chilequest.blogspot.com
ChileQuest International
http://chilequest.blogspot.com/2009/07/chile-la-puerta-de-entrada-de-turquia.html
Wednesday, July 15, 2009. Chile, la puerta de entrada de Turquía a la región. El gobierno chileno sumó un nuevo socio comercial al firmar un TLC con el país europeo. Brasil y el Mercosur son los próximos objetivos turcos en Latinoamérica. Por Patricia Zvaighaft (14 julio 2009). También es el primero que Turquía firma con un país latinoamericano. Sin embargo, el ministro adelantó que se está trabajando para lograr un tratado de libre comercio con Brasil y, además se está conversaciones con el Mercosur.
chilequest.blogspot.com
ChileQuest International: July 2009
http://chilequest.blogspot.com/2009_07_01_archive.html
Tuesday, July 28, 2009. World Heritage Sites: Protect Our Past! By Robin Tauck, July 28, 2009. Research verifies that many travelers give a high priority to visiting a World Heritage Site. Travel agents and suppliers also have new opportunities to tap into this interest. There is no question that the vast majority of sites, as well as the many local communities and economies they impact, would benefit from a closer relationship with our industry. In the 10 years between 1999 and 2009, hundreds of sites a...
chilequest.blogspot.com
ChileQuest International
http://chilequest.blogspot.com/2009/07/watch-out-airline-fees-you-havent-heard.html
Friday, July 24, 2009. Airline Fees You Haven't Heard Of . Yet. By George Hobica, July 23, 2009. Think the airlines are done with new fees. Airfarewatchdog blog for an up-to-date list. In person airport check-in. Ryanair already charges £5 for this, and since you'll soon have to check-in online, there's no way around it. Paying with a credit card. More frequent flyer fees. Ryanair, surprise, charges for this. They charge for checked bags, so why not for cabin luggage? No more free rides for those lap rid...
chilequest.blogspot.com
ChileQuest International
http://chilequest.blogspot.com/2009/07/world-heritage-sites-protect-our-past.html
Tuesday, July 28, 2009. World Heritage Sites: Protect Our Past! By Robin Tauck, July 28, 2009. Research verifies that many travelers give a high priority to visiting a World Heritage Site. Travel agents and suppliers also have new opportunities to tap into this interest. There is no question that the vast majority of sites, as well as the many local communities and economies they impact, would benefit from a closer relationship with our industry. In the 10 years between 1999 and 2009, hundreds of sites a...
chilequest.blogspot.com
ChileQuest International
http://chilequest.blogspot.com/2009/07/los-cusquenos-y-machu-picchu-antes-de.html
Thursday, July 09, 2009. Los Cusqueños y Machu Picchu. Antes de Bingham, según el autor, los cusqueños tuvieron una relación fluida con la ciudadela mucho antes de que llegara la expedición de Yale. Por: Jorge Flores Ochoa / Antropólogo cusqueño. La ciudad y el valle. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). World Heritage Sites: Protect Our Past! Airline Fees You Havent Heard Of . Y. Chile, la puerta de entrada de Turquía a la región. Los Cusqueños y Machu Picchu Antes de Bingham, s. El Mercurio de Santiago.
chilequest.blogspot.com
ChileQuest International
http://chilequest.blogspot.com/2005/11/san-pedro-de-atacama-oasis-in-desert.html
Sunday, July 05, 2009. San Pedro de Atacama. Oasis in the desert. Long before the Incas conquered what is now northern Chile in the mid 1400's, there were inhabitants who lived around one of the rare sources of water in the Atacama Desert. The water ran off the Andes, forming oases, and into the desert where it evaporated. The Spaniards passed through, a century after the Incas, when Diego de Almagro came by on his way south. Though there was water, there wasn't the gold found in Peru and Mexico. Today, ...
chilequest.blogspot.com
ChileQuest International
http://chilequest.blogspot.com/2005/11/easter-island-faraway-land-steeped-in.html
Sunday, July 05, 2009. A Faraway Land Steeped in Mystery. And that is why people go there: Easter Island has a unique and beguiling past, fragments of which are strewn across the landscape, physical clues to a centuries-old mystery. I decided to begin my visit at the moai quarry, an extinct volcanic crater named Rano Raraku, about eight miles outside the village. I had been told to go early to avoid the tourist buses, and I was there, via taxi, by 9:30 am on a sunny October day, completely alone. On Sund...