, state, county and city guides and directories listing local guides, directories, web sites and web pages providing resources, services and information about things to do and places to go.

April 29, 2008

Travel Europe with Low Airfares

Filed under: Web Of Travel — @ 11:12 am

Europe has always been a desirable vacation destination. No matter what your interests are, Europe has something to offer. If museums are your thing, France leads that pack, although the Guggenheim in Bilbao, Spain is a must-see for art aficionados. Italy offers the culinary delights of Tuscany and the unparalleled atmosphere of the Grand Canal in Venice. Switzerland, Italy, and France provide winter sports enthusiasts with the best in Alpine skiing. To travel Europe is to travel in time, from ancient Roman ruins to the hottest nightclubs in Paris.

For many people, to travel Africa means exploring the great savannahs. Going on safari is a once-in-a-lifetime experience, filled with unimaginable beauty and the opportunity to see exotic animals in their natural habitats. Similarly, Westerners can travel Asia to immerse themselves in cultures vastly different from their own. The contrasts that Asian destinations provide - from the bustling metropolis that is Hong Kong and the high-tech Tokyo to the rural areas of Thailand and Vietnam - challenge and delight the senses.

Even as recently as twenty years ago, if you wished to travel Europe, travel Asia, or travel Africa, it would have been a pipe dream or one that required you to spend a lifetime’s worth of savings. Today’s global economy, however, translates into multi-city cheap tickets that can turn virtually anyone into a continent-hopping frequent flyer.

The Internet, of course, is the key to booking cheap tickets. Although individual airlines sometimes offer specials in international travel, third party companies are often the place to turn for cheap tickets. Their proprietary search technology allows them to link to dozens and dozens of airlines, and scour airfares at the lowest possible cost.

Once you’ve made the decision to undertake the adventure of a multi-city trip and travel Europe, travel Asia, or travel Africa, it’s time to book your airfare. The best approach to securing cheap tickets is flexibility. The more flexibility you have in your travel dates and in your destinations, the more likely you are to find the cheap tickets you desire.

With enough flexibility, you can even take a trip around the world for the cost of a single round trip airfare with a traditional carrier. Why not start at a major airline hub close to home, and see where your adventure takes you? Instead of having your heart set on flying from New York City to Paris, why not go from New York to Zurich, and then book a short flight on a smaller airline from Zurich to Paris? Small airlines often offer cheap tickets without a penalty for a one-way ticket.

If you want to see the world, you should make sure to pack a sense of adventure. That, combined with excellent Internet sleuthing skills, can make your travel dreams a reality.

Chris Robertson is an author of Majon International, one of the worlds MOST popular internet marketing companies on the web.
Visit this Travel Website and Majon’s Travel directory.

April 17, 2008

London Buckingham Palace

Filed under: Web Of Travel — @ 8:16 pm

England?s moving & regularly dreadful history is no doubt most rendered in its historic house and nowhere is this more apparent than in those properties housed by the Royal Family & their entertainment.

For a prolonged period now the British Monarchy has been seen as being significant to the prosperity of the United Kingdom. They have enthralled overseas sightseers for years and continue to motivate the love of overseas people of all years. Buckingham Place has been branded the London home of the English monarchy from the time when Queen Victoria became instated as queen in eighteen thirty seven. it’s one of a petite number of operating royal palaces enduring in in Britain at present.

Buckingham Palace is used mostly as an office, but can as well become an events venue for the fifty-thousand royal guests invited to the Palace yearly. There are well over 600 residences, including 19 state housings, 52 royal & guest bedrooms, seventy-eight bathrooms, ninety two offices, but more impressively an in-house cinema and swimming pool.

Right through the spring and summer, overseas tourists can take a trip around the incredible state bathrooms, that make the heart of the Palace. These impressive rooms are improved with a number of the most finest treasures from the Royal collection, including sculptures by Canova as well as paintings by the many well-known painters like that of Rembrandt, Rubens and Canaletto. England tourism board has plenty of other Royal places to visit in England.

April 14, 2008

A White Noise Machine- Your Solution To Sleeping In Noisy Places

Filed under: Web Of Travel — @ 6:35 pm

As an airline pilot, I have a responsibility to always arrive
at the plane well rested. That means being able to sleep well in
almost any hotel room. Few are quiet.

My secret to sleeping well in noisy places (which can be yours
also)- I never go on a trip without my white noise machine.

I spent $80 for mine about 12 years ago and have slept better
thousands of nights because of it. That’s made it a pretty good
investment.

“What Is A White Noise Machine?”

It is a small electronic device that makes background “white
noise”. It masks and covers other sounds that could potentially
disturb your sleep.

The concept of having one noise mask another so you can sleep
might be difficult to imagine.

I’m actually a very light sleeper and noises easily awaken me.

The white noise is a constant background noise that your brain
gets used to so it doesn’t noticeably register. Your mind blocks
it out, so you can sleep without noticing it. The constant white
noise in the background covers or blocks other noises.

It’s an interesting phenomenon that if someone is sleeping while
using a white noise machine and it is suddenly turned off, the
absence of the white noise can actually awaken them.

White noise machines are most effective when placed between you
and the noise source. If there is traffic or an airport out the
window, then put it between the window and you.

I always use mine when traveling, even if it seems like the
hotel is nice and quiet. You never can predict when other guests
will be loud in the hallways of adjacent rooms. If there is no
outside noise, I put mine between the door and my bed.

You might be worried that using a white noise machine will make
you miss your alarm of worse yet, a fire alarm. I’ve been in
many hotels when the fire alarms went off at night while I was
using my white noise machine at full volume. Don’t worry; you
can still hear a fire alarm.

As an airline pilot, I often have to get up very early. I can’t
afford to be late for work.

My white noise machine has never prevented me from hearing my
alarm or wake up call. Your mind still detects these.

White noise machines are also great for your home or for
creating privacy in your office.

My wife used to work as a Family Therapist. Their offices were
not soundproof, but privacy and confidentiality were extremely
important. They used white noise machines to create this privacy.

I have a friend who could not sleep through her husband’s
snoring. It was becoming a stressful issue for them. They
learned about white noise machines and got one. It did the
trick. Now she can sleep and their marriage is much better
because of it.

We have an additional white noise sound machine at home. My
travel one is so important to me that I never unpack it or use
it at home. I would hate to leave it home and lose the sleep
protection it provides during my trips.

When you first get a white noise machine, you have to train
yourself to use it. That basically entails gradually increasing
its volume each night. It takes about a week to get used to
sleeping at the maximum volume. You’ll be surprised how you
won’t even notice it then.

Some white noise machines make “nature sounds” like frogs,
birds, or whales. You can even buy recordings of nature sounds
to play to help you fall asleep.

While listening to Shamu, the killer whale, may be relaxing for
some people, I don’t think they make very effective white noise.

The problem is that nature sounds are irregular. To be most
effective, white noise should be steady and constant. Tatt’s
what your brain is best at adjusting to and tuning out.
Irregular sounds, although nice to listen to just don’t work as
well.

The other weakness of this type is that they often can’t be
turned up loud enough to mask sleep disturbing sounds. I guess
that’s because at greater volume Shamu, the killer whale, sounds
frightening rather than relaxing.

I’m familiar with several white noise machines. There is one
that I think is superior to the rest.

To learn which one it is and why, please visit:
http://www.pilot-pauls-travel-accessories.com/white-noise-machine
.html

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