TSA Administrator Meets with Key Officials in Switzerland and Belgium to Strengthen International Air Cargo Security

March 28, 2011 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Airline Travel

TSA.gov Press Releases

Rick Steves’ Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004 [ILLUSTRATED] (Paperback)

August 31, 2009 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Travel Germany Guides

Rick Steves' Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004

Review

Today’s tourists are as likely to be toting Rick Steves as Giorgio Armani, tasting the good life without burning through the Kids’ college fund.



Product Description

Join Rick Steves on a tour of three of Europe’s most fascinating countries. Rick Steves’ Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004 covers Rothenburg and the Romantic Road; Munich and Bavaria; Salzburg; The Lakes District; Mauthausen and the Danube Valley; Vienna; Tyrol and Innsbruck; Interlaken, Gimmelwald, and the Berner Oberland; Appenzell, Murten and Bern; The Black Forest and Baden Baden Spa; Trier and the Mosel Valley; Bonn and Koln; The Rhine River; and Prague. Completely revised and updated, Rick Steves’ Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004 includes color maps, opinionated coverage of both famous and lesser-known sights; friendly places to eat and sleep; suggested day plans; walking tours and trip itineraries; clear instructions for smooth travel anywhere by car, train, or foot; and Rick’s newest “back door” discoveries. America’s number one authority on travel to Europe, Rick’s time-tested recommendations for safe and enjoyable travel in Europe have been used by millions of Americans in search of their own unique European travel experience.


Buy Rick Steves’ Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004 [ILLUSTRATED] (Paperback) at Amazon

Lonely Planet Switzerland: A Travel Survival Kit (Lonely Planet Travel Survival Kit) (Paperback)

August 15, 2009 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Travel Switzerland Guides

Lonely Planet Switzerland: A Travel Survival Kit (Lonely Planet Travel Survival Kit)

From Library Journal

This welcome addition to the well-respected “Travel Survival Kit” series offers more up-to-date, practical information for arrange-it-yourself travelers than any other guidebook presently available. The work is broken into chapters covering Switzerland’s 12 tourist regions and Liechtenstein. In Joe Friday-style factual prose, Honan adequately covers places to stay and eat, but the value of his guide lies in its coverage of Swiss attractions, including their hours of operation, costs, and how to get there. The 52 maps should prove invaluable in planning itineraries and orienting oneself on arrival. This volume offers a short, factual introduction to the country, an amazing three pages on health concerns, sidebars giving interesting historical details, and a unique “dangers and annoyances” section for major cities. Highly recommended for all travel collections.
William R. Smith, Johns Hopkins Univ. Lib., Baltimore, Md.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.



Product Description

Switzerland offers beautiful countryside – lakes with endless vistas of mountains and forests are found throughout the country. The cities and towns, such as Bern, Geneva, Zurich, St Gallen and Lucerne, offer ample diversions. For outdoor enthusiasts, the resorts offer a choice of sports away from the snow-fields. This guide shows how to avoid the crowds and the costs while not missing out on the best Switzerland has to offer.


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CH is for Chocolate: Individually Wrapped Tastes of Switzerland (Paperback)

August 11, 2009 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Travel Switzerland Guides

CH is for Chocolate: Individually Wrapped Tastes of Switzerland

Product Description

Vegetable gardens for rent by the square meter. Daredevil sledding in the shadow of the Matterhorn. A plot of woods named “Amerika.” A secret passage in a centuries-old barn. These are some of the images Mary Ann Miller uncovers in this fresh collection of travel writing. Fluent in German and armed with a brand new B.A. degree in International Studies and English Literature, Miller embarks on a quest to discover Switzerland and share her adventures through a weekly newspaper column. Once she arrives in the “Confederatio Helvetica” she faces indecipherable local dialects and Bern’s inexplicable obsession with bears. Her camera lens zooms from the precision-stacked woodpiles lining mountain chalets to graffiti sprayed on train station walls. She juxtaposes visits to the hideouts and prison chambers of the ancestors of the Amish and Mennonites with descriptions of an annual festival dedicated to consuming 45 tons of onions. Drinking straight from the city fountains of Bern, Miller weaves a picture of Switzerland more vibrant than simple postcard snapshots.



