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Posts Tagged ‘holidays’
Thursday, January 14th, 2010
Each year in December, Rodney Bay - on the lush, tropical island of St Lucia in the Caribbean - is the finishing destination for the ARC (Atlantic Rally for Cruisers), a 2,700 nautical-mile passage across the Atlantic from Las Palmas, Gran Canaria. The largest transocean sailing event in the world, it usually takes between 14 and 21 days to complete with over 200 yachts, from 29-112ft, making the crossing (along with numerous NARC (Non-ARC) vessels). My father was racing on Star Chaser, a beautiful Swan 51 vessel, and so it was only right that I, together with my mother and brother, flew over to greet him at the finish line!
The first two yachts to arrive crossed the finish line in Rodney Bay on the 4th December, separated by just 16 minutes and five seconds. Big One and Bagheera arrived after just 12 days at sea and an exciting gybing (turning) duel, one which intensified over the last 24 hours. That left over 200 vessels still at sea, however, and not all had such an easy crossing - in fact some unlucky crews didn’t complete the voyage at all. Auliana II was abandoned and the crew evacuated following the loss of her rudder on the 23rd November - just one day into the race. Further misfortune befell Pelican on the 1st December: following a rig failure, the crew had to be evacuated around 300 nautical miles west of the Cape Verde Islands. Others still had big decisions to make. The crew of Silver Bear took the brave and valiant call to slow their boat down and shadow another yacht, Star Fire, for over 1,500 miles after she got into difficulty - providing selfless assistance and delaying their own arrival by several days. Who said it would all be plain sailing?

My extremely-elated Dad and the rest of the equally-chipper Star Chaser crew arrived on the 8th December at 19:50 local time, after 16 days sailing (final results showed Star Chaser’s position as 28th out of 158 in the Cruising Division, and the crew won an award for the best photos taken at sea - not bad at all!). A warm St Lucian welcome greeted them in Rodney Bay Marina, with rum punches at the ready… Not that the crew needed anything in the way of pick-me-ups after the rally: they were all high as kites on the back of such a transatlantic achievement. It proved to be a full-time job to keep them from swaying around and falling off the pontoon into the murky-marina water below!
The following day, the partying at the marina intensified as over a third of the fleet had docked safely in St Lucia. The consistent winds meant that average passage times were reduced by nearly three days compared with 2008. Rodney Bay buzzed with a unique atmosphere created by the coming together of hundreds of people from around the world united by a common accomplishment.

The fog horns, sirens, screaming and whistling continued even as the last yacht, Erasmos I, arrived on the 19th December after a string of nautical difficulties. Camaraderie was high and the rapturous ovation was unparalleled. Erasmos I may have taken her berth in the marina but for the pontoon-side celebrations with steel bands and fire dancers, this was just the beginning…
Welcome to St Lucia and the distinctly Caribbean pleasure of island time!
Tags: Adventure, ARC, ARC 2009, Atlantic Rally for Cruisers, Atlantic Rally for Cruisers 2009, Caribbean, holidays, Rodney Bay, Rodney Bay marina, sailing, St Lucia, Star Chaser, Star Chaser Sailing, travel pr, www.travelpr.co.uk Posted in Uncategorized No Comments »
Wednesday, January 13th, 2010
AITO represents quality, variety and expertise – exactly what AITO seeks from its Travel Writer of the Year awards. Says AITO Chairman, Derek Moore: “The judges are mandated to mark the articles submitted against three key criteria – we look for articles that are interesting, informative and inspirational.”
AITO has announced the results of its 13th Travel Writer of the Year awards with two additional new categories being awarded for the first time.
AITO Travel Writer of the Year
In third place, Anthony Peregrine’s ‘Gift of the Gab’ article written for The Sunday Times is a fresh take on Paris with “excellent word-play and flashes of Wildean humour.”
In second place is Ian Belcher with his ‘A slow boat to the refuge of the last dreamers’ article, written for The Observer, described as “a joy to read for those tied to their armchairs and giving a clear picture of life along the Mekong River in Thailand and Laos.”
