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Produced in Dubai Production City<br />
INSPIRED BY<br />
ISSUE 144 | APRIL/MAY <strong>2020</strong> | DHS10
Welcome note<br />
We’ve published <strong>World</strong> <strong>Traveller</strong> since 2006. Throughout those<br />
14 years, global issues have, at one time or another, impacted<br />
the demand for travel. From the financial collapse through to<br />
ash clouds and H1N1 (which numbered upwards of 60 million<br />
Managing Director<br />
Victoria Thatcher<br />
Chief Creative Officer<br />
John Thatcher<br />
General Manager<br />
David Wade<br />
Group Content Director<br />
Faye Bartle<br />
faye@hotmedia.me<br />
Head of Digital<br />
Siobháin Spear<br />
Content & Social Editor<br />
Hayley Kadrou<br />
Content Writer<br />
Habiba Azab<br />
Editorial Assistant<br />
Ronak Sagar<br />
Art Director<br />
Kerri Bennett<br />
Senior Designer<br />
Hiral Kapadia<br />
Production Manager<br />
Muthu Kumar<br />
Production Coordinator<br />
Nagu Subburaman<br />
cases), our wanderlust has been tempered. That’s<br />
certainly the case now, as COVID-19 demands<br />
that we put the health of ourselves, family and<br />
friends over any thoughts of far-flung beaches.<br />
However, what’s also certain is that like all of those<br />
crises, this one will also be confined to history.<br />
There will be an end point. We will travel again.<br />
In the meantime, what COVID-19 can’t take from<br />
us is our desire to dream of the places we will go<br />
when this latest crisis passes; the people we will<br />
meet there; the many wonderful things we will<br />
experience.<br />
As the home of travel inspiration in the Middle<br />
East, we will continue to feed those dreams with<br />
action-packed ideas to fuel your future adventures,<br />
whether near or far.<br />
Speaking of what's near, we are fortunate to<br />
live in a region that’s home to some of the world’s<br />
finest hotels, hotels that will need our support<br />
once normal service resumes. So, when the time<br />
is right, why not take a staycation and celebrate<br />
the remarkable place we live in and the incredible<br />
opportunities it affords us.<br />
Until such time as COVID-19 becomes the past,<br />
stay safe and keep dreaming of travel. Those<br />
dreams will be realised. That’s for certain.<br />
Chief Creative Officer<br />
John Thatcher<br />
FIVE THINGS<br />
WE LEARNED<br />
THIS ISSUE:<br />
1<br />
Dominica is home to<br />
the only UNESCO <strong>World</strong><br />
Heritage Site in the<br />
Caribbean – Morne Trois<br />
Pitons National Park, p9<br />
2<br />
Beauty boss Maria<br />
Hatzistefani's idea of the<br />
perfect weekend escape<br />
is unwinding on the<br />
beach in Mykonos, p18<br />
3<br />
Not one hungry diner<br />
has managed to conquer<br />
the 25lb (11kg) monster<br />
burger, the Burgernator,<br />
at Denny's in Clearfield,<br />
Pennsylvania... yet! p42<br />
4<br />
A whopping 97% of the<br />
Galápagos' land mass is<br />
national park, p48<br />
5<br />
The historic<br />
Spiegelkwartier is<br />
the place to shop for<br />
art and antiques in<br />
Amsterdam, p60<br />
INSPIRED BY<br />
Photography credits:<br />
Alamy, Phocal Media and iStock<br />
by Getty Images<br />
Reproduction in whole or in part<br />
without written permission from<br />
HOT Media is strictly prohibited.<br />
HOT Media does not accept<br />
liability for omissions or errors in<br />
<strong>World</strong> <strong>Traveller</strong>.<br />
Tel: 00971 4 364 2876<br />
Fax: 00971 4 369 7494<br />
COVER IMAGE<br />
The heart-shaped Love Lake at Al Qudra Lakes<br />
in Dubai, photo courtesy of Dubai Tourism<br />
Find us at…<br />
ONLINE worldtravellermagazine.com<br />
FACEBOOK @<strong>World</strong><strong>Traveller</strong>ME<br />
INSTAGRAM @worldtravellerme<br />
TWITTER @W<strong>Traveller</strong>ME<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 5
Contents<br />
<strong>April</strong>/<strong>May</strong> <strong>2020</strong><br />
Camp Sakira by Amangiri<br />
17<br />
HOT HOTELS<br />
regulars<br />
08 13 60 64<br />
OH, THE PLACES<br />
YOU'LL GO<br />
The destinations<br />
topping our list of go-to<br />
places when the time is<br />
right, starting with our<br />
wonderful home.<br />
GLOBETROTTER<br />
Maria Hatzistefanis<br />
reveals her travel habits;<br />
David Murphy tells us<br />
how to photograph<br />
elephants in the wild;<br />
and five off-grid gems.<br />
A LONG WEEKEND<br />
IN AMSTERDAM<br />
From its captivating<br />
artworks to its delicious<br />
local delicacies, Habiba<br />
Azab shines a light on<br />
the canal-strewn capital.<br />
SUITE DREAMS<br />
We're dreaming of<br />
opening the door to The<br />
Dunes, a spectacular<br />
villa aside the ocean at<br />
Grace Bay Club, Turks<br />
& Caicos.<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 6
CONTENTS<br />
features<br />
20 34<br />
THE FAMILY<br />
WALKABOUT<br />
HOLIDAY<br />
Lara Brunt goes wild<br />
Planning your next on Maria Island in<br />
family escape? Then Australia and discovers<br />
you'll need our how-to an unspoilt isle teeming<br />
guide to tackle it. with unique creatures.<br />
42<br />
LIFE IN THE<br />
FAST LANE<br />
New York to LA by car.<br />
Too far to even think<br />
of trying? Not on this<br />
route, says Ian Belcher.<br />
48<br />
NATURAL WANDER<br />
Nigel Tisdall puts his<br />
best foot forward on<br />
the Galápagos Islands,<br />
mixing creature<br />
comforts with luxury.<br />
54<br />
TRY SOMEWHERE<br />
NEW<br />
New Zealand is the<br />
epitome of easy-going,<br />
but seeing it in the right<br />
order is key. Here's how...<br />
Carhenge<br />
42<br />
NEW YORK TO LA<br />
7 worldtravellermagazine.com
OH, THE PLACES YOU'LL GO<br />
Emily Williams, dnata Travel’s resident globetrotter,<br />
reveals the places to add to your wish list<br />
Dubai<br />
Dubai continues to evolve and innovate and, in <strong>2020</strong>, there are lots of new places to experience and areas to rediscover,<br />
when the time is right. The Al Seef waterfront promenade is bringing new life to the historic Dubai Creek, with a<br />
combination of contemporary spaces that evoke the rich heritage of the city. La Mer has brought a wealth of dining<br />
options to one of Dubai’s most prestigious stretches of beachfront, while the new Nakheel Mall is adding more<br />
to discover on Palm Jumeirah. Combined with a string of new hotel openings in some of the city’s most popular<br />
neighbourhoods, locals and tourists alike have plenty to look forward to.<br />
Add to wish list 1 Get your geek on at The Museum of the Future, set to open in <strong>2020</strong>, which will propel you to the year 2035 for a<br />
glimpse of how technology may evolve to enhance our bodies and minds. 2 Join one of the many guided tours into the desert where<br />
traditional-style Bedouin camps await, offering good food and good conversation in equal measure. 3. Adventure seekers should<br />
make a beeline for the Hatta Mountains, where you can explore the rugged terrain by mountain biking, hiking, kayaking and more.<br />
8 worldtravellermagazine.com
WISH LIST DESTINATIONS<br />
Dominica<br />
This Caribbean island is now visa-free for UAE nationals. Dotted with natural hot springs and lush tropical<br />
rainforests, this isn’t your stereotypical slice of Caribbean paradise. This unspoiled destination is aiming to be the<br />
world’s first climate-resilient nation by 2030. Due to its volcanic origins, its beaches are characterised by black or<br />
silvery sands, and its hotels are often rustic in style to suit the wild surrounds. See the colourful timber houses of<br />
the capital, Roseau, and take advantage of its reputation as a whale watching hotspot. You can access the island via a<br />
domestic flight or by ferry from neighbouring islands including Antigua, St. Lucia and Barbados.<br />
Add to wish list 1 Nature lovers will be enthralled by Morne Trois Pitons National Park, the only UNESCO <strong>World</strong> Heritage Site in the<br />
Caribbean. 2 Sweet plantains, yams and a bounty of fresh fish; the local cuisine is packed full of flavour. Be sure to try Creole style crab<br />
backs, which is one of the most popular traditional dishes on offer. 3 The island is blessed with picturesque hiking routes and most are<br />
relatively smooth and easy to navigate, so pull on your sturdiest books and get out and explore.<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 9
Franschhoek<br />
Known as South Africa’s culinary capital, Franschhoek in the Western Cape is one of the oldest towns in the country.<br />
An hour’s drive from Cape Town, it is home to award-winning restaurants and centuries-old vineyards. The scenery<br />
is spectacular here, from the flowers and wildlife that spread across the trails of the Mont Rochelle Nature Reserve,<br />
to unforgettable mountain views across the Franschhoek Valley. Over the years, Franschhoek has stayed true to its<br />
French roots. As such, it feels like a slice of Europe in South Africa. Enjoy a stroll along its main street lined with art<br />
galleries, artisan shops and some of the country’s finest eateries.<br />
Add to wish list 1 Taste country contemporary cuisine featuring locally-grown, seasonal produce at the highly-rated La Petite Ferme<br />
Restaurant. 2 Join the guided Village Walking Tour that'll take you on a gentle stroll through the beautiful village, past notable architecture<br />
and cultural sites, stopping for a gourmet chocolate tasting along the way. 3 The strikingly beautiful landscape is a romantic setting for<br />
wedding ceremonies, so if you're looking for a picture-perfect place to tie the knot, be sure to check out the venues available here.<br />
10 worldtravellermagazine.com
WISH LIST DESTINATIONS<br />
Tashkent<br />
Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan, is a hotspot for accessing Central Asia’s fascinating Silk Road splendour. The Soviet<br />
Union rebuilt much of Tashkent in 1966 after a powerful earthquake and, as a result, is evocative of the era with its<br />
wide streets, plazas and some of the most ornate and extravagant metro stations in the world. The city is also home<br />
to the domed Chorsu Bazaar, where traditional street food is served in abundance. Newly-built in white marble is the<br />
incredibly picturesque Minor Mosque. Travel on from the capital to discover incredible mountain scenery, beautiful<br />
lakes and ancient cities, including Bukhara and its famous blue-tiled mosques.<br />
Add to wish list 1 Architecture fans can get an up-close look at Tashkent Television Tower, one of the tallest towers in the world, which soars<br />
375 metres up towards the clouds. 2 Swot up on the history of the country by visiting the State Museum of History of Uzbekistan, which is<br />
home to about 10,000 exhibits, with each floor dedicated to a different era. 3 Taste the traditional dish of Palov, prepared with rice, meat,<br />
spices and vegetables and served as a delicious gesture of hospitality.<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 11
CREATE<br />
SPECIAL<br />
MOMENTS<br />
WITH US.<br />
Standing tall in the heart of<br />
Dubai Marina, featuring<br />
incomparable panoramic views<br />
of the city, combine the best<br />
of all worlds with luxurious<br />
accommodation, three<br />
contemporary dining<br />
destinations and a blissful<br />
caravanserai-inspired, Saray Spa.<br />
DUBAI MARRIOTT HARBOUR HOTEL & SUITES<br />
KING SALMAN BIN ABDULAZIZ AL SAUD STREET<br />
DUBAI MARINA, PO BOX 66662, DUBAI, UAE<br />
T. 971.4.319.4000 | DUBAIMARRIOTTHARBOURHOTEL.COM<br />
Dubai Marriott Harbour Hotel & Suites<br />
@marriottharbour
APRIL/MAY<br />
Globetrotter<br />
Be informed, be inspired,<br />
be there<br />
Champion freediver Umberto Pelizzari<br />
giving lessons at Soneva Fushi in 2018<br />
DEEP AND MEANINGFUL<br />
Seeking a holiday with soul? You can learn from<br />
daring explorers, best-selling authors, motivational<br />
speakers, Michelin-starred chefs, leading wellness<br />
practitioners and more celebrated experts who<br />
have teamed up with Soneva to deliver oneof-a-kind<br />
experiences at its luxurious resorts in<br />
Maldives and Thailand. The year-round line-up<br />
of enthralling encounters offers plenty to look<br />
forward to, including Soneva Jani's resident yoga<br />
practitioner, Pawan Kumar, who draws upon his<br />
teachings in India’s ashrams and the Himalayas to<br />
guide you on crafting a more peaceful, blissful life.<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 13
GLOBETROTTER<br />
How to photograph<br />
ELEPHANTS IN<br />
THE WILD<br />
David Murphy<br />
(@davidmurphy_notm) tells<br />
us how to capture the gentle<br />
giants in all their glory<br />
Catch the golden hour<br />
The soft light in the hours<br />
around dawn and dusk lend<br />
a beautiful warm glow. Plus,<br />
it's often the time when the<br />
animals are most visible.<br />
Find a unique vantage point<br />
The most obvious shot isn't<br />
always the most striking.<br />
Think outside of the box and<br />
look for a unique perspective.<br />
A low vantage point often<br />
conveys a more intimate<br />
connection to an animal.<br />
Get up close<br />
This isn’t the easiest thing to<br />
do when shooting wildlife, but<br />
it makes all the difference. A<br />
viewing platform in a hidden<br />
bunker provided a great<br />
opportunity to get nearer to<br />
these majestic elephants in<br />
Botswana. I also recommend<br />
using a telephoto lens to<br />
achieve a more intimate shot.<br />
Double up on shots<br />
Even if you think you’ve<br />
already got the perfect shot,<br />
take more. You might find<br />
something unique and striking<br />
later when flicking back<br />
through your images.<br />
14 worldtravellermagazine.com
GLOBETROTTER<br />
HOT<br />
HOTELS<br />
Our pick<br />
of up-and-coming<br />
luxury hotels<br />
Camp Sakira by Amangiri<br />
FOUR SEASONS<br />
HOTEL MADRID<br />
Spain<br />
With a sun-splashed pool<br />
terrace, a four-level luxury<br />
spa and a brilliant rooftop<br />
dining concept by Michelinstarred<br />
chef Dani Garcia,<br />
Four Seasons Hotel Madrid<br />
brings a dash of golden<br />
charm to its new Spanish<br />
address. Bagging an exclusive<br />
spot in the beating heart<br />
of the city, the innovative<br />
Centro Canalejas, the hotel<br />
comprises of seven<br />
historical buildings, all<br />
stunningly restored<br />
and re-imagined. We<br />
rate the triangular<br />
Royal Suite with its<br />
looming doubleheight<br />
ceilings<br />
and historic<br />
details.<br />
Reserve now<br />
for arrivals on<br />
<strong>May</strong> 15 (TBC).<br />
CAMP SARIKA<br />
BY AMANGIRI<br />
Utah, USA<br />
Tucked deep within a 600-<br />
acre landscape of towering<br />
mesas, slot canyons and rustcoloured<br />
sands, this luxury<br />
resort (opening in <strong>April</strong>, TBC)<br />
offers guests the chance to<br />
experience the Utah desert’s<br />
