Monday, September 3, 2012

CNNGo.com

CNNGo.com


Insider Guide: Best of Honolulu

Posted: 02 Sep 2012 06:16 PM PDT

by Renata Provenzano

Four of the most glorious words in the travel lexicon?

"We're going to Hawaii!"

For many travelers to America's 50th state, that means at least a stop in the capital of Honolulu, a city of nearly a million residents on the lush island of Oahu.

Despite its epic popularity, the best of Honolulu still fulfills the Pacific promise of easy breezes, slow days, perfect beaches and lots of flowery drinks and shirts.

What may come as a surprise are the twists recently added to some familiar island icons.

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Changsha 'hot pot museum': Around China in 60 pots

Posted: 02 Sep 2012 03:00 PM PDT

by CNNGo staff

Hot pot mutton is yummy indeed, but seasoned Chinese diners know that it's the container in which the ingredients are boiling that tells the story of the meal.

A hot pot restaurant in Changsha in southeast China recently made a name for itself by opening a "hot pot museum," as reported by Chinanews.com.

The museum displays nearly 60 artistic hot pots sourced from different parts of China.

The museum, which opened on July 1, is a part of the latest branch of Tan Wang Fu Hot Pot (潭王府火锅), a Hunan-style hot pot chain with five branches across Changsha.

The exhibits are laid out on a 23-meter-long wooden shelf on the second floor of the 75-table restaurant, taking up approximately 150 square meters.

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iReport: My favorite beach

Posted: 02 Sep 2012 12:00 PM PDT

In this iReport assignment, we enlisted your most beloved strands of sand.

From white to black, from postcard views to unknown stretches on a South Pacific island, these are the beaches you recommended.

Been to another amazing beach we haven't mentioned? Tell us about it in the comments section below.

  Islands of Kona, Hawaii, United States

All the time to take the perfect picture.

Lee Gunderson, a photographer in Calgary, visits beaches on Kona two to three times a year. He recommends the beaches on Kukio Bay and Kahaluu Bay.

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In and out in a day: The longboat to Myanmar

Posted: 02 Sep 2012 10:00 AM PDT

by Ian Lloyd Neubauer

The release of Aung San Suu Kyi in late 2010 and the more recent easing of social, political and economic restrictions in Myanmar have turned the long-isolated nation from the pariah of Southeast Asia to the region's hottest travel destination.

Around 425,000 foreigners visited Myanmar last year, according to the Ministry of Tourism, with the number projected to grow to 640,000 in 2012.

But foreigners based in Thailand have long been traveling to Myanmar's deep south -- and just for one day. Strictly for visa runs as opposed to tourism, the trick allows them to skip across an international border and apply for a new 30-day tourist visa on return.

Accomplished by longboat, the journey crosses the mouth of the Pak Chan River, a broad estuary that marks the maritime border between Thailand and Myanmar.

On the Thai side sits Ranong, a prosperous provincial capital. On the other side lies Kawthaung, the southernmost point of mainland Myanmar and a key transit point on the Singapore-Calcutta shipping lane.

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10 hostel mates you meet in hell

Posted: 31 Aug 2012 03:00 PM PDT

by Jordan Burchette, Jane Leung

Hostels are great places to cultivate friendships and share your experiences abroad.

It's just a shame you can't always choose your neighbors. No matter where you are, you'll yearn to be any place else.

Meet the 10 people you never want to find sleeping above or below your bed. 

Also on CNNGo: World's best tourists

1. The one-man eating band


How to identify: He dines on only the most pungent, debris-yielding, noisily packaged foodstuffs ... at all times. His bunk is no more a sleeping quarters than an ogre's lair of gnashed pork byproducts and discarded nut husks.

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Myungwolgwan restaurant: Home of the fanciest (and most expensive) Korean barbecue

Posted: 30 Aug 2012 08:37 PM PDT

by Frances Cha

Myongwolgwan, the Korean barbecue restaurant at the Sheraton Grande Walkerhill Seoul, is an unusual establishment for a number of reasons.

First, it is the only Korean barbecue house run by a luxury hotel in Seoul.

