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Archive for the ‘Travel to Wyoming’ Category

Yellowstone Hotels

Posted by hanun on Sep-30-2009

Travelers who want to enjoy the rustic charm of Yellowstone National Park can choose from a wide selection of lodging options ranging from luxury to budget-conscious accommodations.

Yellowstone National Park is the first national park of United States. Located in the states of Wyoming, Montana and Idaho, Yellowstone National Park spans an area of 8,987 square kilometers consisting of lakes, canyons and mountain ranges. It is home to the Old Faithful Geyser, a very popular tourist attraction. With its massive size, Yellowstone National Park also houses a wide variety of wildlife including hundreds of species of birds, fish and reptiles. Since the mid-1960s, at least 2 million tourists visit the Yellowstone National Park every year.

Tourists going to Yellowstone can choose from the great lodging options available in the park. One of the popular hotels here is the Brandin Iron Inn Hotel, a family owned inn that boasts of three generations of Yellowstone hospitality. Located on Canyon Street in West Yellowstone, Montana, two blocks from park entrance, the inn has 79 upscale and spacious rooms that all have modern amenities. Each room has in-room coffee, refrigerators and data ports for guests with laptops and PDAs. Guests staying in the hotel can also enjoy its deluxe oversized Jacuzzi. Aside from lodging, Brandin Iron Inn Hotel also offers luxury snowcoach tours, snowmobile rentals, park tours, car rentals, and RV Park. It is the best place to stay for people who love to bike, hike, fly fish or snowmobile.

Another great lodging option is Travelodge Yellowstone West. It is located three blocks from the west entrance to Yellowstone National Park, and offers convenient lodging for budget-conscious travelers who want to experience the joys of Yellowstone. The two-story hotel features a seasonal outdoor pool and spa tub and has 83 rooms. Each guestroom is provided with cable television, coffeemakers and complimentary local telephone calls. Other amenities include laundry facilities, fitness equipments, and RV and truck parking.

For Yellowstone explorers who want to enjoy lodging with a Western touch, the Anglers Inn is the best choice. It is located less than three blocks northwest of Jackson Hole’s town square. The two-storey hotel with its modern Western architecture has 28 rooms that are tastefully decorated with hand-made lodgepole furniture, knotty pine accents, wrought-iron lamps, and Western art. The rooms include standard amenities such as refrigerators, microwaves, coffeemakers, hair dryers, and complimentary local calls and wireless Internet. Although the hotel lacks its own restaurant, there are several nearby restaurants that guests can enjoy. Other amenities include parking, ski shuttle and tour assistance. The hotel, however, does not allow pets.

Sitting majestically on the Shore of Yellowstone Lake, the Lake Yellowstone Hotel is Yellowstone’s oldest hotel. This classic hotel, with its 1920s ambiance, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The hotel is popular for its ‘Sun Room’, which offers guests an elegant view of the Yellowstone Lake. Lodgings range from deluxe, presidential suites to comfortable frontier cabins. The hotel also offers a casually elegant restaurant. Other hotel features include a deli, a lobby bar, gift shop, and ATM.

Other hotels in Yellowstone are the Mammoth Hot Springs Hotel, Days Inn West Yellowstone and Stage Coach Inn.

How to Find an Online Home Business Idea

Posted by hanun on Sep-15-2009

Are you in the process of researching ways to earn money at home? Perhaps you are trying to come up with an online business idea for something that is of interest to you. Let’s take a look at a few tips on how you can combine affiliate marketing with the Internet to make money and have fun doing it.

1. Affiliate marketing lets you stay at home and work part time. This is great for people that do not want to quit their job or need some flexibility in their scheduling. For this reason we will assume that finding an online home business is your primary goal.

2. Whenever possible choose an affiliate program that is in a niche that you have an interest in. By that we mean if you love to fish and let’s see if we can find an affiliate program that allows you to sell products around the theme of fishing.

3. Narrow your niche down. rather than sell affiliate products around the theme of fishing. Tried to find a more narrow category in the broad theme of fishing that appeals to you. For example if you love flying fish you could create a website selling flyfishing products. Another example would be if you love to travel and fish in Wyoming, you could create a website offering tips on the best places to fish in Wyoming.