wild allure. The camp’s cluster<br />
of 10 canvas-topped pavilions<br />
are fabulously designed with<br />
epic views, as well oversized<br />
terraces with fire pits and<br />
heated plunge pools. Start<br />
your day with a morning yoga<br />
session atop a monolithic rock<br />
formation, or a restorative<br />
spa treatment inspired by<br />
the holistic traditions of the<br />
Navajo. In the evening, the<br />
slot canyons await discovery.<br />
Four Seasons Hotel Madrid<br />
THE LEGIAN SIRE<br />
Lombok, Indonesia<br />
Fringed by the soft sands of<br />
Tanjung Sire beach, between<br />
the sparkling Gili Islands and<br />
the sacred Mount Rinjani, The<br />
Legian Sire (opening 9 <strong>May</strong>,<br />
TBC) is a tropical delight.<br />
In-room spa treatments and<br />
private plunge pools make<br />
it the perfect choice for a<br />
romantic break, while the<br />
myriad of exciting activities on<br />
offer, from natural explorations<br />
to surfing, snorkelling, diving,<br />
trekking and hiking, offer<br />
family fun in spades. You<br />
can also organise a range<br />
of excursions, from visits<br />
to waterfalls, to rice-paddy<br />
adventures and trips to the<br />
neighbouring Gili Islands<br />
thanks to the hotel's free<br />
shuttle boat service.<br />
The Legian Sire<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 15
GLOBETROTTER<br />
VIRTUAL VIEWINGS<br />
10 museums and exhibitions you can visit from your sofa<br />
Thanks to our digital<br />
evolvement, you can now<br />
sit and discover some of the<br />
world’s most iconic museums<br />
from home. Here are 10<br />
museums and exhibitions to<br />
provide you with some cultural<br />
and educational stimulus over<br />
the coming weeks.<br />
The Louvre<br />
As one of the world’s<br />
largest art museums and<br />
one of Paris’ most iconic<br />
landmarks, the Louvre<br />
is a must-visit for those<br />
visiting the French capital.<br />
While adhering to social<br />
distancing precautions,<br />
you can skip the queues<br />
and visit the exhibitions<br />
online instead. Explore<br />
the Egyptian Antiquities,<br />
the remains of the Louvre<br />
Moat and more besides.<br />
louvre.fr<br />
The Van Gogh<br />
Museum<br />
Home to the largest collection<br />
of artworks by Vincent<br />
Van Gogh, the museum in<br />
Amsterdam is a draw for<br />
curious art lovers. With over<br />
200 paintings, 500 drawings<br />
and 750 personal letters from<br />
the artist himself, the museum<br />
offers endless opportunities<br />
to learn about his life and<br />
work. vangoghmuseum.com<br />
National Gallery<br />
of Art<br />
Washington is home to one of<br />
the most popular museums<br />
in the United States: the<br />
National Gallery of Art. You<br />
can view audio and video<br />
exhibitions via the gallery’s<br />
website to explore exhibition<br />
highlights and learn more<br />
about momentous events.<br />
nga.gov/exhibitions.html<br />
NASA<br />
Based in Ohio, the NASA<br />
Glenn Research The One Centre Restaurant<br />
designs and develops<br />
innovative technology in<br />
order to further advance<br />
NASA’s aeronautical and<br />
space exploration missions.<br />
Not quite a museum or an<br />
exhibition, the innovative hub<br />
still aims to share insights<br />
into its missions in order to<br />
educate the wider population.<br />
You can take an online<br />
tour of the flight research<br />
hangar and more. nasa.gov/<br />
glennvirtualtours<br />
National Museum<br />
of Natural History<br />
The Smithsonian National<br />
Museum of Natural history<br />
tells the history of the planet.<br />
It stewards a collection of<br />
145 million specimens and<br />
artifacts, each reflecting a<br />
moment in time and space.<br />
On a mission to understand<br />
the natural world and our<br />
place in it, the National<br />
Museum of Natural History<br />
allows visitors to take a<br />
self-guided tour of exhibits.<br />
naturalhistory.si.edu/visit/<br />
virtual-tour<br />
National Museum<br />
of Modern &<br />
Contemporary Art<br />
Korea’s National Museum<br />
of Modern & Contemporary<br />
Art has become one of the<br />
country’s most popular<br />
museums since opening in<br />
1969. Providing you online<br />
access from anywhere in the<br />
world, the Google virtual<br />
tour takes you on a journey<br />
through Korea’s art history.<br />
artsandculture.google.com<br />
Metropolitan Museum<br />
of Art<br />
Housing over two million<br />
works of art, The Metropolitan<br />
Museum of Art presents<br />
over 5,000 years of art from<br />
around the world across three<br />
iconic sites in New York City.<br />
Millions of people opt to see<br />
it on their laptops.<br />
metmuseum.org<br />
Rijksmuseum<br />
Explore world-famous<br />
artworks from the Dutch<br />
Golden Age without leaving<br />
your home. In a couple of<br />
clicks you can see the likes<br />
of Vermeer and Rembrandt.<br />
artsandculture.google.com/<br />
partner/rijksmuseum<br />
The Guggenheim Museum<br />
The Guggenheim Museum in New York is an internationallyrenowned<br />
art museum and one of the most significant<br />
architectural icons of the 20th century. However, you don’t<br />
have to fly to the United States to view its artistic treasures.<br />
Works by Pablo Picasso, Edgar Degas and all are among<br />
highlights of a virtual tour, created to ensure the collections<br />
and exhibitions can be enjoyed from afar. artsandculture.<br />
google.com<br />
The British Museum<br />
In partnership with the<br />
Google Cultural Institute,<br />
the British Museum in<br />
London has created one of<br />
the most advanced online<br />
museum experiences.<br />
Featuring some of the<br />
most fascinating objects<br />
in human history, you can<br />
jump back in time and<br />
explore diverse cultures<br />
while listening to insights<br />
from British Museum<br />
curators. britishmuseum.<br />
withgoogle.com<br />
16 worldtravellermagazine.com
5<br />
OF THE<br />
BEST<br />
GLOBETROTTER<br />
The Roof<br />
Remote escapes<br />
If you're dreaming of a digital detox,<br />
these far-flung resorts could be just the ticket<br />
1<br />
TORFHÚS RETREAT,<br />
ICELAND<br />
Set in the heart of the<br />
Golden Circle, this ecoluxury<br />
resort runs entirely on<br />
geothermal and hydroelectric<br />
sustainable energy. Settle<br />
into one of the cosy cabins<br />
and enjoy views over volcanic<br />
plains to snow-capped<br />
mountains and the Langjökull<br />
glacier beyond.<br />
2AMANKORA, BHUTAN<br />
Comprised of five<br />
lodges (home to 76<br />
contemporary rustic suites)<br />
strategically dotted around<br />
the valleys and surrounded<br />
by forests and orchards,<br />
Amankora calls those seeking<br />
a complete holistic and cultural<br />
immersion. Guided activities<br />
change with the seasons – sign<br />
up for the herb-infused hot<br />
stone bath at Paro and the<br />
meditation in Punakha.<br />
3JADE MOUNTAIN<br />
RESORT, ST. LUCIA<br />
Add a dash of romance<br />
to your offline hideaway at<br />
this striking Caribbean retreat.<br />
With vast suites basking in<br />
the spellbinding views of<br />
the Pitons, unobstructed<br />
ocean vistas, and minimal<br />
electronics available, it brings<br />
the disconnect to reconnect<br />
concept to life.<br />
4<br />
MIRAVAL AUSTIN<br />
A haven for wellness,<br />
this resort offers<br />
transformative experiences<br />
that that'll teach you how to<br />
restore balance to your life<br />
through a curated itinerary<br />
incorporating activities such<br />
as vasudhara, which combines<br />
the feeling of being weightless<br />
in the water with Thai<br />
massage. You'll find a 'sleeping<br />
bag' for your mobile phone on<br />
your bedside table.<br />
5NIMMO BAY<br />
WILDERNESS RESORT,<br />
BRITISH COLUMBIA<br />
Offering serenity, adventure<br />
and luxury in equal measure,<br />
this family-owned resort stands<br />
amid masses of unblemished<br />
beauty in the Great Bear<br />
Rainforest. Cabins are devoid<br />
of TVs and you can spend your<br />
days kayaking, paddleboarding<br />
or keeping an eye out for orca<br />
and humpback whales.<br />
Photo: Jade Mountain<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 17
GLOBETROTTER<br />
HOW I TRAVEL<br />
THE THING I LOVE MOST<br />
ABOUT TRAVELLING IS…<br />
the quiet time on the flight<br />
when no-one can reach me.<br />
I KEEP MYSELF<br />
ENTERTAINED WHILE<br />
TRAVELLING BY...<br />
downloading my favourite<br />
shows on Netflix and binge<br />
watching them.<br />
waterfall to shopping for<br />
handicrafts – I’ve heard the<br />
ceramics are particularly<br />
beautiful – its tropical allure<br />
calls me.<br />
THE LAST BOOK I READ<br />
ON HOLIDAY WAS… The<br />
Secret by Rhonda Byrne.<br />
I’ve read this<br />
self-help<br />
bestseller<br />
multiple times<br />
and I always find<br />
something new to<br />
relate to.<br />
Clockwise from left: The Secret by<br />
Rhonda Byrne published by Atria Books/<br />
Beyond Words; Kuang Si Falls in Laos;<br />
spicy lentil dahl; Rodial Pink Diamond Lip<br />
and Eye Filler; Santa Marina Mykonos;<br />
The Bayon temple at Angkor in Cambodia<br />
MY FAVOURITE<br />
HOTEL FOR A WEEKEND<br />
AWAY IS... Santa Marina<br />
Mykonos for its glamorous<br />
blend of beach-chic<br />
interiors, views of the<br />
glistening Aegean Sea, and<br />
being able to unwind on the<br />
sand at Buddha-Bar Beach.<br />
IF I HAD TO CHOOSE<br />
BETWEEN THE CITY AND<br />
THE BEACH, I’D… go to<br />
both at different times.<br />
THE BEST WAY TO<br />
EXPLORE A NEW<br />
DESTINATION IS… to have<br />
no plans whatsoever and<br />
decide what you want to do<br />
once you’re settled.<br />
THE STAMP IN MY<br />
PASSPORT I AM MOST<br />
PROUD OF IS... India. I<br />
loved the culture and food.<br />
MARIA HATZISTEFANIS, founder and CEO of<br />
beauty brands Rodial and Nip+Fab (@mrsrodial),<br />
shares the experiences that fuel her wanderlust<br />
THE ITEMS I ALWAYS<br />
KEEP IN MY CARRY ON<br />
ARE... hand sanitiser,<br />
chewing gum and Rodial<br />
Pink Diamond Lip and<br />
Eye Filler.<br />
THE MOST UNUSUAL<br />
TRAVEL EXPERIENCE<br />
I’VE EVER HAD WAS…<br />
travelling to Búzios in<br />
Brazil from London<br />
with a newborn and a<br />
two-year old. It was a<br />
30-hour journey door<br />
to door – challenging,<br />
but we made it.<br />
which makes me wonder if<br />
I missed out on some fun<br />
along the way.<br />
THE TRIP THAT CHANGED<br />
MY LIFE WAS...<br />
Cambodia. It was a very<br />
spiritual journey.<br />
THE TRAVEL EXPERIENCE I<br />
WISH I’D HAD WHEN I WAS<br />
YOUNGER IS… backpack.<br />
I always opted for comfort,<br />
THE DESTINATION ON<br />
MY BUCKET LIST IS...<br />
Laos. From hiking through<br />
the jungle to a cascading<br />
18 worldtravellermagazine.com
Book at dnatatravel.com,<br />
call 800 DNATA (36282) or<br />
speak to us in-store<br />
Download our app<br />
| Follow us on
XXXXXXXXXXXXX<br />
20 worldtravellermagazine.com
THE FAMILY HOLIDAY<br />
THE FAMILY HOLIDAY<br />
Want your brood to beam like<br />
the ones in the brochures? It is<br />
possible — and no swotting<br />
needed. Simply turn over for<br />
our tantrum-proof cheat sheets<br />
to your favourite cities and trips…<br />
TYPEOGRAPHY: PANDORA THATCHER, AGE 8 3/4<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 21
Start off on a high<br />
Who’s every child’s biggest hero and<br />
hails from Greater London? Harry<br />
Potter, of course. Go seek out Platform<br />
9¾ at King’s Cross Station as soon as<br />
you arrive and the kids will love you<br />
forever. Or at least until you get to the<br />
gift shop, a shrine to all things HP. The<br />
store also sells a few exclusives, such<br />
as Harry’s Hogwarts school trunk and<br />
acceptance letter.<br />
Memorable meal<br />
They’ll be ravenous by now, but you’re<br />
itching to see the capital, so jump on<br />
a B Bakery bus tour (london.b-bakery.<br />
com; depart either from Victoria Station<br />
or just off Trafalgar Square). No-one can<br />
complain about a vintage Routemaster<br />
bus that clocks the city’s greatest sights<br />
– Big Ben, Buckingham Palace, Royal<br />
Albert Hall – while serving you high tea.<br />
Alas: under-5s aren’t allowed – if that<br />
applies to you, try an Afternoon Tea<br />
Cruise on the Thames (citycruises.com).<br />
Secretly educational sight<br />
The Museum of London is really very<br />
clever. Parents view it as the national<br />
curriculum brought to life, but the<br />
kids only see fun, fun, fun. Watch<br />
London burn in the Great Fire (and<br />
wear a 17th-century fireman’s hat),<br />
then join a garden party in the days of<br />
Queen Victoria, before sitting inside a<br />
prison cell, its walls scratched with the<br />
names of turn-of-the-century debtors<br />
(museumoflondon.org.uk).<br />
Blow off steam<br />
The South Bank is a brilliant legstretcher:<br />
under-11s can reboot at<br />
Jubilee Playground and Gardens and<br />
older kids will get a kick out of Riverside<br />
Walk (selfies at the London Eye, street<br />
performers and more) – and no child<br />
will be able to stop staring at the<br />
skateboarders at Skate Space. If it’s<br />
raining, duck into Tate Modern (tate.<br />
org.uk) and let them run around the<br />
gargantuan turbine hall.<br />
Sleeping through<br />
An underground swimming pool with<br />
doughnut inflatables, giant cinema<br />
screens, milk and cookies at bedtime,<br />
and kiddie certificates that can be<br />
cashed in for a mocktail in the bar…<br />
Haymarket Hotel, near Leicester and<br />
Trafalgar Squares, could have been<br />
designed by Kevin from Home Alone,<br />
yet it’s just as pleasing for parents –<br />
with the buzzy Brumus restaurant and<br />
chic interiors they don’t have to keep<br />
tidy. Consider, too, that the sister hotel<br />
in Soho – Ham Yard – has a bowling<br />
alley. Handy.<br />
If only I’d known<br />
Taxis make most sense for families<br />
taking short central journeys, even if it<br />
does feel extravagant. Use the Uber app<br />
and you’ll pay less to be driven from<br />
King’s Cross to the Museum of London<br />
than you would on the Tube when<br />
travelling with older children or more<br />
than two people. If you do take public<br />
transport, use your contactless bank<br />
card for a 50% discount – you’ll need a<br />
different card for each person.<br />
22 worldtravellermagazine.com
THE FAMILY HOLIDAY<br />
These pages, clockwise<br />
from left: B Bakery bus tour;<br />
Platform 9 3/4<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 23
Don’t go too early<br />
Lapland without the white stuff is snow<br />
joke, and winters up here are starting<br />
later these days, so go from the second<br />
or third weekend in December for a<br />
guaranteed snowscape. Ample time is<br />
crucial: do not book one of those 24-<br />
hour round-trips from another country<br />
— your child will be so tired and cranky<br />