In general, Korean luxury hotels rarely house Korean restaurants, and while this has been criticized often in the local press, the Korean hotel dining scene continues to cater more toward locals (and international guests) who prefer Western, Chinese or Japanese cuisine when it comes to finer dining.

korean barbecue Myongwolgwan has a garden with a spectacular view of the Han River, a main hall and a second hall, with a total seating of 700.
It is also ridiculously large (total seating 700) and almost too beautiful for a barbecue restaurant, housed as it is in a painted hanok -- traditional wood-frame Korean architecture.

The menu too, gets quite creative for a barbecue joint, which may have been one of the reasons why the place was voted No. 1 in the Korean cuisine category in the 2010 Zagat Guide to Seoul restaurants. 

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Most unusual, over-the-top hotel amenities

Posted: 30 Aug 2012 11:40 AM PDT

by Pam Grout

Private pools, flatscreen TVs, mega liquor bottles. Been there, seen it, drunk that.

Hotel amenities these days are as much a ploy to get you to gush about them to your friends back home as they are to make your stay comfortable.

This list of over-the-top hotel amenities is worth bringing up because each is a rare one-off, not available in all sizes.

1. Choice of 20 Fender guitars

Strings attached.

Who needs an in-room iPod, when you can make your own music on one of 20 Fender guitars available for free at Chicago's Hard Rock Hotel?

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Huge, huger, hugest: Shanghai skyscrapers walking tour

Posted: 30 Aug 2012 09:10 AM PDT

by Casey Hall

Some travelers love a walk in the woods; others prefer to stroll among a gleaming forest of skyscrapers.

For the latter, Shanghai is likely the best destination in the world.

The city's Lujiazui district is a wonder of urban development, with scores of impressive towers arranged like a phalanx of steel-and-glass sentinels.

Taking a few hours to wander around and up Shanghai's most impressive skyscrapers is one of the city's most irresistible adventures.

Our guide to the Shanghai skyscraper walking tour is Wang Fei (王飞), principal architect with Atelier Ten and an urban image theorist. Wang, 32, also teaches at the China Academy of Art in Hangzhou and University of Hong Kong Shanghai Study Center.

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So kneady: Thailand takes mass-massage record

Posted: 30 Aug 2012 01:56 AM PDT

Guinness World Records can be baffling (most toilet seats broken by the head) or worthy (fastest hurdles wearing swim fins). But none is more impressive for a weary traveler than a mass-massaging world record.

The latest has been taken by a group of 641 masseurs in Thailand, who massaged 641 people simultaneously for 12 minutes on August 30, 2012.

The most impressive part of the event was arguably the absence of any string-vested tourists with gnarled toenails and salacious grins, whom you might expect to be the first volunteers when free Thai massages are being given out.

This event however took place in the clinical setting of the Thailand Medical Hub Expo 2012, at the Impact Mueangthong Arena in Bangkok.

Both the expo and event are supported by Thailand's Ministry of Public Health and presided by Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra.

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Is the party over in Vang Vieng?

Posted: 29 Aug 2012 09:53 PM PDT

by CNNGo staff

Drugs, alcohol, loud music and crazy games on the river. Laos' notorious party town Vang Vieng may sound like a teenager's holiday heaven, but it's become too much for the country's authorities. 

Officials are clamping down on Vang Vieng's hedonistic ways, shutting 24 riverside entertainment venues "being operated in contravention of regulations, including the provision of unsafe drinks to customers, while some also had no business licenses," reports the Vientiane Times.  

The English-language newspaper said the closures follow the findings of a task force made up of senior tourism, health and public security officials.

The group was sent to Vang Vieng to refocus the popular tourist destination following reports of problems in the district, from bars openly selling cocktails made with hallucinogenic mushrooms to several tourist deaths.

"We have set ourselves the target to bring a new face to Vang Vieng district by October," said the leader of the task force, Boualy Milattanapheng.

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IFC Mall opens in Seoul

Posted: 29 Aug 2012 03:20 PM PDT

by Frances Cha

Seoul's Yeouido financial district finally offers major shopping and entertainment in the midst of all those shiny skyscrapers, in the form of the new US$2.2-billion IFC Mall Seoul. 

The mall opens today following its final few days of frenzied construction.

The self-proclaimed "first international-style shopping mall in Korea" is one of the most ambitious retail projects in Korea in recent years, with 100 brands spread out over three lower levels totaling 40,000 square meters of floor space. 

