Difficulties Fitting in Exercise While you Travel

Difficulties Fitting in Exercise While you Travel? Read On!

Travel itineraries are often so crammed with planned activities that we forget to allot time for relaxation and exercise. When you combine busy schedules with decreased physical movement, lowered liquid intake, and strange sleeping quarters, your system reacts by becoming sluggish. The ultimate negative side effect is a holiday infused with lethargy.

Guess what! Exercise can easily be incorporated into your travel routine.

Effective Planning

Be sure to plan physical activities such as walking tours, hiking, bicycling, swimming, or snorkeling.

Easy Exercises

The tensing and relaxing of any muscle group increases blood flow to the area. Try the following exercises. Many can be performed while seated or standing in line – i.e., waiting in the airport, on long flights, or while sitting in a bathroom stall. Avoid germy hotel carpets and floors by performing reclining exercises on a bed or Yoga mat.

Glutes:

Clench and relax the glute muscles. Repeat several times. This movement will sculpture a rounded, toned posterior.

Abdominal Area:

1. Forcibly pull in your abs while you breathe out. Hold for a few seconds, then relax and repeat. You can do this exercise dozens of times daily.

2. Perform leg raises from a reclining position, keeping the small of your back pressed into the bed or mat. Repeat until your abs feel tired.

3. Tense and relax the muscles of the pelvic floor. This exercise tones the lower abs and the muscles that control the bladder and other nearby organs.

Calves:

Flex calf muscles while keeping your heels on the floor and raising your toes, then do the same while keeping your toes on the floor and raising your heels.

Arms, Shoulders, and Back:

1. Do pushups on the bed, or against a wall.

2. Concentrate on pulling your shoulder blades together while tensing the muscles, and then relax. Repeat often on long flights.

3. Packing a set of dumbbells is not practical when you are trying to keep your luggage light. You can set up an easy weight lifting routine with water-filled weights. An internet search for ‘water filled dumbbells’ will locate numerous online stores. A cheap alternative: save the empties when you buy bottled water and use them as weights instead. A bottle filled with one pint of water weighs approximately one pound. You won’t bulk up with such small weights, but fast repetitions will give you an aerobic workout.

Overall Body Workouts

1. Avoid the elevator when possible and use the stairs.

2. Walking alone through strange streets can be intimidating (and even dangerous) in some areas. Instead, park outside a large shopping mall and do a brisk window-shopping tour.

3. Instead of watching TV from a sitting or reclining position, briskly walk in place, pumping your arms vigorously at the same time.

Special Equipment

In addition to the water-filled dumbbells mentioned previously, consider packing one or more of the following. They won’t take much room in your suitcase or add a lot to your luggage weight.

1. Exercise resistance bands

2. Exercise fitness ball (with pump)

3. Hand grip exerciser

4. Compact non-slip Yoga mat

5. Pilates or Yoga book

6. Book of mat exercises

7. Mini stair stepper with resistance cords

Use your Imagination

This article has given you a few guidelines. With a bit of ingenuity and imagination you should be able to add to the ideas and produce an individualized system that works well for you. The big payoff will be increased energy while you travel and a brighter outlook when you return home.

Important

On long flights, get up and walk around as often as possible. This will keep your circulatory system working efficiently and help to avoid deep vein thrombosis (DVT).

Do not attempt to introduce intense exercise during your vacation if you are out of shape to begin with. Check with your physician, physiotherapist, chiropractor, or other health care professional about a pre-holiday exercise routine. Ask specifically about the exercises in this article to ensure that they will not exacerbate any pre-existing problems or back injuries.

©Copyright Kathy Steinemann: This article is free to publish only if this copyright notice, the byline, and the author’s note below (with active links) are included.

Atlanta City Events – Where to Go, What to See

Atlanta City Events – Where to Go, What to See

Atlanta is one city in Georgia that offers just about something for everyone throughout the year. Atlanta usually boasts of warm weather throughout the year, so you do not have to worry about a lack of outdoor activities when you visit this southern city. Some of the annual events that you might enjoy when you visit the city of Atlanta include the following.