The winner of the AITO Travel Writer of the Year 2009 award is Minty Clinch, writing for the Financial Times’ How to Spend It magazine. Clinch’s piece, ‘High Plains Drifter’, was an account of the first commercial riding expedition through Tajikistan’s High Pamirs. It resonated with the judges as having “exciting and adventurous content, where the style sweeps you along” in addition to being “an honest, scholarly and amusing portrayal of life on the tour.”
AITO Online Travel Writer of the Year
This new category was introduced to recognise much of the excellent work that appears exclusively online. The winner is Chris Leadbeater writing for Mail Online with his article ‘Africa holidays: Mountains, manes and meeting Mr Cheetah in sensational South Africa’. The judges liked its “clearly lively writing” that had “some style” and “carries the reader along easily.”
AITO Young Travel Writer of the Year
The winner of this inaugural award is Matt Bolton writing for Lonely Planet Magazine and his piece ‘The people’s Carnival’ on the Mardi Gras in Salvador, Brazil. It was described as “a joy to read from start to finish” with “lots of delicious detail” and “an electric feature that crackles with all the exuberance of the carnival he describes.”
AITO Chairman, Derek Moore comments: “As always, there was an incredibly high standard of entries in addition to a record number of submissions. We are delighted to have Minty Clinch claim the top spot, a new name for the roll of honour, but also to see the online travel writing community and younger journalists being recognised for their efforts”.
Tags: Add new tag, AITO, Financial Times, holidays, How to Spend It, http://www.lonelyplanet.com/magazine/, Lonely Planet, Minty Clinch, The Boserver, The Sunday Times, travel pr, www.aito.com, www.mailonline.com, www.travelpr.co.uk, “Association of Independent Tour Operators”, “online travel” Posted in Client news No Comments »
Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009
I’ve collated various tips for hot travel destinations in 2010, and displayed them all, with explanatory description, in one Google Map. Click the grab below to go through to the map itself - and enjoy! Richard.

Tags: "best in travel 2010", "google map", "hot destinations 2010", 2010, chic, cool, experts, holidays, map, new, tips, travel, trends Posted in Fun stuff, Insider recommendations No Comments »
Monday, December 7th, 2009
Travelling to and from work I’ve been drawn to the colourful posters of the Incredible India advertising campaign, brightening up train and Tube stations around London, and transported to the tropical waters and the vibrant settings they picture. Having returned from the AITO Conference in Cochin, Kerala, on my first visit to the country, I would say the Ministry of Tourism’s product does exactly what it says on the tin.
After arriving in the early hours and waking up from a few hours’ sleep, the sound of nearby prayers and beeping traffic brought me to the balcony and, stepping into the heat with a close-up of Cochin before me, I immediately felt enveloped by the city’s charming, gentle chaos.
Exploring Cochin around the business sessions of the conference was a real pleasure. A laid-back place with a rich history of colonial influences, notably Portuguese, Dutch and British, today they seem to form a harmonious blend with traditional and modern Indian culture. Part of the British legacy is cricket and talking to the locals while watching a game is a great way to spend an afternoon, and definite confirmation of how crazy Indians are about the sport; turning up to watch an AITO team play is keen.
 Locals in Cochin take refuge from the sun and catch up for a chat
Architecture, from palaces to fishing huts; food, with tastes that come at you from all angles; distinctive dance; arresting music; the views; and the people of Cochin’s approach to driving are all part of what made my snap-shot of India an incredible first-time experience. And the backwaters, stretching across a vast area behind Cochin, are an eye-opener after a few days in the city and not to be missed. Coming out of downtown, Chinese fishing net structures and palm trees form the skyline there while flitting kingfishers and fishermen, balancing on small wooden boats to pull in their nets, provide the action to both unwind and uplift the visitor. Rob Looker
Tags: AITO, AITO Conference, Cochin, holidays, Incredible India, India, Kerala, travel, travel pr, www.aito.com, www.keralatourism.org, www.travelpr.co.uk, “Association of Independent Tour Operators” Posted in Experiences, Insider recommendations No Comments »
Thursday, October 29th, 2009
Two-and-a-half years old and she wants to divorce her parents. “I don’t like my Daddy!’ she screams, face puce and feet planted on an uneven stone step overlooking the pastel-washed houses of Fiskardo. “I don’t need my Mummy!” The words feel like gunshots, but our provisional parenting licence (we’re novices) tells us we can’t crumple: show you’re wounded and they’ll think you surrender. In pink plimsolls, pink t-shirt and little white shorts, her big blue-grey eyes and golden curls peeping out from under a floppy blue hat that’s tied in a bow under her chin, she’s a pint-sized-cherub-turned-Exorcist-girl (minus the rotating head and green bile – so far).
