Woman Writers Worldwide Share Travel
Secrets 2007
| Huge splurge in Milan, Italy... Billed in
the company brochure as an "urban retreat, an escape for mind and
body", the spa at the Hotel Bulgari in the centre of Milan is located
on the lower ground floor, and includes a pool. Enhanced by special
lighting effects, the gold and emerald green glass mosaic designs on
walls and floors create a shimmering splendour of luxury and indulgence.
Roberta Kedzierski has lived in Milan for over 10 years and is originally from Britain. She writes for a number of US and UK publications on a variety of subjects. Roberta's work includes milanostyle.com, the "Thinking Allowed" column in the monthly HelloMilano magazine (www.hellomilano.it), as well as having her own page on www.InItaly.com. |
| Bargain for your hotel room...
Pauline Frommer
is an American travel journalist. She appears weekly on CNN's Pipeline
and co-hosts The Travel Show, which can be heard every Sunday on 100
radio stations nationwide. Her new series of budget-conscious guidebooks,
the Pauline Frommer Guides,
are available wherever books are sold. Pauline Frommer's New York City
was named "Best Guidebook of the Year" by the North American
Travel Journalists Association. |
| Stay awake for the first hour
of an international flight... Don't take any sleep aid until at least 30 minutes after the flight has taken off. Trouble with an airplane typically occurs within the first hour after take-off and/or the last hour before landing, and as a passenger you need to be able to respond to any type of emergency. Kathleen
Ameche lives in Chicago. She is the featured travel expert
on CBS 2 Chicago as well as the author of The
Woman Road Warrior, An Expert's Guide to Domestic and International
Business Travel. |
| Safe, warm bus travel in Peru...
Claudia Landini reports from Lima, Peru. She is the co-founder of www.expatclic.com, an expat website for women. |
| She likes free museums... The next time you're waiting for a flight at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport, check out the free Rijksmuseum, a branch of Holland's largest museum. It houses ten works by Dutch Masters, from Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum, and rotating exhibits of ceramics, silverwork and other crafts. A shop sells reproductions of jewellery, glassware and paintings from the permanent collections. The museum is open daily. Admission is free. Barb Kroll and her husband, Ron, are Canadians who publish the trip-planning website: http://www.krolltravel.com/ |
| Don't double tip... When you are dining abroad, remember that a service charge is usually figured into the cost of the meal or tacked onto the bill. There's no need to add more, although in many countries it's customary to "round up" the bill or leave some loose change. This practice is becoming more common in the United States too, especially for large groups, so keep your eyes open or you'll be paying twice. Room service at hotels is another place where you'll often find a built-in service charge. Joan Rattner Heilman is the author of the bestselling guidebook for older travelers, Unbelievably Good Deals and Great Adventures That You Absolutely Can't Get Unless You're Over 50, 2007-2008 (McGraw-Hill) Now in its 17th edition. |
| A woman-friendly hotel in Buenos
Aires... I stayed at the Hotel Frossard in Buenos Aires and would like other travelling women to know about it, too. You'll arrive at a belle époque house-turned-hotel, where Che Guevara’s aunt once lived (there's a buzzer system to enter). You'll ascend to reception in a gold-filigreed elevator cage. Expect that your room will probably mimic the size and cleanliness of a nun’s cell. At $US30 per night with breakfast and an ever-so-helpful staff, the Hotel Frossard, like so much of Buenos Aires, remains friendly and affordable. Hotel Frossard is located in the heart of the city, pleasant and well-run. Website: www.hotelfrossard.com.ar Nancy Wigston is a Canadian travel writer, photographer and reviewer. |
| One to five stars, your hotel
choice in Amsterdam... In April 2007, I discovered an intriguing Amsterdam accommodation, the Lloyd Hotel, www.lloydhotel.com, awash with cultural, historical and architectural surprises. This centenarian, six-storey former emmigrant center and youth prison overlooking a major city canal, still boasts an industrial elegance following its renovation and reopening as a popular cultural arts hotel in 2004. It features rooms of one- to five-stars, so I spent a night in each extreme. Ratings and prices of 80 to 300 Euros, including an ample health-conscious breakfast buffet, are based on a room’s individual measurements. All services and luxury amenities come with every room, with only the one-star having a bathroom down the hall, possibly shared with one or two other guests on the same floor. No two rooms are alike in design, furnishings or size. The Lloyd attracts many art and culture guests who often perform and exhibit in its dramatic public spaces. Alison Gardner is a Canadian travel
journalist and editor of Travel with a Challenge. |
| Bonus #8! Classical Destinations... It's called, Classical Destinations, An armchair guide to classical music. We haven't seen another book like this one and we love the concept. Inspired by the television series of the same name, Classical Destinations combines three strong elements -- brilliant photographs of destinations that inspired some of the greatest names in classical music, biographical tales and fun facts about those composers plus helpful tourist information about all locations. What a splendid idea. Research cities like Venice, home of Vivaldi, Lucca, Puccini's birthplace, as well as Helsinki to investigate Jan Sibelius's roots. Think you'd like to visit? No problem. The best website and tourism sources will be right there at your finger tips. This coffee table book is the real thing -- lovely to look at and delightful to read. Amadeus Press. ISBN 1-57467-158-8. |
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