Boa Vista Island, Cape Verde

Boa Vista Island: Atlantic waves, Dunas do Sara


Ghost of "Cape Santa Maria"
The waves from the Atlantic collide with the freighter "Cabo Santa Maria" and proceed to the sandy beach at Atlanta Beach.
Pissed off
Herd of goats approach a water tank where they are supposed to quench their thirst.
chimney of keys
Two bathers run towards the chimney of Chaves, the apex of an old brick and tile factory.
Coconut Duo
Two coconut trees stand out from the sandy soil around the ruins of Curral Velho.
Sal Rei Gym
Workers on the island of Boa Vista work out in a makeshift gym in Sal Rei.
Sal Rei II Gym
Resident of Sal Rei strengthens his body on a wall of an abandoned building in Sal Rei.
in the shadow of god
Resident passes in front of the church of Santa Isabel, in Sal Rei.
bunny smile
A girl from Sal Rei interrupts the games with her friends to laugh for the camera.
dry mountain
Elevation of the interior of the island of Boa Vista, sculpted by the trade winds.
Palmeira
Shade of one of the palm trees that dot the dunes next to the Chaves chimney.
Fish Bowl of Sal Rei
Fishmonger of Sal Rei, keeps a bucket overflowing with freshly caught fish.
soft fish fry
Fishmongers coexist at the entrance of the Sal Rei municipal fishmonger.
Rough sea in Chaves
Bathers face powerful waves on the vast Praia de Chaves.
An old mural adds color to the city of Sal Rei, the capital of the island of Boa Vista.
Old Corral saline
One of the salt pans that justified the formation of the village of Curral Velho, now in ruins.
Cape Verdean sewing
Seamstress from Sal Rei finishes a blue dress on an old sewing machine.
marine games
Three friends play at the low tide of Praia d'Diante Beach.
the old corral
Ruins and thorny shrubs of the old village of Curral Velho.
island-boa-vista-cape-verde-salt-sara-sandboard-dunes-chaves
Two friends arrive at the top of a dune at Praia de Chaves, about to sandboard it.
urban boat
Boat and hammocks rest against a house in Sal Rei, the capital of the island of Boa Vista.
Boa Vista is not only the Cape Verdean island closest to the African coast and its vast desert. After a few hours of discovery, it convinces us that it is a piece of the Sahara adrift in the North Atlantic.

We walk along the seafront of the large beach of Chaves, on the lookout for the incursions of the waves above.

The trades that generate them blow loudly. In alliance, the wind and waves punish the sandy coast of the west of the island. They keep the beach flag red and a few sunbathers standing at the back.

We see their shapes along the endless bay. It is sprinkled right down to the foot of the sand mountain range that isolates the beach from the ocher expanse of the interior.

The sea water is at 23º. On a day of good oceanic mood, the baths and dives of the figures would give the lifeguard something to do

In those conditions, the detached man remained half-sunken in his wooden tower. He just peeked from time to time if some deranged soul challenged the Atlantic.

Praia de Chaves, Ilha da Boa Vista, Cape Verde, Sal, Evoking the Sahara

Bathers face powerful waves on the vast Praia de Chaves.

The Emblematic Chimney (of the Beach) of Chaves

We continue north, towards the old chimney of Chaves. We let her guide us like a brick beacon. Since long since deactivated and bequeathed to the dunes that surround it, this chimney, however unlikely it may seem, had its era of smoky glory.

In the early XNUMXth century, investors found the surrounding clayey soil to be ideal for producing bricks and tiles. And that they could then sell them in the nearest countries, in Guineas, in Senegal. The manufacturing unit was developed.

It even gave work to dozens of Cape Verdean employees, some of whom migrated from other islands. Without warning, in 1928, the factory closed its doors.

Over time, at the whim of the wind, sand and bushes invaded the lower section of the ovens. Not long after a hundred years, the chimney resists against the mostly blue sky.

Chaves chimney, Boa Vista Island, Cape Verde, Sal evoking the Sahara

Two bathers run towards the chimney of Chaves, the apex of an old brick and tile factory.

It became a brand image of the island of Boa Vista. In those parts, only the palm trees of the Pérola de Chaves restaurant challenge its supremacy.

