Posts Tagged ‘walking’
Tips For Outdoor Cooking: Amazingly Easy
The biggest test in outdoor cooking is having the equipment needed to make a tasty meal. Take pleasure in brilliant dinners on your next camping trip by utilizing these five easy pointers to make cooking fun and easy.
Recipes: The best tip any experienced outdoor cook will give is to plan your meals and collect your recipes before heading out. Certain recipes simply can’t be done in the campground and you don’t want to be ready to eat before you find out this information. Select recipes that don’t necessitate special kitchen equipment due to the fact that these will not be on hand.
Choosing Golf Shoes
Your swing could well change, your accuracy and distance will definitely improve with practice, and you’ll become deadly accurate with at putting, but you will always do all these things while you are standing on your feet in your shoes.
So, your feet need to be quite comfortable, don’t they! Have you ever got a blister whilst walking or running? It’s all you can think about and it ruins your enjoyment of the experience of what you are doing. Don’t let uncomfortable golf shoes ruin your game of golf too.
This is one area where you shouldn’t let your frugality make the decision for you. You will be wearing these shoes many times over a long time and they should be considered a good investment in your game of golf.
Traeth Bychan Beach, Maritime History and Quiet, Sheltered Anglesey Beach, Great for Dinghy Launch
Enjoy the small, sheltered and cosy delights of east facing Traeth Bychan beach near Benllech, down a narrow country lane off the A5025. If you want to really appreciate some fine sea and mountain views covering Llanddona, the Carneddau peaks above Bangor, Puffin Island and Liverpool Bay, you must come here.
The edges of Traeth Bychan are rocky, while the middle area of the beach is sandy with a varying spread of small pebbles the length of the beach up to the dinghy park at the top. Given its sheltered position it’s no surprise that Red Wharf Bay Sailing and Watersports Club have their clubhouse here, and can often see dinghies, powerboats and small day fishing boats queuing up to be towed up the beach on their trailers.
Restful Traeth Bychan Beach, Near Anglesey Coastal Path, Great for Dinghy Sailing
Small, quiet, and sheltered east facing Traeth Bychan beach south of Moelfre on Anglesey is reached down a winding country lane off the A5025. come here and you will appreciate some beautiful coastal views from the peaks of Carneddau on the mainland, to Puffin Island, Llanddona heights, Great Orme and Liverpool Bay.
Traeth Bychan beach is compact with rocky features on each side and a changing mix of sand and pebbles as you move up the beach towards the dinghy park at the back. Red Wharf Bay Sailing and Watersports Club is situated at the top of the beach on a stone and concrete base, and it is from here that you will see various dinghy classes, small day fishing craft and the odd jet ski being launched.
Discover Skerries Lighthouse, Holyhead, Helping Ships off Anglesey Coast
Yachtsmen and women across the Irish Sea will probably have sailed past Skerries Lighthouse in Holyhead Bay, off North West Anglesey, Wales at some time or other in their sailing career. Whether they approach, from Dublin in the west, Port St Mary, Isle of Man to the north or nearby Pwllheli, Skerries rock and light soon comes into view. In fact the white flashing light of this modern automated 23 m high Trinity House lighthouse can be seen 22 miles away.
Garajonay National Park – Rainforest Walk
Forty miles to the West of Tenerife lies the island of La Gomera. There are no flashy nightclubs or bars here – Instead you will find a magnificent landscape full of interesting wildlife and fantastic for hiking.
Shaped like an orange squeezer with deep barrancos and about 15 miles wide the island is home to the Garajonay National Park – a World Heritage Site http://reddeparquesnacionales.mma.es/parques/garajonay/index.htm .
The rainforest consists of Laurel or Laurisilva which at one time covered much of Western Europe. Pollution, man and climate change decimated large areas of this fauna but the isolation and clean air of La Gomera’s micro climate has ensured its survival. At present the biggest threat comes from summer fires.