What is the Hardest Thing a Stock, Futures or Forex Trader Will Ever Have to Do?
1. Learn the jargon – no way, this is easy and it just takes time.
2. Find a profitable trading system – there are hundreds of thousands of them, in fact many are just given away for free nowadays.
3. Back test and paper trade – c’mon, I know many people don’t like hard work but you’re way off here.
4. Learning to read charts – kids like reading charts as they look at the green thing and they say, “Hey that’s going up”, or if they see a red thing they say “that’s going down”.
5. Setting goals – important because if you don’t have a goal, you’re floating aimlessly; but not the hardest.
6. Thinking successfully – no matter who you are or where you are there is always something you are good at. If this is so you already know how to be successful.
7. Being true to yourself – knowing who you are is indeed a quality that sets one apart from the rest and is therefore one of the hardest things a trader will ever have to learn, but not the hardest.
8. Cut losses short – it is hard to do this for many but it is definitely not the hardest.
9. Logging trades – as we are lazy this is done by a very few, but this does not make it the hardest, not by a long shot.
10. Keep emotions at bay – trading without emotions is very hard, but as we are humans the proper definition is more like managing emotions; but either way it is not the hardest thing a trader will ever have to do.
11. Remain independent – listening to other’s advice whether it is a newsletter, internet forum, or just your buddy next door is very easy to do as we like to follow other people by nature so to do the opposite is hard, but not the hardest.
12. Sticking to the rules of a plan or system – this is indeed hard but not the hardest, and the reason is because this is too general a statement; many people trade with only rules for analyzing or entering or exiting, but most never have a complete set of rules for all three.
13. Sticking to the rules for all three (analyzing, entering and exiting) – getting closer but still not there just yet.
14. Holding on to winning trades – BINGO!
If we look back to points 12 and 13, I made about sticking to rules for exiting, this should start to open your eyes to the hardest thing a trader will ever have to do – hold on to winning trades.
Why is this so difficult?
For one, most place more emphasis on seeking opportunities and rules for entering than on anything else to do with running a trading business. And this is exactly how the whole “trading” thing is marketed. Very few traders have rules for exiting.
But even those that do have rules for exiting, only a small minority will stick to them, and this is because we as traders can not get past thinking about the money. Money rules us as traders and probably rules us in our lives too.
If you go back over all the points above I can tell you that all of them contribute in some way to the most difficult thing a trader will do; hold on to winning trades.
For example, if you think you’re a successful trader then why would you cut your profits short?
Because if you thought you were a success you would know yourself and where you need emotional management, you would learn any jargon and how to analyze, you would have a goal, and you would have a plan to go with it, which means you would have a system with rules for analyzing, entering and exiting, and you would have a fair idea how this system performs, which means you would have back-tested or paper traded it, and you’d cut losses short and you’d log all trades, you’d remain independent, and finally you’d stick to all the rules.
What a trader will face is the situation where they cut a profit short and take a look at what they made for that trade; this will send out a good feeling throughout their body. What will compound this feeling is if they look a little later on to see their decision was justified because the trade would have resulted in a loss if they’d not closed it out earlier.
The problem is this good feeling we are experiencing is encouraging bad behaviour whether it’s breaking rules, trading without a plan or whatever. To continue on this path will lead you to having to find more winning trades because the trades you do get wrong will cost you more than what you make from the profitable ones.
Now here comes the litmus test: If you cut a profit short only to see it would have been a lot more profitable had you held on longer or used your exit rules then this should hurt – I mean really hurt, but not because of the lost opportunity but because you see it as a failure on your part. If it doesn’t then success means very little to you.
All traders will go through the process of seeing themselves in a winning trade only to see it end up as a loss. This is inevitable. Apart from having someone look over your shoulder to prevent you breaking rules or cutting profits short, the only person who can do this is you! If you find yourself cutting profits short then look for your weakest links in your trading business. I have given you many here to ponder.
Dean Whittingham created A Traders Universe – Trading System Development in 2005 as a resource site for traders of all levels, with eduction, courses, brokers, tips, free videos, newsletters, trading systems, simulations and a free 7 step process for building a profitable stock, futures or forex trading system.
