A FLORIDA FOREST OF EVERGREENS

Palm Beach’s Festival of  Holiday Trees

Customarily travelers to Florida expect beaches and palm trees, but at this time of year, it’s evergreen trees that are special.  For two weeks in December, visitors to Palm Beach can admire the Festival of Trees in the Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens across the street from the Inland Waterway.  This year is the tenth anniversary of the show which draws visitors from around the state to savor the piney fragrance and admire almost 30 trees elaborately decorated to usher in a tropical holiday season.

Three Kings honor the First Christmas Tree

Three Kings honor the First Christmas Tree

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The Quin Hotel, New York Review

By  – November 15, 2016

If the best way to get to Carnegie Hall is practice, practice, practice, the best place to stay is the location, location, location of the nearby Quin Hotel.  Located just down the block from the iconic concert hall, it is at the corner of 57th Street and 6th Avenue, “where music, fashion, and art intersect.”  Once home to pianist Ignacy Paderewski and other artists, the vintage 17-floor low-rise Quin nestles near the mammoth towers that are taking over 57th Street. Totally renovated with luxury finishes and sustainable materials, it offers a comfortable yet urbane option for guests who want convenient, not impersonal, Midtown accommodations.

More than 208 guestrooms in a dozen categories from superior to a 1,900-square-foot penthouse are designed in sophisticated shades of beige, brown and gray and are stocked with a plethora of prestigious brand names: DUX beds are  done up in Sferra Venetian linens with squishy down comforters. Nespresso machines brew beverages to complement artisanal snacks. Marble bathrooms feature spacious ceiling rain showers with Fresh brand products and fixtures by TOTO. High-speed WiFi is complimentary, and suites include two Samsung LED HD TVs with HBO, CNN, MTV and foreign channels.

Guests can relax in the Apple-equipped Drawing Room or arrange in-room massage and spa treatments by Gilded Hands. While there is a state-of-the-art Technogym, Central Park is only two blocks away for joggers. The Attaché concierge service arranges shopping, gallery tours or restaurant reservations for those who choose not to enjoy classic American cuisine prepared by Chef Chris Shea at the on-site Wayfarer grille. For special events such as the U.S. Open, the hotel offers experience packages including breakfast, tickets and car service.

Besides comfort, The Quin prides itself on its artistic heritage and outlook. Artists, patrons and guests assemble for ongoing cultural exhibits, performances and events. An artist-in-residence program, a permanent collection and video displays on the lobby’s 15-foot art wall lend an air of culture. The hotel hosts a cocktail hour in the lobby on Friday and Saturday, an extra opportunity to experience the hospitality of a place described as a “quintessential” hotel.

The Quin Hotel, New York

101 W 57th Street
New York, NY 10019
1-855-447-7846

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So Much to see in New York’s Fair City

Don’t Accuse Syracuse of Being Dull

Whether you pronounce it Seer-accuse, Sarah-cuse, or Sir-Accuse, New York’s fourth largest city and home of the annual state fair is worth a visit.  Many traces remain of the city’s extraordinary legacy as pre-Civil War America’s largest provider of salt (!), a commercial hub at the crossroads of the railroads and Erie Canal, an important depot on the Underground Railway.  Pack up and spend a few days exploring the town.  Here are some goals and distractions:

 Monumental downtown architecture

Downtown Syracuse is rich in monumental architecture

WALK THE CITY TOUR

The Downtown Committee’s easy to follow walking tour leads you past 71 historic sites and buildings.  Happily Syracuse has preserved several monumental edifices from its Erie Canal boom years.  The monumental Carnegie Library, the clock-crowned Gridley building, the Romanesque style Neal and Hyde Building, the Art Deco masterpiece National Grid building are not to be missed.  Murals in the M&T Bank and the stately furnishings of the Bank of America are reminders of the days when monumental banks were built to impress their clients. Continue reading

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“Weigh” To Go

Shunning Suitcase Fees with Lighter Luggage

So far this year I’ve been to Turkey, China, Death Valley, Mongolia, Florida, Siberia, Kaliningrad, the Tyrol, Poland, Sicily, Ireland, the Gobi Desert — I’m on the road almost two to three weeks a month, and as I often travel alone, I bring gear that is lightweight and inconspicuous.

