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Fort Lauderdale – Florida

Florida Fort Lauderdale

Florida Fort Lauderdale

In 1960, Hollywood proclaimed that a Fort Lauderdale vacation was “Where the Boys Are,” and launched America’s Spring Break craze. The modern Miami Fort Lauderdale metropolitan area has emerged as a chic tropical destination, and a Fort Lauderdale vacation has strived to shed some of its “students gone wild” image.

Riverwalk

Fort Lauderdale is located in a wonderful natural setting, where the New River meets the Atlantic Ocean. Stroll on the New River’s north bank along Riverwalk that connects attractions of the Arts and Science District. Along this 2-mile promenade, you can enjoy great views and entertainment, including a Jazz Brunch on the first Sunday of every month.

Shopping

The Mediterranean styled Los Olas Riverfront might be considered a Fort Lauderdale mall theme park, with its Spanish tile roofs, sunny courtyard concerts, and the adjoining trendy venues along the Riverwalk and Las Olas Boulevard. Beach Place is another entertainment, retail, and dining complex, located just north of Las Olas.

“The World’s Largest Retail Outlet Mall,” Sawgrass Mills ranks as the second-biggest tourist attraction in Florida after Walt Disney World, with 25 million annual visitors. This gator-shaped complex includes 2 miles of rock-bottom discount shopping for major label merchandise, up to 80% below retail prices. Shopping is divided into themed “halls” and this super mall includes a Wolfgang Puck restaurant and a Hard Rock Café.

The Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino just outside Fort Lauderdale, the Shops of Paradise feature unique Florida shopping for Native American art and rare exotic seashells – along with leading musical attractions and Vegas-style gaming action.

The Boardwalk

Pedestrians and cyclists frequent the 2.2-mi paved promenade known as the Boardwalk is situated with the Intracoastal Waterway to its west and Atlantic Ocean beaches to the east. The Boardwalk is a popular traditional destination for wintering French Canadians.

Museum of Discovery and Science

Kids and adults alike will enjoy the wonders of science in this entertaining museum. Engaging interactive exhibits include the 52-foot-tall Great Gravity Clock, Choose Health, Kidscience, Gizmo City, Florida Ecoscapes, and an IMAX theater.

Fine Dining

Renowned chef Mark Militello will astonish your taste buds at Mark’s Las Olas. Try a Mango Scotch bonnet BBQ pizza and top it off with his famous Kit Cat chocolate dessert.

Fort Lauderdale Beaches

Unlike most of Florida’s major beachside communities, Fort Lauderdale’s beach is open and uncluttered, with world-class views azure waves, soft sand, and yachts passing out of the Bahia Mar yacht basin. At night, the low, serpentine beach wall is lit up with colored fiber-optic ribbons.

Fort Lauderdale’s beachfront is also very accommodating for pedestrian strolling, an offers easy access to a wide range of restaurants and shops. The beach is most crowded between Sunrise and Las Olas boulevards.

The Fort Lauderdale waterfront is home to the International Swimming Hall of Fame Museum and Aquatic Complex. Other Fort Lauderdale vacation attractions include the natural splendor of the Hugh Taylor Birch State Recreation Area, and the uniquely historical 35-acre Bonnet House estate.

Fort Lauderdale Beach

Fort Lauderdale Beach
Fort Lauderdale Beach

If you’re straight, you probably still think of Fort Lauderdale as a trashy town in Florida, full of drunk college-age guys leering at barely-dressed – and barely legal – women in dive bars where tequila shots cost a dollar. In fact, Fort Lauderdale is almost exactly the opposite: a trashy town in Florida full of drunk middle-aged guys leering at barely-dressed – and barely legal – men in dive bars where vodka drinks cost a dollar.

The transformation of Fort Lauderdale from spring break mecca to an assisted-living facility for gay alcoholics and their enablers is indicative of many aspects of gay guy culture.

Back in the 1980s, the good citizens of Fort Lauderdale, an enclave wedged between the banana republics of West Palm Beach and Little Havana, decided that enough was enough, and they were tired of making headlines only when drunk cheerleaders were raped by football teams every spring. Like any smart town or neighborhood looking for a way out of crass economic despair, they targeted a more upscale market.

