Hello everyone, Worldmappin friends! @lauramica presents our Travel Digest for today. Come and see the places we'll be visiting this Wednesday! ❤️
This time, our featured posts take us on a beautiful walk through the city of Verona, Italy, a visit to a 10th-century pagoda in Myanmar, and a stroll through the streets of Camagüey, Cuba. We also visit other parts of the world, such as Argentina, Spain, Indonesia, and Colombia. A little bit of everything! :)
Thank you all for sharing your posts on the Worldmappin map. Have a great day! 😃❤️
This time I want to share with you what was my visit to Verona, the esoteric Verona! With my friend Andres, who also didn't know the city.
This place is located between Milan and Venice, about an hour by train from Milan.
I had wanted to see him for a long time, because he is cheerful, one of those who are always looking for solutions and who see the bright side of life. So when I decided to go to Italy, I wrote to him to see if we could meet. Of course he said yes, and he himself found a place that was right in the middle of our trip.
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Imagine how magnificent Old Bagan, Burma, in the 10th century, leave behind countless pagodas that have remain intact to this day. Doesn't that demonstrate that its splendor is preserved?
You should experience exploring the many pagodas of Old Bagan once in a lifetime. It's truly an experience you can tell later. This place holds a spiritual touch for Buddhists, demonstrated by the power you can faintly feel. There's a hint of magic.
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This week the weather has been excellent for going out for a walk and discovering those fascinating places that I love to show you. It has been cloudy and cool, and I, having taken my water bottle, set out to walk along an avenue that I know you will love.
Starting from one of the bridges that cross the Hatibonico River and very close to the historic center of Camagüey Province, Liberty Avenue begins: one of the main traffic arteries. Older people, like my parents, call it Charity Avenue, and the fundamental reason is that when it was founded in the 19th century, it was called Charity Promenade because it led to and ended at the Church of Our Lady of Charity.
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