Private islands up for auction

News Desk

China Daily

Publication Date : 10-03-2015

Recently, islands in Fiji, Greece, the UK and Canada were auctioned off on China's largest online shopping platform, Taobao. However, if you were looking for a private island closer to home, this may be your chance.

More than 500 islands in East China's Shangdong province will be put up for auction from mid March, with leases of up to 50 years, Shangdong TV reported.

The report said that theoretically anyone can apply for the usage rights of the 577 uninhabited islands to develop them into tourist attractions or fish farms, for example.

But they don't come cheap. It may cost more than 100 million yuan (US$16 million), including construction fees to supply the island with water and electricity, a pier and boats in order to make them habitable.

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Private islands up for auction

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Apostle Islands ice caves in Wisconsin could be open this weekend

Apostle Islands National Lakeshore officials say the popular ice caves could be open to the public this weekend.

Lakeshore planning chief Julie Van Stappen says they'll check the ice Wednesday, then make the call. The ice must be locked in and thick enough on the trail out to the mainland ice caves.

High winds are in the forecast for the area this week. TheSt. Paul Pioneer Press reports Van Stappen says it's hoped the extensive ice cover on the lake will protect the ice cave formations from breaking up.

The caves were open to the public last winter for the first time since 2009. An estimated 138,000 people visited the caves last season.

Associated Press

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Apostle Islands ice caves in Wisconsin could be open this weekend

Beginner's guide to the Canary Islands: The other side of Spain

Mount Teide on Tenerife soars 3719 metres above sea level.Photo: 123rf.com

Flicking through El Mundo a top Spanish newspaper one February morning, I'm struck by images of Madrid blanketed in snow and Madrilenos shivering in thick coats and scarves.

I'm in another part of Spain, in a T-shirt, shorts and thongs, sipping a cafe con leche on a cobbled plaza framed by handsome balconied mansions dripping with radiant bougainvillea. Pretty soon, the sun will melt into the Atlantic Ocean, happy hour will commence, and the smell of barbecued seafood and the sound of tapas orders, wine-fuelled chatter and jazz, salsa and flamenco music will spike the blissfully mild air.

Such is life on the Canary Islands. Moored off southern Morocco, this volcanic archipelago was initially the preserve of the wealthy and wanderlustful who would sail here for the sub-tropical rays and therapeutic waters. The Canaries went mass-market in the 1970s and 80s, however, with resorts, Anglo-Saxon pubs and Nordic restaurants mushrooming along coastlines, sparking an influx of holidaymakers seeking sun, sea, golf and R&R away from the frosty climes of Manchester, Berlin and Copenhagen. Despite their appeal to Europeans particularly during winter, when temperatures are usually in the early to mid 20Cs the Canaries remain a mystery to Australians, who are rarely tempted to take the three-hour flight here from Madrid. Trust me it's definitely worth the effort. Get beyond the islands' (mostly) uninspiring tourist enclaves, and countless cultural treats and pulse-raising surprises await the adventurous traveller.

The largest of the seven main Canaries, Tenerife is 46 times smaller than Tasmania and distinctly two-faced. The south is parched, Mars-like and smothered in cacti-strewn desert; the lusher, more humid north is carpeted in banana plantations, pine forests and vineyards. In the middle of the island looms the cause of these micro-climates.

Spain's loftiest peak, and the third highest volcano in the world (when measuring its base from the ocean), Mount Teide soars 3719m above sea level and is dusted with snow in winter. The easiest way up Teide is via a cable car that ascends to a viewpoint, from which, depending on the weather, you'll either observe a sea of clouds, or the entire Canarian archipelago. Scaling the mountain on foot takes five hours and decent hiking boots, sunblock and plenty of water but it's infinitely more rewarding.

Apart from July and August, when temperatures can hit the mid-30Cs, Tenerife is a magnificent walking destination. Sign-posted trails, for all fitness levels, zig-zag the island. I love the Masca gorge hike, which snakes 8.5km from the idyllic whitewashed village of Masca down to its rocky beach, where you can board a boat to the town of Los Gigantes.

The next day I laze on Tenerife's nicest beach. A contrast to the island's many volcanic black-sand coves, Playa Las Teresitas flaunts golden sands imported from the Sahara desert. It's near Santa Cruz, Tenerife's chilled-out capital and port, which springs to life each February when it hosts what's claimed to be the planet's biggest carnival after Rio de Janeiro's.

A 30-minute tram ride from Santa Cruz whose avant-garde auditorium was designed by ace Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava La Laguna is an old charmer.

Its cobblestone grid-centre, crammed with museums, galleries, churches, colleges, convents and palaces; has UNESCO World Heritage listed status and was the blueprint for the Spanish colonial towns of Latin America. Indeed, on a foggy, drizzly day, there are shades of Quito, the Ecuadorian Andean capital, about La Laguna, which was established, 543 metres above sea level, in AD1494, after a Spanish army conquered the Guanches (the native people of the Canary islands).

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Beginner's guide to the Canary Islands: The other side of Spain

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MINECRAFT: BUILDING THE SKY ISLANDS PART 2 (Let's Play Epic Builds) - Video

China expands islands on disputed reefs in South China Sea

New satellite images show China has rapidly expanded several artificial islands it is building atop disputed reefs in the South China Sea, raising fresh concerns across the region and in Washington about Beijing's intentions.

