Middle East Archive
You are currently browsing the archives for the Middle East category.
March 13, 2008
- The World’s First Carbon Neutral City
-
Speaking of the United Arab Emirates (see previous post), I’m tres, tres intrigued by this carbon neutral city I hear the country has in the works. Construction on Masdar City broke ground early last month, but the $22 billion initiative is not slated for completion until 2016. Ultimately, the world’s first carbon-neutral city will house 50,000 residents and 1,500 businesses. It will not allow cars, but will require residents and visitors to reply on public transportation. The entirety of the city’s power will come from solar and wind energy sources, and the local water supply will be provided through a combination of desalinization and waste water purification.
The development may not be finished for another eight years, but it will be inhabitable by sometime next year.
posted in Destinations, Healthy Travel, Middle East. permalink
- Emirates Lands at LAX this Fall
-
The first non-stop flight from LAX to the Middle East touches down this September, when Emirates airlines plans to launch daily flights between the West Coast city and Dubai. The 16-hour flight will include a stop for plane changes, but will otherwise be direct. At the moment, judging from a look this morning for flights from San Francisco and Dubai, a traveler would need to spend between 20 and 33 hours flying to reach Dubai from the West Coast, with connections in either Atlanta, Paris, Amsterdam, Zurich, Hong Kong, etc.
The addition of this new route certainly makes reach this part of the world faster and more convenient for travelers based on the West Coast.
posted in Air Travel, Destinations, News, Business Travel, California, Middle East. permalink
February 28, 2008
- The Bizarre Case of a Starved Foreign Exchange Student
-
Traveling abroad as an exchange student can be a life-changing experience, but it can also be a harrowing one, especially when your home stay family’s cultural traditions and lifestyle differ drastically from your own. For most students, small traumas (like my friend who ended up sleeping in a room above the livestock in her Nepali host family’s home only to wake up one morning covered - head to toe - in itching bites courtesy of the bugs inhabiting the animals’ living space) build character and teach independence. When I was 14-year-old exchange student staying with a family in France, my personal traumas involved embarrassment over not understanding how to shower in the curtain-less bathroom without causing a flood and discovering I had unwittingly eaten gizzard one evening thanks to a gap in my vocabulary.
Unfortunately for one Maine teen, the experience of being a foreign exchange student involved real trauma. Jonathan McCullum, a 17-year-old student, reportedly dropped to a scant 97 pounds from his starting weight of 155 lbs when he ended up with a family that failed to feed him adequately. When McCullum returned home from his year living abroad in Egypt, his family was understandably shocked to find their son had lost one third of his bodyweight. Not the AFS organization is in hot water over the mess. As for the host family, their religious practices apparently involved a great deal of fasting. The story below also suggests that the host family balked at having to feed a strapping American boy, whose appetite exceeded that of the daughter they sent to the United States as part of the exchange program. Whatever the truth, it’s a sad story and a cautionary tale for anyone considering a study abroad home stay program.
posted in Destinations, Unusual News, News, Family & Kids, Middle East. permalink
- New York Times Travel Show
-
If you’re going to be in New York this weekend and you love travel, consider checking out the New York Times Travel Show, a veritable smorgasbord of travel information from resorts, hotels, spas, cruise lines, tour operators, tourist agencies and adventure travel companies from around the world. Along with vendor booths and live entertainment performances representing a vast array of cultures, the show features a Taste of the World Pavilion filled with international cuisine and cooking demonstrations, a Spa Pavilion offering sample treatments and discounted packages at spa resorts, travel author appearances and special travel deals offered to folks brave enough to book their next vacation on the spot. And with travel experts Rick Steves, Arthur Frommer, Ian Wright and Stephanie Abrams - among many others - leading seminars, the show offers a rare chance for face-to-face learning from leading peeps in the industry. Cost: $15.
