To master the Provençal life, you need to get to grips with the thriving towns of Aix, Arles and Avignon
Let us be bold. There is no cluster of towns in France - perhaps in Europe - with the aura of the Provençal A-team, Aix, Arles and Avignon.
They embody the sensual south, with its past of popes, Romans and countrymen, its bullfighters, painters and sense that things might get warmly out of hand when the sun goes down.
These places are, in a way, where Provence happens, and, if you haven’t visited them, you haven’t been to Provence at all. So, do it soon, for a late-season blast of heat, history and herby dishes on nighttime terraces. To help you, here’s our assessment of the A-team’s members.
AIX-EN-PROVENCE
Up the road from Marseilles, Aix is the port’s brainier little brother - the one with glasses, a bow tie and a know-it-all smile. It has been a university town for ever. In the 15th century, Good King René held his court here, filling it with artists and intellectuals. Later, the bourgeoisie put up the grand townhouses of the Mazarin district, which still conceal more than they reveal.
Then came Cézanne. Aix is terribly proud of him. This is, however, a recent development. Aix loathed its weirdo artist when he was alive, and for some time afterwards. It was left to American cash to save Cézanne’s studio (9 Avenue Paul Cézanne; 00 33-4 42 21 06 53, www.atelier-cezanne.com ; £4.60), and it’s now one of Aix’s best visits. The spot where he completed his last works has been left as if the old boy had just popped out for another look at the Mont Sainte-Victoire. Behind a huge window are his bowler hat, a smock and the clutter that starred in his still lifes. “Some visitors burst into tears,” a local guide says.
Not me, I’m afraid – the studio is fascinating, and the work is easy to admire, but somehow difficult to love - so it’s back to the Café des Deux Garçons, where Cézanne drank, though not with excess conviviality, on the central Cours Mirabeau. Wide, lined with plane trees and townhouses, studded with fountains and bars, this is the greatest avenue of southern France, evincing not a shred of self-doubt.
Behind, however, the tone changes. Aix scurries through vital little streets, bursting into squares made grand for the town hall, courts, churches and similar. On Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, much of this old Aix is overlaid with Provence’s best market, its stallholders so obviously wide boys, they must be honest. I pick up cherries, pâté and, from a bric-a-brac stall, a long-needed Lynyrd Skynyrd album.
In Rue Gaston Saporta, Renaissance frontages press in. The cathedral of St Sauveur has delightful cloisters, but if you’re hoping to see Froment’s majestic Moses and the Burning Bush triptych (I always am), it’s away being restored. So, the prettiest thing in town is Baciccio’s wooden model for a baptistry dome in Rome. It’s in the otherwise dowdy Musée du Vieil Aix (04 42 21 43 55, www.aixenprovencetourism.com ; £3.30), back down the street, and flows with colour, light and movement.
Then it’s evening. Little streets such as Rue Bédarrides and Rue des Tanneurs spill out an entire civilisation of bars and terraces. Heaven knows how there are enough people to go round them all, but there are. Tucked away in the heart of the warren, the tiny, table-packed Place Ramus gets lively later, doubtless because it takes people longer to stumble on it. Take a low-lit seat outside Chez Maxime, order the daube – and tell me you’re not happy.
To stay and eat: if money’s no object, try Villa Gallici (Avenue de la Violette; 04 42 23 29 23, www.villagallici.com ; doubles from £175 in low season, £255 high). Smallish, in romantico-Provençal style, it has gardens and a classy restaurant; dinner £72. The credit-crunched might consider the central Hôtel Quatre Dauphins (54 Rue Roux Alphéran; 04 42 38 16 39, www.lesquatredauphins.fr ; doubles from £55/£61).
Best table in town is the Clos de la Violette (10 Avenue de la Violette; 04 42 23 30 71, www.closdelaviolette.com ; lunch from £40, dinner £72). Old Aix throbs with cheaper eateries, too, including Chez Maxime (12 Place Ramus; 04 42 26 28 51, www.restaurant-chezmaxime.com ; lunch from £11, dinner £17).
