Thursday, November 17, 2011

Happy hotel holidays

The Sheraton Centre Toronto is offering an easy way to enjoy all the fun of the season while staying safe.

The hotel offers an easy post-party commute so you can trade your car keys for room keys and simply take the elevator home.

A special rate is available through the holiday season on Friday and Saturday night stays from Nov. 17 to Dec. 30.

"The holidays are a busy time of year with lots of entertaining across Toronto," said Tony Dunn, the hotel's general manager. "Whether in the city visiting friends and family or with colleagues at the office holiday party, the Sheraton Centre offers a safe and responsible way to enjoy all that the festive season has to offer."

 

W brand keeps expanding

Starwood Hotels and Resorts will open W. Jakarta in 2015, making the debut of W Hotels worldwide in Jakarta and its second hotel in Indonesia after opening W Retreat and Spa Bali-Seminyak earlier this year.

 

Ring in the New Year in Michigan

Looking for a family place to party on New Year's Eve?

If so, look no further than the Best Western Sterling Inn Banquet and Conference Centre in nearby Michigan.

The hotel's Susan Bullotta is rolling out the red carpet and inviting her Canadian neighbours to celebrate 2012 at the facility.

Bullotta is planning a New Year's Eve Splash Bash and Family Fun Fest at the hotel, which features a huge indoor water park.

The hotel is located on Van Dyke Avenue in Sterling Heights, an hour's drive from the ferry crossing between Walpole Island and Algonac, Mich.

The 32,000-square-foot indoor water park features a 5,000-square-foot zero entry swimming pool, waterslides, lazy river vortex, interactive splash play park, two large whirlpools, steam rooms, indoor running track and video game arcade.

Family-oriented activities on New Year's Eve begin at 7 p.m. with the magic of master illusionist Bret Beaudry. There will be clowns, a gamefest video game party, a bounce house in the lobby and a countdown to midnight.

The cost is $199 for a queen or king bed or $224.99 for two queen size beds. Rates are based on a maximum of four guests per room.

For more information call 1-586-979-1400 or visit www.sterlinginn.com.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Medieval pilgrimage for modern times

Standing on the main square of Santiago de Compostela, I share the joy of pilgrims who’ve completed the Camino de Santiago (or Way of St. James).

With sunburned faces and frayed walking sticks, they triumphantly end their long trek by stepping on a scallop shell carved into the pavement in front of the city’s magnificent cathedral. For over a thousand years, this cathedral in the far northwest corner of Spain has been the ritualistic last step for pilgrims who’ve hiked here from churches in Paris and all over Europe. Today, most take a month to walk the 725 km from the French border town of Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port.

To enjoy the scene, be on the square about 10 a.m. The last overnight stop on the Camino (or pilgrimage) is 3.2 km away, and most pilgrims arrive at the cathedral in time for the 12 o’clock mass. It’s great fun to chat with pilgrims who’ve just completed their journey. They seem very centered, content with the experience, and tuned in to the important things in life ... like taking time to talk with others.

James, Santiago’s namesake and symbol, was a Christian evangelist — one of Jesus’ original "fishers of men." But judging from the way he’s portrayed here, his main activity was beheading Muslims with his busy sword. Propagandistic statues of James are all over town — riding in from heaven to help the Spaniards defeat the Muslim Moors.

Police guard the square. Security here has been tight ever since Sept. 11, 2001 — and even more so since March 11, 2004, when Madrid’s commuter trains were bombed. Santiago’s cathedral, as one of the leading pilgrimage sites in Christendom, is a high-profile target for Islamic fundamentalists. It doesn’t help that St. James is depicted taking such joy in butchering Muslims.

Historians figure the "discovery" of the remains of St. James in Spain was a medieval hoax. It was designed to rally Europe against the Moors, who had invaded Spain and were threatening to continue into Europe. With St. James — a.k.a. "the Moor Slayer" — buried in Iberia, all of Europe would rise up to push the Moors back into Africa, which, after a centuries-long "Reconquista," they finally did in 1492.

All this commotion dates back about 1,200 years to a monk who followed a field of stars (probably the Milky Way) to this distant corner of Europe and discovered what appeared to be the long-lost tomb of St. James. Church leaders declared that St. James’ relics had been found, built a church, and named the place Santiago (St. James) de Compostela (campo de estrellas, or "field of stars").

Imagine you’re a medieval pilgrim. You’ve just walked from Paris — more than 1,127 km — to reach this cathedral. Your goal: To request the help of St. James in recovering from an illness. Or maybe you’ve come to honour the wish of a dying relative, or to be forgiven for your sins. Whatever the reason, you know the pope promised that any person who walked to Santiago in a Holy Year, confessed their sins, and took communion here would be forgiven.

After weeks of hiking, the spire of the cathedral comes into view and jubilation quickens your tired pace. Finally you stand upon the shell in the pavement and gaze up at the awe-inspiring cathedral. You step inside, squint down the nave, and see the statue of St. James that marks his tomb.

Kneeling at the silver tomb of St. James, you pray and make your request. Then you climb the stairs behind the altar up to the saint’s much-venerated statue — gilded and caked with precious gems — and wait your turn to embrace him from behind while gazing thankfully out over the cathedral. You have completed the Camino de Santiago.

Walking the Way of St. James has changed little over the centuries. The gear still includes a cloak, a floppy hat, a walking stick, a gourd (for drinking from wells), and a scallop shell (symbolizing where you’re going).

The walk itself is a kind of hut-hopping. At regular intervals along the route, you’ll encounter humble government-subsidized hostels called albergues, where pilgrims can rest for the night (free bunks, though small donation often requested).

Recently the route has enjoyed a huge renaissance of interest, with nearly 100,000 pilgrims trekking to Santiago last year. Bikers and horse riders are now joining hikers.

Whether you hike the entire route or just the last stretch — or even if you’re just there to vicariously enjoy the thrill of the latest in a thousand years of pilgrims finishing the Camino de Santiago — it’s an experience that will stay with you forever.

