Member Login

You are not currently logged in.








» Register
» Lost your Password?

Article Archives

SCANDERBEG

scanderbegIn the city of Lezhë overlooking the Adriatic Sea, there is a memorial to Albania’s national hero, Scanderbeg (1405-1468). Born Giorgi Kastrioti in this city of northern Albania, he earned the title of “Lord Alexander” – Scanderbeg in Albanian – for his military genius in leading his Christian army against the Moslem armies of the Ottoman Empire.  For 25 years (1443-1468), his 10,000 Christian Knights consistently inflicted defeat after defeat upon always much larger Moslem forces.

His victory in the Battle of Albulena in 1457, where he destroyed an Ottoman army of 70,000, killing 15,000 and taking 15,000 prisoners, so astounded all of Christendom that Pope Calixtus III appointed him Captain-General of the Holy See, and gave him the title of Athleta Christi, Champion of Christ.

By the 1500s with Scanderbeg but a memory, the Ottomans conquered Albania and Islamized it for almost 400 years. With the rise of Albanian nationalism in the late 19th century, Scanderbeg’s memory was revived. Today he is revered by Albanians who only ostensibly remain Islamic yet idolize a Christian King who devoted his life to defeating their country’s Moslem oppressors. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #247 photo ©Jack Wheeler)

Read more...

WHY TTPERS SHOULD HAVE A GREAT ADVENTURE WITH ME IN 2025

adventure-map-2025

Carpe diem.  The older you get, the more important seizing the day becomes.

On Saturday – November 9, World Freedom Day, the day the Berlin Wall fell in 1989 – I turned 81.  I’m grateful for my good health, without an ache or pain or problem in my body.

I work out pretty hard six days a week with a wide variety of exercises, stick to a high protein/high fiber/low glycemic index diet (lucky for me that Rebel is such a fabulous cook), and the quantity of nutritional supplements I take every day would astound you.

That enables me to continue leading expeditions, such as my 10th Himalaya Helicopter Expedition that I just returned from last week.

How long can I continue doing this?  I don’t know.  What I do know is that I’m going to give it my best shot for next year, with Rebel co-leading to make sure.

So I’d like to tell you what we have scheduled for 2025 in the hopes that you will find at least one adventure irresistible.  For there is no type of person I’d rather travel with than a fellow TTPer.  We have a sympatico of values that makes it especially enjoyable.

In addition, the page of history has now turned, from darkness to sunshine.  With Trump 47 at America’s helm, 2025 will be a year to celebrate.  What better way to celebrate it than to have a marvelously memorable adventure together with Rebel, me, and your fellow TTPers?

Below is for the first half of the year. Each one has loads of really cool photos. Let me know which ones you like best at [email protected] or [email protected].  I’d really like to hear from you. Here we go.

Read more...

PATAGONIA’S PERITIO MORENO GLACIER

perito-moreno-glacier

One of the most spectacular glaciers on earth, the Perito Moreno spills off the gigantic Southern Patagonia Ice Field constantly calving into Lago Argentino at the bottom of South America.  It is almost 100 square miles of ice some 600 feet thick, and is an embarrassment to climate alarmists because it’s growing, not retreating.  Every day, huge chunks of ice on the glacier’s front (which you see in the photo) break off or “calve” into the lake, equal to the glacier’s forward advance of two meters or over six feet a day.

Thunderous cracks and booms accompany the plunge of the calved sections with huge splashes of water.  You never know when or where they’ll occur along the mile wide front, but when they do, everyone watching exclaims and applauds.  We were lucky to have perfectly gorgeous weather.  You can take a boat along the front, view it from several boardwalks for marvelous vantage points, or even hike on it with crampons with an ice-trekking guide.  Being here is one of Patagonia’s most thrilling experiences.

(Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #253 photo ©Jack Wheeler)

Read more...

A COUNTRY TO BE PROUD OF

conquest-of-ceuta

[This Monday’s Archive was originally published on November 11, 2021. In those dark times, it was a call for Americans to realize what it would take to have a country they once were proud of and could be proud of once again.  This week, Americans answered that call.  How thrilling it is to have our country back.]

______________________

TTP, November 11, 2021

 

I took this picture last week.  It is a painting made of azuelos (Portuguese glazed tiles) portraying Prince Henry the Navigator’s Conquest of Ceuta – the stronghold of Barbary Coast Moslem pirates – on August 21, 1415.

Ceuta was on the African side of the Straits of Gibraltar, from where the Moslem pirates incessantly raided the Portuguese coast depopulating entire villages, carting off men for labor slaves and women for sex slaves sold in the Arab slave markets across North Africa.

The azuelos painting is proudly displayed on the foyer wall of the main train station of Porto, where Prince Henry was born.  I invite you take a close look at it, as I did to my TTPer travelers who were with me here last week.

I asked them to look at the fire in Henry’s unyielding eyes, the terrified Moslems on their knees surrendering their swords and bowing to him in submission.  Then I asked, “Can you imagine something like this being publicly displayed in America today, as a source of pride for all Americans to feel in their country’s history?”

Everyone sighed in sadness – for all of us could remember our growing up in an America that was deeply proud of itself, and all of us felt the pain of how that was an America of the past and not the present.

