By Lena Katz
Aug. 26th, 2013
Photo Courtesy of The Ritz-Carlton, South Beach
We’ve seen luxury, we’ve seen convenience and we’ve seen high tech in hotels. But the latest trend seems to suggest that even the busiest and wealthiest travelers still place a high premium on playfulness. Photo Courtesy of the Canary Hotel
Ever since the Kimpton hotel family took over the Canary Hotel in downtown Santa Barbara, the property’s been trying out all sorts of crowd-friendly activities, from s’more roasts to ‘80s dance parties to the just-announced sing-along movie nights happening Wednesdays in October. The rooftop is a perfect SoCal setting, and we applaud the Canary for opening up the screenings to the public and even providing complimentary blankets. The first movie is Grease, the last is The Rocky Horror Picture Show; check the website for the rest and YES, there will be costume contests. Of course there will be.
Photo Courtesy of Calistoga Balloons
A Wine Country sunrise is a beautiful thing, and it’s worth dragging yourself out of bed to view it from the sky, via Calistoga Balloons in partnership with boutique hideaway Wydown St. Helena. Soar over Napa Valley as it awakens, then get back to the ground for a Champagne breakfast at Solbar and morning wine tastings at Calistoga’s finest wineries. With only 12 lovely rooms and a husband-wife team running the hotel, the Wydown is a throwback to Wine Country before the tour buses came—when your hosts helped plan your days and made sure their friends around the Valley took care of you.
Photo Courtesy of Velas Resorts
With divorce parties becoming a thing, the luxury all-inclusive Grand Velas resorts of Mexico welcome the newly-split with a customizable package that celebrates second-time singlehood. There are some serious components like the purification ritual (pictured), which is conducted by a Mayan shaman. On the lighter side: complimentary makeovers to make you feel sexy and piñata-bashing, because sometimes it’s just very satisfying to beat up an inanimate object as though you were five years old again.
Photo Credit: Tim King
Everyone’s heard about Point Reyes views and Sonoma Coast wines, but did anyone know that the Northern California Ocean goes glow-in-the-dark once a year with phosphorescent natural organisms, just like the famous bioluminescent bays of Puerto Rico? Perhaps the Bay Area’s algae display doesn’t draw as many curious folk because the water’s much chillier than the Caribbean — but still, if you‘re an explorer type, a night kayak tour of the electric-blue-frosted Pacific is definitely one for the bucket list. Especially considering the Tomales Bay barbecued oyster feast that host hotel Nick’s Cove organizes afterward.
Photo Courtesy of Wild Dunes
Barrier islands are a special Southern vacation experience — not tropical, but lush and not exotic, but still a world of their own. Wild Dunes in South Carolina has created a day excursion that really explores the natural beauty of the barrier islands. Take a pontoon boat to Capers Island, a tiny land speck neighboring Isle of Palms where the resort is. There, guests learn about the creatures in the touch tank, try to spot dolphins offshore, catch tasty blue crabs in season and generally enjoy the unspoiled unique ecosystem all around them.
Photo Courtesy Arizona Biltmore
What do you do when you’re a classic resort known for its traditional high teas, but the temperature is regularly above 100 degrees and nobody wants to drink a boiling hot beverage? You put it on ice, of course! It’s no surprise that the desert grand dame Arizona Biltmore is offering an afternoon iced tea service — starting with a chilled cucumber soup palate-cleanser, then continuing with traditional sandwiches and cakes — through October. We’re just wondering why nobody in New York thought of this when the East Coast had its record-breaking heat wave earlier in the summer.
Photo Courtesy of Cottar’s 1920s Safari Camp
If you want your kids to have at least one childhood vacation experience they can brag about till the end of time, this is it — but it’ll entail a long flight. Take them to Cottar’s 1920s Safari Camp in the Maasai Mara and enroll them in Maasai Warrior training. There they’ll learn to make fire, shoot arrows, throw spears and do many other useful things in the African bush. They may even get henna tattoos. It all takes place under the supervision/tutelage of a respected Maasai tracker, and parents are welcome to supervise…though most prefer to go on grown-up safaris.
Photo Courtesy of Hester Street Fair
Hester Street Fair is a small but well established weekly Lower East Side street fair known for its artisan purveyors. Hester Nights is an offshoot, taking place every Thursday night through September 26 in the courtyard of the oh-so-centrally located Eventi Plaza. This is the public gathering space behind Eventi, a Kimpton Hotel, and it’s enormous by Manhattan standards: large enough to comfortably hold a dozen street food vendors, a film screening and a couple hundred passersby who stumbled onto the action and decided to stick around.
Photo Courtesy of Viceroy Riviera Maya
Apparently it’s much more fabulous to play bartender at a five-star hotel bar than in the kitchen of your own home. Casa del Mar in Santa Monica lets guests bring their boozy creation home in a mini-barrel, and some U.K. hotels offer master mixology classes. But for the win, it’s Viceroy Riviera Maya, where bride-and-groom duos come up with their own branded cocktails to serve their wedding party. Mostly this wins because the basic cocktail themes are pure Hollywood RomCom fodder: i.e. Bridesmaids Revenge, Last Fling and The Pre-Nup. From there, things only get more spirited — depending how inventive the bride and groom want to be.
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)