ARLES
Of the A-team, Arles is the one where southern blood pumps fiercest - during bullfights at the stunning Roman arena, it pumps right out onto the sand. The last corrida I saw there was a duff abattoir show. That said, you need to see the arena in action to get a feel for the great, 1st-century-AD days of live entertainment: go for the bull games (courses camarguaises), where it’s still man v beast, but the beast lives on (08 91 70 03 70, www.arenes-arles.com ; Wed at 5pm until Sept 4; £6.30).
Then - and please don’t say I told you this - canter round the rest of classical Arles at a fair old lick. You can see all you need of the Roman theatre and baths from the streets, without paying. The real spectacle is elsewhere, on the main Boulevard des Lices, in the market and in the seething squeeze of streets running away from the arena. They strain to contain both local exuberance and roaming visitors. Here are cowboys in from the Camargue and women en route to some festival or other, wearing the prettiest traditional dress - shawls, lace, high collars, long skirts - a woman can wear.
Eventually, the labyrinth chucks you out towards Place du Forum, where the Café de Nuit remains, outside at least, much as Van Gogh painted it (though it’s gone a bit loungey inside). Ah, yes. Van Gogh. Turning to him after Cézanne in Aix is like opening curtains and letting in sunlight. Van Gogh, too, was hated by the townsfolk. After the ear-lopping episode, they circulated a petition to have him banged up in a bin.
The dislike was mutual. Arles, said Van Gogh, was “filthy... with a rather squalid casualness”. Yet, fuelled by coffee and alcohol, he painted like billyo - 300 works in 15 months - defining a new way of handling not only Provence, but colour itself. None of his canvases remains in a town that now, obviously, fêtes him as a favoured son.
The gardens of Arles hospital have been recreated, just as Van Gogh painted them when committed there. The building is now the Espace Van Gogh, and jolly peaceful (or would have been, if 40 American visitors hadn’t been agreeing loudly how peaceful it was). By the arena, someone has recreated Van Gogh’s bedroom, as painted by himself. “It is a unique feeling to be in Vincent’s room,” we are told. Certainly, it’s unique. This is the only rip-off in Arles. Avoid it, go for a drink–and prepare for a long night in, um, ear-splitting bars.
To stay and eat: the slightly raffish Grand Hôtel Nord-Pinus (Place du Forum; 04 90 93 44 44, www.nord-pinus. com ; doubles from £127), bang in the centre of things, is the classic Arles spot for tales of travel, bullfighting, art and drink. Infinitely more modest, but comfortable and just off the hurly-burly, is the two-star Hôtel Constantin (59 Boulevard Craponne; 04 90 96 04 05, www.arles-hotel-constantin.com ; doubles from £39 in low season, £42 high).
Jean-Luc Rabanel’s ultra-fashionable Med-meets-Asia cooking bagged him the French Chef of the Year award from GaultMillau in 2007 (L’Atelier, 7 Rue des Carmes; 04 90 91 07 69, www.rabanel.com ; menu £54). Down the street, he runs the cheaper, minimalist Bistro à Côté (21 Rue des Carmes; 04 90 47 61 13; mains from £10).
AVIGNON
I have a friend who lives in the wriggling little streets of Avignon. “It’s okay,” she says, “but a bit seedy.” Seedy? The papal city and former centre of Christianity? Well, she’d just had her car (resale value £2.35) stolen from outside her door, so she’s biased. She’s also right.
Away from the centre, the alleys and tiny thoroughfares decline to dowdy quite quickly, with little leavening sense of gaiety. It’s as if the city has run out of energy, so relies on its monuments to keep it going. Luckily, it has the greatest Provençal monument of all: the Papal Palace (04 90 27 50 00, www.palais-des-papes.com ; £8.30 in high season, £6.70 low). Rising sheer, powerful and gothic, the vast edifice radiates authority still. Given half a chance, it would be running Christendom again in the time it took to dismantle the European Union.
It’s mainly empty, and the imagination struggles to refurnish it with medieval magnificence, but the scale is overwhelming, the views are arresting and the private papal chambers retain their startling frescoes. Not that the pontiffs had much time to appreciate them, if the poet Petrarch is to be believed.
“A thoroughfare of vices,” he wrote, “where prostitutes swarm over papal beds.” The image, you’ll agree, is riveting. Seediness has a history here.
