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Samui Training Center Opens First-of-its-kind It Training Facility
Earlier this week, Training Center spokesperson and technology veteran Paul Valente announced the opening of the fledgling training giant's IT training facility. The facility will initially offer instructor-led vendor-approved courses geared towards obtaining popular IT certifications such as MCSE, and CompTIA Linux+, but will later extend to include seminars on IT outsourcing and executive level business communications. Because of its remote, tropical location, the opening of the facility marks the company's first pioneering step in developing the world's growing travel-to-train IT training and certification market."We've all seen the same market indicators," said Valente when asked about the company's unique approach, "we have just chosen a different response." According to Valente, in an industry where careers look perhaps less attractive and more challenging than they once were, IT training companies have focused on trying to cut the cost of training an individual student to an absolute minimum, in order to remain competitive.According to Valente this has resulted in there being "simply nothing left worth buying" from your typical "McDonald's brand" IT training vendor. "Why not just buy a book?" says Valente, bluntly. While web based training methods entice the student to make a purchase thinking they will get more for less, unfortunately all too often the huge cost savings afforded the training provider do not find their way to the student and the IT student's value to business fails to increase significantly as a result of their online training.As businesses race to outsource their technology initiatives and the IT training industry focuses on web and online based delivery methods, it may seam strange that Training Center is offering instructor-led courses targeted at students from all hemispheres looking to boost their technology careers and travel."What STC offers is an educational experience," says Valente, "a chance to expand technical ability and value, create business and technology

