Coolest place to stay and see the Northern Lights

Where is the coolest place to stay and see the Northern Lights? Our vote goes to Hotel Igloo Village Kakslauttanen in Finland. This place is special!

Top 10 highest hotels in New York

Showcasing the top 10 highest hotels in New York City. These tallest New York hotels offer amazing views of the New York skyline to gaze in awe at from the comfort of your bedroom.

5 Coolest Winter Holiday Destinations in the World

All too often the focus of a winter break is to head off somewhere hot and sunny and tropical, leaving the cold far behind. However, Winter can be a magical season, all frosted trees, cozy drinks in warm bars and twinkling lights. This year, instead of escaping the cold, embrace it in one of these 5 enchanting destinations.

Sunday, 29 November 2009

Las Vegas at Night

These cool travel pictures show dazzling Las Vegas from the sky at night, the city that never sleeps. Using technology that has only been developed in the past 18 months, this stunning series was taken by renowned aerial photographer Jason Hawkes, from Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, in March 2009.


A panoramic view of Las Vegas looking down the strip from the Pallazo resort

Photographers around the world have only recently been able to capture detailed aerial images after dark. Using a state-of-the-art gyroscopic mount, professional photographers like Jason Hawkes are now able to shoot world locations from a circling helicopter at night and get mind-boggling results.


View down onto the fountains at the Bellagio.


Aerial view across to the Stratosphere



Mirage Hotel Volcano eruption





Excalibur



 Entrance in the Luxor Hotel


The Luxor Hotel


The Las Vegas Strip


Close up of the Stratosphere

These Las Vegas Pictures are sourced from Jason Hawkes website

Saturday, 28 November 2009

Oasis of the Seas - Pictures and Videos

Showcasing pictures and videos of world's biggest cruise ship, Oasis Of The Seas.  Five times bigger than Titanic, weighting a cool 225,000 tonnes and costing an even cooler £800 million, Oasis of the seas is a monster of the sea! It is in fact 40% bigger than any other cruise ship afloat. It has a cool 'Central Park' style open air space aboard about size of a football pitch with its own micro-climate and trees. Just look at the pictures and videos of this stunning ship....

It was officially shown to the public for the first time this week. The 225,000-tonne leviathan was shown unveiled at Fort Lauderdale, Florida, by the US company Royal Caribbean. Here is a video filmed from inside this amazing ship just a few days ago...





Until now, the inside of the 1,187ft long ship, which can carry 6,296 passengers, has been a closely guarded secret as it traveled through the Baltic and across the Atlantic for its launch.



Watching this video below, it makes you wonder how so much weight can float.





View down to Central Park from the sports deck you get some idea of the sheer scale of this amazing cruise ship.



The Opus dining room is a sight to behold with the stunning chandelier the focal point of the room.



The Blaze Nightclub looks a cool place to dance the night away.


The Solarium


The whirlpool



And those with a head for heights, why not try the rock climbing wall...



Chill out by the beach pool area with tasteful sun loungers a plenty, but be quick to bag the best positions if any Germans happen to be on board!




Deckchairs lined up by the Aquatheatre

There are many lounges to relax, eat, drink and socialize whilst you cruise across the ocean to you destination.



The rooms on the Oasis of the Seas are not you typical cruise ship room as these pictures below offering luxury as standard...


The Royal Loft Suite


The Crown Loft Suite: downstairs...


The Crown Loft Suite: upstairs...


The bedroom of the Grand Suite

Each room on Oasis of the Seas has it's own balcony.



No expense was spared in the interior design of this ship...just check out the seating at the end of the Royal Promenade



Fitness freaks will no doubt be seriously impressed with the equipment and facilities available in the Vitality At Sea Spa and Fitness Centre









As the light goes down, Oasis of the seas comes alight - this is a view of the Board Walk looking down to the Aqua Theatre



Oasis of the Seas, which was built in Finland, is so big its exhaust stack retracts so it can pass under bridges as it travels the world. Its owners claim it is the most technologically advanced cruise ship in the world. Cruising continues to grow in popularity in Britain and America despite the recession with Royal Caribbean building another ship of the same size due to enter service next year.

This represents a £1.6 billion investment in the industry by the company with competitors like P&O and Cunard also expanding their fleets in Britain and America in recent years. However, the recession is biting into the industry with new ship launches dramatically down this year. Royal Caribbean said it has not sold out all its cruises on the new ship.

Despite the downturn, figures from the Passenger Shipping Association project that 1.55 million Britons are expected to take a cruise holiday in 2009 - up from 1.35 million last year. By 2012 it estimated 2.2 million Britons will take a cruise. This is a doubling of the UK cruise industry in 10 years. There will now be a series of further celebrations on board until the ship goes on its first paying cruise on December 1. Prices start from £1,786 for a nine-night eastern Caribbean fly-cruise on board the ship.

