Archive for the ‘Insider tips’ Category

10 weird and wonderful things to do in California

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

From 101 Holidays newsdesk

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The California fly-drive holiday recommendation is one of 101 Holidays’ most popular pages - driving yourself around this immense and diverse state is a great way to explore beyond the more obvious attractions. Here are 10 weird and wonderful things to do in California.

1. The hills above Palm Springs are home to The Integratron, one of the world’s weirdest must-sees. Located on a magnetic vortex, this dome shaped building was built by George Van Tassel to be a rejuvenation centre and time machine. It claims to have communicated with Extra Terrestrials, and apparently harbours a magical magnetic energy.holiday destinations

2. If you’re a wine enthusiast and are planning to tie the knot, surround yourselves with beautiful Merlot and Pinot Noir vines as you say “I do” with a wedding at Gundlach Bundschu Winery. Celebrate with a wedding breakfast in the romantic Cave Barrel Room. More ideas and information from California Wines.

3. Try sky-diving at 120mph, two miles above the wine country, from the Russian River to Lake Sonoma. Land at the Alexander Valley Vineyards for a celebratory glass or two.

4. Take a catamaran across Lake Shasta to some spectacular caves, formed over 250 million years ago. Trek up into the hills for a chance to see bald eagles, mountain lions and black bears and have a go at sluicing for gemstones and fossils.

5. Enjoy a game of Monopoly in the Park in San Jose. Throw the monster dice on a gigantic 930 sq ft Monopoly board wearing Monopoly pieces as headgear. Great fun for all the family.

6. Head to Chico for the Yo-Yo Museum, housing a collection of yo-yos dating back 80 years. It’s also home to the world’s largest yo-yo, weighing an impressive 256 pounds!

7. Huntington Beach a surfer’s paradise. Not only is the beach sensationally sandy, but it hosted the world record for the most riders (40 in total) on one giant surfboard in 2005. Time your visit to coincide with the US Open Surfing Championships in July and August to see how the experts do it.

8. Pasadena is home to the infamous Colorado Street Bridge. Built in 1913 across a canyon linking the San Gabriel Mountains to the Los Angeles River, it is rumoured to be haunted and has been the location of numerous suicides.

9. In North Hills, a 15 ft topiary poodle stands on Plummer Street and Hayvenhurst Avenue, created by resident Brian Welch. Named ‘Ivy Poodle’ the pooch even wears a red ribbon collar to celebrate Christmas.

10. Visit Watts Towers in Los Angeles, an art centre with a difference. Consisting of 17 different towers, the steel structures are adorned with mosaics made from whatever materials were available to the artist, Simon Rodia. With no access to machinery, the towers were created using his own ingenuity and simple tools (including a washer’s belt and buckle).

Visit our recommended tour operator for California: North America Travel Service

Honeymoon advice from Jane Anderson

Friday, July 16th, 2010

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If you - or anyone you know - is planning to get married in the near future, you may like to see some of the work Jane Anderson has been doing over at our sister site, 101 Honeymoons.

Jane (pictured above) has created some great pages packed with hard-earned wisdom, expert advice and personal recommendations. She has advice on honeymoon planning to ensure the whole thing goes smoothly from start to finish, plus a great selection of honeymoon packages for those seeking inspiration.

If cash is tight, Jane has advice on honeymoons on a budget. While for those who are cash-rich but time-poor, she offers advice on mini moons.

If the idea of tying the knot in an exotic location appeals, then check out Jane’s detailed and priceless advice on getting married abroad. She also has some great insider tips on organising beach weddings.

The site is packed with great honeymoon ideas, and there is a new section called Honeychat full of deals, ideas, interviews and advice.

6 things to do in New York City

Friday, May 7th, 2010

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By Mark Hodson, editor, 101 Holidays

I’m just back from New York on a trip organised by British Airways to promote their new business-only flights from London City. It’s a cracking service, which I’ll review in a future blog post. In the meantime, here are six great discoveries I made in New York City - some you may know, some you may not.