Installing a Cork Floor
<p>Sometimes tile just doesn't seem right for a kitchen. Maybe the previous owner laid down really ugly tile would look appropriate only at a Mardi Gras party, and you would like to break from the past with a different flooring solution. Maybe new hardwood wouldn't look right when matched up against the old hardwood present throughout the rest of the house. Maybe it is time to investigate the possibility of a cork floor. Kate and I just put a cork floor in our kitchen, and this article will walk through our decision and the installation process.</p> <p>Cork is a natural and renewable flooring resource that grows on trees. It is durable, yet soft and warm under foot. It is available in a number of patterns and colors, and new tile and plank designs literally make installation a snap. We chose cork because it looks great and adds a unique touch to our living space. I am fairly certain that we are the only people we know with a cork floor, and that either means we're cool and unique or just a couple of weirdos with bad taste. I am crossing my fingers in hope that my sister doesn't decide to comment on this post, because she'd probably lean toward calling me a "weirdo".</p> <p>Specifically, we chose the Santiago pattern from the APC Natural Earth series of cork floor products. This particular product floats over the subfloor and snaps together with the aid of a tapping block and rubber mallet. The planks are approximately 36" by 12" and come six to a box. We didn't choose this pattern blindly: we received samples from <a href="http://fastfloors.com">FastFloors.com</a>, and our sales guy, Thomas Zoellner, was very speedy in getting us squared away. We highly recommend getting the samples, as the colors vary quite a bit between the screen and the real product.</p> <h3>Shopping List</h3> <table> <tr> <th>Product</th> <th>Quantity</th> <th>Link/Photo</th> </tr> <tr> <td>1/4 inch plywood sheets</td> <td>4 Sheets</td> <td></td> </tr> <tr> <td>APC 5mm Cork Underlayment</td> <td>1 Roll</td> <td>(Click the cork below, choose "Accessories" and then "Underlayment")</td> </tr> <tr> <td>Natural Cork Earth Series Santiago Planks</td> <td>6 Boxes</td> <td><a href="http://www.fastfloors.com/catalog/productline.asp?productlineid=10411&productid=3497"><img src="http://renovatekc.com/images/P092M_Santiago_Matte.jpg" border="0"></a></td> </tr> <tr> <td>Natural Cork Tapping Block</td> <td>1 (but we wish we had two)</td> <td>(Click the cork above, choose "Accessories" and then "Tools"</td> </tr> <tr> <td>Rubber Mallet</td> <td>1</td> <td><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000KKQXV0?ie=UTF8&tag=ren-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=B000KKQXV0"><img border="0" src="http://renovatekc.com/images/11aLAAHd1vL._SL160_.jpg"></a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=ren-20&l=as2&o=1&a=B000KKQXV0" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></td> </tr> <tr> <td>Pull Bar</td> <td>1</td> <td><a href="http://www.tools4flooring.com/crain-561-pull-bar-p-335.html"><img src="http://renovatekc.com/images/puller_bar.jpg" border="0"></a></td> </tr> <tr> <td>Pergo Spacer Blocks</td> <td>1 Package</td> <td><a href="http://www.1aflooring.com/ProductDetails.aspx?pid=PRGSPACERS">These little blue things</a>, also available at Home Depot</td> </tr> <tr> <td>2x4</td> <td>2</td> <td></td> </tr> <tr> <td>Circular Saw</td> <td>1</td> <td></td> </tr> </table> <h3>Preliminary activities</h3> <p> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/2384677800/" title="Cork at Rest by timfreund, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3253/2384677800_e8b9e52afd_t.jpg" width="100" height="75" alt="Cork at Rest" style="float: left;"/></a> The absolute first thing that must be done: rest. Specifically, unwrap the cork planks and let them acclimate to the home for at least three days before proceeding. We don't know what will happen if you skip the wait, but it surely includes doom and madness. Since cork is a natural product, it has a tendency to shrink and swell with changes in temperature and humidity, so this acclimation period gives the product a chance to ready itself for life in your particular home and helps to prevent buckling or gaps in the floor at a later date.</p> <p> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/2395000686/" title="Tacking the Underlay by timfreund, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2059/2395000686_59cde31128_m.jpg" width="240" height="180" alt="Tacking the Underlay" style="float: right;"/></a> While the cork planks rest, the 1/4 inch plywood can cover the floor boards of the entire room, and the cork underlayment should be tacked down in any place that will be covered by the cork planks in the finished room. We did not extend the underlayment to each wall in our kitchen, because we thought it would be a bit extravagant to lay the cork underneath the cabinets. The cabinets will rest on a much more economical and durable 5/8 inch piece of plywood. That extra 5/8 inch allows the cabinets to rest at the same level as the finished cork floor, which allows us to do neat things like add and remove a dishwasher as we please.</p> <p>The installation guide suggests starting with the longest run of flooring as the first row. From there, installation is like reading a book: left to right, top to bottom. The guide suggests using spacers to leave a half inch gap between the cork plank and the wall, but our longest run was parallel with our not yet installed cabinets. That left us with nothing to brace the spacers against, so we temporarily tacked a 2x4 in place where the cabinets would go.</p> <h3>Now to install some cork</h3> <p> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/2394168351/" title="The First Cork Plank by timfreund, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2186/2394168351_307623e03f_m.jpg" width="180" height="240" alt="The First Cork Plank" style="float: left;" /></a> These planks require no glue, no nails, no fastener of any kind. The very first plank goes in like butter. Remember to orient the plank so that the long edge is parallel to longest edge of your room. Set it on the floor in the correct location, and walk away. You're done, you have successfully installed the first piece. Congratulations.</p> <p>The second plank butts up against the first along the narrow edge. The tongue and groove mechanism should partially engage, leaving a gap of about one eighth to one quarter of an inch between the surfaces of the two planks. Now is the time to grab the tapping block and rubber mallet: place the tapping block at the edge of the second piece, and tap the piece into place. The two pieces should be snug when you are done tapping. Make sure to orient the tapping block correctly, and always use a rubber mallet to avoid destroying the tapping block. I was too lazy to get a mallet when we started, and I cracked the plastic binding on the back of the block. We also found that by improperly orienting the block on the plank, the edge of the plank can be damaged. Get two blocks, you'll be glad you did.</p> <table> <tr> <td>Bad Tapping Block Position</td><td><img src="http://renovatekc.com/images/improper_tapping_block.jpg"></td> <tr> <tr> <td>Good Tapping Block Position</td><td><img src="http://renovatekc.com/images/proper_tapping_block.jpg"></td> <tr> </table> <p>When installing the second and subsequent rows, you will be tapping a plank in to two neighboring planks. I recommend tapping the short side in first, and then tapping in the long side. I have no scientific research supporting this method, but it sure seemed to work for us.</p> <p>Planks can be cut with a circular saw or a table saw. We had a half plank left over at the end of the first row, and that provided a great start to the second row that allowed us to offset the joints as we continued the installation. Small pieces were cut using a drywall keyhole saw. Not the most appropriate tool, indeed, but when your only handheld saw is a keyhole saw, everything starts to look like drywall.</p> <h3>Wrapping up</h3> <p> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/2394172743/" title="Cork is Done! by timfreund, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3051/2394172743_19e2930895_m.jpg" width="240" height="180" alt="Cork is Done!" style="float: right;"/></a> The floor went in without any trouble, and it seems to clean up fairly easily with a dust mop. We haven't yet sealed the floor, but we would like to do so since the kitchen is a high traffic area prone to spills. Large quantities of water or other liquid will cause the planks to swell, so we will need to clean up spills quickly. Now if you will excuse us, we're off to deal with a cork of the bottle stopping variety.</p>
Rapture Came and We Were Left Behind
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/2375892511/" title="Splotchy Red by timfreund, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2009/2375892511_b10c8dbbc0_m.jpg" width="240" height="180" alt="Splotchy Red" style="float: left;" /></a>Kate and I are no strangers to colorful tastes in home decor. Shortly after we met, we spent a weekend painting her apartment bedroom electric blue while I pinky swore that regardless of what happened to the relationship, I'd help her to paint it back in a year when the lease was up. She didn't need to enforce the pinky swear. I gladly helped her to paint the apartment back, but it was a little sad painting a room for bright blue to blah beige just so someone else could move in.</p> <p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/2394163411/" title="Trim Painting Pro by timfreund, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3020/2394163411_4240b7749a_m.jpg" width="180" height="240" alt="Trim Painting Pro" style="float: right;" /></a> While choosing colors for the bungalow, we had the idea to use warm colors in the public areas, and cool colors in the private areas of the home. The way things worked out, we were supposed to have a red kitchen. Rapture was the exact color name. We tried, we really did, but it just wasn't working out. The rapture came and went, and we were left behind with a splotchy red paint job. After four coats of paint, I would have bet we were in for another four before we would reach anything resembling decent results, so we primed it and repainted. The color we ended up with isn't warm as we originally planned, but, given the infuriating time had with the color red, we were in the mood for something cool and refreshing.</p> <p>One worthwhile note: we did not use tinted primer before the red went on the wall. It was covering a bright white coat of Bullseye 123, and that was probably our biggest mistake. The guy at the paint desk was kind enough to suggest that, but only <b>after</b> we were picking up our second gallon. We did tint the primer for our second color, and that went up without any problems. One coat of primer, two coats of paint. Just like it should be.</p> <p>Lessons learned? Tinted primer rules, and red paint is meant for people with a special brand of dedication that we lack.</p>
A Lesson on Drill Safety
<h3>Or a Recommendation for Milwaukee Drills</h3> <p>Long before we ever seriously considered renovating a house, I needed a drill. I didn't want just any drill. I knew that one day I may just jump into home renovation, and I wanted a drill with the umph to tackle most any drill worth task. Anything from holes in the wall through mixing drywall mud and grout. Oh, and it needed a 1/2" chuck. Of course.<p> <p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00007FPIN?ie=UTF8&tag=ren-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=B00007FPIN"><img style="float:right;" border="0" src="http://renovatekc.com/images/118K9TFEQEL._AA_SL160_.jpg"></a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=ren-20&l=as2&o=1&a=B00007FPIN" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> After digging around on Amazon for a while, I went out "just to look" at a Milwaukee 0299-20 8 Amp 1/2-Inch Drill, and I just had to have it right away. It has served us well even before the renovation, but it still looked brand new. Only through the course of our work on the bungalow has it been truly broken in. The downside to buying the largest drill one will ever need is that it is often far overkill for certain tasks, and it can be downright dangerous if handled improperly. For instance, I attached the side handle to the chuck rather than the (stationary) drill housing after pulling it out of the box. That was an eye opening introduction to the power and torque available in this hefty little package. <p> <p>Throughout our renovation project, the drill has served us well, doing all of those things that a drill can do. Holes in wood, screws in drywall, and lots of mixed drywall mud, it all went without a hitch. This weekend I bought a flexible bit attachment to help drill holes for the new electrical wire that I am itching to wire into the bedroom outlets. The flexible bit fit into the drill, and a 3/4" spade bit fit into the flexible bit. I figured I was golden, and the first hole went off without a hitch, although the going was slow. I guess this got me feeling cocky.</p> <p>The second hole was in a relatively accessible place, and I knew it would go smoothly. The first 1 1/2" of the hole went smoothly, the bit only catching slightly a handful of times. Getting impatient, I kicked up the speed and put a little more pressure on the bit. Suddenly, BAM! The bit caught, the drill wrapped around the flexible bit attachment, and the spade bit fell out of the hole. Where would the spade bit naturally land? In my shirt, of course. It spun around once or twice more, twisting itself into the shirt, and while I was trying to free myself I hit the drill trigger. That's where things got ugly.</p> <p>Nobody was hurt, but I did lose the flexible bit, and I almost literally lost my shirt. I love my Milwaukee drill, but you'd better believe that I'll be more careful the next time I am drilling in awkward spots.</p> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/2376745020/" title="Torque Kills by timfreund, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3192/2376745020_187fa6f2e1_m.jpg" width="180" height="240" alt="Torque Kills" style="float: left; clear: both;" /></a>