4. Is in important which affiliate programs you join. Your success is dependent on your ability to represent a good quality product. This may take some time, but the Internet will allow you to do that. You can start by Google searching your primary theme keyword such as flyfishing for example.

5. See if you can find some discussion forums to join that relate to the theme of your website. Again type in your theme keyword “flyfishing + discussion forums”. The Internet offers many great discussion forums where you can research what other people are doing as it relates to the theme you are interested in.

6. Go to google trends and type in your website theme keyword to see what is going on with that according to Google. You can also do some keyword research for various words relating to your theme to determine how many people are online searching for those words. If you want to earn money it is important to find a niche that offers affiliate marketing products that people are interested in.

This is six tips on choosing an online home business idea that you are interested in, and can make money with using the internet and affiliate marketing.

Your summer can hardly be considered complete with out a summer road trip. Here’s a list of ten things you cannot leave home without, and one bonus item you just might find revolutionizes your time in the car!

1. Music. happy, adventurous music that will keep you moving down the road. Bring CDs, your ipod, satellite radio, whatever it takes to keep you grooving all the way there.

2. A DVD player with kids’ choice movies. If you have kids in the back, this is really a must! I tend to limit my kids’ movie watching to half the trip or two movies, whichever is less. Really, after two movies, they are bored of watching TV anyway, so they end up fighting. When we’re not watching a movie, we play the license plate game, the alphabet game, read books, color, and tell jokes.

3. Good maps of your destination and roads along the way. Remember road trip season is also road construction season, so be prepared to navigate any detours with current maps of the area. Plus, you may find a scenic byway or other alternate route, but may not have time to risk ending up way out of the way.

4. Books on tape. For kids, or adults, books on tape allow you to be entertained together while still keeping an eye on the scenery.

5. A well stocked emergency kit and first aid kit. Don’t let a flat tire or cut finger ruin your trip. You might be able to help someone else out too. Remember to carry some food and water (for the people and the engine) plus an emergency blanket or two in case you are stranded for any reason.

6. A car ready for the road–be sure to have all your fluids (oil, power steering, windshield wiper, and antifreeze), your tire pressure, and your battery checked before you leave for any extended driving tour. Check your wiper blades, and replace them if needed. Have your tires rotated or replaced, if necessary. Check that your spare tire is inflated, and that all the pieces to your jack are in place.

7. Your cell phone and charger…duh.

8. Munchies. Whether the person sitting shotgun is passing out sandwiches from the cooler between the front seats or you stop and get out to eat at a restaurant, there is nothing like red vines and M and Ms to calm the road tripper’s restless soul.

9. A Camera. Of course you’ll take pictures once you get there, wherever there is, but don’t forget to take pictures along the way– at Tree in the Rock, Wyoming, standing on the Four Corners, in front of the giant thermometer at Death Valley, or wherever else you find yourself stopping to use the bathroom, buy more munchies, or just to stretch your legs.

10. Antibacterial hand wipes. If you’re traveling with kids, wipes are an obvious must, but even without kids, you are going to want to clean your hands after using that nasty gas station bathroom, or worse, an outhouse somewhere with no running water. Studies have shown that washing your hands is the number one way to keep yourself from getting sick, and let’s face it, no one wants to be sick on the road.

Finally, I add a bonus, the number 11 must have for a successful road trip; it’s something you may not have even thought about, but I think it could revolutionize your highway travel: the hitch mounted cargo carrier. I have to say that I have taken many a trip with my foot well and arm space crowded with things that wouldn’t fit in the trunk or the back of the van, and that’s not in the plan for the perfect road trip. Consider for a moment the ease and utility of a rack mounted to the rear hitch of your vehicle where you could put 3 or 4 suitcases, a cooler, most of your camping supplies, skis, bikes, even a motorcycle. You’re smiling right now, just thinking how convenient that would be. So, gather these essentials, and have a great trip! Wherever you’re going, may your road be smooth, your scenery amazing, and your companions worthy.