Monday, June 10, 2013

CNNGo.com

CNNGo.com


50 greatest summer music festivals

Posted: 09 Jun 2013 09:01 AM PDT

Put that iPod away -- these top rock spots don't guarantee sunshine, but they do guarantee a summer 2013 to remember
best summer music festivals

Whether you're into indie, grindcore, folk or hard techno, these epic summer events will be sure to keep your ears ringing till the fall.

Bonnaroo, Tennessee, United States

BonnarooFun on the farm.

Date: June 13-16

"The Roo" is one of the largest summer festivals in the United States, and it's deliberately OTT. It's also diverse; this year you'll get sets from Paul McCartney to Björk and Mumford & Sons.

The name of this party under the blazing Tennessee sun translates as "real good time," and this simple hippy ethos resonates throughout the 283-hectare farm.

Aside from watching a decent roster of artists, you can don your tie-die and throw your inebriated self around on carousels, slippery wet slides and silent discos.

www.bonnaroo.com

Sonar, Barcelona, Spain

Date: June 13-15

Multimedia meets music at this four-pronged festival (taking place in Sao Paulo, Cape Town and Tokyo as well).

We'd argue that the Sao Paulo version of this festival is even better, for its hip crowd oozing intoxicating Latin energy. Speaking strictly summer festivals, though, Barcelona is your next best bet.

"The event is about one word ... music," explains Charl Chaka, the managing director of Infusion events. "Nothing compares to Sonar when it comes to the best underground line-up around."

It's also an avant-garde, visual journey, with volt-loads of experimental digital art taking place all over the historic, sunny city.

www.sonar.es

Download Festival, Derby, England

Date: June 14-16

One critic from Rolling Stone Middle East says, "The organizers have been booking too many commercial emo bands of late, to get the teenagers in."

But regardless of its shameless sugar-coating, the satanic-metal atmosphere and rock-god lineup of the Download Festival is yet to be rivaled elsewhere in Blighty.

Heavy metal giants Slipknot and Iron Maiden headline this year.

www.downloadfestival.co.uk

Glastonbury Festival, Glastonbury, England

Glastonbury FestivalNo rain? No mud? Fake.

Date: June 21-23

Most summers this quaint rural spot turns into a mini city of more than 150,000 oddballs, old-school hippies and music-fanatics.

"You can always be guaranteed an incredible lineup," says Andy Buchan, editor of Infusion Magazine.

And regardless of the festival's commercial success, the sprit of the festival remains, explains Matt Wilkinson, new music editor of NME.

"Despite the number of pop acts on the bill, and the seemingly never-ending corporate tie-ins … the quirkiness of the festival, from the green fields to the weather, gives it a life of its own," he says.

This is the only place on earth you can lose your tent (and even your car) to two meters of mud and walk away thinking it was worth it.

www.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk

Also on CNN: 5 blooming great flower festivals

Hellfest, Rue du Champ Louet, France

Dates: June 21-23

"This picturesque town with historic churches gets invaded by satanic T-shirt wearing metalers with long greasy hair trying to find food and beer. It's absolute mayhem," says Orlando Crowcroft from Rolling Stone ME.

It started out when a small group of friends obsessed with hardcore metal, sick of trekking halfway across the country to see their idols, decided to bring the bands to them.

The event has now turned into four stages pumping out monstrously loud riffs to a frenzy of around 70,000 metalheads doing windmills.

"The lineup is always fantastic," says Crowcroft. "Good metal bands often get buried at big festivals, but here, they get center stage."

www.hellfest.fr

INmusic, Zagreb, Croatia

inmusic festivalJay Kay does his back in at INmusic 2011.

Dates: June 24-26

For the festival-goer who likes music but doesn't like to get too grubby listening to it, the camping spots here come with Wi-Fi and hot showers.

You won't have to stand next to teenagers chucking their beer around either -- the comfortable 25,000-partier capacity means there's plenty of room to breathe, and the idyllic forest and lakes make for a quick escape if it's getting too loud for your delicate head.

Once you've finished watching Arctic Monkeys and Iggy & the Stooges, go for a hike, swim, yoga session or a row (we kid you not).

www.inmusicfestival.com

Festival Au Bord De l'Eau, Sierre, Switzerland

Festival Au Bord de LeauLike something out of a painting.

Date: June 26-30

This festival gets our vote for its community vibe. The experience is part festival experience and part idyllic family holiday with a bunch of excellent musicians in tow.

"It's held in an amazingly beautiful setting near a crystal blue lake surrounded by mountains," says Lance Ferguson from deep funk outfit The Bamboos.

Here you can paint a canvas, pour yourself a glass of Champagne, and lounge back in a pedalo with Swiss Alps in the vista, all while listening to grooves from Theo Parrish and Mark de Clive Lowe.

www.aubordeleau.ch

Summerfest, Wisconsin, United States

The Eagles: the band everyone secretly enjoys.

Date: June 26-30/July 2-7

This 45-year-old festival -- also the world's largest music festival according to Guinness World Records -- is stretched alongside a 75-acre lake.

The event runs for 11 days on 11 stages.

In addition to music performances (headliners this year include The Avett Brothers & Violent Femmes, fun., Eagles and Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers), families can take some time out with activities like paddleboating.

http://summerfest.com

Baybeats Music Festival, Singapore

BaybeatsFree entry, priceless fun.Dates: June 28-30

Southeast Asia's premier alternative music festival is your best bet in the region; it emphasizes homegrown talent in multiple disciplines from folk, pop and rock to punk and electro.

www.baybeats.com

Rock Al Parque, Bogota, Colombia

Dates: June 29- July 1

There's no quaint festival vibe at Rock al Parque, as it's South America's largest rock music festival and is totally free.

A heaving crowd turns up every year and piles into the arena to catch a glimpse of mega artists. It can get pretty rowdy, so the security staff prohibit booze, cigarettes and studded belts.

www.rockalparque.gov.co

Roskilde, Copenhagen, Denmark

RoskildeWho needs a shirt when it's all in a good cause?

Dates: June 29-July 7

You get more bang for your buck at Roskilde, not just because the beer and food is cheap but because the northern hemisphere summer sun will be up from 5 a.m. until past 10 p.m.

As well as a great lineup including Kraftwerk, Sigur Ros and Rihanna across the eight stages, you can partake in activities at each of the campsites and do some skateboarding, watch a movie on the outdoor cinema screen, go for a swim and even fish for your dinner (if you catch anything they'll cook it for you too).

Mainly though, you'll be giving to a good cause by going to this event -- the organizers don't keep any profits but instead donate everything to cultural organizations and charities.

roskilde-festival.dk

 

July

 

Open'er, Gdynia, Poland

Dates: July 3-6

Identifiable by the retro Ferris wheel standing like a beacon against 20,000 tents, the Open'er is a different breed of organized fun.

It's less organic than other festivals -- you can't take liquor into the arena, have to queue for a designated camping spot and are not allowed to piggyback your mates so they can see the stage -- but it redeems itself through extracurricular add-ons including a pop-up theater, documentary screenings, hipster fashion shows and a silent disco in a bunker.

This year see Blur, Modest Mouse, Editors and Queens of the Stone Age.

opener.pl

Obscene Extreme, Trutnov, Czech Republic

Dates: July 3-7

Admittedly, this festival isn't for the masses; it's dedicated to underground extreme metal and grindcore.

The diehard fans total only 1,500 per year, however, this group of long-haired rockers keep the spirit of the genre alive, and there's an undeniable cameraderie in the air, no matter how threatening the decibels and band names.

Chapel of Disease, Christ Denied, Entrails Massacre, Gruesome Stuff Relish and Sublime Cadaveric Decomposition all grace the stage this year.

www.obsceneextreme.cz

Eurockeennes, Malsaucy, France

Dates: July 4-7

Dubbed the "French Glasto," Eurockeennes' biggest pull is its beautiful site on the Swiss border. Pick one of a handful of stages in the pristine nature reserve, lie down on the spongy green surface and do angel wings into the night.