 Christmas Walk

 Visit Atlanta during the first weekend of December so that you can participate in the Christmas Walk in the historic center of the city. Many of the homes on the historic marker are open to the public for the Christmas Walk and you can actually go into the homes and see the interiors of some of the finest mansions in Atlanta. This is one thing that you will not want to miss if you are in town during this time of the year.

Pecan Fair

The Pecan Fair is held to signify the coming of spring and is usually held the last weekend in March each year. This annual event is held in the city center and features pecan pies as well as roasted and candied pecans. This event has been held at Centennial Olympic Park for the past few years and is something for everyone who enjoys not only pecans but also wishes to participate in welcoming spring.

Magnolia Days

Magnolia Days brings back a bit of the Old South and this event takes place the first week of May each year. Magnolia Days is more of a city wide event and encompasses Callaway Gardens as well as the Atlanta History Center. There is much to see and do during this time of the year and a Magnolia Queen is usually a much vied for title in Atlanta. The Magnolia Queen rides in the parade that starts off the Magnolia Days celebration as well as reigns over the event. The title is passed on each year. Many people dress in clothing from a bygone age during the Magnolia Days celebration. If you are in Atlanta during the first week of May, you might enjoy Magnolia Days.

Peach Festival

Georgia is known for producing some of the tastiest peaches in the country. There are peach festivals taking place throughout the state but the Atlanta Peach Festival is always held the first weekend after Labor Day Weekend at Centennial Park. In addition to featuring peaches, the event also features peach pies, peach ice cream and a huge carnival and fair that is fun for both young and old alike.

Haunted Tours

Beginning in October of every year, the Haunted Atlanta tours really pick up with tours of Underground Atlanta. You can take a haunted tour of Atlanta throughout the year, but the Underground Haunted Tours are only available each weekend in October. This is one event that you will enjoy when you visit Atlanta during the month of October.

Fox Theater Days

The last weekend of November signifies Fox Theater Days. Fox Theater offers live theater to Atlanta residents and visitors and Fox Theater Days showcases some of the best talent with street performances as well as workshops for up and coming performers. Fox Theater Days have been a part of Atlanta history for the past 20 years. There are many attractions to visit when you come to Atlanta, Georgia. There are usually events that take place throughout the year in this sunny and inviting southern city so do come and visit!

Namibia Travel and Tours

Namibia Travel and Tours

Special offers Galore  –  we love passing on our Special Offers for travel in  Africa  to our clients – offering excellent value for money.   We are constantly updating our specials – so don’t forget to visit us again !  Namibia never fails to enthral its visitors, to charge the fantasies and imaginations of narrators in their efforts to aptly describe the many-facetted grandeur and harsh splendour of this desert country

Namibia is known for its contrasting landscapes. The desolate Namib Desert is said to be the oldest in the world, with its high dunes and awe-inspiring sense of space…..

Namibia is located in southwest Africa. It is a large and mainly arid country sharing borders with Angola, Botswana, South Africa , Zambia and Zimbabwe.

Along its entire length, the vast shifting sand dunes of the Namib Desert spread inland for 80 to 130km.  Sossusvlei hosts postcard perfect Sand Dunes – a photographers delight !

A fascinating land of contrasts – from the  interior sand basin of the Kalahari to the Etosha Pan (a dried-out saline lake), surrounded by grasslands and bush which support a large and varied wildlife.  The Etosha National Park & Game Reserve is one of the finest in Africa, in that it remains, to a large extent, free of human influence

As Namibia is a semi-desert country it has a dry climate where droughts occur regularly. This phenomenon is greatly influenced by the cold Benguela current in the Atlantic Ocean.
Days are mostly warm to very hot, while nights are generally cool.
In summer (October to April) the average temperatures range from 20°C to 34°C during the day.
In winter nigh – time temperatures can drop below freezing point and ground frosts do occur. The day – time temperatures in the interior range from 18°C – 25°C
The rainy season is from October to May, but mostly it rains from January to March.
Rainfall is usually caused by convection thunderstorms, which are normally of a short duration.
The average rainfall figures vary from less than 50mm along the coast to 350 mm in the central and 700mm in the far north – eastern regions.
Winter rains do occur in the far south – westerly regions.
Often the coast is covered by thick mist.

