Thursday, September 16, 2010

GPSmyCity.com is looking for travel articles...

GPSmyCity.com is looking for informative and high quality travel articles in the following areas:

Travel Stories - first person account travel stories related to destination discovery, road trips, or short getaways with the assistance of smart phone travel apps and/or GPS navigator.

How-To Guide - guide on using travel app on smart phone or GPS navigator for travel planning and reservation, trip navigation, and destination discovery.

Travel App Review - first hand user-experience-based in-depth review of travel app. Each article must provide a detailed review of one travel app with screen shots of the app in action. The review must be based on your first hand experience in using the app in a real situation.

They pay $50 per article within 30 days after publication.

For more information, check out the writer's guidelines at GPSmyCity.com or email at travelarticle @ gpsmycity.com.

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Tuesday, September 07, 2010

Earthquake hits Christchurch, New Zealand



The people of Christchurch, New Zealand got a heck of a lot more than they bargained on this weekend. Instead of enjoying the first few quiet days of Spring in Christchurch, enjoying the city's café culture, gothic buildings, and the public gardens full of color and new life, they were unexpectedly awakened on Saturday morning by a bouncing 7.1 earthquake.

The ornate clock on the Victoria Street Tower is frozen at 4.36, the time that the earthquake first hit, savagely shaking Christchurch and waking up its residents, throwing them around.

But Cantabrians are hardy souls, not prone to hysteria or panic, and earthquake shakes are not uncommon. So while many took cover under tables and beds or doorways, many more just stayed in bed, listening to the sounds of falling objects and waiting for it to end. And end it did, for all of four or five minutes.

But then it came again.

And this time, no one remained in bed.

This time, everyone knew that this wasn’t ‘just another shake’.



But there is an upside to this disaster. Its timing (in the early hours of Saturday morning) meant that we are only counting broken building and not broken bodies. Had it been during the day or evening, when the city was alive with people, it could easily have been the other way around.

And as with any disaster, the community spirit which, sadly, is often missing in everyday life, came immediately to the forefront. After the earthquake’s initial violent shakes subsided, people started gathering in the streets, checking on neighbours to make sure they were okay and helping each other out.

And when daylight broke, it was an almost perfect Spring day, perhaps Mother Nature’s way of apologizing for the mess it was creating.

Two days and eighty aftershocks (and still counting) later, the true extent of the damage is only just starting to sink in. The central city looks a little like a war zone, complete with military helicopters flying overhead and police and soldiers standing guard at street corners.

It’s a most unsettling sight.

Tourism New Zealand, by the way, offers updated information for anyone planning on traveling to Christchurch in the coming weeks.

(originally posted on Perceptive Travel Blog)

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