Rick Steves (ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. E-mail him at rick@ricksteves.com, or write to him c/o P.O. Box 2009, Edmonds, WA 98020.

 

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Europe off-season can be best season

Each summer, Europe greets a stampede of sightseers and shoppers with eager cash registers. Before jumping into the peak-season pig pile, consider the advantages of an off-season trip.

Given the weakness of North American dollars overseas, the potential price-savings of an off-season trip are enough to brighten a grey winter day. Airfares are often hundreds of dollars less. With fewer crowds in Europe, you’ll sleep cheaper. Many fine hotels drop their prices, and budget hotels have plenty of vacancies.

To save some money on hotels in the off-season, arrive late without a reservation, notice how many empty rooms they have (look for keys on the rack), and give the receptionist an excuse to win your business with a deep discount. Explain that you’re a senior (hosteler, student, artist, whatever) with a particular price limit, and bargain from there. Note that while tourist-oriented places may be cheaper in the low season, the opposite is true of big-city business centres (especially Brussels and the Scandinavian capitals), which are busiest and most expensive in the off-season.

For many travellers, "shoulder season" — April, May, early June, September, and early October — offers the best mix of peak-season and off-season pros and cons. In shoulder season you’ll enjoy decent weather, long days, fewer crowds, and a local tourist industry that is still eager to please and entertain.

Outside of peak season, adventurers loiter all alone through Leonardo’s home, ponder un-pestered in Rome’s Forum, kick up sand on virgin beaches, and chat with laid-back guards by log fires in French chateaux. In wintertime Venice you can be alone atop St. Mark’s bell tower, watching the clouds of your breath roll over the Byzantine domes of the church to a horizon of cut-glass Alps.

Without the crowds, you can enjoy step-right-up service at tourist offices and experience a more European Europe. Although many popular tourist-oriented parks, shows, and tours will be closed, off-season is in-season for the high culture: Plays and operas are in their crowd-pleasing glory. For instance, in Vienna, while the Boys Choir, Opera, and Spanish Riding School are scarce in the summer, all have a busy schedule of performances through the rest of the year.

Europe’s major cities crackle with energy year-round. In London, you can spend your days at the British Museum and National Gallery, and your nights at a cozy pub or a world-class play. In Paris — the City of Light that always sparkles — you can get face-to-face with Mona and scale the Eiffel Tower. In Florence, you’ll see Renaissance paintings and Michelangelo’s David without peak-season crowds.

But winter travel has its drawbacks. Because much of Europe is in Canadian latitudes, the days are short. It’s dark by 5 p.m. The weather can be miserable — cold, windy, and drizzly — and then turn worse. But just as summer can be wet and grey, winter can be crisp and blue, and even into mid-November, hillsides blaze with colourful leaves.

To thrive in the winter, you’ll need to get the most out of your limited daylight hours. Start early and eat a quick lunch. Tourist offices close early, so call ahead to double-check hours and confirm your plans. Pack for the cold and wet — layers, rainproof parka, gloves, wool hat, long johns, waterproof shoes, and an umbrella. Use undershirts to limit the washing of slow-drying heavy shirts. Dress warmly. Cold weather is colder when you’re outdoors trying to enjoy yourself all day long. And cheap hotels are not always adequately heated in the off-season.

Off-season hours are limited. Tourist information offices normally stay open year-round but have shorter hours in the winter. While most sights stay open through the winter, they typically operate on shorter schedules (such as 10 a.m.–5 p.m. rather than 9 a.m.–7 p.m.), with darkness often determining the closing time. Winter sightseeing is fine in big cities, which bustle year-round, but it’s more frustrating in small tourist towns, which often close down entirely. In December many beach resorts are shut up as tight as canned hams.

While Europe’s wonderful outdoor evening ambiance survives year-round in the south, wintertime streets are empty in the north after dark. English-language tours, common in the summer, are rare during the off-season, when most visitors are natives. Another disadvantage of winter travel is loneliness. The solo traveller won’t have the built-in camaraderie of other travellers that she would find in peak season. Still, this can be a plus, since it encourages you to really connect with the locals you travelled halfway around the world to meet.

Regardless of when you go, if your objective is to "meet the people," you’ll find Europe filled with them 365 days a year.

Rick Steves (ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@ricksteves.com, or write to him c/o P.O. Box 2009, Edmonds, WA 98020.

 

Monday, November 14, 2011

EdgeWalk hits the record books

EdgeWalk at the CN Tower in Toronto is now in the Guiness World Record Book for the highest external walk on a building.

EdgeWalk opened to the public Aug. 1 and is the CN Tower's most thrilling attraction in its 35-year history and the first of its kind in North America.

It is the world's highest full circle hands-free walk on a five-foot wide ledge encircling the top of the tower's main pod.

Visitors walk in groups of six while attached to an overhead safety rail via a trolley and harness system.

Exciting new experiences like EdgeWalk provide another reason to add Toronto to everyone's travel list.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Budget friendly North Carolina

Q: This winter we plan to drive along the east coast to North Carolina's Outer Banks. Do you know the drive time? Is it better to stay at a hotel or a B&B while there? Can you suggest some popular free or budget friendly attractions?

-- C. Blair, Scarborough

A: According to Google Maps, you can drive straight through from Toronto to the Outer Banks in just under 14 hours, but most people prefer to break the trip up over two days. Accommodations really depend on your preference.

Aaron Tuell, public relations director for the Outer Banks Visitors Bureau, says vacation rental homes are very popular and make up "about 80% of our lodging share on the Outer Banks. But we have a full range of accommodation types from camping, om and pop hotels, bed and breakfasts, condominiums and cottage courts."

Prices for vacation rental homes vary depending on amenities. For accommodation listings, visit the OBVB site at outerbanks.org.

The area has many free experiences. One of the best is a trip to Jockey's Ridge State Park in Nags Head. The 172-hectare park is home to the tallest sand dunes on the east coast, which is part of a massive system that provides stunning views of the ocean and Roanoke Sound.