Cycling Holidays in Provence – Heading South Easier than Ever for School Group Holidays
Zipping off to the southern reaches of France has become easier for school groups since the advent of daily flights from various airports around the UK to the likes of Lyons, Nimes, Nice and Marseilles.
The sunny and chic but one time elite Riviera is no longer just the preserve of the rich and famous.
While some high falutin’ types may bemoan the loss of its exclusivity, most of us celebrate the chance to parade the palm tree promenades of Nice, meander around the side streets of the casino capital Monte Carlo, take an hour or two to go celebrity spotting in Cannes or watch the world pass by in from the quiet of a tree-lined avenue in Aix-en-Provence.
Here, too, is chance to relish the rustic scenes which inspired great artists from Monet and Manet to Picasso and Degas, savour the food and wines which they savoured, take in the rustic scenes which so fired their imaginations, visit the one time ‘Papal kingdom’ of Avignon.
Museums and art galleries offer a glimpse of great artistic and historic works and a walk around in hillside village trails in the Alpes Maritimes and the Var valley provide an insight as to how the Impressionists found the inspiration to produce such masterpieces.
This is now a region where international businessmen, film moguls and stage and screen celebs come to play, or seal deals while enjoying the comfort of the sun on their backs. Gazing at the rows of gleaming luxury yachts moored in Mediterranean marinas is an activity in itself – one which defies ‘credit crunch’ headlines. Swish hotels and high priced restaurants are patronised by a designer suited clientelle. Flashy convertibles turn heads as they get caught up in France’s obligatory town centre traffic jams.
But dinted Renaults and standard model citroens also hold their own in the line. You do not have to ‘come from money’ to enjoy the infinite array of rich vistas here, nor to explore market plazas or village squares, to sit by an ancient sculptured fountain or dip your feet into cool river waters.
This is a holiday spot to be enjoyed by all – a delight for school parties, gap-life travellers, or groups of retirees.
For those whose pockets aren’t too deep, there are mouth-watering menus aplenty, terrace cafes affording ample opportunity to people watch at leisure, while savouring a mid-morning coffee or chilling out with a glass of wine. Accommodation choices range from family and school group camp sites to self-catering apartments, country gites for rent, and friendly family-run hotels.
High temperatures in summer make it a favourite for annual holidays, and budget airline services have now turned the Cote d’Azur, in particular, into a popular destination for weekend breaks.
Cannes, a short hop from Nice airport is centre of the media spotlight every year as it hosts the world’s most famous international film festival. Here you can stroll by the fashion houses and perfumeries of the Promenade La Croisette or catch a glimpse of who’s enjoying nouvelle cuisine at the famous Palme d’Or restaurant, visit venues frequented by George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Nicole Kidman and Catherine Zeta-Jones, pick up film festival memorabilia, take in a movie at a city cinema.
But it is not just Hollywood stars who are attracted to Cannes. Over the years it has been a port of call for artists of all generations – home to Picasso for ten years, a destination favoured by Renoir, Chagall and Matisse. More modern day artists now display their works at the weekly crafts and antiques markets near the town hall a stone’s throw from the old port marina. Tourists can board the quaint ‘little train’ for a city tour, discover hidden away historic churches, elegant boulevards, the Palais des Festivals, Palais Croisette, casino plazas and flower markets.
From the marina visitors can take a 15 minute ferry to two unspoiled islands across Cannes Bay – St Marguerite and St Honorat. With their ancient forts, chapels, Roman relics and museum pieces, they offer a green and secluded rest from the more mainstream tourist trail.
It is easy to get about along the southern coast, on foot, on bicycle, by, bus, coach or train.
Frequent local buses and trains offer the options for one, two or three centre trips, to explore vineyards, enjoy the local culture, take part in hiking or cycling holidays – or simply to discover secluded beach spots along the coast. Summer or winter, there is a rich choice of those.
For more information about cycling holidays in Provence and other group holidays, please feel free to visit the website at www.inspiredtravel.net
Real Estate Is Hotter Than Ever In The Western Cape Of South Africa
Over the past decade, the Western Cape of South Africa has experienced significant real estate growth that registers on a global scale. The overall returns from investment in South African real estate show a 15.1% return in the year 2007. This is higher than sixteen other major countries and has established South Africa as a solid force in the international real estate market. As the most developed part of South Africa, the Western Cape of South Africa is in the middle of most of the success.