Outside the palace, Avignon remains monumental. The cathedral is next door, and the Petit Palais (Place du Palais des Papes; 04 90 86 44 58, www.petit-palais.org ; £5), with its decent selection of early Italian paintings, is nearby. As is the 100ft Doms rock, boasting lovely gardens, a puzzling statue of an Armenian agronomist and a dominant perspective over the most famous fifth-of-a-bridge in the world. Le Pont looks lovely from up here.
Little is gained by going down and paying to walk along it - it’s a rather ordinary, broken old bridge, testimony only to the power of a children’s song.(A mistaken one, at that; as everyone knows, the dancing was sous, not sur, le pont.) Time would be more pro-fitably spent ambling the lively streets off the main Rue de la République. These retain a scurrying sense of southern life and commerce.
You may carry on to Rue des Teinturiers, where the River Sorgue still runs under water wheels. The dyers (teinturiers) have ceded place to ethnic bars, tiny theatres and blokes with pony-tails selling rubbish from the Orient. Lively, though. By evening, return to the central Place de l’Horloge. Southern city life pumps through it, from bar to restaurant and on through the night. The women would turn any pontiff’s head. Of the A-team members, Avignon is my least favourite - but, seated at a terrace with music swirling round me, I can’t always remember why. To stay and eat: top of the tree is Hôtel d’Europe (14 Place Crillon; 04 90 14 76 76, www.heurope.com ; doubles from £134, then steeply upwards), with an eclectic past guest list - Dickens, John Stuart Mill, Jackie Kennedy. In a different, but charming, league is Hôtel Médiéval (15 Rue Petite Saunerie; 04 90 86 11 06, www.hotelmedieval.com ; doubles from £46).
Housed in a former palace, Christian Etienne’s restaurant (10 Rue de Mons; 04 90 86 16 50, www.christian-etienne.fr ; lunch £28, dinner from £52) has the best reputation in town. The warm and eccentric L’Epice and Love (30 Rue des Lices; 04 90 82 45 96; menus from £14) has a deserved fan base. Getting there: Eurostar (0870 518 6186, www.eurostar.com ) has a direct, 5hr 50min rail service from London St Pan-cras to Avignon until September 13. Flybe (0871 700 2000, www.flybe.com ) has flights to Avignon from Exeter and Southampton; Jet2 (0871 226 1737, www.jet2.com ) flies there from Leeds/Bradford and Edinburgh.
Nîmes is the nearest airport to Arles. Fly there with Ryanair (0871 246 0000, www.ryanair.com ), from Luton, East Midlands or Liverpool.
Marseilles is the nearest airport to Aix. Ryanair flies there from Stansted and six regional airports. Or try EasyJet (www.easyjet.com ), BMI Baby (0871 224 0224, www.bmibaby.com ) or British Airways (0844 493 0787, www.ba.com ).
If you’d like a package, French Travel Service (0844 848 8843, www.f-t-s.co.uk ) has three-night B&B deals in three-star hotels, including rail travel, from £310pp in Aix and £389pp in Avignon; a four-night deal in Arles is £472pp. Or try VFB Holidays (01452 716840, www.vfbholidays.co.uk ) or Kirker (020 7593 1899, www.kirkerholidays.com ).
2008年9月15日星期一
The world's 50 best walks
From The Sunday Times
September 14, 2008
The world's 50 best walks
The Sunday Times presents the world’s best treks, from a grade-one pub stroll right up to a grade-five yeti hunt
Graded 1-5, with 1 the easiest and 5 the most challenging
1 Highlands for beginners Glencoe Grade 1
All great pub walks should involve a quick hit of scenery, then a slow sup by the fire - and the Clachaig Inn, buried among the man-sized mountains of Glencoe, has a cracker. A mile’s clamber on a pinewood trail brings you to Signal Rock, where, in 1692, government troopers gave the fateful command that triggered the Glencoe massacre. Highland scenery soars on every side, red stags bellow in the autumn rut ... and it’s all yours for barely an hour’s effort. And who cares if you feel a fraud back in the Boots Bar at the Clachaig (01855 811252, www.clachaig.com ), with its granite-jawed climbers and ice-axe decor? They do 160 malts and a tasty line in venison burgers.