Headliners include Jamiroquai, The Smashing Pumpkins and Phoenix.

www.eurockeennes.fr

Rock Werchter, Werchter, Belgium

Dates: July 5-7

One of the big five European festivals, with a great lineup every year, Rock Werchter still manages to maintain that small festival vibe.

It attracts a young crowd of overexcited Dutch and Flemish kids, but don't let that dissuade you.

With a lineup including Green Day, Vampire Weekend, Blur, Kings of Leon, Rammstein and Depeche Mode we'd happily hold back the hair of the odd vomiting teen.

www.rockwerchter.be

Exit, Novi Sad, Serbia

Exit festA quarter million good times.

Dates: July 10-14

A 2,000-strong protest against Slobodan Milosevic in a 17th-century fortress has, 12 years on, evolved into a swelling mass of 250,000 revelers, 500 bands, 20 stages and a 2012 lineup including Ceelo Green, Snoop Dogg aka Snoop Lion, The Prodigy and Atoms for Peace.

Over four days, metal, hardcore, punk, electro, reggae, indie and world music fans play together in this foresty fortress against an incredible backdrop of the second biggest Serbian city, Novi Sad.

"To me it's one of the best festivals I've ever been to," says Rodney P from Sleepin' Giantz. "The running order of the acts over the course of the event makes sense musically so you can really catch a vibe."

www.exitfest.org

Pohoda, Trenčín, Slovakia

Date: July 11-13

The aim of the game here is to relax (which is exactly what Pohoda means). And the killer down-tempo lineups, the fact you never feel like cattle (there are no queues) and the sweltering heat ensures that you do.

Last year the organizers cleverly brought in fire trucks to hose down the crowds, and the big bosses also thought of other atmospheric additions.

"They released thousands of Thai lanterns into the sky. It looked beautiful," says Ricky Fabulous from Belleruche.

"There's also huge Slovakian acts mixed in," he says. "I got to hear an aging and very strange prog rock organist just before Sharon Jones."

www.pohodafestival.sk

Bilbao BBK Live, Bilbao, Basque Country

Date: July 11-13

On top of a hill overlooking the city, Bilbao BBK Live is the festival that put the Basque capital on the traveling music fan's map.

Considered one of the best medium-scale festivals in Europe, the festival covers big international names, upcoming indie bands as well as local music.

This year sees Depeche Mode, Green Day, The Hives, Klaxons and local hero Fermin Muguruza in the lineup.

www.bilbaobbklive.com/2013/en

Dour Festival, Dour, Belgium

dour festivalRed Bull, anyone?

Dates: July 18-21

Here it's all about a belly full of local beer and pure unadulterated indie and hardcore music, with no frills or gimmicks.

There are fewer stadium names to pull the crowds, but instead dozens of bands that are on the cusp of blowing up play each year.

Each year the organizers construct two large stages for the headliners and seven mega tents (with floorboards and everything) ... at some point it's guaranteed to tip it down.

www.dourfestival.be

Benicassim, Spain

Dates: July 18-21

There's not a poncho in sight at this mid-summer Spanish fest. Instead it's heaving with Speedos.

The festival itself is a sweaty affair; if you find yourself covered in beer, with your face in a raver's armpit, fear not -- they have showers at the campsite. Alternatively, the beach is close by.

The town center offers slap up paella and refreshing jugs of sangria to wash it down. And the lineup's not bad either.

Party until sunrise this year to a lineup including The Killers, Kaiser Chief, Beady Eye and Primal Scream.

fiberfib.com

Also on CNN: World's most bizarre annual events

Finger Lakes Grassroots Festival of Music and Dance, New York, United States

Dates: July 18-21

Thousands of aging hippies, young hippies, families and farmers show up for this laidback affair in rural New York, a short way from Ithaca.

You'll find hundreds of aficionados of bluegrass, rockabilly, Irish music, rock 'n' roll, country and Native American music, plus a load of other hippy stuff from stripy clown pants stalls to an art barn and a healing tent (with herbal highs and remedies).

A percentage of the proceeds goes to worthy causes such as Doctors Without Borders and Musicians For World Harmony.

www.grassrootsfest.org

Pitchfork, Chicago, United States

Dates: July 19-21

Organized by the hipster publication "Pitchfork," this small festival likes it that way.

If you've heard of half the bands on the bill, own several pairs of skin-tight jeans and wear organic-designer-stubble, you're about as muso as you need to be to understand what it's all about.

Headliners include Björk, Belle & Sebastian and R. Kelly.

Kelly McClure, music editor at "Vice" magazine, is an anti-festivalist but says she'd visit Pitchfork before any other: "It's the least physically excruciating [festival] I've been to."

She's spot-on.

pitchfork.com

Secret Garden Party, Abbots Ripton, England

secret gardenKind of a weird Madonna-Shakespeare hybrid.

Dates: July 25-28

This festival is a garden party gone gaga. It's got a modest capacity of 26,000, but wander through the forest and you'll find strange festival-goers putting on their own performances in trees, plus bizarre art installations and treasure hunts.

The big stages will have Orbital, Lamb and Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros among others.

"Take all the magic, chaos and wonderment of the wilder fringes of Glastonbury, stick it between rolling hills and add a healthy dose of chemicals and you've got a magical, mysterious wonderland, where the Mighty Boosh could happily come to life," explains George Wilson Powel, former editor of Blowback magazine.

"From art installations to DJs in tree houses and more dress-up boxes than you can shake a fairy wand at, it's Cambridgeshire as you've never seen it before."

www.secretgardenparty.com

Cambridge Folk Festival, Cambridge, England

cambridge folk festA festival for the family.

Dates: July 25-28

Filled with laidback folky stalwarts, this festival offers that quaint English muffin-and-jam feeling, with its storytelling sessions for kids, countless experimental ales and the chance to admire some of the finest beards and pot bellies in Britain.

Special features include a chill-out flower garden, the MOJO signing tent -- for wannabe folk stars -- and plenty of impromptu sessions (don't forget to bring your tin whistle or bodhráin).

Tickets: www.cambridgefolkfestival.co.uk

Global Gathering, Warwickshire, England

Dates: July 26-27

It's become more commercial over the last few years with super-sized stages and high-profile headliners, but if you look hard, you'll still find enough dirty drum 'n' bass and hard house to dance to till you get blisters.

Posh clubbers can now bed up in luxury by booking a Suitehut with a TV and DVD player, fridge, and fresh linen. Plan B, Disclosure and Steve Aoki headline this year.

www.globalgathering.com

Midi, French Riviera, France

Dates: July 26-28

This itsy-bitsy festival focuses on new sounds. "Midi has traditionally hosted the first foreign shows by some of the world's best new bands," says Matt Wilkinson, new music editor of NME.

"The likes of WU LYF and Girls both kick-started their careers there."

The location gives the festival something extra, perched atop the seaside town of Hyères with medieval streets.

The music take place in Villa Noailles over looking Chateau Vallombrossa, which Wilkinson describes as "a 1920s surrealist dream of a building," with a deep-rooted cultural significance.

"It has played host to everyone from Salvador Dalí to Man Ray in the past," he says.

midi-festival.com

Fuji Rock, Naeba, Japan

Fuji Rock_Wave those glow-wands, pops!

Date: July 26-28

The largest festival in Japan has a year-on-year cracking lineup (expect The xx, The Cure and Nine Inch Nails this year), and a mystifying location in the mountains.

To get to some of the stages you have to trek through the forest or take a gondola.

There's also an outdoor cinema by the river, the chance to eat udon noodles for breakfast and the must-visit "Stoned Circle" where you can play ramshackle instruments and drums.

