Hello everyone, Worldmappin friends! I'm @lauramica, and I'm bringing you our Travel Digest for this Wednesday. Come see the places we'll be visiting today! ❤️
This time, our featured posts take us to a beach stroll on Margarita Island, Venezuela, a walk in the park in Málaga, Spain, and a visit to the charming streets of Bo-Kaap in Cape Town. We'll also be visiting other places around the world like India, the Philippines, Cuba, and Argentina—a little bit of everything!
Thank you all for sharing your posts on the map! Have a wonderful day! 😃❤️
My husband and I left around 9:30 in the morning, taking advantage of the fact that I didn’t have to work that day. We wanted to enjoy the tranquility of the early hours, when the tourists are still resting and the beach retains that gentle silence that only the sea can offer. Our destination was Parguito Beach, a place that always welcomes us with its cool breeze and that sense of relaxation that envelops you the moment you arrive.
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I like to wander through different streets; it’s great mental exercise to keep changing direction, memorising new routes and then changing again. It’s the best exercise for the brain: learning new things, in whatever way, and in this case, exploring new paths, travelling and even getting lost to find oneself again is a very good way.
This walk allowed me to see some spectacular buildings on the street I chose, on my way to a park. The architecture is wonderful and I love it when those buildings are made with exposed brickwork.
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This Wednesday’s walk takes us to the colourful district of Bo-Kaap, the Malay Quarter, in the heart of Cape Town. Behind its photogenic pastel façades lies a deep history shaped by resilience and identity.
Bo-Kaap is one of the oldest neighbourhoods in the city, and its identity is inseparable from the colonial era. From the 17th century, under the rule of the Dutch East India Company, enslaved people were brought to the Cape from regions such as Indonesia, Malaysia, India and Madagascar. Many of them, along with exiled Muslim political prisoners, were settled on these slopes above the city. Deprived of freedom yet bearers of rich and diverse cultures, they gradually shaped a unique community, at the origin of what is now known as Cape Malay culture.
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Good morning, dear friends @lauramica @worldmappin. What a beautiful selection! My congratulations to all.
Thanks for stopping by ❣️
Thank you @lauramica and @worldmappin for the selection
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Thank you very very much for your support @worldmappin and @lauramica!!🤗😃
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If you want to be amazed by literature, just read this: [Literature] Charles Dickens: The Uncommercial Traveller 1/203
My congratulations to everyone selected and best wishes for the future. I have read everyone's writings very carefully and I really liked them.
Thanks for stopping by!