2 Storm the ramparts Croatia Grade 1
It took a battering in the Balkans conflict, but Unesco restoration has turned plucky Dubrovnik into the loveliest medieval city under the sun. The hour-long circuit of its old town’s battlements is unforgettable, around an Escher-like collection of sand-castle sentry posts, helter-skelter stairways and crumbling catwalks, all poised on high cliffs against the bluest bit of the Adriatic. Go for sunset, then descend for cocktails at Bar Buza, on a craggy platform between citadel and sea. The ramparts are open 9am-7.30pm; £5.50; www.tzdubrovnik.hr/english/. Original Travel (020 7978 7333, www.originaltravel.co.uk ) has three nights in Dubrovnik from £540pp, including flights.
3 Tropical downpour Venezuela Grade 1
At 19 times higher than Niagara, Angel Falls is a wonder - but getting there is nearly as memorable as seeing it. After a half-day expedition by dugout canoe, it’s an hour’s scramble into the throb and fizz of the jungle. You’ll balance across branches, paddle through creeks - and suddenly it’s there, blasting straight out of the clouds into the lagoon below. All that remains is to cool off under the loftiest shower on earth. Last Frontiers (01296 653000, www.lastfrontiers.com ) has a 12-day Venezuela itinerary, with three nights at Canaima, from £2,339pp, including flights.
4 Stout and stanzas Dublin Grade 1
No city is as rich in pubs and poetry as Dublin, and Colm Quilligan’s literary pub crawl is a genius amalgam of both - a 2½hour stagger with Wilde, Joyce, Behan and Beckett. “Their search for an audience took them from the drawing room to the public saloon,” Quilligan says. His tour visits four favourite “Publin” watering holes, allowing time for internal lubrication between comic cuts of the writers’ work. The guides, all pro actors, begin with a shot of the black stuff - an excerpt from Waiting for Godot. Tours nightly, £10; 00 353 1670 5602, www.dublinpubcrawl.com .
5 Tortoise pace Seychelles Grade 1
On the island of Curieuse, giant tortoises patrol the shore, jacking themselves up on hydraulic legs to greet arriving sailors. The nature reserve here is full of wild wonders, not just the enormous - and enormously friendly - Aldabra tortoises, but giant palm spiders, black parrots and transparent ghost crabs, which blow across the sand like dandelion down. A boardwalk trail takes you through the mangroves and over the headland to emerge on Anse St José, the most beautiful beach in the Indian Ocean. Creole Travel Services (00 248 297000, www.creoletravelservices.com) can arrange your Curieuse excursion; Elite Vacations (01707 371000, www.seychelleselite.co.uk) has sevennight autumn packages from £1,145pp, including flights.
6 Into the underworld Morocco Grade 1
Potentially, Fez’s medina is the world’s longest city walk. The labyrinth of souks is unmatched and probably unmappable, with 9,400 alleyways, some so narrow you have to sidestep through. It’s a magic-carpet ride for the senses: the clang of metal workshops, the stink of the tannery, donkeys brushing past with toppling loads, traders hawking cloth, comestibles and cures for everything from haemorrhoids to a broken heart. A two-hour tour with a guide costs about £20 (Fez Tourism; 00 212 35 62 34 60). Best of Morocco (0845 026 4588,www.realmorocco.com ) has four nights from £595pp, with flights.
7 See the skulls New Orleans Grade 1
The cult of the dead is very much alive in New Orleans, and nowhere embodies the sultry strangeness of the city like St Louis Cemetery Number 1, the spookiest graveyard in the world. A guided walk invites you to meet its shrivelling citizenry, all of whom are buried above ground – some in temple-sized vaults, others barely covered by crumbling brickheaps. New Orleans Spirit Tours (£11; www.neworleanstours.net ) will show you around, and adds a visit to a modern voodoo temple. Bon Voyage (0800 316 0194, www.bon-voyage.co.uk ) includes the tour in a Louisiana fly-drive: nine days start at £599pp.