you’ll wonder why you bothered. Four<br />
nights is better, and even then you’ll wish<br />
you had more. Darkness reigns: daylight<br />
falls between 10am and 2pm, when an<br />
eerie green and pink glow illuminates<br />
the sky.<br />
Not all Santa villages are the same<br />
Lapland spreads across the top end of<br />
Norway, Finland, Sweden and Russia’s<br />
Kola Peninsula. However, Finnish Lapland<br />
is where almost all Santa trips go, and<br />
Rovaniemi, the provincial capital, is<br />
the ‘main’ home of Father Christmas<br />
(santaclausvillage.info): the big guy<br />
can be visited here every day of the<br />
year. With this comes a hefty slice of<br />
commercialism, and if you’re happy with<br />
that – paying for your photo in a snow<br />
globe, endless gift shops, a whopping<br />
great city of Santa – that’s where you<br />
should go. Children will love it; parents<br />
may not. For the real deal – and<br />
endless other wintry activities, such as<br />
snowmobiling, skiing and reindeer rides –<br />
head north to the smaller resorts of Levi,<br />
Yllas or Saariselka. Levi is just 20 minutes<br />
from the airport, making transfers with<br />
weary tots superspeedy. Here, Santa’s<br />
village is way out in the wilderness: a<br />
huddle of twinkly log cabins hidden<br />
among snow-laden pines. Kids can<br />
decorate gingerbread cookies with Mrs<br />
Claus, make decorations and visit Elf<br />
school to learn Finnish words such as<br />
‘Hyvää Joulua’ (Happy Christmas), as<br />
well as having a private tête-à-tête with<br />
Santa himself. The focus is firmly on<br />
wholesome festive fun and, refreshingly,<br />
souvenir stops are sparse.<br />
If you only ever take one package<br />
trip, this is the time to do it<br />
If you let the experts plan this trip for<br />
you, the festive fun starts on the plane<br />
– and children are hooked. Trust us,<br />
when it’s -20°C outside you’ll want a<br />
coach-load of elves to collect you from<br />
the airport, equip you with thermal<br />
snowsuits and speed you straight to<br />
your accommodation. And with just<br />
three or four days on the ground, you<br />
won’t want to waste precious time at<br />
the supermarket, so opt for a hotel. The<br />
expansive buffets will please even the<br />
most unadventurous of little eaters.<br />
Go against the flow<br />
Book your husky ride, snowmobile<br />
and reindeer safari (all unmissable)<br />
for the last day or two of your hols.<br />
The numbers will have petered out by<br />
then as most people whizz off at high<br />
speed on the first day or two. Booking<br />
through the local tourist office or direct<br />
(laplandsafaris.com) can make it more<br />
crowd-free. Check your tour company’s<br />
included excursions carefully – these can<br />
be just five minutes ‘having a go’ and<br />
nothing like the longer experience. And<br />
remember the best fun is free… Some of<br />
your sweetest memories will be sledging,<br />
building snowmen or simply rolling<br />
around on the slopes. In Levi, sleds are<br />
scattered about, and there’s a nursery<br />
slope with free button lifts at Kids’ Land,<br />
so children can have a go at skiing. Pick<br />
up some sausages and marshmallows<br />
from the local S-Market en route and<br />
toast them free of charge over the fire in<br />
a little Lappish hut at the bottom of the<br />
slope (levi.ski/en/kidsland); hire ski gear<br />
a short walk away at Zero Point.<br />
Maximise your chances of seeing<br />
the Aurora Borealis<br />
The Northern Lights are elusive and the<br />
luckiest time to see them is in spring and<br />
autumn – here’s how to increase your<br />
chances. Stay far north of the Arctic<br />
Circle (in Levi, Inari or Saariselka), out of<br />
town (less light pollution), and download<br />
the aurora app (free). It shows the<br />
likelihood according to your location and<br />
will send an alert if a sighting is imminent<br />
– some hotels will even sound an alarm<br />
to wake you when the aurora is near. Or<br />
take an after-dark snowmobile safari for<br />
an atmospheric treat. Even if you don’t<br />
see it, speeding across a frozen lake at<br />
60kph is an experience in itself.<br />
24 worldtravellermagazine.com
THE FAMILY HOLIDAY<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 25
Ferris wheel on Tibidabo<br />
26 worldtravellermagazine.com<br />
26 worldtravellermagazine.com<br />
26 worldtravellermagazine.com<br />
Start off on a high<br />
Forget the Sagrada Família (the kids<br />
won’t get it) and take bus T2a from<br />
Plaça de Catalunya to Tibidabo – the<br />
hill you can see from Passeig de<br />
Gràcia. On top, there’s a theme park<br />
with charmingly retro rides and fab<br />
views (tibidabo.cat). Or, on the other<br />
side of the city, take the funicular up to<br />
montjuïc (telefericdemontjuic.cat). The<br />
highlight here is the Magic Fountain,<br />
next door to the Poble Espanyol,<br />
a leftover from the 1929 <strong>World</strong><br />
Exhibition (the equivalent of the Expo),<br />
where kids can visit attractions from<br />
the whole of Spain.<br />
Memorable meal<br />
Take the metro to the Plaça d’Españya,<br />
then nip around the corner to the<br />
Suarna Bar restaurant on Carrer Llançà.<br />
Admittedly, from the outside it looks a bit<br />
like a shopping-mall diner, but the kids –<br />
like the cops and the locals who dine here<br />
– will love it. Paella is the house speciality,<br />
but there’s also a kids' menu, entertaining<br />
staff and, on the top floor, a play area<br />
(restaurantesuarna.com).<br />
Secretly educational sight<br />
You may wish to explore La Ruta del<br />
Modernisme in a bid to understand<br />
Gaudí’s internal struggle between God<br />
and nature, but that won’t cut it with<br />
the kids – with the exception perhaps of<br />
the Alice in Wonderland fantasy of La<br />
Pedrera (lapedrera.com) and crazy Park<br />
Guell, where they’ll love exploring Gaudí’s<br />
cartoon-like playground. Otherwise, the<br />
Museu Maritim (mmb.cat) will easily fill an<br />
afternoon, with its fascinating collection<br />
of model ships and a fish-shaped<br />
submarine.<br />
Blow off steam<br />
Hit the beach. Most visitors head to<br />
La Barceloneta, but for a more familyfriendly<br />
vibe take metro line L4 to Selva<br />
del Mar and the Platja del Bogatell,<br />
where locals combine competitive<br />
volleyball with loafing, paddling and long<br />
lunches. This could also be the spot for<br />
another memorable meal: try the paella<br />
at the beachfront Xiringuito Escribà<br />
(restaurantsescriba. com). And don’t miss<br />
the magical Parc de la Ciutadella at the<br />
edge of El Born district. It has a boating<br />
lake, zoo and playgrounds – perfect for<br />
hide and seek<br />
Sleeping through<br />
You can find cheaper places to stay, but<br />
you won’t find a better location than<br />
the Majestic Residence, one block from<br />
La Pedrera on Passeig de Gràcia. The<br />
two-bed apartments come with sitting<br />
and dining rooms and, on the off-chance<br />
you’ve got fussy eaters in tow, a fully<br />
equipped kitchen. Prefer a hotel? The<br />
Icon BCN is three blocks east of the Plaça<br />
de Catalunya and 20 minutes from Parc<br />
de la Ciutadella.<br />
If only I’d known<br />
The Barcelona card saves you so<br />
much cash, providing free public<br />
transport and free entry to 25 museums<br />
(barcelonacard.org).
THE FAMILY HOLIDAY<br />
Brooklyn Bridge<br />
Start off on a high<br />
No NYC attraction will wow your<br />
kids like the rooftop views from the<br />
Rockefeller Centre. The 67th/68th floor<br />
indoor gallery is good, but the open-air<br />
70th-floor observation deck is better,<br />
with OMG views of all Manhattan’s<br />
icons, including the Empire State<br />
Building, Central Park and the Hudson<br />
River. Come at night for added sparkle.<br />
Memorable meal<br />
For a classic slice of ’50s Americana in<br />
Midtown Manhattan, grab brunch in a<br />
booth at Comfort Diner, notorious for<br />
its artery-clogging buttermilk pancakes,<br />
piled high with toasted pecans, bananas<br />
and berries (comfortdiner.com). Free<br />
coffee refills, leather banquettes and<br />
possible sightings of Comfort Diner<br />
fan Justin Bieber – it’s a cracking find,<br />
less than 10 minutes’ walk from Grand<br />
LUX* North Malé Atoll<br />
Central Station. For dinner, Urbanspace<br />
Vanderbilt is a food hall with 20 burger,<br />
taco or pizza vendors and communal<br />
tables (urbanspacenyc.com).<br />
Secretly educational sight<br />
Some families will lick their lips at New<br />
York’s dizzying list of art museums.<br />
But not all. However, even philistines<br />
enjoy the fifth-floor gallery at MoMA,<br />
a perfect 90-minute highlights reel of<br />
A-List artists, from Picasso and Pollock<br />
to Mondrian and Monet. There’s no<br />
charge for under-16s, free wi-fi at the<br />
excellent cafe by the gift shop, and<br />
selfie opportunities with Van Gogh’s<br />
Starry Night to impress even the<br />
grumpiest teen (moma.org).<br />
Blow off steam<br />
Running for two-and-a-half elevated<br />
kilometres between Hudson Yards<br />
and Chelsea, the disused railway<br />
High Line is an entertaining riot of<br />
wildflowers, urban art and belting<br />
views, starting right beside the instantly<br />
Instagrammable new Vessel landmark<br />
(thehighline.org). Or make yourselves<br />
comfortable on a bench in Washington<br />
Square Park, brimming with buskers<br />
at weekends, and just next door to the<br />
cage, aka West Fourth Street courts,<br />
a famous no-frills breeding ground of<br />
basketball legends.<br />
Sleeping through<br />
A 15-minute walk from MoMA and the<br />
Rockefeller Centre, the Roger Smith<br />
on Lexington has oodles of old New<br />
York style and family suites that won’t<br />
blow your holiday budget. It also has<br />
a bite-sized rooftop bar, so while the<br />
kids gorge on wi-fi back in the room,<br />
mums and dads can sip manhattans<br />
while basking in the city views with<br />
midtown’s after-work crowd<br />
If only I’d known<br />
The city’s parks are packed with<br />
free family stuff – and they’re a<br />
great way to meet New Yorkers.<br />
Check out nycgovparks.org for free<br />
events in parks, including theatre<br />
and piano recitals, yoga and juggling<br />
classes. The best green space of all is<br />
Brooklyn Bridge Park, with six piers of<br />
activities, from kayaking to Pilates.<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 27
Avoid summer holidays<br />
Balmy Florida is a year-round<br />
destination, so skip summer, when<br />
it’s priciest, and nab better deals at<br />
Christmas and October and February<br />
half terms. There’s added off-season<br />
value, too, with festive decorations and<br />
parades from October (Halloween and<br />
Thanksgiving), then Mardi Gras from<br />
February to <strong>April</strong>. If summer is your only<br />
option, travel as late as you can – in many<br />
US states, children are back at school by<br />
mid-August, so theme-park queues start<br />
to dissipate then.<br />
Stay at on-site hotels<br />
For starters you’ll avoid driving and<br />
parking headaches with free transport<br />
to the parks, but the other perks are<br />
worthwhile, too. Stays at all the Universal<br />
hotels grant you early park access,<br />
meaning an hour’s head start on the<br />
masses to tick off the most popular<br />
rides – think Simpsons, Revenge of the<br />
Mummy and anything Harry Potterrelated.<br />
Bookings at the three premium<br />
hotels also include an express pass to<br />
skip the lines – it’s worth calculating<br />
whether this will actually work out<br />
cheaper than a less pricey stay plus<br />
express passes on top (the new Endless<br />
Summer Resort is the most budgetfriendly<br />
on site). If you’re planning to<br />
visit other Orlando parks, too, and want<br />
to stay offsite, the International Drive<br />
neighbourhood is the most central.<br />
Kissimmee, while convenient for Disney,<br />
is less so for Universal Studios.<br />
Have a plan of attack<br />
Fail to plan, plan to fail – a maxim that<br />
could have been designed for theme<br />
parks. Don’t head immediately for the<br />
rides by the entrance – start at the back<br />
of each park and work your way in. If<br />
you have small children, make sure to<br />
intersperse height-limited rollercoasters<br />
with age-appropriate rides, character<br />
meet-and-greets and play areas they can<br />
enjoy, too. Use the Universal app – it’ll<br />
not only show you live-ride wait times<br />
Surfside Inn and Suites, Universal Studios<br />
and schedules, it'll even help you find the<br />
nearest loos. Disney and Legoland have<br />
similar apps. Carry swimming cozzies<br />
every day, just in case you decide to<br />
head over to Universal’s water park,<br />
Volcano Bay, where there are pools as<br />
well as splash rides – a good downtime<br />
opportunity without returning to your<br />
hotel/villa.<br />
Buy a multi-park ticket<br />
Explorer tickets, which give access to<br />
either two or all three of the Universal<br />
parks, are a no-brainer. Even if you<br />
plan to focus mainly on one park a day,<br />
without a multi-park ticket you won’t be<br />
able to ride on the Hogwarts Express, the<br />
HP-themed train that joins Universal to<br />
Islands of Adventure (make sure to ride<br />
in both directions – the return journey is<br />
totally different). Explorer tickets have<br />
to be purchased in advance, but this is a<br />
bonus, as buying on the day just means<br />
one extra queue to stand in. If you plan<br />
to visit other Orlando parks, combination<br />
tickets with access to Disney, Legoland<br />
et al are available (orlandoattractions.<br />
com).<br />
Manage the merchandise<br />
You are not going to escape without<br />
souvenirs – branded toys and clothes<br />
are, as you'd expect, everywhere. So<br />
negotiate spending limits in advance, and<br />
consider buying birthday gifts, as much<br />
of the merchandise is exclusive to the<br />
parks. If you’re staying in an on-site hotel,<br />
purchases can be sent directly from the<br />
till to your room, avoiding the potential<br />
for immediate loss or damage. But be<br />
sure to hang on to any interactive wands,<br />
as they can be used to cast spells at set<br />
locations around the Wizarding <strong>World</strong> of<br />
Harry Potter.<br />
28 worldtravellermagazine.com
THE FAMILY HOLIDAY<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 29
Nooooooo! Don’t make me do it!<br />
The idea of going all-inclusive is<br />
anathema to many parents, especially<br />
those who pride themselves on their<br />
intrepid lust for ‘authentic’ travel. But<br />
we’ve got bad news for you: everyone<br />
ends up trying it. And the worst news?<br />
You’ll love it. There’s nothing so blissful<br />
as being able to say ‘yes’ to your child’s<br />