"It's one of the best places to see a sunset on the Outer Banks. And kids and adults alike love to run up and down the big sand hills, fly kites, and there's even a recreational hang-gliding school there operated by Kitty Hawk Kites," Tuell says. Entrance to the park is free but there is a fee for gliding lessons.

Another free activity is watching the commercial and recreational fishing boats come in.

"Our game fishing is recognized worldwide for blue and white marlin, various species of tuna, grouper, mahi mahi, red drum and striped bass. At various times of the year, when the fish are really biting, you can drive up to your closest marina and watch the fishing yachts come in and unload their day's catch on the docks. It's great for photos and helps you learn and appreciate our fisheries in North America."

See oregon-inlet.com.

Lastly, the Cape Hatteras National Seashore (nps.gov/caha/index.htm) is truly breathtaking and parking is free.

"The Cape Hatteras National Seashore is 110-km-long and has three lighthouses you can visit for free," Tuell says. There are small fees to climb Cape Hatteras Lighthouse, which is the only seashore lighthouse open for climbing.

Other fun free activities along this coastal stretch include views of migrating waterfowl, seasonal sea turtle nesting, and fabulous photography.

"You can also enjoy a family bonfire on the beach, which is neat, providing you (follow) park guidelines. Far away from urban lights, the Outer Banks are an amazing place to see the Milky Way and other celestial displays."

Q: We haven't seen any good deals on Mediterranean cruises and were hoping you could help.

-- E. Ramos, Toronto

A: MSC Cruises has a great Upscale Upgrade deal if you looking for a little luxury without breaking the bank. Until Dec. 31, those who book a standard room on an eligible cruise aboard MSC Fantasia or MSC Splendida are upgraded to the MSC Yacht Club -- a sort of ship within a ship program that provides passengers with extras such as butler services, complimentary wines and spirits, and deluxe accommodations. The deal applies to select Mediterranean winter cruises sailing now through March 14. For details, see your travel agent or call MSC Cruises toll-free at 1-855-469-2582. Q: I recently heard about a new train service in Quebec. I missed the details and am hoping you might be able to identify the route.

-- W. Li, Markham

A: Cirque du Soleil got its start in Baie-Saint-Paul, a celebrated cultural hub in Quebec. One of Cirque's co-founders, Daniel Gauthier, is behind a new venture -- the Le Massif de Charlevoix train -- which operates luxury "rail cruises" from Quebec City through the gorgeous Charlevoix region. The new train is expected to open the area up for four-season travel. This winter it will stop at the base of Le Massif so skiers can get off. For details, see lemassif.com/en/train or call toll-free 1-877-536-2774.

Q: Has anything ever become of Guy Laliberte's space flight adventure?

-- S. Hassan, Brampton

A: When the Cirque du Soleil cofounder ventured into outer space sporting his clown nose, those familiar with his antics were wondering how the colourful impresario could possibly out-do himself.

Well, Laliberte has turned his "vacation photos" into a fundraising project. His stunning images of earth and space -- taken during his 11-day journey to the International Space Station in 2009 -- have been published in Gaia, a glossy 300-page book. All profits from book sales go to Laliberte's nonprofit organization One Drop. The group's mandate is to increase awareness of water issues and to encourage responsible water-management practices. See onedrop.org.

"My goal was to reach people with my photographs. I took the time to choose quotes from books and poems, written by more significant people than I, and juxtaposed them with my photographs. All the excerpts point to the same thing: Urging us to take care of the paradise where we live, Gaia, our Earth," Laliberte said in a press statement. The book can be bought online from the publisher at assouline.com, or chapters.indigo.ca and amazon.ca.

ilona@mycompass.ca

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Don't waste that vacation buzz

You've taken the vacation. You've come back. You have 5,000 emails in your inbox. You need to take steps to ease back into work without losing all the benefits of taking time off in the first place, says Harvard Business Review.

The Management Tip of the Day offers quick, practical management tips and ideas from Harvard Business Review and HBR.org. Any opinions expressed are not endorsed by Reuters.

"Many things await you on your first day back from vacation: a full inbox, a long list of to-dos, and people needing your time. If you dive right in, you're likely to wipe out all the benefits of taking time off.

Instead, get back in the swing of things while maintaining some of the calm and restoration of your break. Block off your morning. Make sure you don't have any meetings scheduled or big projects due.

Then before you open your inbox, pause and think about your work priorities. As you make your way through emails and voicemails, focus on returning the messages that are connected to what matters most. Defer or delegate things that aren't top priority.

And remember it will probably take more than one day to get caught up, so be easy on yourself."

- Today's management tip was adapted from "The Right Way to Come Back From Vacation" by Peter Bregman.

 

Friday, November 11, 2011

Canada top travel brand: Survey

Travellers rank Canada tops when it comes to the country's tourism brand.

The brand and design company FutureBrand announced Canada was the most powerful country brand in the world for the second year in a row on Thursday at the World Travel Market in London, England.

The decision is based on the Country Brand Index (CBI), which was created through interviews with 3,400 travellers from 13 countries.

According to the CBI, the most important factors that differentiate a nation's brand are its associations and attributes: The qualities people think of when they hear a country's name, read or see images of a location, or plan a business or leisure trip.

"Canada's continued rating at the top of FutureBrand's Country Brand Index is a testament to our country's global appeal," Minister of State for Small Business and Tourism Maxime Bernier said in a release.

A country's brand is a measure of international reputation, the FutureBrand release said.

Canadian Tourism Commission president and CEO Michele McKenzie said the nod is important not only to encourage more people to visit, but to get more people to invest in the country.

"While Canada's tourism brand has grown into a powerful cultural force and a marketing tool to inspire visitation, it also has largely untapped potential as a lever to drive trade and investment in ideas, education and business," McKenzie said in the release. "In this period of global economic turbulence, by showing the world that Canada is a dynamic, modern and cosmopolitan society, we're not just inviting the world to visit us, we're capitalizing on our positive reputation to open new doors and create new opportunities."