Initially this didn’t work, because only an hour south of Fort Lauderdale lay South Miami Beach. South Beach was in the process of vacuuming away from Key West the kind of cute young gay guys that draw less cute but higher spending older gay guys to warm-weather tourist destinations. Key West doesn’t have much in the way of beaches, and even less in the way of fashion photography, so in retrospect it was probably doomed. But what goes around comes around, and eventually straight people figured out that South Beach was cool. When they started coming, hotels became more expensive, and the same cute gay guys who couldn’t afford Key West couldn’t afford South Beach either. So they migrated north to Fort Lauderdale.

Like South Beach and Key West, Fort Lauderdale is in Florida, so it’s warm in the winter, has palm trees, and doesn’t have anything in the way of bookstores, historic sites, or theater to make hedonistic tourists feel guilty for spending seven nights in a row at strip clubs. But unlike Key West, with its colorful past and darling Victorian houses, or South Beach with its colorful present and Art Deco hotels, Fort Lauderdale looks like it was sprayed out of a can by a team of developers in 1975. In Key West, a gay guy might pay $150 a night to stay in a Victorian guest house with gingerbread trim where Ernest Hemingway once beat someone up. In South Beach, a gay guy might pay $300 a night to stay in a bright aquamarine hotel where an elderly Jewish woman from Brooklyn once heard Henny Youngman ask the crowd to take his wife – please. But in Fort Lauderdale, that same gay guy might pay $215 a night to stay in a hotel that had once been, say, a dog kennel or a U Haul dealership.

Finally, as everyone knows Florida’s official state nickname is God’s Waiting Room. (The more common nickname of The Incompetent Election State is purely informal.) This holds for gay guys as much as for straight guys. Key West and South Beach draw their share of older gay toursts: chiefly gay guys from smaller towns in the former and gay guys from big East Coast cities in the latter. Key West is famous for its clothing-optional resorts where middle aged gay guys from Tulsa and Lansing can get pretty feisty and grabby when they’ve had a few pina coladas. South Beach has New Yorkers of a certain age with skin like raisins and sunglasses like bats’ wings who let it slip that they have a suite and a lot of cash. The genius of Fort Lauderdale is not just that it combines both these entertaining types of gay guys, but that it combines them with bars in strip malls,  which means those same gay guys have to drive from their clothing optional hotels and high-end suites, get drunk and leer, then drive home, making Fort Lauderdale by most standards the capital of mai tai-related car accidents involving powder-blue Chrysler Sebrings.

When gay guys talk about going to Fort Lauderdale, however, it’s best not to bring up criticisms. Gay guys love the place exactly because it’s warm and sandy and cheap enough for 20 year olds. Rather than ask them if their hotel was once a dog kennel or whether they got that bruise being jostled at the Denny’s early bird special, stick to polite questions like: how were the bars, did you ride bicycles on the beach, and were there are cute guys there. Gay guys will go on for hours, and you too may find yourself seduced by Fort Lauderdale’s charms.

Beach Information

Beach

Beach

Huntington City Beach is a 3.5-mile stretch of pristine shoreline. Popularly known as “Surf City,” Huntington Beach is home to the world famous municipal pier, and is a west coast surf mecca for more than 8 million annual visitors. Whether enjoying an evening at one of our fire pits or enjoying a day at a professional sporting event such as the U.S. Open of Surfing, “Surf City” offers a variety of exceptional, recreational, cultural, and entertainment opportunities.

Tulum beach

Tulum Beach

Tulum Beach

Welcome to the Siam Beach resort hotel on Koh Chang in Thailand

Siam Beach Resort

Siam Beach Resort

ISLAND SNAPSHOT

A lazy morning on Boracay’s world-famous White Beach. Photo courtesy of Gunther Deichmann.

White Beach

White Beach

I’d love to pack things and go to these places

i’ve been longing for holiday since months ago. a real holiday, more and less 1 or 2 weeks with real packing things and have lots of fun. crap! i browsed for holiday destination and my heart was crying even more cos i want it so bad! mom and dad asked me whether i needed holiday and mom didn’t mind to take me anywhere affordable to them. i said no because i don’t think it is the right time and i don’t deserve it now. i can’t go for holiday when my heart is not in it. this unfinished  thing needs to be finished first (hahaha, bad sentence!). but just let me share what i’ve got. places below are soooooo wonderful (haven’t been there though hihi)! my mouth is foaming, i’m serious.

Dreamland Beach. Bali

Dreamland Beach. Bali

Maui Beach Guide

Welcome to the Maui Beach Guide! Whether you’re planning a trip to Maui or are already here on the island, we created this guide just for you: the Maui Beach Guide is your complete, unbiased guide to every single beach on Maui. We’re currently completing the write-ups for many of the beaches on Maui, so if you don’t see the beach you’re interested in here, come back in a couple of days. We’ll have them all online very soon.