third request for an ice cream (because<br />
there’s a free gelato kiosk by the pool);<br />
nothing so stress-busting as watching<br />
them taste – even screw up noses at –<br />
local cuisine (because no-one’s judging<br />
you, and there’s pizza if they don’t like<br />
parmigiana); and nothing so indulgent<br />
as taking them to the water slides<br />
for five minutes, before they want to<br />
try something else. (Who cares? You<br />
didn’t queue for pricey tickets). If you’re<br />
happy when your kids are happy, then<br />
an all-inclusive resort is the best family<br />
holiday you’ve never had.<br />
You don’t have to wear a wristband<br />
The tell-tale neon tag is dying out in<br />
the world of all-inclusives. They existed<br />
in resorts where different guests were<br />
on different meal plans (ie, purple for<br />
‘premium’ drinks included, ‘orange’<br />
not). But hoteliers have cottoned on to<br />
the fact that people hate this system<br />
and now everyone is on the same<br />
basis: all-inclusive, no questions asked.<br />
And if your resort is on its own private<br />
beach (many are – take a look at lovely<br />
LuxMe Daphnila Bay in Corfu) with a<br />
secure entrance, they know no-one<br />
can saunter in uninvited and plunder<br />
the food and drinks for free. You<br />
don’t have to eat buffet food, either.<br />
Some families love buffets (and who<br />
doesn’t, at breakfast, anyway?) –<br />
and there are big dining rooms with<br />
an international spread for those<br />
guests. However, more and more<br />
all-inclusives come with à la carte<br />
Rixos Premium<br />
Saadiyat Island<br />
restaurants, often gourmet, where<br />
every dish and drink happens to<br />
be free. Ikos Resorts (four hotels in<br />
Greece, and one in Marbella from<br />
<strong>May</strong> <strong>2020</strong>) has concocted the ‘ultra’<br />
all-inclusive concept, which means<br />
Michelin-star menus and even the<br />
ability to visit local, independent<br />
restaurants (their food is included<br />
in your stay). If you want to eat a<br />
simple salad on the beach in your<br />
kaftan, you can, but if you'd prefer<br />
to dress up and reserve a table for a<br />
special meal, you can do that, too.<br />
You can go all-inclusive and be<br />
adventurous<br />
Besides its UAE resorts, Rixos<br />
operates premium all-inclusive<br />
resorts in other destinations –<br />
southern Turkey, Egypt, Croatia,<br />
even the Swiss Alps. Rixos Abu<br />
Dhabi is on Saadiyat Island: its<br />
beach attracts nesting sea turtles; its<br />
hammam wins awards; and it’s just<br />
minutes from Louvre Abu Dhabi. Or<br />
try Lujo Bodrum in Turkey. Yes, it’s<br />
all-inclusive, but it has the styling<br />
of an Indian Ocean five-star, with<br />
overwater beach club and all-glass<br />
villas, and is within driving distance<br />
of two of the seven wonders of<br />
the ancient world (Ephesus and<br />
Helicarnassus). You can sneak in the<br />
history curriculum between pool<br />
days and the teens won’t even notice.<br />
Beware: not everything is<br />
thrown in<br />
Generally speaking, spa treatments<br />
and motorised water sports aren’t<br />
included. But fitness classes, gym use,<br />
and kayaks often are – so be clever<br />
and get your fill of the free stuff first.<br />
If the kids’ club is complimentary, take<br />
your children along to explore on day<br />
one with no pressure to attend, and<br />
they’ll pick up on your laissez-faire<br />
attitude. Kids often love the allinclusive<br />
versions of kids’ clubs. The<br />
standard is often higher, too, because<br />
all-inclusives are famously familyorientated;<br />
expect soft-play centres,<br />
splash parks, laser tag, cinemas and<br />
even sailing and sports schools. Don’t<br />
assume going all-inclusive costs much<br />
more than regular hotel stays either.<br />
30 worldtravellermagazine.com
THE FAMILY HOLIDAY<br />
Start off on a high<br />
The Pantheon temple’s floor is like a<br />
giant hopscotch, laid out in squares of<br />
contrasting marble. Head to the slab<br />
at the very centre and gaze up at the<br />
Roman dome, open to the sky through a<br />
perfect circular oculus. Little ones can lie<br />
down on the cool 1,900-year-old marble<br />
and try to spot a pigeon flying overhead.<br />
Arrive 30 minutes before last entry<br />
(7.15pm; 5.45pm Sundays) and you’ll be<br />
spared the rush-hour crush.<br />
Memorable meal<br />
There’s no sign outside Villa Medici<br />
announcing the house cafe, Colbert<br />
(caffecolbert.it) – just head upstairs<br />
and you’ll find it. Its towering windows<br />
offer an exquisite panorama… and a<br />
mysterious optical illusion. While you<br />
await your home-cooked meatballs, fix<br />
your eyes on the dome of San Rocco<br />
in the distance. Now slowly back away<br />
from the window. As you reach the far<br />
corner of the room, the dome appears<br />
bigger, not smaller. Dig in and discuss.<br />
Secretly educational sight<br />
You might prefer the rooftop bar or the<br />
fourth-floor craft gallery at Rinascente<br />
Tritone department store (rinascente.<br />
it), but for the kids’ sake, start in the<br />
basement. Spanning the homeware<br />
section is a 60-metre stretch of ancient<br />
Kudadoo Maldives<br />
aqueduct, lit up with LEDs. Two millennia<br />
since Augustus’s Romans built the<br />
Aqua Virgo, it still transports 80,000<br />
cubic metres of water daily to the Trevi<br />
Fountain – just three minutes away.<br />
Blow off steam<br />
After school hours, families let their kids<br />
loose in traffic-free Piazza Navona. Join<br />
them on the cobblestones, scampering<br />
between sidewalk artists, buskers and<br />
charcoal caricaturists. At dusk, out<br />
come the bouncing, whirring glowin-the-dark<br />
toys – mesmerising for<br />
babies and tempting for toddlers. For<br />
a souvenir they’ll cherish, wander over<br />
to the Murano glass shop at 170 Via del<br />
Pellegrino – kids love foraging through<br />
the crates of adorable animal figurines,<br />
tiny treasures at a few euros each.<br />
Sleeping through<br />
On sultry days you’ll be grateful for a pad<br />
on a cool, quiet, convenient street. Hotel<br />
Navona is a rare budget option sleeping<br />
up to four in a room. The Roman Forum<br />
is 15 minutes away on foot, the Pantheon<br />
just three. Find superlative pizza down<br />
the road at Baffetto (pizzeriabaffetto.<br />
it) and stellar coffee at the nearby<br />
Sant’Eustachio cafe.<br />
If only I’d known<br />
Not only is Rome swarmed by tourists<br />
in August, but the best restaurants and<br />
shops are often closed. If you must come<br />
during summer holidays, make it late<br />
July or late August.<br />
PARENTS’<br />
TOP<br />
TRAVEL<br />
TIPS<br />
1<br />
‘Make<br />
a packing<br />
list from your first<br />
family trip, and store<br />
it on your phone<br />
– then add to it as the<br />
kids grow. It means you’ll<br />
never forget goggles or<br />
Calpol. Essential packing?<br />
Earphones (no-one wants<br />
to listen to the little ’uns’<br />
cartoons). What not to<br />
pack: kids’ wheelie cases –<br />
overhyped!’<br />
2‘Getting a child’s<br />
first passport<br />
takes longer than<br />
normal. Don’t<br />
book a non-refundable trip<br />
until it arrives’<br />
3‘It’s free to take<br />
a car seat on<br />
airlines. And if<br />
you buy a storage<br />
bag for yours, it’s not only<br />
extra protection, but gives<br />
more packing space, too.’<br />
4‘Villas are great<br />
for families, but<br />
beware tighter<br />
check-in/ out<br />
times: 4pm and 10am.<br />
There’s no point booking<br />
an early outbound flight<br />
if you can’t access the<br />
property for hours.’<br />
5‘Don't just pack a<br />
change of clothes<br />
for kids during<br />
the flights – think<br />
of yourself, too. Under-2s<br />
must sit on parents’ laps,<br />
so you’ll probably get as<br />
mucky as they do!’<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 31
XXXXXXXXXXXXX<br />
Hawke's Bay in Napier<br />
Photo © Graeme Murray for<br />
Tourism New Zealand<br />
Postcards<br />
Stories from journeys<br />
far and wide<br />
TASMANIA p34<br />
GALÁPAGOS p48<br />
NEW ZEALAND p54<br />
ROAD TRIP FROM NEW YORK TO LA p42<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 33
These pages: Taking a stroll along<br />
Reidle Beach<br />
34 worldtravellermagazine.com
TASMANIA<br />
Lara Brunt goes off-grid on Maria Island in Australia and discovers an<br />
unspoilt isle teeming with unique wildlife<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 35
TASMANIA<br />
As we walk along the bush track, the<br />
air thick with the honey-like scent of<br />
eucalyptus trees in bloom, a brown ball<br />
covered in spines waddles across our<br />
path. Sensing danger, the echidna goes<br />
to ground, burying his long snout in<br />
the leaves, reckoning that if he can’t see<br />
us, we definitely can’t see him. Despite<br />
growing up in Australia, I can count on<br />
one hand the number of times I’ve seen<br />
one of these shy creatures in the wild.<br />
Encounters like this are commonplace<br />
on Maria Island (oddly pronounced<br />
‘Mariah’, as in Carey), a pristine island<br />
off the east coast of Tasmania that was<br />
thankfully unaffected by Australia's recent<br />
bushfire crisis. Declared a national park<br />
in 1972 and accessible only by ferry, the<br />
island’s carefully managed conservation<br />
programme has seen booming numbers<br />
of weird and wonderful Aussie wildlife,<br />
including wombats, wallabies, kangaroos,<br />
pademelons, echidnas and possums.<br />
Maria Island has also become<br />
something of a latter-day Noah's Ark,<br />
with vulnerable species such as Cape<br />
Barren geese and Forester kangaroos<br />
shipped here for insurance. Meanwhile,<br />
‘<br />
IT FEELS<br />
LIKE THE<br />
PERFECT OFF-<br />
GRID ESCAPE<br />
FOR THESE<br />
TURBULENT<br />
TIMES<br />
’<br />
the Tasmanian devil, a meat-eating<br />
marsupial famous for its spine-chilling<br />
screeches, has been saved from extinction<br />
after being decimated by a rare facial<br />
cancer. Over the past eight years, 34<br />
disease-free devils have been introduced<br />
to Maria Island, which now boasts a<br />
healthy population of more than 100.<br />
With its white-sand beaches, ancient<br />
eucalypt forests and soaring dolerite<br />
columns, animals are not the island’s<br />
only draw. I’d come to do the Maria<br />
Island Walk, an active but pampered<br />
four-day adventure led by guides Dan<br />
and Gemma. Fuelled by gourmet Tassie<br />
food and staying in glamping cabins,<br />
the 40km walk from south to north<br />
is not terribly demanding, even for a<br />
novice hiker like myself. It feels like<br />
the perfect off-grid escape for these<br />
turbulent times; in four days, we stumble<br />
upon only one other walker (who<br />
looked pretty surprised to see us too).<br />
Originally inhabited by the Tyreddeme<br />
Aboriginal people, Dutch navigator Abel<br />
Tasman sailed past in 1642 and named<br />
the island after the wife of his patron.<br />
The British established a penal colony on<br />
mainland Australia nearly 150 years later,<br />
before setting up a convict settlement<br />
at Darlington at the northern end of<br />
Maria Island, our ultimate destination,<br />
in 1825. Abandoned seven years’ later,<br />
the island was then leased for whaling,<br />
farming and various ill-fated ventures,<br />
including a vineyard and cement works,<br />
dreamt up by a charismatic Italian<br />
merchant named Diego Bernacchi,<br />
before it became protected land.<br />
Departing by boat from Triabunna, a<br />
tiny town on the east coast of Tasmania,<br />
we arrive 30 minutes later at Shoal<br />
Bay. Small rays glide in slow motion<br />
36 worldtravellermagazine.com
Clockwise from<br />
opposite: Darlington<br />
convict settlement;<br />
candlelit dining at<br />
camp; Tasmanian devil;<br />
the sun sets on the<br />
rocks © Rob Blahers;<br />
a wombat comes to<br />
say hello<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 37
JAPAN<br />
38 worldtravellermagazine.com
‘<br />
MARIA ISLAND<br />
HAS ALSO BECOME<br />
SOMETHING OF<br />
A LATTER-DAY<br />
NOAH'S ARK<br />
’<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 39
TASMANIA<br />
through the turquoise shallows as<br />
we wade ashore and set off down the<br />
deserted beach, boots in hands and sand<br />
between our toes. The island is 20km<br />
long and 13km across at its widest point,<br />
but we cross the narrow isthmus that<br />
connects the north and south parts,<br />
giving Maria Island an hourglass shape.<br />
After settling into Casuarina Beach<br />
Camp, a permanent eco-camp hidden<br />
among the trees with six green canvas<br />
and wood cabins and a swanky communal<br />
dining area, our group of ten – Belgians,<br />
Canadians, Aussies and a Brit – set off<br />
for an 8km round-trip under towering<br />
blue gums to Haunted Bay (spotting our<br />
spiky echidna friend along the way).<br />
With boulders covered in blood-red<br />
lichen and a resident penguin colony,<br />
the bay is incredibly photogenic, despite<br />
its mournful moniker. “The name is<br />
said to come from the tortured souls<br />
of whalers once stationed here, or the<br />
cries of baby penguins as they wait for<br />
mum to bring food home,” Dan tells us.<br />
By the time we stroll back into camp,<br />
canapés are ready and dinner is well<br />
under way. We may be on an uninhabited<br />
island with no mobile phone signal,<br />
but Dan and Gemma rustle up a topnotch<br />
meal of bruschetta with vineripened<br />
tomatoes and goats’ cheese,<br />
followed by a saffron risotto with<br />
Spring Bay scallops, and a summer<br />
berry pudding with King Island cream.<br />
Time to loosen those trousers.<br />
We wake to the sound of twittering<br />
wattlebirds, ready for the longest stretch<br />
of the walk, covering some 14km over<br />
flat bush tracks and five sandy beaches.<br />
Heading north, we stop for morning tea<br />
at an old farmhouse at French’s Farm,<br />
with the nearby shearing shed hinting at<br />
Maria Island’s previous life as a sheepfarming<br />
outpost for more than 150 years.<br />
We follow kangaroo tracks along the<br />
beach, as the clearest waters I’ve ever<br />
seen lap the shore and dramatic storm<br />
clouds gather overhead. From the crest<br />
of the hill at Point Lesueur we spy the<br />
red-brick ruins of a convict probation<br />
station that operated from 1842 and<br />
1850, and marvel at the orange and red<br />
cliffs that were an important source of<br />
ochre for the Tyreddeme Aborigines.<br />
After stopping for lunch, we come<br />
across a grassy headland dotted with<br />
dozens of bare-nosed wombats and<br />
‘<br />
WILD AND WINDSWEPT, THE PRISTINE<br />
COASTLINE OF THE FREYCINET<br />
PENINSULA STRETCHES OUT BEFORE US<br />
’<br />
