Archive for May, 2009
Go Healthy At The Ayurveda Resorts In South India
Author: Sanjog
Get introduced to the beautiful you, to the healthy you after the rejuvenating experience of Ayurvedic massages in South India. This Indian destination is popular the world over for offering amazing Ayurvedic massages and treatments leading to physical relaxation and mental well being. Whether you want to relax or want to cure yourself of some kind of disease, this region of the country is the place to head for.
Ideally located in beautiful and natural surroundings, the Ayurveda Resorts and Spas Of South India have highly skilled and well trained professionals to pamper you with blissful Ayurvedic sessions. Relax under some shady coconut grooves in Kerala and experience a refreshing massage. Kerala, Kovalam, Alleppey, Kumakom, Trivandrum, Cochin and Calicut are some of the best destinations for Ayurveda.
Leave behind the fast-paced daily routine, noisy environment and worries of day-today-life and let yourself loose into the revitalizing massages at the backwaters and beaches of South India. Enjoy the perfect combination of natural beauty and heavenly comfort at the resorts and take back home a ‘healthy experience’ which you will remember for long. A wide variety of packages are offered by these wonderful resorts such as packages for weight loss, depression, stress and beauty enhancement.
Some of the best Ayurveda Resorts In South India are:
Kerala Ayurveda Resorts
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Keraleeyam Heritage Home and Ayurvedic Resort
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Kairali Ayurvedic Health Resort
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Somatheeram Ayurvedic Beach Resort
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Coconut Holiday Resorts
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Somatheeram Ayurvedic Beach Resort
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Kovalam Ayurveds Resort
- Cochin Ayurvedic Resort
Tamil Nadu Ayurveda Resorts
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Lukmaania Vaidhyasala
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Cholayil Sanjeevanam
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Le Royal Meridien
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Sukhada Ayurveda
Karnataka Ayurveda Resorts
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Ayurvedagram Health Resort
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Soukya Health Resort
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Windflower Resort
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Kairali Om Beach Resort
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Golden Palms Resort
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Pondicherry Ayurvedic Resorts
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Rosema Ayurveda Resort
Article Source: ArticlesBase.com
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From the Exotic Asia weblog
62th Cannes film festival
On May, in France started 62th Cannes film festival.
Hearings about that the competitive program of the Cannes film festival starting today, will collect elite of world direction, have proved to be true. Financial crisis as if has teased the main directors of Europe and Asia: in desire to prove that their art exists not in the most direct dependence on the market, they competing in speed finished the pictures to the main festival of the world.
LONDON, May 9 — Next week in Cannes you could be forgiven for thinking that the good and the great of the movie world had declined to take off their Ray-Bans for the opening film of the world’s biggest film festival.
They will, in fact, be wearing polarised specs, as the 3D revolution in cinema finally begins to look like a real possibility, with dozens of films on the horizon backed by big studios.
The opening night at Cannes will feature a 3D animated film about a grumpy old man whose house flies round the world under party balloons. The Disney-Pixar film “Up”, from the makers of “Toy Story” and the director of “Monsters Inc”, is a milestone in the festival’s 62-year history. While several animated films have been shown in the past, including “Dumbo” and “Shrek”, “Up” is the first one to land the opening-night slot.
The new 3D films began dribbling into cinemas last year and will soon be impossible to avoid. The polarised specs, which are more like sunglasses, have replaced the old cardboard blue and red glasses, and the experience is meant to knock socks off. For many, the 3D revolution is the most exciting thing since the talkies or Technicolor, and the money being thrown at it is astonishing.
Disney has more than a dozen 3D movies in preparation while Twentieth Century Fox is reportedly spending US$200m (RM720 million) on James Cameron’s “Avatar”, which uses new 3D techniques and around which incredible hype is building. The New York Times quoted a behavioural neurologist as saying that it was possible that “Avatar”, about a troop using technology to control an alien body, could possibly tap brain systems left undisturbed by conventional films.
John Woodward, chief executive of the UK Film Council, said the 3D revolution was real: "I do think it is a step change, not quite as big as the introduction of sound but maybe up there with the move from black and white to colour and certainly there with the introduction of widescreen.
"Whatever way you look at it, the sheer level of Hollywood money means we are going to be seeing a lot more 3D films. You’ll not be able to avoid them and the experience is fantastic."
Aside from 3D, Cannes promises much. Quentin Tarantino will blast in with his World War Two spaghetti western “Inglourious Basterds”. Also in competition will be the British directors Ken Loach, with “Finding Eric”, and Andrea Arnold with “Fish Tank”, about a teenager whose mum gets a new boyfriend.
There was good news for the London film festival yesterday with the UK Film Council saying it was giving it ?1.8 million (RM6.5 million) over three years to help it raise its game. — Guardian
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From the Carnivals and Festivals weblog