Trench Warfare
<p>Standing in the trenches of renovation is a nice metaphor for all of the hard work that goes into a home renovation, but we have found ourselves literally standing in the trenches of renovation. Keep reading to pick up tips on how to trench and how not to trench based on our experience digging up 60 feet of an already ugly lawn.</p> <p>The wiring in our detached garage is atrocious. It is so bad that our home inspector told us that he wouldn't park his car in the garage until we turned off the electricity. "Sure, it's been fine for years, but you never known when something this bad will finally burn the place down." Furthermore, the wiring out to the garage is pretty poor. We have 30 amps of electricity running through two tiny little wires that are far below the minimum height from the ground. Oh, and there's a birds nest built around those wires at the house end of the run. Truth be told, there are two pairs of wires running to the garage, but that second pair runs the light that sits between the two garage doors.</p> <table> <tr> <td> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/1265775087/" title="The Garage by timfreund, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1215/1265775087_7471802bee_m.jpg" width="240" height="180" alt="The Garage" /></a> </td> <td> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/1298706264/" title="Awesome Wiring 3 by timfreund, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1369/1298706264_f741ecc54f_m.jpg" width="180" height="240" alt="Awesome Wiring 3" /></a> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/1265776923/" title="The Back Porch by timfreund, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1152/1265776923_c25b2e83ee_m.jpg" width="240" height="180" alt="The Back Porch" /></a> </td> <td> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/1297842917/" title="Awesome Wiring 1 by timfreund, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1313/1297842917_eccdf31491_m.jpg" width="180" height="240" alt="Awesome Wiring 1" /></a> </td> </tr> </table> <p>In discussing our options with the inspector, he mentioned that our two options would be to put in a new and higher run of wires or to go underground and hide the wires all together. Underground sounded like the most pleasing final result, but the idea of digging a trench from the back wall of the house to the garage sounded slightly back breaking, at least for a soft computer programmer like myself. That's where it pays to have friends with trucks and a love of heavy machinery.</p> <h3>Slow down now...</h3> <p>Before we show off the heavy machinery, let's talk safety. Our house is in an old neighborhood that sprang to life in 1927, and all of our electrical utilities run overhead. The layout of the plumbing indicated that our gas, water, and sewage all ran from the house to the street rather than through the backyard. With that in mind, many people may have forgone the quick, free, and painless process of calling for a utility locate. One more time, quick, free, and painless. Why skip a step that could save you from making a mistake that would surely set you back in time, money and health?</p> <p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/1959715965/" title="Deciphering Utility Marks by timfreund, on Flickr"><img style="float:left;" src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2204/1959715965_3f45c3fd84_m.jpg" width="240" height="180" alt="Deciphering Utility Marks" /></a>Two steps were required to get a locate done on our property. First, I bought two cans of white spray paint to mark the path of our proposed trench. I was carded for the spray paint, which amused me. Next, I made a 5 minute call to the <a href="http://www.mo1call.com/">Missouri One Call System</a> one afternoon over lunch, and we were cleared to dig on the upcoming weekend. The utility location service wrote in paint next to my white dig line for each service that I was clear to dig. The marking was a little ambiguous simply because the little flags with their phone number said "buried [gas|electric] line" right next to paint that read "OK MGE" (Missouri Gas Energy), etc.</p> <h3>The Big Dig</h3> <p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/2037018366/" title="Trench Warfare by timfreund, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2276/2037018366_bb2858f2b0_m.jpg" width="240" height="180" alt="Trench Warfare" style="float: right;"/></a>Now back to that heavy machinery. My buddy, Joe, said that we weren't friends anymore if I didn't invite him over whenever heavy machinery was on the job site. He's a little redneck like that, and he'd hate to miss the opportunity to tear up someone else's yard. That works for me, especially given the fact that I had never touched a trencher and I drive a Ford Escort. His full sized pickup had a lot easier time pulling the trencher than my car ever would, and his experience running the beast really paid off. The schedule of events looked something like this:</p> <ol> <li>Pick up 80FT of cable rated for 50 amps and direct burial, conduit, fittings, a hole saw, and an electrical panel at Home Depot</li> <li>Pick up the trencher from the rental place</li> <li>Trench!</li> <li>Attach the conduit and fittings to the house and garage</li> <li>Lay the cable, fishing it through the conduit at both ends</li> <li>Cover the cable</li> <li>Eat Lunch</li> <li>Attach the electrical panel</li> <li>Return the trencher</li> </ol> <p>I met Joe, we proceed to Home Depot, and things immediately start to go wrong. Our first HD doesn't have the wire we need. 30 minutes lost driving to another one and getting another associate to cut us the wire. We pick up our other supplies, and we head to the rental place. Our second bad experience of the day was watching the rental company's mechanics cannibalize two trenchers to get ours up and running, 30 more minutes lost to that.</p> <p>Soon, the trencher is off the trailer, and Joe's digging into our excavation line. After a rough start due to some stones and the remnants of an old clothesline, things are humming along. A few more whole bricks turn up in the soil as we near the garage, but nothing major. Then perceived disaster strikes. It appears that the concrete pad that makes up our driveway extends beyond the side of the garage where there appeared to be dirt and grass at first glance. A bit of worry sets in while we go over our options. Do we beat it up by hand with sledge hammers? Do we get a hammer drill? Do we go back to the rental outfit and rent a small jackhammer? My sister and dad stopped by at about this time to admire the predicament while they were in the neighborhood. After a few calls to directory service, AKA my mom and her phone book, we were on our way to rent a jackhammer.</p> <h3>Humble Pie</h3> <p>About half way to the rental place, I get a phone call from my sister. All that horrible tough concrete? Yep, wasn't concrete at all, it was just a row of cinder blocks set into the ground. My dad had poked and prodded with a shovel until they started popping out one by one. My dad wanted us all to go to college so we would be smart and successful, but who was the smart one, really? Thanks dad, you simultaneously saved us a load of time and money while reminding us that with age comes wisdom. 20 more minutes with the trencher and we were ready to move on.</p> <h3>Check and Double Check</h3> <p>We start assembling our conduit and fittings, and we realize that they are not all the same size. Home Depot is one of my favorite stores lately, but their conduit and plumbing fittings are a mess. Be warned. By this time we are running short on time with the trencher, and soon evening will set in. Joe laughs at me as I try to wrestle the trencher back on to the trailer, and then we are off to return it and make our third trip of the day to Home Depot.</p> <p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/2036221687/" title="Trench Carnage by timfreund, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2315/2036221687_35436d8b8a_m.jpg" width="240" height="180" alt="Trench Carnage" style="float: right;"/></a>This time around, everything starts to come together. The electrical panel was hung after dealing with some terrible nails that didn't want to drive into the old studs. Despite our lack of a fish tape, we were even able to get the cable into both the house and the garage successfully. Woo hoo! Of course, we were working in the dark at that point, and we left a large amount of carnage strewn across the yard and driveway. Click the picture to see the carnage notated. With that all said, how'd our schedule turn out?</p> <ol> <li><strike>Pick up 80FT of cable rated for 50 amps and direct burial, conduit, fittings, a hole saw, and an electrical panel at Home Depot</strike></li> <li><b>Pick up 80FT of cable rated for 50 amps and direct burial, conduit, fittings, a hole saw, and an electrical panel at the other Home Depot</b></li> <li>Pick up the trencher from the rental place</li> <li><b>Wrestle with the clothes line pole</b></li> <li>Trench!</li> <li><b>Find a potential place to rent a jack hammer</b></li> <li><b>Turn around one the way because we were dumb and short sighted</b></li> <li>Lunch</li> <li><b>Finish trenching</b></li> <li><strike>Attach the conduit and fittings to the house and garage</strike></li> <li><b>Return the trencher</b></li> <li>Buy more fittings</li> <li><b>Attach the conduit and fittings to the house and garage</b></li> <li>Lay the cable, fishing it through the conduit at both ends</li> <li>Cover the cable</li> <li><strike>Eat Lunch</strike></li> <li>Attach the electrical panel</li> <li><strike>Return the trencher</strike></li> </ol> <p>We ended with a success, but it was a long day in the making. If I had to do it all over again, I'd buy my materials ahead of time, dry fit them, and better clear the area so I knew what potential obstacles would slow us down. Kate and I bought Joe and his girlfriend dinner as a token of thanks, but deep down, I think running heavy equipment and watching me struggle with the same heavy equipment made his day.</p>
We've Been Working, Really
<p>Almost three months have gone by without a post. Once upon a time I had said that a week's worth of silence on the blog would mean that we are behind schedule. We aren't as far along as I would like, but we haven't been snoozing for the last three months, either.</p> <p>We never did get the outside completely painted before the nasty winter weather rolled around, but getting to move indoors has been fun. The work is a lot more varied and less sweaty. Since our last post, we've tackled a range of tasks: electrical, plumbing, plastering, paint, floors, and of course it all started with some demolition.</p> <p>We are going to pick apart some of these latest projects in several upcoming posts:</p> <ul> <li><a href="http://renovatekc.com/blog/articles/2008/02/01/trench-warfare">Trench Warfare</a></li> <li>Demolicious</li> <li>Patching Plaster for Amateurs</li> <li>Sandless Floor Refinishing</li> </ul> <p>Those titles will turn into links over the next few days as we get them edited and posted.</p> <p>In the meantime, we're up to <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/sets/72157601747133831/">111 photos in our renovation photo set on flickr</a>! Take a look!</p>
Wet Inside and Out
