OOZcollections :: A Portfolio of World's Influential Projects

April 5, 2009

PirateColony

Filed under: Design, Innovation, Lifestyle, islands — Vivian Chen @ 7:01 PM
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A NEW UNDERTAKING: a planbook dedicated to improving the quality of living http://piratecolony.wordpress. com

PirateColony ~ Theme Party Island – the next level of leisure and celebration

the planbook will tackle subjects such as: food, water, sanitation, electricity and energy, transportation, lodging, leisure activities, landscape design, geography, building design and efficiency, clothing/fashion style, entertainment, etc…

http://www.piratecolony.net

March 7, 2009

Caribbean Snorkeling

Filed under: Hotels and Resorts, PLACES, islands, water — Vivian Chen @ 4:34 PM
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source: forbestraveler.com

http://www.forbestraveler.com/adventure/caribbean-snorkeling-spots-story.html?partner=alert

 

 Puerto Rico   © Stephen Frink/ Getty Images

Puerto Rico © Stephen Frink/ Getty Images

  • San Salvador, Bahamas (Riding Rock Inn Resort and Marina)
  • La Cordillera Nature Reserve, Puerto Rico (Spread Eagle II)
  • Isla Mona Nature Reserve, Puerto Rico (Tour Marine)
  • Anegada, British Virgin Islands
  • Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles (Renee Snorkel Trips)
  • Tobago Cays, St. Vincent and the Grenadines (Tobago Cays Marine Park)
  • Whale Sharks, Isla Contoy, Mexico (Delfin Diving)
  • Shark Ray Alley, Ambergris Caye, Belize (Hol CHan Marine Reserve)
  • Buck Island, St. Croix (Buck Island Reef National Monument)
  • Dominica

See our slideshow of Best Caribbean Snorkeling.

 

BEST CARIBBEAN SNORKELING

Greg Breining February 6, 2009

©Nikolas Konstantinou/ GettyImages

Who needs to scuba dive?

Snorkeling is a terrific way to see your Caribbean travel destination from a new perspective. Slipping beneath the surface to swim through corals and spy on reef fish helps a tourist gain some appreciation of the natural world beyond the clubs and casinos.

For such rich rewards, the sport doesn’t ask for much in return. For starters, it requires little skill or athleticism—only the ability to feel comfortable in water. “You don’t even have to swim to snorkel,” says Renee Leach, who guides snorkel tours onBonaire in the Netherlands Antilles. “You float. You can’t sink.” In fact, Leach has guided snorkelers as young as 3 and as old as 93, and has pulled nonswimmers around by the hand.

“If our guests are not experienced snorkelers we go straight to a shallow area where we ‘learn’ to snorkel in waist-deep water and test out the equipment so even people who actually can not swim can participate in the snorkeling,” says Elena Humphrey, who guides trips to Puerto Rico’s La Corillera Nature Reserve.

 “No certification,” says Luis Saez, a dive instructor who manages a guide service that takes snorkelers among the islands of La Cordillera. “It’s something the whole family can enjoy. It’s something really simple to do.”

Not only does it take less training and skill than scuba, it also takes less equipment—a real advantage for a traveler. You can pack a mask, snorkel and flippers in a tote bag. If you don’t have gear or left it at home, you can usually pick up a mask and snorkel at a local dive shop for under $20. (More, of course, if you want good-quality stuff.)

Compared with diving, says Karen Moise, part owner of a Nature Island Dive shop in Dominica, “it’s not as cumbersome. But you can see a lot of stuff, a lot of marine life.” 

And if you don’t have gear and don’t want to buy any, simply sign up for a tour that provides the gear. The key to a good guided experience is finding guides who are involved in pointing out interesting stuff underwater and then, back at the surface, explaining what you’ve seen, Moise says. 

As easy as it is to go snorkeling, some places provide a better experience  than others. Even in the Caribbean—as close to ideal snorkel waters as you can imagine—some sites stand out.  What makes these great snorkeling spots? Whether you plan to spend every waking hour in the water, or only paddle around for a single afternoon, it comes down to four things: clear water (often with visibility approaching 100 feet), mild currents (or none at all), abundant aquatic life (especially healthy corals and diverse reef fish), and the chance to get away from the crowds.

Some of our best Caribbean snorkeling spots are no farther away than a public beach or park. On the island of Dominca, the bizarre bubbling volcanic formation known as Champagne is easily accessed from shore. On the island of San Salvador in the Bahamas, some of the best diving, including a 261-foot shipwreck in 20 feet of water, lies just offshore from the Riding Rock Inn Resort and Marina. 

Others spots are a bit harder to reach. You’ll need a boat—at the very least a kayak—to snorkel La Cordillera Nature Reserve in Puerto Rico. And to explore fabulous Mona Island off the west end of Puerto Rico is a major expedition. You’ll need not only a boat but at least a couple of days. 
 
When it comes to undersea life, some of our sites have a bonus. For example, Hol Chan Marine Reserve on Ambergris Caye in Belize boasts not only coral and small fish, but abundant rays and sharks as well. Mexico’s Isla Contoy stands out for giving snorkelers a chance to swim with whale sharks, the world’s largest fish.

