Thursday, 23 January 2014

An extraordinary underwater Hotel in Fiji


An extraordinary underwater Hotel in Fiji.
Imagine yourselves spending a night at a beautiful hotel, overlooking the vast ocean 
beneath you. Now imagine you could penetrate the waves with your eyes, see the 
amazing underwater world, the colorful fish and algae, the other worLdly glow of the 
sun through the water.
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On the private islands of Fiji, at the Poseidon Resort, this dream is becoming a 
reality.
 
                                        Introducing the first underwater 6-stars hotel!

   This is the first hotel that is completely underwater, at a depth of 12-40 feet under the  waves, in a crystal clear lagoon that offers guests a breath-taking view of coral reefs  and the fish that live around them.
      In essence, you get to feel like a fish kept in the most luxurious of aquariums, while the fish swim free! How about that for reversal of positions?


70% of the room will be made of plexiglas, allowing total immersion in the underwater environment.


Each suite is carefully being designed to be totally modular, and in case of a malfunction or maintenance, it can be raised to the surface individually.


     The hotel is going to include 25 suites guest suites and everything else a hotel offers.



                           Eating in incredible style. We wonder if it's all sea food?


   
For those guests who have had enough of this spectacular view, they will be
               able to darken theglass or use 'virtual drapes' to cover them.

   A more beautiful room cannot exist.



 What else is here? A restaurant, bar, gym and even an underwater wedding chapel for those who'd like to say their vows in a very unique setting.


 Laying on the bed, looking up at the sea - this is a unique experience.



A stylish lounge to enjoy a drink.
 

 A library offers a great place to read while also enjoying the fish swimming by.


But it doesn't end there, as guests will have access to four personal submarines that will take them around the lagoon.


For those worried about safety, the resort claims on its website that its buildings are based on the design of passenger submarines, which it describes as 'statistically the world's safest form of transportation'.


The hotel will be accessed through a special elevator that will take
                                               them down from the beach.



 Getting out of the water, visitors will find tennis courts, a spa and a 9 hole golf resort waiting for them. However, this amazing resort fits the pocket of the rich or those who are willing to spend for a once-in-a-lifetime experience. Cost of a room for a week is $15,000 per person. So if you are planning a romantic week under the sea, you'll have to shell $30,000 for the experience.

Penguins, Ice, Light & Wildlife Photos


Penguins, ice and light... the beauty of nature captured on camera by the world's greatest wildlife photographers

Stare at the beautiful sight of African elephants at twilight, and witness the split second before a grizzly bear shuts his jaws on a sockeye salmon.
Or study a western lowland gorilla walk through a cloud of butterflies she has disturbed, and see a greater bulldog bat's reflection as it catches a fish.
These extraordinary images feature in a new book bringing together the work of ten of the world’s greatest wildlife photographers for the first time.
 

Underwater: Penguins, Ice and Light by David Doubile is one of the most extraordinary images featuring in a book called The Masters of Nature Photography


Red on white: Ice Formation is by Pal Hermansen, a photographer who is a specialist in the use of light and dark, and featured in the new Natural History Museum book


To the surface: Featured in the book is Antarctica Expedition - Climate Reality by Paul Nicklen, who has become known for his pioneering underwater photography


Mane image: Horse Spirit by Jim Brandenburgh is in a new book book bringing together the work of ten of the world's greatest wildlife photographers for the first time


Birds at play: Dancing Cranes by Vincent Munier. The photographers are all past winners of the Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition
The Masters of Nature Photography features the artistry of Jim Brandenburg to the underwater images by David Doubilet and Paul Nicklen.
The book also includes Pål Hermansen’s use of light and dark, the viewpoints of Frans Lanting and Anup Shah’s intimate portraits.
In addition there are the visual statements of Michael Nichols, Thomas Mangelsen’s landscapes and Christian Ziegler’s images of wild behaviour.
Each photographer has a biography along with a portfolio of the ten images that they consider is most representative of their work.
 

It's lunchtime: Catch of the Day by Thomas Mangelsen shows the split second before a grizzly bear shuts his jaws on a sockeye salmon


Pretty pink: African Elephants at Twilight by Frans Lanting is an astonishing photograph taken at Chobe National Park in northern Botswana


Splash: Perfect Trawl is a beautiful photograph by Chris Ziegler, showing a greater bulldog bat - also known as noctilio leporinus - catching a fish


Flying around: Anup Shah's photograph shows a western lowland gorilla walking through a cloud of butterflies she has disturbed in the Central African Republic

 
Visual statement: Whiskey by Michael Nichols is one of many photographs featured in The Masters of Nature Photography, which will be published on September 19
For every photographer there is a brief biography defining the essence of their art and what drives and inspires them.
The photographers are all past winners of the Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition, which is now in its 49th year.
The Masters of Nature Photography will be published by the Natural History Museum of South Kensington, central London, on September 19.
A collection of some of the best pictures from past years of the competition is featured in Wild Planet, also published by the museum.

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