About the Author

After graduating from Denison University, Mary Ann Miller received a Fulbright Fellowship to spend an academic year researching the historical context of early Swiss Anabaptism in Bern. “CH is for Chocolate” is a collection of the columns she wrote for the delightfully unique U.S. newspaper, “The Budget.” She currently works as an English teacher in Amman, Jordan, with her husband.


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The Rough Guide to Switzerland 2 (Rough Guide Travel Guides) (Paperback)

August 7, 2009 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Travel Switzerland Guides

The Rough Guide to Switzerland 2 (Rough Guide Travel Guides)

Product Description

INTRODUCTION

“In Italy for thirty years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love; they had 500 years of democracy and peace. And what did that produce? The cuckoo clock.”

Orson Welles as Harry Lime, in The Third Man (1949)

Never has one throwaway movie line done so much to damage the reputation of a whole country. Even now, despite being one of the most visited countries in Europe, Switzerland remains one of the least understood. The facts are that until national reconciliation in 1848, Switzerland was the most consistently turbulent, war-torn area of Europe (so much for brotherly love), and yet, both before and after it found stability, it brought forth such literary and artistic pioneers as Hans Holbein, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Paul Klee, Hermann Hesse and Alberto Giacometti (so much for the cuckoo clock ? a Bavarian invention, anyway).

But two centuries of tourism have left their mark: faced by an ever-increasing onslaught of visitors, these days the Swiss are content to abide by a quaint stereotype of Switzerland that?s easily packaged and sold ? the familiar Alpine idyll of cheese and chocolate, Heidi and the Matterhorn ? while keeping the best bits for themselves. Come for a “Lakes and Mountains” package, or a week of skiing, or a short city-break, and you?ll get all the pristine beauty, genteel calm and well-oiled efficiency of the Switzerland that the locals deem suitable for public consumption. The other Switzerland ? the one the Swiss inhabit ? needs time and patience to winkle out of its shell, but can be an infinitely more rewarding place to explore.

Within this rugged environment, community spirit is perhaps stronger than anywhere else in Europe. Since the country is not an ethnic, linguistic or religious unity, it has survived ? so the Swiss are fond of saying ? simply through the will of its people to resolve their differences. Today, a unique style of “bottom-up” democracy ensures real power still rests with the people, who seem to vote almost monthly on a series of referenda affecting all aspects of life from local recycling projects to national economic policy. The constitution devolves power upwards from the people to municipal governments and up again to the regions (known as cantons), only as a last resort granting certain powers to the federal government.

This kind of decentralized structure means that the cantons ? which are, in essence, tiny self-governing republics who have volunteered to join together ? have mostly held onto their own, unique flavours. Although Swiss people value their shared Swissness above all, they also cherish their own home-town identity and their differences from their neighbours.

Tensions exist between the four language communities, as they do between Catholic and Protestant, or between urban and rural areas, while regional characteristics remain sharply defined and diverse. Local pride is fuelled by a range of traditional folkloric customs, most of which stem from pagan or medieval Christian festivals. Most prominent of these is carnival, held around the country on or around Mardi Gras, the last day before Lent. The most exuberant celebrations, held in Luzern, Bern and Basel, feature bands, masked parades, street dancing and spontaneous partying that belie the stereotype of a placid, unadventurous Switzerland. A host of smaller events fills out the calendar and it?s still easily possible to stumble on village festivals that have been staged by local people for centuries past.

This sense of cultural continuity sits oddly with the fact that Switzerland has grown into one of the world?s richest countries. Its economy is small-scale but thoroughly modern: traditional industries such as watchmaking and textiles now thrive by focusing closely on the luxury end of the market and have ceded prime position to engineering, pharmaceuticals and service industries galore. Tourism has been a high earner since the mid-nineteenth century, when the Alps became both a fashionable destination for wealthy travellers and a prescribed retreat for sufferers from respiratory diseases needing curative sunshine and fresh mountain air. And yet the country, seized by an increasingly anachronistic national Kantönligeist, still stands alone. In the 1940s, Switzerland was surrounded by hostile Axis powers; these days, it?s encircled by the “friendly” EU. With the end of the Cold War, recent damaging revelations of Swiss collaboration with the Nazi Third Reich, and increasingly close ties amongst Western European nations, Swiss neutrality rings ever more hollow ? and yet, far from embracing a wider perspective, the country has collectively taken a step into conservatism. Commentators are noting sadly that Switzerland is only now embarking on the kind of multiethnic social integration that its neighbours began in the 1950s.