We’ve now added a map showing how to get to each beach, the weather forecast for the beach, and even aerial photographs of each of the beaches on Maui! So come on in, browse the beaches of Maui, and maybe check out our Webcams page to see the current weather on the coast of Maui.

Maui has dozens of fabulous beaches to satisfy everyone’s tastes. There are long, undeveloped sandy beaches, like Big Beach and Kealia, family-oriented beaches with lifeguards to protect you, like Kama’ole I, Kama’ole II, and Kama’ole III, as well as developed beaches with high-rise hotels right along the shore, like Ka’anapali Beach. Maui also is home to not one but two of the world’s best windsurfing beaches, Kanaha Beach Park and Ho’okipa Beach Park.

Kaanapali Beach

Kaanapali Beach

Maui has beaches for everyone, young and old, sunbathers to extreme sports enthusiasts. If you’re planning a trip to Maui, it only makes sense to check out the beaches first, and plan your lodging accordingly. If you already have booked your trip, you can use this site to find out which beaches are most convenient to your accomodations.

You can use the search box at the bottom of each page to find beaches that have certain features you want, or just look below to start browsing beaches by location!

We hope you enjoy using this website as much as we do creating it for you! If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to email us at admin@mauibeachguide.com.

Big Beach

Big Beach

Myrtle Beach Photos

Myrtle Beach Sunrise

Myrtle Beach Sunrise

Beach

Beach

Beach

On The Beach

On The Beach

On The Beach

Beach Directory — Oahu’s Guarded Beaches

Caution is advised especially during the Winter months when waves may reach heights of up to twenty-five feet plus. The best surfers in the world ask the lifeguards about conditions, you should, too. And, if in doubt, just stay out!

From June through September there are incidents of stinging limu (seaweed) along beach front near Laie. Heed postings and warnings about it.

Beach

Beach

Little Beach at Makena (Pu’u Ola’i Beach), Maui, Hawaii

Little Beach Hawaii

Little Beach Hawaii

Imaginary Shopping Spree, Special Valentine’s Edition

Hore Beach

Hore Beach

I’m going to be a dork this Valentine’s Day and basically state the obvious and earnest: the best presents are personal and poetic, with just a touch of the fanciful, whimsical and/or extravagant. (I think this is true of any kind of present, not just Valentine’s Day ones.) There’s nothing like a present that speaks to the shared experience between two people: it should acknowledge the burgeoning secret history of your relationship in some oblique way, and it should be specific to the point of quirkiness. The subtext of such a gift should say to the object of your affections: “I get you, I like you, right down to the weirdest little nook and cranny of your being that I know of thus far, which I speak to with this gift I am bestowing upon you.” It is impossible for me to suggest a present for anyone without knowing the two parties involved, and it is also near-impossible for me to say what I’d want for myself without knowing the specific dude involved in the equation. Of course, this is from someone who once got a dictionary in which my beau at the time pasted in little stories, pictures and notes in certain entries and I basically declared it the best, most epic, heart-melting Valentine’s Day present in my life — because it took time, it was personal and creative and it was completely beyond the realm of commercial possibility. I’m easy to please, no?

But, Kat, that is so impossible! What if I’ve only known so-and-so for only so long? What if we’re just seeing each other/newly dating/I like but I’m not sure if I love them? The Oprah in me suggests you use the day as an opportunity to clarify your intentions of what you want out of love and romance overall. The practical Midwesterner best friend in me suggests that you still can exercise creativity and thoughtfulness despite the limited emotional provenance of your relationship: I think travel is always a good thing, so a weekend away somewhere to a place that speaks to you both is a marvelous thing. (Personally I thought Prince Edward Island a lovely, secluded place, but left-of-center European capitals like Lisbon or Vienna are also nice.) Or just use the opportunity to get the hell out of town to anywhere. But again, the choice of place should speak to your shared sense of adventure — and isn’t any type of romance a shared adventure? But if you must give something, I also suggest privileging time and experience over material goods, but no matter what, such a gift should speak to the personal desires of the person you are giving such a gift to. Did they mention they are just starting to play guitar but have a roommate that never leaves the apartment? Book them some time at a rehearsal space. Do they like a particular writer? Signed first editions are always nice for literary types, I think. (Although, you know, I’ve never been so shocked at the price of something as learning what some signed first-editions will go for. Yikes!) The point is to pay attention to the person you’re buying for. (I think paying attention is a good, decent thing, no matter what level of dating you are at.) I always think this realm of gift-giving, the presents should have a sort of romantic garnish as well, as to demarcate the gift as romantic intent. The traditional trappings of romance should suffice here, although again, try to be a little more quirky here — peonies over roses, that kind of thing…unless the person in question loves roses. (But then, why not give them a membership at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, which has a stunning rose garden in the spring?)

