Diners more likely to leave bad restaurant reviews on rainy days, says study
That harsh restaurant review left on Yelp? Might be because it rained that day.
That harsh restaurant review left on Yelp? Might be because it rained that day.
Apparently more and more Filipino travelers want their “winter fix.” They fly to snow-covered destinations and enjoy not only the cold weather, but also the shower of soft, supple snowflakes
A-maze-ing: a snow labyrinth in the frigid, windswept prairies of Western Canada has broken the record for the world’s biggest.
Veterinarians in Montana revived a cat named Fluffy that nearly froze to death after being found in a snow bank.
A mom and her child nearly faced tragedy when they narrowly avoided an oncoming train in Canada after the car got stuck in snow.
More and more Filipinos are traveling–that you know–but what’s amazing is how they’re being drawn to winterland and skiing, to freezing weather, to the Artic. Just look at what they
Time was when the only way Filipinos—especially kids who had never built a snowman—could experience snow was to head west. One great alternative is now just a three-and-a-half-hour flight and a quick train or bus ride away.
Snow, preferably a thick layer of it, is the recipe for successful winegrowing in western Finland, at what is believed to be the world’s northernmost winery.
Thousands of revellers got to taste the New Year celebrations in London when edible peach snow and strawberry mist descended on partygoers watching the midnight pyrotechnics.
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