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/1521062607/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2396/1521062607_ace7440e93_m.jpg" width="240" height="180" alt="Progress. Some Good, Some Not" style="float: left;" /></a>It rained this past weekend. That explains the wet outside, and it goes half way toward explaining the wet inside. Not only did the showers keep us from painting, the severity and direction of the downpour left no doubt as to the quality of our repaired roof. The roof was repaired over the summer, long before we bought the house. The roof itself was in good shape, but some of the flashing was done improperly, and that allowed water to seep in and soak a small hole through the living room ceiling. The repair work is evident, but apparently they missed a spot. The good news? Dad and I had purchased a tarp at Home Depot that same morning to transport some lumber to the house. Uncle Tim and I used the tarp to cover the offending area of the roof. We used the recently removed front porch railing to keep the tarp in place. It looked classy.</p> <p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/1521910684/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2300/1521910684_ddba5f0abe_m.jpg" width="240" height="180" alt="Wallpaper in the Closet?" style="float: right;"/></a>That leak, as I said, only goes half way toward explaining the wet conditions inside. The rest of the water was there on purpose. Grandma and two of her sisters, Mary Al and Denny, took the wallpaper to task in both bedrooms. Mom was in on the action as well until she was pulled away to be my youngest sister's chauffeur. Everyone involved was taking the paper to task with a wide assortment of spray bottles and putty knives. The strangest thing, in my opinion, was the amount of wallpaper in the closets. I counted up to five layers, and I just can't imagine taking the time to paper in a closet. The wallpaper is almost done for - a small bit remains in the back bedroom closet, and we still have at least one layer hanging around the bottom half of the living room.</p> <p>Mom also made an interesting discovery in our duct work. Hair, hair, and hair. Oh, and popsicle sticks. Yum!</p> <p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/1521064509/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2361/1521064509_c91ac1c743_m.jpg" width="240" height="180" alt="Mary Al, Denny, Grandma" style="float: left;" /></a>We took more pictures than we can fit in this brief write up. Don't forget that by clicking on any one of the photos you will be taken to our Flickr photo stream.</p>
Posh Scaffolding
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/1465582061/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1367/1465582061_3e2f3ddeb6_m.jpg" style="float: right;" width="180" height="240" alt="The Scaffold" /></a> We have some pretty serious scaffolding erected to help paint the house, especially considering that it is a small one-story bungalow. How did we end up with this monster scaffold, what makes it so posh, and where is our sense of adventure? Shouldn't we just use a tall ladder, after all? All these questions, and more, answered below:</p> <h3>How did we get it?</h3> <p>It's good to have a handy family. The two sections planted in our side yard were in storage at the family business, we just needed to supply new planks. The scaffolding looks big up against our small house, but it's just the perfect heigh for reaching up to the very peak of the roof, and I am glad we have it. Had we not found these two sections lying around, we would have gladly rented the equipment from Home Depot for a very reasonable sum. They can rent scaffolding on a monthly term when necessary, and I believe it would be less than $200 for a month.</p> <h3>What makes it so posh?</h3> <p>See how there are four planks at each level, plus two planks leading up to the upper level, plus a (not so sturdy) 2x4 "guard rail"? Subtract the guard rail, the two intermediate planks, and two planks from each level, and then we'd have a standard scaffold setup. (Click the picture for a larger image.) That's actually what we had after the first evening, but that's where things get a little interesting. Dad and I set up the scaffold without issues, and then Kate arrived on the scene. She said things looked good, and Dad broke into some facts and figures about job site safety. He teaches the OSHA class for his union, and he had no trouble telling us that falls and falling tools are two of the leading causes of death on the job. We even got a personal anecdote: his first foreman was killed on the job after falling only 4 feet on to some rather pointy equipment. Kate was now convinced that the standard scaffolding was a death wish waiting to come true, and I was left wondering if she <b>really</b> wanted me to rent a scissor lift. That would be ridiculous, I thought. Fortunately, after some extra planks and wire made the scaffold more novice friendly, she gave her blessing for work to continue. I haven't seen her climb to the top yet, but she has been on the middle level.</p> <h3>Where is our sense of adventure?</h3> <p>Isn't renovating a house that contains a small assortment of hazardous materials enough adventure for right now?</p> <h3>Why Not a Ladder?</h3> <p>Several reasons:</p> <ul> <li>The scaffolding is free in our case.</li> <li>We don't own a tall enough ladder, although we did budget for one.</li> <li>The Silent Paint Remover is tough to wield from a high ladder. Remember, don't be cheap, get the handsfree device.</li> </ul> <p>Be safe, or at least pretend to be safe. "I told you so" never sounds nice, but I suspect it stings a little extra after sustaining a fall.</p>
New Color for an Old House
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/1432055465/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1095/1432055465_3da71f99cd_m.jpg" width="180" height="240" alt="Painting Begins" style="float: left;"/></a>We started painting yesterday, and it felt great. Our work up until this point has largely been destructive, and this was the first weekend where we ended by making things "right" again. We are painting one scaffold width at a time since it takes a bit of effort to move the scaffolding. The scaffold deserves a post all to itself, so I'll write more about that later. For the curious, we are using Pratt & Lambert flat exterior paints. The trim is Woodgate and the primary color is Dried Moss.</p> <p>We didn't work on the house very much during the week, but Joe, a friend from my days with Honeywell, stopped by on Thursday with his angle grinder to take care of a chain and padlock that kept the back gate locked. It was a 5 minute job, but he got to spent 20 minutes freaking out over the state of the house wiring. He also confirmed that fitting a full size pickup truck through the gate on a daily basis could get tiring.</p> <p>We spent two full days at the house this weekend, and we were visited by Uncle Tim on both days. He helped us scrape and prime on day one, and then he helped us scrape and paint on day two. He brought Grandma along on Sunday, and she did a fantastic job of cleaning the grime off the walls in our hallway. I swear, the previous owner didn't believe in the benefits of hand washing - dirt is caked on to the walls, especially around light switches. As Uncle Tim and Grandma were arriving on Sunday, Dad was just leaving. He was tired of watching the Chiefs screw up, and it was only the 1st quarter.</p> <p>All this time, Kate was going to town on the windows with a combination of the Silent Paint Remover, a borrowed heat gun, putty knives, and a random orbit sander. I think she really started to like the sander by the time the weekend was over.</p> <p>We will move the scaffold some time this week and start over on the next section.</p>
A Primer Primer in Two Parts
<p>Last Saturday we had finished scraping around the lower half of the house, and we were looking for something to do on Sunday since our scaffold wasn't scheduled to arrive until the middle of this past week. Priming the bare portions of the house seemed like a great way to move the exterior forward while waiting for the scaffold. The entire event took only a few hours, but two lessons stick out and warrant a write-up:</p> <h3>Primer Preps the Surface for Paint</h3> <p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/1353633796/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1018/1353633796_f43a26cb0f_m.jpg" style="float: left;" width="240" height="180" alt="Strange Priming Incident" /></a>OK, you probably know that already, but we encountered a small twist. We have cedar shingle siding, and we took it down to bare wood. There is a dark layer of tannin on the surface of many of the shingles. Our primer, <a href="http://www.zinsser.com/product_detail.asp?ProductID=12">Zinsser Cover-Stain</a>, is meant to block the tannin from interacting with the paint and provide a solid surface for paint adhesion. The fact that it is white will help our paint's color look even across the entire house. Except that it isn't all white anymore. Apparently there was enough tannin on the surface of the back of the house that the Cover-Stain interacted with it and turned bright Orange. I thought the sun was playing tricks on me, and I called Kate around back to confirm the change. Prime well. It will allow paint to stick, and it will keep your paint from discoloring.</p> <h3>Read the Clean Up Instructions First</h3> <p>Seriously, before you crack open the first can, read the clean up instructions. We were priming with Cover-Stain, but we also had two cans of <a href="http://www.zinsser.com/product_detail.asp?ProductID=11">Zinsser Bulls Eye 1-2-3</a> in the house. The Bulls Eye was purchased first, and we knew it was water based. With that in mind, we primed with the Cover Stain, and we expected another hassle free water based clean up. Wrong, way wrong. I remember smelling the primer and thinking "this is oil based", but it didn't quite click with me until I was "cleaning" my brush under the faucet and only making a sticky mess. I really wanted to take a picture of this lesson, but I couldn't bear the thought of getting primer on my camera in the process.</p> <h3>Corollary: Appreciate Your Neighborhood Hardware Store</h3> <p>The neighborhood hardware store is a dying breed, but we are fortunate enough to have one right down the road. It only took Kate a few minutes to return home with a gallon of paint thinner so I could clean the brushes, the sink, and my hands. Sure, they don't have the vast selection of Home Depot or Lowes, but they do have a location that can't be beat when in the middle of a project we find that we are lacking supplies.</p>
A Little Help From Our Freunds
<p>I hate it when people make a play on words with my last name, but I couldn't think of a more appropriate title for this post. One of the great things about living within an hour of my entire extended family has it's benefits. Case in point, almost every day that we have spent working on the house has involved us getting a visit, or even a helping hand from one or more of the Freund clan.</p> <p> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/1317151849/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1398/1317151849_8e2687e994_m.jpg" width="180" height="240" alt="Sanding Away Layers" style="float: left;"/></a>Jack and Sarah stopped by last Sunday while loading up on meat from <a href="http://www.mcgonigles.com/">McGonigles</a>. Sarah was jealous with our proximity to that finest of butcher shops. Meanwhile I'm jealous of Jennifer, my sister, since she lives within walking and smelling distance. My dad didn't make it over last Saturday because of my other sister and her chauffeur needs, but on Saturday he and my mom both stopped by to help. Mom made me feel a little guilty yesterday -- she got over to the house two hours before I did, and she had the back yard cleaned up quite a bit with the help of our neighbor lady. Jennifer has stopped by twice, and she's even provided snacks and drinks. She was even there when we witnessed the arrest of "the drunk boyfriend", or so he is nicknamed by the folks on the street. Drunk Boyfriend helped his girlfriend move out yesterday, so woo hoo. More about them in a later post...</p> <p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/timfreund/1352748481/" title="Photo Sharing"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1359/1352748481_b1a8efdfc9_m.jpg" width="240" height="180" alt="A Little Help from our Freunds" style="float: right;" /></a>Today we were priming, and we got a surprise visit from Grandma and Uncle Tim. They stopped by to see the place, and they ended up feeding us and pitching in for a few hours. A note on the food: Tim, being a Freund, bought twice as much as was necessary. I was not shocked. I probably would have done the same thing. Today's visit did highlight a weakness in our project planning. Sometimes we don't know what to do. The priming finished hours earlier than expected, and then we had two extra people willing to help. We all kept busy, but that was more by chance than by proper planning. </p> <p>We love having so many guests, and it is icing on the cake when our guests want to roll their sleeves up and spend some time on the house. We only have two concerns: make sure that people never feel obligated to work on the house - it's a mess, and it is a mess that we knowingly signed up for. We also need to make sure that there are things to do for people who do stop by to work.</p> <p>To our family and friends: We appreciate the support you're giving us, and our doors are always open. Well, at least on the weekend and the evenings when we get a chance to work. If there is anything you want to learn how to do, but you're too afraid to try on your own house, let us know. We're going to be hitting up every major area of home renovation, so you can probably stop by to watch or help us make mistakes before attempting a project at your own house. Thanks for everything you do, you're the best.</p>

