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bubble shooter pet - [https://goo.gl/WMCXgi https://goo.gl/WMCXgi]. Frazer Harrison / Getty Images<br><br><br><br><br>The INSIDER summary: <br><br><br>• There's a lot more to the Caribbean than meets the eye.<br><br>• You can ride ostriches, watch planes land just 100 feet over head or go to a drive in volcano. <br>• It's also the birthplace of James Bond and one of the world's hottest chilis.<br><br><br><br><br>Before embarking on a trip, most of us will do our best to brush up on information about the destination we're heading to, even if it's just the basic currency tidbits, language essentials, and unmissable tourist hot spots. But there's a lot more to discover beyond that. Take the<br>Caribbean<br>, for example -- the vast, diverse region has plenty more to uncover aside from its pretty facade of sunny beaches, lush rainforests, and mountains. For instance, did you know that just two percent of the<br>Caribbean<br>islands are inhabited? Or that there are -- on average -- 340 days of sunshine per year? Whether you're considering a vacation to one of the islands or just want to impress friends and family at dinner parties, read on for some more fun, insider facts about the Caribbean.<br><br><br>1. Jamaica was the birthplace of James Bond.<br><br>Shutterstock/Ramunas Bruzas<br><br><br><br><br>After visiting Jamaica<br>for a naval conference during WWII, Ian Fleming decided then and there that island life was going to be for him. Three years later, when the war was over, he kept his word and bought a house in Jamaica<br>, where he decided to "swim in the sea and write books." From his home, which was called GoldenEye, Fleming penned the James Bond series that brought fame to both him and Jamaica. The first Bond film, "Dr. No," was also filmed on location there. Fleming's house is now a boutique hotel that goes by the name GoldenEye Hotel & Resort<br>, so you can return to the source of where it all started. <br><br>And while we're on the subject of Jamaica<br>, the island is also home to the greatest concentration of churches per square mile than anywhere in the world (it boasts 1,600 places of worship). <br><br>2. Saba has the shortest commercial aircraft runway on earth.<br>Flickr/killians_red<br><br><br><br><br> If you have a fear of flying, look away now because the runway on the Caribbean island of Saba is not a place you'll like the sound (or sight) of, given that it's one of the world's most extreme places to take off and land. Officially the world's shortest commercial runway, the strip is just 1,300 feet long. Flanked by water and rocky cliffs, a flight to Saba is the closest most will ever come to the feeling of landing on an aircraft carrier.  <br><br>3. Tobago inspired Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe.<br><br>Flickr/neiljs<br><br><br><br><br>If you're relaxing on a beach, watching the crystal clear waves roll in on the small island of Tobago<br>, and think that it might not be so bad to be stranded there forever, then know that you're in good company. Tobago, the sister island of Trinidad<br>, was the inspiration for Daniel Defoe's "Robinson Crusoe," the novel in which a shipwrecked sailor washes up on a tropical island where he encounters cannibals, mutineers, and captives. These days, you'll just find great snorkeling, amazing waterfalls, and remote beaches at the destination. <br><br>4. One of the world's hottest chili grows naturally in Trinidad.<br><br>AP Photo/Courtesy of Jim Duffy, New Mexico State University<br><br><br><br>If you've ever watched the television show "Man v. Food," then you know that chilis are a big deal. And when it comes to chilis, the biggest deal of all is the moruga scorpion chili, which is native to Trinidad<br>. Although the Carolina Reaper is currently the hottest chili pepper in the world, the moruga scorpion chili comes in at a close second (it also once held the title as the hottest in the world). And that's not surprising, given that it has a heat of more than two million Scoville heat units (SHUs). <br><br>5. Barbados was George Washington's only foreign trip.<br><br>Styve Reineck/Shutterstock<br><br><br><br><br>Americans might be the second most well-traveled people in the world<br>, but only one in five<br>travel abroad, which means that the majority of the country has something in common with George Washington. Not one to globe-trot, Barbados<br>was the only foreign destination that former president George Washington ever visited. Not a bad place to choose, if you ask us.   <br><br>6. St. Lucia has a drive-in volcano.<br><br>Flickr/Simon Phipps<br><br><br><br><br>While the U.S. has its famous drive-through trees, St. Lucia<br>has something even wilder for tourists to take their cars to and through: a volcano. Known locally as Sulphur Springs, the volcano last erupted in the late 18th century, which means the natural phenomenon is now considered dormant. However, while lava and molten rock eruptions might be a thing of the past, the bubbling, boiling mud and steaming sulphur of the volcano's hot springs keep things interesting for tourists.  <br><br>7. You can ride an ostrich in Curacao.<br><br>Mario Micklisch/Flickr<br><br><br><br><br>While some Caribbean fantasies might involve riding a majestic white horse along a deserted sandy beach, on the island country of Curacao<br>, you can swap the horse for an ostrich. The Curacao Ostrich Farm is a popular family attraction, where folks can pet the animals, test the strength of their eggs by standing on them, and climb on and ride an ostrich -- provided you weigh less than 80 kilograms.   <br><br>8. Aruba has submarine reef tours.