Saturday, September 12, 2015

27 Pictures From India That Will Blow Your Mind



India is home to gorgeous palaces, bustling cities, and a
diverse and tranquil countryside filled with mountains, lakes, and exotic animals. The intricacies found in the detailed architecture of India’s palaces and temples
are both fascinating and breathtaking, and most of the sites are
unlike anything you would encounter in the Western world.
From stunning temples to lush tea plantations,
here are 27 photos that will inspire you to book a trip to India.

Varanasi is a sacred city along the Ganges River.

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The Assam tea plantations in northeast India have lush green tea fields that seem to stretch on forever.

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The Meenakshi Temple is located in Tamil Nadu in southern India and is a beacon of bright blues, yellows, pinks, and greens. The incredibly detailed layers of the temple reach far into the sky.

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The colorful Wagah border ritual is held daily in Punjab, where India borders Pakistan.

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The Sheesh Mahal (Palace of Mirrors) is the best-known part of Jaipur’s Amber Fort. Paintings and flowers carved from glass cover the walls and ceilings, giving the palace its name.


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India has many gorgeous beaches. No longer the hidden gem that it used to be, the Palolem Beach in Goa still offers a peaceful paradise.

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New Delhi’s Lotus Temple offers a sharp contrast from India’s more traditional temples. There’s a simple elegance in its modern appearance.

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The street markets in New Delhi sell an exotic and eye-catching array of nuts, fruits, spices, candies, and more.



The intricate design of the five-story Hawa Mahal, or Palace of the Winds, in Jaipur was meant to allow royal women to watch street festivities from the confines of the palace, since they weren’t allowed in public.


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Kanha National Park is one of the best-preserved wildlife areas in India, and it is filled with tigers, leopards, wild dogs, deer, and birds.

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A stunning architectural masterpiece constructed of white marble, the Taj Mahal is India’s most well-known monument and houses the tomb of the wife of a former Mughal emperor. The Taj Mahal’s reflection in the water in front of it is arguably as breathtaking as the structure itself.

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The Victoria Memorial is a monument in the city of Kolkata that was built in honor of the British Empire, which explains the building’s more western architecture.

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The Buddhist monuments that fill the Ajanta Caves in west-central India tell stories that date back to the first and second centuries B.C.

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Udaipur’s City Palace is a complex of 11 majestic palaces complete with gardens, gates, courtyards, terraces, and corridors that are situated on the banks of Lake Pichola.

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The Ganges River, which flows through the northern plains of India, is considered holy in Hinduism. Every 12 years, millions of Hindus travel to the river in order to bathe in it and wash away their sins.

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Varanasi is a city on the banks of the Ganges that’s sacred to Hindus, Buddhists, and Jains, who bathe in the river.

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Buddhists believe that Bodhgaya, in northeastern India, is where the founder of the faith reached enlightenment. Today, it’s a spiritual pilgrimage site for Buddhists.

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Mumbai’s historic railway station, Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, is a blend of Victorian Gothic and Indian architecture. Originally known as Victoria Terminus Station, the terminal was built in 1878 and served as a hub for merchants.

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The Nilgiri Mountain Rail is the steepest rail line in the country, stretching from Mettupalayam to Ootacamund (Ooty) in southern India. The five-hour ride offers incredible views of India’s countryside.

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Humayun’s Tomb, which was built for India’s second Mughal emperor, looks more like a palace with its dome and detailed walls and archways. The tomb later inspired the construction of the Taj Mahal.

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A striking mix of patches of bright green and looming instruments, the Jantar Mantar is an astronomical observation site that was built in the early 1700s in Jaipur. Although there are other astronomical sites in the country from this period, the Jantar Mantar is the most well preserved.

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Known by some as the Arc de Triomphe of the East, the Charminar is the centerpiece of the city of Hyderabad.


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The backwaters of Kerala in southern India are best explored on a luxury houseboat.

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The landscapes of Kashmir in northern India are vast, diverse, and amazingly scenic.

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Northern India has valleys filled with rivers that are bordered by mountains.

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Here, Buddhist monks still practice in monasteries surrounded completely by nature.

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The Oberoi Udaivilas hotel in Udaipur is regularly named the world’s best hotel by top travel publications. Guests arrive by private boat and stay in luxury accommodations that are designed to resemble a traditional Indian palace.


Via : BusinessInsider
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14 Places To See In SCOTLAND Before You Die

SCOTTISH POET RABBIE BURNS wrote: ‘The best-laid plans o’ mice an’ men gang aft a-gley’. This is certainly true for even the most well planned trips in Scotland. Quite often your holiday will ‘gang aft a-gley’.
And it’s generally the weather that sticks a metaphorical spanner into the works. Although the unpredictability of the darn Scottish drizzle is out of your control you can make sure not to skip on these locations during your visit.
Note: Place names located above the central belt of Scotland have been translated into Scottish Gaelic to help with navigation.

