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Saturday, January 26
by
GB
on Sat 26 Jan 2008 23:55 GMT
There are five of us here for a special occasion - KB’s birthday - and I can’t imagine a better place to stay than Hotel Tremoille. It has been undergoing an extensive renovation itself, 16 months of upgrading which has turned Tremoille into a very fine mid-sized hotel in the heart of Paris’ ‘Golden Triangle’, just a few minutes’ walk from George V Avenue and the Champs-Elysees. more »
Monday, December 10
Saturday, December 8
Sunday, November 4
by
KB
on Sun 04 Nov 2007 18:35 GMT
The Royal First Lounge at Bangkok is very impressive - better even than Qatar Airways Premium Terminal at Doha in my opinion. There are nice private rooms to relax in (photo shown), sleeping areas, shower suites and a full service menu. The lounge staff were extremely attentive and were constantly offering to bring me food and drink. They also made me an appointment to visit the Royal Orchid Spa where I had a nice complimentary neck and shoulder massage. When the time came for me to board my connecting flight, I was personally escorted all the way to the aircraft. more »
Friday, November 2
by
GB
on Fri 02 Nov 2007 13:01 GMT
The pitch seems too good to be true: an all-business airline, less than 50 passengers on a 757, flying from Stansted, fast track all the way, and considerably less expensive than BA or Virgin. Could EOS possibly live up to the hype?
As one of the world's biggest cynics, I have to say that it's almost all true! This flight to JFK was one of the smoothest I have ever had, and probably the best business class service. The EOS staff whisk you through the check-in and security process as fast as possible to the smart lounge where attentive staff ... more » Wednesday, October 31
by
GB
on Wed 31 Oct 2007 08:20 GMT
Looking for the Hollman Beletage Hotel? Do we have the right address? you may ask yourself as you head down Köllnerhofgasse, a short street about five minutes walk from St Stephen’s Cathedral. You stop at the entrance to a grand old apartment building and enter a secret code which opens the heavy door. Once inside, your eyes wander around the cavernous hallway, which looks little changed from the late Imperial era. more »
Sunday, October 21
by
GB
on Sun 21 Oct 2007 19:34 BST
I have a strange addiction to Japanese restaurants. It's strange, because I have a severe allergy to most fish and seafood. Therefore, seventy or eight per cent of the menu is off limits to me. However, I persist for two reasons: KB is with me and he loves sushi; and I can content myself with a superb bottle of Sake and a real treat: Wagyu beef.
Where better to sample these delights than Zuma? Tucked away in a Knightsbridge side street across the road from Harrods and Harvey Nichols, this place is one of the best Asian restaurants in London, ... more » Monday, October 1
by
GB
on Mon 01 Oct 2007 12:49 BST
There are a small number of world class hotels in St Petersburg, and this is one of them. The Astoria has been around since 1912, when the unfortunate Nicholas II was still living in style down the road at the Winter Palace. Just about every world leader who has visited the city since has stayed at the Astoria. more »
Saturday, September 15
by
GB
on Sat 15 Sep 2007 17:33 BST
It's been a tough week, and I'm feeling as old as Sir Menzies Campbell. The embattled, geriatric Liberal leader looks like he needs cheering up, and so do I. We head for Smiths of Smithfield, very much a local for KB as he lives round the corner, and one of our old favourites. This is about familiarity and comfort food. more »
Sunday, August 26
by
GB
on Sun 26 Aug 2007 17:26 BST
I could write a novel set in the Kurhaus. Having much work to do in the Dutch capital last year, I must have stayed there at least a dozen times. Last week I found myself back there for the day, and had to take the tram down to Scheveningen for a quick visit to the grand old lady of the Dutch hotel trade.