Step by step, we arrive at the small oasis valley in which this business is installed. Sitting on white chairs, some families relax in a sunny conviviality.

Nearby, two friends armed with sandboards, they have fun sliding down the dune, starting from the slippery summit where a Cape Verdean flag waves.

Sandboarding, Praia de Chaves, Boa Vista Island, Cape Verde, Sal, Evocar o Sara

Two friends arrive at the top of a dune at Praia de Chaves, about to sandboard it.

We also went up. From there, we contemplate the vastness of the beach and the 8km semi-desert that still separated us from Sal Rei, the capital of Boa Vista.

Half-round in Plenas Dunas da Boa Vista, in search of the capital Sal Rei

Convinced that, on foot, it would take too long, we returned to the starting point. In Cabeçadas, we take a ride to the city.

We arrived in Sal Rei at around three-thirty in the afternoon. The heat of the plunging sun was fading. This made it easier for us not only to walk around but also to take photographs.

We leave the ride in the middle of Avenida dos Pescadores, a few meters from the Wakan Bar, which serves as an unusual separator.

We take a look at Praia d'Diante. We travel it to the opposite end. by the house tut dret, we are surprised by the athletic frenzy of an outdoor gym.

The floor is the sand of the beach. The wall of an abandoned and ruined house was equipped with iron bars. Right there, with no great conditions but no excuses, five or six men were strengthening their muscles. We got into conversation.

Exercise, Boa Vista Island, Cape Verde, Salt Evoking the Sahara

Workers on the island of Boa Vista work out in a makeshift gym in Sal Rei.

We realized at a glance that they were almost all, if not all, immigrants from Guinea Bissau. They worked as security guards at the various resorts spread along the coast of Boa Vista. Thus, it was possible to perceive the zeal with which they gave themselves to the push-ups, elevations and similar exercises.

In the cove by d'Diante, the fishing boats swayed to and fro, depending on the sway of the protected sea, much more tamed than that of Praia de Chaves.

Two fishermen get into one of them and set sail. On land, the people of the humble neighborhood that occupied the rocky ledge filled with slimes that separated Praia Diante from the adjacent bay did for their lives. Or entertained the time.

The Peaceful Life of the Capital Sal Rei

Two buddies were playing a game of goldfish, on a tiny board of this African game. A smiling owner was cleaning her Kapadocia bar for the night that was soon to be announced. Three young friends, armed with handmade surfboards, were playing in the swimming pools and puddles bequeathed by the low tide.

We return to the urban heart of Sal Rei. We wander through the houses on the ground floor, surrendered to the decadent beauty of its pastels that have long to be repainted. We stopped in front of one of those unpretentious buildings.

For once, we barely see the facade. A Cape Verdean and African craft store had taken over. One of his employees sewed on a machine worthy of a museum.

Seamstress in Sal Rei, Boa Vista Island, Cape Verde, Sal, Evoking the Sahara

Seamstress from Sal Rei finishes a blue dress on an old sewing machine.

A race, flag and map of Cape Verde, acted as a skirt for the table on which the machine was placed. With a tape measure around her neck, the lady gave us a big smile and delicious moments of chatter, stolen from the sewing of the finished blue dress.

We continued, with the islet of Sal Rei always ahead. Until we bumped into an extension of Amílcar Cabral Avenue, which was no longer named. And with the city's municipal fishmonger.

At the entrance, a group of fishmongers dressed in scarves and gaudy capulanas were arguing with great excitement.

That night, the teenage daughter of one of them had not slept at home. Unprecedented for the mother, more than a case, her absence was a drama whose approach and resolution her colleagues insisted on pointing out.

Peixeiras, Boa Vista Island, Cape Verde, Sal, Evoking the Sahara

Fishmongers coexist at the entrance of the Sal Rei municipal fishmonger.

Despite the commotion, we threw another joke and fell into its goto. Thereafter, the discussion alternated with combined poses, mouths and remarks that made us blush.

Discovering the Boa Vista Island Desert

We were a mere 16º above the equator. Night fell in a flash. With the next few days to plan, forced to dispatch some “office work” that was accumulating, we anticipated the return to the hotel.

We did it in a jeep Jimmy that we had pre-rented, we thought it was up to exploring the island.