Our 50-week-awaited, two-week-long Cephalonian summer holiday had promised to be worth every penny of our savings (just over £3,000): a stunning stone house in an olive grove with an entire valley and a small beach practically to itself; a private pool overlooking Ithaca; our own chickens and their daily eggs; a houseman on hand to clean (and who, on one occasion, held the back end of our hire car up with his bare hands, preventing it from toppling over a precipice while I took my time remembering how to find first); a hillside hamlet just up the road with a couple of really Greek tavernas and where we could find all sorts of inflatables and plastic beach bumph to keep the little lady happy.
But no. “I want to go back to London. I don’t like my holiday”. Admittedly she was getting over a bad throat infection, but we thought if we kept her plied with Calpol and ice cream, she’d see the benefits of being away. According to our miniature travel expert however, the beaches were too “stinty” (pebbly), despite the anti-stint shoes we went to great pains to find for her to toddle about in, in what were actually the most striking, practically deserted bays with cerulean, see-through water we’d ever seen.
 The stunning pool at Hotel Emelisse on Cephalonia
All she wanted was to watch Winnie the Pooh, Chicken Run and Madagascar (in that order, over and over again) on the big telly in the sitting-room, and to make patterns with the pieces of the Connect 4 game we found in the cupboard. Seething with frustration, desperate to get our tans on the go, my husband and I sat with her, in silence gazing out of the windows at the green and blue, dazzlingly beautiful outside world, occasionally catching each other’s eye and trying to smile to belie the fact that our souls were under destruction.
By day five I was ready to go home. I even contemplated calling the Greek Islands Club (GIC) rep to find out about flights. I’d liked this lady, Anna, the minute I met her, which was on our first day: she arrived just as our delightful daughter finished having a poo on the terrace. I was mortified. She had (honestly) never done this before – I was having a (short-lived) attempt at potty training and just wasn’t being observant enough. As I ineptly scrubbed at the immaculately swept stone with washing-up liquid and kitchen roll, apologising profusely and assuring her that we were actually very clean, tidy people and would take excellent care of their property, Anna laughed and reassured me with stories of her own children’s embarrassing loo (or lack of) moments.
Anyway, I resisted the urge to call her, thinking that such capitulation on my part may well push my dear husband, so desperate to give his little family a fun holiday, over an edge that he was perilously teetering on. And amazingly, my resistance paid off. On day six, I nervously went into our daughter’s room to wake her up – preparing myself for the abrupt “Go way! I want stay in bed” we’d been greeted with every other morning – and she was sitting in her white sheets, grinning.
And from that moment on, either because she’d finally shrugged off the tail end of her illness, or because a pitying Greek fairy godmother had visited her in the night to perform a personality transplant, we had a relaxed, happy eight days of holiday. She started playing with other children on the beach, swimming in the sea, and even stopped worrying about the stints. We enjoyed early-evening dinners around Fiskardo’s buzzing harbour, and she ate her bodyweight in calamari, Greek salads, meatballs and spaghetti every night. She started sleeping like a log (or a twig, anyway) at night, napping on the beach wrapped in towels under an umbrella after lunch, and, most importantly, hugging us again.
An added bonus to our new-found holiday happiness was the discovery of the Emelisse Hotel, another GIC property recommended by a couple we met who also had small kids. A boutiquey design property, all serenity and contemporary style, we were utterly surprised it described itself as a ‘family hotel’. But despite the minimalism and mostly coupled clientele, it turned out to be the most child-friendly place (bar Center Parcs) I’d ever been to. The two enormous infinity pools, one cascading into the other, overlooked a breathtaking and expansive view over the calm sea and ‘Ifferker’ (as it became known) – the island whose majestic, mountainous dominance is inescapable in the area. One of the pools came up only as far as her chest, which meant hours of water-winged wading with bucket and spade; and the other had perfect steps for sitting on and colouring in with a watering can.