This is partially due to the neighborhoods of the Cape Town area, where residential real estate on the Western Cape of South Africa is particularly sought after. There are neighborhoods like Clifton, which is the center of local society and a highly sought after place in which to live. The high-end homes of Clifton are popular for their ocean views and proximity to the pure granite sand beaches of the Atlantic.
Clifton is only one of many desirable places to live on the Atlantic coast. There is also Camps Bay, another upscale neighborhood of Cape Town. With Palm-lined beaches and and exclusive shops and cafes, Clifton is also a popular destination for tourists during the winter months; when they flock to the Western Cape of South Africa.
Another Atlantic Seaboard neighborhood of interest if you are planning on living in Cape Town is the beach town of Llandudno. The truly wealthy live here, and like the fact that that it is secluded, has its own beach, and does not allow stores or restaurants in the area. The semi-private beach here is one of the nicest for sunbathing on the Western Cape of South Africa.
Of course, there is the residential real estate in Cape Town itself, which is a world away from the Atlantic Seaboard. The Newlands, a district famous for its rugby stadium, is a perfect place for families to purchase a home. Situated at the base of Table Mountain near the city bowl, this area of the Western Cape of South Africa receives more rain fall per year than any other and has been nicknamed the ‘green’ district.
Young professional singles prefer to live in De Waterkant, the trendiest neighborhood in the business district of Cape Town. Here, home buyers will find condos and townhomes, as well as the most upscale boutiques and restaurants in the entire Western Cape of South Africa. This is also an area of cobblestone streets and Cape Dutch style buildings.
To get entirely away from city life, many home buyers have found peace in the wine country or the Garden route of the Western Cape of South Africa. Properties here include newer homes, historic estates, and vacant land for building. The scenery is pastoral and the pace is slower here in the valley.
The Western Cape of South Africa has an immense variety of real estate to choose from for anyone who wants to live here. There are also many commercial properties and vacant land for those who want to have a custom-built home. The scenery is also so diverse on the Western Cape of South Africa that anyone interested in a home will be able to find the right location for the home of their dreams.
We are your source for Cape Town Accommodation, Cape Town Hotels, and more for your next vacation to the Western Cape.
What Is The First Sporting Event You Ever Attended–pro Or College? And Most Memorable Game You Attended.?
I went to a Texas Rangers game in 1983 against the California Angels. I don’t remember much about the game (I was 7), but the atmosphere, the smells, the sights, the teams, and the crack of the bat hooked me as a sports fan. Since, I have been to hundreds of baseball, basketball, hockey, football, and soccer games at professional and college parks. My most memorable game was a trek to see the Green Bay Packers play Arizona in Green Bay a few years ago. I have been a Packers fan my whole life, and my friend and I tail-gated at Brett Favre’s steakhouse before the game, walked on Holmgren Way and Lombardi Avenue and other streets that just have history, and made our way into the mecca of football. It also helps that Green Bay won the game, and Favre even had a rushing TD.
The Toughest Athletes to Ever Grace the World of Sport
It hurts to say that today’s sports landscape is filled with prime-time prima donnas and multi-million dollar cry babies. Though the games are still packed with enormous talent, gone are the days when the Rodmans and the Barkleys exemplified what it truly constitutes sports; toughness. After all, the symbols of sport are power, physical domination and shameless swagger. Where have all these gone? The following list pays homage to the toughest athletes with admirable tolerance for pain and unwavering passion for their respective sport.
Allen Iverson – Basketball
Listed as a mere six feet tall guy, The Answer is literally a small fish in a big pond. You would never think that the short and relatively skinny guy can drive to the hoop, up and over guys much taller and bigger than he is, but that is exactly what he did over the course of his career. During his prime, he averaged a remarkable 41 minutes and 28 points per game. In other words, this scoring machine simply does not get tired. Further, AI would go at great lengths just to play a single game, regardless of injuries and other setbacks. A lot of people may not be aware that in 1999, Iverson became fed up after missing 10 games due to a thumb injury that he removed the cast himself and went on playing.