posted in Hotels, Air Travel, Destinations, Train Travel, News, Family & Kids, Travel Books and Literature, Car and Bus Travel, Miscellaneous, Adventure Travel, Travel Advice, Deals, Contests and Promos, New Zealand, Cruise Travel, Hawaii, Spas, China, Mexico, India, Thailand, United Kingdom, Winter sports and travel, Germany, California, Caribbean, Florida, Spain, Insider Tips, Holidays and Special Events, Pacific Northwest, Southeast Asia, Africa, South America, New York, Las Vegas, Middle East, Colorado, Italy, France, Southwestern United States, Europe - All Countries, New England, Australia, Latin America, Foodie Travel, New Orleans. permalink
February 12, 2008
- Summer’s Acoming! It’s Fare Alert
-
Yeah, last minute travel can be cool. But it can also leave you cash poor, especially when you’re talking high-season travel in major vacation destinations. But as with most things in life, a just little edumuhcation can go a long way. Case in point: Kayak.com’s Fare Alerts.Create a Fare Alert (or 12) on Kayak.com or SideStep.com for the summer getaway(s) currently sequestered in your noggin by clicking on the “Get fare alerts for this trip” link on the top right-hand corner of the flight results page. You can track fares for specific dates, a flexible span of time (e.g. summer weekends or, say, the month of June) or an entire region (e.g. Europe). When your daily or weekly Fare Alert (you choose how often it arrives) touches down in your email inbox, you’ll be able to make informed travel decisions.
Depending on what you ask it to track (specific dates, flexible span of time or even top cities in a region), each Fare Alert can show you:
- How much the fare for specific dates has increased or decreased in dollars since the last alert
- The airfare history for your trip dates based on searches made by Kayakers over the past 90 days
- A snapshot of prices in Kayak.com’s matrix view, so you can quickly compare prices by carrier and number of stops
- The lowest fare available during a specific span of time (e.g. the next four weekends)
- The best fares available for popular destination cities in a region you want to visit (e.g. Africa)
Who knows, maybe you’ll still pay craptons to travel to the most expensive resort on the hottest island right in the middle of the high season. After all, it’s high season for a reason. But at least you’ll be pimping it out with full knowledge of your unbridled American excess. Just remember the wisdom of G.I. Joe.
(**Editor’s note: Yeah, Kayak.com owns us. You wanna make something of it? I’ll have you know I was surreptitiously using Fare Alerts to aid in making my personal travel plans long before Kayak.com bought our parent company SideStep.com in December. Nepotism, bias, blah, blah, blah. Fare Alerts just make good travel sense.)
posted in Hotels, Air Travel, Destinations, Train Travel, Family & Kids, Adventure Travel, Travel Advice, Techie Travel, Deals, Contests and Promos, New Zealand, Cruise Travel, Hawaii, China, Mexico, Thailand, Business Travel, United Kingdom, Germany, California, Caribbean, Florida, Spain, Insider Tips, Pacific Northwest, Southeast Asia, Africa, South America, New York, Las Vegas, Middle East, Colorado, Italy, France, Southwestern United States, Europe - All Countries, New England, Australia, Latin America, New Orleans. permalink
January 24, 2008
- Yeti Spotted High in the Sky
-
Although no one we know can provide us with an eyewitness account, we hear tell that a new airline was spotted in the skies this week: Air Yeti. Aiming to be the low-cost carrier of choice for travelers in Nepal, the Indian subcontinent, the Middle East and Southeast Asia, the Air Arabia-owned airline has its hub in Kathmandu, Nepal and flies to destinations that include Bangkok, Delhi, Hong Kong, Kuala Lumpur, Sharjah and Doha.
posted in Air Travel, Destinations, Unusual News, News, India, Thailand, Southeast Asia, Middle East. permalink
January 21, 2008
- Saudi Hotels to Admit Women Without Guardians
-
Newspapers are reporting that the government of Saudi Arabia has issued a statement to Saudi hotels asking them to admit women traveling without male guardians. It’s big news for Saudi women, who live with a host of restrictions placed on their personal freedom.