To minimize packing I’ve worked out a scheme based on color. I’ve assembled sets of single color “bottoms” — trousers + tights + a skirt + pair of shoes — each set coordinated with a zipper vest and an anorak jacket. I have these sets in five basic colors: black + navy + brown + olive + gray and I intermingle them with a few colored tops and matching earrings. While fully outfitted, I maximize the wardrobe I have to lug around.

One set of travel basics is an olive green color scheme

One set of travel basics is an olive green color scheme

For maximum flexibility I prefer two pieces of SAKS luggage, black and well worn to attract a minimum of curiosity and attention.

I pack the larger one without opening the expansion zippers — that leaves me room to unzip and add space to cart back souvenirs if I buy them on the trip.

The smaller one, with two separate zipper compartments carries my guide books and files in one half. In the other side I stash electronics — ipad, chargers, and adapters — plus an essential umbrella. It’s lower zip pocket is permanently loaded with a blanket/shawl and a small emergency kit with ear phones, band aids, sleeping mask.

I cart these along on a portable trolley — separate bags and wheels provide more flexibility for fitting into overhead compartments — and usually these two pieces can be carried on the plane — no baggage checks required.

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88 REASONS TO BITE INTO “A TASTE OF WEST CORK

Sightseeing and Sampling at Ireland’s “Food Paradise” Festival

With a temperate climate, fresh sea air and rich soil warmed by the Gulf Stream swerving nearby, West Cork at the southwestern tip of Ireland is an ideal location for agriculture to thrive.  Recent years have seen a resurgence of natural farming, and its bounty is highlighted each autumn in the Taste of West Cork. For ten days in September,  32 towns and 8 islands hosted 188 events and participants were treated to myriad activities — beekeeping workshops, gourmet walking tours, elegant candlelit dinners held in historic homes.  Arriving just after the opening weekend, I missed the opening few days but did attend sessions for almost a week.  Picking out events from each day’s list was daunting, but here is what I was able to taste and learn.

A multi-page program listed Taste of West Cork Events

A multi-page program listed Taste of West Cork Events

MONDAY

Arriving four days after the festival officially started, I drove straight from Shannon Airport to the Michael Collins Center in Clonakilty to attend a highly informative lecture and slide show detailing the region’s local hero who became the martyr of the 1916-22 Revolution and Civil War when this area was a hotbed of fervor supporting separation from England.  While knowledgeable Tim Crowley lectured, his colleague baked a delicious soda bread over the open fire.  It’s aroma was a treat to us all, and after it was popped from the pan, four lucky raffle winners each took home a quarter chunk. Continue reading

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Suzhou Highlights

10 Irresistible Features of China’s “Garden City”

China’s “Venice of the East,” has been a center of high culture and wealth throughout history attracting officials, scholars, wealthy merchants to its graceful greenery and waterways.  Now an emerging center of commerce and industrial parks, Suzhou’s ancient core retains a microcosm of the country’s history and culture.

Suzhou is a city of greenery and canals

Suzhou is a city of greenery and canals

WATERWAYS

Situated near the southern end of China’s monumental Grand Canal linking Beijing and the South China Sea, Suzhou is crossed by picturesque canals.  Lined with shops and cafes, historic Pingjiang Lu  is one of the popular pedestrian streets running parallel to waterways crossed by high stone bridges.  Cruises along the Grand Canal and paddle boat rentals offer a floating perspective on lush greenery lining the banks.

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Late Night in Guangzhou

ChinaDestinationsEditorialMagazineSeptember 2016

Photo: Guangzhou Opera House © BAOYAN ZENG | DREAMSTIME.COM

By  – September 1, 2016

Entertainment thrives in Guangzhou, a center of commercial and maritime activity and site of the world’s largest trade exhibit, the annual Canton Fair. Multitudes of visitors with time for fun after work can choose among concerts, historic venues, river cruises and a tram line with an entire district devoted to art and recreation.

