
The Spain Ticket Bureau offers tickets to Sports Events, Concerts and Hotel Accommodation. With cheap air travel and an easily accessible European travel network, many people now look further afield when they book up for shows. The Spain ticket Bureau website features an array of events and shows that would be ideal to plan an excursion around. These trips make an ideal gift or simply as a treat. All the offers include secure payment and delivery and include VAT, so no hefty added charges in the background.
Famous events are featured all over the website to inspire you in your choice. Whether it’s Formula 1, The International Tennis Tour, boxing, or a musical, the suggestions are abundant. Recent eye catching offers include The Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Pearl Jam, Eric Clapton, and Rihanna. The Spain Ticket Bureau check many of the prices against online competitors to ensure competitiveness and in some cases, they make a lowest price guarantee, an offer that may well inform your choice.
STB acts as official ticket agent of FC Barcelona and has over fifteen years experience in the market. One of its most popular offers is tickets to see Barcelona FC at their famous Nou Camp stadium. This is one of the most prestigious stadiums in world sport.
Barcelona is a beautiful city, famous for its organic Gaudi styled architecture, and The Sagrada Familia, Las Ramblas and Park Guell are unique sights. This is why the Nou Camp has great appeal for an excursion. You will see a renowned sporting event and experience the wonderful surrounds of the Catalan capital. Most people would agree that a trip to the football is a vital part of your holiday itinerary, made possible by the Spain Ticket Bureau.
So whether you’ve planned an excursion and want tickets to coincide with it, or you want to plan an excursion around a popular event, the Spain Ticket Bureau makes all of this possible.
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The name appears on millions of bottles of wine, one would almost forget it is also the name of a town in France. The place is crowded with cathedrals, statues and other monuments that remind you of its great history and cultural importance. The city became rich some centuries ago thanks to the two rivers ‘Garonne’ and ‘Gironde’, as overseas ships from many continents used the port for trading. Nowadays the port has lost its importance, but the name of Bordeaux did not lost its prestige, thanks to the sweet gold… wine !
A visit to the vineyards is a pleasure in many ways. The landscapes are just fantastic – this countryside is ideal for a bicycle trip – it is great way to explore the little villages, meet the locals, experience the ‘couleur locale’…
The landscapes are dotted with castles (chateaux) , which makes the experience sometimes like being in a fairy tale. A lot of these ‘chateaux’ can be visited, often a guided tour with explanation about the wine making process and wine tasting is offered – this is really the good life ! A little word of warning however : it can become hot , very hot, and when with a bicycle, one better not exagerate wine tasting along the way…
But don’t worry , the good life can be continued when one comes back in the evening and can enjoy the richness of the French cuisine. Oysters, ‘Foie gras’, different ‘Patés’, of course with the appropriate choice of Bordeaux wine…it is difficult to make a choice from the menu here and did I mention the deserts yet ? Many nice restaurants, often at great locations with a nice atmosphere. And dfter dinner a nice stroll in town, watch the sun set, and then a nightcap in the hotel – good life can be simple !
Bordeaux, a place to remember and return to !
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The main attraction of the Kasbah is its position as a gateway for trekking the High Atlas, specifically the Toubkal National Park, protected since 1942. For those with a decent level of fitness, the ascent of Jbel Toubkal (at 4,167m, the highest mountain in North Africa) is achievable in a two-day round trip.
Maurice tailors treks of varying lengths (up to more than 5 nights) according to the experience and ambitions of his guests, with guides, chefs and muleteers on hand. For the less adventurous – or those shorter on time – a half-day trek is the perfect option.
I was expertly guided by Omar, whose weather-worn features imparted a comforting air of authority – I knew I’d be grateful for his insistence on taking a walking pole and straw hat. Between friendly ‘agoos’ with goat herders and picking paths out of nowhere, he told stories of walking these trails since childhood and remote inter-village football matches on a sole grassy plateau, at least 2 hours up.
Fuelled by a breakfast that brimmed with fig jam, fresh honey, bread, omelettes and pancakes, the walking was the right side of challenging, the views truly astounding. A mule followed quietly, carrying water, fresh fruit and dates for snacking, while a refreshing lunch at the Azzaden Trekking lodge was waiting at the end of the trail – I was never far from my next meal.
April and May are the ideal months to visit, with conditions near perfect for trekking. Snow resists the sunshine on the mountain tops, while lower slopes are transformed by blossom with cherry, apple and walnut trees springing back to life – stunning scenery is a given. When I visited in late March, crocuses and the purple of early irises were hinting at the carpet of green and spring flowers that would transform the slopes within weeks.
The rocky jeep ride back to Kasbah du Toubkal could have been terrifying if it weren’t for the distraction of ever-changing panoramas across slopes, valleys, and villages, at points extending for 150 km. Safely returned, sipping mint tea and basking in the last of the sun on the roof terrace, I resolved to challenge anyone claiming they could tire of mountains to come here for a serious reassessment.
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