Posts Tagged ‘Magic’
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Ancient songs and spellbinding airs evoke the enchantment of Celtic Ireland, Scotland, Wales and Brittany. Performed on traditional instruments. Made in England…. More >>
The Fairy Dance: Myth and Magic in Celtic Songs and Tunes Audio Cassette
What were some beliefs held about witchcraft and magic in 11th century Scotland?
We just need for for simple spells for summoning, projectiles and shields, etc. It would be nice if one party speaks Latin and the other a more ancient Gaelic/Celtic. Perhaps you could suggest other languages?
Known as the âfestival cityâ, Edinburghâs Christmas and Hogmanay are two glittering events for the Scottish capitalâs winter.
At the end of November, the Christmas lights are switched on amid a blaze of ceremony on Princes Street.
Carol singing, fireworks and decorations lighting up throughout the city centre mark the beginning of the winter festivals for this beautiful city.
Princes Street and its much loved gardens become home to Winter Wonderland, where a host of seasonal activities and entertainment take place in the shadow of iconic Edinburgh Castle.
With lights twinkling in the trees below the castle, the city after dark enjoys a deeply magical atmosphere.
Children adore Winter Wonderland, with its ice skating, carousels and Ferris wheel, and the air of an enchanted Christmas.
And kids of all ages go wild for the snow slide and snow cars.
The bustling German street market, with the obligatory offerings of snow frosted candle holders, charming wooden toys and watercolour prints of cityscapes, is a friendlier, more festive way to enjoy Christmas shopping.
When the Scottish air starts to bite, stalls selling cosy knitted scarves, hats and gloves are abundant, as are favourite winter comfort foods such as mince piece and shortbread.
This can all be washed down with mulled wine or hot chocolate.
A wander will take you to many more novelties, from open air carol concerts to the reindeer at the west end of the gardens.
Edinburgh offers fantastic Christmas shopping, from the popular high street chains that stretch along Princes Street, to independent stores in the old town or designer haven Harvey Nichols.
Theatre lovers are spoilt for choice on the seasonal stage, with the cityâs many venues performing for a range of tastes, not least the pantomime extravaganza at the famous Edinburgh Playhouse.
Following Christmas is the event which has proved a cultural phenomenon, drawing thousands of revellers from around the world to see in the New Year in Scotland.
Edinburghâs Hogmanay epitomises Scotlandâs hospitality and friendliness. The event offers four days of celebration, with music, dance and street theatre offered in the run up to the countdown.
These include a torchlight procession, creating a âriver of fireâ through the historic Royal Mile to Calton Hill. Pipes and drums, music and performers play as fire sculptures are lit on the hill.
There is also a street dance or âceilidhâ, which is fantastic fun for older children, known as âFamily Hoog.âNew Yearâs Eve itself is the time for the world famous street party with sensational fireworks, and concerts featuring high profile acts.
Daring souls may wish to join the âloony dookâ, where hardy types mark the first day of the year with a dip in the freezing cold waters of the River Forth, in the shadow of the bridges at South Queensferry.
Or, you could just eat, drink and sleep the day away in the comfort of one of the many beautiful hotels in Edinburgh.
Edinburgh is hugely popular at Christmas and Hogmanay so advance booking is advisable to allow choice.
Fortunately, with such a vast array of high quality Edinburgh accommodation, there is something for everyone.
You may opt for serviced apartments in Edinburgh or hotels and whatever you choose, this trip is certain to deliver one of your most treasured memories of Christmas and New Year.
My name is Xavi Smith and I love to write about the city of Edinburgh and Scotland. If you are also interested in tips about notas de prensa , don’t hesitate to get in contact.
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7 tracks including: Patrick Cassidy-funeral march, Nightnoise-Silky flanks, jog of sorts and shadow of time, Johnson & Dunning, The bard and the warrior, tylwyth teg and the fortunate isle… More >>
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1. Amarantine2. It’s In The Rain3. Drifting4. Long Long Journey5. Amid The Falling Snow6. Fallen Embers7. Day Without Rain A8. Marble Halls9. Silver Inches10. Lazy Days11. Only TimeFormat: CD Genre: MISCELLANEOUS/OTHER Artist: VARIOUS ARTISTS UPC: 787364135226… More >>
Residents of the Alto Adige region of Italy will tell you that it is impossible to understand the true majesty of mountains until you have seen the Dolomites. For while every mountain landscape is spectacular in its own way, the Dolomites have something extra. Perhaps it’s their position in the heart of Europe, or it may be the pink hues of their sunsets caused by the fact that they were once coral formations that rose up from the seabed 25 million years ago. Maybe it is the host of stories and history they have played witness to, invasions and exodus, as the portal to and from Austria. The colors of the Dolomites make it akin to an enchanted garden: the fresh, verdant meadows framed by the darker greens of the woods, the pink hue of the mountains against the white of the glaciers at their peaks and the sky that resembles a cut canvas with the sharp outline of the peaks against blue sky and white cotton-candy clouds.
Merano, the heart of the Dolomites, is a geographic anomaly. Predominantly German-speaking, it seems to belong to neighboring Austria, but is 70 miles inside the border of Italy, a consequence of the redrawing of borders after World War I. Many street and shop signs are bilingual, but to Germans and Austrians, Merano is still Meran. The architecture of the region is decidedly Tyrolean, with wrought-iron balconies making way for classic wooden carved ones characteristic of the Austrian and Swiss alps, a change in shape of church bell-towers that is almost Byzantine, and food that leans towards Italy’s northern neighbors rather than the traditional Italian dishes.