posted in Hotels, Destinations, News, Middle East. permalink
July 6, 2007
- Costa Indian Ocean-Middle East Cruise via Mauritius
-
Here’s an unusual cruise itinerary I ran across today: The Costa Marina ship with a 1,000 passenger capacity will set sail this winter from Mauritius (an island off Africa’s East Coast) and travel through the Indian Ocean, with stops in Madagascar, Mayotte, Kenya, the Seychelles, Jordan, Egypt and Savona. Prices for the 14-night cruise start at $1,879/person. Of course, that’s on top of the airfare you’ll have to purchase to get to and from Mauritius (not the easiest place in the world to reach). Certainly not your ordinary Caribbean cruise! You can kinda see the route in the image. Wish it was larger….
posted in Destinations, Deals, Contests and Promos, Cruise Travel, Africa, Middle East. permalink
January 15, 2007
- Economist City Guides
-
If you like your travel advice with a healthy dose of news and business-minded tips, then you shouldn’t miss The Economist’s City Guides. In addition to current events happening in your destination city, you’ll find extras like Cheat Sheets, which offer insider tips on basics like hotels and restaurants, as well as topics like taxis and bank holidays. In Dubai, for example, you don’t want to schedule meetings on Fridays, the country’s day of rest. In Hong Kong, business cards are a must for meetings. When you get to Mexico City, you don’t need to tip your taxi driver, but you should tip 10 percent or more at a good restaurant.
posted in Destinations, Travel Advice, China, Mexico, Business Travel, Middle East. permalink
January 5, 2007
- Conde Nast’s 2007 Gold List
-
Travelers can find lots of meaty “best of” picks in Conde Nast Traveler’s 2007 Gold List, its definitive guide to the best hotels and cruise accommodations the world has to offer. Search by location or categories like rooms, service, design, food and activities. If, for example, you wanted to know which hotels have the most impressive rooms on each continent, you’d find these results:
United States
Four Seasons Resort Hualalai (Hawaii)
Inn at Palmetto Bluff (Bluffton, SC)
Rancho Valencia Resort (Rancho Santa Fe, CA)
Africa
Bateleur Camp (Kenya)
Chobe Chilwero (Botswana)
Singita Private Game Reserve (South Africa)
Asia
Amandari (Indonesia)
Four Seasons Resort Bali at Sayan (Indonesia)
JW Marriott Seoul (South Korea)
Australia and Pacific Nations
Rialto Hotel on Collins (Melbourne, Australia)
Park Hyatt Sydney (Australia)
Huka Lodge (Taupo, New Zealand)
Canada
Auberge du Vieux-Port (Montreal)
Pan Pacific WHistler Mountainside (Whistler)
Auberge Saint-Antoine (Quebec)
Caribbean and Atlantic Islands
Hotel St. Barth Isle de France (Guadeloupe)
Sandy Lane (St. James, Barbados)
Malliouhana Hotel & Spa (Anguilla)
Central America and South America
Four Seasons Peninsula Papagayo (Costa Rica)
Swisshotel Quito (Ecuador)
Ritz Carlton Santiago (Chile)
Europe
Buckland Manor (Gloucestershire, UK)
Chateau Les Crayeres (Reims, Frances)
Four Seasons Gresham Palace (Budapest, Hungary)
Mexico
Las Casa Que Canta (Zihuatanejo)
Four Seasons Resort (Punta Mita)
JW Marriott Mexico City
Middle East
Four Seasons Cairo Nile Plaza (Cairo, Egypt)
Four Seasons Cairo at the First Residence (Cairo, Egypt)
Burj Al Arab (Dubai)
The complete guide is too exhaustive to publish here, but this is definitely a good resource to browse if you’re planning a luxury getaway, honeymoon or world adventure for the coming year.
posted in Hotels, Destinations, Top 10 Lists, Travel Advice, New Zealand, Hawaii, Mexico, Business Travel, Southeast Asia, Africa, South America, Middle East, France, Europe - All Countries, Australia, Latin America. permalink



