
Dan Wildey
Articles
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Sep 23, 2024 |
active-traveller.com | Costa Brava |Dan Wildey
Size: 32x52x25cm Shimoda Carry-On Roller V2 Review: TL;DR Save your back and shoulders for the destination, by slipping your Shimoda Core Unit insert from a rucksack into a roller, and let the wheels take the strain through the airport. Shimoda Carry-On Roller V2 Review: Intro Shimoda is fast becoming the brand to watch when it comes to adventure photography luggage.
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Sep 23, 2024 |
active-traveller.com | Costa Brava |Dan Wildey
Joby Seapal Underwater iPhone Housing Review: TL;DR An affordable and user-friendly entry into the world of underwater photography, which harnesses the power of the camera you already have in your pocket. Joby Seapal Underwater iPhone Housing Review: Intro Joby has long been a part of the Vitec Imaging Solutions stable of photography brands which includes the likes of Manfrotto and Lowepro, and has created a name for bringing pro-photography gear into highly useable form factors for the masses.
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Aug 15, 2024 |
outdoorsmagic.com | Costa Brava |Dan Wildey
It’s among the best-known destinations in Spain, but seeing it from all angles gave Dan Wildey a whole new perspective on Costa Brava. East of the resort town of Roses on the Cap de Creus, a peninsula on Catalunya’s Costa Brava, the tarmac runs out. If you carry on down the dirt track for another six kilometres, however, you end up in a little slice of paradise.
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Aug 15, 2024 |
active-traveller.com | Costa Brava |Dan Wildey
Less than an hour’s drive north of Turin airport the Aosta Valley seems to swallow the road. The steep sides of the mountains encroach so quickly it’s almost a shock, despite the Alps being within touching distance of Turin itself. A short way into the valley, at its narrowest point, Fort Bard dominates the skyline, towering over the valley like an ancient sentinel. Given its position at the entrance to a mountain paradise, one would assume it was built to guard the door.
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Jun 26, 2024 |
active-traveller.com | Costa Brava |Dan Wildey
East of the resort town of Roses on the Cap de Creus, a peninsula on Catalunya’s Costa Brava, the tarmac runs out. If you carry on down the dirt track for another six kilometres, however, you end up in a little slice of paradise. Hidden deep within an isolated cove, there are a handful of buildings which constitute the “village”, and a single hotel situated right on the beach: The Hotel Cala Joncols. Arriving at the end of a long day’s travelling, I could hardly believe my luck.
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