We stretched out on smart sun-beds, iPods on, ordering Diet Cokes, pretending to amazed onlookers that our daughter was always this easy with non-committal nonchalance. We lunched by the pool on tasty club sandwiches, smoked salmon-filled ciabatta, chips and fresh melon, while our angel, strapped into the latest funky high-chair provided by the hotel, smiled and said ‘efaristo’ to the accommodating waiters, desperate for one of her charming smiles.
Five days were spent in this delicious luxury, and although the pleasure cost us around 45 euros a time, we were just astonished, and incredibly thankful, that such an exceptionally cool hotel allowed children, and day-guests, in at all.
 A picture perfect olive grove on Cephalonia
So in the end we had the best of both worlds, times two: the privacy of our own property and the facilities of a hotel; and the (eventual) joy of a family-friendly holiday without having to venture into happy-clappy Mark Warner-esque territory.
As we drove back to Argostoli airport, 90 minutes’ worth of winding and zig-zagging through the mountains, our little friend, after so many days of adorability, without warning took on her Regan-inspired traits again: shouting and kicking in her car-seat, and twisting her head violently (still not rotating though). We stared forward, ignoring her wails, determined we wouldn’t have this again. Then silence, and a repulsive smell. I looked around and she looked at me desperately, dolefully, covered chest to knees in white puke. The guilt! The shame of thinking so little of our girl, when all she was doing was being car-sick.
Thankfully, this came just at the popular viewpoint where you can pull in and marvel at Myrtos Beach (featured in Captain Corelli’s Mandolin). As we stripped her down in front of a coach-load of religious Greek tourists and their accompanying Orthodox priests, I gave thanks to God that we had her back for good. Mischa Mack stayed at Olive Grove, featured in GIC’s portfolio of properties. Mischa Mack.
Tags: Add new tag, AITO, Cephalonia, Greece, Greek Islands, Greek Islands Club, holidaying on Cephalonia, holidays, Holidays in Greece, Sunvil, travel, www.aito.com, www.greekislandsclub.com, www.travelpr.co.uk, “Association of Independent Tour Operators”, “travel pr” Posted in Experiences, Insider recommendations No Comments »
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Destinations of the past decade & future hotspots
Monday, December 21st, 2009After bringing us the likes of Simon Cowell, Osama Bin Laden, Jordan and Jedward, the Noughties are almost over. But what were the Destinations of the Decade – stunning new places that are now firmly on the tourism map – and what will be the holiday hotspots of the Twenty-Tens/Oh-tens/Teenies/Tenties/Tenners? We asked some of our expert clients:
**The Noughties**
The trend of the decade: Staycations
“Of the many holiday destinations British travellers have turned to in the past decade, our own backyard, the UK, has fared especially well as its appeal broadened. The profile of Cornwall, in particular, has grown since 2000 partly due to a rash of new attractions, from the Eden Project to high-profile celebrity restaurants like Fifteen: Cornwall, while Newquay has become synonymous with Britain’s new found passion for surfing. New air links have made Cornwall more accessible for residents across the country, and an increase in accommodation options – from the green to the ultra-luxurious – mean everyone is catered for, and at a higher standard than ever before. Long live the staycation!”
Simon Tregoning, MD of West Country expert Classic Cottages (01326 555 555, www.classic.co.uk)
The short break of the decade: Unknown Italy
“As people worked longer hours throughout the decade, they felt the need to get away more frequently – and short breaks consequently exploded in popularity, with Italy leading the way. Although Venice, Florence and Rome remain the classic choices, the likes of Sicily and the art cities of northern Italy – such as Bologna, Mantua and Ravenna – have enjoyed a steady rise in visitor demand. Just when you think you’ve seen every great Italian town or city, there’s always another one to seek out.”
Ted Wake, Director of Sales & Marketing of short break specialist Kirker Holidays* (020 7593 2283, www.kirkerholidays.com)
The short/mid-haul holiday of the decade: Morocco
“Ten years ago the short break really took off: and, after Paris and Madrid, the exotic appeal of Marrakech suddenly registered. Just three hours away existed a cultural vortex – a land of souks, sorcerers, spas and sun, and a very cost-effective one at that. Beyond Marrakech lay similar jewels; packed into a relatively small country were ski resorts and high mountains, beaches, first-class golf-courses, Berber villages and the most scenic of desert-scapes. Announced in 2001, King Mohammed VI’s ambitious Vision 2010 tourism plan saw eight million visitors to Morocco in 2008, a 400% rise on 2000’s numbers.”