Thursday, November 10, 2011

New7Wonders to launch city contest

The New7Wonders group is following its New7Wonders of the World and New7Wonders of Nature campaigns with the New7Wonders Cities contest.

The previous campaigns have relied on votes from around the globe to determine the best of the world's man made and natural attractions. Machu Picchu, the Great Wall of China and the Colosseum were among the attractions honoured in the Wonders of the World contest, while the New7Wonders of Nature will be named on Nov. 11, 2011.

New7Wonders founder Bernard Weber hopes the cities campaign will highlight the mass urbanization occurring around the planet.

"For the first time in history, a majority of the global population now lives in cities. From the great historical cities of Jerusalem, Venice and Kyoto, to the alpha world cities of London, Paris, New York, Mumbai and Shanghai, urban living has enriched human society," Weber said in a press release. "Given these dramatic developments, New7Wonders Cities will become a catalyst for discussing everything from urban planning to metropolitan governance, from tourism to architecture. This campaign is going to be very much in touch with the Zeitgeist and I am very excited about its potential to generate energy and ideas."

People around the globe are being urged to nominate their personal favourite cities in the campaign, which will accept suggestions through Dec. 31, 2011. The field of finalists will be announced on Jan. 1, 2012.

Visit cities.n7w.com to submit your nominations.

 

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Giddy-up and go to Ottawa

Q: We're going to visit friends near Ottawa and want to go horseback riding while there. Do you know of any places with riding lessons or tours?

-- P. Wright, Mississauga

A: Head for the hills. The Gatineau Hills to be exact -- near the historic steam train town of Wakefield, Que., about 25 minutes northeast of Ottawa. The 182-hectare Captiva Farms offers year-round horseback riding for all skill levels on 20-km of scenic trails that range from beginner to advanced. These take riders past bucolic meadows, open fields, ponds and creeks. Novices can take a 30-minute riding lesson before setting off. See captivafarms.com.

Q: I'm and amateur photographer, and -- after watching the Bridges of Madison County -- I am interested in photographing covered bridges. Are there any nearby?

-- E. Hanson, Mississauga

A: Dale Travis, a covered-bridge and old-barn buff, has compiled a handy list of covered bridges in Ontario that you can view online at dalejtravis.com/cblist/cbon.htm. The majority of the bridges on the list are new, with the exception of Waterloo's famed "Kissing Bridge." Constructed in the 1800s, it's near the Grand River just north of Township Road 62 (Riverside Dr.) in the village of West Montrose. For details, visit the Township of Woolwich's website woolwich.ca and click on "tourism" followed by "things to do."

In Quebec's Outaouais region, Wakefield has a beautifully restored covered bridge. For details, visit outaouaistourism.com. And south of the border, New Hampshire has 54 covered bridges. For maps and brochures, contact the New Hampshire Tourism Office at visitnh.gov.

Q: I would like to take advantage of some Black Friday sales while I'm on a business trip to Orlando, Fla. It's been years since I've been there and I am wondering if you can recommend any outlet malls?

-- B. Nolen, Toronto

A: Considered the kick-off to the Christmas-shopping season, the day after American Thanksgiving -- or Black Friday -- is the country's busiest shopping day of the year. When the clock strikes midnight, marking the end to Thanksgiving Thursday, many stores will open their doors. This year's shopping frenzy will take place Nov. 25 and retails outlets are expected to offer three-day holiday weekend sales.

Premium Outlets (premiumoutlets.com) has two good malls in the Orlando area. One is at 4951 International Dr., minutes from Universal Orlando Resort. The other is at 8200 Vineland Ave., near Walt Disney World.

I have visted the International Dr., mall, which has 180 stores and is favoured by seekers of high-end labels. A shopper could spend hours browsing in boutiques like Cole Haan, DKNY and Kate Spade.

A few weeks before the big sale, a list of special offers will be posted online at premiumoutlets.com/sales. And the centres will also open early on Saturday and Sunday to maximize shopping hours. In addition, many area hotels are offering Shop & Stay packages. For details, visit premiumoutlets.com/travel, click on the centre you are travelling to and then on "Where to Stay, What to Do" for more information.

To make it easy for tourists to get around without a car, Orlando runs a trolley service along International Dr., that costs $1.25 US per ride. See iridetrolley.com.

Q: Is it true that passengers who fly with Austrian Airlines can use their boarding passes for discounts.

-- J. Floyd, Mississauga

A: Yes. The Austrian Airlines boarding pass is quickly gaining a reputation as being the "most valuable boarding pass in the world."

It offers a lot of discounts for things like museum admissions, and purchases in participating shops, hotels, restaurants and coffee houses throughout Vienna. You can download a list of current offers from the Austrian Airlines website. Last time I checked, more than 25 establishments were offering discounts or free admissions to places including the Sigmund Freud Museum, Madame Tussauds Museum, The House of Music, The Mozart Haus, the Esterhazy winery in Trausdorf, and more. At Galerie Ernst Hilger, you can enjoy a free coffee and receive a free book from the Hilger shop until December 2011. For details, go to austrian.com.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Tips for flying with Fido

Planning on taking your pet along on your next vacation? Before you pack Fido securely in his crate and head to the airport, read this list of tips for travelling with your pet from the editors of Cheapflights.ca. You may save yourself headaches later if you follow their advice now…

1. Calculate the costs: All airlines charge different rates for transporting a pet. Cheapflights recommends looking for pet-friendly flights with smaller airlines, as they often charge less for your pet’s flight.

2. Call the airline: Check the website of the airline you’re flying with for rules on crate sizes and to see if there is a limit on how many pets can fly in the cabin, but be sure to call and confirm all rules and regulations over the phone.

3. Rehearse at home: Will your pet get nervous at 35,000 feet in the air? Cheapflights recommends taking your pet on subways, trains or buses to familiarize them with a public form of transportation.