Tickets: www.fujirockfestival.com

Also on CNN: A first timer's foray into Fuji Rock

Splendour In The Grass, New South Wales, Australia

Dates: July 26-28

If you're headed south this summer (their winter) your best bet is this little beaut.

Now back in its rightful place (after a two-year location change), at Belongil Fields near the sleepy surfer town of Byron Bay, there are dollops of fine international sounds from Mumford & Sons and Of Monsters and Men, plus sprinkles of top Aussie rock including The Presets and Bernard Fanning.

Take a break from the crowds at the pop-up mall (named the Very Small Mall) and spa.

splendourinthegrass.com

Jisan Valley Rock Festival, Seoul, South Korea

Dates: July 26-28

Set in a beautiful ski resort, hundreds of pretty, multicolored picnic blankets are laid out in front of the stages here.

The colorful scene never lasts long though; they get trampled on when the crowd gets a sniff of the immense headliners.

This year's little lineup includes Stereophonics and My Bloody Valentine.

Tickets: www.valleyrockfestival.com

Also on CNN: 4 festivals in Korea really worth attending

Tomorrowland, Boom, Belgium

Date: July 26-28

A spectacular fairy tale-inspired stage design, a campsite named Dreamville and mind/ear-blowing electronic music can only mean one thing: the 2013 Tomorrowland festival.

Held in the appropriately named town of Boom in Belgium, Tomorrowland is one of the best dance parties on earth -- if the 2 million fans who tried to buy a ticket are anything to go by.

Tickets this year reportedly sold out in one second.

This year's lineup includes Armin van Buuren, Tiesto, Steve Aoki, Carl Cox and Avicii.

www.tomorrowland.com/home/

Boom, Idanha-a-Nova, Portugal

Dates: July 28-August 4

This hippy biennial event started out as a hard trance electronic party 15 years ago; now the giant rave has evolved into a medley of fire dancing, art, sculpture, yoga and more than 30,000 multi-cultural free spirits sporting dreads, tats and tie-dye.

The organizers call what they've created a "global psychedelic and alternative tribe."

We give them props for their successful eco-approach to festivals; the United Nations has even nabbed the organizers for help with their Music and Environmental Initiative program.

boomfestival.org

 

August

 

Wacken Open Air, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany

wacken open air festival"The lights ... we must worship the lights ..."

Dates: August 1-3

Last year it became a beast of a festival and smashed the record for the largest heavy metal event on earth.

In their own words it's "louder than hell." A crowd of 800 metalheads has evolved into an army of harder and hairier death worshipers, 75,000 strong.

Extra curricular activities include dressing up as Vikings and throwing axes in the Wackinger Village.

www.wacken.com

Stop Making Sense, Tisno, Croatia

Dates: August 1-4

This is what the Sunset Strip in Ibiza used to be like.

The Adriatic coastline still has that belly-flipping feeling as the sun goes down (or comes up), and this two-day dance event is a holiday within a festival.

Inventive jazz, Latin, dubstep and reggae beats play out while its endorsees relax at tiki bars on the beach or cruise by on boats.

www.stopmakingsense.eu

Lollapalooza, Chicago, United States

LollapaloozaBet he didn't realize how high it was.

Dates: August 2-4

It started out as a grungy event, set up 20 years ago by Jane's Addiction singer Perry Farrell; headliners back then included Soundgarden and Pearl Jam.

The event became a traveling circus and popped up in different places across the United States. Since 2005, however, the festival has settled down in Chicago and hosts more than 130 acts from mainstream pop to indie.

Take your little nippers to this fest, there are usually tons of attractions to keep them busy -- from comedy shows, to clown classes at the Kidzapalooza -- then skip off and see The Cure, Phoenix and New Order on stage.

www.lollapalooza.com

Standon Calling, Hertfordshire, England

Dates: August 2-4

This boutique fest, with a maximum of 5,000 people, is one of the youngest picks on our list and started back in 2001 with 25 people in the grounds of a small country house.

"It's turned a manicured garden into a life size 'Button Moon' set," says Georgina Wilson Powell, former editor of Blowback magazine.

"Along with a late-night rave that brings a sci-fi industrial edge to the field."

The organizers have a canny knack of showcasing bands before they get massive. Previous acts include Florence and the Machine, Friendly Fires and Mumford and Sons.

This year you can get intimate with Digitalism, Band of Skulls and De La Soul.

www.standon-calling.com

Satchmo Summer Fest, New Orleans, United States

Dates: August 3–5

This lively, free street festival in the French Quarter was set up to honor Louis Armstrong. Over three days there's an unforgettable atmosphere of raw soul, blues and jazz.

"It somehow manages to be quaint, but huge," says Bennie Pete the tuba player of the Hot 8 Brass Band. "The 24-meter tents are set up in the heart of New Orleans and offer the soul and essence of the city through music, for one weekend."

Dance in the street during this family event, and fill your belly with the Creole tomato gazpacho with Louisiana crabmeat from The Thee Muses restaurant on site.

www.fqfi.org

Sziget, Budapest, Hungary

Dates: August 5-12

The lineup here is monster. Somehow Sziget gets it right every year.

The party train runs from the west of Europe onto the island in the Danube (while DJs play warm-up sets), then arrive at a lush forest lit up by fairy lights and flanked by golden sands, where you can pitch your tent.

People often turn up with their own turntables, while others relax on full sofa sets, get sporadic tattoos and cook hog roast -- and this is all just in the campsite.

Mystery Jets, Blur, John Digweed, Dry the River and Peter Bjorn & John feature this year. Once you're done with them, you can go bungee jumping.

"A truly wonderful setting for a week-long festival," says Phil Dudman, clubs and live music editor at Mixmag.

"My first year there was 2006," he adds. "There was an incredible thunderstorm right in the middle of Radiohead's 'Paranoid Android,' the only time it rained all week, which was just epic."

www.sziget.hu

Way Out West, Göteborg, Sweden

way out west festivalWiz Khalifa rocks the crowd.

Dates: August 8-10

Throughout the festival, set in the pretty Slottskogen park, Göteborg holds gigs all around the city in its pubs and clubs, creating an explosive music-fueled city-break.

www.wayoutwest.se

Outside Lands, San Francisco, United States

Dates: August 9-11

At this eco-affair bicycle valets greet new arrivals and Golden Gate Park turns into a cultural wonderland for one weekend of the year.

Here there's an emphasis on decent food and wine from the region (there's an awesome organic farmer's market) and one stage is solar-powered.

Red Hot Chili Peppers, Paul McCartney, Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Nine Inch Nails feature in 2013.

www.sfoutsidelands.com

Endorse it in Dorset, Dorset, England

Endorse itDorset's Endorse It -- get it?

Dates: August 9-10

Here you'll find great music and lots of burly men wearing dresses. If you've got no inhibitions and like the idea of intimate tents filled with punks flinging themselves around to live reggae and rock, this place is for you.

"It's full of actual punks -- not weekend warriors that go back to normal jobs and dress accordingly," says music promoter Tomus Frog from GutRot.

"These guys actually have Mohawks all year round," he says, and the last day of the event is a shocker: "It's an amazing spectacle -- tattoos, makeup and fishnets with hair in all the wrong places. A very weird day."

endorseit.co.uk

Summer Sonic Festival, Osaka and Chiba, Japan

Dates: August 10-11

This mega event is the poppier version of Reading and Leeds, with a Japanese twist.

Some 60,000 attendees congregate at stadium-sized indoor stages (plus the Marine outdoor stage), and the Japanese show their appreciation by pogoing in a wavy sea of raised hands, like some kind of well-organized riot.

Headlines this year are an eclectic but mighty mix including Muse, Pet Shop Boys, Beady Eyes, Metallica and Linkin Park.

www.summersonic.com

World Electronic Music Festival, Ontario, Canada

Dates: August 16-18

Formerly the World Trance Festival, the World Electronic Music Festival is three days of non-stop shiver-inducing crescendos, loops and beats from 200 international artists.