All that said: the dude who buys me a pony will own my heart one day. Or, you know, a vintage Hermes horse blanket would be cool, too. (Kat)

HEARTS GALORE: DAISY ROCK GUITAR, MARC JACOBS TOTE, AND LOTS & LOTSA CHOCOLATE

Springtime – Monarch Beach

Monarch Beach

Monarch Beach

More Monarch Beach images>>>

Call today to order: 949-240-8721

The beaches of Tel Aviv – North

Like in San Sebastian and Barcelona, the meeting place between the city and the sea is the true heart of Tel Aviv, and any visit to Tel Aviv would be incomplete without seeing it. As one who grew up in the landlocked city of Jerusalem, the beaches are the first thing that comes to my mind when I think of Tel Aviv.

 
the meeting place between the city and the sea is the true heart of Tel Aviv, and any visit to Tel Aviv would be incomplete without seeing it.

The city boasts great city beaches, each unique in its ambiance and inhabitants. In the summer, the beach is the place to be, with cool water and a refreshing sea breeze. In the winter the weather shapes the water and sand into the best and most dynamic artwork in the city. This is the city boundary where nature can still be felt full force.

The weather in Tel Aviv is well suited for enjoying the beaches. During the summer heat it’s either A.C or the beach, but you can start tanning as soon as March. Even during December and January there are usually a few days when you can play Frisbee in shorts on the beach!! If you are coming from cold Europe you will find the Tel Aviv winter delightful. If you plan of coming to Tel Aviv, bring a bathing suit. All year-round.

The important thing to know about beaches in Tel Aviv is where and when to go. Different beaches attract different crowds and create different experiences. The following section shows listings of Tel Aviv’s beaches from north to south.

 
Different beaches attract different crowds.

Tel Baruch Beach – northernmost Tel Aviv Beach

This beach is actually outside the urban part of the city makes it unique in its natural and relatively unspoiled feel. The beach is wide stretched and sandy, well kept and has ample paid parking. It lingers from the Sede Dov airfield to the south up to the border of Hertzlia in the north. Tel Baruch area used to be notorious for its nighttime prostitution scene, but today it is a nice family oriented beach. This beach has been protected from development due to the small Sede Dov airfield located close by. Today the relocation of that airfield is at hand and there are plans for massive building which will change the face of the area for good. Come get it while it’s still natural.

Metzitzim Beach

The northernmost of Tel Aviv’s city beaches is probably its most urban feeling one. Tucked away near the old city port, and overlooking the Reading chimneys and Sede Dov airfield, Metzitzim has no pretensions of being a nature beach. Even so, this is one of the coolest beaches in Tel Aviv, the queen of the north. Metzitzim (peeping) beach was immortalized in an early seventies cult movie of the same name, and something of that wild bohemian feeling has stuck with the beach. The crowd is young and trendy, a good place to tan and look at beautiful people. There is a run down basketball course on the north side of the beach.

The religious, dog and Hiltons beaches Hof Hadatiyim, Hof Haclavim, Hof Hilton

Beach Sky
Beach Sky

Just south of here are three special and small beaches. The first is hof Hadatiyim (the religious beach) which offers separate bathing areas for men and women, day in day out. South of that is a narrow concrete lined beach known as hof haclavim (the dogs beach), where many people bring their dogs over. This is also a good beach for surfing and kayaking when the swell is up. This beach is also known as the Hilton beach. Good for meeting interesting people.

East Beach

This location is rather small with only Portable Toilets for our restrooms. However this beach offers 3 miles of undeveloped beach frontage. Parking is very limited and fills up early on sunny summer days. 