Parks:

Namibia has several national parks as well as a few private parks.

In the north of Namibia we find the world-famous Etosha National Park, with a size of 22 270km? it is one of the largest game parks in Africa.

Etosha owes its unique landscape to the Etosha Pan, a vast shallow depression of approximately 5 000km?. A series of waterholes along the southern edge of the pan guarantees rewarding and often spectacular game viewing. Several of the 114 mammal species found in the park are rare and/or endangered, including the black rhino and black-faced impala. Over 340 bird species have been recorded at Etosha.

The Skeleton Coast Park was proclaimed in its present form in 1973. It extends from the Ugab River in the south to the Kunene River in the North.

The attraction of this remote area lies mainly in the colour changing moods and untouched profile of its landscape, ranging from sweeping vistas of windswept dunes to rugged canyons with walls of richly coloured volcanic rock and extensive mountain ranges.

Its aura of mystery and impenetrability is due to the many shipwrecks, the dense coastal fog and rough sea-swell.

How The Kilimanjaro Came To Be

How The Kilimanjaro Came To Be

Mount Kilimanjaro is one of the world’s most famous volcanoes.

Volcanoes, as everyone knows, are mountains that explode every once in a while, causing untold devastation… and then dying down again for thousands of years.

You have to wonder – how do these mountains get formed? Why do they explode? Why do they have craters on top? Most importantly – will the Kilimanjaro explode while I’m on it?

So many questions. But worry not, here are the answers.

First of all, the Kilimanjaro is not likely to erupt while you are on it, as it hasn’t exploded in at least 150,000 years. Right now, scientists are more concerned with the rapidly dissolving glaciers on the Kilimanjaro’s peak than the possibility of a volcanic eruption from its core.

However, the Kilimanjaro must have been an extremely active volcano to have reached the size it is at now – standing 4600 meters above its base, and with a peak height of 5832 meters.

Volcanoes originated when the mass of liquid that formed the earth slowly began to solidify on the surface. This is what gave birth to what we call “land” now. Land, however, was not continuous, and still is not so. The surface of the earth is divided into plates that rub against each other, and – just like using friction to strike a match – causes explosions whenever the force of this rubbing gets to be too much. The molten rock beneath the earth breaks through to the surface, and there we have a volcanic eruption.

Volcanic belts occur at the borders between tectonic plates, which are called fault lines. This also explains why volcanoes usually occur in ranges – the Kilimanjaro, as a free-standing volcano, is very much the exception.

However, tectonic plates move for some time, and then tend to settle down after a few hundred thousand years. Right now, the tectonic activity has settled down enough to make the Kilimanjaro dormant for longer than man has tracked it. Scientists say that there is volcanic activity going on beneath the surface, but even they are more interested in the shrinking icecaps at its peak than the rumblings and bubblings within. Mount Kilimanjaro has been firmly placed in the category of “dormant volcano” – one that shows some activity, but will not erupt in the foreseeable future.

According to its structure, Mount Kilimanjaro is what is called a stratovolcano – “strato” referring to the layered structure of the volcanic mound. A stratovolcano is the tall, steep volcanic mountain we associate with the image of a volcano, as opposed to the lower, wider structure of shield volcanoes. The difference in shape comes about due to the high viscosity of lava in stratovolcanoes as compared to shield volcanoes.

Highly viscous material cannot flow very far before it solidifies, so it solidifies close to the volcano’s mouth. With every eruption, more and more solidified lava is added to the volcano’s body, making it slowly grow in size and height. As eruptions do not happen continually, the lava of two successive eruptions will always look slightly different to the eye – which is what gives cross-sections of volcanic rock the distinctive “layered” appearance.