This giant rave-up is an off-the-chart clubbing experience. You'll find thousands of sexy dubstep, jungle, electro, house and trance fans bonding to the baseline and grinding their teeth into the night.

wemf.com

Hip Hop Kemp, Hradec Králové, Czech Republic

Dates: August 22-24

B-boys, break dancers and MCs from across the world congregate at this killer event dedicated to all things hip-hop.

The 500 cherry-picked performers during the three-day festival include DJs, graff artists, plus grime and dubstep DJs. The lineup this year includes Kendrick Lamar, EL-P and Souls of Mischief.

"It's the world's biggest festival dedicated to every facet of hip-hop culture," says hip-hop expert DJ Excalibah, former BBC 1Xtra presenter and journalist.

"Expect to see classic golden era artists alongside newer acts from all across the globe."

"Kemp is sick," says Fallacy from Sleepin' Giantz. "It has the biggest names in hip-hop and grime from all over the world, and they always get the hot artists before they blow up so you get a peek into the future."

www.hiphopkemp.cz

Shambala, Northamptonshire, England

Date: August 22-25

A festival based on the concept of "purposeful hedonism," you can't help but leave a bit of your soul at this festival that attracts lefties, environmentalist and dreamers.

"It's about the people and the party," says Paul Jonas, managing director of Tru Thoughts Records. "Shambala is a return to basics with an eco attitude, a loving ethos and a variety of music booked for its musicianship, rather than its effectiveness selling tickets."

We strongly recommend a break from the serious music to take part in the Shambolympics: jumping for a long time and the pent-up-aggression-athlon.

www.shambalafestival.org

Also on CNN: 8 best Indian music festivals

Creamfields, Cheshire, England

CreamfieldsA workout for your eardrums and your arms.

Dates: August 23-25

The daddy of European dance festivals is a hedonistic affair. It swaps bellbottoms, facepaint and falafel burgers for pyrotechnics, glow sticks and back massages.

"Dance music festivals are entirely different beasts," says Phil Dudman the clubs and live music editor of Mixmag magazine. "I was fortunate enough to fill in for the Brookes Brothers there last year in the Mixmag Silent Disco.

"I'd never deejayed to a crowd bigger than 300 people and here I was, stepping up at the last minute in front of 4,000 mad-for-it ravers. That was the best night of my life."

"The vibe is electric, the lineups are usually of the cutting edge of music and you can find a Creamfields festival on just about every continent on the globe," adds Safe from Smokingroove.

www.creamfields.com

Reading/Leeds Festival, Reading and Leeds, England

Dates: August 23-25

"In my book, this is the quintessential rock festival," comments James McMahon from Kerrang. "For broad booking, genuine exclusives, no experiential nonsense clogging up your day, just out and out rock 'n' roll fun."

In true Reading/Leeds style, the mosh pit will explode at some point in the weekend with rowdy head-banging teens occasionally lobbing toilet rolls and beer grenades at unpopular bands.

The metal, punk and emo lineup is equally hard to ignore -- countless bands play their best set of the year, or face the wrath of the crowd.

Tip: when nature calls, make sure there's no toilet-tipping going on (it usually happens on the last day of the festival).

www.readingfestival.co.uk, www.leedsfestival.co.uk

The Burning Man, Nevada, United States

Burning manArsonists unite.

Date: August 26-September 2

Set in the desert in 45-C heat, this lifeless patch of sand turns into a 50,000-strong city (affectionately named "Black Rock City") come August.

The festival starts on the Monday before Labor Day, and on the Saturday night they set light to a 12-meter-tall effigy of "The Man" and a smaller wooden dog.

There are no stages, showers, or food stalls here, visitors bring their own entertainment to this gathering filled with non-judgmental veterans, deep-rooted in radical self-expression through music and art.

www.burningman.com

Bumbershoot, Seattle, United States

BumbershootNope, no phone reception however high you reach.

Dates: August 31- September 2

The laid-back vibe of North America's largest arts festival fits well in Seattle's fresh mountain air.

It serves up flavors you probably won't get elsewhere (Wanda Jackson and the Dusty 45s,The Vaselines, Jane's Addiction and Passion Pit), and during the three-day event there's countless art shows and performances to keep you occupied.

www.bumbershoot.org

 

September

 

Bestival, Isle of Wight, England

Bestival 2011Electric entertainment, in every sense.

Date: September 6-9

This year the likes of Elton John, Snoop Dogg and Franz Ferdinand will light up this 50,000-strong fancy dress party.

Not only does everyone turn up looking like a "Sesame Street" escapee, each year they rig up equally odd places to sleep: yurts, tepees, squrts and wooden beach-style huts.

Beryl the Bespoke Bus can also be hired -- she's a three-bedroom Cornish cottage on wheels.

"Organiser Rob Da Bank puts his quirky touches on everything," says Andy Buchan, Infusion Magazine's Middle East editor.

"From the lineup to the non-music tents which make Glastonbury's Lost Vagueness seem sedate in comparison, it's a winner in my eyes."

www.bestival.net/

Berlin Festival, Berlin, Germany

Berlin Festival 2011_4_credit Where crowd surfing takes an hour.

Dates: September 6-7

Set in a former airfield, you have to walk through an arrivals hall to experience this one.

There are immigration booths, baggage conveyor belts and an old-school departure board where they put the indie, punk and electro lineup on display.

Over the weekend there will be surprisingly decent art installations from local and international urban artists, plus music shows on runways and an open-air silent disco.

This year catch Björk, Boys Noize and John Talabot.

www.berlinfestival.de 

Also on CNN: 10 of the world's weirdest film festivals

Poutine in Tokyo: Japan takes on Canada's favorite comfort food

Posted: 05 Jun 2013 08:27 PM PDT

Can a dish made of French fries, cheese and gravy catch on in the land of ramen? One Japanese fan is willing to take the risk

In Tokyo's jam-packed restaurant landscape, filled with sushi, ramen and hundreds of other options, 26-year-old Yuta Fujino's modest establishment stands out.

Robson Fries, tucked away in the winding streets of the Japanese capital's funky Shimokitazawa neighborhood, has a menu focused on one item only: Canadian poutine. 

"I lived in Vancouver for a year in 2008," says Fujino. "It was the first time I had poutine. The taste surprised me."

Robson Fries, named after one of Vancouver's most famous streets, has been serving up cheesy goodness to Tokyo for a year. So much so that he was motivated to bring the popular fries/cheese/gravy combo to Japan.

But before he opened his business in June of 2012 -- it's named after Robson Street in Vancouver -- he went on a pilgrimage to the Canadian province of Quebec, the birthplace of poutine, and spent time training at a restaurant in Montreal. 

"I asked them how to cook gravy and how to cook fries and everything," he recalls. "They were really kind. They helped me with everything." 

More on CNN: World's 10 greatest comfort foods

National dish, international buzz

Poutine, seen here with real cheese curds, is Canada's unofficial national dish. Poutine, Québécois slang for "a mess," was created in the 1950s. The classic version consists of French fries, a beef or chicken stock-based gravy and white cheddar cheese curds that squeak when chewed -- or as they say in French, "le fromage qui fait 'squick-squick." 

"It's simple and good," says Patrick Martineau, co-founder of Poutinewar.com, a website dedicated to all things poutine.

"People want more because it's good fast food and it could be fancy and funky at the same time."

These days, poutineries add a wide variety of toppings, from various types of meat and vegetables to different sauces and fried eggs.

Montreal-based chef Chuck Hughes mixed in lobster when he used the dish to win Iron Chef America in 2011.

The fascination with this fare has morphed into such an obsession that Canadians pay tribute to it with an annual World Poutine Eating Championship in Toronto and Poutine Week, or Semaine de la Poutine, in Montreal.

Restaurants from New York to Chicago, Chiang Mai to Auckland also serve this calorie-packed cuisine.