 

East Beach

East Beach

 

Location:   (Ninigret Conservation Area) Off East Beach Road, Charlestown Rhode Island 02813                                                            

Mailing Address: Burlingame State Park, 1 Burlingame State Park, Charlestown, Rhode Island 02813

Phone Numbers: 

East Beach (seasonal) – (401) 322-0450

Burlingame State Park (year round) – (401) 322-8910

Fax Number – (401) 322-3083

Directions from Providence:
Take Interstate Rte. 95 South, to Rte. 4 South, to Rte.1 South,
to East Beach exit in Charlestown.Smoke Free Beaches: This summer, Rhode Island’s state beaches are going smoke-free. Learn more.Park History: This park has a long and interesting history. for more information Click Here

Reservations: reservations are available through ReserveAmerica. To make a reservation Click Here

Reservation Regulations: Length of stay will be limited to four consecutive days. Following each stay, regardless of duration, a Three day interim period is mandatory for all members of camping party and equipment.

Third Monday in May through Labor Day, there is a four night minimum reservation. The minimum stay will be reduced to one night for reservations that are purchased between June 1st and October 31st for the current year.

April 15th through the third Monday in May and from Labor Day through October 31st the minimum stay will be reduced to one night for reservations.

Current Fees: Daily Parking: (May 1st through September 30th) Fee Increases Effective April 23, 2002

Monday through Friday:

Residents – $6.00 per car                Non-Residents – $12.00 per car

Resident Seniors – $3.00 per car       Non-Resident Seniors – $6.00 per car

Weekends and Holidays:

Residents – $7.00 per car                Non-Residents – $14.00 per car

Resident Seniors – $3.50 per car       Non-Resident Seniors – $7.00 per car

Bus Fees: None – (No bus parking allowed. Pick up and drop off only)

Season Passes: (Must be affixed to vehicle)

Beaches: (Allows entrance to all State Beaches)

Residents – $30.00                    Non-Residents – $60.00

Camping:

Resident Seniors – $15.00           Non-Resident Seniors – $30.00

Residents – $14.00 per night       Non-Residents – $20.00 per night

Barrier Beach Permit: (required for driving on any RI State Barrier Beach or access road). Permits are valid from     July 1st through June 30th of the following year and must be renewed.

East Beach

East Beach

Residents & Non-Residents [ based on where the vehicle is registered ]

Residents – $50.00 per year        Non-Residents – $100.00 per year

Operational Times: Season: April 15th through October 31st || Open 7:00 am to 11:00 pm.
 
Size: 174 Acres
Other Information:
50 Vehicles – 30 Day Use & 20 Camping on the Barrier Beach || 96 Vehicle Day Use Parking Area || 8 Portable Restrooms || Driving on Barrier Beaches requires a Barrier Beach Permit. || All camping vehicles must be self contained and have a Barrier Beach Permit.|| License required for non-resident shell fishing. || Lifeguard on duty 9:00 am to 6:00 pm. || No Animals Allowed || No Alcohol and no fires permitted.
 
Facilities and Activities:
Portable Restrooms | Parking | Beach | Campsites | Swimming | Fishing | Boating | Shell fishing |
Camping | Windsurfing.
Animals, Including Horses and Dogs:
No person shall bring onto any state bathing beach, East Beach/Ninigret
Conservation Area, or Burlingame picnic area any animal from April 1 through
September 30.

Firewood: The RI Department of Environmental Management urges all visitors to RI Campgrounds and Parks to help STOP THE SPREAD of nonnative insects and diseases.  Transporting firewood can also transport a number of insects and diseases that threaten the health of our forests.  Gypsy moth, emerald ash borer, and beech bark disease are just a few of the growing number of firewood hitchhikers that can kill large numbers of trees.

You can help by following these simple precautions:

  • Do not bring firewood with you when you camp.
  • Buy firewood when you reach your destination.
  • Don’t take any with you when you leave.  Burn it all or give it to other campers in the park.

  PROTECT RHODE ISLAND’S FORESTS – DON’T TRANSPORT FIREWOOD

All Trash Is Carry In Carry out Please!

Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort

Our Hotel

Welcome to the Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort, a new luxury property located on the world-acclaimed North Beach of Fort Lauderdale, Florida between the palm-shaded Boulevards of Sunrise and Las Olas.

Our sophisticated resort in south Florida, along with its 374 elegantly appointed studios and suites, offers the finest in modern comforts for its well-traveled guests…. more

Book Your Next Stay at Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort

 

Welcome to the Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort, a new luxury property located on the world-acclaimed North Beach of Fort Lauderdale, Florida between the palm-shaded Boulevards of Sunrise and Las Olas.