Gordie Howe – Hockey
Everyone knows that hockey is a sport for the tough and mean, and Gordie Howe is the toughest guy among the tough guys. Consistently finishing a season in the top five scorers, Howe dominated the rink for twenty straight years. Gordie, however, was not only feared for his sheer talent in scoring, but also for his hard elbows and extremely short temper. His toughness and talent in hockey resulted in the coining of the term “the Gordie Howe Hat Trick”, which is when a player makes an assist, scores a goal, and gets into a fight in one game.
Brett Favre – American Football
Brett Favre is not your average quarterback. In the violent world of the NFL, nobody symbolizes toughness like this Green Bay Packer gunslinger. To begin with, Favre holds the record for most consecutive games played. For a non-kicker, this achievement is entirely nonhuman as injuries are as common as sense in the NFL. Moreover, Brett threw for a league-leading 33 touchdowns in the 2003 season despite a very broken thumb. The guy not only has the ability to endure physical pain, but emotional pain as well. Right after the death of his father at the age of 58, Brett insisted that he still play in a showdown against the Oakland Raiders, which led him to amazingly throw 400 yards and 4 touchdowns in a 41-7 blowout.
Tiger Woods – Golf
He may not look or move like a tiger compared to the previously mentioned athletes, but there may not be an athlete more intimidating that the best golfer of all time. With his unrivaled determination and dedication to perfecting his craft, Tiger Woods exemplifies the real essence of mental toughness. Though he is aware that he is currently at the top of the golfing world, Tiger still practices his game for countless of hours, like a teenager who dreams of becoming the best in the world someday. GP
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Has Anyone Ever Heard Of The Green Bay Packers All Star “basketball” Team?
The Green Machine?
Did The Google Chef Ever Open His New Restaurant?
There were rumors that the original Google chef retired early and was going to open a green restaurant in the Bay Area. Supposedly you could ride a bicycle to generate electricity in exchange for paying your bill. Did this restaurant ever open? Where is it?
The Best deal which i ever get from the Hotel in New Delhi !!!!!!!
I can remember that all my schoolbooks still showed Goa as Portuguese when I was at school – they hadn’t caught up with the 1961 Indian takeover. I’m staying in Fontainhas, one of the oldest parts of Panjim, which is the capital of Goa State and it still seems quite European in appearance. It is sometimes known as Goa’s Latin Quarter. Most of the food is Indian in style but with lots of influence from the Portuguese which means that this is the only part of India where pork can be quite a speciality. I was hoping that some restaurants mght serve steak, but no luck so far. They do have a nice drink here called Fenny or Feni which is made either from coconuts or from cashew nuts. Cashew nuts are something of a Goan speciality and are on sale at lots of shops. So far as I can tell they taste just like the cashew nuts you get in England.
I had a glass of Feni (cashew type) after a meal. It was pleasant enough but I couldn’t detect any nutty flavour. In the interests of research, I am going to have to try the coconut type too.
The town of Old Goa used to be the capital until towards the middle of the nineteenth century when that city was smitten with many diseases and plagues and was practically abandoned and the Portuguese decided to relocate the capital to the more salubrious Panjim or Panaji. Most of the important catholic religious buildings are still in Old Goa and they even left the body of St Francis Xavier there – it is on show in a crystal casket in the Bom Jesus church. At least most of it is. The Vatican has one of his arms, I think and his internal organs were taken away too. For a long time the body was held to be incorrupt and there is a legend of a woman in Goa who bit off one of the Saint’s toes so as to take it home in her mouth and keep it at her home for luck. Apparently there was so much bleeding (and bear in mind the Saint had been dead for some hundred years or so) that the church officials followed her by the blood. But more recently the body has deteriorated and occasionally toes drop off by themselves. The body will be taken on display again in about five years time, in 2014.
It was interesting to walk around Old Goa and look around that church and also the neighbouring Se Cathedral ( I don’t know why it’s called Se, it’s dedicated to St Catherine of Alexandria because the battle securing Goa to the Portuguese was won on her festal day). It’s also quite odd that the cathedral took over a hundred years to erect and the Bom Jesus went up in a few years. Presumably that’s because one man paid for the whole of the church whereas the community as a whole had to pay for the cathedral.