More on CNN: 11 things to know before visiting Quebec 

Poutine and Canada Dry. Doesn't get more Canuck then that. At Robson Fries, diners pass through a set of sliding doors to step into the restaurant, which occupies a space no bigger than a parking spot.

Fujino enthusiastically runs through the menu: the gravy poutine, the butter chicken curry poutine, the chili poutine, plus the long list of add-ons ranging from fried garlic to corn to jalapeño to roast beef.

Then Fujino's colleague, Naoki Shiba, gets to work, cooking up the fries in rice bran oil, which is lower in cholesterol.

"Sei!" Shiba shouts a few minutes later.

"Some ramen shops say that when the noodles are done," explains Fujino. "Here, it means we've fried the French fries twice."

He pauses for a few seconds. 

"And it entertains customers."

More on CNN: The best sushi restaurants in Tokyo

Curd crisis

Japanese diners give Robson Fries a try. Clearly, fries topped with cheese is a dish that knows no cultural bounds. Hardcore poutine fans will scoff at the lack of a key ingredient in the dish -- cheese curds.

Fujino is unable to import them from Canada, so he uses shredded cheese as a substitute. Some poutine aficionados would consider this sacrilege. 

Nevertheless, the fries float in that magical zone between crispy and soft. The cheese, while not the real deal, melts into all the right places. The gravy has a light consistency, and is salty with just a hint of sweet. 

"That was the most difficult thing," he proudly replies, when complimented on his gravy. 

The Japanese customers seem just as enthusiastic as the Canadian ones who come to Robson Fries for a taste of home.

Eriko Fujita, 22, chows down on a roast beef poutine with her friend, Naoko Miashita. 

"I like it because it's greasy," says Fujita between bites. 

"It's delicious," adds Miashita.  

Robson Fries, Shimokitazawa, 2-31-5 Setagaya-ku, Tokyo; +81 3 6407 1485 

More on CNN: World's 50 best foods 

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Latest Travel News Daily Email from ASIA Travel Tips.com

Monday, 10 June 2013. News from over the weekend and today Asia time.

The ASIA Travel Tips Team
http://www.asiatraveltips.com
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++


10/6/2013 AirAsia Launches Free Shuttle Bus Transfers to/from Mandalay Airport.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/106-AirAsiaMandalay.shtml


10/6/2013 ACI Reports 4.6% Increase in Passenger Traffic in April 2013.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/106-AirportTraffic.shtml


10/6/2013 ATR -600 Series Granted ETOPS 120 by EASA.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/106-ATR.shtml


10/6/2013 AirAsia to Increase Bangkok - KL Flights.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/106-AirAsia.shtml


10/6/2013 Mandarin Oriental Enters Global Partnership with UnionPay.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/106-UnionPay.shtml


10/6/2013 IHG Signs Holiday Inn Express in Nicaragua and Honduras.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/106-HolidayInnExpress.shtml


10/6/2013 Langham's First Hotel in Canada Undergoing Multi-Million Dollar Renovation.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/106-EatonChelsea.shtml


10/6/2013 Archipelago Breaks Ground on Aston Kupang Hotel & Convention Center.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/106-AstonHotel.shtml


10/6/2013 SIA Selects Rolls-Royce Engines to Power Boeing 787-10Xs.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/106-SingaporeAirlines.shtml


10/6/2013 Qatar Executive Awarded AOC by QCAA.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/106-QatarExecutive.shtml


10/6/2013 HKRFU CEO Resigns.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/106-HKRFU.shtml


9/6/2013 Singapore Beats Malaysia to Win HSBC A5N Division I Promotion.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/96-FiveNations.shtml


9/6/2013 British & Irish Lions Name Team to Play Combined Country in Newcastle.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/96-LionsTour.shtml


7/6/2013 A Swim to Remember - HK Harbour Race to Take Place 6 October.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/76-HarbourSwim.shtml


7/6/2013 Name Change for Nikko Bali.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/76-NikkoBali.shtml










- Prefer the convenience of an RSS Feed? The ASIA Travel Tips daily travel news RSS Feed is at:
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/travelnews.xml
____________________________________
Advertise here contact: webmaster@asiatraveltips.com




END

Established in 1997, ASIA Travel Tips was the first online daily travel news service in Asia. If
you know of any colleagues or friends who may be interested in receiving our daily travel news
email, please do ask them to subscribe. Thank you.

To unsubscribe, simply reply to this email and place "unsubscribe" (in English) as the subject.
To change your email simply reply to this email and place "change email" (in English as the
subject, be sure to let us know both the old email address, as well as the one you wish to
change it to).

If you receive an error trying to connect to any of the above pages, please go to
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/LatestTravelNews.htm and use the links there. If that fails please
feel free to contact us: webmaster@asiatraveltips.com

All editorial comments should be sent to the Editor - Steven Howard - editor@asiatraveltips.com

Special Travel Trade and Media Rates -
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/TravelTradeRates.shtml

Calendar of Travel Trade Shows and Exhibitions -
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/TravelTradeShows.shtml

Latest Travel News - FAQ -
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/TravelNewsFAQ.shtml

Travel News Archives (since 2000) -
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/TravelNewsArchivesMenu1.shtml

To enquire about sponsorship opportunities please send an email to:
webmaster@asiatraveltips.com

http://www.asiatraveltips.com
____________________________________

CNNGo.com

CNNGo.com


Opinion: Photography has ruined travel

Posted: 08 Jun 2013 02:57 PM PDT

Our obsession with capturing every experience through our cameras is sabotaging our memories, not enhancing them

When concert pianist Krystian Zimerman stormed off stage this week because an audience member was recording him through a camera phone, he re-opened the debate on the pros and cons of camera-phone technology. Our senior producer wrote about this topic in 2011 -- here's the piece again. Let us know what you think in the comments.

There is an addiction that has passed unnoticed into modern society, threatening to ensnare the minds of everyone reading this article, and more.

It is creeping up on reasonable members of the civilized world, turning us all into beaming, giggling fools, our faces locked into clownish grins and our brains distracted at the slightest click.

The bane of 21st-century life is the phone camera, a product of such technological prowess and immediate convenience that no one would blame you for "just trying it."

One click leads to another; if you don't like the first hit you delete and try again.

More on CNN: 10 of the world's most hated airports

Before you know it you have 300 pictures on your phone comprising beaming, giggling fools, plates of food and cats making funny faces and you have succumbed; you have been dragged in; your life is now defined by images on a handset and the same goes for all your friends.

A menace to memory

The real victims of this click-happy menace are travelers.

Not just the travelers who hope to see a spectacular waterfall in Chile only for the view to be blocked by hundreds of beaming addicts, but also those camera-phone addicts who are themselves travelers.

Because much like the wretch who drinks to be happy, the snappers are deluded: they think their photos are creating memories, when in fact they are sabotaging them.

I was one of them.

My junk was the real deal. Class-A stuff, the cocaine of the photography world -- the digital SLR.

With this oversized device I felt confident. I felt virile. It made me feel superior to the beaming, giggling amateurs fumbling about with their pathetic phones and small, flaccid point-and-shoots.

More on CNNGo: Nat Geo's Steve McCurry on travel photography

It took an epiphany for me to kick the habit.

I was diving in Thailand, when a whale shark emerged from the gloom. I snapped away at the beast with my underwater apparatus for the few minutes of air I had left, then returned topside to high-five and celebrate this potentially once-in-a-lifetime experience.

As I scrolled through the 100-odd pictures I had, I realized: they were all I had.

My memories are framed by the 2x2-inch blurry screen of my camera. Not once did I look up to see the fish with my own eyes.

whale shark As the whale shark passed by, the only view I got was through my camera.

Trapped by technology

The problem runs much deeper than a small camera addiction too. The technological age has trapped us inside cotton-wool cages.