The next morning, we left Cabeçadas as early as we could. We point to the south of the island and its Santa Monica beach. We had also thought of going through Varandinha.

An unexpected fluvial phenomenon distracted us from the plans and held us in the red desert south of Viana and Ribeira do Rabil.

Boa Vista Island, Cape Verde, Sal, Evoking the Sahara

Elevation of the interior of the island of Boa Vista, sculpted by the trade winds.

We drove through this dusty waste, concentrating on keeping to what we thought was the road. Without warning, a stream came from the opposite direction. He walked along it unhurriedly, with forked advances, not always synchronized.

That road creek left us stunned. As they explained to us later, it happened because the strengthened winter trades diverted water from the Ribeira do Rabil. They made it flow, like spontaneous rivers, through the deepest furrows of the desert.

Confirming where it came from would require a detour of many kilometers. Accordingly, we have resumed Kurral Bédju's original destination.

We pass by the ultimate resort with a southern Maghreb look. Soon, by a huge herd of goats eager to drink from a nearby pool.

Goats, Boa Vista Island, Cape Verde, Sal, Evoking the Sahara

Herd of goats approach a water tank where they are supposed to quench their thirst.

Old Corral da Boa Vista. Legacy of a Village that Ruined

From this threshold of asphalt and civilization bubist, we got into one of the most stony roads on the island. Fifteen minutes of jolts later, once again on the verge of the Atlantic, we found the ruins we were looking for, also stony, sterilized by the inclement sun.

Boa Vista Island, Cape Verde, Sal, Evoking the Sahara

Ruins and thorny shrubs of the old village of Curral Velho.

They were, above all, walls and walls, with the company of thorny bushes.

The Old Curral looked out over a salt pond. On a dry and inhospitable island like Boa Vista, it was this same lake and its salt that justified the human presence in those inhospitable confines.

Similar to what happened in the neighboring island of Sal, in addition to fish, the natives of Curral Velho had salt, there for sowing.

Boa Vista Island, Cape Verde, Sal, Evoking the Sahara

One of the salt pans that justified the formation of the village of Curral Velho, now in ruins.

Well, more than fish, salt was rare. And valuable.

Its export to the coast of mainland Africa and to other islands in Cape Verde generated a livelihood that compensated for the hardship of subsisting in that harsh hell.

At the height of summer, the temperature hovered around 40º. At any time of the year, ensuring clean water was a daunting challenge. As if that wasn't enough, even elementary, from the XNUMXth century onwards, the village was the victim of pirate incursions into Boa Vista.

The islanders have reorganized. They built Fort Duque de Bragança on the islet of Sal Rei and moved to an area under their protection, the area of ​​the contemporary city of Sal Rei.

With island of sal and other places competing to provide much more salt, Curral Velho was abandoned to the sun, to time, and to the birds and turtles that proliferate in the sand-palm groves of the surrounding Protected Landscape.

Coconut trees, Boa Vista Island, Cape Verde, Salt Evoking the Sahara

Two coconut trees stand out from the sandy soil around the ruins of Curral Velho.

Povoação Velha and the Old Desert of Viana

On the way back, we detour to Povoação Velha. More than Curral Velho, this is the town in the genesis of the history of Boa Vista. We found only a few rows of low houses, white, blue, arranged at the foot of hills forgotten by erosion.

They are separated by a wide paved road that, despite the dryness, the residents try to endow with verdant palm trees.

Whatever you find, despite its insignificance, this was the first town in Boa Vista and was also its capital. Until 1810, the year in which the newly fortified Sal Rei took the lead.

We return to the jeep. We left there oriented. We stop to admire the dunes of the small Viana Desert, which is said to be 1km wide by 5km long.

In practice, this mini-desert is a stronghold in which the sands blown from the Sahara by trade unions are concentrated, in the form of successive dunes.

In the good manner of Sara, it houses its own date palms and some of the countless acacias that color Boa Vista green. The coconut community, on the other hand, would hardly be seen in the great original desert.

Palmeira, Boa Vista Island, Cape Verde, Sal, Evoking the Sahara

Shade of one of the palm trees that dot the dunes next to the Chaves chimney.

Instead of stopping at Sal Rei, we continued to Atalanta beach.