There are some other things worth seeing there – the Viceroy’s Gate, with an interesting sculpture of a heathen being stamped on by a Christian and a small gate which is all that remains of the palace of the Kings who reigned here before the Portuguses. There is a nice statue of Gandhi with a little girl between the Bom Jesus Church and the Se Cathedral, It bears a text implying that all religions are essentially the same and all are equally valid ways of attempting to find god. There is also a very interesting small archaeological museum where you can see the giant statue of the first governor which stood in the Panjim Azad Maidan until 1961.
I caught a taxi from my hotel when I went there and this cost Rs300. But on the way back, I caught a bus and that was only Rs8! It was a crowded bus and I had to stand, but it was definitely good value. I ended up in a bus station quite far from the city centre but I managed to find my way back, walking through a nice park on my way. The park is dedicated to Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar who was the founder of the movement to convert Dalits to Buddhism and so avoid the Hindu caste system. It should be said that even Goa’s Christians are still grouped by caste and ally themselves with the Hindus to preserve the rights of Brahmins and other high castes.
Something I noticed was that the gutters here are deep and wide and dangerous. This is one of the peculiarities of the Portuguese architecture and was designed to help drain away the water after monsoon rains. Many of the older houses have sloping roofs and gutters for the same reason. Some of the roadside gutters have been covered and are relatively safe but most are open and provide a danger when walking, especially after nightfall.
The street, however, are relatively well-lit at night and the corollary of the roadside gutters is that nearly all the streets have pavements – and these are generally in good repair. For some reason, thouigh, they have been paved in a material which becomes incredibly slippery after rain, so you have to be very careful during the monsoon season.
The autorickshaws have evolved similarly to those in areas that were formerly in British India. The only difference that I noticed was that they have a curtain separating the driver from the passengers. There are also a lot of motorcycle taxis which are authorised by the state.
Generally speaking, Goa seems to be better run than those parts of India that were subject directly or indirectly to the British Raj. I don’t know if that’s because the Portuguese did anything better than the British, or because they did less and thus accustomed the Indians to do more or because of the natural advantages of Goa or because it’s a small state and so more easily ruled or because of the proclivities and personalities of the native peoples or because it gained independence later than the rest of India and so knew what actions to avoid and what actions would likely work. Or for some other reason. But it does seem to be the case. Goans expect things in their State to work and, mostly, they do. And there does seem to be a general feeling of content in the air, so it is hard to stay angry or upset here.
Many shops still have Portuguese sounding names – I’ve seen a Centro Commerciale de Drogas (a chemists shop) and several Commerciantes (I think they may be accountants). Also you see surnames like Menezes and Da Costa and Fernandes everywhere. But English is very much more used than Portuguese here. The street signs are in English and even those like 31 de Janeiro, which commemorate dates of importance to the Portuguese (this was the date when the Portuguese regained their independence from Spain), are translated into English. One of the main roads is 18 June Road, but I think that name may always have been in English. It commemorates a day of action against the Portuguese in 1946.
There are many statues in Panjim and the other Goan towns that I have visited. But unlike the controversial statues in Uttar Pradesh they are mostly not of politicians but are symbolic of cultural or religious practices. One, near the bus station and the Ambedkhar Park shows women at a “Divja” Festival. But I haven’t been able to find anything abou this destival in Wikipedia or using Google. Another interesting statue is one of the Abbe de Faria who was one of the first hypnotists. The statue shows him in the act of hypnotising someone.
Most of the churches in Goa are painted or whitewashed in white. In the past no private house could be painted white and they were traditionally painted in pastel colours.
I have not noticed any public toilets elsewhere in India, but there are many in Goa. Most of them have a sign saying “Symbol of Cleanliness”. They charge, or at least recommennd a “donation” of one rupee for use of the urinal. They are kept at least as clean as their London equivalents.