4. Visit the vet: Your vet can provide you with a travel first-aid kit designed for pets should any emergencies strike while travelling. Vets can also certify that your pet is healthy and provide medical certificates for airlines that require one.

5. Prepare the kennel: Cheapflights recommends investing in a carry crate that allows pets room to stand and turn around. Food and water dishes, bedding and "live animal" stickers for the crate are also recommended.

6. Use ID tags: Attach proper identification to your animal’s collar and crate. This should include your flight information.

7. Exercise the day before: Cheapflights suggests treating your pet to extra exercise the day before travel. A tired pet will ensure a more relaxing flight for all.

8. Pack food and water: Make sure to offer pets food and water before checking-in for your flight.

9. Avoid food after check-in: While you should make sure pets are hydrated and fed, make sure you leave enough time for food to settle before take off. Queasy pets do not travel well.

10. Prepare for anything! Don’t lose your cool if you find your flight delayed, your cat sick or a mess in the dog crate after landing.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Tea time in Ontario

It’s a custom steeped in time and tradition.

Afternoon tea, a thoroughly British tradition from the early 1800s and popularized by Queen Victoria, is back in fashion.

The afternoon restorative cup of tea served with small plates of sandwiches and pastries on fine china, of course, are offered at fine hotels, inns, tea rooms and on many cruise ships.

After all, an ancient Chinese proverb says: "Better to be deprived of food for three days than tea for one."

Toronto-based Fairmont Hotels and Resorts has a long, illustrious history of having some of the best afternoon tea parties.

To celebrate this cherished tradition, Fairmont has declared next Saturday (Nov. 12) an "official" day to celebrate tea at its properties around the world.

And, like most things these days, it’s not your grandmother’s tea any longer.

There’s the Victoria Gin MarTEAnis at the Royal York in Toronto and a Matcha martini shaken, not steeped, for the modern tea enthusiast at the Fairmont Banff Springs.

 

Pinkies up!

The Library Bar at the Royal York will be steeped in its British legacy during its "RoyalTea" on Nov. 12 from 12:30 p.m. to 3 p.m.

"The tea will include Prince William’s groom’s chocolate biscuit cake and her Majesty’s favourite treats," said public relations director Melanie Coates.

There will be "an array of Metropolitan Tea Co. teas from the commonwealth," while non-teetotallers can sip a la carte on Canada’s cocktail royalty, the Victoria Gin MarTEAnis, she said.

"Afternoon tea is not only an alternative to a lunch but also a perfect escape from downtown shopping or a delightful way to start or end an afternoon at the theatre with friends," Coates said.

Since the hotel opened in 1929, tea has been served from the former rooftop terrace, to the ballroom, Imperial gazebo, EPIC restaurant and now to the "warm and intimate setting" of the Library Bar.

The teas include a selection of premium loose leafs teas – not bagged, for shame – with recent additions of trendy sips of energy, equilibrium, tranquility and digestive teas.

There are also seasonal berry cocktails, finger sandwiches of lobster, smoked salmon, cucumber, Manchego (cheese) and brie; pastries including swans, black cherry clafoutis, chocolate cakes and madelines (cookies); and house-baked cranberry scones with Devonshire clotted cream and preserves.

Go upscale with the Royal Tea Experience that adds smoked salmon and caviar canapes paired with a glass of Moet & Chandon Brut champagne.

Book a tea time on Saturdays and Sundays from 12:30 p.m. to the last reservation at 4 p.m.

The "RoyalTea" costs $40 while the regular teas are $35, $39 for "festive teas" around the holidays and $60 with salmon and caviar.

The Royal Winter Warmth Package offers with an overnight, valet parking and tea for two from $239 nightly. www.fairmont.com/royalyork; 1-800-441-1414 or (416) 860-5050 (for tea reservations).

Reading the tea leaves

Now, this was a tea party worth travelling for at the Fairmont Hamilton Princess in Bermuda.

The Heritage Court experience offers 14 varieties of loose-leaf black, green, herbal and fruit teas, including the signature hotel blend.

There’s a delicious assortment of sandwiches served on silver trays, such as Parma (Italian dry-cured) ham and cantaloupe on chive wheat rounds and minted cucumber and chevre (goat cheese) on Bermuda onion rolls. Savoury scones follow, with kumquat jam and traditional Devonshire cream.

After a selection of petits fours, such as pear amandine tart and black forest chocolate cup, the tea finishes with a scoop of sorbet.

The "little tea drinkers" menu features such kid-friendly options as homemade peanut butter and strawberry preserves on crustless bread, albacore tuna salad on pita triangles and mini ham and cheese sandwiches. Girls also get to wear "fancy party hats and strings of pearls."

 

Bottoms up

Elsewhere, Zoe’s Lounge at the Chateau Laurier in Ottawa offers three tea-infused cocktails; there’s apple spice tea latte and apple scones at the Queen Elizabeth in Montreal; and the Fairmont Empress in Victoria has its 1908 tea-based cocktail where 100,000 people take afternoon tea each year.

There’s also a Boston tea party with no uncalled for taxes at the Fairmont Copley Plaza and Battery Wharf hotels.

For a full listing of Get Steeped events, tea fun facts, recipes and more: www.fairmont.com/promo/getsteeped

Around Ontario, there are numerous opportunities to try afternoon tea, including the Millcroft Inn and Spa in Caledon and Langdon Hall Country House Hotel and Spa in Cambridge. There is also a tea guide listing at www.teaguide.net/tearoomsontario.htm

 

 

Jim Fox can be reached at onetanktrips@hotmail.com

 

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Exhibit recognizes documentary photographers

Compelling portraits of everyday life drawn from the streets of New York City form the heart of a new exhibit opening on Friday at The Jewish Museum.

"The Radical Camera: New York’s Photo League, 1936-1951," recognizes the role that the League played in the evolution of the documentary photograph,

The organization of young, idealistic photographers saw documentary photography as both an art form and a way to argue for social justice.