Our sophisticated resort in south Florida, along with its 374 elegantly appointed studios and suites, offers the finest in modern comforts for its well-traveled guests. Our hotel delivers the refined elegance of beach resort living with superior service, unique tropical amenities and upscale accommodations. An international style of appointments are blended with a secluded tropical getaway atmosphere to inspire travelers from around the world to experience the best Fort Lauderdale, Florida has to offer. Travel should take you places.™

Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort

Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort

The Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort Features Include

  • Luxurious Spa Q with facial and massage treatments
  • Poolside and beach cabanas
  • Sunrise terrace overlooking Florida’s Atlantic Ocean with the Infinity Pool
  • 25,000 square foot tropical enclave overlooking the Atlantic Ocean
  • Fitness Center by Precor® with private televisions and headphones
  • Beach/Yacht charter dining options
  • Premium meeting space with the latest technological features
  • Wireless and wired Internet services
  • Wedding and social event planning services
  • Executive conferencing and board meeting services
  • Personalized airport transportation services

The Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort Guest Suite Features

  • Upscale modern comforts with designer furnishings
  • 374 elegantly appointed studios, one, two, and three bedroom suites
  • Expansive private balconies with glass railings affording 100% ocean views
  • Twice daily housekeeping service
  • Equipped kitchens with stainless steel appliances and custom cabinetry
  • Italian marble bathrooms with separate glass-enclosed showers and deep soaking whirlpool tubs
  • Wired and high-speed Internet services
  • Hilton Serenity Beds
  • Crabtree & Evelyn® La Source Bath Amenities
  • 24-Hour In-Room dining

The Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort Neighborhood

  • Las Olas Boulevard shops, art galleries, restaurants and clubs
  • International Swimming Hall of Fame
  • Private Yacht Charters
  • Ocean recreation and sports activities
  • Championship Golf Courses – Exclusive use at a private course, Parkland Golf Club
  • Galleria Mall with upscale shops, art galleries and restaurants
  • Bonnet House
  • Broward County Center for Performing Arts
  • Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art
  • Fort Lauderdale’s Intracoastal Water Taxi Service
  • Fort Lauderdale’s Dolphin Stadium
  • Fort Lauderdale’s AA Institute of Culinary Studies
  • Sawgrass Mills Mall, Florida’s largest retail & entertainment center

Travel should take you places™.

Book Your Next Stay at Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort

An Interview with Gabriela Borges

Gabriela is in her junior year of undergraduate studies here at Duke. She is from Perth, Australia, and is majoring in Math and Economics.

1. Why did you decide to study in the States?

I think one of the things that’s most appealing about the American education system is the liberal arts education. Everywhere else that I applied required applying to a specific major program. I really like the idea of having an education that has breadth as well as depth, which is something that Duke prides itself on. On top of that, Duke’s one of the best-ranked universities in the world. You’re looking at a full dynamic of career opportunities and extracurricular opportunities aw well as the academics, which is important to me as well.

 

2. What did your friends and family think of your decision to study here?

My family was very supportive. They figured that Duke would be a really good opportunity. Friends were a little bit surprised, I guess, because not many people in my high school decided to study abroad. But everyone could see the benefits of a liberal arts education and everyone could see the opportunity of America.

 

3. So most Australian students stay in the country for college?

Yeah.

4. Have you lived in Australia all your life?

No – So, I was born in the Middle East, in a country called Oman, right by Dubai. And then I spent my childhood between Oman and Australia. Then I went to boarding school for my last two years of high school in England.

 

5. Why did your family go from Oman to Australia? Or were the always based in Australia?

Yeah, Australia’s always been home. My dad’s in Oman right now for work. He does oil and gas engineering.

 

6. Growing up, how would you characterize Oman as different from Australia?

Oman is a very unique society. It’s a very unique culture, as well. It’s a beautiful place – lots of beaches. So we spent a lot of time on the beach, beach barbecues, things like that. It’s very modern in the sense that I can wear whatever I want, women have a lot of rights, I can drive, etc. So it’s not at all backwards in a lot of ways, which is good – a lot of freedoms. But in terms of young people, there’s not much to do. There’s no grass, there’s no outdoors, there’s very little sport. So that’s one of the biggest differences, I think, between Oman and the UK/Australia in how you spend your time.

 

7. As an Australian, how would you say that spending so much time in Oman has impacted you?

I think there are obviously advantages and disadvantages to having lived in a lot of places. One of the biggest advantages is I feel that it’s broadened my perspective on the world. The majority of my friends back home have never even left the state, let alone the country. And so, being able to have these firsthand experiences in the Middle East, which is on people’s minds due to oil and its emerging economy, and now England and America – it’s very much a big picture perspective, which I think helps me a lot with relating to people and working with team dynamics and understanding diversity better. Diversity is something that Australia has certainly had to deal with, now as well as in the past, because it’s almost a cultural melting pot in the same way that America is. We have a lot of people come in from Southeast Asia and further abroad.