Having taken centuries to bolt their country together from diverse elements, the Swiss seem instinctively to return to their sense of community spirit, expressed most tangibly in the order and cleanliness you?ll see on show everywhere. Yet the sterility so decried by Graham Greene (who wrote Harry Lime?s jibe about brotherly love), if it characterizes any part of the country, applies only to the glossy, neatly packaged tourist idyll of lakes and mountains. The three great Swiss cities of Geneva, Zürich and Basel are crammed with world-class museums and galleries. In Zürich and Lausanne, there?s a humming arts scene and underground club culture that feeds nightlife as vibrant as anything you?ll find in much larger European cities.

The landscapes are dominated by the Alps and their foothills, but mountains aren?t the only story. In the north and centre are lush, rolling grasslands epitomized by the velvety green hills of the Emmental, traditional dairy-farming country. Vineyards rise tiered above Lake Geneva, the Rhône valley and the Rhine. The fairytale southeast is cut through by wild, high-sided valleys, lonely, dark and thickly forested. Most surprisingly of all, bordering Italy in the south you?ll find subtropical Mediterranean-style flower gardens, sugarloaf hills and sunny, palm-fringed lakes. For a small, little-regarded mid-continental country with a profound image problem, Switzerland has plenty more to offer than most visitors suspect.



About the Author

Matthew Teller is an experienced and accomplished travel writer. He is also the author of the Rough Guide to Jordan.



See all Editorial Reviews


Buy The Rough Guide to Switzerland 2 (Rough Guide Travel Guides) (Paperback) at Amazon

Rick Steves’ Switzerland 2005 (Paperback)

August 3, 2009 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Travel Switzerland Guides

Rick Steves' Switzerland 2005

Review

Steves preaches a low-cost, low-to-the-ground style that not only saves money, but gets you closer to the real Europe, the way Europeans experience it.



Product Description

Who but Rick Steves can tell you the best way to visit Zürich, Gimmelwald, the Berner Oberlander, Interlaken, Bern, Murten, Lake Geneva, and French Switzerland? With Rick Steves’ Switzerland 2005, you can experience everything Switzerland has to offer?economically and hassle-free. Rick Steves’ Switzerland 2005 includes color maps and photos, opinionated coverage of both famous and lesser-known sights; friendly places to eat and sleep; suggested day plans; walking tours and trip itineraries; clear instructions for smooth travel anywhere by car, train, or foot; and Rick’s newest “back door” discoveries. America’s number one authority on travel to Europe, Rick’s time-tested recommendations for safe and enjoyable travel in Switzerland have been used by millions of Americans in search of their own unique travel experience.


Buy Rick Steves’ Switzerland 2005 (Paperback) at Amazon

The Rough Guide to Switzerland 3 (Rough Guide Travel Guides) (Paperback)

July 30, 2009 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Travel Switzerland Guides

The Rough Guide to Switzerland 3 (Rough Guide Travel Guides)

Product Description

The Rough Guide to Switzerland tells you all there is to know about this beautiful and varied country. The 36-page, full-colour section introduces all of Switzerland”s highlights, from snowboarding in the Alps and sampling swiss wine to the country”s Gothic cathedrals and medieval castles. The guide includes extensive listings of the all the top places to eat, drink and stay, whatever your budget, plus brand-new ”author picks” to highlight the very best. There is plenty of practical advice on outdoor pursuits, including where to find the best mountain walks and most scenic ski resorts. The guide takes a detailed look at Switzerland”s history, wildlife and culture and comes complete with maps and plans for every region.



About the Author

Matthew Teller is an experienced and accomplished travel writer. He is also the author of the Rough Guide to Jordan.



Matthew Teller is an experienced and accomplished travel writer. He is also the author of the Rough Guide to Jordan.


Buy The Rough Guide to Switzerland 3 (Rough Guide Travel Guides) (Paperback) at Amazon

Insight Guides Switzerland (Paperback)

Insight Guides Switzerland

Product Description

This guide includes a section detailing Switzerland’s history, nine features covering aspects of the country’s life and culture, ranging from its rich artistic heritage to its Alpine activities, a region by region visitor’s guide to the sights, and a comprehensive travel tips section packed with essential contact addresses and numbers. It also includes hundreds of photographs and 20 maps.