Bisected by the Passirio River, which pours into the Adige, the city of 32,000 residents combines red-roofed arcaded buildings, historic churches and flower-embroidered parks, Merano, is tucked into the intersection of four mountain valleys spilling down from lower Alpine ranges. Its protected location, about 1,000 feet above sea level and shielded from the north, east and west, has given it a climate mild enough to nurture vineyards as well as palm trees, oleander and fruit trees that blossom against a backdrop of snowy peaks.
This Alpine town has been famous as far back as the 1500s for its milk cures in the spring and grape cures in the fall for digestive disorders. These recuperative remedies kept a constant flow of tourism into the region, especially during the 1800s when Sisi, beloved empress of Austria, became enamored with these cures. Subsequently, Merano was ravaged by World War I and II and the tourism trade did not return until sometime in the 1960s.
In summer, the mountain peaks are alive with wildflowers and pasturing creatures. But it is winter here that has captures my fancy. The peaks are snow-capped and still, but below the passegiata along the river is bustling with the Christmas mercatino, and every street is strewn with decorative no stunning holiday lights as charming as a Hans Christian Anderson Fairytale alla italiana. True to their Italian and Germanic roots, the merchants sell everything from the colorful sarcastic-looking befana, the satirical witch who brings candy to Italian children who leave their shoes by the front door on the eve of the Epiphany, to the weihnachtspyramide, a Germanic wooden Christmas decoration that moves and twirls with the natural thermo-dynamic heat of candles. Shoppers sip warm vin brule, a lovely mulled wine with blended spices, and eat huge salted pretzels. Children ice-skate to the tune of a Tyrolean band, and the smell of roasting chestnuts wafts through the air.
There are so many hotels in this area, one for everyone’s taste and pocketbook, but I was on a mission to find the one that had it all. I was searching for an ambiance of old-world charm with modern amenities, a staff trained to sophistication, but friendly and unassuming, a restaurant with healthy, but sumptuous cuisine, and perhaps even a small spa as a respite from holiday shopping.
Talking to locals, I was surprised and pleased to find out that a hotel fitting my description existed. It is called Castel Rundegg Hotel & Beauty Farm, and it is, indeed, a castle, a hotel, and if you think the “beauty farm” connotes something old-fashioned, think again. The Chinese philosophy upon which most of the treatments are based, is obviously of ancient origins, but the spa and treatment area itself is renovated to the most modern and elegant of standards.
Descending the stairs from the ancient castle to the bright new spa, is like transcending instantaneously from the 16th century to the present.
Many of the treatments, from facials to massages are based on bioenergetic Tai Yang principals that use acupressure to combat a multitude of ailments. These are no warm and fuzzy weekend-getaway “relax” treatments. They are real, honest-to-goodness curative treatments that leave you feeling as if you explored some kind of long-term anatomical improvement couched in pleasure from scalp to toe. Above all, and this is my favorite part, these are treatments, the results of which, transcend the treatment room and stay with you for days, weeks, or if you’re lucky enough and open enough a life time.
A dream-stay would be the Rundegg “Get in Shape” week which includes seven days full-board, six massages, a hydrotherapy treatment, a facial, a peeling, and a manicure and pedicure. Picture beginning every morning with acqua gymnastics, followed by a healthy, but sumptuous, breakfast. Every meal eaten in their elegant dining room will be the height of haute cuisine, but carefully tailored to your needs. Should you chose, you may have a complete medical and diet evaluation. But either way, guests enjoy unlimited use of the indoor pool, Finnish sauna, steam bath, Kneipp pool, Scottish shower, and yoga classes. The entire package is 2,100 Euro per person, per week. A month sounds good to me. Best of all, you’ll be in the loving hands of Peter and Adriana Castelforte and regardless of your age, they will treat you like their own son or daughter while you are entrusted to their capable hands.
Brand new to Merano are the thermal baths and spa at the Therme Merano. The Merano Thermal Baths offer 25 pools and treatment baths for a full spa experience, from the cold dip pool for the sauna to a warm whirlpool with its clouds of vapor. You’ll be carried by water-power through the current-pool, swim with the buoyancy of the sea in the brine pool, and enjoy the 240 meter pool, where you may start indoors and simply swim out to the mountain scenery. There are also two steam baths, a solarium, a hay bath, a caldarium and an outside Finnish log-cabin sauna. If the cold water dips aren’t adequate to cool you off after a hot sauna, try the Snow Room, where it literally snows from the ceiling, the walls and floor are snow-packed, and you have the feeling of being in the midst of the glaciers of South Tyrol regardless of the season.
Lastly, you’ll have a myriad of restaurants to choose from in addition to the one at Hotel Rundegg. For variation, I highly recommend at least one dinner at Restaurant Sissi, named after the Empress herself, where owner-chef Andrea Fenoglio will mesmerize you with cuisine that is modern in its presentation, but respectful of Tyrolean tradition, sauteed with a bit of playful imagination. My favorite dessert was called www. quattrobanane.com, but don’t try to look it up on the internet, it’s strictly for human consumption, not for your computer’s search engine. Literal translation, four bananas; culinary translation is that you will just have to try it for yourself.
More idyllic than this, you’ll have to create your own fairytale.
Denise Hummel is an American, who moved to Italy with her husband and children for a one year cross-cultural experience that has expanded to two. Denise Hummel directs a communications business focused on tourism called Imagine Communications.
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Tracks: 1. Generations to Come; 2. The Garda Car; 3. The Rolling Reel; 4. Young Arthur; 5. The Jogging Song; 6. The Land I Call My Own; 7. The Fly; 8. Ag Teacht Abhaile; 9. Jigs – The Bishopstown Jig & The Cork Minor Jigs; 10. Free – On the House; 11. Rover; 12. Won’t You Sail Across the Sea to Ireland; and 13. The Weaving Reel…. More >>