8 Woozle hunting East Sussex Grade 1
The most eye-boggling walk in southeast England? Easy: across the clifftops of the Seven Sisters. But the most cockle-warming? An “expotition” with Pooh and Piglet in the real-life Hundred Acre Wood. The magic of AA Milne’s universe owes much to the richly reimagined landscape of Ashdown Forest, the Sussex oasis of pine stands, gorse bushes and high, heathery places where Christopher Robin played. Grab a child as an excuse, collect a Pooh Country map from East Grinstead tourism (01342 410121, www.eastgrinstead. gov.uk ) and drive to Gills Lap car park.
9 Sydney-on-Sea Australia Grade 1
Everyone’s heard of Bondi Beach... but what about Tamarama, Bronte, Clovelly, Gordon’s Bay? The two-hour promenade from Bondi along Sydney’s eastern seaboard must be the world’s best walk you can do in your Speedos – it’s one knockout strand after the next. First up is Tamarama, known as Glamorama because of its rich and famous habitués; then picturesque Bronte, a good place for brunch; and Clovelly, the best spot for a swim. After 3½ miles, you’re at Coogee, for a milkshake and the bus back to Circular Quay. To print the trail, visit www.waverley.nsw. gov.au. Bonzer.
10 Snail trail Italy Grade 1
Siena is like a pop-up page from a storybook, all Rapunzel towers and medieval alleyways. What clinches its appeal for kids, however is thecontrade: the 17 neighbourhoods that compete in the biannualpalio horse race. Each has its totem – dragon, unicorn, giraffe, panther ... caterpillar. This turns a city walk into an I-spy trail, as each district has its fountain and its flag, as well as nameplates and knockers adorned with the sacred symbol. You can download a children’s trail at www.terresiena.it . ATG Oxford (01865 315678, www.atg-oxford.com ) includes a Siena stroll on its self-guided Tuscan walking holidays. Four nights start at £355pp, excluding flights.
11 Gilded prison Snowdonia Grade 1
With the imminent return of The Prisoner to our television screens, Portmeirion will soon be back in the limelight. It’s the supreme monument to British eccentricity, a high-camp Italianate village assembled in the 1920s using abandoned monuments and bits of scrap statuary, painted in zany colours and tattooed onto a remote headland overlooking Cardigan Bay. A walk there is relentlessly enchanting. You can tunnel through 70 acres of exotic clifftop gardens to find bricolage temples and lighthouses, then blink out across the expanse of Black Rock Sands. Open daily; £7, children £3.50; www.portmeirion-village.com
12 Eat the Apple New York Grade 1
The way to a city’s heart is through its stomach: at least, that’s roughly the premise of Addie Tomei’s belly-busting gastro-walks in the Big Apple. They take you a million miles from the staple tourist fodder of Broadway and Bloomingdale’s into neighbourhood New York – the steamy pasta kitchens of Little Italy and the fragrant bagel bakeries of the Lower East Side – sampling copiously as you go. Addie is the ideal brassy Brooklyn guide, but do bring your appetite: the Chinatown and Little Italy combo trip should come with a free high-colonic. Tours start at £60 with Savory Sojourns (00 1 212 691 7314, www.savorysojourns.com ).
13 Village of the damned Derbyshire Grade 1
Death, pestilence and gruesome graveyards – the horrible history of Eyam is a winner with kids. In 1665, this bucolic Peak District hamlet went bubonic, as the plague arrived in a parcel of cloth from London, and villagers pledged to quarantine themselves. By the time the disease abated, 269 had perished. A 20p leaflet from Eyam Museum (01433 631371, www.eyammuseum.demon.co.uk ) sets you off on a tragic treasure hunt among the cottages where the story unfolded; or buy Making Tracks, which lists Peakland walks for children (£10.95; www.walking-books.com).
14 Rat run Paris Grade 1
Finding the entrance to the Paris sewers is easy – head for the Eiffel Tower, then follow your nose. The sewers have been, well, fundamental to the city’s cultural history, from Les Misérables to Delicatessen, and at the Musée des Egouts (93 Quai d’Orsay; £3.30), you can penetrate several hundred yards of tunnels. The ramshackle gangways make the walk an adventure, encouraging the sneaky suspicion that you might slip into the slop below. For a guided tour, contact Paris Walks (£8; 00 33 1 48 09 21 40, www.paris-walks.com).