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Michelin Green Guide Switzerland (Paperback)

July 18, 2009 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Travel Switzerland Guides

Michelin Green Guide Switzerland

Product Description

This title in the acclaimed Michelin Green Guide series is your indispensable guide to the cultural and natural highlights of Switzerland: cosmopolitan cities with their international institutions, famous museums brimming with art treasures, elegant ski resorts, charming villages, spectacular mountain scenery, snowy peaks, sparkling blue lakes, breathtaking views and the delicate beauty of rare alpine flowers.
–This text refers to the

Paperback
edition.



Language Notes

Text: French
–This text refers to the

Paperback
edition.


Buy Michelin Green Guide Switzerland (Paperback) at Amazon

Travel Zurich, Switzerland – illustrated city guide, phrasebook, and maps. FREE General Info chapter and a map in the trial version. (Kindle Edition)

Travel Zurich, Switzerland - illustrated city guide, phrasebook, and maps. FREE General Info chapter and a map in the trial version.

Review

More e-Books from MobileReference – Best Books. Best Price. Best Search and Navigation (TM)

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Product Description

An illustrated city guide, phrasebook, and maps. Indulge Yourself with a personal tour guide on Your PDA. FREE general information chapter and a map in the trial version.

Features

  • Fully illustrated.
  • Historical overviews.
  • Interesting facts.
  • Street Map and more.
  • Museums hours and ticket info.
  • Navigate from Table of Contents or search for the words or phrases.
  • Access the guide anytime, anywhere – at home, on the train, in the subway.
  • Plan the trip during airplane flight.
  • Add Bookmarks
  • Text annotation and mark-up
  • Automatic synchronization between the handheld and the desktop PC. You could read half of the book on the handheld, then finish reading on the desktop. Annotations and drawings are also synchronized.

Table of Contents

General: About | Coat of Arms | Climate | History | Business | Demographics | Hotels | Cope | Stay Safe

Maps: Streets & Attractions | Switzerland | Cities | Lake Z?rich | Canton | Autobahn A1 | S-Bahn

Phrasebooks: German: About | Intro | Phraselist | Swiss-German | French: About | Intro | Phraselist | Italian: About | Intro | Phraselist

Transport: Overview | Get in | Get around | Trains | S-Bahn | Motorways | Zurich Main Station | Airport | ZVV | Trams

By Area: Canton of Z?rich | Geography | Rivers | Districts

Culture: Overview | Theaters | Museums | Education | Events | Sports

Landmarks: Sites | Gardens | Buildings | Churches

Attractions: Nightlife & Clubbing | Do | Buy | Cabaret Voltaire | Ristorante Cooperativo

Eat & Drink: Swiss Cuisine | Eat | Cheeses | Drink

Switzerland: General | Geography | History | Culture | Religion | Transportation | Buy | Talk | Contact | Respect | Stay Safe | Other Destinations?


Buy Travel Zurich, Switzerland – illustrated city guide, phrasebook, and maps. FREE General Info chapter and a map in the trial version. (Kindle Edition) at Amazon

Switzerland: Rail, Road, Lake, 3rd: The Bradt Travel Guide (Paperback)

July 10, 2009 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Travel Switzerland Guides

Switzerland: Rail, Road, Lake, 3rd: The Bradt Travel Guide

Review

One of the best travel guides I have seen. Today’s Railways.
–This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Review

“The most comprehensive guide to Switzerland’s transport system and the best reading.”
The Times



See all Editorial Reviews


Buy Switzerland: Rail, Road, Lake, 3rd: The Bradt Travel Guide (Paperback) at Amazon

Switzerland Insight Travel Map (Insight Travel Maps) [FOLDED MAP] (Map)

Switzerland Insight Travel Map (Insight Travel Maps)

Product Description

Insight Travel Maps are an established favourite in providing everything you need from an ultra portable, folded sheet map. Now with a striking new cover design that will really give you a feel for the destination, travel maps are better than ever. Containing city plans of major towns and cities, distance indicators to aid route planning, a comprehensive index booklet and legend in 8 languages, along with clearly indicated map coverage and scale conversion, you will find this map easy and informative to use. Key places of interest are highlighted by specially designed symbols and websites are listed for the main tourist attractions to help you set your own priorities, altogether making this Insight Travel Map the ideal resource for your trip.