Dredging and sand reclamation over the last year at Hughes Reef, a shoal in the Spratly Islands, which are claimed by five nations, has created a 90,000-square-yard island with two piers, a helicopter pad and what appears to be an anti-aircraft tower or radar facility, according to HIS Janes, a defense research company.

A satellite photo taken in March showed only a small concrete platform jutting above the reef at high tide. Another photo of the same area, taken in late January, shows an inhabited island bustling with construction projects.

As The Times reported on Jan. 28, U.S. officials worry that the buildup indicates a Chinese push to establish de facto control over resource-rich waters and islets also claimed by the Philippines, Malaysia, Taiwan, Brunei and Vietnam. Washington has urged China and the five other nations to resolve the territorial dispute peacefully.

Artificial islands also have grown substantially over the last year at Gaven Reef, South Johnson reef and Fiery Cross Reef, other outcroppings in the Spratly Islands occupied by China, according to Janes and a new report by a policy group that follows Asia maritime issues

At Fiery Cross Reef, Chinese dredgers created a land mass that spans the entire existing reef and is approximately 3,000 meters long and 200-300 meters wide, according to a Feb. 18report by the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative, part of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a nonpartisan Washington think tank.

Several other countries have built small military outposts on parts of the Spratly Islands, but they are dwarfed by the Chinese construction.

Taiwan has stepped up construction at Itu Aba, the only island it occupies in the South China Sea.

Taiwan is expanding the port to accommodate frigates and coast guard cutters and improving a 1,200 meter runway that is mostly used by C-130 cargo planes, the report said.

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China expands islands on disputed reefs in South China Sea

Nature's just showing off again

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Lissa Flemming, of Bayfield, Wis., explores an ice cave at the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore on Lake Superior, Friday, Feb. 27, 2015, near Bayfield. (Zbigniew Bzdak/Chicago Tribune) ORG XMIT: MIN2015022715523612

A person explores an ice cave at the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore on Lake Superior, Friday, Feb. 27, 2015, near Bayfield, Wis. (Zbigniew Bzdak/Chicago Tribune) ORG XMIT: MIN2015022715523916

Bayfield, WI For the third time this winter ice has formed along the Apostle Islands mainland ice caves. This time it has formed with enough thickness and extent to allow viewing of the ice caves along the mainland unit of Apostle Islands National Lakeshore. If conditions remain as they are or improve, the Ice Caves will open on Saturday, February 28th. ORG XMIT: MIN1502251736234211

Andy Wegner, @blitzcycleworks Edward Mitchell, front, of Detroit, and James Kuhn, of Seattle, explore an ice cave at the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore on Lake Superior, Friday, Feb. 27, 2015, near Bayfield, Wis. (Zbigniew Bzdak/Chicago Tribune) ORG XMIT: MIN2015022715523917

Andy Wegner, @blitzcycleworks Edward Mitchell, front, of Detroit, and James Kuhn, of Seattle, explore an ice cave at the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore on Lake Superior, Friday, Feb. 27, 2015, near Bayfield, Wis. (Zbigniew Bzdak/Chicago Tribune) ORG XMIT: MIN2015022715523917

Andy Wegner, @blitzcycleworks Edward Mitchell, front, of Detroit, and James Kuhn, of Seattle, explore an ice cave at the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore on Lake Superior, Friday, Feb. 27, 2015, near Bayfield, Wis. (Zbigniew Bzdak/Chicago Tribune) ORG XMIT: MIN2015022715523917

Andy Wegner, @blitzcycleworks Edward Mitchell, front, of Detroit, and James Kuhn, of Seattle, explore an ice cave at the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore on Lake Superior, Friday, Feb. 27, 2015, near Bayfield, Wis. (Zbigniew Bzdak/Chicago Tribune) ORG XMIT: MIN2015022715523917

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Nature's just showing off again

Cayman Officials End Sea Search For US Comic Book Artist

GEORGE TOWN, Cayman Islands (CBS/AP) Authorities in the Cayman Islands have ended a search for a U.S. comic book artist who went missing while snorkeling with his wife during a vacation.

A Saturday evening police statement says authorities in the British Caribbean territory have ended their active search for Norman Lee of Weymouth, Massachusetts.

The 47-year-old artists wife returned to shore last week after they separated while snorkeling about 250 yards (about 230 meters) off Grand Cayman. Boats, divers and a helicopter crew searched for Lee. But no sign of him turned up.

Chief Inspector Brad Ebanks says the currents were strong in the area and it was unlikely that we will make any recovery at this stage.

Family members say his wife thought he had returned to shore when she could no longer see him. Rick Connolly with Royal Cayman Islands Police says the current is particularly strong in the area.

There is a current out there which is taking us quite a way out to sea, said Connolly.

Local reporter Joe Avery with Grand Cayman 27 says he was last seen at the channel markers that separate the outer waters from the inner waters.

The inner waters are quite calm because the reef adds protection, said Avery.

It isnt uncommon for snorkelers to encounter trouble in the water.

Lee had worked for Marvel and DC Comics on titles including Avengers, X-Men and Supergirl.

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Cayman Officials End Sea Search For US Comic Book Artist