Our philosophy is simple. We want to encourage you to dream. BIG!
Then we help you plan your trip, get the most out of it while you're traveling and help you
share your experience with friends.
Jack Eaton, father of one of the deceased students from Engländerdenkmal (Englishmen Memorial) disaster, had a stone cross erected at the spot where his son, Jack Alexander Eaton, had been found lifeless. This cross is locally known as "Kleines Engländerdenkmal", literally "Little Memorial to the English". It bears a German inscription on the mountain side, ...
Klooga concentration camp was a Nazi forced labor subcamp of the Vaivara concentration camp complex established in September 1943 in Harju County, during World War II, in German-occupied Estonia near the village of Klooga. The Vaivara camp complex was commanded by German officers Hans Aumeier, Otto Brennais and Franz von Bodmann and consisted of 20 field camps, some o...
The Knife Angel made from over 100,000 knives, blades, swords and other weapons used in violent crime from across 43 Police Forces in the United Kingdom.
In 2014, Alfie Bradley and the British Ironworks Centre, launched a new incentive called the 'Save a Life, Surrender Your Knife' campaign. They encouraged a knife amnesty in conjunction with local police forces acros...
Knocking at Death’s Door (Pietro Badaracco Tomb) features a sculpture by G.B. Cevasco from 1876 that depicts a mourning widow knocking on the bronze door of the sepulcher while carrying a crown. The door contains an hourglass, a symbol of the passage of time.
Knud Johan Victor Rasmussen (/ˈræsmʊsən/; 7 June 1879 – 21 December 1933) was a Greenlandic-Danish polar explorer and anthropologist. He has been called the "father of Eskimology" (now often known as Inuit Studies or Greenlandic and Arctic Studies) and was the first European to cross the Northwest Passage via dog sled. He remains well kn...
Ilulissat Museum is a museum dedicated to the famous Danish explorer Knud Rasmussen. It is located in the town of Ilulissat, Greenland.
The house was built in 1917 and designed by Helge Bojsen-Møller. Since 1939, the house has served as a museum dedicated to Rasmussen. In 2011, the house experienced a fire, yet the house and furniture were saved.
The Kodiak Queen, a former Navy fuel barge (YO-44) that survived the attack on Pearl Harbor was purposely sunk on March 2017 to become an underwater art installation and new dive site in the British Virgin Islands.
Historian Mike Cochran found the ship rusting in a Road Town junkyard in 2012. He set up a website in an effort to rescue the ship. British photographer O...
A perfect example of Desert Modernism, the Koerner House was built for Leon and Thea Koerner, a pair of Canadian snowbirds, in a deftly-handled composition of stub stone, glass and wood.
Koggala is a small coastal town, situated at the edge of alagoon on the south coast of Sri Lanka.
The area is also famous for its distinct stilt fishermen, who erect a single pole in the chest-deep water on the beach, just few meters off-shore, where they perch on a cross bar and using bamboo fishing rods cast their lines out beyond the surf break to catch small fish....
The Kokoda Track Memorial Walkway is a walking track and war memorial located in the suburb of Concord West, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is located along Brays Bay on the Parramatta River, and is a unique tribute to the Australian troops who fought in the World War II Papua-New Guinea campaign of July 1942 till November 1942.
The Walkway serves as a focal p...
The Kokoda Trail or Track is a single-file foot thoroughfare that runs 96 kilometres (60 mi) overland — 60 kilometres (37 mi) in a straight line — through the Owen Stanley Range in Papua New Guinea. The track is the most famous in Papua New Guinea and is known for being the location of the World War II battle between Japanese and Australian forces in 1942....
Price: $82.76