The must beutiful nachar pilec in world
The Amazon turned out to be an area that included over 40 percent of South America in ancient times; it is now this rainforest covering the extensive area of Brazil, Peru, and Colombia, and seems to be the world's grand rainforest, grasping more than 40.000 plant species and 1.300 bird species in itself.
Angel Falls, Venezuela
With natural wonders like the 3,212-foot-long cascades of Angel Falls and Guiana Highlands of UNESCO-stipulated Canaima National Park, it is no wonder that:
Fact: We squeeze a whole continent into this space. That is, 99 percent of the time there used to be ice in Antarctica—but the landscape is strangely varied—all the subtle blue glaciers, active volcanoes, hard waterways of the Drake Passage, and sights of pure snow everywhere, 360 degrees.
Arashiyama Bamboo Grove, Japan
Here ought to sit the world: in this light, in this infinity, this edge of Kyoto. More than a view, it is echoes of experience; in 1996 these sounds here—creaking wood, rustling leaves—have been listed by the Japanese Ministry of the Environment among the top 100 Soundscapes of Japan.
Atacama Desert, Chile
It's like traveling to the moon. In the back of our minds, or perhaps just in some ways, very slightly, our journey to the Valle de la Luna in the Atacama Desert in Chile felt just a little bit like a backdoor flight to the moon.
Serengeti, Tanzania
This collection of images looks like it could have been taken on the moon. In fact, it's Earth—even further to be exact: a few hundred square acres in Chile's Atacama Desert called Valle de la Luna.
Location: Serengeti, Tanzania
It is Tanzania that you will venture to for your African experience. For the spectacle that is the Great Migration the season to go is from January to March.
Svalbard, Norway
As far inside the Arctic Circle as one can get, the Norwegian Northern Archipelago of Svalbard holds views between the steep fjords and ice fields that can hardly be equaled at any time in
the 24-hour clock from October until February. Polar bears and Arctic foxes are still legendary for spending daylight hours between the steep fjords and the ice fields that ring this region.
Chile, Torres del Paine National Park
With granite tors, indigo lakes and soaring savannahs speckled with grazing guanacos, Torres del Paine is possibly the most mesmerising landscape found anywhere in the entire Southern Hemisphere. Happily enough, this is also a superbly well-trafficked place for hiking: The super-ambitious can clear around the park on the Full Circuit in nine days.
Ubud, Bali
But in all directions, Ubud is only a short drive from scores of the charming villages and tranquil countryside views. You can hire a bicycle at your hotel and easily make your way out to these bucolic villages, tangerine groves, and rice fields, with every serenaded by the sounds of farmers hard at work in the terrace's, a thousand years before.
It's almost the middle of nowhere, yet somehow one feels more at the center of things than ever.
But it's a lost cause—as one of Japan's most beautiful places, it has to be 12,388-foot Mount Fuji. Head for the best view to Lake Kawaguchiko of the Fuji Five Lakes; and this sight in spring enhances even more by blooming cherry blossom trees, the head to. Or, if you're a hardcore hiler, the trail is open from mid-July through the end of August, since snowmelt leaves just enough of a two-day window allowed for a strenuous ascend to the peak.
Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania
It sure does seem to have a bit more of an edge to it, though run-of-the-mill stratovolcano, if one could say that, the centerpiece of some giant mountain range for Africa's highest. The volcano fans out of that 19,000-foot height sloping down in every direction to huge, flat plains, so it kind of makes a blip in the topography of Tanzania; kind of like a mirage. Big added plus: No technical mountain climbing skills are required to make the top, so even newbies can feel good about ticking this off their bucket list.
Namib Desert, Namibia
Every view is packed with rhinos, giraffes, and plenty of elephants; an inner space further akin to the scale of another world. Owing to the red dunes of sand and groves of skeletal trees, you almost start to feel in the real sense that you are on Mars, rather than somewhere in Southwest Africa.
With long stretches, it offers circle-island views of waterfalls cascading and crescent moons of beaches secluded, making this county one of the world's longest coastlines. The list is long, and some are a bit off the visitor track, but try and stay open-minded: Na Pali is only accessible by helicopter, catamaran, or a somewhat strenuous hike.
The purple, pink and blue-flowered lupins are not natives here—actually they come from North America—but you'll find few other countries where they burst into the most exuberant flowers than New Zealand's South Island
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