carpeted with their distinctive cubeshaped<br />
dung. Normally nocturnal, the<br />
tank-like marsupials are happy to graze<br />
all day long on Maria. And while they<br />
look dozy, the average wombat could<br />
out-sprint a human in a 100-metre<br />
dash. We even catch sight of a “twoheaded”<br />
wombat, with a baby joey<br />
sticking out of mum’s pouch at the rear.<br />
Arriving at another impeccably<br />
organised camp, I enjoy a wonderfully<br />
hot bush shower, before sitting down<br />
to miso soup with wakame seaweed<br />
and shitake mushrooms, followed<br />
by a gourmet Aussie barbeque of<br />
duck-and-wallaby sausages, quail and<br />
lamb chops with spiced cous cous.<br />
After the day’s exertion, I feel like<br />
I’ve earned every bite of the flourless<br />
chocolate cake smothered in cream.<br />
Day three takes us past the Painted<br />
Cliffs, swirling sandstone rock<br />
formations created by iron oxide-stained<br />
ground water, tides and wind, before<br />
arriving at the UNESCO <strong>World</strong> Heritagelisted<br />
convict settlement of Darlington.<br />
We dump our packs at Bernacchi House,<br />
an elegant 19th-century cottage where<br />
we’ll spend our last night, before the<br />
more adventurous of us head out to scale<br />
the twin peaks of Bishop and Clerk.<br />
Following the cliff edge, the track<br />
begins to narrow and climb as we<br />
make our way into the bush. We slowly<br />
zigzag up a steep field of fallen rocks,<br />
before scrambling up to the summit.<br />
Wild and windswept, the pristine<br />
coastline of the Freycinet Peninsula<br />
stretches out before us to the north,<br />
while massive dolerite columns plunge<br />
into the Tasman Sea as we look east.<br />
On our final day, we explore the wellpreserved<br />
buildings of the old convict<br />
settlement that was once home to 627<br />
convicts, ever-watchful for a Tassie<br />
devil that has been known to sun itself<br />
around these parts. It doesn’t make<br />
an appearance, but as we sit on the<br />
verandah of a rustic cottage enjoying<br />
one last meal of freshly shucked<br />
oysters, it hardly seems to matter.<br />
The four-day Maria Island Walk<br />
operates from October to <strong>April</strong>, while a<br />
three-day walk operates in the winter<br />
months from June to August.<br />
To book a future trip, call<br />
800 DNATA or visit dnatatravel.com<br />
40 worldtravellermagazine.com
This page: Soft,<br />
colourful TASMANIA<br />
corals around<br />
Lizard Island<br />
Previous pages, left to<br />
right: On top of Bishop<br />
and Clerk; kangaroos<br />
at play<br />
These pages, left to<br />
right: Painted cliffs; a<br />
couple enjoy the views<br />
at Skipping Ridge<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 41
XXXXXXXXXXXXX<br />
This page: Peggy Sue’s<br />
roadside diner near Barstow<br />
Right: On the open road<br />
through Utah<br />
42 worldtravellermagazine.com
USA<br />
Life in<br />
the<br />
FAST LANE<br />
New York to LA – it’s the ultimate American road<br />
trip. But surely it takes forever to complete? Not on<br />
this route, says Ian Belcher. You just need a week<br />
off work and a motor with oomph<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 43
What divine timing. As I burn along a<br />
rattlesnake speedway in the Utah desert,<br />
a single cloud drifts above Monument<br />
Valley’s iconic buttes as if let loose from a<br />
Hollywood studio; red-tailed hawks wheel<br />
overhead and the iPad shuffle releases<br />
the high-octane opening chords of Born<br />
to Run, Bruce Springsteen’s paean to the<br />
open road. Surely such synchronicity isn’t<br />
mere coincidence? I’ve no idea if God’s a<br />
DJ, but I’m reliably informed he’s running<br />
the show. Just three days before, while<br />
driving through Nebraska, I heard Dr<br />
Erwin W Lutzer declare that I ‘will face<br />
the wrath and judgment of the Lord’.<br />
From Bible-bashing pastors to heavenly<br />
landscapes to rock ’n’ roll salvation, there’s<br />
nothing that brings the intoxicating,<br />
movie-set and occasionally alien world<br />
of America to life like a road trip – and<br />
there’s no road trip better than New<br />
York to LA, the El Classico of drives.<br />
Under cyan skies we’re chasing a<br />
route that offers warm sun without<br />
the relentless sizzle of the Deep South<br />
(come summer, Route 66 just melts).<br />
And ours is the greedy ‘fast food’ option,<br />
allowing us to gorge on everything we<br />
desire from a trans-America journey –<br />
‘<br />
ROCKS MIMIC A<br />
VAST TIRAMISU,<br />
CHOCOLATE<br />
TRUFFLES<br />
AND BLOBS<br />
OF WHIPPED<br />
CREAM<br />
’<br />
hip-as-hell big cities, small-town kitsch,<br />
mind-bending western wilderness<br />
– and still take only a week off work.<br />
Arrowing out of the Big Apple towards<br />
the Great Lakes and Midwestern flatlands<br />
provides a blend of kitsch Americana,<br />
intriguing roadside culture and refuels<br />
in mom-&-pop diners before we vault<br />
over the Rockies into movie territory,<br />
navigating dramatic cowboy deserts to<br />
take the chequered flag on LA’s Manhattan<br />
Beach. It also means eight days and<br />
6,500km in a confined space. So pick<br />
your travelling companions carefully. I<br />
chose familiarity over joy, recruiting two<br />
old travelling buddies: Doug, a grouchy<br />
Canadian photographer, and Gareth, a<br />
grouchier Welsh accountant, who’ll both<br />
lighten the driving load if not the mood.<br />
Our starting line is a hip Downtown<br />
hotel, chosen as an opening blast of<br />
Manhattan sophistication. After a dawn<br />
check-out, departing through the lobby<br />
beneath a glass-bottomed swimming<br />
pool – you won’t find that in a roadside<br />
motel – we set off with a fresh sun<br />
winking in our rear-view mirror. And<br />
90 minutes later New York’s concrete<br />
canyons morph into New Jersey’s verdant<br />
hills, then, remarkably quickly, into<br />
our first mountains: Pennsylvania’s<br />
Appalachians, with their forested valleys<br />
and ridges. It’s not just the scenery<br />
that’s expanding. There are huge<br />
trucks, enormous road kills – and epic<br />
hamburgers. Denny’s Beer Barrel Pub in<br />
Clearfield has the biggest on the planet.<br />
It’s our first taste of the unique,<br />
sometimes bizarre attractions kissing<br />
the highway and I’m not sure my arteries<br />
can handle many more. No-one has<br />
conquered the 25lb (11kg) Burgernator,<br />
but Brad Sciullo scoffed the 15lb (7kg)<br />
Belly Buster in two hours and 33 minutes,<br />
and hundreds have devoured the 2lb (1kg)<br />
Challenger, earning plaques in Denny’s<br />
These pages, clockwise from<br />
above: Carhenge; the sun<br />
comes down on Manhattan<br />
Beach; tackling the burgernator<br />
at Denny's Beer Barrel Pub;<br />
vintage signs at a roadside<br />
gas station<br />
44 worldtravellermagazine.com
USA<br />
Hall of Fame. We won’t be joining them.<br />
Our three-strong team surrenders meekly<br />
to the 30cm-wide patty that, with bun<br />
and cascading garnish, hits 3.5lbs (1.5kg).<br />
Silent with indigestion, we head west<br />
to Ohio, completing a day’s high-calibre<br />
nutrition with sacks of cheese and caramel<br />
kernels at Chagrin Falls’s renowned<br />
68-year-old popcorn shop. The peachy<br />
small town (imagine It’s A Wonderful Life)<br />
typifies the quirky Americana we’d hoped<br />
for. Nearby Cleveland chips in with two<br />
bizarre world records: the biggest rubber<br />
stamp (doubling as a celebration of the<br />
end of slavery) and the largest outdoor<br />
chandelier: a six-metre-high behemoth.<br />
And the heartland idiosyncracy<br />
doesn’t let up. Two hours into next<br />
day’s drive, as Ohio flattens into farms<br />
and barns, I discover, alongside the fast<br />
food, fast religion: at Interstate 80’s<br />
Toledo rest stop, next to Burger King<br />
and Taco Bell, a stationary truck sports<br />
a supersized logo – Mobile Chapel. Its<br />
carpeted container holds an organ, pulpit<br />
and seats for a truckers’ congregation.<br />
Sadly its glass doors are locked.<br />
Perhaps it’s for the best. The clock’s<br />
ticking. Our relatively speedy trans-<br />
America adventure mostly allows time<br />
for only minor detours, demanding long<br />
drives with late finishes. But today is<br />
different. We reach Chicago, 1,400km<br />
under our belts, before sunset – in time<br />
for another of the ‘urban cool’ hits that<br />
distinguish this cross-country route<br />
from its southern equivalents. This<br />
time it’s a chic blend of Art Deco and<br />
Neo-Classical architecture as we mingle<br />
with the Young Things on the London<br />
House hotel’s rooftop bar and lap up its<br />
views of the surrounding skyscrapers.<br />
Were this On the Road, Dean Moriarty<br />
would charm a dame and find a sweaty<br />
jazz dive. Instead, Gareth sips his beer<br />
and explains VAT changes for the selfemployed.<br />
Jack Kerouac would weep.<br />
He’d also hate our car. We’d considered a<br />
convertible, imagining blue horizons, soft<br />
breezes and mirrored shades reflecting<br />
roadside cactuses, but were told the reality<br />
is a rear passenger deafened by wind and<br />
crippled by minimal legroom. So we hired<br />
a bulky Dodge Journey instead. Youthful<br />
abandon trampled by middle-aged<br />
pragmatism: good call. Big wheels are de<br />
rigueur next day, though. We’ve reached<br />
Iowa 80, the world’s largest truck stop.<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 45
A kerbside city that hasn’t closed<br />
in 53 years, that has served more<br />
than three million coffees, 18 million<br />
eggs and, best not to visualise this,<br />
got through 56,000km of loo roll. It<br />
boasts a barber, chiropractor, cinema<br />
and Dogomat pet wash, and even<br />
hosts its own Trucker’s Olympics (the<br />
women’s strong pull is a highlight).<br />
I boost my testosterone behind the<br />
wheel of its showroom’s mammoth<br />
chrome-covered cab and buy my wife a<br />
pair of vast elasticated shorts frescoed<br />
with three ducks and the words ‘Butt<br />
Quack’. I spoil her, I really do.<br />
If Iowa 80 is big and brash, Grinnell,<br />
reached by a short detour, is petite and<br />
understated. It’s small-town gold dust.<br />
Just behind the near-deserted Main Street,<br />
where I’m passed by a pensioner on a<br />
motorised lawnmower, the magnificent<br />
Merchant’s National Bank sports golden<br />
winged lions, glistening Greek columns<br />
and striking stained glass. One of the<br />
Midwest’s jewelbox banks, its architect,<br />
Louis Sullivan, was the father of the<br />
modern skyscraper. (Louis would adore<br />
tonight’s accommodation: a red-brick<br />
mansion in Lincoln, with ballroom, library<br />
and creaky floors that were once part of<br />
a University of Nebraska frat house.)<br />
We’ve now penetrated the Great Plains.<br />
Coming up to halfway, it’s time to swap<br />
I-80, the interstate that has dominated<br />
the journey, for gently rolling prairies.<br />
Our pace slows. At a local bakery, our<br />
waitress, Michelle, demands I repeat<br />
my breakfast order: ‘Your accent makes<br />
everything sound so intellectual.’<br />
‘Even toast?’<br />
‘Yep, even toast.’<br />
I’m not sure Michelle’s right, but<br />
either way, there’s plenty of time for<br />
conversation on this trip. As Doug,<br />
Gareth and I meander through Nebraska’s<br />
rippling ocean of sandhills, serenaded<br />
by the mournful wail of goods trains,<br />
talk turns to health concerns, career<br />
openings that closed, roads not travelled.<br />
Nebraska, it seems, is the perfect<br />
spot for a Midwest mid-life crisis.<br />
Perhaps that’s what inspired Jim<br />
Reinders to plant 39 Caddies, Chevvies<br />
and Buicks in a circle outside Alliance<br />
city, replicating Stonehenge. The<br />
offspring of the US automobile industry<br />
and British druids, Carhenge is one<br />
of the world’s great works of folk art.<br />
Red Canyon Drive<br />
Americana doesn’t get more classic,<br />
but it’s a last slice of ‘hokey’ before<br />
things take a turn for the ‘epic’. We drop<br />
south to Colorado and, reinvigorated<br />
by a night in Denver, rise up the wall of<br />
the Rockies along 1-70. Temperatures<br />
plummet, forests replace corn, the air<br />
reeks of pine. After the Eisenhower<br />
Tunnel, at 3,400 metres, we emerge<br />
into a light, bright expansive world of<br />
snow-kissed peaks and ski-brochure<br />
names: Vail, Aspen, Breckenridge. The<br />
horizontal Midwest’s already a distant<br />
memory. Glenwood Canyon’s vertiginous<br />
walls almost blot out the sky above the<br />
seething Colorado River and we begin an<br />
exhilarating hour-long descent through<br />
enormous rocks. The scenery’s now<br />
centre stage. Driving’s a 24-carat joy.<br />
And it gets even more dramatic.<br />
We slink beneath the cappuccinocoloured<br />
Grand Mesa, the world’s<br />
largest flat-topped mountain, and it<br />
turns out to be a mere starter for the<br />
main course of the Colorado National<br />
Monument. The massive rock’s spires,<br />
Credit: The Sunday Times Travel<br />
Magazine/News Licensing<br />
46 worldtravellermagazine.com
USA<br />
‘<br />
TEMPERATURES PLUMMET,<br />
FORESTS REPLACE CORN, THE<br />
AIR REEKS OF PINES<br />
’<br />
monoliths and canyons soar above the<br />
surrounding plains. Its scenic drive,<br />
snaking along the vertiginous cliff<br />
edge, is the very antithesis of I-80.<br />
As the mercury hits 39C, we turn south<br />
towards Utah’s Capitol Reef National<br />
Park and Salvador Dalí takes over<br />
landscaping duties. About 270 million<br />
years of sedimentation have been lifted<br />
into a shale and sandstone landscape<br />
that’s not merely lunar – it’s Mars,<br />
Jupiter and Neptune on heavyweight<br />
hallucinogens. Towering ochre walls<br />
resemble Rajasthan forts, their fiefdoms<br />
protected by thousand-strong battalions<br />
of columns, while orange temples<br />
spike out of sun-scorched plains.<br />
Rocks mimic a vast tiramisu, chocolate<br />
truffles and blobs of whipped cream. All<br />
that’s missing is the melting watch.<br />
Linear progress is abandoned. Utah’s<br />
too tempting. A night in a wilderness<br />
lodge prepares us for a mazy geological<br />
tour from Glen Canyon’s watery<br />
majesty to Monument Valley’s High<br />
Noon drama to Zion’s golden cliffs. It’s<br />
incredible, but we overindulge. Scenic<br />
fatigue sets in. Awe becomes snore.<br />
We need stimulation. And the route that<br />
has ticked so many boxes has one more<br />
trick up its generous sleeve: Vegas, baby!<br />
We recharge our adrenaline next morning<br />
by playing basketball with mechanical<br />
diggers – Vegas is nothing if not creative<br />
with its charms – before rejoining the<br />
open road. California is calling. So is<br />
Hollywood. We devour a Marlon Brando<br />