Buy Switzerland Insight Travel Map (Insight Travel Maps) [FOLDED MAP] (Map) at Amazon

Rick Steves’ Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004 [ILLUSTRATED] (Paperback)

June 28, 2009 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Travel Switzerland Guides

Rick Steves' Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004

Review

Today’s tourists are as likely to be toting Rick Steves as Giorgio Armani, tasting the good life without burning through the Kids’ college fund.



Product Description

Join Rick Steves on a tour of three of Europe’s most fascinating countries. Rick Steves’ Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004 covers Rothenburg and the Romantic Road; Munich and Bavaria; Salzburg; The Lakes District; Mauthausen and the Danube Valley; Vienna; Tyrol and Innsbruck; Interlaken, Gimmelwald, and the Berner Oberland; Appenzell, Murten and Bern; The Black Forest and Baden Baden Spa; Trier and the Mosel Valley; Bonn and Koln; The Rhine River; and Prague. Completely revised and updated, Rick Steves’ Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004 includes color maps, opinionated coverage of both famous and lesser-known sights; friendly places to eat and sleep; suggested day plans; walking tours and trip itineraries; clear instructions for smooth travel anywhere by car, train, or foot; and Rick’s newest “back door” discoveries. America’s number one authority on travel to Europe, Rick’s time-tested recommendations for safe and enjoyable travel in Europe have been used by millions of Americans in search of their own unique European travel experience.


Buy Rick Steves’ Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004 [ILLUSTRATED] (Paperback) at Amazon

Daytrips Switzerland: 45 One Day Adventures by Rail, Bus and Car (Daytrips Series) (Paperback)

June 20, 2009 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Travel Switzerland Guides

Daytrips Switzerland: 45 One Day Adventures by Rail, Bus and Car (Daytrips Series)

Product Description

This book will include approximately 45 one day adventures by rail, bus, and car, as well as numerous walking tours.


Buy Daytrips Switzerland: 45 One Day Adventures by Rail, Bus and Car (Daytrips Series) (Paperback) at Amazon

Rick Steves’ Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004 [ILLUSTRATED] (Paperback)

June 15, 2009 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Travel Austria Guides

Rick Steves' Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004

Review

Today’s tourists are as likely to be toting Rick Steves as Giorgio Armani, tasting the good life without burning through the Kids’ college fund.



Product Description

Join Rick Steves on a tour of three of Europe’s most fascinating countries. Rick Steves’ Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004 covers Rothenburg and the Romantic Road; Munich and Bavaria; Salzburg; The Lakes District; Mauthausen and the Danube Valley; Vienna; Tyrol and Innsbruck; Interlaken, Gimmelwald, and the Berner Oberland; Appenzell, Murten and Bern; The Black Forest and Baden Baden Spa; Trier and the Mosel Valley; Bonn and Koln; The Rhine River; and Prague. Completely revised and updated, Rick Steves’ Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004 includes color maps, opinionated coverage of both famous and lesser-known sights; friendly places to eat and sleep; suggested day plans; walking tours and trip itineraries; clear instructions for smooth travel anywhere by car, train, or foot; and Rick’s newest “back door” discoveries. America’s number one authority on travel to Europe, Rick’s time-tested recommendations for safe and enjoyable travel in Europe have been used by millions of Americans in search of their own unique European travel experience.


Buy Rick Steves’ Germany, Austria, and Switzerland 2004 [ILLUSTRATED] (Paperback) at Amazon

Streetwise Zurich Map – Laminated City Center Street Map of Zurich, Switzerland – Folding pocket size travel map with metro map (Map)

June 12, 2009 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Travel Switzerland Guides

Streetwise Zurich Map - Laminated City Center Street Map of Zurich, Switzerland - Folding pocket size travel map with metro map

Review

‘Don’t leave home without STREETWISE.’ –The New York Times

‘STREETWISE is an absolute travel essential.’ –Travel + Leisure Magazine `

‘In a strange city, your sense of direction is only as good as the map in your hands. The best maps to carry are published by STREETWISE.’ –Chicago Daily Herald



Product Description

Streetwise Zurich Map – Laminated City Center Street Map of Zurich, Switzerland – Folding pocket size travel map with integrated metro map featuring tram, bus, train, cable car lines & stations

