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09-21-2012, 09:04 PM | #21 |
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I thought NP was from USA. Here are some more pics of the Mojave Desert. I don't think that it looks anywhere near as comfortable as the flickr pics FiP posted above. The Mojave Desert is about 25,000 square miles and New Zealand is about 100,000 square miles. So that desert spans nearly 25% of New Zealand. There are stretches that can go 300km between fuel ad people.The Mojave Desert on the left and the NZ Desert on the right. The one on the right doesn't look near as scary or desolate to me. That is not complimentary to the US terrain in my eyes.
At the same time I don't think the USA can afford me the beauty of rainforest jungles FiP. Florida may be close but still no cigar, well except Cubans maybe? |
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09-21-2012, 09:34 PM | #22 |
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09-21-2012, 09:47 PM | #23 |
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09-21-2012, 10:29 PM | #24 |
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09-21-2012, 10:31 PM | #25 |
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09-21-2012, 11:52 PM | #27 |
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09-22-2012, 12:30 AM | #29 |
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try these games here: Middle East 22/22 Asia 17/20 [Kashmir being included as a country threw me!] Russia 7/15 Africa 10/42 America 10/62 David |
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09-22-2012, 12:48 AM | #30 |
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I have noticed how countries that are taught in schools etc that their country is the best in the world e.g. America, Thailand, Australia are a lot more naive when it comes to any other country in the world or world history.
I have done the same as Stephen Cleary to Thai, American and Australian friends and I am always shocked at how little they know about other countries. Maybe in Europe it is because we have the chance to travel more and there are a lot of countries with a diverse array of cultures all in a smallish area that we are more aware of other countries ways of life. My younger brother can name every capital city in the world which I know is quite extreme but its not from studying them every day for a week, he just knows them from reading and geography at school. I often find it frustrating discussing any world history or travel with some foreign friends because of them not having much knowledge of world affairs and only of their home countries... I just think in some of these schools maybe it wouldn't go a miss to learn a bit more about world geography and history. |
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09-22-2012, 01:17 AM | #31 |
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09-22-2012, 01:30 AM | #32 |
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it's not "David's game", I pasted the link here, and it is not even "my game" either. if there are mistakes, it's none of our fault. btw, checked now and the countries are all at the right place. both Nepal and Pakistan. |
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09-22-2012, 01:44 AM | #34 |
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If you get a globe make sure to get a good one... most of the cheaper ones I saw in Thailand made a complete mix of Europe: none of the smaller countries were there (like good old Switzerland), and the globe was not even very small. Germany was fused with everything between Poland and Hungary, Italy had a similar shape to Spain/Portugal... etc... didn't bother to check the Americas, must have been similar there. I wonder why people even bother to produce these globes if they don't even take care about the "details"...?!
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09-22-2012, 01:53 AM | #36 |
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a couple of million living in that region can surely do it. of course, it is a lot easier if you have been travelling all around for years and it's not just names on a map, but you know about the culture, people, history. and btw, you just wouldn't believe how different these countries and people are, and how and why they look down on each other or are friendly with each other. it's not a red communist monolith, never been same diversity as Western Europe.
Asia, Africa, South America,whatever looks like a mass of countries from far away, must be the same for those inside. anyway.... anyone tried www.freerice.com , for games? interested in your vocabulary levels |
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09-22-2012, 02:05 AM | #38 |
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