With a 10km extension, facing north, exposed to all winds, trades and less constant, hit by storms and endless waves, at Atalanta beach we unveil the wildest side of Boa Vista. In such a rude and savage way that he claimed and showed his visitors who had arrived by land one of his nautical victims.

Atlanta Beach and the Ghostly Wreck of the freighter “Cabo de Santa Maria”

We park Jimmy. We walked outside the beach.

After almost an hour, we glimpsed the objective of the walk, an ornate, rusty and ghostly wreckage of a ship that the waves seemed to pass through.

On September 1, 1968, the Spanish freighter “Cape Santa Maria” ran aground, right there, everything seems like forever.

In the image of the Chaves chimney, it became a symbol of Boa Vista.

Even if your ultimate nautical trip and the wreck remain shrouded in controversy.

Cargo Cabo Santa Maria, Boa Vista Island, Cape Verde, Sal, Evoking the Sahara

The waves from the Atlantic collide with the freighter “Cabo Santa Maria” and proceed to the sandy beach at Atlanta Beach.

The most popular version is that the “Cape Santa Maria” traveled from Genoa towards the port of Santos – where most of the cargo sent by Spain would be located – and to Argentina.

It is also said that the freighter carried four bells destined for a cathedral in Brasilia.

The main reason for the sinking remains to be determined. It is known that shortly after leaving Tenerife, the crew was confronted by a tropical storm and cyclonic trade winds.

It was not considered a sufficient reason for such a large and well-equipped freighter to end up running aground. Over time, many other suspicions of incompetence and carelessness have been raised.

What is known for sure is that, on the morning of Sunday, September 1, 1968, the inhabitants of Boa Vista came across the stranded ship and generated a continuous stream of unloading the cargo. For almost a year, the “Cape Santa Maria” gave work to many residents.

Even considering that the most voluminous and valuable cargo was kept, it is said that, like Bread for a Nautical God, almost all the olives, oil, melons, Jerez wine, flour and many other foods ended up on the table of the good sighted people.

Chã das Caldeiras, Fogo Island Cape Verde

A "French" Clan at the Mercy of Fire

In 1870, a Count born in Grenoble on his way to Brazilian exile, made a stopover in Cape Verde where native beauties tied him to the island of Fogo. Two of his children settled in the middle of the volcano's crater and continued to raise offspring there. Not even the destruction caused by the recent eruptions deters the prolific Montrond from the “county” they founded in Chã das Caldeiras.    
Cidade Velha, Cape Verde

Cidade Velha: the Ancient of the Tropico-Colonial Cities

It was the first settlement founded by Europeans below the Tropic of Cancer. In crucial times for Portuguese expansion to Africa and South America and for the slave trade that accompanied it, Cidade Velha became a poignant but unavoidable legacy of Cape Verdean origins.

island of salt, Cape Verde

The Salt of the Island of Sal

At the approach of the XNUMXth century, Sal remained lacking in drinking water and practically uninhabited. Until the extraction and export of the abundant salt there encouraged a progressive population. Today, salt and salt pans add another flavor to the most visited island in Cape Verde.
White Desert, Egypt

The Egyptian Shortcut to Mars

At a time when conquering the solar system's neighbor has become an obsession, an eastern section of the Sahara Desert is home to a vast related landscape. Instead of the estimated 150 to 300 days to reach Mars, we took off from Cairo and, in just over three hours, we took our first steps into the Oasis of Bahariya. All around, almost everything makes us feel about the longed-for Red Planet.
São Nicolau, Cape Verde

Photography of Nha Terra São Nicolau

The voice of the late Cesária Verde crystallized the feeling of Cape Verdeans who were forced to leave their island. who visits São Nicolau or, wherever it may be, admires images that illustrate it well, understands why its people proudly and forever call it their land.
Santa Maria, Sal Island, Cape Verde

Santa Maria and the Atlantic Blessing of Sal

Santa Maria was founded in the first half of the XNUMXth century, as a salt export warehouse. Today, thanks to the providence of Santa Maria, Sal Ilha is worth much more than the raw material.
Santo Antão, Cape Verde

Up and Down the Estrada da Corda

Santo Antão is the westernmost of the Cape Verde Islands. There lies an Atlantic and rugged threshold of Africa, a majestic insular domain that we begin by unraveling from one end to the other of its dazzling Estrada da Corda.
Fogo Island, Cape Verde