Thursday, 5 November 2009

Nepal - Now in Top 10 Travel Destinations

Nepal has found its way into the list of top ten travel destinations in 2010 in the world and the pictures below of the area go some way to showing why. This cool place is a sight to beyhold!


The Lonely Planet "Best in Travel 2010" has listed Nepal, along with El Salvador, Germany, Greece, Malaysia, Morocco, New Zealand, Portugal, Suriname and the United States, as one of the top ten travel destinations, a statement from Nepal Tourism Board (NTB) said. "Trekking in Nepal is one of those travel benchmarks, like seeing the Taj Mahal, or diving the Great Barrier Reef, or the first time you eat fried locusts. By the end of your trek, you may vow never to climb anything higher than the stairs around your home town, but the experience of the Himalaya will stay with you for a lifetime," local newspaper The Rising Nepal cited The Lonely Planet's list as reporting.





"This is a collection of destinations and experiences that we rate as the stuff people really should consider for next year. Whatever your own style dictates, you should be able to find inspiration in these destinations," The Himalayan Times cited Adam Bennett, manager of Asia-Pacific communications as saying. "They'll take you from the familiar to the far away, both geographically and culturally, and more than likely have you reaching for your travel bag," Adam Bennett said. The lists released Monday is The Lonely Planet's fifth in its annual collection of the best places to go and things to do in the year ahead.

With an area of 147,181 square kilometres (56,827 sq mi) and a population of approximately 30 million, Nepal is the world's 93rd largest country by land massand the 41st most populous country. Kathmandu is the is the capital and the country's largest metropolitan city. Nepal is commonly divided into three physiographic areas: the Mountain, Hill, Siwalik region and Terai Regions. These ecological belts run east-west and are vertically intersected by Nepal's major, north to south flowing river systems. The southern lowland plains or Terai bordering India are part of the northern rim of the Indo-Gangetic plains. They were formed and are fed by three major rivers: the Kosi, the Narayani, and the Karnali. This region has a subtropical to tropical climate.

The Mountain Region, situated in the Great Himalayan Range, makes up the northern part of Nepal and the single main reason why Nepal has entered the top 10 travel desitnations of the world. It's just a site to behold and no amount of videos and pictures and do this place justice...you just have to experience it with your own eyes! The region contains the highest elevations in the world including 8,850 metres (29,035 ft) height Mount Everest (Sagarmatha in Nepali) on the border with China. Seven other of the world's eight thousand metre peaks are in Nepal or on its border with China: Lhotse, Makalu, Cho Oyu, Kanchenjunga, Dhaulagiri, Annapurna and Manaslu.


Monday, 2 November 2009

Cool Tree Hotels

Want a cool but romantic hotel setting and something a little different? Want to be one with nature and stay up in the trees under the stars like the Ewoks for your next holiday? If so then these cool tree house hotels maybe just what you were looking for. Here are the world's coolest tree house hotels...

Inkaterra Reserva Amazonica (Peru)
As a pioneer of sustainable tourism in Peru, Inkaterra’s aim has always been to introduce outsiders to the wonders of Peru’s indigenous culture in a way that actively benefits local people. One of its loveliest properties, Inkaterra Reserva Amazonica, is a jungle lodge on the banks of the Madre Dios river in the Amazon rainforest. Accommodation is in 35 thatched cabanas, all with screened porches and hammocks.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The latest addition, the fairytale Canopy Tree House, is a heart-stopping 90ft above the ground. Accessed by canopy walkway and situated on its own private platform in the sky, the Canopy Tree House is ideal for animal watching below, stargazing above or just unwinding in complete peace. Everything has been considered, including the possibility that you might get vertigo in the night (there’s an additional bedroom at ground level you can clamber down to), and a butler is on hand, contactable by walkie-talkie, for those late-night Pisco Sour orders.
 


 
 
 

  • The Canopy Tree House, from US$200pp pn, based on two sharing (inkaterra.com). Last Frontiers offers 10-night itineraries including three nights in the Canopy Tree House from £4,192pp (01296-653000; lastfrontiers.com).

Hapuku Lodge (New Zealand) 
Beautifully positioned on a shelf between the snow-capped Kaikoura Mountain Range and surf-lashed Mangamaunu Bay on South Island, Hapuku Lodge is an exercise in fresh, contemporary, low-impact design.



The architect Tony Wilson and his family set out to build a low-key country inn, but before long the project had morphed into a six-room lodge and five glorious tree houses, 30ft up in the canopy of a native manuka grove.