Las Vegas and Broadway shows along with experimental theater and operas are performed at the city’s swooping, theatrical “double pebble” Opera House, created by renowned architect Zaha Hadid. On historic Shamian Island, overseas headquarters for foreign colonials, the recently renovated White Swan Hotel serves meals in three dining rooms and cocktails at the see-and-be-seen Destination Bar with views of the dinner cruises floating by. Lavish showboats outfitted in brocades serve up rich buffets and live music as they navigate past brilliant neon light shows illuminating highrises lining the Pearl River bisecting the city. Popular LGBT venues for disco, karaoke and bars are listed weekly on the Fridae website.

A simple approach is to jump on and off at stops of the charming electric Haizhu tram, which runs about five miles along the southern riverfront, passing several evening destinations. The quiet cars depart from the Canton Tower, where an observation deck provides “crystal” cars circling passengers around the perimeter. Farther along, the tram stops at Zhujiang Party Pier, an art and culture district devoted to galleries, restaurants and clubs such as the curvy new JZ Club, a barrel-shaped jazz bar with musicians playing on a stage surrounded by towering arched windows. A popular steakhouse, the Mr. Rocky Bar is done up in cowboy style with country music, free billiards, darts, telecast sporting events and nightly dancing to the house band.

The Shangri-La Hotel, midway down the tram line, offers a venue for elegant and inventive dining and drinks, where Summer Palace and Nadaman serve Chinese and Japanese cuisine and the less formal RIBS features a smoked rye with bacon cocktail, baby back ribs and unique and savory Beijing duck pizza.

The tram’s final stop, Wanshengwei, delivers passengers to the historic Huangpu Ancient Port, a preserved village of Lingnan-style carved wood buildings with wok handleshaped houses and tile roads. Harborside cafés serve sampan congee, shrimp dumplings and Huangpu scrambled eggs with local beers and cocktails.

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Kent Presents

The Kent School campus was the setting for “Kent Presents.”

Friday, September 2, 2016. Labor Day Weekend, end of Summer.Yesterday in New York we had some light showers intermittently throughout the day, and remaining overcast, with temps dropping into the 70s by late afternoon– which is what the forecasters are predicting for this last holiday weekend of the summer.

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Tanglewood Too

Adjunct Events at the BSO’s Great Music Festival in the Berkshires

The leafy setting of the BSO’s Seiji Ozawa Hall

The leafy setting of the BSO’s Seiji Ozawa Hall

While picnics on the lawn outside the big Koussevitsky Music Shed are the principle attraction for those who journey to Tanglewood, the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s iconic summer music festival in western Massachusetts, audiences should not overlook another option.  Also on the grounds is Seiji Ozawa Hall, a handsome acclaimed wood auditorium.  Housing the BSO’s Fellowship Program and hosting concerts and programs, the Ozawa offers concert-goers an additional venue and line-up.  Continue reading

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Destination Kent: Scenery and Study in Litchfield County

An Ideas Festival in Northwest Connecticut

Which panel discussion to choose? For one particular session, the options were the pros and cons of a guaranteed income for every American, “Hamilton” and non-profit theater, and the 21st century challenges of feminism ― plus there was the outdoors draw of beautiful Litchfield County on a splendid sunny day.  For over 300 participants who have traveled to the campus of the Kent School in scenic northwest Connecticut for the second annual year of “Kent Presents” the dilemma, seven times a day, is choosing one of three juicy topics to focus on for the next fifty minutes.

The Kent School campus is the setting for Kent Presents

The Kent School campus is the setting for Kent Presents

Kent School’s Mattison auditorium awaits a panel discussion

For the second year in a row, Litchfield county’s verdant hills were the setting for northwest Connecticut’s answer to Davos World Economic Forum and the Aspen Institute. Three Nobel laureates, four former US ambassadors, directors of four major museums, the former head of British intelligence, the scientist who helped confirmEinstein’s theory of gravitational waves  were among over 85 authors, doctors, technicians, artists, and other experts assembled to share their expertise with people who have traveled from New Mexico, Florida, Minnesota, Arizona, Louisiana, and the surrounding towns to attend.