Around the Fogo Island

Time and the laws of geomorphology dictated that the volcano-island of Fogo rounded off like no other in Cape Verde. Discovering this exuberant Macaronesian archipelago, we circled around it against the clock. We are dazzled in the same direction.
São Nicolau, Cape Verde

São Nicolau: Pilgrimage to Terra di Sodade

Forced matches like those that inspired the famous morna “soda” made the pain of having to leave the islands of Cape Verde very strong. Discovering saninclau, between enchantment and wonder, we pursue the genesis of song and melancholy.
Chã das Caldeiras a Mosteiros, Fogo Island, Cape Verde

Chã das Caldeiras to Mosteiros: descent through the Ends of Fogo

With the Cape Verde summit conquered, we sleep and recover in Chã das Caldeiras, in communion with some of the lives at the mercy of the volcano. The next morning, we started the return to the capital São Filipe, 11 km down the road to Mosteiros.
Brava, Cape Verde

Cape Verde Brave Island

During colonization, the Portuguese came across a moist and lush island, something rare in Cape Verde. Brava, the smallest of the inhabited islands and one of the least visited of the archipelago, preserves the authenticity of its somewhat elusive Atlantic and volcanic nature.
Santiago, Cape Verde

Santiago from bottom to top

Landed in the Cape Verdean capital of Praia, we explore its pioneer predecessor city. From Cidade Velha, we follow the stunning mountainous ridge of Santiago to the unobstructed top of Tarrafal.
Santo Antão, Cape Verde

Porto Novo to Ribeira Grande the Seaside Way

Once settled in Porto Novo, Santo Antão, we soon notice two routes to the second largest village on the island. Once surrendered to the monumental up-and-down of Estrada da Corda, the volcanic and Atlantic drama of the coastal alternative dazzles us.
Ponta do Sol a Fontainhas, Santo Antão, Cape Verde

A Vertiginous Journey from Ponta do Sol

We reach the northern tip of Santo Antão and Cape Verde. On a new afternoon of radiant light, we follow the Atlantic bustle of the fishermen and the less coastal day-to-day life of Ponta do Sol. With sunset imminent, we inaugurate a gloomy and intimidating quest of the village of Fontainhas.
Mindelo, São Vicente, Cape Verde

The Miracle of São Vicente

São Vicente has always been arid and inhospitable to match. The challenging colonization of the island subjected the settlers to successive hardships. Until, finally, its providential deep-water bay enabled Mindelo, the most cosmopolitan city and the cultural capital of Cape Verde.
Nova Sintra, Brava, Cape Verde

A Creole Sintra, instead of Saloia

When Portuguese settlers discovered the island of Brava, they noticed its climate, much wetter than most of Cape Verde. Determined to maintain connections with the distant metropolis, they called the main town Nova Sintra.
Tarrafal, Santiago, Cape Verde

The Tarrafal of Freedom and Slow Life

The village of Tarrafal delimits a privileged corner of the island of Santiago, with its few white sand beaches. Those who are enchanted there find it even more difficult to understand the colonial atrocity of the neighboring prison camp.
Ribeira Grande, Santo AntãoCape Verde

Santo Antão, Up the Ribeira Grande

Originally a tiny village, Ribeira Grande followed the course of its history. It became the village, later the city. It has become an eccentric and unavoidable junction on the island of Santo Antão.
Lion, Elephants, PN Hwange, Zimbabwe
Safari
PN Hwange, Zimbabwe

The Legacy of the Late Cecil Lion

On July 1, 2015, Walter Palmer, a dentist and trophy hunter from Minnesota killed Cecil, Zimbabwe's most famous lion. The slaughter generated a viral wave of outrage. As we saw in PN Hwange, nearly two years later, Cecil's descendants thrive.
Annapurna Circuit, Manang to Yak-kharka
Annapurna (circuit)
Annapurna 10th Circuit: Manang to Yak Kharka, Nepal

