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Transformer sa Twingo en un mini-camping car ? 🚗 On peut dormir à deux confortablement (c’est déjà arrivé à trois) Hôtel ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ La vidéo complète sur la chaîne #twingo #twingocampingcar #twingocamping #vanlife #campingcar #roadtrip #twingolife #minimalist #tinyhome #tinycampingcar #twingo1 #voyage #ontheroad #hack #campinglife #camping #van #vanlowcost #vanlifefrance #vanamenage #vanamenagé #hotelview

Falmouth, Cornwall | The West Country of England is a sailor’s dream. Small, picturesque and historic ports and harbours pepper the coast, many with deep water berths, long navigable rivers and excellent pubs. Falmouth in Cornwall is one of our favourites, where we stopped off for a few days to visit a good friend. This was one of the major ports for Britain’s shipping trade from the 18th to the early 20thCentury, with ships from all around the world anchoring in the harbour to await instructions from their agents as to which port in the British Isles had the best market at that moment. It was also a major fishing port, especially for Pilchards. As a consequence, the town has a rich maritime heritage which lives on to this day, with serious racing for the fine historic Falmouth work boats (with their distinctive coloured tops’ls) and six sailing clubs throughout the Falmouth Estuary. It is also a popular cruise ship destination. The National Maritime Museum in Falmouth is a gem, with exhibits ranging from the first Mirror Dinghy, to a workshop demonstrating traditional boatbuilding and a 1.68m long ‘boat’ called Fathers’ Day that crossed the Atlantic in 1993! There was even a surf exhibition when we visited, as this part of the UK has a strong surf culture, borne of the Atlantic rollers and swell that land on the exposed Cornish and Devon coasts. The shanty-style music that accompanies this video is called ‘The Wellerman’ and has its origins in the whaling industry in Otago, New Zealand.

Waltz of Bones in the Moonlight Two elegantly dressed skeletons waltz in a ballroom frozen in time. Their bones gleam with gilded details, draped in tattered aristocratic attire—a moth-eaten tailcoat and a decaying ball gown. They move gracefully across the cracked marble floor, their hollow gazes locked in eternal devotion. Around them, wilted roses, shattered mirrors, and swirling dust glow under the pale moonlight. A ghostly orchestra plays faintly in the distance as they spin, caught between death and passion. This is a love story written in bones.

Adelaar Dive Cruises takes you on a quick drift dive to Tatawa Besar in the Komodo National Park. An amazing drift dive, at about 15 to 20 meters deep you will find a very beautiful fringing reef. Excellent reef fish life and an endless field of orange soft corals, Barrel Sponges, and small boulders harboring a wide range of fish life awaits you. Mantas are often seen in this area, too.