relationships and put it in a context that applies to businesses who are looking to capitalize through technology enabled global business strategies."Samui Training Center's efforts to create an IT training facility in a tropical paradise had previously been thwarted by such region's usual lack of access to reliable electrical, Internet and communications infrastructure.

With the recent construction of the Information Technology Complex near Lamai Beach on the popular island paradise of Koh Samui, Training Center has finally found what they've been looking for.The island of Koh is less than one hour from Bangkok International Airport by airplane and--made popular a decade ago by the novel The Beach and later by the nearby island of Koh Phangan's Full-moon Party--is one of Thailand's most popular tourist destinations for travelers wishing to relax on the beach, swim, dive, snorkel or spa. The giant, totally-IT, air-conditioned monolith is on Island's main road fifteen minutes from the island's second most popular beach and has everything expected of a top-notch training facility. "Even if you offer the best accommodations package in the world at the lowest price, you can't have a technical training center without redundant power and high-speed Internet," says Valente, standing outside the facility in the hot sun.But students won't brave the high seas for high speed Internet and redundant power. Training Center anticipates training many students from the America's and Europe who want to get away, see the world and come back ready for a new job or better equipped and more valuable to their old job. Students from Asia will come because they want a better education and don't want to travel far out of the region to get it.

Many will come for the great vacation and to look for global business opportunities as well.More information on Training Center and the new facility can be found at www.samuitech.com..


We strive to provide only quality articles, so if there is a specific topic related to samui that you would like us to cover, please contact us at any time.

And again, thank you to those contributing daily to our koh samui rentals website.

Ryanair plans new bid for Aer Lingus
<p> Low-cost carrier Ryanair revived its takeover interest in Dublin-based airline Aer Lingus today. </p>
Duty-free allowances double, thanks to Brown
<p>From today, travellers returning to Britain from outside the European Union will be able to bring back double the amount of wine, electrical goods and souvenirs without paying tax. </p>
Disaster? Megéve was a triumph
]]> <p>Let me count the ways in which this should have been a disaster. We'd chosen the last-but-one week of the season, a warm and sunny Easter holiday, in a region untouched by snow in the whole of the previous April. We'd booked horrendously early flights with easyJet. (Can saving a couple of hundred quid ever compensate for a 3.45am alarm call?) By the time we'd reached Meg&egrave;ve via a minibus transfer from Geneva, midday felt like midnight, and there was a whole afternoon's skiing ahead. </p>
It's all go in the rainforests of Dominica
]]> <p>Would Tom Cruise choose to take a mud bath? His Hollywood hair and Rodeo Drive wardrobe couldn't cope with such squalor, right? Wrong. And Dave, a Dominican who divides his time between farming the land and taking visitors out into the private rainforest estate that surrounds his bright-yellow home, was eager to prove the point to me, leafing through a worn photo album to show me snaps of Cruise caked in thick mud. </p>
City Slicker: Why Boston is best for shopping
]]> <p> <b>Why visit?</b> </p> <p> Should you go Christmas shopping in America this winter? The pound doesn't offer the amazing value that it has for the past few years, and though sterling steadied after the Chancellor's pre-Budget report, the economic situation remains volatile. </p>
Don't panic! We can go skiing and save the planet
]]> <p>'The world is going to end and no one's doing anything about it!" As a statement of fact, this is hard to argue against, particularly with an upset 13-year-old fed a daily diet of climate apocalypse.</p>
Stay the night: Rose Walk, The Cotswolds
]]> <p>Something's stirring in the sleepy Cotswolds. At the end of the year, a campaign will be launched to make this area the Rural Capital of Culture. The idea is to draw attention to the array of cultural events that brings the area to life throughout the year (see cotswolds.com for the full calendar) and prove there's more to the Cotswolds than the olde-worlde charm of its villages.</p>
Belarus is missing a tourist trick with Chagall
]]> <p>The childhood or working homes of most painters of world renown are now well-established tourist honey pots. The massing of art-hungry visitors at Monet's Giverny came to mind as I wandered, alone, around the house of Marc Chagall. Despite his Francophone name, Chagall lived in a bungalow down a quiet cobbled lane, which is to be found in Vitebsk in the international tourism backwater of Belarus.</p>
Tips and deals: 30/11/2008
]]> <p> <b>The gear</b> </p> <p> New from firebox.com, the Wrap-up Tripod is a protective case featuring an integrated stand. Attach the die-cast aluminium tripod to your camera's screw-in socket for use on the move with the minimum of fuss. Price &pound;19.95. </p>
Katy Holland: How to ease the pain of travelling with children
<p>Oh, the joys of travelling with children. Why do we punish ourselves so? Juliet Merrick from London has written to me asking if I can recommend something to ease the pain of a 12-hour road trip to the Alps at New Year with two squabbling nearly-teens in tow. Yes, Juliet, it's simple: don't do it. </p>
Fantasy islands: Joanne Harris heads to Hawaii
]]> <p> When I was very young I had a book in French called Hina, la petite Hawa&iuml;enne. Lavishly illustrated with black-and-white photographs, it features a six-year-old Hawaiian girl and her everyday life on the island; shows her hiding in the jungle with a flower in her hair; shows her fishing; sailing; swimming with sea turtles; playing her ukelele; picking fruit; running for sheer joy along what looks like unbroken acres of gorgeous white sand. I still have my battered copy and ever since then I have dreamed of Hawaii, hoping one day to see Hina's island paradise in colour. </p>
The Complete Guide To: Byzantium
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Pizza with more pizzazz: Puglia is a food-lover's paradise
]]> <p> The more I thought about it, the more I wanted to learn how to make a pizza &ndash; and that's why I came here. But as often happens when travelling, the world was taking me over. It was increasingly hard to stay focused on my task.</p>
48 Hours In: Strasbourg
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Travel Agenda: St Andrew's Day celebrations; luxurious new East African lodgings; Art Basel hits Miami Beach