I’d been to New York many times over the years, but never paid much attention to the Rockefeller Centre, a series of 1930s buildings between 48th and 51st Streets bookmarked by Fifth and Sixth Avenues. At its heart is the 70-storey GE building which has an elegant rooftop renovated in 2005. Known as Top of the Rock, it offers thrilling 360-degree views of the city (see above, left), including the whole of Central Park. Less busy than the Empire State Building, it’s well worth the $21 entry fee. While you’re there, make sure you explore the surrounding buildings - an attractive parade of cafes, shops and an ice rink all richly adorned with Art Deco detail.

We all love an authentic 1950s-style diner, but I didn’t expect to find one in trendy Tribeca. The Square Diner at 33 Leonard Street (near Franklin Street Subway, just a few blocks south of Soho) is a proper throwback with aluminium walls, vinyl bench seats and a lengthy menu of American classics mixed up with a few Greek dishes (it’s run by a brusque but very sweet Greek lady). The interior is suitably atmospheric and there are plenty of tables outside where you can soak up the sun and people-watch. Go for a blow-out breakfast or the lunch special: a soup and sandwich for just $9.75, drink included.

I’ve always used Time Out guides when exploring cities, and now their iPhone apps are whipping the backsides of the opposition. Time Out’s New York iPhone app is aimed at locals, rather than tourists, and it’s packed with solid, up-to-the-minute recommendations of where to eat, drink and party. You can search by neighbourhood, cuisine or price - or a combination of all three. You can save entries to a list of favourites and see a list of critics’ picks. The maps are so good that you can use them instead of a paper map (so you don’t look like a tourist) and you can use all the info without incurring roaming charges. Best of all, it’s completely free. Indispensable.

What do you with an abandoned railway line raised on huge steel girders above the streets of West Manhattan? Why, turn it into New York’s newest and most innovative park, of course. The High Line (pictured above right) is an ingenious idea, turning an eyesore into a delightful leafy promenade that takes you from the trendy Meatpacking District up to West 20th Street. It’s still being built with a second section due to open shortly and eventually it will go all the way up to 34th Street. This is not New York’s prettiest neighbourhood, but the concrete walkway is beautifully maintained with stretches of the original track still visible, benches and chairs, art installations, well-tended gardens and viewpoints across the Hudson River. Climb the stairway at the western end of Gansevoort Street. The nearest Subway is 14th Street and Sixth Avenue.

What’s the perfect location to stay in New York? I’ve been all over but I prefer Downtown. This time I was a guest of the Soho Grand Hotel on West Broadway close to Canal Street. It’s handy for the shops, bars and cafes of Soho and has a Subway stop next door that will get you to points across the city. It’s a stylish renovation of a historic industrial building, the bar is abuzz with beautiful people and there’s always a chance you’ll bump into a celeb in the lobby. Room start at around $399. Not cheap, but not overpriced either.

With the help of my Time Out app, I managed to eat at some excellent-but-cheap breakfast and lunch spots. But you can’t slum it all the time. And if there’s one place to go for a blowout, it’s Buddakan in the Meatpacking District. Similar in style to London’s Hakkasan, it’s an ultra-hip bar and restaurant serving some of the best Chinese food in town. The interior is bold and colourful with a series of high-ceilinged rooms and the usual retinue of gorgeous waiting staff dressed head to foot in black. It’s the sort of place where the food can be disappointing, but it was anything but. Dim sum, noodles, rice dishes, pork and fish were all outstanding and - at around $12 to $24 for a main course - good value for money. Whatever you do, you must try the tuna tartare spring rolls.

Things to do for free in Tokyo

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

By 101 Holidays newsdesk

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Tokyo may regularly appear on the ‘most expensive cities in the world’ lists but one of the most common misconceptions is that Japan is an expensive country to visit.

Armed with the insider knowledge, experience and expertise of InsideJapan Tours, Japan can offer excellent value and many sights and attractions, both well-known and hidden gems, are absolutely free - including some in Tokyo itself.

Here are InsideJapan Tours’ insider tips for things to do in and around Tokyo without spending a single yen.