1. Scott’s View, Scottish Borders


Scott’s View – St Boswells, Sc… by Steve Talas on 500px.com
The Scottish Borders, with its breadth of rolling hills and scattered historic villages form a stronghold along the borderline of England and Scotland. The Scottish Borders region is a perfect introduction to the lowlands. One location in particular is a must, Scott’s View looking out over the Tweed Valley. From there you’ll be treated to a stunning advantage point where you can appreciate the distance across the border.

2. Loch Ness (Loch Nis), Inverness (Inbhir Nis)


Urquhart castle and the loch N… by Alain Gaymard on 500px.com
Located in the Scottish Highlands extending southwest of Inverness the loch is steeped in the mystery of the prehistoric Loch Ness Monster. Stop off at the northern shore in Drumnadrochit at the exhibition centre and have a dram at the Loch Ness Brewery.

3. Dunure Castle, Ayrshire (Siorrachd Inbhir Àir)


Dunure Castle at night by Peter Ribbeck on 500px.com
The county of Ayrshire is located in the south-west of Scotland, with 80 miles of unspoilt coastline introducing the west coast, in particular Arran (Eilean Arainn), Holy Isle (Eilean MoLaise) and Cumbrae (Cumaradh Mòr). The ruins of Dunure Castle overlook Ayr Bay in the Firth of Clyde. After many years as a derelict and dangerous ruin, the castle has recently been consolidated and is now partly accessible to visitors.
On a side note Scotland boasts some of the clearest skies in Europe, which provide exceptional conditions for nighttime photography. Galloway Forest in Ayrshire is the UK’s first Dark Sky Park and well worth a visit.

4. Ben Nevis (Beinn Nibheis), Fort William (An Gearasdan), Inverness (Inbhir Nis)


Sunrise over Ben Nevis by camerondj1970 on 500px.com
Ben Nevis, the tallest mountain in Scotland, sits at 4,400ft in the western end of Scotland’s Grampian Mountains.
Fort William is delightful and you can easily day hike Glen Nevis in the shadow of the summit. If you are gearing up to summit, it is rare to get clear skies, yet if your time is right and luck is on your side you can experience the falling sun over the eastern peaks.

5. Loch Tummel (Loch Teimhil), Perthshire


Autumn at Loch Tummel by eric niven on 500px.com
The narrow loch sits north west of Pitlochry (Baile Chloichrigh) in Perth (Peairt) and Kinross (Ceann Rois). The north and south banks offer splendid views of the surrounding landscape. Also stop at Queens View an outlook favoured by Queen Victoria. Nip back to Pitlochry and visit the Edradour Distillery for a wee dram of single malt.

6. Forth Rail Bridge, Edinburgh, West Lothian.


Forth Rail Bridge Anchor by David Sharman on 500px.com
The rail bridge stretches over the Firth of Forth in the east of Scotland, 9 miles west of Edinburgh City Centre. The bridge connects the southeast to the north coast of Scotland. This summer the bridge was awarded World Heritage status.

7. Loch Achtriochtan (Loch Trychardan), Glencoe(A’ Chàrnaich), Highlands


Loch Reflections by Tracey Whitefoot on 500px.com
Under the care of the National Trust of Scotland, Lock Achtriochtan is located east of the village of Glencoe. Glencoe is all about brooding peaks and narrow, oppressive valleys. The A82 runs straight through the middle and makes this a great spot for a day trip or if you have time a full week.

8. Kilchurn castle, Loch Awe (Loch Obha), Argyll and Bute (Earra-Ghaidheal agus Bòd)


in Awe (revisited) by KENNY BARKER on 500px.com
Kilchurn Castle sits on the northeastern end of Loch Awe. Access to the ruins is dependent on the water level of the loch, during higher-than-usual levels the peninsula becomes an island. The water runs over 25 miles (41 kilometres) in length, making it the largest freshwater loch in Scotland. The loch is also a super place to enjoy some wildlife photography, there are numerous companies running day tours and longer workshops, but BBC photographer and presenter Philip Price’s company Loch Vision is highly recommended.

9. Machrie Moor on the Isle of Arran (Eilean Arainn), West Coast


Machrie Moor stones… by Dougie Salteri on 500px
The Isle of Arran, off the West Coast of Scotland, is home to numerous stone circles and standing stones dating from the Neolithic period and the early Bronze Age. The finest collection of circles can be found on Machrie Moor, on the west of the island. Arran itself is a delight to visit, considered as “Scotland in miniature”. There are plenty of places one can visit; Machrie beach, Blackwaterfoot, Corrie,Shiskine, King’s cave on the west, Lochranza, Glen Rosa are only some of top locations not be to missed.