 

8. When you came to Duke from boarding school, what were some of the changes you noticed besides the actual educational system?

So, culturally, it’s not that different because they’re both very Western cultures. The biggest thing I noticed was the drinking age – that has a huge effect on the social life. And, of course, Durham is a little bit different than Cambridge, which is where I was – a little bit slower. A lot of the things that you do on the weekend after school happen on campus here as opposed to out in the city. But, yeah, I think the drinking age has a really huge effect. I was really used to going out to pubs and bars with friends on the weekends, and you can’t really do that here. It’s very different. And Greek life, too, I guess. Greek life is the other thing that I’d point out, in terms of culture. I was completely unfamiliar with that sort of system. And it’s good, as a freshman, because you’re exposed to it, but you’re not dominated by it in the sense that you don’t rush until your second semester. But that was something that I was still unfamiliar with and surprised by.

 

9. And when you’re here at Duke, what do you miss most about Australia?

I miss home food a lot – I miss home cooking. On top of that, Australians are known for being very laidback and chill. I miss the beach. And I miss the nightlife. Perth isn’t the biggest city – it’s got a population of about 2 million – but there seems more to do than in terms of shopping, arts and entertainment, going out etc.

 

Scarborough Beach
Scarborough Beach

10. How do you think Americans view Australia?

I get a lot of comments about spiders and scorpions and dangerous creatures. And I guess that’s part of the  Steve Irwin stereotype– completely wild. The beach is pretty representative, given that a lot of the population lives on the coast. What else…shrimp on the barbie is a big one, Outback Steakhouse. These stereotypes are true to an extent, but they’re also a little bit limited.

11. So here on campus, what organizations are you involved with?

I’m really proud of my position as Vice President of Programming for Duke University Union. It’s a lot of fun – I get to play a part and inspire some of the really exciting programming we have that goes on here. Everything from the major speakers program to the radio station, to campus-wide cocktail parties and big-name bands. It’s a great team to work with, as is the International Association, for which I’m Directory of Marketing– slightly different events, but still really great, really fun programming that brings different groups of people together. And I’m also part of the Duke Sailing Team.

 

12. And in your past three years at Duke, do you feel that you’ve changed any?

Yeah, of course I have. I think, regardless of where you are, that time from 18 to 21, that’s a huge time of growing up and learning a lot about yourself.

 

13. Do you have any plans after graduation?

Not specifically. Ideally, find a job. I’m a little bit flexible as to where I want to work. I think I’d still be up to travel a little more before I go back to Perth and settle down – if I do end up going back to Perth to settle down! I think it’s nice that I have options and I don’t have to be limited by my geographic location. I’m excited to explore the possibilities.

Miami Beach Photos

Miami Beach

Miami Beach

POSTCARDS FROM THE Leo’s BEACH

When Leo diCaprio landed on a serene Thai island, was it a countdown to the end of Utopia, just like in “The Beach”? Following a storm of controversy, the sand is left with the prospect of millions more footprints upon the world’s most perfect beach.

I FOUND IT! THE PERFECT BEACH. Not just any sun-bleached shore, but THE BEACH. Set alongside a blue lagoon, in the perfect bay. Shielded from prying eyes by sheer cliffs on all sides. The ultimate beach. Sun, sand and sea. Paradise.

Until recently, that is. Ever since Maya Bay, in Thailand’s Phi Phi island chain near Phuket, was anointed The Beach in the 20th Century Fox film starring Leonardo DiCaprio, the spot has been anything but peaceful. And the perfect beach happens to be in a national park, prompting allegations that officials are selling out Thailand’s natural heritage to a rapacious Hollywood.

Meantime, islanders disgruntled over missing out on a slice of the film’s $40-million budget have clashed with islanders lucky enough to be on the payroll.

Swamped by the tidal wave of controversy and hype, however, is the movie itself – and what it will mean for Thailand. 

The film is based on British author Alex Garland’s 1997 bestseller, also called The Beach. A kind of children’s classic for backpacking hippies, the engaging utopian satire tells the story of a backpacker weary of overrun tourist spots in Thailand.