 
 

All rooms are simple, with comfortable handcrafted beds, wool rugs, roaring fires, huge windows and terraces facing the ocean.

 
 
 

 
 

There is a tree house to suit all – from a romantic one-bedroom nook to two-bedroom enclaves for families. There are great walks direct from the lodge, and it is 12 miles north of Kaikoura (Maori for ‘to eat crayfish’), once a major whaling town and now a centre for eco-marine tourism and an artists’ colony that has achieved Green Globe Benchmark status. Next year Hapuku is adding a few more rooms and an outdoor heated pool.
  • From NZ$440pn for a lower branch tree house (hapukulodge.com). Bales Worldwide offers 10-day itineraries that include two nights at Hapuku Lodge from £2,385pp (0845-057 0600; balesworldwide.com).
     
Tranquil Resort-Plantation Hideaway (India)
On a private coffee and vanilla plantation in the remote Wayanad district of northern Kerala, Tranquil Resort-Plantation Hideaway is much as it sounds – a peaceful rainforest haven with the efficiency of a resort and the intimacy of a ‘home stay’. You are greeted like old friends by the owners, Victor and Jini Dey, and it is difficult not to relax at Tranquil Resort.



There are eight rooms in the main bungalow, the Tree House with a bedroom, bathroom and a large veranda, and the bigger Tree Villa, huge with a double and two single beds, two bathrooms and a large veranda. Its diminutive overall size gives the hideaway a laidback house party atmosphere. Relax by the pool in a hammock, in the garden or strike out for a walk into the 400-acre plantation, where you can learn how coffee and vanilla are produced. Home-cooked meals are taken around a big communal table – some say this is the best food in Kerala.


  • Stays in the Tree House cost from £280pn (tranquilresort.com). Pettitts offers 12-day itineraries including two nights in the Tree House from £2,390pp (01892-515966; pettitts.co.uk).

Chole Mjini Lodge (Tanzania)
Off the tourist trail on a stunningly beautiful island within Tanzania’s Mafia archipelago, Chole Mjini Lodge was an eco-lodge way before the term had been coined. The owners, Jean and Anne de Villiers, built this collection of six tree houses high in the branches of baobab trees set within tropical gardens to be environmentally sound and to give something back to the community.



 

Today, $10 of each guest’s nightly tariff goes towards funding a local project (most recently building a primary school and an adult education centre). Be prepared for ‘creative’ takes on modern conveniences: storm lanterns replace electricity, there are composting lavatories, and air conditioning comes in the form of natural ventilation that blows through each open-sided house.


 
 
 
 

 The result is a unique rustic charm and complete indulgence defined by attentive staff, huge wraparound terraces with gorgeous ocean views and the feeling of being somewhere completely, wonderfully different.
  • Expert Africa offers a seven-night ‘Lemon Grass Beach Holiday’ from £1,672pp (based on two sharing), which includes three nights at Chole Mjini (020-8232 9777; expertafrica.com).

Jaci’s Tree Lodge (South Africa)

Luxury safari lodge situated in the malaria-free Madikwe Game Reserve. Jaci's Tree Lodge voted one of the 101 best hotels by The Tatler Travel Guide.





Visit the website at www.madikwe.com/tree_lodge.htm

Wild Canopy Reserve (India)

A great example for eco tourism is the Wild Canopy Reserve hotel, located in south India.  Unfortunately, Wild Canopy Reserve is currently closed, due to ongoing issues with the owners of the private reserve near the Masinagudi Wildlife park.


This eco-friendly hotel offers tree house accommodation while an elephant or a tiger lingers at your doorstep.  From the Wild Canopy Reserve tree houses resorts you will enjoy over two hundred varieties of birds including the Great Indian hornbill, not to mention elephants, tigers, leopards, wild dogs, peacocks, various species of deer, wild boar, giant squirrels and flying squirrels. Just look at this amazing view of this tree house hotel to the vast grounds of the Indian jungle.


 
 
 


Safariland Treehouse Resort
Safariland Treehouse Resort: Deep in a mountainous jungle region of India, you’ll stumble upon one of weirdest hotels on the planet. This hotel actually consists of 4 treehouses which stand approximately 15 feet off the ground, and each is built out of locally sourced materials such as bamboo. These gigantic tree houses provide awesome views of the mountains and jungle streams below.






Each of the 14 rooms here cost between $150 and $250 per night depending upon the room, and there’s plenty to do for eco-tourists including wildlife treks, mountain hikes, bonfires, elephant rides, and you can even get some good food at the on-site restaurant.
Visit the hotel website at www.safarilandresorts.com

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