Steve Diederich, is VP of UK Sales & Operations for Travelzest Plc, incorporating The Best of Morocco (0845 026 4588, www.realmorocco.com)
The ski resort of the decade: Kicking Horse, in British Columbia
“Kicking Horse Mountain Resort started life as Whitetooth Ski Area, run by local volunteers in the town of Golden. In 1999 it was bought and hugely upgraded, reopening in Dec 2000 under its new name. Back then, few people knew of it: today Kicking Horse has worldwide renown for its powder, challenging skiing and 4,133ft vertical drop, second in Canada only to Whistler Blackcomb, and also as a fine option for beginner or intermediate skiers. Bring on the next decade, too: there’s newly a ten-year, $300 million development plan in place to expand Kicking Horse by 1750 acres.”
Richard Rice, MD of Ski Safari and committee member of AITO Ski (020 8744 9280, www.aitoskiholidays.co.uk)
The safari of the decade: Botswana’s Okavango Delta
“In the 1990s, the Okavango was still split up into the Moremi Game Reserve and a number of hunting areas – and tourism to the Delta was relatively small. The last decade has seen a steep change: Southern African safaris are no longer the poor relation of East Africa trips, and the Okavango has turned from a backwater to the continent’s ultimate safari destination. From 2000 onwards, small, often fabulous lodges began arriving in areas previously reserved for hunting: gradually, over the last decade, we’ve seen many of these change to be photographic concessions, where hunting is no longer practiced. Safaris are now firmly established in the Okavango as a much more humane money-spinner.”
Chris McIntyre, MD of Africa specialist Expert Africa* (020 8232 9777, www.expertafrica.com)
The adventure destination of the decade: Vietnam
“Options for the traveller to Vietnam have expanded dramatically in the past decade. There have been vast improvements in the transport and hotel infrastructure, while enterprising locals have introduced an array of ways to see their destination: now there are luxury junk cruises around the incredible karst scenery of Halong Bay, tribal homestays and trekking in the North and Central Highlands, cycling holidays along the Mekong Delta, cookery schools in Hanoi and Hoi An and all sorts of volunteering trips. Combine these with beautiful landscapes, beaches, popular cuisine and a tropical climate, and it’s a winning combination. The icing on the cake is that Vietnam has consistently offered excellent value for money.”
Peter Crane, Product Director of adventure expert Explore* (0844 499 0901, www.explore.co.uk)
The Latin America trip of the decade: Oaxaca State, Mexico
“During the past decade, more and more people have been discovering Mexico’s rich interior, heading beyond the commercial beach resorts to find colonial cities, elegant architecture, culinary treats and congenial people – all elements which can be found in the state of Oaxaca. In the city of the same name, live performances take place in the main square, chic boutique hotels offer first-class accommodation and grasshoppers fried in chili make for unusual meals. In the country, Zapotec rugs are hand-loomed as they have been for centuries and the tombs of Monte Alban offer arguably Mexico’s best archaeological site. It’s easy to see why enquiries for travel to Oaxaca have risen so steadily over the past decade.”
Lloyd Boutcher, Director of Latin America specialist Sunvil Traveller* (020 8758 4774, www.sunvil.co.uk)
And what’s coming next?
**The Twenty-Tens/Oh-tens/Teenies/Tenties/Tenners**
Zimbabwe – Chris McIntyre
“With the Mugabe era likely to end in the next few years, Zimbabwe’s tourism industry is poised to bounce back, and the good news is that its environments are generally in great shape. The wonderful national parks are all situated on land that’s difficult or impossible to farm, so they remain largely untouched, while much of the game is apparently in good shape, too – even if a few areas have had high levels of hunting. Recent news has been very encouraging: an apparent upsurge of visitor numbers in 2009, and now a much less unstable, dollar based economy. Once an effective protection plan is re-installed and development returns to the country’s people, I can see it taking off fast in tourism terms. Zimbabwe used to have vastly more visitors than either Botswana or Namibia – and it can do so again.”