Mushroom Burger beneath portraits of<br />
James Dean and Marilyn at Peggy Sue’s, a<br />
’50s roadside diner near Barstow, before a<br />
night in the revamped Pioneertown Motel.<br />
Opened in 1946 by Roy Rodgers and Gene<br />
Autry for fellow stars filming on next<br />
door’s Wild West set, it’s now a weekend<br />
retreat beloved of Orange County hipsters.<br />
Its clientele suggests the end’s in sight.<br />
A sprint past the spiky Medusas of<br />
Joshua Tree National Park delivers an<br />
elegy-inducing view across the San<br />
Andreas Fault to Mount San Jacinto,<br />
then a 1,500-metre slaloming descent<br />
into Coachella Valley. We’re clearly<br />
demob-happy. In Palm Springs we swap<br />
our Dodge for a Mustang convertible.<br />
It’s bright red, of course, as is Gareth<br />
after a back-seat snooze under a 43C<br />
sun: a small price for the exhilarating<br />
cruise into LA along 14-lane highways.<br />
All that’s left is a Pacific dip. But the<br />
last morning brings low bruised clouds.<br />
Surely it won’t end like this, not in<br />
California? As we drive to Manhattan<br />
Beach the gloom shatters, the sun enters<br />
stage left and a soft breeze tickles the<br />
tall palms: final proof that this is the<br />
US road trip that does it all – and proof<br />
of a beneficent deity who, this being<br />
Tinseltown, just adores a happy ending.<br />
To book a future trip, call<br />
800 DNATA or visit dnatatravel.com<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 47
The remote Pikaia Lodge<br />
Most visitors see the Galápagos on a live-aboard<br />
cruise, but there’s another way: mix the creature<br />
comforts of a luxury lodge with animal-magic<br />
ambles. Nigel Tisdall puts his best foot forward<br />
48 worldtravellermagazine.com
GALÁPAGOS ISLANDS<br />
y first encounter with<br />
the celebrated wildlife<br />
of the Galápagos<br />
Islands is a near<br />
disaster. Fresh off<br />
the plane after the<br />
two-hour flight west<br />
from the Ecuadorean capital, Quito,<br />
I’m thrilled to find that my hotel – the<br />
immaculately designed Pikaia Lodge, on<br />
Santa Cruz Island – has complimentary<br />
mountain bikes. I jump on one, aiming<br />
to get a little exercise in before a sunset<br />
swim in its inviting infinity pool.<br />
Soon I’m freewheeling through a<br />
savannah-like landscape sketched with<br />
wriggly branches of Palo Santo trees,<br />
chuffed to have made it to this bucketlist<br />
volcanic archipelago. After all,<br />
these islands "reveal in microcosm the<br />
processes that have shaped all life on<br />
Earth." So says Sir David Attenborough<br />
in his three-part documentary<br />
Galápagos 3D, screened on demand at<br />
Pikaia Lodge, in a plush lounge with<br />
mini-cinema-screen-sized TV.<br />
Suddenly, rounding a corner at speed, I<br />
happen upon a large and solid specimen<br />
of this evolutionary process crouching<br />
motionless in the middle of the track.<br />
It’s all I can do not to flip over the<br />
handlebars. The giant tortoise springs<br />
back into its shell with an almighty hiss,<br />
like a burst tyre. I think we’re both as<br />
shocked as each other. An ancient eye<br />
stares out at me with a look that seems to<br />
say ‘idiot!’ It’s a fair cop – from a tortoise’s<br />
perspective the world must always be<br />
going too damn fast. Still, that’s one<br />
true Galápagos highlight ticked off.<br />
Tortoises’ longevity is extraordinary.<br />
When Charles Darwin visited in 1835<br />
aboard HMS Beagle, he shipped three<br />
back to England. Waggishly, they were<br />
called Tom, Dick and Harry, only the<br />
last turned out to be a Harriet and lived<br />
to be 175, eventually passing away in<br />
a Queensland zoo as recently as 2006.<br />
The next morning, visiting the island’s<br />
Charles Darwin Research Station, I find<br />
myself peering down at a corral full of<br />
sweet baby tortoises milling around with<br />
yellow numbers painted on their backs<br />
as if about to compete in some hilarious<br />
race. Then I join a queue for the other<br />
end of the timeline: the reverential death<br />
chamber of Lonesome George, so called<br />
for his inability to mate. The creature’s<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 49
GALÁPAGOS ISLANDS<br />
demise in 2012 meant extinction for<br />
the Pinta Island species: a dark day for<br />
conservationists. First, visitors have<br />
to enter an acclimatising room, after<br />
which we get a few solemn minutes with<br />
the corpse before being moved along.<br />
Forget Tutankhamen’s Tomb or Lenin’s<br />
Mausoleum. You’ve not seen the world<br />
until you’ve stared into the lifeless glassy<br />
eye of a century-old stuffed tortoise.<br />
The Galápagos Islands soon reveal<br />
themselves as a fine place to slow<br />
down. With its uniquely evolved flora<br />
and wildlife, I’d assumed this volcanic<br />
adventure park was only for seriousminded<br />
types clutching field guides<br />
and binoculars. Sure, there’s earnest<br />
stuff to contemplate: discovering how<br />
the 18 main islands vary in age from<br />
3.2 to 0.7 million years; and how the<br />
pollinating carpenter bee found its<br />
way here (on driftwood). But it turns<br />
out you can have a relaxing holiday,<br />
too. I find Seychelles-white beaches,<br />
well-marked walking trails, friendly<br />
restaurants serving fresh tuna for $7<br />
and some very indulgent hotels.<br />
On the lip of an extinct volcano’s crater,<br />
with spacious balcony rooms, Pikaia<br />
Lodge is a blissfully isolated design<br />
hotel, testament to the notion that you<br />
can learn about the story of our planet<br />
while residing in the lap of luxury. What<br />
drew me (and, it seems, most guests)<br />
was a horror of spending days on end<br />
in confined spaces with strangers on a<br />
regimented itinerary. In other words, no<br />
week-long cruises. That said, the lodge<br />
strikes a happy balance, with day-trips<br />
on its boat, Pikaia 1, which has room for<br />
16 guests (conventional cruise vessels<br />
take up to 100), and has private cabins<br />
and a sundeck. After each exhilarating<br />
outing, it was a joy to return to a leisurely<br />
dinner of, say, grilled octopus with<br />
chimichurri, followed by a tranquil<br />
night’s sleep in a big bed that didn’t sway.<br />
True, some sightings are only possible<br />
on longer voyages to outlying islands –<br />
the red-footed boobies on Genovesa, for<br />
instance, and the waved albatrosses of<br />
Española. But any fear of missing out<br />
as a ‘landlubber’ dissipates the minute<br />
I step onto tiny North Seymour Island<br />
after a 45-minute trip aboard Pikaia 1<br />
after breakfast on Santa Cruz. We draw<br />
up beside what looks like just another<br />
guano-splashed bird sanctuary – under<br />
‘<br />
ATHE ISLANDS AREN’T JUST FOR<br />
FOLK WITH BINOCULARS. I FIND<br />
SEYCHELLES-WHITE BEACHES,<br />
FRIENDLY RESTAURANTS AND SOME<br />
VERY INDULGENT HOTELS<br />
’<br />
full-beam sunshine (the Galápagos<br />
sit right on the equator). Suddenly,<br />
everything explodes into life. Flameorange<br />
Sally Lightfoot crabs scuttle over<br />
the black rocks. A sea lion slips into the<br />
cobalt waves. What was that splash?<br />
‘Marble rays mating,’ explains our guide,<br />
Mario, as he leads us ashore and along<br />
winding paths. ‘Look – love is in the air!’<br />
Scores of male frigate birds perch in the<br />
trees, their bright-red throat pouches<br />
puffed up like Valentine’s Day balloons.<br />
High above, the females wheel past,<br />
sizing up the suitors. Further on we meet<br />
blue-footed boobies nursing their eggs,<br />
as other would-be couples perform their<br />
comic courtship dance. They bow low,<br />
then raise each leg with an exaggerated<br />
step, like a man with chewing gum<br />
stuck to the sole of his shoe.<br />
These are plenty more surprises to<br />
come. The following day, we cruise<br />
northwest for 90 minutes to Santiago<br />
Island. We’re here to walk across<br />
the gargantuan swirls of pahoehoe<br />
lava at Sullivan Bay, like a petrified<br />
cowpat the size of a football pitch. The<br />
untouched beach is heavenly, and I<br />
can’t wait to dive into the bewitchingly<br />
turquoise sea. Warm enough to swim<br />
in, it is still sufficiently cool to please<br />
the penguins that made their way up<br />
from Antarctica on the Humboldt<br />
Current many moons ago and,<br />
understandably, never went back.<br />
They’re smaller, more solitary<br />
than their snow-zone counterparts.<br />
Progressing to neighbouring Bartolomé<br />
Island for a snorkelling session, we spy<br />
a dozen of them on the rocks like a row<br />
of black-and-white skittles, cooling their<br />
wings in the breeze as we breaststroke<br />
past. Abruptly, as if they’d heard a<br />
collective cry of ‘That’s enough, guys!’,<br />
they dive in with us, darting around<br />
with an urgency that seems a mix of<br />
playfulness and territorial defence.<br />
‘Wow, I’ve just been swimming<br />
with penguins!’ a fellow traveller<br />
reflects as we head for home,<br />
sunbathing on the top deck.<br />
‘What else is there to do here<br />
after that?’ she wonders.<br />
In my case, the answer is an onward<br />
journey to my next hotel, on Isabela,<br />
the largest of the Galápagos islands.<br />
As I wait at Puerto Ayora to transfer<br />
from Santa Cruz, I encounter hulking<br />
sea lions fast asleep on a bench<br />
surrounded by gaggles of tourists. It’s a<br />
delightful snapshot of how refreshingly<br />
indifferent nature remains to the<br />
Credit: The Sunday Times Travel Magazine/ News Licensing<br />
50 worldtravellermagazine.com
These pages, clockwise from<br />
left: a free-roaming tortoise;<br />
looking out from a Balcony Room<br />
at Pikaia Lodge; colourful red rock<br />
crabs; a curious sea lion<br />
Opening pages: grilled<br />
prawn salad; climbing a<br />
tree against the backdrop<br />
of a fiery sunset<br />
This page: Petit Piton<br />
above Margretoute Bay<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 51
These pages, clockwise from<br />
inset: the infinity pool at Pikaia<br />
Lodge; Pool Suite at Pikaia Lodge;<br />
Amarican flamingos<br />
islands’ 275,000 annual visitors.<br />
In just under two hours, after a bumpy<br />
high-speed ride, I reach Puerto Villamil.<br />
My welcome committee: a posse of<br />
marine iguanas hanging around the<br />
jetty like toughs in black biker leathers.<br />
These ‘imps of darkness’, as Darwin<br />
called them, have a mean-as-hell look,<br />
with their spiked spines, scaly armour<br />
and ‘Reptiles Rule OK’ arrogance. I<br />
guess they’re here to scavenge on scraps<br />
of dropped baguette – in fact, in an<br />
evolutionary plot-twist typical of the<br />
Galápagos, they have adapted from land<br />
to sea, fine-tuned to dine on seaweed and<br />
algae and hold their breath underwater<br />
for up to 30 minutes in the process.<br />
A little bigger than Mallorca, Isabela<br />
has just one 30km road that runs from<br />
the port northwest to the mighty<br />
Sierra Negra volcano. Among the many<br />
miracles of the Galápagos is just how<br />
protected it is: 97% of its land mass is<br />
national park and I get a distinct feeling<br />
we lucky visitors are merely clinging<br />
to its edges, like kids peeping through<br />
‘<br />
JUST ABOUT<br />
EVERYTHING YOU<br />
ENCOUNTER IS SO<br />
FASCINATINGLY<br />
DIFFERENT TO<br />
THE REST OF<br />
THE WORLD<br />
’<br />
a window at something they know is<br />
wonderful, but can’t fully comprehend.<br />
A 20-minute drive along this road<br />
lies Scalesia Lodge, the only place you<br />
can stay outside the small port village<br />
of Puerto Villamil. For nature-seekers,<br />
it’s a dream – guests sleep in handsome<br />
safari tents shipped in from South Africa.<br />
They’re fronted with raised decking<br />
shaded by fruit trees. A profusion of<br />
stars fills a night sky unpolluted by<br />
artificial light, and I sit listening to the<br />
nightly frog chorus prior to dinner: an<br />
agreeable affair featuring swordfish<br />
with passionfruit sauce. Heading back<br />
to bed, I find a cushion with a warning:<br />
‘There have been around 13 volcanic<br />
eruptions in the Galápagos in the last<br />
100 years’. A good piece of trivia, if hardly<br />
conducive to a peaceful night’s sleep.<br />
The dramatic results of such<br />
subterranean turbulence are in plain<br />
view when I take a tour up to Sierra<br />
Negra, which erupted as recently as 2018.<br />
Its vast caldera, which is almost 10km<br />
wide, is now a barren lava field that<br />
resembles a massive accident involving<br />
a hundred lorries loaded with instant<br />
coffee granules. Alfredo, my genial guide,<br />
who gave up a promising soccer career<br />
to live in this eco-paradise, was up here<br />
when the volcano kicked off spectacularly<br />
in 2005. ‘I told my clients not to worry,’<br />
he chuckled. ‘I explained we get 400<br />
tremors a year. Then there was a second<br />
big shake and it was clearly time to go!’<br />
Walking around the rim, admiring<br />
the magnificent views, it hits me how<br />
immensely rewarding hiking in the<br />
Galápagos is – and surely always will be.<br />
Just about everything you encounter is<br />
52 worldtravellermagazine.com
GALÁPAGOS ISLANDS<br />
so fascinatingly different to the rest of<br />
the world. Why are there mostly only<br />
white and yellow native flowers here?<br />
Apparently because the majority are<br />
self-pollinators, so there’s no need to<br />
show off to insects. How did spiders<br />
get here from the mainland? Flying on<br />
parachutes of silk, or so the story goes.<br />
As Alfredo and I yomp along, our<br />
conversation turns to his distaste for the<br />
cruise ships that treat Isabela Island ‘as a<br />
place to drop their garbage’. Passengers<br />
might come up for a panoramic view<br />
of the caldera, he explains, but they<br />
rarely have the time to explore as we<br />
do. Cruise life is in sharp contrast to<br />
my experience, travelling group-free,<br />
at my own land-based pace, stimulated<br />
by thrills, insights and mellow times<br />
that leave me relaxed and enriched.<br />
On my final day, I wind up as I<br />
began: on a bike, cycling off alongside<br />
Alfredo to explore Puerto Villamil, an<br />
agreeably sleepy place, with a sandstrewn<br />
main street and a lagoon of<br />
pink flamingoes striking elegant poses.<br />
Heading west beside its dazzling beach,<br />
we pass families picnicking next to the<br />
mangroves and birdwatchers climbing<br />
a tower for a far-reaching view along<br />
the coast. It all seems Edenic, but<br />
there’s a sting in the tail. Or tale…<br />
At the end is a cairn-like row of heavy<br />
grey rocks, piled high above us. ‘Here<br />
they made hell in paradise,’ Alfredo<br />
explains as we contemplate the grim,<br />