Simon Calder: Air Passenger Duty is still in a hopeless mess
<p> The runway to hell is paved with good intentions. Look, here is what the Treasury said only this week about flying: "The Government was minded that aviation duty, as a per plane duty, should apply irrespective of the passengers carried." At last: recognition that an aircraft with only half its seats occupied has almost as much impact as a full one. I have been banging on for a decade about the need for tax to reflect the damage caused by aviation, by applying Air Passenger Duty (APD) to every seat whether or not it is occupied. Airlines would be incentivised to fill their planes, and flights which regularly flew with lots of empty seats would be grounded.</p>
Something to declare: Thailand; Kuala Lumpur; city breaks in vision; maps and guides for less

Can you ski in Spain?
]]> <p> I was off on another ski trip. "Where are you going this time?", asked a friend. To Spain. "Spain! Why do you always ski in such peculiar places?" </p>
My Life In Travel: Frank Skinner, comedian

Five luxury barns
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Family travel: 'We want a rural, festive weekend'
<p> <b>Q. Our extended family is unable to spend Christmas together, so we're hoping to get together for a weekend in the next few weeks. However, we're finding availability difficult for 12 of us. Since we will be travelling from various parts of the country, somewhere in the middle would be ideal, as would somewhere with facilities and/or activities for children and some scenic country walks. Any ideas? F Worth, via email</b> </p>
Tourism: Images that threaten a flourishing trade
]]> <p>The targeting of British and US nationals at luxury hotels in Mumbai may have serious consequences for tourism in the region.</p>
Thailand shuts down second airport
<p> Thai authorities shut down Bangkok's second airport today after it was overrun by anti-government protesters, completely cutting off the capital from air traffic as the prime minister rejected their demands to resign, deepening the country's crisis. </p>
British tourists moved from Bangkok airport
]]> <p> Hundreds of stranded British tourists were taken by coach to out-of-town hotels tonight after anti-government protests closed Bangkok airport. </p>
QE2 cruise ship arrives in Dubai
<p> Britain's most famous luxury cruise ship, the Queen Elizabeth 2, has arrived to Dubai to begin a new life as a floating hotel moored off an artificial island. </p>
More Rhine cruise Britons hit by virus
<p> Four more British tourists on a River Rhine cruise hit by an outbreak of a gastric virus have been admitted to hospital, the tour operator said today. </p>
Virgin urges EU to reject British Airways link-up plan
<p> Sir Richard Branson's airline Virgin Atlantic today urged the European Commission to reject the planned tie-up of British Airways and giant US carrier American Airlines (AA). </p>
No-frills airline connects UK to Asia for under &#163;100
<p>Travellers will be able to fly to Asia for under &pound;100 on a new no-frills service from London to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.</p>
Ryanair pulls out over &pound;10 airport charge
<p> Budget airline Ryanair is to stop services from one of its departure airports in protest at a &pound;10 charge being introduced there in the New Year. </p>
How to get in shape for the ski slopes
]]> <p>The nights are drawing in, the mercury is falling as steadily as the rain, and, let's face it, the idea of dusting off those running shoes or digging out that forgotten gym-membership card is enough to bring even the keenest pavement-pounder into a cold sweat. But for those of us heading to the mountains this winter, hitting the snooze button is not an option. </p>
We will fight them on the beaches...
]]> <p>British tourists who decide to take a late night stroll on Benidorm beach &ndash; or perhaps engage in a steamy romantic encounter &ndash; might soon be surprised to find their revelry interrupted by a patrolman handing out &euro;750 (&pound;640) fines.</p>
Warsaw steps out of the shadows
]]> <p>Warsaw is a modern city of wide boulevards, skyscrapers, advertising hoardings, traffic jams, shopping malls and a thriving population of 1.7 million people. People live normal 21st-century lives here; they look as ordinary as the residents of Milton Keynes, and their aspirations are probably no different from MK-man. </p>
There's something magical about this Czech chateau
]]> <p>'The Elixir of Power is designed to relax the part of the brain that is adult-inhibited," says Jim Cusumano. "It allows the creative responses to flow freely."</p>
Tips & deals: 23/11/2008
]]> <p> <b>The tour</b> </p> <p> Find out more about Chesterfield's crooked spire and why Ashover is the home of Bertie Bassett, courtesy of new interactive audio guides to the Peak District's border country. Go to visitchesterfield.info for free download of the trails to your MP3 player. </p>
Get on the straight and narrow in Austria's Alps
]]> <p> There are two types of people in the world, those who've got the skiing bug and those who haven't. People who love skiing will for ever hanker after the thrill of the slopes and the feel of salopettes, even if they went only once with the school 20 years ago. People who don't &ndash; well, don't. </p>
Katy Holland: Last minute family getaways.
<p>You lot love to leave it till the last minute to book your Christmas breaks, don't you? I've just received a fluster of requests from panicking parents asking if I can recommend any cut-price cottages over the school holidays. </p>
Top 10 bargain breaks to beat the winter blues
]]> <p> <b>1 Dubai</b> </p> <p> Dubai hits the headlines for its swanky five-star resorts. But there are other, cheaper, well-appointed options, too. The budget-but-chic Rimal Rotana Suites, in downtown Deira bordering the Creek, has a rooftop pool where you can soak up the same rays and be within walking distance of the city's cultural highlights. Remember, you can make further savings by eating at local restaurants. </p>
Stay the night: Trump International Hotel & Tower, Chicago
]]> <p>Donald Trump's ambitions don't stop at turning Aberdeenshire into a golf course. Over in Chicago, the billionaire is engaged in a similarly audacious project &ndash; turning a hotel into a landmark. When a 22-storey spire is popped on top of the Trump International Hotel & Tower, the skyscraper will become the second highest building in the city, after the Sears Tower. It will also make it the tallest residential building in North America.</p>
The real star of 'Australia' is the Kimberley Mountains
]]> <p>On a bright October morning, I bumped along the graded Gibb highway toward El Questro, a million-acre ranch in the back end of Aussie nowhere. Iron-red cliffs competed for attention with 1,000-year-old boab trees, distant relations to Madagascar's celebrated baobabs. Their swollen, water-storing trunks underlined the all-embracing dryness, as the 4x4's air con struggled with a thermometer hovering around 42C. And it wasn't even 10am. </p>
24-Hour Room Service: Diamant, Sydney, Australia
]]> <p>As boutique-hotel interiors go, the Diamant isn't just sober, it's committed to its own 12-step programme. There isn't a single statement-making piece of furniture to be seen, notwithstanding some flirtatious low-level lighting fixtures in the hallways and a particularly shiny lobby. The exterior is equally sober; it could easily be mistaken for a corporation HQ.</p>
48 Hours In: Heidelberg
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My life in travel: Jonathan Agnew
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Travel Agenda: Budapest's 10th annual Christmas fair; 2011 Rugby World Cup; A380 between Heathrow and Dubai