15 Love Valley Turkey Grade 2
Out on the eastern edges of Europe, there’s a place where cavemen live inside strange stone spires shaped like huge phalluses. Sorry to be blunt, but the so-called “fairy chimneys” of Cappadocia are the fruitiest obelisks on the planet. Men have been hollowing their hobbit houses into the soft tufa rock since biblical times, and exploring here is a mythic experience – especially the Love Valley walk from Goreme, with 400 Byzantine churches chiselled into the rock. HF Holidays (0845 470 7558, www.hfholidays.co.uk ) includes it on an easy-going Caverns of Cappadocia trip; nine nights start at £1,435pp, with flights.
16 Chateau-hopping France Grade 2
The picture-book Château de Chaumont is France’s Chelsea, host to the Festival International des Jardins (www.chaumont-jardins.com ), and you could devote all day to a wide-eyed wander around the extravagant plots laid out by “landscape artists” from across the globe. But do it in half a day, then strike out on a bosky seven-mile meander along the Loire valley to the British-run Domaine du Prieure (www.les-metamorphozes.com ) for a taste of the Touraine wines – andchambre d’hôteif you decide to make a weekend of it. You’ll need Blue Series map No 20220 Ouest; alternatively, the route is offered by Belle France (01580 214010, www.bellefrance.co.uk ) as part of its Chateau to Chateau walking holiday. Eight days start at £801pp, including car ferry.
17 Subaqua scramble Thailand Grade 2
You don’t need a machete or a Tarzan chest wig to climb Erawan Falls, but they might just help. The cascade plummets through seven sensational tiers of tropical rainforest in Kanchanaburi province, northwest of Bangkok. The mile-long scramble to its summit gets more adventurous by the minute, as craggy pathways draped in lianas give way to rickety bridges and tree-branch ladders. Stopping to have a swim is irresistible – and, by the time you reach the top, you’ll be soaked anyway. Intrepid Travel (020 3147 7777, www.intrepidtravel.com ) has an eight-day Taste of Thailand tour, which takes in Erawan, from £915pp, including flights
18 Fat Duck Waddle Berkshire Grade 2
The Thames Path must be the world’s laziest long-distance footpath: all downhill from source to sea, no map-reading necessary, just stick to the river. The stretch running from Henley-on-Thames to Bray makes the perfect foodie weekend. The first day is a well-heeled six-mile wander along the rowing river of Jerome K Jerome and The Wind in the Willows. Stay at the Olde Bell, in Hurley (from £150, B&B; www.theoldebell.co.uk ), which has a scrumptious new restaurant, then press on via Marlow and Cookham to Bray, and the Fat Duck (www.fatduck.co.uk ), the ultimate gastronaut’s reward. Altogether you’ve pounded 18 miles (and gained 18lb, probably); www.nationaltrail.co.uk/thamespath .
19 Secret Eden Costa Rica Grade 2
Five hundred types of tree, 220 kinds of butterfly and more bird species than the whole of North America put together: the Corcovado National Park, in Costa Rica, is the most biodiverse place on earth. As you walk the beach trail from Sirena to La Leona, scarlet macaws wheel overhead, pelicans plunge into the waves, white-nosed coatis shovel for crabs and monkeys howl from the rainforest canopy. The jaguars and tapirs are tougher to spot, as are the deadly crocs and bushmaster snakes. You’ll be safe enough with a guide from Corcovado Adventures (www.corcovado.com ); or book a 17-day trekking tour with High Places (0845 257 7500, www.highplaces.co. uk ) for £2,190pp, including flights.
20 Port to port Portugal Grade 2
When is a wine tour not (quite) a wine tour? When it gambols among the sunshiny port estates of the Douro valley, in northern Portugal. This is a pointillist landscape of hill-hung vineyards staircasing steeply into the river - bizarrely evocative of the rice paddies of China. The circular walk from Pinhao up to Quinta do Noval, the Château Lafite of the port lodges, is vintage stuff: a seven-mile circuit, bits of it taxing, but worth every step for the outdoor tasting en route. Arblaster & Clarke (01730 263111; www.winetours.co.uk ) offers it as part of a week’s Douro ramble; from £1,399pp, including flights.