10. The Summer Isles (Na h-Eileanan Samhraidh)


Summer Isles by Jenny Cameron on 500px
Within the Summer Isles archipelago is The Isle of Tanera Mòr, just a mile off the Coigach Peninsula in the North-West Highlands of Scotland. It’s a beautiful and remote place and feels far from the rush and clamour of Glasgow. The island is surprisingly accessible: just a two hour drive from Inverness and 45 minutes from the pretty fishing village of Ullapool. From the east side the hills of Coigach and the ”Sutherland Giants” are visible across the water of the sheltered sound, to the west the other islands of the archipelago and further out the stormy Minch, then the Sea of the Hebrides. If you’d like a little inspiration before your visit, read Gavin Maxwell’s “Ring of Bright Water”, Rowenna Fare’s “Seal Morning” and/or “The Island” by Ronald Lockley.

11. Isle of Skye (An t-Eilean Sgitheanach)


The Birth of Winter by Alister Benn on 500px
The most popular of Scotland’s Hebrides Islands, the Isle of Skye presents some of the most captivating landscape in western Scotland. You’ll be treated to a panoramic patchwork of mountains, moorlands and mile long beaches. The Isle is a mecca for all outdoor activities. The Cuillin passes offer some of the most outstanding coastal views in all of the UK. Here’s a super location guide that will help you make sure you don’t miss any of the epic locations in Skye.

12. Trotternish, Isle of Skye (An t-Eilean Sgitheanach)


Trotternish by Michael Breitung on 500px
Trotternish is the most northerly of Skye’s peninsulas, extending north from Portree (Port Rìgh) to Rubha Hunish. The peninsula is one of 40 National Scenic Areas in Scotland. One of the major attractions is The Storr (An Stòr) — a 719m tall hill that runs down the centre of the peninsula for most of its length. If The Storr is not striking enough for you, located at the foot of its cliffs is a 50 meters high tooth of rock, the Old Man of Storr. It’s so intimidating it remained unclimbed until 1955.

13. Buachaille Etive Mor (Buachaille Eite Mòr), Highlands


Buachaille Etive Mor by Ian Sweet on 500px
The Buachaille, is a mountain at the head of Glen Etive (Gleann Èite) in the Highlands. It’s one of the most recognisable mountains (photographed and filmed (Skyfall) in Scotland. Personally I’d recommend visiting in low season to avoid the tour buses of tourists making their way to Glencoe.

14. Isle of Lewis (Leòdhas), Outer Hebrides Islands


Creatures by Andrea Pozzi on 500px
The Outer Hebrides are a chain of more than 200 islands that sits 43 miles (70 kilometres) off the west coast of Scotland. The Isle of Lewis makes up the northern part of Lewis and Harris (Leòdhas agus na Hearadh). Gaelic is predominately spoken by the isle’s 18,000 inhabitants, which has helped preserve their cultural identity. Also if you are into surfing Lewis is the place to head for incredible reef and beach breaks.


Photos via : njt1982
Source : MadatorNetwork
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This Photographer Traveled To 37 Countries To Prove That Female Beauty Is Everywhere

By Mihaela Noroc : I’m a photographer from Romania that quit her job and started a new life.
Two years ago I took my backpack, my camera and begun to travel around the globe, photographing hundreds of natural women surrounded by their culture.
My project is called “The Atlas Of Beauty”, which is about our planet’s diversity shown through portraits of women. Traveling on a very low budget around 37 countries made me integrated in all kinds of environments.
Now I can say that beauty is everywhere, and it’s not a matter of cosmetics or sizes but more about being yourself.
Global trends make us look and behave the same, but we are all beautiful because we are different. In the end, beauty is in the eye of the beholder, and the beholder is always somebody else. My goal is to continue and take photos of women from each country of the globe, making “The Atlas Of Beauty” a mirror of our diverse societies and an inspiration for people that try to remain authentic.

Tibetan Plateau, China



Maramures, Romania



Baltic Sea, Finland



Shiraz, Iran



Omo Valley, Ethiopia



Yangon, Myanmar



Rio de Janeiro, Brazil



Amazon Rainforest



Colca Valley, Peru



El Paico, Chile



Ethiopia



Nasir al-Mulk, Iran



Little India, Singapore



Riga, Latvia



New York, USA



Havana, Cuba



Chang Mai, Thailand



Oxford, UK



Tibetan Plateau, China



Mawlamyine, Myanmar



Bogota, Colombia



Havana, Cuba



Medellin, Colombia



San Francisco, USA



Sydney, Australia



Taskent, Uzbekistan



Tbilisi, Georgia



Otavalo, Ecuador



San Pedro de Atacama, Chile



Maori Marae, New Zealand



Mihaela the photographer hopes to continue her ambitious project and plans to travel to even more countries in the future.





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Photographer : Mihaela Noroc. More info: indiegogo.comFacebook | Instagram | Tumblr
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