Just over a decade ago there was no Google to point you to the nearest café. No satellite technology connecting you, via your phone, to a computer to an ATM to the nearest hotel.

When people traveled, they got off the plane and explored. They asked people, real people, where to go for a great night out, not some kind of Stephen Hawking robot girl inside your phone.

Sorry, Siri, you're not my type. Great fun for profound philosophical inquiries, but when it comes to places to get good dim sum, "25 alternatives within half a mile" is such a turn-off.

On the other hand: iPhone photos like you've never seen

Too often the Internet search is a first resort rather than a last, a shortcut that, at least for travelers, gets us to the end while bypassing the means. It is the destination without the journey.

So here's a challenge: get lost. Seriously. Next time you're in a new town, ditch the phone. Disable your GPS. Close your eyes, point, then open them and walk. If you need to find somewhere, ask someone.

Even if the place recommended by Real Human is a dive, takes you for US$15 a beer and gives you an intestinal worm, at least you get a good story.

At least you've traveled and explored and discovered, for yourself.

But in fact the place recommended by Real Human is far less likely to be a disaster than one randomly suggested by an algorithm.

More from James Durston: Boozing Brit expats should be chained up

Getting lost is something to be embraced, not feared.

That's when you discover the cafe with the bubbling soup served by cats in bowler hats that somehow Lonely Planet (or even CNN Travel) managed to miss.

Far more fulfilling, I think, than the perfectly efficient evening of hotel-restaurant-hotel, courtesy Google Maps.

What do you think? Is technology enhancing or ruining travel? Leave a comment.

If you must take photos on your travels, check out these articles first:

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of James Durston.

First published November 2011, updated June 2013

Friday, June 7, 2013

CNNGo.com

CNNGo.com


Too Glee or not too Glee? Airline reveals 'hipster' uniforms

Posted: 06 Jun 2013 11:40 PM PDT

Alas poor Air Canada rouge, no one told them it's over already

"Inspired by Glee!" social media has been saying about Air Canada rouge's newly revealed flight attendant uniforms.

It's certainly the exact look Will Schuester's been pushing for three years. 

More on CNN: Gallery: Sexy flight attendant uniforms of the past

Ahead of its July 1 launch, Air Canada's new low-cost carrier has opted for hats, patterned scarves and hipster attitude to set it apart from its parent carrier.

The jury is out on whether the look is appealing or just plain hideous.

"Anything casual and moving away from corporate stiffness is good in my view," says our senior producer.

"Worst airline uniforms ever," says another CNN Travel staff member.

What do you think? Write a comment

Just two or three perky steps away from bursting into song. More on CNN: 9 easy ways to make a flight attendant go insane

Designed by Canadian designers VF Imagewear, the uniforms, complete with Fluevog shoes, will be worn by the airline's 150 flight attendants.

"Our goal was to create a unique, welcoming and fashion forward look with lasting appeal that would also be practical and comfortable," said Renee Smith Valade, the airline's vice president of customer experience.

Service standards are likley to be equally fabulous, with Air Canada rouge flight attendants receiving training at the Disney Institute in Florida

Where to see the look: the new airline will initially be flying from Toronto and Montreal to various European destinations.

10 things that make Wakayama Japan's best kept secret

Posted: 06 Jun 2013 03:00 PM PDT

Hot springs galore, top notch ramen and tuna-cutting lessons are highlights of this southern slice of Honshu
Japan onsen

"Wakayama? Wakawhat? Wakawhere?" 

Overshadowed by the neighboring city of Osaka, this humble Japanese prefecture is home to arguably Japan's most delicious ramen, a 1,700-year-old fire festival and a giant open-air bath fed by a hot spring.

You'll find much of what you need for the complete Japanese experience on this little crescent of land on the southern coast of the country's largest island, Honshu.

Here are 10 ways to begin to get to know this little Japanese secret.

1. Eat Japan's "most delicious" ramen

 Tastiest ramen in JapanHow to be a Wakayama local top: Resist the temptation to call it ramen -- it's known locally as "chuka soba."
Ever since Ide Shoten's Wakayama ramen was voted "Japan's most delicious" by a Japanese food show, this humble noodle shop has become sacred ground for ramen lovers.

Wakayama ramen has a unique soup base, made with an extremely savory pork bone and soy sauce broth. But it's generally known to locals as chuka soba -- not ramen -- which means "Chinese noodles" in Japanese. These steaming bowls of soup with their satisfying pork and lard flavor can fast become an addiction.

Cooked eggs and mackerel sushi on tables are the traditional appetizers. Diners just have to report how many they have eaten when it comes time to get the bill.

How to get there: Exit from Wakayama JR station, walk straight and turn left at Kokutai Road. Then, walk straight until you reach Sannen-zaka Dori. Ide Shoten is on the left.

Ide Shoten, 4-84 Tanaka Town, Wakayama City; 11:30 a.m.-11:30 p.m., closed on Thursday

2. Learn how to cut fresh tuna

 Freshest sushiNot a life-saving skill, but knowing how to cut a nice slice of tuna is still handy.
Wakayama's fish markets may not share the fame of their Tokyo counterpart, the Tsukiji fish market, but they're just as noteworthy.

Kuroshio-Ichiba Market hosts three entertaining tuna cutting shows daily. Porto Europa, a Europe-themed amusement park, is another attraction right next door.

The Katsuura Port fish market in the southeast corner of the prefecture is also worth a visit, if only because it's famous for hauling in the biggest tuna in Japan.

After viewing the daily tuna auction from the observation area, visitors can sample the goods -- seared tataki, sushi or sashimi -- in Katsuura town.

How to get there: A shuttle bus transports visitors from JR Kainan station (one stop from Wakayama station) to Kuroshio-Ichiba Market. Or take a taxi to Kuroshio-Ichiba Market, which will cost JPY1,300 (US$13). To get to Katsuura, take the JR line to Kii-Katsuura station. The fish market is five minutes away on foot. 

Kuroshio-Ichiba Market, Marina City, 1527, Kemi, Wakayama-shi, Wakayama-ken, Japan; open daily, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; tuna cutting show at 11 a.m., 12:30 p.m. and 3 p.m.

Katsuura tuna auction, 7-8-2 Oaza Tsuikiji, Nachi-Katsuura Town, Higashimuro District; opens at 7 a.m., closed on Saturday and the day before holidays

3. Walk Kumano Kodo

kumano kodo, Wakayama pilgrimageKumano Kodo, the world's most underrated hike. Japan's best unknown hike, Kumano Kodo is the perfect Kii Mountain getaway.

Made up of seven routes of various difficulties through the south of Wakayama prefecture, the hike was originally an ancient pilgrimage leading to three major Japanese shrines: Hongu Taisha, Nachi Taisha and Hayatama Taisha.

Our recommended route starts from Tanabe City (Kii-Tanabe JR station) to Nachi Fall (Nachi JR station).

The easily navigable routes are dotted with numerous onsen (hot spring) towns, scenic valleys and restaurants serving rustic Japanese cuisine.

To find out more about the hike, check out our report on Kumano Kodo.

4. Cook 'hot spring egg' in a real onsen

 Onsen egg cooking "Don't steal the onsen eggs!" You've been warned. There's no better way to whip up a batch of onsen tamago -- or hot spring egg -- than actually boiling it in an onsen.

Visitors to Wakayama can do so at the public cooking basin in the Yunomine onsen area, the only UNESCO World Heritage hot spring in the world.

All you need to do is buy eggs and other vegetables from the local store near the hot spring basin -- they come pre-prepared for cooking in a net -- and boil them in the basin.

Local residents often buy onsen water ($1 for 10 liters) to bring home for cooking.

How to get there: Take a bus from Tanabe (Kii-Tanabe JR station) or Shingu (Shingu JR station).