Child's play: Austria's scenic slopes are a hit with families
]]> <p> Early in the 21st century, the Austrian ski resorts of the Vorarlberg region &ndash; of which the best known is St Anton &ndash; introduced a "Learn to ski" offer for children aged five and over. This was the offer: the local ski schools promised to teach children to ski in three days; and if they failed, the lessons would continue, free of charge, until the child became proficient.</p>
Liner notes: All at sea with John Walsh
]]> <p>It was probably pure coincidence that Céline Dion's "My Heart Will Go On" was playing on the PA system as our coach pulled up in Fort Lauderdale harbour and we first laid eyes on the Celebrity Solstice where she lay at anchor like a fat skyscraper. Beside it, the Titanic suddenly seemed pretty small fry. Nobody could look at this massive, towering, sleekly bulky ziggurat of maritime elegance, reflecting the hot Miami sunlight from 700 starboard windows, and imagine her coming to any harm. She seemed the match of any earthly manifestation of weather, wind or icy flotsam. (Not, of course, that you find many icebergs in the Caribbean Sea...)</p>
On and off the rails: Britain's old railway routes are being reclaimed
]]> <p> Deep in the heart of Somerset, a strangely straight path leads southwards from the river Yeo. On either side, a tangle of undergrowth and overgrown trees could convince you that you have somehow stumbled through a space-time hedgerow and ended up in darkest Peru &ndash; a sense amplified when you peer through the verdant muddle and discover evidence of ancient masonry. </p>
Five luxury ranches
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Trail Of The Unexpected: House-proud on the prairies of Kansas
]]> <p> In 1900, one L Frank Baum wrote a book about a farmhouse (with a girl inside) being picked up by a tornado and deposited in a strange land. His book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz was popular, but when MGM dropped the "wonderful" and made it into a film in 1939, tourism to the State of Kansas &ndash; for that had been the location of Dorothy's farm &ndash; received a boost that continues to this day. </p>
Something to declare: Shrinking transatlantic choice; Albania; UK hotel bargains

Simon Calder: Cuba as risky as Darfur? Don't make me laugh
<p> Travel, like life in general, requires judicious risk management, ranging from &quot;Am I a strong enough swimmer to cope with those currents?&quot; and &quot;Should I really have that extra drink?&quot; to &quot;What countries are too dangerous to contemplate?&quot; </p>
Rail passengers face above-inflation fare rises
<p> Rail passengers will face big fare rises in the new year with some tickets going up by more than double the rate of inflation, it was announced today. </p>
Going on vacation on location
]]> <p>Across Western Australia, tour operators are pouring coals on barbecues, chilling lagers in cold stores and hanging corks from their wide-brimmed hats in preparation for an influx of visitors, following the international roll-out of writer-director Baz Luhrmann's new outback epic, Australia, which is due to be released in the UK on Boxing Day.</p>
Sir Stelios ramps up row with easyJet's directors
<p>Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou intensified his dispute with the board of easyJet yesterday by refusing toapprove the annual accounts of the budget airline he founded. His move came as the group said its profits were slashed by the high cost of fuel this year. </p>
Discover Helsinki and let off some steam!
]]> <p> Relax and unwind in a modern European cultural city where urban cosmopolitan lifestyle exists in perfect harmony with nature. Just as Helsinki cannot be described in one word, neither can it be experienced in just one way. Helsinki has something for everyone. </p>
Ryanair to compete with rival on holiday routes
<p> Budget airline Ryanair announced today that it was to compete with rival easyJet on two key routes from a major holiday-flight airport. </p>
EasyJet reports sharp fall in profits
<p> Budget airline easyJet PLC reported a 45 per cent drop in full-year profits today as higher fuel costs offset a strong gain in revenue. </p>
Ski industry predicts boom as cold sets in
]]> <p> Clad in salopettes and woolly hats, skiers swished effortlessly downhill yesterday as nervous beginners concentrated hard on their snow-ploughs. OK, so this was a dry slope in Sheffield, but dozens of those on the artificial piste are gearing up for the real thing and booking pre-Christmas breaks to the Continent and North America. </p>
A Christmas menu for you to source in Pas-de-Calais