"The documentary photograph changed as a result of the really great teaching that distinguished the League in the form of (photographer) Sid Grossman who pushed his students to discover the meaning of their work, but also their relationship to it," said Mason Klein, curator at The Jewish Museum. "That helped their work become more subjective and more poetic."

The League’s photographers captured public and private moments: tenement balconies full of people angling for a good view of a passing parade, a woman gazing at a Bleecker Street bakery window, a solitary walker on the Brooklyn Bridge, swing dancers in Harlem. Some images are beautiful; some stark. Many comment subtly on class, race, and disparities of opportunity.

The League’s darkroom, exhibition space, and its acclaimed newsletter "Photo Notes" all drew photographers together in a space where they could socialize and exchange ideas.

Women actively participated in the League where they found rare access and recognition.

"We were interested in the synergy of the League, that critical mass of artistry that resulted from the Photo League’s panoply of activities," said Catherine Evans, William and Sarah Ross Curator of Photography at the Columbus Museum of Art, which collaborated with The Jewish Museum on the exhibit.

Photographers Lewis Hine, Berenice Abbott and Paul Strand were mentors to the League while the younger generation included Grossman, Morris Engel, Arthur Leipzig, Lisette Model, Ruth Sorkin, Walter Rosenblum, Aaron Siskind, W. Eugene Smith, Weegee, and many others.

The decade and a half of The Photo League’s existence spanned the Great Depression, The New Deal, World War Two and, finally, the "Red Scare" hunt for domestic Communists to which the League fell victim.

A December 5, 1947 front-page story in The New York Times: "90 Groups, Schools Named on U.S. List as Being Disloyal" proved the beginning of the end for the New York Photo League.

The League categorically denied the accusation in press releases, meetings, petitions, letters, articles, and even an exhibition; and for a while, the disclaimers worked, writes Anne Wilkes Tucker, photography curator at The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, in an essay in the exhibition’s catalogue.

But as the blacklisting grew in intensity and reach, membership declined. The League dissolved on October 30, 1951.

"Fear killed The Photo League," said Howard Greenberg, owner of a gallery bearing his name and an early collector and dealer of Photo League work.

The blacklisting affected The Photo League even after it was disbanded.

"At least partly because of the suppression after the blacklisting, the significant role the League - and its teacher Sid Grossman - played in the evolution of the documentary photograph has not been fully recognized," Klein said.

"The subsequent generation of photographers was sort of apolitical," he said. "They were turned off to that idea of the documentary photograph as a political statement. And they were validated by the art world."

The exhibit runs through March 25, 2012 and then will travel to other U.S. cities.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Pig to plate at Hungary sausage fest

The annual Bekescsaba Sausage Festival is the place to taste and find out secrets of Hungary's spicy kolbasz sausages, but strict vegetarians and anyone who sticks to the rule that it's best not to ask how a sausage was made might want to steer clear.

From butchering a pig, complete with blowtorch for searing the bristles, to grinding the meat, mixing it with spices and squeezing it into long, filmy sausage casings that fit just so over the nozzle of a purpose-built stuffing machine, pig to plate is on display with little left to the imagination.

"Any foreigner who ever once tasted the Hungarian sausage will always ask me: 'That sausage, can you please bring me that sausage again?'," said Gyula Bodrogi, a Hungarian actor and member of the jury that judges the best of the day's kolbasz.

And people do love it. The 15th year of the four-day festival in a rural area of southeastern Hungary, near the Romanian border, drew an estimated 100,000 visitors over the end-October holiday weekend, winding up Monday.

While others celebrated Hallowe'en and All Saints Day, many Hungarians and Romanians spent time well-fed at what organizers say is the biggest eating and drinking event in eastern and central Europe -- a food-focused flipside to Germany's beery Oktoberfest.

People come for the weather, which this year was sunny and mild, for music from local and regional rock and folk bands, for dancing, crafts, amusement-park rides, beer, wine and the ever-present, potent and often homemade "palinka" fruit brandy.

But most of all they come for the kolbasz ("sausage," in Hungarian), made according to a century-old recipe with pork, paprika, garlic, caraway seeds, but also various tricks of the trade, and available in sizes and shapes from finger-sized to monsters more than a meter (yard) long, ranging in texture from dry to moist and in spiciness from mild to mouth-destroying.

Visitors also get to watch and cheer on about 500 roughly 10-person teams making the kolbasz from scratch, competing in a good-natured, carnival-like, palinka-fueled atmosphere.

"There are other festivals but this atmosphere, this crazy good spirit, the teams are unrivalled anywhere else," said Jozsef Nemeth, deputy president of the sausage-judging jury.

The sausage-making contest provides a focus for the festival, and a chance for one-upmanship among sausage makers.

"The spirit of a beautiful woman is in our sausage," said Ferenc Bordacs, dressed in the long, skirt-like garment of the Hungarian "puszta" plains, with hat to match. He came with a team from Debrecen, in eastern Hungary to make sausage in Bekescsaba's socialist-era Sports Hall, where bright smiles made up for the somewhat dingy lighting and period decor.

Other contestants, more modestly, said their sausages contained special blends of paprika, garlic, or top quality pork, or maintained their team was best at mixing it all up.

"Let's do it, guys," Bence Szabo, 23, team leader for a group of university friends, many of them now software programmers in Budapest, said as about eight hands -- covered in clear plastic gloves -- kneaded the contents of a big plastic bin full of about 10 kg (22 lb) of freshly ground pork meat, plus salt, paprika and whatever they thought was good.

When the meat and seasonings are thoroughly mixed, it is squeezed through a sausage maker, into clear casings and proudly displayed on each team's table, for the judges to come by and decide who made the day's best kolbasz.

It all happens in a relaxed and friendly atmosphere, with one table helping out another, sharing ingredients and palinka, and anything else anyone needs, until the entire festival feels like one huge, if somewhat tipsy, family.