How did this happen so fast?  Ever since the Democrats were allowed to steal the presidential election a year ago, America has been speeding pedal to the metal down the Highway to Hell.

Read more...

FLASHBACK FRIDAY – THE MAN-EATER OF DALAT

jw-man-eating-tigerDalat, South Viet Nam, 1961. I was 17 years old. A friend of my father’s, Herb Klein, came by our house. He was a prominent businessman whose passion was big-game hunting. He had just returned from the mountain jungle highlands of South Viet Nam and regaled us with stories of the Montagnard tribespeople who were plagued by tigers with a taste for human flesh. He told me that after climbing the Matterhorn, living with Amazon headhunters, and swimming the Hellespont, hunting a man-eating tiger should be my next adventure.

“You’d be saving so many lives, Jack,” he told me. “There’s one I heard about from the Co Ho Montagnards that’s killed and eaten almost 20 of them in the forests outside the town of Dalat. I know who can guide you, he was mine, his name is Ngo Van Chi.”

Somehow, I talked my parents into letting me do this. I had saved up the money from giving tennis and judo lessons. So there I was, in pitch dark in a “mirador” of branches and leaves, holding a .300 Weatherby with a flashlight wired to the barrel, waiting for this man-eating tiger to come for the rotting water buffalo we set out as bait. Chi and I heard the tiger, I put the rifle barrel out, Chi clicked on the flashlight, I saw these two enormous red eyes, and fired.

And there he is, the Man-Eater of Dalat, who would never kill another human being ever again. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #175 photo ©Jack Wheeler)

Read more...

HALF-FULL REPORT 11/08/24

red-wave-usa-trump

Welcome to the Most Full HFR just about ever as America’s cup runneth over with good news.

Let me first say how appreciative I am over all the deeply felt condolences sent by TTPers regarding our beloved Skye. What I am sure of is that he would want this HFR to be one of undiluted celebration undiminished by any mourning, knowing how happy he would be for our country.

Let’s get started.

Read more...

THE LAND OF NOAH

noah-burial-ground-in-nakhchivan

We all know the story of Noah and the Ark told in Genesis (chapters 6-9). But do you know where Noah’s grave is? You’re looking at it. There is a tradition thousands of years old that he died and is buried here in the Land of Noah – Nakhchivan.

Known to the ancient Greeks and Romans as “Nakhsuana,” today Nakhchivan is an isolated enclave of Azerbaijan, cut off from the rest of the country by a strip of Armenia reaching Iran. You never heard of it because it’s unknown with a strange name – but the name literally means the Land of Noah. “Noah” is the Anglicization of Hebrew Noakh, or “Nakh” (“van” means “land,” “chi” means “of”).

azerbaijan-on-map

Noah’s tomb has been built, destroyed, rebuilt, and destroyed again repeatedly over the millennia. It’s now been built yet again on the original site. Looming near is Haça Dag, the Notched Mountain – where Noah’s Ark they say ran aground as the Flood waters receded, carving a notch on the summit before coming to rest on Mount Ararat about 50 miles to the north (in present-day Turkey).

The people here are wonderfully friendly. I was always told “welcome” everywhere. I was even spontaneously invited to a wedding party in a remote village. You’ll find it easy to make friends here too. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #3, photo ©Jack Wheeler)

Read more...

SKYE

durkpearson_1943-2024

Yesterday (11/06) was a day of agony and ecstasy for me.  The latter because of the salvation of America by the American people electing Donald Trump in an overwhelming landslide. The former because that is when I learned that my dearest friend whom I loved and admired like a hero brother for over 50 years had suddenly died.

TTPers knew him as Skye, his nickname and pen name.  I knew him as Durk – Durk Pearson, a super-genius of almost unimaginable brain power.  He loved writing Skye’s Links every Thursday for TTP. Now there will never be another for he is no more.  I’d like to tell you about this extraordinary man and what he achieved to the benefit of millions all over the world.

This may not be easy for me as, frankly, I am still in a state of shock.  Every Friday morning before I started the HFR, I’d give him a call.  We’d talk about the week’s events, but also about all kinds of science topics, funny jokes we’d heard, just plain buddy talk, a fun yet intensely informative conversation usually lasting about an hour and a-half.  Both of us really looked forward to it every week. It really hurts that there will be no such call tomorrow morning.  With that said, here we go.

Read more...

THE DONGBA SPIRIT OF NATURE

shv-statueOriginally nomads from the Tibetan Plateau, the Nashi people settled in the fertile Himalayan foothills of Yunnan over 2,000 years ago. From the ancient Tibetan religion of Bön, they developed a unique religion of nature-worship called Dongba. The progenitors of humanity and nature were two half-brothers, two mothers with the same father. Nature is controlled by a human-snake chimera called Shv – a statue of whom you see here.

The Nashi are a peaceful gentle people whose ideal is living in accordance with nature. They dress very colorfully, women have equal respect with men, they write with the world’s only still-functioning pictographic script, and are proud of preserving their culture for millennia. It is an enchanting experience to be among them. (Glimpses of Our Breathtaking World #163 photo ©Jack Wheeler)

Read more...