FREE: experience the hustle and bustle of the world’s biggest fish market, Tsukiji. The atmosphere is frantic and exhilarating. Arrive before 7am to see the tuna market and indulge in the freshest sushi breakfast (from £17).

FREE: visit a sumo stable for early morning training in Asakusa – get up close and personal with huge sumo wrestlers (7-10am). You need to book the visit in Japanese (which InsideJapan Tours will do for you) and to obey strict rules, but this is a fantastic - if slightly daunting - experience.

FREE: visit some of Tokyo’s most important temples such as Sensoji Temple in the old Asakusa district and Meji Jingu Shrine in Harajuku, one of Tokyo’s ‘cooler’ districts. It’s set in 175 acres of evergreen forest right in the city centre.

FREE: the staggering view over Tokyo and beyond to Mt Fuji from the 48th floor viewing galleries of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Buildings, Shinjuku.

FREE: discover techno heaven. Visit the huge electronic department stores in Akihabara, known as an electronics town; Shinjuku’s Yodobashi Camera store with floor upon floor of gizmos; the Sony showroom in Ginza for a glimpse of tomorrow’s gadgets; and Shibuya district with its neon and Bladerunner-esqe environment.

FREE: a two-hour sacred mountain hike through forest and past shrines to the top of Mt. Takao - Takao San sits in Hachijoji on the edge of Tokyo. Great panoramas of the metropolis await. Other free options include visits to Tokyo’s parks and gardens, museums and galleries.

Tokyo has the most Michelin-starred restaurants in the world but there is also an array of cheap eateries: try sushi (from 70p per plate), bento boxes (from £2.80), ramen noodles (from £3), 3-course lunches (from £7) or an Izakaya dinner with drink (from £12).

InsideJapan Tours offers a range of small group tours, self-guided adventures and tailor-made itineraries to suit all budgets and tastes and has an exclusive 101 Holidays offer.

101 exclusive offer1 Things to do for free in Tokyo

Half price long-haul holidays with Hayes & Jarvis

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

Kandaburi Resort and Spamedufushi hotel maldives Half price long haul holidays with Hayes & Jarvisjumeirah beach hotel dubai Half price long haul holidays with Hayes & Jarvis

By 101 Holidays newsdesk

Hayes & Jarvis has slashed more than £800 pp off the cost of selected long-haul holidays. It is also throwing in free upgrades from B&B to half-board.

Bookings must be made by Thursday March 4.

* Save £801 pp, departing May 4. Two weeks at the 4* Kandaburi Resort and Spa on Chaweng Beach, Koh Samui, now costs £749 pp.

* Save £853 pp, departing May 15. One week at the 4* Medhufushi Island Resort in the Maldives now costs £899 pp  with seaplane transfers.

* Save £440 pp, departing June 28. Four nights at the 5* Jumeirah Beach Hotel, Dubai now costs £599 pp.

    All holidays include a free upgrade to half-board, scheduled flights and transfers. More details from Hayes & Jarvis.

    How to get a €1.25 holiday exchange rate

    Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

    Siblu mobile homesiblu holiday parc

    By Mark Hodson, 101 Holidays editor

    In preparation for a family skiing trip this Christmas I’ve been shopping around for the best exchange rate. Travelex, despite its best price guarantee, wasn’t the winner at €1.072. I went with the Post Office at €1.079, although I tapped in my credit card details with a heavy heart believing that the “proper” exchange rate is around €1.40.

    But there’s at least some encouragement for people booking summer holidays. The French holiday parc specialist Siblu Holidays is launching its own EuroVouchers, which its customers can use in its parcs and which have a guaranteed fixed rate of €1.25 to £1.

    Siblu customers can buy them in advance with no commission, and sell back any unused vouchers to the company at the same rate. So a family changing £500 would get €625, compared to around €540 at the Post Office.

    That’s a cracking deal, and it’s good to see at least one UK tour operator doing something to soften the blow of Sterling’s woes.

    Siblu has 14 holiday parcs with mobile homes across France, including locations in Normandy, Brittany, the Vendée, Charente Maritime and the Cote d’Azur. They’re great for families, with pools and waterslides, kid’s clubs and sports.