PIG BUTCHERED, RIGHT THERE

Outside the Sports Hall, in a roped-off area, a team of six butchers from the Serb meat company Agropupak, in Kukujevci, Serbia, showed a crowd of several hundred people, including youngsters who possibly never had been on a farm, where the raw ingredients of sausage come from by butchering a pig.

The pig was dead on arrival, but the Serbs did everything else, from shaving the bristles to cutting up the carcass.

"The only difference is in the way we cut it up, but a pig is a pig, from here or across the border," Bogatic said.

The presence of the Serbs, plus sausage-making teams from Romania, Slovakia, Germany, Austria and elsewhere in central and eastern Europe, gives the festival an international flavor, and makes it an occasion for good-natured national rivalries.

"I'm an ethnic Hungarian but Hungarian sausage is too spicy for my taste," said Laszlo Gyorfi from Sepsiszentgyorgy in Romania, offering a sample of the milder Romanian-style version.

All manner of food and drink was available in the Sports Hall and several mammoth marquis, but it was possible -- and cheaper -- to graze, walking past sausage-making tables, where team members offered samples of their wares, bread, cheese, bite-sized "pogacsa" pastries and the ever-present palinka.

It is, in fact, hard to be in the Sports Hall for more than five minutes and not be offered a shot of palinka, or three.

Sandor Hegely, who has taken over the running of the festival from its founder, local librarian Zoltan Ambrus, said it had grown in 15 years from an event with about 50 sausage-making teams to 10 times that, with attendance to match.

"It's more people than ever," he told Reuters in an interview, adding that part of the attraction of the festival, which he said is the biggest of its kind in the region, and brings in hundreds of thousands of euros for hotels, restaurants and other local businesses, is that people the world over love sausage, plus the sausage competition.

And what is the secret of the best Hungarian kolbasz?

Hegely said the local kolbasz, while made with plenty of paprika, uses no pepper. But sausage makers such as 62-year-old former prizewinner Mihaly Kovacs immediately begged to differ.

"We do use pepper, a little white pepper, a little black, not much, so it's not overwhelming," Kovacs said. "With that we increase the harmony of taste."

 

Friday, November 4, 2011

Great Wolf's gingerbread experience

Great Wolf Lodge Niagara Falls is creating a life-size gingerbread house for family dining.

Instead of a little ginger house with frosting, gumdrops and candy canes used a dinner centerpiece, the lodge builds a gingerbread house large enough for a one-of-a-kind holiday dining experience for lodge visitors and local families.

It stands nearly two stories tall and seats up to six for a meal full of memories.

This year's edition is set to begin taking reservations Nov. 24, with up to nine seatings each day for breakfast, lunch and dinner.

It takes more than 300 hours, hundreds of pounds of gingerbread, chocolate, cookies, pretzels and candy to build.

Dining reservations are available to the public as well as to lodge guests.

For reservations call 905-354- 4888 ext. 5718.

 

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Europe on two wheels

It starts as a simple dream --then moves over to the tangible bucket list items.

Next you add a couple of pals -- guys who have both the time and the wherewithal to leave their work and family life behind for three weeks to see the world by touring through Europe.

Then you must have three wonderful wives who all say, "Go for it -- it sounds like a guys' trip."

Next comes the planning stage -- flights, accommodations, trains, planes and motorcycles.

Then once it's all booked you wait and dream about the adventure of the upcoming trip.

Gary Peruzinni is from Scottsdale, Ariz., Brian Norrie is from Calgary. We are all Honda Gold Wing pals and Brian and I are neighbours at our condo in Chandler, Ariz. This trip was the first overseas for both gents and my fourth venture across the big pond.

Last fall we started talking about a unique trip made available through a group called Edelweiss Motorcycle Tours in Austria. Among other tours around the world they host a seven day riding tour called the Best of Europe through southern Germany, northern France and then from Switzerland to Austria with a blink at tiny Liechtenstein.

We chose that one.

We were to join several other riders from around the world including Brazil, Chile, Taiwan and the United States. One other Canadian couple joined us from Hanna, Alta..

The ride was spectacular and we enjoyed five full sunny days with the temperature averaging 25-28 C, one foggy morning and one chilly morning as we left the top of the mountain hideaway in Austria.

We travelled through some of the most beautiful towns, villages and areas you can possibly imagine and the beauty was totally enhanced with the fresh air and thrill of doing it on two-wheels.

Most riders were on BMWs, while one great and fun couple from San Francisco did it on a Harley. We had two great hosts and one organizer in a truck. Jenn (speaks at least five languages fluently), Sigg (from Austria) and George (specialty was handling our luggage so that it was waiting in our rooms each day as we arrived -- and picnics) guided us through the entire process and were tremendous tour guides, offering tidbits of history when we pulled in to the various attractions, parks, castles and churches.

Prior to the trip Gary decided to go a few weeks early and enjoyed visits to Paris, London and Prague.

His first blog said it all -- "I sure wish I had come to London before now. I've been here one day and I already know that I want to come back."

Brian and I visited London post-ride, and although we had a touch of home sickness during the visit, we crammed in three days of incredible experiences and enjoyed one of the true cities in the world that has earned the title "world-class" as they get ready for the Summer Olympics in 2012.

LIFE IN THE FAST LANE

During the ride we hit the "motorway" (Autobahn) in southern Germany and it has quite the system. First off there's no passing on the right side, which is a blessing. The right hand lane is reserved for slower traffic, trucks, buses, etc.

The middle lane is for the normal flow of traffic -at regular speed limit of 120 km/h to 130 km/h.

The left lane is where the legend of the Autobahn lives. It flies. Cars can really open it up and you have to watch very carefully as they approach you from the back extremely fast with the full expectation that you will get out of the way. Along the motorway at no time did we see a police car nor any photo radar.

Most of the riding was on what we would call secondary highways and, later, paths. The beauty of this is that we got to see the small towns and villages in these stunningly beautiful countries instead of being stuck in the major metropolises.