In addition to Korea's first Hollister store and a Banana Republic flagship store, the mall also houses a nine-theater CGV complex, 35 new restaurants and the first Apple outlet (Frisbee) in southwest Seoul.

Developed by AIG Global Real Estate Development in conjunction with Seoul City and operated by Taubman Asia, the mall is part of the larger IFC project, which includes two office towers and Conrad Seoul Hotel, which is slated to open in November.

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Sento spectacular -- Tokyo's amazing public baths

Posted: 29 Aug 2012 03:00 PM PDT

by Mark Buckton

Does the thought of getting nude with the neighbors or starkers with strangers in your local sento, or public bath, raise a smile or make you cringe?

Whatever your personal take, most reading this will be aware the process of bathing in true Japanese form has long been a communal, often social, activity.

Even so, it's still one part of traditional life that can put some visitors, and nowadays Japanese too, on edge.

Still, if you're not too far on the shy side, we recommend you swallow your pride, understand that your own bits and pieces are of little interest to anyone else and take off the towel.

Then and now

To most Japanese people, sento are a thing of the past, born of an era when houses did not have their own bathrooms in the decades and centuries up to around 1970.

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9 places to go native

Posted: 29 Aug 2012 11:40 AM PDT

by Daisy Liu

Can a tourist's experience ever be truly authentic?

If you talk with the locals, share their cuisine, and, heaven forbid, even do a little work while you're traveling, you can get pretty close. 

Many tour companies out there make an effort to submerge their guests in a local culture, sharing stories, sampling the food and practicing traditional customs.

Some of these programs also help to boost rural development and raise awareness of environmental sustainability. 

  1. Stay with an Amazon tribe, Ecuador


The Huaorani Ecolodge immerses visitors among one of world's most isolated ethnic groups in the Amazon.

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Airline's food costs more than the flight

Posted: 28 Aug 2012 11:22 PM PDT

by Zoe Li

Frugal passengers determined to save money may want to pack their own lunchboxes, especially if they've booked with Ryanair.

A meal onboard the no-frills Irish airline can cost more than the airfare, a new study by travelsupermarket.com shows.

The survey found that some budget airlines marked up their food and drink as much as 10 times the price at supermarkets. Still water on Aer Lingus was marked up 1,083 percent. 

But Ryanair was the worst overall offender. The Dublin-based airline is famed for its innovative approach to making a profit -- see their 5 money-saving schemes that would impress Scrooge.

When passengers are held hostage 37,000 feet aloft aboard Ryanair, they are charged £2.76 (US$4.36) for a half-liter bottle of still water.

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The secret confessions of hotel employees

Posted: 28 Aug 2012 03:10 PM PDT

What happens when someone asks hotel staff to share "things that are disturbing/interesting/unsanitary about hotel rooms" on user-generated news site Reddit?

An explosion of 5,575 comments ranging from secrets and tips to expletives and anecdotes by hotel staff and guests.

Sometimes the IDs are even more disturbing than the comments (see: BayHarbourButcher or cold_white_silence) and yes, many of the comments are pretty damn disturbing.

Here's the Reddit link. Read at your peril (be warned, you will not be able to stop) and especially not before a meal. Or a hotel stay. But first, some highlights.

Note: We cannot verify any of these reports. Some have been edited for clarity/spelling.


1. Simple verification 

"Just to clear this up, duvets are NOT meant to be slept on. I know many people are grossed out that they aren't always changed but again they are not meant to be used as a blanket. There is a large warm blanket underneath with the sheets that are supposed to be used. Every single person who travels knows the horror stories accompanied with bed covers, so the right thing to do is to fold it and place it on the floor or chair."

2. Surprise, surprise

"I worked in a youth hostel for a while; time limits were never even brought up there and that was by far the cleanest place I've chambermaided in."

3. Washing up

"Always use the disposable cups in the rooms. The glasses/mugs are usually just rinsed in hot water in your bathroom sink."

4. Bookings

hotel staff "Can't wait to write about what just happened on Reddit tonight ..."
"Don't book your hotel room online! The reservations are a pain in the ass to deal with. They were almost always impossible to cancel/refund. They also charge more than the actual rate and pay us less."

5. Safety

"Hotels, even nice ones, attract the worst kind of people. Don't let your kids run around at night, make sure your door is closed properly … Don't be an idiot!"