<br><br>iStock<br><br><br><br>Why bother with PADI scuba courses when you can stay dry below the surface in a submarine? Atlantis Submarines offers tours that allow you to witness the reef life off Aruba<br>. Dropping to depths of 130 feet below the Caribbean Sea, the submarine tour is the ultimate tourist trip on the island, offering unique views of the ocean life that you might not see otherwise. <br><br>9. The Cayman Islands has more businesses than people.<br><br>Shutterstock/Yevgen Belich<br><br><br><br><br>In addition to representing a cosmopolitan mix of tropical paradise and developed luxury, the Cayman Islands<br>hold claim to being one of the few places in the world that hosts more businesses than people. And while Grand Cayman<br>is a thriving, wealthy imitation of South Florida, don't expect to find all those businesses among the island's malls and upmarket strips -- most of the businesses are there for the tax laws above all else.   <br><br>10. Planes pass just 100 feet above the beach on St. Maarten.<br><br>Flickr/Takashi Ota<br><br><br><br><br>The sight of a commercial jumbo jet swooping in and passing just 100 feet above the beach is one of the most iconic Caribbean images. And while you're not likely to spot a KLM Boeing 747<br>flying overhead these days, St. Maarten<br>is still home to one of the most epic sights in aviation. Maho Beach even attracts a mix of sunbathers and plane buffs to watch its amazing display.
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Otto Warmbier's funeral will be held at Wyoming High School -- located in the city of Wyoming, a suburb of Cincinnati -- from which he graduated in 2013<br><br>Otto Warmbier, the US college student imprisoned for more than a year by North Korea and sent back home in a coma that proved fatal, will be buried Thursday in his home state of Ohio.<br><br>Sentenced to hard labor for stealing a political poster from a North Korean hotel, the 22-year-old Warmbier was medically evacuated in a coma last week after nearly 18 months in captivity.<br><br>Suffering from severe brain damage, he died Monday in his hometown of Cincinnati, Ohio. President Donald Trump slammed Warmbier's detention and eventual death as "a total disgrace."<br><br>Warmbier's funeral will be held at Wyoming High School -- located in the city of Wyoming, a suburb of Cincinnati -- from which he graduated in 2013. He will then be buried in Cincinnati's Oak Hill Cemetery.<br><br>Blue and white ribbons, the colors of the high school, were still tied to trees in the city of about 8,000 to show of support for Warmbier's family after Otto's recent return.<br><br>Warmbier's father Fred earlier told reporters that his son was lured to North Korea, as other US tourists have been, by tour groups run out of China.<br><br>"Otto's a young, thrill-seeking, great kid who was going to be in that part of the world for a college experience and said, 'Hey, I've heard some friends who have done this. I would like to do this.' So, we agreed to let him do that," Fred Warmbier said.<br><br>"They lure Americans, and then they take them hostage and then they do things to them, and that's what happened to my son," he added.<br><br>Warmbier was arrested as he was about to leave North Korea and sentenced in March 2016 to 15 years of hard labor. Soon after his family heard nothing more about his fate<br><br>Then, just before he was to be medically evacuated, the North Korean regime revealed that Warmbier had been in a coma for much of his imprisonment.<br><br>- 'Warm, engaging, brilliant' -<br><br>Warmbier died Monday of severe brain damage, which doctors said was likely due to cardiopulmonary arrest.<br><br>Medical tests did not show what precipitated his injuries, but also found no evidence of the botulism infection that North Korea claimed was the cause of his coma.<br><br>The Hamilton County Coroner's office did not perform an autopsy at the request of the Warmbier family.<br><br>Warmbier's friends and relatives described him as a bright young man beloved in his community.<br><br>"He just lived life with such a zest and a passion that I haven't really ever experienced in somebody before," Warmbier's childhood friend Chris Colloton told the Cincinnati Inquirer newspaper.<br><br>"He was the best guy I knew. I still know him - I'm just going to miss him so much," the 22-year-old said.<br><br>In a statement announcing his death, Warmbier's family described him as "a warm, engaging, brilliant young man whose curiosity and enthusiasm for life knew no bounds."<br><br>"You can tell from the outpouring of emotion from the communities that he touched -- Wyoming, Ohio and the University of Virginia to name just two -- that the love for Otto went well beyond his immediate family," the statement said.<br><br>Following Warmbier's death, the tour group that  [https://play.google.com/store/apps/developer?id=Game+King+2017 subway runner] arranged his trip said it would no longer take Americans to North Korea.<br><br>"Now, the assessment of risk for Americans visiting North Korea has become too high," said the China-based Young Pioneer Tours.<br><br>US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson warned that Washington holds North Korea "accountable" for Warmbier's fate, and demanded the release of three other Americans held by the reclusive regime.<br><br>Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis said that US patience with Pyongyang is running out.<br><br>"To see a young man go over there healthy and, (after) a minor act of mischief, come home dead basically... this goes beyond any kind of understanding of law and order, of humanity, of responsibility towards any human being," Mattis said.