On the way to the Annapurnas Even Higher Lands

After an acclimatization break in the near-urban civilization of Manang (3519 m), we made progress again in the ascent to the zenith of Thorong La (5416 m). On that day, we reached the hamlet of Yak Kharka, at 4018 m, a good starting point for the camps at the base of the great canyon.
Itamaraty Palace Staircase, Brasilia, Utopia, Brazil
Architecture & Design
Brasilia, Brazil

Brasília: from Utopia to the Capital and Political Arena of Brazil

Since the days of the Marquis of Pombal, there has been talk of transferring the capital to the interior. Today, the chimera city continues to look surreal but dictates the rules of Brazilian development.
Boats on ice, Hailuoto Island, Finland.
Adventure
Hailuoto, Finland

A Refuge in the Gulf of Bothnia

During winter, the island of Hailuoto is connected to the rest of Finland by the country's longest ice road. Most of its 986 inhabitants esteem, above all, the distance that the island grants them.
Ceremonies and Festivities
Military

Defenders of Their Homelands

Even in times of peace, we detect military personnel everywhere. On duty, in cities, they fulfill routine missions that require rigor and patience.
Saint George, Grenada, Antilles, houses
Cities
Saint George, Grenada

A Caribbean History Detonation

The peculiar Saint George spreads along the slope of an inactive volcano and around a U-shaped cove. Its abundant and undulating houses attest to the wealth generated over the centuries on the island of Grenada, of which it is the capital.
Beverage Machines, Japan
Meal
Japan

The Beverage Machines Empire

There are more than 5 million ultra-tech light boxes spread across the country and many more exuberant cans and bottles of appealing drinks. The Japanese have long since stopped resisting them.
Kente Festival Agotime, Ghana, gold
Culture
Kumasi to Kpetoe, Ghana

A Celebration-Trip of the Ghanian Fashion

After some time in the great Ghanaian capital ashanti we crossed the country to the border with Togo. The reasons for this long journey were the kente, a fabric so revered in Ghana that several tribal chiefs dedicate a sumptuous festival to it every year.
combat arbiter, cockfighting, philippines
Sport
Philippines

When Only Cock Fights Wake Up the Philippines

Banned in much of the First World, cockfighting thrives in the Philippines where they move millions of people and pesos. Despite its eternal problems, it is the sabong that most stimulates the nation.
Traveling
Inle Lake, Myanmar

A Pleasant Forced Stop

In the second of the holes that we have during a tour around Lake Inlé, we hope that they will bring us the bicycle with the patched tyre. At the roadside shop that welcomes and helps us, everyday life doesn't stop.
Ethnic
Viti levu, Fiji

The Unlikely Sharing of Viti Levu Island

In the heart of the South Pacific, a large community of Indian descendants recruited by former British settlers and the Melanesian indigenous population have long divided the chief island of Fiji.
ice tunnel, black gold route, Valdez, Alaska, USA
Got2Globe Photo Portfolio
Got2Globe Portfolio

Sensations vs Impressions

Figure at Praia do Curral, Ilhabela, Brazil
History
Ilhabela, Brazil

Ilhabela: After Horror, the Atlantic Beauty

Ninety percent of the preserved Atlantic Forest, idyllic waterfalls and gentle, wild beaches live up to the name. But, if we go back in time, we also reveal the horrific historical facet of Ilhabela.
Martinique island, French Antilles, Caribbean Monument Cap 110
Islands
Martinique, French Antilles

The Armpit Baguette Caribbean

We move around Martinique as freely as the Euro and the tricolor flags fly supreme. But this piece of France is volcanic and lush. Lies in the insular heart of the Americas and has a delicious taste of Africa.
Geothermal, Iceland Heat, Ice Land, Geothermal, Blue Lagoon
Winter White
Iceland

The Geothermal Coziness of the Ice Island

Most visitors value Iceland's volcanic scenery for its beauty. Icelanders also draw from them heat and energy crucial to the life they lead to the Arctic gates.
shadow vs light
Literature
Kyoto, Japan

The Kyoto Temple Reborn from the Ashes

The Golden Pavilion has been spared destruction several times throughout history, including that of US-dropped bombs, but it did not withstand the mental disturbance of Hayashi Yoken. When we admired him, he looked like never before.
Mirador de La Peña, El Hierro, Canary Islands, Spain
Nature
El Hierro, Canary Islands

