Cultural Heritage · cultural itineraries · destination management · food and wine itineraries · Historic Towns · intercity transit · Italy · Tradition · travel plan · Wine Trails

Venetian Countryside Food and Wine Itineraries

Cooking Classes and Culinary Tours Veneto is the most productive wine area in Italy and a unique area where the flavors of the local products combine to create delicious dishes, both in traditional and innovative ways. When natural products are put together to create a dish, the choice of ingredients and the way they are… Continue reading Venetian Countryside Food and Wine Itineraries

Atlantic Coast · Conservation · Cultural Heritage · cultural itineraries · Historic Towns · intercity transit · museums · Resilience · Rivers · Sustainable Communities · Travel Plan Fees · water quality

Exploring Brandywine Creek and Valley

Brandywine Creek is a tributary of the Christina River in southeastern Pennsylvania and northern Delaware. The Lower Brandywine is 20.4 miles long and is a designated Pennsylvania Scenic River with several tributary streams.

Cultural Heritage · cultural itineraries · escursioni · Historic Towns · Italy · museums · servizi turistici · servizio guida · travel plan · vacanze · viaggi

The Capua Archaeological and Provincial Museum

Capua is an illustrious and antique metropolis in Campania. Its museum contains the most resplendent archaeological and medieval relics from this region of Italy.
The Archaeological Museum stands on one of Capua’s most ancient settlements, first occupied by the Torre di Sant’Erasmo during the Longobard era. Inaugurated in 1995, it contains archaeological finds coming from the excavations carried out in the territory. The complex consists of 32 exhibition rooms, 20 areas for deposit, three large courtyards and a vast garden.

Cultural Heritage · cultural itineraries · destination management · Historic Towns · museums · Rivers · Travel

Mid America Destinations

Illinois River Towns Quad Cities North Shore and South Dakota Illinois and Iowa Champaign County is nearly equidistant from Chicago, St Louis and Indianapolis; a thriving micro-urban oasis supported by local agriculture, technology and research and home to the University of Illinois. The College of Agriculture, Consumer and Environmental Science is a leader in crop… Continue reading Mid America Destinations

Cultural Heritage · cultural itineraries · food and wine itineraries · Historic Towns · intercity transit · museums · travel plan

Texas Hill Country Small Towns

Fredericksburg Gruene Lockhart Luckenbach Poteet Round Top and Wimberley
Fredericksburg is known for its German heritage, antiquing, wineries, Oktoberfest celebration and the Enchanted Rock, a massive bald dome of Texas granite that is a hiking, bouldering, and spelunking destination.
The Starting Point to Visit Texas Hill Country Wineries

Cultural Heritage · destination management · Friends and Family Travel · Historic District · Historic Towns · intercity transit · paratransit · public transit · Transit Calculator · Travel · travel plan

Billings Montana

Crow Indians Settlers Oil Discovery Microbreweries and a Heritage Trail
Billings is the largest city in Montana and is located in the south-central portion of the state. With the Bakken oil development in eastern Montana and western North Dakota, the largest oil discovery in U.S. history, as well as the Heath shale oil discovery, the city’s growth rate stayed high during the shale oil boom. Nicknamed the Magic City because of its rapid growth from its founding as a railroad town in March 1882. It is named for Frederick H. Billings. Billings is the trade and distribution center for much of Montana east of the Continental Divide, Northern Wyoming, and western portions of North and South Dakota. Billings is also the retail destination for much of the same area. With more hotel accommodations than any area within a five-state region, the city hosts a variety of conventions, concerts, sporting events, and other rallies.

Cultural Heritage · cultural itineraries · destination management · Historic Towns · Maritime Heritage · Rivers · Transit Calculator · Travel · Travel Plan Fees · waterways

Muscatine Iowa

a commercial industrial network pearl of the Mississippi and watermelon capital
Muscatine is situated on a series of bluffs and hills at a west-south bend in the Mississippi River. The river-bend gives the city roughly 260 degrees of riverfront with two creeks flowing into the Mississippi in downtown Muscatine. From the bluffs there is a beautiful view of the town below and of the Mississippi for miles up and down. Located 25 miles (40 km) from the Quad Cities, 38 miles (61 km) from Iowa City and 68 miles (109 km) from Cedar Rapids, Muscatine is part of a larger community whose residents commute for work.

Cultural Heritage · cultural itineraries · destination management · food and wine itineraries · Historic Towns · Tradition · Transit Calculator · Travel · Travel Plan Fees

Jasper Indiana

German Festivals Wood Capital and Historic Commercial Buildings
Jasper is strategically located one-hour northeast of Evansville, 2 1/2 hours southwest of Indianapolis,
1 1/2 hours west of Louisville and 3 hours east of St. Louis, this community is consistently ranked among the best small towns to live in Indiana and the United States, start a business as well as one of the safest.

Cultural Heritage · cultural itineraries · destination management · food and wine itineraries · Geography · Historic Towns · Mobility · museums · Rivers · Transit Calculator · travel plan · waterways

Hershey Harrisburg and the Susquehanna River Valley

On Day 3 of your travel program, you transfer to the Hershey Harrisburg Region – 2 nights 3 Days.
The Susquehanna River is 464 miles (747 km) long and is the longest river on the US East Coast. With its watershed, it is the 16th-largest river in the United States, and the longest river in the continental United States without commercial boat traffic today. In the Canal Era, navigation improvements were made to enhance the river for barge shipping of bulk goods by water on the Pennsylvania Canal.

Cultural Heritage · destination management · Geography · Historic Towns · intercity transit · Rivers · Transit Calculator · Travel · travel plan · waterways

Lafayette Louisiana

history geography local culture and transport services
History the Attakapas Native Americans inhabited this area when French colonists founded the first European settlement, Petit Manchac, a trading post. In the late eighteenth century, numerous Acadian refugees settled here after being expelled from Canada; intermarriage led to the Cajun culture which fostered the French language and the Catholic religion. Vermilionville was renamed in 1884 for General Lafayette, the French aristocrat who aided the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. The city and parish economy continued to be based on agriculture into the early 20th century. In the 1940s, after oil was discovered in the parish, oil and natural gas became dominant.