Revision as of 16:41, 31 January 2018

Otto Warmbier's funeral will be held at Wyoming High School -- located in the city of Wyoming, a suburb of Cincinnati -- from which he graduated in 2013

Otto Warmbier, the US college student imprisoned for more than a year by North Korea and sent back home in a coma that proved fatal, will be buried Thursday in his home state of Ohio.

Sentenced to hard labor for stealing a political poster from a North Korean hotel, the 22-year-old Warmbier was medically evacuated in a coma last week after nearly 18 months in captivity.

Suffering from severe brain damage, he died Monday in his hometown of Cincinnati, Ohio. President Donald Trump slammed Warmbier's detention and eventual death as "a total disgrace."

Warmbier's funeral will be held at Wyoming High School -- located in the city of Wyoming, a suburb of Cincinnati -- from which he graduated in 2013. He will then be buried in Cincinnati's Oak Hill Cemetery.

Blue and white ribbons, the colors of the high school, were still tied to trees in the city of about 8,000 to show of support for Warmbier's family after Otto's recent return.

Warmbier's father Fred earlier told reporters that his son was lured to North Korea, as other US tourists have been, by tour groups run out of China.

"Otto's a young, thrill-seeking, great kid who was going to be in that part of the world for a college experience and said, 'Hey, I've heard some friends who have done this. I would like to do this.' So, we agreed to let him do that," Fred Warmbier said.

"They lure Americans, and then they take them hostage and then they do things to them, and that's what happened to my son," he added.

Warmbier was arrested as he was about to leave North Korea and sentenced in March 2016 to 15 years of hard labor. Soon after his family heard nothing more about his fate

Then, just before he was to be medically evacuated, the North Korean regime revealed that Warmbier had been in a coma for much of his imprisonment.

- 'Warm, engaging, brilliant' -

Warmbier died Monday of severe brain damage, which doctors said was likely due to cardiopulmonary arrest.

Medical tests did not show what precipitated his injuries, but also found no evidence of the botulism infection that North Korea claimed was the cause of his coma.

The Hamilton County Coroner's office did not perform an autopsy at the request of the Warmbier family.

Warmbier's friends and relatives described him as a bright young man beloved in his community.

"He just lived life with such a zest and a passion that I haven't really ever experienced in somebody before," Warmbier's childhood friend Chris Colloton told the Cincinnati Inquirer newspaper.

"He was the best guy I knew. I still know him - I'm just going to miss him so much," the 22-year-old said.

In a statement announcing his death, Warmbier's family described him as "a warm, engaging, brilliant young man whose curiosity and enthusiasm for life knew no bounds."

"You can tell from the outpouring of emotion from the communities that he touched -- Wyoming, Ohio and the University of Virginia to name just two -- that the love for Otto went well beyond his immediate family," the statement said.

Following Warmbier's death, the tour group that subway runner arranged his trip said it would no longer take Americans to North Korea.

"Now, the assessment of risk for Americans visiting North Korea has become too high," said the China-based Young Pioneer Tours.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson warned that Washington holds North Korea "accountable" for Warmbier's fate, and demanded the release of three other Americans held by the reclusive regime.

Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis said that US patience with Pyongyang is running out.

"To see a young man go over there healthy and, (after) a minor act of mischief, come home dead basically... this goes beyond any kind of understanding of law and order, of humanity, of responsibility towards any human being," Mattis said.