5. Check out the Nachi Fire Festival

 Nachi Fire FestivalNothing's quite as thrilling as watching hundreds of young Japanese men rush down a steep staircase with 50 kg torches.

Wakayama's Nachi Fire Festival, held every July, celebrates the homecoming of the Nachi Waterfall's god.

The 1,700-year-old event is considered one of the most sacred festivals in Japan.

Tucked away on Nachi mountain, home to the Nachi Taisha shrine and 133-meter-high falls, the festival involves dozens of young Japanese men carrying 12 gigantic torches up and down the stone staircase that leads to the falls, shouting enthusiastically all the way.

It's quite a sight (and sound). Each torch weighs about 50 kilograms and youngsters have to take a turn carrying one.

Locals sit near the stairs on the mountain to cheer on teams. Be there early to secure a good view.

6. Live like a monk

 Koyasan temple stayIf eats like this are served, living like a buddhist monk can't be all that bad.
Living (temporarily) in a temple has become the latest in thing for travellers to Wakayama.

The holy Buddhist grounds in Koyasan have 52 temple lodgings for visitors seeking a tranquil stay that includes meditation, temple services, Buddhist gardens and vegetarian cuisine.

Book your Koyasan temple stay and check train schedules to Koyasan in advance.

7. Enjoy hot springs in the wild

 Hotel NakanoshimaAt Hotel Nakanoshima, an onsen in the middle of the sea. Wakayama has plenty of ancient onsen spots. Saki-no-yu in Shirahama, south of Wakayama, is a public bath right on the shore of the Pacific .

Sennin-buro in Kawayu, southeast of Wakayama city, is a giant 73-degree Celsius pool right in the river. It's also Japan's biggest open-air bath.

The city of Katsuura has a few onsens with amazing views -– Hotel Nakanoshima on a small island off the port has onsens looking over the ocean and Hotel Urashima has an ancient bathing site in a cave.

For a less-exposed onsen experience, you can soak your feet in hot spring water while you dine at Ashiyu-Yokocho, a Japanese restaurant/feet onsen in Shirahama.

8. Visit Tama, the cat hero of Kishi station

Tama cat, Japan trainmasterMeet Tama, the world's cutest stationmaster.Tama is a cat that saved Wakayama's little-visited Kishi Train Station from closure when she was, improbably, appointed its stationmaster -- instantly making it a tourist attraction. 

Learn more about the curious story of Tama, and her cat apprentice Nitama, here: The cat that saved a Japanese train station.

Getting there: Kishi station is a 30-minute ride from Wakayama City's main train station.

9. Get a castle-view hotel room in Wakayama City

Wakayama castleThe secret to getting a great Wakayama castle photo is to book a castle-view room. You'll find the best view of Wakayama Castle from the hotels across the road.

Daiwa Roynet Hotel Wakayama and Wakayama Tokyu Inn are two of the best options. Ask for a castle-view when making a reservation.

Explore the peaceful castle gardens and the panoramic views from the top once you've checked in.

The castle also hosts exhibitions about the history of the city. There's a small entrance fee (JPY150, or $1.5) but the rest of the park is free to the public.

10. Feast on fruit

 Arida mandarinsFact: The smell of Arida mandarins will make orange fans drool.
Whether you want to try hardcore fruit picking or just eat a few from the supermarket, we highly recommend you have some kind of orange-related experience in Wakayama.

The prefecture, the self-proclaimed kingdom of fruit, produces one of the best varieties of Mandarin oranges in the world.

Named after their growing area, Arida are thin-rind mandarins said to have the perfect balance of sweet and sour. The fruit are so delicious and juicy they qualify as a dessert in Japan.

The prefecture also has no shortage of strawberries, grapes and persimmons. And at Minabe, the largest ume (Japanese apricot) producer in Japan, you can get tipsy on lovely ume wine.

Wakayama City, the capital city of Wakayama Prefecture,  is about 35 minutes by train from the regional Kansai Airport and 550 kilometers from Tokyo.

Check out our special Wakayama Prefecture section.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Latest Travel News Daily Email from ASIA Travel Tips.com

Friday, 7 June 2013. News from last night Asia time and today.

Have a splendid weekend!

The ASIA Travel Tips Team
http://www.asiatraveltips.com
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++


7/6/2013 A Swim to Remember - HK Harbour Race to Take Place 6 October.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/76-HarbourSwim.shtml


7/6/2013 Name Change for Nikko Bali.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/76-NikkoBali.shtml


7/6/2013 Major New Convention Centre to be Developed in Auckland, NZ.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/76-AucklandMICE.shtml


7/6/2013 Jetstar Hong Kong Welcomes Major New Shareholder.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/76-JetstarHK.shtml


7/6/2013 TripAdvisor Enhances Hotel Price Comparison Search.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/76-TripAdvisor.shtml


7/6/2013 Jin Jiang Signs Hotel in Stone Forest, China.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/76-StoneForest.shtml


7/6/2013 ATR -600s Certified to Operate in Temperatures as Low as -45°C.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/76-ATR.shtml


7/6/2013 Shangri-La to Open Hotel in Confucius' Birthplace.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/76-ShangriLa.shtml


7/6/2013 MasterCard to Deploy 410,000 Contactless Terminals in Japan.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/76-MasterCard.shtml


7/6/2013 Bremen Airport Upgrades T3 Security with HI-SCAN 10080 XCT.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/76-BremenAirport.shtml


7/6/2013 Lions Name Team to Take On Queensland Reds in Brisbane.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/76-LionsTour.shtml


6/6/2013 AirAsia to Launch Bangkok - Nay Pyi Taw (Myanmar) Flights.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-AirAsia.shtml


6/6/2013 Singapore to Take On Malaysia in HSBC A5N Division II Final on Saturday.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-FiveNations.shtml


6/6/2013 Emirates to Launch Daily A380 Flights to Zurich.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-EmiratesA380.shtml









- Prefer the convenience of an RSS Feed? The ASIA Travel Tips daily travel news RSS Feed is at:
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/travelnews.xml
____________________________________
Advertise here contact: webmaster@asiatraveltips.com




END

Established in 1997, ASIA Travel Tips was the first online daily travel news service in Asia. If
you know of any colleagues or friends who may be interested in receiving our daily travel news
email, please do ask them to subscribe. Thank you.

To unsubscribe, simply reply to this email and place "unsubscribe" (in English) as the subject.
To change your email simply reply to this email and place "change email" (in English as the
subject, be sure to let us know both the old email address, as well as the one you wish to
change it to).

If you receive an error trying to connect to any of the above pages, please go to
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/LatestTravelNews.htm and use the links there. If that fails please
feel free to contact us: webmaster@asiatraveltips.com

All editorial comments should be sent to the Editor - Steven Howard - editor@asiatraveltips.com

Special Travel Trade and Media Rates -
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/TravelTradeRates.shtml

Calendar of Travel Trade Shows and Exhibitions -
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/TravelTradeShows.shtml

Latest Travel News - FAQ -
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/TravelNewsFAQ.shtml

Travel News Archives (since 2000) -
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/TravelNewsArchivesMenu1.shtml

To enquire about sponsorship opportunities please send an email to:
webmaster@asiatraveltips.com

http://www.asiatraveltips.com
____________________________________

CNNGo.com

CNNGo.com


6 top beers in the Middle East and North Africa

Posted: 04 Jun 2013 11:14 PM PDT

Despite having a rep for being near teetotal, these six destinations are brewing up some surprisingly decent bottles of the brown stuff

Think traveling in the Middle East and North Africa means having to forego a nice, cold glass of beer? Think again.

Here's a quick run down of the regions' six best brews, along with some testimony from their victims/fans.

6. Jordan: Petra

Everything starts looking rosy -- especially your cheeks -- after a pint of Petra. One of those rare, wild and, as many Jordanians attest, almost undrinkable local beers that exist the world over, Petra beer is the special brew of the Middle East.

