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Tips From the Experts: The Best Beauty, Spa and Fitness Advice to Start Your Spring Off Right

Eau Spa

Photo Courtesy of Eau Spa

Spring, is that you? Everybody’s wondering, hoping, peeking out cautiously from the office/apartment-caves we’ve burrowed in for the better part of the past five months, and—yes. The season of flowers and sundresses is finally here! It’s time for a whole new look, feel and attitude. To help us transform from frozen to fabulous, we asked the the top beauty, fitness and spa experts to share their wisest tips for sloughing off the winter blahs.

Eau Spa
Photo Courtesy of Eau Spa

Molly Wabel, Treatment Director at Eau Spa, Palm Beach, Florida

Detox First: Get the lymphatic system going, force your body to sweat, and expel toxins first and foremost. Eau Spa’s recommended method is a “detox wrap” in jasmine-rhassoul clay, but you can get a similar effect by exfoliating and then going in a sauna. Use a dry scrub, sugar scrub or salt scrub. Removing all that dead skin is almost like removing a shell—and it’s important to go in a dry sauna rather than a steam room because in a dry sauna your body is working to sweat, whereas in a steam room you’re coated immediately in moisture.

Eau Spa
Photo Courtesy of Eau Spa

Blooming Beauty: Floral, grassy, mossy, supple—these are the scents and textures that guests of Eau Spa gravitate to in spring. If you’re looking for products with these qualities, the Red Flower line has some great choices: Red Flower Ohana Gingergrass is one of Eau Spa’s biggest sellers. It smells like the forest coming alive. Plum Blossom Silk Cream from the same line has a supple feel and an aromatic blossomy smell, like plum trees blooming before they start to produce fruit.

Also recommended: Cherry Blossom & Lotus range from Sothys.

Core Fusion
Photo Courtesy of Core Fusion

Elisabeth Halfpapp, Co-Creator Core Fusion

Get on the Ball: As Core Fusion Barre is a ballet-inspired, core-centric class, it focuses on isolating core fitness exercises, alignment, flexibility and posture, and mindful muscle movements. You work on the ball of the foot to help get more range of movement in the leg and gluteal muscles. This position actually comes from ballet classes where dancers work in "releve" to get more length to the legs. It also works the calf muscle along with balance. When you work on the ball of the foot of your standing leg, you also help increase bone density, since it is a weight bearing leg!

Core Fusion
Photo Courtesy of Core Fusion

Core + Cardio = Full-Body Transformation: Exhale's newest class, Core Fusion Barre+Cardio, combines the cardio benefits of interval training with the toning benefits of the Core Fusion barre technique. Each two-part class consists of 30 minutes of plank run sprints with short recovery periods, followed by muscle-defining barre-based sequences of movements that target the thighs, butt and abs.

Note: Core Fusion’s definition of “recovery” is typically a down-dog stretch, a plank, or slowly practicing an exercise form before speeding up to double-time for the intense sequence. There’s no such thing as a total resting period, until the last few minutes of the cool-down. This class incorporates high-energy sequences with “bigger” range of motion than the subtle repetitions that define other Core Fusion classes.

Epsom Salt Council
Photo Courtesy of Epsom Salt Council

Elena Hight for Epsom Salt Council

Epsom Salt Does a Body Good: As the new Epsom Salt Council spokeswoman, Olympic snowboarder Elena Hight is popularizing a simple home remedy that physical therapists, yoga instructors and masseuses have recommended all along. Three cups of Epsom salt in a bath are “such an easy go-to when you have sore muscles or after a hard fall,” she advises. For a great DIY body scrub—effective as an exfoliant but also to hydrate wind-chapped skin—Hight recommends Epsom salt mixed with coconut oil.

Spa Villagio
Photo Courtesy of Spa Villagio

Leslie Wolski, Spa Director at Spa Villagio, Yountville, CA

Exfoliate Thyself: One of the first things I like to promote for spring are body scrubs. People don’t realize how bad the winter is for your skin. They put lotion over lotion over shea butter to try to keep hydrated—but if you’re not getting the dead skin off, the lotion is doing nothing. And if you’re not exfoliating before spray tanning, that’s when you get the streaks. The tanner is going to adhere more to the dry areas and give it that uneven look.

What I’d recommend for spring is a full-body exfoliation followed by a great self-tanning treatment. We have one here called the Fruity Peel, which is fruit enzymes. Sugar scrubs are really great—that’s going to be your most gentle scrub, even more than the enzymes.

Spa Villagio
Photo Courtesy of Spa Villagio

Spring in Your Step: Another thing people start to think of in spring is their feet, because they’re going to be putting on sandals. The area where the wear and dehydration really shows first is in the heels. One professional pedicure’s not going to do it. To get your heels nice and sandal ready, you have to have a home care routine. I keep [a] foot file from Sweden hanging in the shower—it’s called the FOT. [Use] it every time you shower. Then once a week, slather your feet in a really thick body butter or crème, slip on some socks and go to bed. In the morning your feet will look so nice, and they will stay gorgeous all summer long.

Professional warning: Never razor skin off. There’s a high risk of infection.

Lena Katz

Lena Katz is the author of the Travel Temptations series (SIP, SUN, SNOW), published by Globe Pequot Press in 2009. Lena is also a travel expert for Celebrations/1800FLOWERS and WEtv (online and on-air). She contributes to the South China Morning Post and ABC News online. Lena is a former Orbitz Travel blogger and former columnist for the LA Times. She's been published in Brides Magazine, Robb Rep...(Read More)

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