When I first arrived it was very rainy and wet and not at all the weather to want to visit a beach. But the weather improved (from my selfish point of view – most of India is lamenting a “failed monsoon”) and I went up to Anjuna beach. The countryside on the way was very beautiful. Goa is known for its greenness, which is now at its height towards the end of the monsoons and the countryside looked very beautiful. There are green paddy fields of rice and the darker green of the forests of trees that extend over most of Goa state. Panjim is only a small town and you are soon outside it and just surrounded by green ion every direction. Inland you can see the wooded slopes of the Western Ghats.
At the Anjuna beach itself, the green of the trees and the grass extends all the way to the beach, except wheer a space has been cleared for some shops and the market. Cows were wandering around right up to the beach.
I went on Wednesday, which is market day in Anjuna. There is usually a famous flea market there every week. But it doesn’t open during the monsoon, even when its not raining so there were only a few stalls. There were fewer customers, so all the stall keepers were trying to attract my attention and get me to buy something. Anything. As I walked away one told me I could have anything from her stall for Rs50 (about 60 pence). It was annoying at teh time, with all the vendors trying to get me to buy, but tehyt didn’t mean any harm and it was aonly a few minutes later that I was finding it funny. In another part of India, I might have been upset.
There’s what calls itself a dollar shop in Panjim, but it sells everything for Rs100. That’s actually quite a lot here so you have to buy three or four of each item at a time. It seems an odd price to choose. A dollar would be closer to Rs60, anyway. It’s more like a Pound shop, or even a GBP1.20 shop at current rates of exchange.
I went on a trip to one of the nearby Spice Plantations that are near Ponda, inland in Goa. THe countryside was spectactularly beautiful. Goa is so green. Rajasthan was green too, and that was unlike anything I had seen in England too. Here, it’s different again, as you mostly see the dark green of the forests of trees as well as the green paddy fields of rice. It’s hard begrudge them the rain when it makes the country here so beautiful and productive.
We drove through Ponda and the sun’s light was so bright that the displays of flowers and fruit and vegetables in the roadside market seemed to shine themselves with the most lovely colours.
Before visiting the plantation itself. I went to a couple of Hindu Temples near the town. There are many temples nearby and they are mainly there because when the Portuguese came they persecuted the Hindus and tore down their temples wherever they found them. They mostly stayed near the coast, so al the temples near there were destroyed. Wherever possible the HIndus would save the idols and move them further inland into the jungly area where they could be furtively and secretly worshipped. Later on, when it was safe, they built temples there to house the idols that had been worshipped.
The first temple that I visited was that of Manguesh (this seems to be a local name for Mahesh – the benificent form of Shiva). The main idol here is a black linga and this would, of course, have been anathema to the religious Portuguese Catholics as it symbolises a phallus at the point of penetration.
I also paid a vist to the temple of Shantadurga, attracted by the seemingly self-contradictory name. Durga is normally an angry goddess – she fights demons, I tok a picture of her killing the buffalo demon in a museum. But here Shanta means peace, after she resolved a dispute between Shiva (to whom, in her aspect of Parvati she is married) and Vishnu. It is said that this shows the nature of Goa – here even the angry goddess is peaceful. I saw another Shantadurga temple in Candolim.
At the entrance to the temple an old lady sold me a couple of coconuts to offer to the goddess. I gave them to the priest and he gave me one back, saying it was now a blessed coconut. I returned it as I left the shrine.
The Sahakari Spice Plantation gave a guided tour to me and several others who had arrived at about the same time. They had lots of different spices growing there and also showed us ohter plants grown there not for sale but more fpr display. It was interestring to see a coffe plant, for example and a grapefruit bush. The plantation is entirely organic and does not use chemical fertilisers.
As far as spices go there was tumeric, and cardoman and vanilla and cinamon. The cinamon leaves are used in the same way as bay leaves are in England and the actual cinamon spice comes from the trunk of the tree. Long sprouts of lemongrass was growing in the grass under the trees and we all had some of the lemongrass tea when we arrived. There was a chilli plant, introduced by the Portuguese, that gives the Peri Peri flavour for chicken etc. There were allspice plants which give the flavour of five spices.
The nutmeg plant that we were shown produces nutmeg spice but also mace. Our guide told us that nutmeg was banned in some countries as it was an hallucinatory drug.