Turn that booze cruise into a gourmet tour
<p> &ldquo;Champagne tasting is a strange concept,&rdquo; says wine critic Oz Clarke, as he kicks off our sampling session. &ldquo;We don&rsquo;t usually bother tasting it, we just get on with drinking it.&rdquo; </p>
Let the good vines roll in New Zealand
]]> <p>There is no more sublime way to travel than in a hot-air balloon, I thought, as we drifted towards the town of Martinborough, on New Zealand's North Island. But to the sheep munching weeds in the vineyard below, the appearance of this monster was the signal to scatter in panic.</p>
Turn that booze cruise into a gourmet tour
<p> &ldquo;Champagne tasting is a strange concept,&rdquo; says wine critic Oz Clarke, as he kicks off our sampling session. &ldquo;We don&rsquo;t usually bother tasting it, we just get on with drinking it.&rdquo; </p>
City Slicker: St Petersburg
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Tips and Deals
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There's plenty more room at the inn for the Barmy Army
]]> <p>St Lucia may be accustomed to big storms, but the tiny Caribbean island probably didn't know what hit it when it found itself sprawled across the British tabloid press 18 months ago. England's cricketers were based on the island for the 2007 World Cup and Andrew "Freddie" Flintoff had to be rescued from a pedalo that he had managed to steer into Rodney Bay in a drunken stupor. </p>
CAA moves to extend consumer protection to airline passengers
<p>The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) will gather the great and good of the travel world for a meeting in London this week to thrash out an industry stance on the extension of consumer protection to the airline industry. </p>
Phnom Penh: We only serve Cosmopolitans here
]]> <p>'You want to buy a newspaper?" asks the street kid in perfect English as I sit eating a bowl of noodles. "OK if you don't want to buy. I will rent to you. Only 1,000 riel. It costs 4,000 to buy, so this is a good price. You can read for one hour. Then I will come back and collect it." As I've only just begun slurping on my noodles, I hand over the cash and get something to read.</p>
Katy Holland: Holidays with the grandkids
<p>I love receiving emails from you, dear readers, even though you sometimes rap my knuckles. This week I got a ticking off from Emily Vernon, a disgruntled grandma from Sussex, for a recent column I wrote about holidays with grandparents. </p>
Stay the night: Café du Vaudeville, Brussels
]]> <p>Brussels' newest hotel is housed in one of its oldest buildings. The ultra-chic Galerie de la Reine, off Grand' Place, was one of the first shopping malls in the world. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels frequented the Galerie's Café du Vaudeville when it opened in 1847. Later, Victor Hugo and Auguste Rodin were regulars at both the café and 260-seat theatre. </p>
Peak practice: Escape to the Lakes
]]> <p> I firmly believe there is a breaking point for all London Underground commuters and mine was at 8.38am on a Friday morning. Wedged into a neck-snapping position with an armpit against my cheek, I strained for the last few particles of oxygen only to receive a sneeze in the face. Turning to escape the repeat blast, I inhaled someone's hair, which stuck to my face like sweat-flavoured candyfloss. </p>
Hot to trot: saddle up for some adventure in Aruba
]]> <p> Riding through the dusty red earth of Aruba's interior, you could be forgiven for thinking you'd passed on to the film set of a cowboy movie. The flat, arid landscape, studded with giant cartoon-like cacti, looks more Texan than Caribbean, and the sheer number of ranches (there are five on an island just 21 miles long and a few miles across) is equally surprising. </p>
Tough stuff: The best gear for the adventure traveller
]]> <p> <b>Click on the images to the right to view our pick of the latest adventure equipment.</b> </p>
Great heights: Eastern Europe's mountains set the heart racing
]]> <p> Just for a moment &ndash; at the point where my heart seemed finally to be about to explode &ndash; I closed my eyes and wished I'd decided to spend my holiday lounging around a beach. But then we reached the end of our three-hour ascent and caught up with the 360-degree view from the White Tarn in the High Tatras mountains. </p>
48 Hours In: Basel
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Trail Of The Unexpected: How one man brought skiing to New Mexico
<p> The United States is a big country: the amount of ground between New York and Los Angeles is such that entire states can be off the beaten track. Take New Mexico: clearly, a beaten track runs through it, since Gallup, New Mexico features in "Route 66"; but what goes on beyond its verges is a bit of a mystery. </p>
24-Hour Room Service: Casa Camper, Barcelona, Spain
]]> <p> Ever since the 1990s, when it opened its first shoe shops outside Spain, Camper has been a byword for simple, stylish footwear &ndash; and now fans of this fashionable Spanish firm can stay in a dedicated Camper hotel. Barcelona's Casa Camper opened in 2005, and it quickly became a cult classic, with a hip, no-nonsense attitude that echoes the ethos of its shoes. </p>
Simon Calder: Child-free flights... and why not end free alcohol, too?
<p> Say what you like about Radio 2: it remains consistently the best listen of the BBC's national radio networks, not least the excellent Jeremy Vine programme on weekday lunchtimes. On Thursday, his 1pm debate was on the concept of child-free flights. It soon morphed into a tirade against inconsiderate flyers who recline their seats without regard to the passenger behind, nor their meal/drink/laptop. But the central question posed by Vine &ndash; "Could child-free flights be a popular and profitable venture?" &ndash; set me thinking about whether, and how, it would work.</p>
Family travel: 'Where can we enjoy some sun in December?'
<p> <b>Q. We are hoping to take our four-year-old son away for a pre-Christmas short break. As it will be during the week before Christmas, we don't want to fly too far. Where will we be guaranteed reasonable sunshine and some nice outdoor activities? D Elms, via email </b> </p>
Open Jaw: The North goes west
<p>I think you let British Airways off the hook a bit re the airline ending its Manchester-New York flights. Manchester is not a "Newcastle" or a "Bristol", but the most important UK airport outside London. And while it may not be a flight hub, it is, unusually for the UK, a public transport hub &ndash; with frequent through trains from the North-west, and the North-east, and even Edinburgh. Maybe, too, BA's word is accepted too easily. That BA have cancelled may not be just about the lack of custom, but their strategy of going particularly for the business market. </p>
Paris in the bling: How to do the French capital in style
]]> <p> In 1980, between finishing my A-levels and heading off to university, in what was not yet so widely known as a gap year, I went to live and work in Paris. I found a job as a humble bagagiste &ndash; a luggage-carrier &ndash; in a three-star hotel on the rue Cambon, right next to the headquarters of Chanel in what was literally one of the ritziest neighbourhoods: my hotel, the H&#244;tel de Castille, was owned by the Ritz, and stood opposite its back door, later made famous as the fateful getaway exit for Diana, Princess of Wales, and Dodi Fayed. </p>
Snow business: Can you still afford to ski in North America?
]]> <p>The United States had a remarkable ski season in 2007/8. First, there was the snowfall &ndash; a huge amount of it. Snow depths broke records at Aspen Snowmass, Crested Butte, Steamboat and five other resorts in Colorado; on the West Coast snowfall was up 61 per cent on the previous season, and on the north-eastern slopes by 28 per cent. </p>
Plate With A View: Tugra, Istanbul
<p> In the 19th century, the Bosphorus &ndash; which divides Europe and Asia &ndash; became a great place to build your palace if your were a relative or favourite of the Ottoman emperor. Only a few of these marble pleasure domes exist today and the neo-baroque Ciragan palace is one of the remaining three. It was designed by the great Armenian architect Nigogayos Balyan and completed by his sons in 1872. This was to be the new home of Sultan Abdul Aziz, the painter-emperor, who lived here until he was deposed in 1876. Monumental gates and a bridge connected the Ciragan to the older Yildiz Palace, where the women of the harem lived. </p>
Travel Agenda: Free art at Under Scan; Fontainebleau hotel; Museum of Islamic Art

Five Thai island retreats
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My Life In Travel: Luiz Felipe Scholari
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My holiday in Australia: Polly Burton, aged 7

The Complete Guide to: The Gulf states
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Something To Declare: Bahrain; Papua New Guinea

EasyJet and Virgin in talks for Gatwick bid
<p> Sir Richard Branson's airline Virgin Atlantic today confirmed it was in talks to form a bidding consortium to run Gatwick airport. </p>
Economic woes hit tourism numbers
<p> The global financial meltdown is hitting the number of overseas tourists visiting Britain as well as UK trips abroad, official figures out today showed. </p>
QE2 runs aground on final trip home
]]> <p> The QE2 ran aground today heading into its home port for the final time. </p>
Emergency landing for Ryanair jet hit by birds
<p> One of Rome's main airports was closed temporarily after birds caused a Ryanair aircraft to make an emergency landing. </p>
Life in the swamp (or how I nearly became 'gator bait)
]]> <p>I am driving south on US41 towards Naples, Florida, in a monsoon downpour and there is not a manatee to be seen. It was the promise of swimming with manatees that brought me to the south-west coast of the "sunshine state" but someone up there forgot to turn off the power shower. It has rained almost non-stop for four days and I'm doubting whether I'll ever glimpse a manatee, let alone swim with one.</p>
Tips and deals
]]> <p> <b>The book</b> </p> <p> Out this Friday, 'The Good Tourist: An Ethical Traveller's Guide', by Lucy Popescu, explores the various abuses that are hidden from tourists and serves as a practical guide to what you can do after your holiday to help. Price &pound;11.99. </p>

News

Samui – Top 10 Attractions And Activities
By Andy Burrows
A 2-hour ferry ride from the coast of Sarat Thani will land you on the banks of Samui, one of Thailand's most popular resort islands which has grown increasingly popular in the past few years. Read more...


News

Samui – Top 10 Attractions And Activities
By Andy Burrows
A 2-hour ferry ride from the coast of Sarat Thani will land you on the banks of Samui, one of Thailand's most popular resort islands which has grown increasingly popular in the past few years. Read more...


News

Samui Training Center Opens First-of-its-kind It Training Facility
Earlier this week, Samui Training Center spokesperson and technology veteran Paul Valente announced the opening of the fledgling training giant's IT training facility. The facility will initially Read more...

 
 

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