The Volcanic Rim of the Canaries and the Old World

Until Columbus arrived in the Americas, El Hierro was seen as the threshold of the known world and, for a time, the Meridian that delimited it. Half a millennium later, the last western island of the Canaries is teeming with exuberant volcanism.
Sheki, Autumn in the Caucasus, Azerbaijan, Autumn Homes
Autumn
Sheki, Azerbaijan

autumn in the caucasus

Lost among the snowy mountains that separate Europe from Asia, Sheki is one of Azerbaijan's most iconic towns. Its largely silky history includes periods of great harshness. When we visited it, autumn pastels added color to a peculiar post-Soviet and Muslim life.
The Sounds, Fiordland National Park, New Zealand
Natural Parks
Fiordland, New Zealand

The Fjords of the Antipodes

A geological quirk made the Fiordland region the rawest and most imposing in New Zealand. Year after year, many thousands of visitors worship the sub-domain slashed between Te Anau and Milford Sound.
Miyajima Island, Shinto and Buddhism, Japan, Gateway to a Holy Island
UNESCO World Heritage
Miyajima, Japan

Shintoism and Buddhism with the Tide

Visitors to the Tori of Itsukushima admire one of the three most revered scenery in Japan. On the island of Miyajima, Japanese religiosity blends with Nature and is renewed with the flow of the Seto Inland Sea.
Zorro's mask on display at a dinner at the Pousada Hacienda del Hidalgo, El Fuerte, Sinaloa, Mexico
Characters
El Fuerte, Sinaloa, Mexico

Zorro's Cradle

El Fuerte is a colonial city in the Mexican state of Sinaloa. In its history, the birth of Don Diego de La Vega will be recorded, it is said that in a mansion in the town. In his fight against the injustices of the Spanish yoke, Don Diego transformed himself into an elusive masked man. In El Fuerte, the legendary “El Zorro” will always take place.
Tombolo and Punta Catedral, Manuel António National Park, Costa Rica
Beaches
PN Manuel Antonio, Costa Rica

Costa Rica's Little-Big National Park

The reasons for the under 28 are well known national parks Costa Ricans have become the most popular. The fauna and flora of PN Manuel António proliferate in a tiny and eccentric patch of jungle. As if that wasn't enough, it is limited to four of the best typical beaches.
Armenia Cradle Christianity, Mount Aratat
Religion
Armenia

The Cradle of the Official Christianity

Just 268 years after Jesus' death, a nation will have become the first to accept the Christian faith by royal decree. This nation still preserves its own Apostolic Church and some of the oldest Christian temples in the world. Traveling through the Caucasus, we visit them in the footsteps of Gregory the Illuminator, the patriarch who inspires Armenia's spiritual life.
white pass yukon train, Skagway, Gold Route, Alaska, USA
On Rails
Skagway, Alaska

A Klondike's Gold Fever Variant

The last great American gold rush is long over. These days, hundreds of cruise ships each summer pour thousands of well-heeled visitors into the shop-lined streets of Skagway.
Buffaloes, Marajo Island, Brazil, Soure police buffaloes
Society
Marajó Island, Brazil

The Buffalo Island

A vessel that transported buffaloes from the India it will have sunk at the mouth of the Amazon River. Today, the island of Marajó that hosted them has one of the largest herds in the world and Brazil is no longer without these bovine animals.
herd, foot-and-mouth disease, weak meat, colonia pellegrini, argentina
Daily life
Colónia Pellegrini, Argentina

When the Meat is Weak

The unmistakable flavor of Argentine beef is well known. But this wealth is more vulnerable than you think. The threat of foot-and-mouth disease, in particular, keeps authorities and growers afloat.
Pisteiro San in action at Torra Conservancy, Namibia
Wildlife
Palmwag, Namíbia

In Search of Rhinos

We set off from the heart of the oasis generated by the Uniab River, home to the largest number of black rhinos in southwest Africa. In the footsteps of a bushman tracker, we follow a stealthy specimen, dazzled by a setting with a Martian feel.
Full Dog Mushing
Scenic Flights
Seward, Alaska

The Alaskan Dog Mushing Summer

It's almost 30 degrees and the glaciers are melting. In Alaska, entrepreneurs have little time to get rich. Until the end of August, dog mushing cannot stop.