Chris McIntyre, MD of Africa specialist Expert Africa* (020 8232 9777, www.expertafrica.com)
Colombia – Peter Crane
“After years of civil unrest and conflict, stability has been restored in Colombia – and mainstream tourism seems likely to follow. Most emblematic of the country’s new era is the city of Medellin: once famed as the home of Pablo Escobar, it’s now a vibrant tourism stop, as new museums, parks and direct flights to Florida attest. All around are new options, however: from plantation stays and jungle trekking to eco-beach retreats and even medical tourism. Officials have boldly estimated 30% annual increases in visitor numbers and it’s easy to see why: put simply, Colombia is the one Latin American destination with every kind of landscape – from beach to mountain, rainforest to plantation.”
Peter Crane, Product Director of adventure expert Explore* (0844 499 0901, www.explore.co.uk)
India for skiing – Richard Rice
“While the likes of Japan, Mongolia and Chile are likely to emerge as viable ski destinations in the coming ten years, and Russia will host the Winter Olympics in 2014, we feel that India’s slopes will be the hottest draw of the next decade. The Kashmir paradise of Gulmarg is already well-established as a resort, but now there’s talk of Doodpathri and Aur at Pahalgam following suit, and of New Zealand-style heli-skiing at Sonamarg. Tourism is always involving in India – with ever-improving flight services from the UK – and skiing seems likely to be the next big sector.”
Richard Rice, MD of Ski Safari and committee member of AITO Ski (020 8744 9280, www.aitoskiholidays.co.uk)
Scandinavia – Noel Josephides
“Scandinavia remains Europe’s last great wilderness, offering dramatic and diverse scenery, excellent food, warm and welcoming people, surprisingly good summer weather and an unexplored, untouched appeal. It is good value – the pound has held up comparatively well against the Swedish and Norwegian currencies, unlike the euro – and it’s so close: flights to Stockholm for example are just 2.5 hours from London. From a short-haul perspective, Scandinavia seems the obvious choice for the discerning traveller in the twenty-tens.”
Noel Josephides is MD and co-founder of short-haul specialist Sunvil Holidays* (020 8758 4758, www.sunvil.co.uk)
Burma – Derek Moore
“Lots of the potential new destinations for the next decade are places that are currently marginal for tourism due to restricted access. North Korea, Zimbabwe and Iran are all ripe for more mainstream tourism if they see internal changes in the coming decade – and especially Burma. This may not necessarily mean a change in regimes but an awakening to the potential earnings of tourism. Burma has a fascinating Buddhist tradition, pagodas stretched down the dreamlike Ayeyarwady, miles of beaches and the cultural idyll of Mandalay. Despite such unlimited potential for visitors, it will open up slowly, perfect for small tour operators rather than mass market operators.”
Derek Moore is the Chairman of AITO (020 8744 9280, www.aito.com)
South-Eastern Mediterranean – Ted Wake
“Perfect for discerning travellers balancing a sense of adventure with an urge for warm sunshine, the southern and eastern shores of the Mediterranean will prosper as a short break and longer-stay destination in the next decade. Recent infrastructure improvements and the emergence of high-quality, often quirky accommodation in the likes of Syria, Jordan, Lebanon and Israel amount to an unforgettable cultural experience.”
Ted Wake, Director of Sales & Marketing of short break specialist Kirker Holidays* (020 7593 2283, www.kirkerholidays.com)
*This company is a member of AITO – the Association of Independent Tour Operators. AITO comprises 140 independent and specialist travel companies providing an unrivalled collection of holiday ideas that cover every corner of the world. Consumers booking with AITO can be assured of 100% financial security, high-quality holidays and excellent personal service. Visit www.aito.com for further information. Richard Mellor
Tags: "classic cottages", "expert africa", "kirker holidays", AITO, comment, Explore, holidays, Sunvil Holidays, The Best of Morocco, travel, travel pr, www.aito.com, www.classic.co.uk, www.expertafrica.com, www.explore.co.uk, www.kirkerholidays.com, www.realmorocco.com, www.sunvil.co.uk, www.travelpr.co.uk, “Association of Independent Tour Operators”, “travel pr”
Posted in Insider recommendations, News & comments 1 Comment »