
Shot of the beach next to Cozy Beach hotel in Pattaya. The sky and sea  make a awesome view . IN the view is the Royal Cliff Hotel
Labels: hong kong sea bech, thailand sea beach
 The good place to view coral is Nual Beach on the southern part of the  island. Laemtien Beach and Samae Beach is on the southwestern side; two  tranquil and serene beaches that will delight sun worshippers. The water  is nice and clean and the sand nice and golden. You can snorkel,  jetski, parasail or banana boat near here. There is also a small shop  selling souvenirs, and freshly cooked Thai food.
The good place to view coral is Nual Beach on the southern part of the  island. Laemtien Beach and Samae Beach is on the southwestern side; two  tranquil and serene beaches that will delight sun worshippers. The water  is nice and clean and the sand nice and golden. You can snorkel,  jetski, parasail or banana boat near here. There is also a small shop  selling souvenirs, and freshly cooked Thai food.
Known as Coral Island and covering an area of about 4 square kilometres,  you spend the day swimming, snorkeling and sunbathing. Enjoy the  abundant coral and underwater world, either from the glass-bottom boat  or by diving in. Price includes travel to and from Pattaya, transfer by  boat to Koh Larn and Thai lunch. There are many activities here for  visitors to enjoy, some include para sailing, snorkeling, jet ski,  banana boat, of course swimming in tropical waters, and there is even a  shooting range located here.
Labels: coral island of pattaya, pattaya beach
The best private Bungalow in Pattaya. When you reach to this Resort, you  will interesting about the private place in Pattaya with nature  atmosphere around private beach. You can choose the Bungalow by person  and size for hire from 2 until 20 persons.
Labels: Pattaya sea beach, pattaya sea resort
 Teluk Kumbar (sometimes Gombar) in Malaysia's Penang State for a dinner  at a sea-front restaurant yesterday, I snapped these two magnificent  sunset photographs
Teluk Kumbar (sometimes Gombar) in Malaysia's Penang State for a dinner  at a sea-front restaurant yesterday, I snapped these two magnificent  sunset photographs
Labels: malayasia beach, malayasia civilization

Teluk Kumbar (sometimes Gombar) in Malaysia's Penang State for a dinner  at a sea-front restaurant yesterday, I snapped these two magnificent  sunset photographs
Labels: malayasia sea beach, Penang sea beach
There are some great beaches out this way (see Padang Bai, below) but the  beaches along the coast at Candi Dasa are fighting total disintegration with  massive concrete walls that hold back the ocean at high tide. When the tourist  area was being developed from a small fishing and farming centre the off-shore  reef was seen as an easy and convenient source of lime for cement and mortar.  The subsequent explosions and burning of the coral destroyed the reefs and with  them went the natural protection from the strong Lombok Strait currents leaving  the new  hotels in frightening danger of simply falling into the scouring sea. What  exists now is a sort of pretty, man-made series of groynes and breakwaters that  splash up into bridal veils of foam and spray as the waves run along them, but  the only sand to be found is very coarse and tucked only into the corners of the  protective works. 
 The exclusive beaches of the Nusa Dua  enclave are not spared despite their exclusiveness. The raking and sifting are  done more vigorously perhaps, and opposite the larger hotels the inter-tidal sea floor has been scoured of  its allocation of broken rock and dead coral, but the need to mark out these safe  areas with ropes and buoys spells out a different story about the un-cleaned  areas.
The exclusive beaches of the Nusa Dua  enclave are not spared despite their exclusiveness. The raking and sifting are  done more vigorously perhaps, and opposite the larger hotels the inter-tidal sea floor has been scoured of  its allocation of broken rock and dead coral, but the need to mark out these safe  areas with ropes and buoys spells out a different story about the un-cleaned  areas.
Litter is always a problem along these beaches facing the Indian ocean. At the worst times it seems that every country from South Africa, the Middle East and past India and Java has up-ended their refuse trucks into the strongest of the ocean currents that run past their shores and all of it winds up along this hooked coastline of Bali. Even out west past the popular surfing beaches of Canggu, around the island temple of Tanah Lot and as far as Soka Beach, some 40 beach kilometres from Tuban, plastic drink bottles and ends of rope and twine can be found up the creek entrances, tangled around the roots and branches along the banks.
Labels: indonessia beach, Soka Beach