This map covers the following areas:
Main Zurich Map 1:10,000
Zurich Area Map 1:77,000
Zurich City Metro Map

Zurich is a banker’s paradise. This is the financial capital of Switzerland, and in turn the world. Numbered accounts and absolute secrecy may be more difficult to find these days, but financial discretion is still the order of the day in this monetary mega city. Walking around the streets of Zurich, you find perfectly manicured townhouses with thick doors featuring cryptic names on bronze plaques. These are the money handlers of the twenty first century. Once it was imperative to physically sit on hoards of gold, but now you don’t need much more than a computer and a network to control a fortune. That doesn’t mean that the hoards of gold aren’t still tucked away, it just means that there are more companies behind thick doors moving it around figuratively.

Zurich therefore is a bit deceptive. It’s so clean and manageable; you wouldn’t think that so much business takes place here. The Old Town, made up of tiny cobblestone pedestrian streets, straddles the Limmat River. Houses line the streets with retail or restaurants on the ground floor and apartments above, giving the area life even after the shops close. Each of these neighborhoods are clustered around one of the major churches in the city: Grossemunster, with it’s iconic twin spires; Fraumunster, with the Marc Chagall stained glass windows; and St Peters, the oldest church in Zurich displaying the largest clock face in Europe.

The city sits at the base of Lake Zurich (Zürichsee) and directions are based on the right side or left side of the river, based on having your back to the lake. On the left side along the river are the streets of Schipfe and Storchen, both filled with trendy upscale shops and cafes. Bahnhofstrasse is the main shopping street in town and it stretches from the lake up to the train station. On the right side of the river is Neiderdorf Strasse, a younger hipper street filled with funky boutiques, inexpensive restaurants and clubs. Less expensive hotels are found hidden in the small alleys that lead away from the river, but you might want to stay in another section of town if you have a concern about late night noise.

One of the nicest things to do in Zurich is to take an evening stroll along the lake. The promenade that runs from Bellevue Plaza along Uto Quai and then continues on Seefeld Quai is lovely in warm weather. Pass the Johann Jacobs Museum, Le Corbusier’s Hans Weber Haus, the Museum Bellerive, and wander through the China Garden maybe stopping for a cool drink or an ice cream.

Our STREETWISE® Zurich Map will guide you in your visit to this beautiful Swiss city. All metro stops and sites are clearly highlighted on the main map, some with architectural renderings making it easier to spot them as landmarks. Streets, hotels, parks and squares, and points of interest are listed in the index. A separate Zurich area map will facilitate your travel in and out of the city and to the airport. A complete Zurich Metro Map is also included.

Our pocket size map of Zurich is also laminated for durability and accordion folding for effortless use. The STREETWISE® Zurich map is one of many detailed and easy-to-read city street maps designed and published by STREETWISE®. Buy your STREETWISE® Zurich map today and you too can navigate Zurich, Switzerland like a native. For a larger selection of our detailed travel maps simply type STREETWISE MAPS into the Amazon search bar.



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Buy Streetwise Zurich Map – Laminated City Center Street Map of Zurich, Switzerland – Folding pocket size travel map with metro map (Map) at Amazon

Hunter Travel Guides Adventure Guide to Switzerland (Paperback)

Hunter Travel Guides Adventure Guide to Switzerland

Review

“These useful guides are highly recommended…”



Product Description

Nestled in the heart of Europe, Switzerland is a feast for the eyes, with azure-blue lakes that shine brilliantly against the greenest slopes of the surrounding Alps. Its picturesque villages and chic towns are accessible via high-speed trains, which whisk travelers around at amazing speeds, though many opt to travel by longboat on some of the country’s tranquil waterways. It is one of the world’s most advanced industrialized nations, yet its towns and cities are incredibly clean. It also has the distinction of being one of the oldest democracies. Part-time Swiss resident Kimberly Rinker has lived and worked here for years. She tells of little-known attractions as well as major tourist draws and everything in-between. Color photos.



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Michelin Switzerland (Michelin Green Guide: Switzerland English Edition) (Paperback)

June 4, 2009 by Destination Guide  
Filed under Travel Switzerland Guides

Michelin Switzerland (Michelin Green Guide: Switzerland English Edition)