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TOP TEN REASONS TO VISIT KALININGRAD

Woody Allen, German “Gold,” and Giveaway Prices in Russia’s Pocket Enclave

A theater complex in the center of Kaliningrad may seem like an unlikely place to find a pair of bronze eyeglasses mounted in tribute to Woody Allen, but “Woody” was  born Allan Konigsberg and before the Russians seized the region, this city wasKonigsberg the original capital of Prussia before Berlin. Now renamed for one of Stalin’s henchmen, Kaliningrad is the moniker of both the city and the tiny enclave or oblast  nestled between the Baltic seacoast states of  Poland and Lithuania, a mini Russian outpost rich in modern and historic lore.

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Nuggets of New York

Lesser Known Spots to Discover in Manhattan

The Empire State Building, Tiffany’s and Trump Tower, Rockefeller Center and the Statue of Liberty, the Metropolitan Museum and MoMA are among Manhattan’s “must see” spots for tourists.  But the island is dotted with less publicized gems that still merit attention.  Here are some stops an “insider” was invited to discover.

THE SEA GLASS CAROUSEL

Encased in its own spiraling nautilus shell pavilion, Battery Park’s merry-go-round is like no other. Without a center pole, guests seated in fanciful fish and sea creatures twirl around and up and down in a trip through a mystical “underwater” world.  Located steps from the Staten Island Ferry in historic Battery Park where the city originated, the carousel is open from 10 am to 10 pm, and after dark the 30 iridescent fish light up evoking a spin through the bioluminescence of deep ocean waters.

A nautilus shell shaped pavilion
Carousel riders sit in fishes inspired by actual species
The Sea Glass Carousel glows luminescent at night

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How to Attend Safari School

A See-and-Study-Wildlife Vacation

Instead of merely driving around in search of wildlife to gape at, a major South African wildlife centre offers the opportunity to observe rescued animals up close in their enclosures while studying  methods of saving and preserving the natural bush veld and its creatures.

Game drives pass giraffes and zebras

Rescued rhinos, elephants, cheetahs, wild dogs, lions, African wild cats, bald ibises, blue cranes, ground hornbills, sable antelope and wildlife are the featured guests, but human visitors are invited to encounter and care for them through the Wildlife Conservation Experience of the Hoedspruit Endangered Species Centre  in South Africa.  In an extensive three week program of lectures and hands-on experience, participants observe the everyday care of the creatures, study conservation, and tour wildlife areas.

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Destination Bridgehampton: A Cavalcade of Chefs

Attending the Hayground School’s Annual Feast

Travelers to the Hamptons know they can enjoy the food at ultra-popular Nick &Toni’s any night they can manage to wrangle a reservation.  But Toni, Toni Ross, is also a founding parent of the Hayground School and once a year it’s worth a trip out to Bridgehampton for the school’s famous Chef’s Dinner where celebrated chefs assemble to cook up an exclusive benefit feast.

Pre-dinner cocktails are served in a tent on the school’s 13-acre rural grounds.

             Every single seat at this year’s dinner sold out, but the cocktail reception hors d’oeuvres alone were worth the trip.  Among the precursor tidbits were lemony “Romance in Aviation” cocktails made with handcrafted Owney’s rum which is distilled in Brooklyn, little plates of lamb chops with creamy vegetable puree from French American bistro Camaje which forayed  out from Manhattan. Almond’s brought cups of a Malaysian corn soup, there was a selection of cheeses with cubes of quince jelly from Cavaniola’s in Sag Harbor, and Stone Creek Inn’s rounds of grilled octopus under little mounds of tomato preserves, lemon confit and Castelvetrano olives.

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A Weekend in Majestic Mongolia

Visiting Genghis Khan’s Spectacular Homeland

Oklahoma eat your heart out ― to say nothing of Montana, North Dakota, Wyoming and all those other “wide open spaces” where “the wind comes sweeping down the plain.”  Expansive though they may be, American prairies are literally dwarfed byMongolia’s majestic steppes which stretch endlessly into the distance.

Mongolia’s landscape stretches endlessly into the far off horizon

Within the vast green landscape, herds of cattle and horses and flocks of sheep and goats roam without fences amid intermittent multi-mile long wheat fields stretching out of sight into the horizon. It’s bitterly cold in winter, but in the summer central Mongolia is an idyllic landscape stretching almost farther that the eye can encompass, interrupted only by occasional round white ger (yurt in Russian) homesteads.

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