colossal Muro de las Lágrimas – Wall of<br />
Tears. Its construction, by the inmates<br />
of a penal camp established in 1946,<br />
was ordered with the sole purpose of<br />
exhausting and punishing its labourers,<br />
whose crimes might be as mundane<br />
as stealing a calf. The prison was here<br />
for 13 years, and only closed after the<br />
convicts made an unsuccessful attempt<br />
to murder its governor by pushing a<br />
section of the wall onto him, which<br />
alerted the government to its iniquities.<br />
As I survey this monument to misery<br />
and folly, it’s obvious that we humans<br />
haven’t evolved anywhere near as<br />
gracefully as these fabulous creatures<br />
now merrily swimming and sunbathing<br />
their days away in the Galápagos<br />
Islands. Hopefully, we still have time<br />
to get it right, but, meanwhile, I’m<br />
taking my cue from its loveable giant<br />
tortoises. If you want a long happy<br />
life, keep your head down and take<br />
things slow. Obviously, it’d help to not<br />
fall asleep in the middle of the road.<br />
To book a future trip, call<br />
800 DNATA or visit dnatatravel.com<br />
Erimitis beach on the west coast<br />
of Paxos; a plate of fried calamari;<br />
an elderly local surveys the<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 53
NEW ZEALAND<br />
Try somewhere New<br />
New Zealand is the epitome of easy-going, but tackling it in the<br />
right order is key. Thankfully, NZ expert David Whitley has packed the best<br />
bits of both islands into one seamless, four-week itinerary<br />
New Zealand’s triumph is to<br />
cram unparalleled amounts<br />
of one-off experiences into<br />
a single epic trip. You can’t<br />
cover the whole country in a three- to<br />
four-week self-drive adventure, but<br />
you can give it a darned good shot<br />
and pile up top-tier memories in the<br />
process. Here’s a route that fits in as<br />
much as possible, with the journey<br />
broken down into easy chunks – minus<br />
the odd tourist trap that’s simply<br />
not worth your time or money.<br />
Days 1-3: Bay of Islands<br />
(and beyond)<br />
After what will have felt like an eternity<br />
in the air, it might come as a blow to<br />
know that the best place to properly<br />
start your New Zealand adventure<br />
is not in Auckland – where you’ll fly<br />
into – but another 227km north, in the<br />
Bay of Islands. But it’s worth it – for<br />
baize-green hills, stone-walled sheep<br />
farms and bountiful sunny beaches.<br />
It’s a short, $100-ish hop on an internal<br />
flight or a three-and-a-half-hour drive<br />
(you can pick up a hire car on landing).<br />
If doing the latter, you’ll want to<br />
overnight in Auckland first, picking<br />
up a hire car the following morning.<br />
Several cruises flit lazily around the<br />
Bay of Islands’ jewel-like archipelago,<br />
the novelty among them the full-day<br />
Cream Trip (dolphincruises.co.nz),<br />
which doubles as the local mail<br />
run. Dolphin-watching, lounging in<br />
the boat’s netting above the waves,<br />
and beach-lazing on lush green<br />
Urupukupuka Island are thrown<br />
in. There’s spiritual nourishment,<br />
too, at the Waitangi Treaty Grounds<br />
54 worldtravellermagazine.com
These pages from left: Dusk<br />
descends on Auckland, photo<br />
by Chris McLennan; Redwoods<br />
Treewalk at Rotorua<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 55
(waitangi.org.nz), which cover Maori<br />
culture and the often rocky relationship<br />
with European settlers. Soul-searchers<br />
should try Cape Reinga, further north,<br />
at the country’s tip, where the Maori<br />
believe the spirits of the deceased<br />
depart. Day tours – such as with<br />
GreatSights (great sights.co.nz) – take<br />
in sacred kauri forests, sandboarding<br />
on Sahara-steep dunes and fourwheeldriving<br />
along Ninety Mile Beach.<br />
Days 4–5: Auckland beckons<br />
From the Bay of Islands, the next stop<br />
lies back the way you came – south<br />
again to Auckland. But first, divert<br />
west to the Waitakere Ranges, for<br />
walks among native rainforest, before<br />
taking the winding roads down to the<br />
brooding black-sand surf beaches at<br />
Piha and Karekare. Should the buzzy<br />
restaurants, museums and volcanoes<br />
listed in Auckland not sound sufficiently<br />
thrilling, sign up to jump from a<br />
192-metre-high platform on the city’s<br />
Sky Tower (skyjump.co.nz), your descent<br />
slowed only by wires and a harness.<br />
Days 6–8: Rotorua<br />
Just over a three-hour drive south<br />
‘<br />
SPLASHING SEAL PUPS, COVE<br />
BEACHES AND DAINTY ROCK<br />
ISLANDS LINE UP TO BE GENTLY<br />
PADDLED AROUND<br />
’<br />
of Auckland, Rotorua is adventure<br />
central. But there are two popular<br />
detours to weigh up on the drive down:<br />
the Lord of the Rings set at Hobbiton<br />
(hobbitontours.com), is, frankly,<br />
underwhelming and overpriced. But the<br />
Waitomo Caves (waitomo.com), lit by<br />
millions of tiny glow-worms, are well<br />
worth it. The 45-minute boat tours cater<br />
to the timid, while the five-hour, Black<br />
Abyss adventure – including abseiling<br />
and tubing on the underground river<br />
– will appeal to adrenaline junkies.<br />
Rotorua stinks – the sulphurous whiff<br />
comes from geothermal activity beneath<br />
the town. But there’s a massive menu<br />
of fun stuff to hold your nose for:<br />
everything from Zorbing down hills<br />
in giant hamster balls (zorb.com) to<br />
tackling terrifyingly high waterfalls on<br />
the Kaituna River. Kaitiaki Adventures<br />
(kaitiaki.co.nz) runs the hardcore<br />
white-water rafting nerve-shredder.<br />
Day 9: Hiking in Taupo<br />
Your next – considerably less whiffy<br />
– base is lakeside Taupo, which is also<br />
the jumping-off point for NZ’s greatest<br />
walk, the Tongariro Alpine Crossing.<br />
Over the 19km day-long route, rustcoloured<br />
streams, vast lava fields, a<br />
gaping crater in the shadow of soaring<br />
Ngauruhoe (better known as Mount<br />
Doom from the Lord of the Rings movies)<br />
and near-luminous-green lakes all<br />
make appearances. It’s not circular, so<br />
park at the end point – Ketehahi – and<br />
take the shuttle (tongariroexpeditions.<br />
com) to the start. Some operators go the<br />
opposite way, but that leaves you either<br />
rushing to complete the hike or hanging<br />
around for a bus when you’ve finished.<br />
Credit: Alicia Miller / The Sunday Times Travel Magazine / News Licensing<br />
56 worldtravellermagazine.com
NEW ZEALAND<br />
This page, clockwise from far left:<br />
Waiheke Island; zorbing in Rotorua; a<br />
vintage car parked outside an Art Deco<br />
style cinema in Napier; Hawke's Bay in<br />
Napier, photo by Graeme Murray; Sky<br />
Tower, Auckland, photo by Mark Downey<br />
Day 10: Art Deco Napier<br />
From destruction comes beauty.<br />
Napier, about two hours southeast of<br />
Taupo, responded to a city-wrecking<br />
1931 earthquake by conjuring up what<br />
is claimed to be the world’s greatest<br />
concentration of Art Deco buildings.<br />
The Art Deco Trust (artdeconapier.<br />
com) runs several tours. Pick the hourlong<br />
walk at 10am and you’ve got an<br />
afternoon free to indulge in the Hawke’s<br />
Bay region’s other draw – Bay Tours<br />
(baytours.co.nz) runs an afternoon jaunt<br />
stopping at a few wineries for tastings.<br />
Days 11–13: Wellington<br />
Trick someone else into being the<br />
designated driver on the four-hour<br />
drive from Napier to Wellington –<br />
there’s more vino to slurp, and the<br />
Martinborough region has rock-solid<br />
Pinot Noir credentials. Once in the<br />
capital create room for daytime cafehopping<br />
and museum stops by visiting<br />
Zealandia (visitzealandia.com) at<br />
dusk. This is when the resident kiwis<br />
inside the giant conservation project<br />
tend to come out, making for a far<br />
better chance of up-close sightings.<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 57
Arresting architecture of<br />
the The Alcázar of Seville<br />
These pages, clockwise from inset:<br />
Mount Cook in Lake Matheson; yelloweyed<br />
penguins; Swing bridge crossing to<br />
Hokitika Gorge<br />
Days 14–15: South Island<br />
crossing<br />
Change of island means a change of<br />
cars. Most hire arrangements mean<br />
dropping yours off at the Wellington<br />
ferry terminal prior to the often-choppy<br />
voyage to Picton at the top of South<br />
Island, where you rent a replacement.<br />
You’ve landed in the Marlborough<br />
wine region – world famous for its<br />
Sauvignon Blancs. But the real star in<br />
these parts is the craggily coastlined,<br />
forest-shrouded Abel Tasman National<br />
Park. Sea caves, cormorant-nesting<br />
sites, splashing seal pups, cove beaches<br />
and dainty rock islands line up to be<br />
gently paddled around, with Kahu<br />
Kayaks (kahukayaks. co.nz) running<br />
full-day tours and half-day jaunts.<br />
Days 16–18: Wild west coast<br />
Even by Kiwi standards, the west coast<br />
of South Island feels remote, detached,<br />
weather-beaten and enigmatically<br />
doughty. But many highlights can be<br />
combined in a mini road trip. Kick off<br />
90 minutes southwest of Nelson with a<br />
stroll in the Nelson Lakes National Park.<br />
The 90-minute Braeburn Walk at Lake<br />
Rotoroa passes shimmery waterfalls and<br />
the world’s largest fuchsia trees. Bird life<br />
is diverse. Now, swing west for a pit stop<br />
at Punakaiki’s Pancake Rocks, where the<br />
sea mashes away at the weird, pancake<br />
stack-like formations and explodes up<br />
through blowholes. Forty minutes south,<br />
Greymouth counts as a big town in these<br />
parts and has an arty streak – check out<br />
the Left Bank Art Gallery (bankarts.com)<br />
for greenstone carvings and ceramics.<br />
The seemingly supernatural turquoise<br />
waters of Hokitika Gorge make a good<br />
stop on the way, two hours further south,<br />
to glacier country. Then, at the Franz<br />
Josef and Fox glaciers, the experiences<br />
are similar – a short helicopter flight<br />
on to the ice, followed by a few hours’<br />
fully kitted-out hiking through eerie<br />
blue crevasses and ice caves. But Franz<br />
Josef has more to do around it – horseriding,<br />
rafting – so makes a better base.<br />
Days 19–20: Queenstown thrills<br />
Queenstown bounces like a student<br />
on energy drinks, but its setting – on<br />
a splintered lake surrounded by ski<br />
fields – is so impressive that the<br />
resort town’s enthusiasm becomes<br />
endearingly infectious. It’s a four-hour<br />
45-minute drive down from Franz<br />
Josef – stop at Monro Beach and check<br />
out roadside waterfalls along the Haast<br />
Pass highway en route. And, once there,<br />
decide how you want to scare yourself.<br />
Commercial bungee-jumping was born<br />
in Queenstown, but white-water rafting,<br />
sky dives and lurching 300-metre swings<br />
into a canyon feature on a lengthy whiteknuckle<br />
menu. These work out cheaper<br />
when packaged up, which Queenstown<br />
Combos (combos.co.nz) specialises<br />
in. Daintier options include taking the<br />
TSS Earnslaw steamship (realjourneys.<br />
co.nz), for a cruise on Lake Wakatipu,<br />
and 4WD tours (nomadsafaris.co.nz)<br />
to Lord of the Rings filming locations.<br />
Days 21-22: Milford Sound<br />
and Te Anau<br />
Whatever you do, don’t use<br />
Queenstown as a base for visiting the<br />
58 worldtravellermagazine.com
NEW ZEALAND<br />
‘<br />
HOKITIKA<br />
GORGE HAS<br />
SEEMINGLY<br />
SUPERNATURAL<br />
TURQUOISE<br />
WATERS<br />
’<br />
in<br />
fiord that launched a million photos:<br />
Milford Sound. Rather than enduring<br />
the almost eight-hour round-trip,<br />
drive two hours the day before to<br />
Te Anau, where you’ll have time to<br />
cram in a cruise across Lake Te Anau<br />
(realjourneys.co.nz) into Fiordland<br />
National Park to explore glow wormcovered<br />
caves. Start early the next<br />
day north towards Milford Sound and<br />
you’ll have the chance to stop at the<br />
numerous waterfalls on the precipitous<br />
road down, then get on the water<br />
when it’s relatively quiet before all the<br />
tour buses from Queenstown arrive.<br />
Cruises are fairly interchangeable<br />
– most allow for plentiful gawping<br />
at seals, dolphins and seemingly<br />
vertical rock walls. But Mitre Peak’s<br />
small boat jaunt (mitrepeak.com)<br />
is less crowded and permits a stop<br />
at the Underwater Observatory to<br />
wonder at the aquatic life and coral.<br />
Days 23–24: Destination<br />
Dunedin<br />
The Scottish streak is strong and the<br />
student population decidedly lively<br />
Dunedin, a three-hour 20-minute<br />
drive through bucolic sleepiness from<br />
Te Anau. The look is distinctive, too,<br />
with a rich line-up of Victorian and<br />
Edwardian buildings made from the<br />
local bluestone. The railway station is<br />
the standout photo-op in this regard,<br />
but you’ve come here to explore by<br />
boat, not train – that’s the best way to<br />
spot the teeming variety of wildlife.<br />
Monarch Wildlife Cruises (wildlife.<br />
co.nz) chugs down the coast of the<br />
Otago Peninsula, taking in feeding sea<br />
birds and galumphing seals. Various<br />
combos are available, but the full-day<br />
Otago Peninsula Wildlife Tour stops at<br />
the two most magical sites. The Royal<br />
Albatross Centre is where the giants<br />
with three-metre wingspans nest<br />
– it’s the only place in the world to see<br />
them, as otherwise they hang out on<br />
tiny mid-ocean rock islands. And the<br />
Penguin Place Conservation Reserve<br />
provides a refuge for the comical,<br />
waddling yellow-eyed penguins.<br />
Days 25–26: Alpine adventure<br />
The drive inland to New Zealand’s<br />
highest point, the 4,000-metre Aoraki/<br />
Mount Cook, is a startlingly beautiful<br />
journey (three hours 45 minutes) past<br />
tussock-grass foothills and milkyblue-white<br />
lakes. You’ll not get to the<br />
summit without mountaineering in<br />
your blood, but you can learn about<br />
those who have – who went on to<br />
top Everest – at the engrossing<br />
Sir Edmund Hillary Alpine Centre.<br />
The half-day hike to Hooker Lake<br />
– through alpine meadows, over<br />
dainty wooden bridges crossing<br />
frigid streams – isn’t in quite the<br />
same league, but it’s a fine way to<br />
get lungfuls of mountain air. For<br />
something more spectacular, there’s<br />
kayaking on Tasman Lake around eerie<br />
blue icebergs, watching ice calve off<br />
the glacier; mtcook.com runs tours.<br />
Lake Tekapo, a 90-minute drive away<br />
on the road to Christchurch, twinkles<br />
with near-fluorescence, but there’s<br />
plenty of twinkling overhead, too. It’s<br />
part of a dark sky reserve, and the Dark<br />
Sky Project lays on stargazing sessions<br />
at the Mount John Observatory<br />