For those unfamiliar with the Netherlands, Scheveningen is the small outpost which sits right on the North Sea, about three miles from Den Haag city centre. There is a very long, straight drive down to the coast, ... more » Sunday, July 29
Wednesday, July 25
by
GB
on Wed 25 Jul 2007 03:18 BST
I really want to love Virgin Atlantic. If every flight were as good as our trip to Shanghai on that awful day, I would always use them whenever possible. But Sir Richard and the gang, in my opinion, need to ask themselves a key question: are we making Upper Class as good as it could be? more »
Sunday, July 22
by
GB
on Sun 22 Jul 2007 14:29 BST
Elaborate doesn’t begin to describe the interior of the Pestana Palace. Although this is a recreation of ‘haute’ 19th century European living, I’d describe it as more Rococo than Empire - the kind of place where Louis XV would have felt right at home (or Sir Elton John, in today’s terms). more »
Sunday, July 8
Sunday, June 24
by
GB
on Sun 24 Jun 2007 17:23 BST
We are staying in one of half a dozen tents in a mobile camp which moves round the Serengeti with the wildebeest. There is nothing to separate you from the life of the great plains stretching for hundreds of miles in front of us. Hyenas howl outside the tent most nights. The odd giraffe stumbles by. Leopards are chased away now and again by the staff. We are given a small whistle to use in case of ‘real emergencies’. I wonder what that might be like. more »
Saturday, June 23
by
GB
on Sat 23 Jun 2007 14:32 BST
I don’t know whether we can say that the Ngorongoro Crater Lodge is the best hotel in the world, the second best, or trailing in at number five. What I can say is that this is an outstanding travel experience which more than justified the bank-account emptying price tag. more »
Friday, June 22
by
GB
on Fri 22 Jun 2007 12:15 BST
Lake Manyara National Park is a lush green strip of land between the water and the Rift Valley escarpment which provides the most dramatic backdrop. The reason why this land is so green is that most of the rainfall in the area occurs on the highlands just above the lake. more »
Monday, February 5
by
GB
on Mon 05 Feb 2007 23:45 GMT
From the moment we step onto the neat One & Only yacht in Male harbour, we are inside the Reethi Rah universe. Four stewards in smart white costumes greet us offering drinks. It is raining as we motor towards the island. We scramble onto the top deck and enjoy getting wet as the Indian Ocean opens up in front us of. An hour passes before we approach the harbour of Reethi Rah itself. more »
Friday, January 5
Monday, October 30
by
KB
on Mon 30 Oct 2006 22:50 GMT
Arriving in Siem Reap, it's clear that Angkor is no longer off the beaten track. Multiple hotels line the main roads and tourist buses cause mini traffic jams in town. I was anxious that the main temple sites of Angkor outside Siem Reap would be overrun but fortunately our guide planned a circuit of the temples specifically to avoid the crowds. It did however, mean that we drew up to the Angkor Wat in the full glare of the midday sun. more »
Monday, April 3
by
GB
on Mon 03 Apr 2006 14:43 BST
I’m always fascinated by ugly towns: Chongqing, Nairobi, Detroit, Dundee. They’re ugly because they are (or have been) centres of industrial-economic activity: working towns. They may not have a Hyde Park or a Champs Elysee, but if you scratch just a little beneath the surface of an ugly town, you’ll find hidden treasures, quirky stuff which doesn’t exist anywhere else. For example, next time you’re in Detroit, check out the Cadieux Cafe, one of the last places in the United States where you can play authentic Belgian feather bowling and enjoy a bowl of steamed mussels at the same time.
more »
Thursday, March 30
by
GB
on Thu 30 Mar 2006 14:53 BST
One of our brilliant guides is standing by the sink-hole to hold on to each visitor while we look down. I am about half way down the queue. Everyone else has made it more or less intact and is now climbing the other side. I keep my penguin walk going steady right to the last step, and then start to feel my balance going. Instinctively, I push one leg out to balance myself, then realise I am going the other way. So I push back - right into the arms of our guide who grabs me with all the strength he can muster and utters a small cry of genuine concern. Without him there, I would probably have disappeared down that sink-hole forever.
more »
Monday, March 27
by
GB
on Mon 27 Mar 2006 15:07 BST
In a city which is know for its magical realism, the Faena Hotel & Universe is, in many ways the ultimate location. Just a few miles from where Borges wrote about fantastical other worlds - some fiction, some fiction within fiction - the Faena is almost certainly on another planet, although which one I’m not entirely sure. more »
Saturday, July 16
by
GB
on Sat 16 Jul 2005 16:31 BST
KB is driven mad by those documentaries on satellite TV about Rome, which constantly refer to 'the greatest Empire the world has ever known'. The worst offender recently was the bombastic Boris Johnson in his BBC series on the glories and grandeur of the Romans. As an educated, worldy, Asian-born scientist, KB finds this kind of casual, narrow-minded claptrap infuriating; and who can blame him? By the time Julius Caesar was rolling around the Dordogne, the great Chinese Emperor Qin Shi Huangdi had been underground with his Terracotta Army for over 200 years, having created what was (and is) really the 'greatest empire the world has ever known' - with a culture, arts and sciences far ahead of anything which existed in 'the west'. more »
Friday, July 8
by
GB
on Fri 08 Jul 2005 16:37 BST
Before dinner, we head down to the ground floor for a stroll around Pudong. It’s all brand new, bright and shiny, big and bold - just across the river from the old town. This is where Shanghai is building its world financial centre. At the end of this century, if our species is still here, that’s almost certainly exactly what it will be. Old Europeans may not like what is being built in Pudong, these massive temples serving international trade and business. But I find it oddly comforting, this confident vision of the future. It’s certainly a lot better than the alternative. more »
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