Sporting Outdoors > Camping (and general budget travel) in the Azores

http://ask.metafilter.com [Ask MetaFilter | Community Weblog] From what I gathered (I have a longstanding interest in the Azores), it's not uncommon for visitors to the smaller islands lacking the usual tourist infrastructure to make their own informal, low-cost arrangements. And the Danish link seems to warn against camping on your own.

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Cartercenter.org[Cartercenter.org] Trip Reports by Jimmy Carter, Former US President and Nobel Laureate: Except for nations ripped apart by civil war, for several years Venezuela has been the most divided country in which The Carter Center is involved, and there are few evident means by which this division can be healed from within. We have been deeply involved in electoral and other matters in Venezuela since the general election of 1998, when Hugo Chavez was elected overwhelmingly as president, defeating candidates from major parties that had become almost totally discredited among citizens. [Read the Article...]

Wallofsleep.comhttp://www.wallofsleep.com [Wallofsleep.com] From Behind the Wall of Sleep: (July 2, 2003)" href="http://www.bootsandsabers.com/archives/000387.html">tells us that it’s “going to be funny to watch the Democrats who were opposed to the Iraq war tap dance to try and justify their support for American intervention in Liberia.” Movement in the background .It’s apparently already started.

[Hanscomfamily.com] The Hanscom Family Weblog: November 2005 Archives: In a Veterans Day address on Friday he accused critics of his Iraq policies of sending “the wrong signal to our troops and to an enemy that is questioning America’s will.” But Democrats aren’t the only ones questioning the administration’s Iraq policies””almost 2 in 3 Americans (65 percent) disapprove of the president’s handling of Iraq.

[Radio.weblogs.com] Earl Bockenfeld's Radio Weblog: The war has authored lots of odd media moments, none odder, perhaps, than that witnessed by anyone who crashed home at 3am on Sunday morning and turned on the telly to find Angela Rippon, live on the ITV News Channel, describing the skyline of Kuwait as "elegant". But one of the most consistently striking things about the coverage of the conflict - and every other conflict of the modern TV era - is the way it has been dominated by an endless flow of facts, stats and graphics about military hardware, from the sort of spoddy experts usually banished to minority satellite channels aimed at men you would rather not sit next to on the tube.

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