"Yes, always use the deadbolt and/or door chain when in your room."


6. Free stuff

"I'm a bellman and valet at a resort. I can give you free water bottles, tampons, valet parking, tours, shuttle rides, reservations, dry cleaning, hell even an upgrade to a better room if you just ASK ME. But no one ever does because they think I'm just a doorman. Oh and room service isn't open all night so the kitchen cooks meals (like sandwiches and dessert and what not) and leaves them in a fridge near the front desk in case a guest checks in at like three in the morning and wants food. Anyways in the morning there's just free food sitting there, every morning I get a free cheesecake if I want, but the guest could have it if he or she asked."

7. Who's afraid?

"The guests shouldn't be the ones scared in a hotel room (at least not in the hotel where I work). We have to hold our breath every time we enter a room that needs thorough cleaning. You can't believe the [stuff] we have to deal with sometimes. Most guests are friendly and thankful, but some people truly are animals."

8. Disturbia

"For the slower hotel goers. Do Not Disturb signs on a door most certainly means you will not get housekeeping service at any point during the day. I don't know how many people I have had to tell this to."

9. For the morbidly curious

"I worked at a hotel with a few friends of mine while at university. The biggest thing I found out while working there was that six months previously, a guest had hanged himself in one of the rooms and was found by the cleaner. From what I gather, the hotel was particularly empty at the time anyway and it was mid-afternoon, so they did their best to keep it quiet. The police arrived with the appropriate people, took away the body, without any guest having the faintest idea what was going on. It never even appeared in local news."

10. Timing

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7 sci-fi innovations that will change travel

Posted: 28 Aug 2012 03:01 PM PDT

by Hoishan Chan

You may recall from January a story about a Canadian man who was able to cross the U.S. border using a scan of his passport on his iPad. Turns out that wasn't entirely true, as he also had his birth certificate and driver's license on him.

Nevertheless, it's assumed this kind of digital identification will be part of the future of travel, just as some airlines already allow digital boarding passes on smartphones.

More high-tech innovations that appear beyond reality now could soon become standard.

Here are seven innovations that could just change, even enhance, the travel experience. 

1. Driverless cars

AutoNOMOS Labs tested its first driverless car in Berlin in September 2011. A similar project has persuaded the State of Nevada to allow Google to test its autonomous cars on Nevada roads.

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How to travel with your dog

Posted: 28 Aug 2012 11:40 AM PDT

by Karla Cripps

dog passportDon't deprive your dog of the opportunity to dress up in tacky tourist outfits. Take him on holiday with you. At the five-star Fairmont Whistler Hotel in British Columbia, cocker spaniels, golden retrievers and even German shepherds can be seen strutting through the hallways with their owners. 

Out the hotel's back entrance, stainless steel dog bowls filled with fresh water are set out to rehydrate tired pets returning from brisk walks in the mountain air. 

Long gone are the days when pet owners were banished to grim roadside motels with their contraband canines.

Thanks to a surge in the number of pet-friendly hotels, airlines with pet-friendly policies and pet immigration guidelines to facilitate international travel, more people than ever are taking their dogs overseas with them. 

"I travel with my dog everywhere," says TV's "Dog Whisperer," Cesar Millan. "It's the right thing to do. In Mexico, we went to the market -- dogs follow. Went to school -- dogs follow."

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7 hotels that changed China

Posted: 28 Aug 2012 10:00 AM PDT

by Steve Bellman

Hotels, in the Western sense, are a relatively new addition to China -- the oldest still standing only date back about 150 years.

But in that time, they have formed the backdrop to many turbulent moments in China's modern history.

Here are the hotels where you can still stay, and the history they've witnessed.

The Astor Hotel, Tianjin

China hotel with history -- inline 1Imagine tangoing with China's last emperor in this very ballroom.

The Astor in Tianjin dates from 1863 and hosted Ulysses S. Grant, the 18th U.S. president, during a two-year world tour following his second term, and Herbert Hoover in 1899, who lived in Tianjin when he worked as an engineer for the oil company Bewick, Moreing & Co.

However, the eight-story, 152-room establishment also witnessed some of the final grand days of China's last emperor, Pu Yi (爱新觉罗•溥仪).

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