The chain-smoking protagonist, played by DiCaprio, follows a secret map to paradise among the palms, beside a huge pot field, and a blissful commune of like-minded individualists. They spend the days singing, fishing and smoking mounds of marijuana. Until it all falls apart.

To discriminating minds, the plot may sound far-fetched, inane fantasy. In fact, that was Garland’s intention. He based the book on his own Asia wanderings and meant it as commentary on the folly of smug, young tourists, who call themselves travelers – a special breed more sensitive to the local cultures and locations they trample over.

beautiful beach

beautiful beach

CONTROVERSY ASIDE, “The Beach” most certainly will lure many more backpackers to Thailand, and Asia, for the same thrills Garland parodies in his book. “That would worry me,” he admits. “But it’s all speculation until the movie comes out. I don’t see Leo fans jumping on planes and coming to Thailand.” But that is the hope of Thai officials, who are already looking far beyond the estimated $13-million-plus in direct spending the film has injected into the economy. “Movies have always played a major role in promoting destinations,” says tourism chief Seree. “In spite of controversies regarding portrayal of facts or fiction, movies create images that stay in people’s minds.”

The Beach is already proving its drawing power. It lured the Japanese Leo followers, Maya, and countless more here, just like the paparazzi and me. We came for the hype. The buzz. Leo. Later, others will follow the plot-line of the book, of the movie. Looking for the ultimate beach. Maya is already home in Ko Samui, where she works as a healer. In the end she passed Leo’s crystal to a minor member of the cast. “It was supposed to reach Him,” she says. Shimomura is banging out her book, and the Thai students are busy updating their website. Leo will soon leave and move on to other projects, different fans, more hysteria.

At Maya Bay, crews are already putting things back the way they were, even replanting the weeds. Islanders are debating what to do with a temporary dock and other improvements; most want to keep them. Meanwhile, Thailand grapples with the role backpackers play in a society that is so much more Westernized than most in Asia. When Lonely Planet’s Cummings was interviewed last week by the Nation newspaper, he was asked: “How do you see the growth of the backpacker cult in the past years?” That’s how it appears to many Thais, this conga-line of rich, foreign kids pretending to be poor that snakes through every year. But they don’t build the backpacker hovels, or set the rules. Ultimately, that is a matter for Thais.

Likewise the hoopla over the film. If laws were violated, that is up to a Thai judge to decide. And despite an environmental controversy that split ecology groups, many concede the battle may lead to refinement of vague areas of park law. As to the Phi Phi islands, peace and quiet won’t return any time soon. Not with customers queuing up at the Rolling Stoned. And certainly not after the Christmas release of The Beach. By then, Garland’s book will feature Leo’s mug on the cover – bringing The Beach to the attention of millions more. Some of whose footprints, for better or worse, are bound to appear in Maya Bay.

Eratap Beach Resort, Vanuatu

Eratap Beach

Eratap Beach

Eratap Beach Resort is a brand new 2008 resort built just inland of Eratap Beach. It is on a peninsula with the ocean on one side and a protected lagoon on the other.

This is a luxury resort and about as isolated and private as you can get on the island of Efate. The resort has it all, from honeymoon suites to spas, swimming pool, soft clean white sand beach, well developed coral reefs to snorkel on, kayaks. The sea side villas are fan cooled with sea breezes.

The builder/owner/managers are Tony and Louisa. Tony is a keen surfer, fisherman and environmentalist and has set up facilities at Eratap Beach Resort to suit these tastes. There are two resort skiffs available free of charge to guests, kayaks, and you can swim, snorkel and even surf right off the beach.

When I first walked into one of the waterfront villas I was really impressed with the rooms – large, well laid out, furnished and decorated perfectly. Each villa is divided into “pavilions” – the one bedroom villa has a bedroom/bathroom pavillion and a lounge pavillion. There are one bedroom, two bedroom and three bedroom villas available – all absolute waterfront.

My first thought was that they had spend a fortune on an interior decorator, but Louisa said that she and Tony did all the planning, found and bought all the furnishings, and set up the rooms themselves. This is one extremely talented young couple, and they are professional, attentive and gracious hosts as well.

Families with children are welcome at Eratap Beach Resort. Tony and Louisa have set up special “family weeks” when families are encouraged to come with their kids (write to them for dates). During family weeks there are a whole range of activities that will appeal to both kids and their parents.

One of the highlights of Erakor Beach Resort – for kids and parents – is a boat trip out to Castaway Island. This is one of the most beautiful tiny reef islands in Vanuatu – a small wilderness with a vast white sand beach and sparkling lagoon waters.