At a staggering 8% ABV, it's the second most popular beer in Jordan after Amstel, but the latter's Dutch roots will always make it a foreign import, despite being brewed in the country.

Johnny Shaw, 37, a student and freelance graphic designer, says, "If a visit to the ruins of Petra didn't knock you off your feet, a few cans of this beer will.

"While the label promises a 'Taste of the Rosy City' it's probably not what you had in mind while you were stumbling around the dusty ruins in the Jordanian sun."

Not enough alcohol for you? We suggest you crack open a bottle of Petra Premium, which rocks a head-numbing 10% alcohol content.

More on CNN: 8 best beer towns in America

5. Morocco: Casablanca

Here's looking at you, kid. Morocco offers a choice of four beers, including its locally brewed Heineken, but Casablanca is undoubtedly the country's most famous –- it's even served in the Moroccan pavilion at Disney World's Epcot Center.

A pale, light lager with a solid 5% ABV, Casablanca takes the edge off many a sweaty day in the souks or hiking in the Atlas Mountains.

"Casablanca is a slightly dark, hoppy lager that delivers a distinct punch on acquaintance. It's not a bad drop," says Jon Rhodes, 38, a press officer.

"It mainly distinguishes itself from the competition by virtue of its slightly bigger bottle size, affording any respectable beer aficionado the chance to actually wet their palate as opposed to dampening."

More on CNN: 10 things to know before visiting Morocco

4. Israel: Goldstar

Despite being mass produced, there's nothing common about Goldstar. Coming in at a contentious fourth place, this fantastic Israeli beer has been brewed in the country since the 1950s.

Goldstar is the granddaddy of Israeli beer, a favorite throughout the country -- and this despite a burgeoning craft beer scene in Israel.

"Israel sets itself apart by having by far the most interesting commonly drunk beer in the world," enthuses Steve Hynd, 27, a former brewer and one-time West Bank resident.

"You'll find it in almost every bar in the country and while it is a dark lager, in reality is closer to amber in color. It puts mass produced beer to shame."

We can't agree more. At 4.9% ABV, both its straight pilsner and dark ale alternative are best drunk cold, bought from a street-side bottle shop and consumed on the beach in Tel Aviv before a raucous night out on the tiles.

More on CNN: World's most popular brewery tours

3. Egypt: Stella/Sakara

Sakara Gold, though brewed in Egypt, is owned by Heineken. A joint third for these two Egyptian beers, which have provoked countless debates in many a Cairo expat bar.

No relation to its Belgian cousin, Stella is Egypt's oldest beer -- brewed since the 19th century –- and is best served in a tall bottle and poured leisurely into a pint glass.

Its ABV of 4.5% does the trick, easily taking the edge off a sweaty day of fighting touts, taxi drivers and traffic in any of Egypt's hectic cities.

Its rival, Sakara Gold has a slightly lower 4% ABV but is also brewed by Al Ahram brewery, now owned by Heineken. Like Stella, it's a refreshing, light pilsner served in both bottles and cans.

More on CNN: Tourism in Egypt: Hope amidst a slow recovery


2. Palestine: Taybeh

Brew master Nadim Khoury holds up the four varieties of his popular Palestinian beer, Taybeh. Taybeh is as loved in the West Bank as it's elusive everywhere else, but whether served in a Ramallah bar, or tracked down in a back street off license, it truly is an excellent beer.

The creation of brew master Nadim Khoury, Taybeh comes in four forms: a larger, a dark ale, an amber beer and a non-alcoholic, and is best drunk at the source -– at the brewery in the village that bears its name.

"Taybeh Golden is undoubtedly the most common, a crisp refreshing lager that is a perfect accompaniment to a warm evening relaxing with friends," enthuses former brewer Hynd.

"But if you're looking for something more sophisticated, try Taybeh Dark: it's a delicious complex beer with strong powerful roasted barley."

More on CNN: The man who brought beer to Palestine

1. Lebanon: Almaza

Amazing Almaza. Try saying that 10 times in a row after a few cans. In at number one is the king of Middle Eastern beers and the staple of any trip to Beirut, the one-and-only Almaza.

At a low 4% ABV, Almaza may be a light and fairly standard pilsner, but served ice cold at a Hamra Street café on a warm summer evening, it amounts to far more than that.

"Almaza tastes like a Lebanese summer night would if you could bottle it, with a side of nuts," said Beirut native Karl Baz, 33.

"The beer itself is great. Sure, it's light, but we love it because it's become a defining characteristic of our culture."

More on CNN: 10 best bars in Beirut

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Latest Travel News Daily Email from ASIA Travel Tips.com

Thursday, 6 June 2013. News from last night Asia time and today.

The ASIA Travel Tips Team
http://www.asiatraveltips.com
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++


6/6/2013 AirAsia to Launch Bangkok - Nay Pyi Taw (Myanmar) Flights.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-AirAsia.shtml


6/6/2013 Singapore to Take on Malaysia in HSBC A5N Division II Final on Saturday.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-FiveNations.shtml


6/6/2013 Emirates to Launch Daily A380 Flights to Zurich.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-EmiratesA380.shtml


6/6/2013 SIA and CAG Sign MOC with South African Tourism.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-SouthAfrica.shtml


6/6/2013 British Airways Partners Bangkok Airways.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-BritishAirways.shtml


6/6/2013 Hong Kong and Taiwan to Promote Cruise Tourism.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-RoyalCaribbean.shtml


6/6/2013 SAS to Replace Economy, Economy Extra and Business Class.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-SAS.shtml


6/6/2013 Indonesian Journalist Wins Kate Webb Prize.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-KateWebbPrize.shtml


6/6/2013 Etihad Cargo Launches Global Advertising Campaign.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-EtihadCargo.shtml


6/6/2013 Jetstar's First Boeing 787 in Final Assembly.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-Jetstar.shtml


6/6/2013 HotelTravel Connects to eRevMax Channel Ecosystem.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-HotelTravel.shtml


6/6/2013 Qatar Airways Increases Flights to Paris, France.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-QatarAirways.shtml


6/6/2013 Corbisiero Called Up by British & Irish Lions.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-LionsTour.shtml


6/6/2013 Luxperience to Hold New Pop Up Events in Key Markets.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/66-Luxperience.shtml


5/6/2013 Ocean Park Theme Suite (Video) - Cosmopolitan Hotel Hong Kong.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/56-OceanPark.shtml


5/6/2013 Airbus Names Crew of First A350 XWB Flight.
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/news13/56-A350.shtml









- Prefer the convenience of an RSS Feed? The ASIA Travel Tips daily travel news RSS Feed is at:
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/travelnews.xml
____________________________________
Advertise here contact: webmaster@asiatraveltips.com




END

Established in 1997, ASIA Travel Tips was the first online daily travel news service in Asia. If
you know of any colleagues or friends who may be interested in receiving our daily travel news
email, please do ask them to subscribe. Thank you.

To unsubscribe, simply reply to this email and place "unsubscribe" (in English) as the subject.
To change your email simply reply to this email and place "change email" (in English as the
subject, be sure to let us know both the old email address, as well as the one you wish to
change it to).

If you receive an error trying to connect to any of the above pages, please go to
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/LatestTravelNews.htm and use the links there. If that fails please
feel free to contact us: webmaster@asiatraveltips.com

All editorial comments should be sent to the Editor - Steven Howard - editor@asiatraveltips.com

Special Travel Trade and Media Rates -
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/TravelTradeRates.shtml

Calendar of Travel Trade Shows and Exhibitions -
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/TravelTradeShows.shtml

Latest Travel News - FAQ -
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/TravelNewsFAQ.shtml

Travel News Archives (since 2000) -
http://www.asiatraveltips.com/TravelNewsArchivesMenu1.shtml

To enquire about sponsorship opportunities please send an email to:
webmaster@asiatraveltips.com

http://www.asiatraveltips.com
____________________________________