We saw peppers growing in chains on a pepper tree. The different colours come from how ripe the pepper is and how long it is dried. We also saw Betelnut trees. THese are tall and thin and have supple trunks. People climb up them and when they get to the top they shake the tree from side to side so that the betelnuts fall down, beofre nimbly jumping to the next betel nut tree and starting to shake that one too.
Cloves were also grown there and they grew cashew nuts, both for the nut itself and also for the fruit of the tree which is made into feni. The fruit or “apple” of the cashew is sort of bell shaped and the cashew nut protrudes from it.
After the tour we had lunch, which was made with many of the spices we had seen. And also a glass of feni, made from their own cashew nuts and distilled on the plantation.
I walked down along the DB Marg esplanade to the Miramar Beach (Gaspar Dias Beach). This was a very pleasant walk of about four kilometres. The pavement was very good and you could walk at a brisk pace without fear of falling – though, of course, you had to take care at road junctiions both because of the traffic and also the gutters. Most of the route is alongside the Mandovi River and there is a pleasant park further down. On the river I saw the Casino ship which is the only place in India where you can legally gamble against other people, as opposed to gambling against a machine.
The Miramar Beach itself was a pleasant place though swimming there was not permitted. I wandered across the sandy beach – it was a long walk as the sand extends about a quarter of a mile – and paddled for a while.
The Goa State Museum was very interesting. The table used by the Inquisition to question suspects is housed there. St Francis Xavier, whose formerly incorrupt body I had glimpsed at Old Goa, first called for this to be held in Goa. As was the case with Jews, both in Europe and here, many Hindus nominally converted but actually maintained their original faith. So the inquisition was marshalled against them and many were tortured and burned to death. The wooden crucifix of the Inquisition which bore a Christ with open eyes who looked searchingly at the suspects was supposed to be at St Sebastian’s Chapel (very near my hotel) but I could not see it there.
There were many other things of interest at the museum, apart from the standard fare of Hindu statues. A gallery showing the history of printing in Goa (first printing press in Asia, apparently) – presumably you have to discount the Chinese who first invented moveable type!
They had lots of black and white photos taken of Panji before independence and it could be seen that it had not really changed all that much.
I also went to Candolim Beach but it was practically deserted and most of the shops and restaurants were shut because it wasn’t the season. I think that nearly all the visitors to Candolim and the adjacent beaches of Sinquerim and Calangute and Baga are on package tours and these are not arranged during the monsoon, so the place closes mosre or less. Surprisingly enough, though, the bus I got back to Panjim on was crowded – I hadn’t seen so many people in Candolim Village as I saw on the bus out of it.
My time there was not at all wasted, though, because I visited the very interestig Calizz Museum – www.destiny-travels.com
The museum’s name means “heart” in the local Konkani language (which is written both in Roman and Devangari writing). The main part of the Museum is an old mansion that belonged to a Portuguese lady, Dona Bertha. She had three sons and one daughter and, according to the tradition of those days, gave one son to god, one to the devil and one to the people. Her daughter she gave to a husband.
The son given to god became a catholic priest, the son given to the people became a doctor and the son given to the devil became a lawyer.
The museum now displays the living quarters of all these people restored to how it would have looked while they lived.
Also they have erected example Hindu houses, one in which Brahmins would have lived and one set up as the home of wealthy merchants. In all the rooms of each house there was much to see. I was given a guided tour around the whole place. I was the only visitor! It was raining hard when I left the museum and walked to the bus stand.
Panjim is a lovely town to wander about in and there is always much to see. There seems to be somthing about the place that makes you happy.
My last day in Goa coincided with the start of the Ganesh festival and of Ramadan (Ramazan) and there were lots of fireworks. However, most of the shops were closed as it was Sunday.
Would A New York Jets Green Bay Packers Sb Be The Highest Rated Sb Ever?
Brett Favre against the Green Bay packers who he had been an icon for the team for 16 years. would that be the most watched event in TV history?
Anyone Ever Stayed At The Brickell Bay Hotel In Oranjestad, Aruba?
My husband and I got a vacation through Outdoor Traveler ( a Blue Green Resorts company) and the hotel we will be staying in is the Brickell Bay Hotel in Oranjestad, Aruba. Anyone have any pix or feedback on this property? Thanks!