Riding was set up so that we had several breaks during the day and most were spent in gorgeous countryside settings where we got to see castles, churches, private car collections, lakes, waterfalls --as well as meet and chat in very broken English with the locals. It's all part of the adventure playing charades as you try to order food from a menu that has zero English and a waiter/waitress who also doesn't understand a word you're saying.

Along the way the Tres Amigos gave out our signature pins that were designed and provided to us by Brian Norrie. It was absolutely amazing to see the reaction to these when we handed them to the recipients. On one occasion it even resulted in an upgrade at a hotel as I got my own room to help get over a vicious cold, flu and earache in Munich.

We stopped there to see the legendary Oktoberfest and weren't disappointed.

They tell us six million peoome in for this extended party and, man, do they party. They make the Calary Stampede look like a little shindig compared to this huge event. Ambulances were heard nonstop picking up guests who over imbibed.

There were far too many highlights along the trip for me to comment on -- and nothing beats being there -- but the two major memories will stay with me forever are:

* The Black Forest. It's named that because the trees are very tall and grow very close to each other. You only get to see the odd bit of sunshine when it breaks through in certain areas or at the reststops. We rode on an extremely thin roadway with hundreds and hundreds of twisties which was a gentle reminder that you'd better be a damn good motorcycle rider to not only do these roads properly but manipulate in a group riders' style while staying tight to your lanes so as not to get hit by oncoming traffic or the near-expert riders who pass YOU going uphill on these tight lanes.

On one stop we enjoyed the real Black Forest cake.

*The run from Switzerland through Austria. The day started out in pure fog and it was a wet fog meaning we had to sweep off our visors every 10 seconds or so.

After about an hour in this we came around a corner and were on the side of a mountain filled with Bavarian style homes virtually hanging on a cliff. Many were Swiss farms where the cows are climbing the valley walls. Of note, a great number of these homes (which are about 100 years old) featured solar power on their roofs. Plus, we rode by many giant wind harvesting propellers much like what you see in southern Alberta.

The ride was the most scenic thing you can imagine -on a path almost at the top of the Alps that was literally only about eight to 10 feet wide. No guard rails. At the least it was two miles to the bottom. Cars passing you on the left while aggressive bikers pass from behind ... it's chilling!

After our trip we decided to enjoy a few days in Germany and enjoyed:

* Therme, the most magnificent water park you can imagine. About five times larger than West Edmonton Malls waterpark with a "clothing-optional" (nude) area. The Europeans really have no qualms about dropping their gear and suntanning nude. Us - ah, not so much!

* The Porsche Museum in Stuttgart -a tribute to the legendary Ferdinand Porsche who invented the car "because nobody else made one that I liked."

* The Mercedes Museum, also in Stuttgart, huge and impressive with vehicles going back to the late 1800s.) You could spend a day there and see some of the earliest modes of two and four wheel transportation ever invented.

 

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Discover upstate New York

VisitRochester has launched a campaign to attract Canadian travellers beyond Buffalo and into Rochester, the Finger Lakes and Genesee Valley.

The campaign features a new interactive website created specifically for Canadian travellers coming to the Rochester area,

The cooperative program titled "A Welcome Surprise" will continue through December.

Rochester and neighbouring partners are a brief 90-minute drive from the border.

VisitRochester believes this year's program may attract as many as 20,000 travellers during the last four months of the year.

Highlighted events include a free VIP coupon book for Waterloo Premium Outlets, a special price at Palm Island Indoor Water Park/Hotel and skiing at Bristol Mountain.

 

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Spirited Traveller: Sipping in Vienna

Few go thirsty in the Austrian capital of Vienna. In addition to abundant wine and beer offerings, the city is famed for its rich café culture. But here's what many outsiders don't know: Many of these cafés segue from day to night, transforming from "coffee bar" to "martini bar".

Janin Nachtweh, a Vienna-based editor and project manager, susses out the best places for business travellers to caffeinate by day, and tipple by night (or vice versa, if so desired).

During the day, Onyx Bar, on the sixth floor of the Haas House, offers coffee and a top-notch view of St. Stephen's Cathedral. In the evening, lit with warm yellow light, the bar transforms into a people-watching delight, attracting politicians, actors, as well as "the odd international celebrity."

And the drinks? "The extensive range of bar drinks leaves nothing to be desired, not even with the most unusual request," Nachtweh says.

Sky Bar, within the Steffl Department Store, has a similar split personality. During the day, a continuous wall of windows encourages shoppers to linger over cappuccinos (or strawberry daiquiris) at Sky Cafe, which offers a panoramic view of the city's old centre. But at 6pm, the café closes, and across the corridor the chic rooftop Sky Bar opens. Drink options include more than 350 cocktails and 80 different whiskeys.

In addition, the modern and urbane Café Leopold, situated in the middle of the Museum Quarter, is more than just a coffee house. Architecturally, the café is part of the Leopold Museum and during the day weary culture-vultures rest over coffee, cake and "new Viennese cuisine." After dark, the tables are shoved aside making space for DJs and a dance floor, and the art extends to trippy light displays on the walls and gimlets in the glass.

For "the last drink of the night," Nachtweh advises heading to the "sophisticated" Loos American Bar. The small venue was designed in 1908 by architect Adolf Loos after a trip stateside. Inside, the dark interior, furnished in marble, onyx and wood, barmen serve up six kinds of martinis and five Manhattans. But Loos is the exception to the day/night rule: It doesn't open until 5pm, so best seek your afternoon espresso elsewhere.

RECIPE: Havana Sunset - Created by Loos Bar barman, Milen Mikolv

4 cl Havana Club Rum

1 cl Martini Rosso (sweet/red vermouth)

1 cl Martini Dry (dry/white vermouth)

6-7 cl Pineapple Juice

1 cl Grenadine

Combine all ingredients in a shaker with ice. Shake vigorously, and strain into a tall glass with fresh ice. Optional garnish: Pineapple wedge.