Hello everyone, happy Wednesday to you. @lauramica is here to share with you today's edition of Travel Digest - stop by and see where we wander today!
Today's featured posts include a visit to an incredible Roman aqueduct in the south of France, a bit of hiking to a castle in Lisbon, Portugal and a trip to Aniakchak Bay, Alaska. We also visited other parts of the world such as Indonesia, Philippines, Spain, Venezuela and USA. A bit of everything :)
Thank you all for pinning your posts on the Worldmappin map, I wish you a great day! 😃❤️
Come and explore with me the ROMAN AQUADUCT ~ PONT DU GARD in FRANCE 🇫🇷 It is located in Vers-du-Pont and dates back to the first Century AD. Build on 3 levels, about 50 meter high and stretches 275 meter over the river Gardon.
A true engineering masterpiece. We will walk around it today, check out the view points at the sides and even cross it a few times. So we can enjoy all the stunning views of this beautiful ancient bridge. It was a cloudy day as you can see and we luckily won’t catch any rain, it is a bit windy though.
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Good afternoon, adventurous friends, today I am in Sesimbra, south of Lisbon (40km) to do for the first time the trail that goes by the name: "trilho do castelo" which consists of a very short route of less than a kilometer starting from the Plaza de Sancho I to the Sesimbra Castle, in this short route we are going to learn about the landscape of the mountains that we have in the surroundings and take some photos in the Castle at more than 230 meters high.📸📍🌍
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On our expedition cruise along the Alaskan Peninsula, we pulled into a rugged, remote bay called Aniakchak Bay. This coastline is part of Aniakchak National Monument and Preserve, which is one of the National Park Systems least visited units, with less than 200 visitors yearly. Most of these visitors are fishing, hunting, or rafting up in the caldera of a huge, inland volcano. However, we are getting to explore the coast. There are no footprints on these beaches, except for the wildlife that came before us.
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