HOT SPRINGS, Va. – With many people staying indoors and limiting travel due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Forbes is stepping in to help. Forbes writer Peter Taylor compiled a list of 10 best places to travel and Bath County's own Hot Springs made the list. Hot Springs was listed as a safe area to visit with a total of 246 coronavirus cases, 8 total deaths and no new cases in the past week. With its heated mineral water, you'll be able to loosen up after a whole year of being cooped up in the house. For history enthusiasts, Hot Springs is also home to the Omni Homestead Resort which 23 U.S. Presidents have stayed at in the past 200 years. After a relaxing day, you can go on a hike or bike riding right outside of the downtown area. Below is Taylor's full Top 10: Carson City, Nevada Vancouver, Washington Camden, Maine Branson, Missouri Natchez, Mississippi Santa Fe, New Mexico Apalachicola, Florida Terlingua, Texas ...
Cabo Verde is to invest around €8.2 million in a five-year programme of tourism and environmental upgrading of rural villages to diversify its tourism offer beyond the usual sun and beach. The creation of this programme was approved by a resolution of the cabinet meeting of 25 January, to which Lusa had access on Wednesday, in which the government said that the Covid-19 pandemic caused a virtual paralysis of tourism in 2020 in the archipelago, conditioning the national strategy, which aimed at the target of one million annual tourists. "With the discovery of vaccines, the pandemic is expected to retreat in 2021 and return to normalcy, with economic growth resuming, especially in tourism. From this point of view, it is very appropriate to accelerate the diversification of tourist segments (…), creating more opportunities in rural areas," according to the resolution, which recalled that tourism guarantees 25% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), with a record of almost 820,000 ...
Each time Blue Monday comes around, travel agencies seize the opportunity to market escapist holiday deals to beach destinations or cruises to sunnier climes. The third Monday of January has become known as 'Blue Monday', the day of the year people are supposed to feel most depressed. But it was not a medical expert or mental health charity that termed it as such. Blue Monday was dreamt up by now-defunct holiday agency Sky Travel in 2005 as a way to sell more holidays. Each year, travel companies continue to piggyback on the PR stunt with offers for serotonin-boosting winter sun breaks and wellness trips. What is Blue Monday? Nearly 15 years ago, UK-based Sky Travel commissioned a former university lecturer to work out what is the most depressing day of the year as a way to market winter holidays . Cliff Arnall came up with a 'mathematical equation' to find the bleakest day by combining weather data, amounts of debt, time passed since Christmas, motivatio...
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