that show just how different the<br />
heavens look in the southern<br />
hemisphere (dark skyproject.co.nz).<br />
Days 27–28: Christchurch<br />
and home<br />
Your journey’s end – Christchurch<br />
airport – is just under three hours’<br />
away. But there’s a choice to be made<br />
for the last two days: city or chilled?<br />
Christchurch will show you postearthquake<br />
transformation hipness,<br />
but the town of Akaroa, on the<br />
neighbouring Banks Peninsula, has<br />
craters, coastline and more than a little<br />
Gallic flair – imbued by its original<br />
French settlers. And snorkelling with<br />
the rare, adorable Hector’s dolphin –<br />
Black Cat Cruises (blackcat.co.nz) will<br />
take you to swim with them – feels like<br />
a mighty fine farewell to the country.<br />
To book a future trip, call<br />
800 DNATA or visit dnatatravel.com<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 59
long<br />
the<br />
weekend<br />
Amsterdam<br />
From its blooming natural beauty to its<br />
artistic treasures, we get under the skin of<br />
this creative city's enduring appeal<br />
This page: A carpet of colourful tulips<br />
Opposite from top: Charming buildings<br />
line the canal; Pulitzer Amsterdam<br />
60 worldtravellermagazine.com
THE LONG WEEKEND<br />
Compelling at any time of year, Amsterdam invites you to<br />
spend hours wandering through its weave of waterways<br />
lined by gabled houses, letting the energy of the creative<br />
city wash over you. With museums brimming with<br />
captivating artworks by the Dutch greats, a delicious<br />
line-up of local delicacies to taste (you won't be able to<br />
refuse a crunchy, caramel-filled Stroopwafel), and lush<br />
outdoor spaces to unwind in, it's a treat for all the senses.<br />
Spend your days shopping the edgy boutiques in the<br />
criss-crossing alleys of The Nine Streets, seek out a future<br />
masterpiece at the up-and-coming galleries in trendy<br />
Jordaan, and immerse yourself in the lively nightlife<br />
around the Southern Canal Ring. All you need to do is<br />
hop on a bicycle and let the adventure unfold...<br />
DRIFT INTO<br />
TRANQUILLITY<br />
From art-filled abodes to<br />
canal-side views, these<br />
stylish hotels get our vote<br />
Overlooking Amsterdam’s<br />
historic central canal belt<br />
(a UNESCO <strong>World</strong> Heritage<br />
Site, no less), the Pulitzer<br />
Amsterdam is set within a<br />
cluster of 25 restored 17th<br />
and 18th century houses<br />
in the effervescent The<br />
Nine Streets (De Negen<br />
Straatjes) neighbourhood.<br />
Keeping the building's<br />
original feel, but with a<br />
fresh, sleek atmosphere,<br />
rooms come in all shapes<br />
and sizes, with modern art<br />
on the walls. Courteous<br />
service, delightful garden<br />
courtyards and delectable<br />
food adds to the charm.<br />
Close by, Hotel Seven<br />
one Seven is as magical as<br />
it gets. The award-winning<br />
boutique hotel has named all<br />
nine of its guestrooms after<br />
legendary literary figures and<br />
artists, lending an exclusive<br />
ambience to its distinctive<br />
brand of old-world romance.<br />
We rate the two Executive<br />
Suites, which have premier<br />
views over the 17th century<br />
Prinsengracht canal.<br />
With an elegant interior,<br />
mosaic of fine artworks and<br />
a proud history of hosting<br />
celebrated 19th century<br />
Dutch artists, it’s easy to<br />
mistake Breitner House for<br />
a museum. Rise and<br />
shine to a luxurious<br />
breakfast served in the<br />
period dining room, while<br />
looking out over the<br />
flower-laden park.<br />
At the heart of the city,<br />
Soho House Amsterdam<br />
puts a contemporary<br />
stamp on a grand<br />
19th century building.<br />
With rooms ranging in<br />
size, from Tiny to XL<br />
Monumental, this hip<br />
hotel has a home from<br />
home feel complete<br />
with a glistening rooftop<br />
pool, private cinema and<br />
Cowshed Spa.<br />
Get set, shop<br />
Retail therapy is easy to<br />
come by in the city. If<br />
you're an avid collector<br />
of art and antiques<br />
then you'll be in your<br />
element at the historic<br />
Spiegelkwartier (which<br />
translates to the 'Mirror<br />
Quarter'.) This buzzing<br />
district is home to more<br />
than 70 shops and<br />
galleries bursting with<br />
treasures you'll want to<br />
bring home with you.<br />
Next, seek out some<br />
notable homegrown<br />
designers, such as<br />
Dutch design duo<br />
Viktor Horsting and<br />
Rolf Snoeren (of Viktor<br />
& Rolf fame), who have<br />
their headquarters in the<br />
city. You can check out<br />
their concept store at<br />
Danzigerkade 55.<br />
There's an exciting<br />
vintage shopping<br />
scene to discover,<br />
too. The brainchild<br />
of entrepreneurial<br />
sisters, Jutka & Riska<br />
[Haarlemmerdijk 143]<br />
is the place to go for<br />
coveted pieces from the<br />
likes of Jil Sander and<br />
Gucci. In addition, The<br />
Nine Streets historic<br />
canal district is a gem for<br />
vintage stores.<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 61
Nature’s way<br />
Get outdoors and discover<br />
the city’s natural bounty<br />
Hortus Botanicus<br />
Amsterdam<br />
Established in 1638, this<br />
lush attraction is one of the<br />
oldest botanical gardens<br />
in Europe. Showcasing a<br />
treasure trove of rare flora<br />
and fauna, there’s a lot for<br />
budding botanists to admire<br />
here, including ancient<br />
varieties of tulips, and wide<br />
range of cycads.<br />
Artis Royal Zoo<br />
Laid out in grand style<br />
in 1838, one of Europe's<br />
oldest zoos has something<br />
to delight all ages. Watch<br />
giraffes, zebras, and<br />
springboks mingling on the<br />
Savannah, see butterflies<br />
flutter in the dedicated<br />
Pavilion, and gaze at the<br />
tropical fish swimming in<br />
the vast Aquarium. The<br />
zoo is also home to ARTIS-<br />
Micropia, the world's only<br />
microbe museum, where<br />
you can take a peek at the<br />
tiniest organisms.<br />
Lange Bretten<br />
Known as 'the last city<br />
wilderness of Amsterdam',<br />
this verdant park is home to<br />
buzzards and falcons, which<br />
hunt in the area, while the<br />
waters are brimming with<br />
frogs, toads and fish. Take<br />
the (usually) muddy nature<br />
trail for an energetic hike,<br />
spotting animals as you go.<br />
TOP TABLES<br />
Bord’Eau,<br />
De L'Europe Amsterdam<br />
Located on the bank of<br />
the Amstel River, this one-<br />
Michelin-star restaurant<br />
– easily one of the best<br />
tables in town – is sure to<br />
impress with its inventive<br />
dishes crafted by head<br />
chef Bas van Kranen.<br />
For an extra memorable<br />
meal, book the Bord’Eau<br />
sur L’Eau experience – an<br />
intimate lunch or dinner<br />
on the luxurious Dyos<br />
boat so you can soak up<br />
spellbinding views of the<br />
city's historic centre as<br />
you cruise<br />
along its<br />
famous canals.<br />
bordeau.nl<br />
Vinkeles,<br />
The Dylan Amsterdam<br />
Period charm meets<br />
modern French cuisine<br />
at this one-Michelin-star<br />
restaurant in the hip<br />
Dylan hotel. Situated<br />
in an 18th century<br />
bakery, the interiors<br />
reflect the history of the<br />
venue, complete with<br />
rustic brickwork and<br />
cast-iron ovens. The<br />
A stroke of genius<br />
Feast your eyes on iconic works of art<br />
signature menu, which<br />
is the work of chef de<br />
cuisine Jurgen van der<br />
Zalm and executive<br />
chef Dennis Kuipers,<br />
features tantalising<br />
French delicacies that<br />
flirt between classic<br />
and contemporary, with<br />
highlights including the<br />
mackerel with hibiscus,<br />
Dutch oyster, goat<br />
yoghurt and shiso<br />
flower. vinkeles.com<br />
Ciel Bleu,<br />
Hotel Okura<br />
Amsterdam<br />
Soaring above<br />
Amsterdam’s<br />
rooftops, this<br />
culinary hotspot<br />
blends spectacular city<br />
views with sublime cuisine<br />
served in an elegant<br />
setting that pairs muted<br />
tones with contemporary<br />
flourishes. The creative<br />
menu, led by chefs Onno<br />
Kokmeijer and Arjan<br />
Speelman, certainly lives<br />
up to its two-Michelin-star<br />
status. Immerse yourself<br />
in the exciting ambience<br />
by reserving a seat at the<br />
chef’s table in the bustling<br />
heart of the kitchen.<br />
cielbleu.nl<br />
As you may expect from a country that gave the<br />
world some of its greatest art luminaries, Amsterdam<br />
is home to breathtakingly magnificent art. At the<br />
Van Gogh Museum, you can find the world's largest<br />
collection of works by the post-impressionist painter,<br />
from mesmerising self-portraits to the uplifting<br />
Sunflowers. A few blocks away, Rijksmuseum hangs<br />
Vermeer’s The Milkmaid alongside Rembrandts' The<br />
Night Watch. If you can’t get enough of Rembrandts'<br />
artistic gems, Rembrandt House Museum offers a<br />
glimpse of the artist’s etching-packed studio. Stedelijk<br />
Museum Amsterdam is the place to go for modern and<br />
contemporary art and design, with major pieces by<br />
Mondrian, Kandinsky and Malevich in its armoury.<br />
62 worldtravellermagazine.com
THE LONG WEEKEND<br />
This page: Royal Palace<br />
Amsterdam; cyclist by the<br />
Prinsengracht canal, photo by<br />
Koen Smilde © <strong>2020</strong> I amsterdam<br />
Opposite from top: Hortus<br />
Botanicus Amsterdam; Ciel Bleu;<br />
a dish from the Eau season menu<br />
at Bord'Eau, a self portrait by<br />
Vincent Van Gogh<br />
at Rijksmuseum<br />
DESIGNS ON LIFE<br />
The devil's in the details at these architectural marvels<br />
ROYAL PALACE AMSTERDAM<br />
This dazzling palace embodies Amsterdam's 17th century power and<br />
wealth in a way that rivalled the grandest European buildings of the time.<br />
Inside, interiors gleam and Golden Age grandeur shines through the<br />
marble-encrusted main hall, with sculptures and paintings narrating its<br />
story at every turn.<br />
CANAL HOUSES<br />
Set off on a stroll along the canalways and admire the charming waterside<br />
houses that were built during the height of the Dutch Golden Age. Beyond<br />
the historic facades are several museums, including FOAM [Keizersgracht<br />
609], which is dedicated to contemporary photography.<br />
MUSEUM HET SCHIP<br />
One of the most prominent buildings showcasing the Amsterdam School<br />
style of architecture, this captivating apartment block features a postoffice-turned-museum<br />
where you can learn more about the design<br />
movement. From here, you can also join a walking tour of other notable<br />
buildings in the city.<br />
Words: Habiba Azab<br />
Ask a local<br />
Amsterdam<br />
native Iris den<br />
Hartog shares<br />
her favourite<br />
under the<br />
radar spots in<br />
the city<br />
“Admire the beautiful houses of Ringdijk<br />
in Watergraafsmeer. This part of the<br />
city was drained in 1629 and the dike<br />
that surrounded it is still preserved. End<br />
your stroll with a Dutch cheese platter at<br />
Vergulden Eenhoorn; a farm established<br />
in 1702, which has since been transformed<br />
into a restaurant and boutique hotel.<br />
“The resident cat Sammie is waiting<br />
to welcome you at Café Hermes<br />
[Ceintuurbaan 55]. One of my favourite<br />
haunts, in the De Pijp neighbourhood, it is<br />
decorated from top to toe with curiosities,<br />
such as old instruments, street signs and<br />
vintage advertisement posters.<br />
“I also highly recommend Restaurant<br />
Sjefietshe [Van Ostadestraat 1]. This<br />
cevicheria serves the classic South<br />
American dish with a local touch. My<br />
personal favourites are the hake ceviche,<br />
the pulpo ceviche, the waffle topped with<br />
crème fraîche and trout caviar and the<br />
fermented fries."<br />
FAMILY TIME<br />
Fun-packed activities<br />
to suit all ages<br />
Feel the sand<br />
between your toes at<br />
Amsterdam Beach<br />
For a change of scenery,<br />
why not swap the<br />
cobblestone city streets<br />
for the soft sand along<br />
the coast? Around half<br />
an hour from the city<br />
centre, Amsterdam<br />
Beach offers plenty of<br />
space to unwind while<br />
topping up on vitamin<br />
D. You can even test<br />
your skills at some of the<br />
adventurous activities on<br />
offer, such as blokarting.<br />
Set off on a cycling tour<br />
Strap the kiddies into<br />
their bike seats and join<br />
one of the many cycling<br />
tours of the city. Yellow<br />
Bike operates daily<br />
and can guide you on<br />
a journey of discovery<br />
of some of the city's<br />
best sights. From the<br />
introductory 90-minute<br />
city tour, which you<br />
can take as soon as<br />
you arrive (they'll hold<br />
onto your luggage for<br />
you), to discovering the<br />
picturesque Waterland<br />
district in the north<br />
– it's fun, affordable,<br />
and a brilliant way to<br />
get some fresh air and<br />
exercise while finding<br />
your bearings.<br />
Cruise along the canals<br />
You simply haven't had<br />
the full Amsterdam<br />
experience until you've<br />
cruised the historic<br />
waterways in a canal<br />
boat. All you need<br />
to do is buy a Canal<br />
Cruise Ticket and hop<br />
on a boat at any one of<br />
14 locations across the<br />
city. Each cruise lasts<br />
around an hour and<br />
they depart every 30<br />
minutes so there's no<br />
excuse to miss it.<br />
worldtravellermagazine.com 63
Suite dreams<br />
Our monthly finish with a flourish, delving into a suite<br />
that has a character and style all of its own<br />
VILLA FRANGIPANI<br />
Grace Bay Club, Turks & Caicos Islands<br />
With ocean views you can sit and stare at for hours, this four-bedroom Private Beach Front<br />
Residence invites you to throw open the doors to the vast private deck and lap up the balmy<br />
tropical breeze from the comfort of your oversized sofa. An eight-minute drive from Grace Bay<br />
Club, this stand-alone villa, designed by Edinburgh-based Coast Architects, has an infinity pool<br />
and master bathrooms with freestanding tubs – an idyllic retreat for up to eight guests.<br />
64 worldtravellermagazine.com
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Inspiration. Expertly crafted.<br />
Comprising two iconic towers, the JW Marriott Marquis Dubai is centrally located beside the<br />
Dubai Water Canal and offers a spectrum of facilities and services for a seamless experience.<br />
The hotel features: 1,608 Luxurious Guest Rooms and Suites, Over 15 Award-Winning Restaurants<br />
and Lounges, Saray Spa featuring Traditional Hammams, 17 Treatment Rooms, State-of-the-Art<br />
Health Club and Fitness facilities, 8,000 sqm of spectacular Meeting Spaces.<br />
JW Marriott® Marquis® Hotel Dubai<br />
jwmarriott.com/DXBJW<br />
Sheikh Zayed Road, Business Bay, PO Box 121000, Dubai, UAE | T +971.4.414.0000 | jwmarriottmarquisdubai.com