The beach at Tuban, on the northern  side of the airport runway that juts out into the sea, is sheltered by the  off-shore reef and therefore very safe and especially child-friendly but it is often  scarred by small beds of dead and broken coral that are not kind to the feet. Not so  frequently these days, but often in the past, pollution of the soft brown rock  kind (read 'faeces') in dark water was also a definite deterrent. 
Labels: bali sea beach, Tuban beach
Labels: Hawaii, hawaiian beaches, North Shore, Pacific Ocean, surfing
 The term "Bermuda Triangle" was first used in an article written by Vincent H. Gaddis for Argosy magazine in 1964. Gaddis claimed that several ships and planes had disappeared without explanation in that area. The article was expanded and included in his book, Invisible Horizons: True Mysteries of the Sea (1965), where he described nine mysterious incidents and provided extensive detail. Many newspapers carried a story in December of 1967 about strange incidents in the Bermuda Triangle after a National Geographic Society news release brought attention to Gaddis's book. The triangle was featured in a cover story in Argosy in 1968, in a book called Limbo of the Lost (1969) by John Wallace Spencer, and in a documentary film, The Devil's Triangle, in 1971. Charles Berlitz's 1974 bestseller The Bermuda Triangle marked the height of the disaster area legend, but some of its sensationalized claims were quickly proved inaccurate.
The term "Bermuda Triangle" was first used in an article written by Vincent H. Gaddis for Argosy magazine in 1964. Gaddis claimed that several ships and planes had disappeared without explanation in that area. The article was expanded and included in his book, Invisible Horizons: True Mysteries of the Sea (1965), where he described nine mysterious incidents and provided extensive detail. Many newspapers carried a story in December of 1967 about strange incidents in the Bermuda Triangle after a National Geographic Society news release brought attention to Gaddis's book. The triangle was featured in a cover story in Argosy in 1968, in a book called Limbo of the Lost (1969) by John Wallace Spencer, and in a documentary film, The Devil's Triangle, in 1971. Charles Berlitz's 1974 bestseller The Bermuda Triangle marked the height of the disaster area legend, but some of its sensationalized claims were quickly proved inaccurate.
 Juhu beach is one of the most attractive sea beaches of Mumbai. This flat beach is located almost at center of the Mumbai town. Located 18-km north of the city centre, it’s a major beach site on the shores of Arabian Sea and is one of the posh localities of Mumbai where one can find the bungalows of the famous film personalities of Bollywood. It’s also a favourite shooting site among the filmmakers as many film shootings are also held over here.
Juhu beach is one of the most attractive sea beaches of Mumbai. This flat beach is located almost at center of the Mumbai town. Located 18-km north of the city centre, it’s a major beach site on the shores of Arabian Sea and is one of the posh localities of Mumbai where one can find the bungalows of the famous film personalities of Bollywood. It’s also a favourite shooting site among the filmmakers as many film shootings are also held over here.
Labels: beaches of Mumbai, Juhu beach

 The Bermuda Triangle, also called the Devil's Triangle, is an imaginary area that can be roughly outlined on a map by connecting Miami, Florida; San Juan, Puerto Rico; and the Bahamas, an island chain off the coast of the United States. Within that triangular area of the Atlantic Ocean have occurred a number of unexplained disappearances of boats and planes. Additionally, readings on directional devices do not operate normally inside the triangle.
The Bermuda Triangle, also called the Devil's Triangle, is an imaginary area that can be roughly outlined on a map by connecting Miami, Florida; San Juan, Puerto Rico; and the Bahamas, an island chain off the coast of the United States. Within that triangular area of the Atlantic Ocean have occurred a number of unexplained disappearances of boats and planes. Additionally, readings on directional devices do not operate normally inside the triangle.
Labels: Devils Triangle, The Bermuda Triangle














 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 





