Welcome! :: TGF on!
-
new entry
your name:
your e-mail:
Icq#:
your homepage:
Security Code:
your message:
[quote]MarvinSpich wrote: [br]Most flights donât want you joining the Mile-High Club. This company encourages it
kraken ŃаĐčŃ
In our travel news roundup this week: the rise in solo dining, where to save money at US ski resorts, plus the Californian hot-air balloon company offering a rather cheeky package. Your love keeps lifting me higher Is it getting hot in here, or is a gas-burner propelling a dirigible above our heads? A California-based hot-air balloon company is offering mile-high flights â with amorous Mile-High Club privileges â over the Temecula countryside. Guests can enjoy the views with a whole basket to themselves â and a privacy screen separating the pilot compartment from the passenger cabin. The pilot, who Magical Adventure Balloon Rides promises will be wearing protective hearing gear and focused solely on flying, ascends the balloon to 5,280 feet (about 1,610 meters), which is about 2,000 feet higher than a typical recreational flight. While intimate clinches are usually thoroughly discouraged in the skies, the company invites you to bring your own bedding and music playlist. A complimentary Champagne breakfast is included to fuel your frolics, of whatever sort. Pricing for two passengers starts at $1,400. If your mantra is âthe more the merrier,â each additional adult in the larger 10-person basket is $159. The Mile-High Club flight is just one of a host of packages on offer, from wine tours to company picnics, the rest of which are considerably more family-friendly. All by myself Sometimes it can seem like the world is full of lovers floating high on cloud nine, but donât fret if youâre going it alone this Valentineâs season: Youâre bang on trend. Millennials and Gen Z are breaking down the stigma attached to solo dining in an era when more Americans live alone than ever before. Some do it for convenience; some do it for freedom â either way, reservations for one are on the rise. Once youâve mastered dining alone, itâs time for bigger challenges, such as walking across Saudi Arabia. British explorer Alice Morrison, who has been called âIndiana Jones for girls,â is in the middle of her five-month trek of 2,500 kilometers (about 1,550 miles). Others are opting for a permanent adventure. Californian Jason Bennett gave up his life in San Francisco for a new home in Colombia. Today he says his happiness is âoff the charts.â[/quote]
register now
lost password
22.07: TGF!
22.07: Welcome
no active poll
•
show polls
COPYRIGHT & DESIGN BY WEBST4RS.DE