    Travel writers’ recommended hotels

    Monday, September 28th, 2009

    ginny light 150x150 Travel writers recommended hotelsdave yearbook bigger Travel writers recommended hotelsimage2 bigger Travel writers recommended hotelsrichard hammond Travel writers recommended hotelslara dunston Travel writers recommended hotelsnick redmayne Travel writers recommended hotelsvictoria trott bigger Travel writers recommended hotelsdavid atkinson Travel writers recommended hotels

    By Mark Hodson, editor of 101 Holidays

    Where do travel writers stay when they are paying their own hotel bills? Here at 101 Holidays we asked some of the top travel journalists and editors on Twitter to recommend their favourite hotels, B&Bs and guests - the places they would choose if they were picking up the tab.

    We’re not talking fancy 5-star palaces here. All our recommended hotels cost no more than $250 a night for a double room. That’s £150, or €160.

    And, to make it more interesting, we asked the writers to summarise their tips in no more than 140 characters - just like on Twitter.

    The resulting list of travel writer hotel tips includes many of the leading names in travel writing in the UK. And now we’re going global and inviting travel writers in the US, Australia and across the world to recommend the places they love best.

    If you want to receive regular hotel tips from our experts, subscribe to this blog. Or go to the 101 Holidays homepage for holiday ideas.

    Sorrento guide: our editor’s insider tips

    Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

    Grand Hotel Excelsior Vittoria 5 stars Sorrentosorrento guideBay of Naples itineraries: The islands of the Gulf of Naples | Bay of Naples Travel

    By David Wickers, editor of 101 Holidays

    Sorrento, which has been putting out the welcome mat to visiting Brits for decades, is an ideal resort for those who want to get more from the Med than a sunbed - yet who don’t want to rent a car.

    From its main harbour, confusingly called the Marina Piccola (the little marina), you can zip across to the islands of Capri or Ischia by fast ferry, with some services also going along the spectacular Amalfi coast to glittering Positano and Amalfi.

    If your stomach can cope with the twists, turns and hairpin bends of the Amalfi Drive, hacked out of the solid rock face, I thoroughly recommend one of the world’s most scenic bus rides, travelling to the medieval streets and casbah-like alleyways of the main town of Amalfi.

    Or head up into the lemon and olive groved hills to Ravello, rightly famous for a pair of beautiful gardens (Cimbrone and Rufolo).

    A short walk from Sorrento’s central piazza Tasso, you can board a local train service that will take you to the main entrance of Pompeii, to the funicular that travels up the lava slopes of Vesuvius and on into Naples.

    GETTING THERE

    From Naples airport there are bus services straight to Sorrento, or take a taxi and be sipping that first Campari and soda on your hotel terrace in less than an hour.

    WHERE TO STAY IN SORRENTO

    At the budget-testing but spectacular Grand Hotel Excelsior Vittoria (top left), one of Europe’s most authentic grand hotels and host to an A list of royals, statesmen and celebrities ever since it first opened in 1834. It has 5 acres of gardens, an oasis of lemon trees with a large pool and a spa. The views from the hotel terrace, overlooking the Bay of Naples with Vesuvius looming on the far horizon, are to die for.

    WHERE TO EAT IN SORRENTO

    In the hills above town is the Michelin starred Don Alfonso in Sant Agata. In town, Il Buco is excellent for fish. For no nonsense Italian food served in a huge conservatory setting with a garden at the back, try O’Parrucchiano. For ice cream head for Gelateria Davide or Bougainvillea - my favourite is the vanilla and mango combo. A good place to sample local Campania wines is the Bollicine wine bar on Via dell’Accademia.

    BEST SHOPS

    Along the Corso Italia – which is pedestrianised in the evening - and the narrow, flagstoned streets of the old town, especially the traffic-free via San Cesareo.

    BEST BUYS

    “Tassia” inlaid wooden crafts, the local lemon liqueur, vacuum packed wedges of parmesan.

    HOW TO BOOK

    To book a holiday to Sorrento, we recommend the following tour operators: Long Travel, Elegant Resorts, Kirker Holidays and Seasons in Style.