And if snorkeling with a fish that stretches 30 feet doesn’t cast your vacation experience in a new light, nothing will. Here are our picks for the Caribbean’s best snorkeling stops.

January 7, 2009

Dutch Plan To Build A New Island

Filed under: Design, Innovation, islands, water — Vivian Chen @ 12:07 AM
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source: International Herald Tribune

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/12/10/asia/testrtrisland11.php

Tulip island in the Netherlands as it would appear in a satellite image. (Innovation Platform)

Tulip island in the Netherlands as it would appear in a satellite image. (Innovation Platform)

AMSTERDAM: The Netherlands wants to redraw the map of Europe – literally.

Dubai built Palm Island. Now the world leaders in land reclamation are considering an island in the shape of a tulip to fight overcrowding and shield the coastline from the rising sea.

Supporters of the scheme say it will give Dutch companies a chance to showcase water management skills that are increasingly in demand due to global warming, but critics say the plan will be prohibitively expensive and harm delicate ecosystems.

While a poll in October by the research company TNS NIPO with the Red Cross showed that the Dutch were more afraid of flooding than a terrorist attack, many have a strong faith in Dutch expertise and technology to protect them from the water.

The Dutch Parliament has asked a commission on coastal development to look into the idea of building islands in the North Sea that could be used for housing, farming or a nature reserve, while at the same time helping to protect the coast.

“People live on top of each other in the Netherlands,” said Joop Atsma, the Chritian Democrat politician who sponsored a parliamentary motion on building in the North Sea. “We are hungry for land. A huge area is needed for building.”

Atsma says high land prices threaten the country’s position as one of the world’s exporter of agricultural products, and make a 100,000 hectare, or 247,000 acre, island potentially worth €10 billion, or $14.69 billion – enough of a return to fund the project.

A government body set up to promote innovation has drawn up proposals for an island about 50 kilometers, or 31 miles, long, sparking fierce debate which inspired one blogger to joke that a cannabis leaf may be a more suitable shape than the tulip on the formal plans.

“The Netherlands has a lot of know-how in terms of water,” said Maria Henneman of Innovation Platform. “It exports this knowledge but it is missing out on innovation. More experiments are needed in the fields of alternative energy, tides and wind.”

“Of course it is an expensive investment but with current technology a lot is possible.”

The Netherlands, literally the Low Countries, has a long history of pioneering technology to help it claw back land from the sea and fight recurrent flooding.

U.S. officials sought advice from Dutch experts after floods devastated New Orleans in 2005, and Dutch companies have been involved in coastal developments worldwide.

The Dutch company Boskalis developed techniques during the Zuiderzee and Delta projects to become the world’s largest dredger, helping reclaim land for Hong Kong’s airport and now working on Oman’s “Wave” project, a huge resort added to the coast.

Dubai’s island, which juts into the shallow waters of the Gulf in the shape of a palm tree, was built by the Dutch marine contractor Van Oord using more than 100 million cubic meters, or 3,500 cubic feet, of sand.

“I live far below sea level and I have never had wet feet at home,” Atsma said. “So much can be done with water management.”

One of the world’s most densely populated countries, with 16 million people living in an area about half the size of Scotland, a quarter of the Netherlands is below sea level and lies on the floodplains of three big rivers.

In 1932, work was completed on a mammoth 32-kilometer dike that closed the Zuiderzee off from the North Sea and allowed 1,650 square kilometers, or 640 square miles, of land to be drained.

After devastating floods in 1953 killed more than 1,800 people, the Dutch started one of the world’s largest construction schemes, the Delta project, to raise dikes, close sea estuaries and build a huge storm-surge barrier.

“Funny shapes like tulips, clogs and windmills are a good way to start a debate, but they should not be considered as realistic,” said Bert Groothuizen, spokesman for Van Oord, the builder of the Dubai palm island.

While Dubai’s Gulf rarely sees waves above 2 meters, or 6.5 feet, high, the North Sea is much stormier with waves of up to 10 meters.

“The seaward protection must be stronger than in the Arabian Gulf which means that construction costs are greater,” he said, adding it might be more realistic to extend Dutch beaches into the sea or move the main airport.

That idea was already floated after a plane crashed into an apartment block in Amsterdam in 1992, but it was shelved due to cost and environmental concerns. Nature-lovers have also scuttled plans to drain more land onshore.

Given rising sea levels, Van der Veen said it made more sense to protect existing land than build a new island.

July 14, 2008

The Private Islands Blog

Filed under: Lifestyle, islands — Vivian Chen @ 3:24 PM
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Thank you Cheyenne Morrison for providing the insightful information on private islands.

The Private Islands Blog

June 28, 2008

Private Island World

Filed under: Lifestyle, islands — Vivian Chen @ 11:25 PM
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Only limited few other comparisons have more control than having one’s own private empire. Seclusion and exclusivity are beyond the value of price tags.

World’s Most Expensive (Exclusive?) Private Islands

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