21 Heidi highs Switzerland Grade 2
Kandersteg is classic Switzerland: cuckoo-clock houses, blinding-white peaks and flower-pricked meadows full of cowbells and yodelling. It’s the starting point for the loveliest day walk in the Alps, around a luminous mountain lake called Oeschinensee. A hill-beating cable car from town cuts the circuit to seven miles, and the views are mind-altering. The Victoria Ritter (00 41 33 675 8000, www.hotel-victoria.ch) has high-summer family apartments from £144 per night - and does a mean fondue. Inntravel (01653 617906, www.inntravel.co.uk ) offers a sevennight walking package, based at the hotel, from £609pp, excluding flights.
22 The Postman’s Path Mallorca Grade 2
The dove-grey peaks of northern Mallorca are chunky with sea-view strolling. The Pilgrims’ Path is the loftiest, the Archduke’s Trail the maziest, but for a family-friendly flavour, base yourself in Soller, catch the bus to Deia, the artists’ enclave beloved of Robert Graves, and stride back en familleon the eight well-marked miles of the Postman’s Path, a panoramic mule track through olive groves and orange orchards. Holiday Walks in Mallorca (Sigma Press £9.95) has the route; Andalucian Adventures (01453 834137, www.andalucian-adventures.co.uk ) offers a week’s guided walking from £1,010pp, excluding flights.
23 Tomb raiding Jordan Grade 2
Even at 9am, tourist high tide, nothing dents the drama of a visit to Petra, the wondrous, whittled-out canyon city of the ancient Nabateans. What clinches its status as a New Wonder of the World, however, is the walk that gets you there - almost a mile between the sky-busting sandstone bulwarks of the Siq, a thin gulch etched with 2,000-year-old carvings and echoing with the clatter of ponies and traps. However hot you are, don’t miss making the extra hour’s climb, beyond the fabled treasury and the painted tombs, to explore the city’s immense mountaintop monastery, etched into its crag. For a rather longer trek to Petra, Walks Worldwide (01524 242000, www.walksworldwide.com ) has a 10-day Jordan Gorges holiday for £1,495pp, including flights.
24 Lilies and damsels Pembrokeshire Grade 2
If Monet had hailed from Pembrokeshire, he wouldn’t have needed to spend so much time gardening. Bosherston Nature Reserve (01646 661359) is a fairy land of lily ponds and woods squirrelled behind Broad Haven beach; and, come June, thousands of floating flowers explode into bloom, illuminating the most romantic evening walks imaginable. It’s a seven-minute stroll from Bosherston village, or an elementally gorgeous seven-mile circular hike across gull-draped cliffs from Stackpole Quay, where the National Trust rents cottages from £255 per week (0844 800 2070, www.nationaltrustcottages.co.uk ).
25 Mr Henderson’s Railway Spain Grade 2
The British influence on the Costa del Sol is a chequered one: fish and chips, flamenco nights, but also Mr Henderson’s Railway, built in the 1890s to link Gibraltar with the pueblos blancosof the Andalusian high country. It’s a stunner, and it makes an afternoon ramble out of Ronda excitingly easy. Alight in the snoozy hamlet of Benaojan and follow a crisscross track down through the Guadiaro valley, through almond groves and limestone ravines, to still sleepier Jimera, home to Restaurante Quercus (00 34-952 180041). There’s a station to whisk you back. For route details, visit www.andalucia.com . On Foot Holidays (01722 322652, www.onfootholidays.co.uk ) offers a version of the walk on its sevennight White Villages of the Ronda trip; £525pp, excluding flights.
26 The goat track France Grade 2
The 2,000ft plunge from La Turbie to the sea distils the best of the Côte d’Azur into five breathtaking miles. A short bus ride from Nice, this Tuscan-class hill town teeters on the Grande Corniche, and it’s all downhill into the cliffhanging village of Eze, skewered on its limestone spike. If you’ve the cash, and a change of shoes, the Golden Goat (www.chevredor.com ) beckons, with a Michelin-starred meal served before vivid views of the Med. The Grill du Château is a tasty cheaper option. Then it’s a knee-trembling descent on Sentier Frédéric Nietzsche to Eze-Bord-de-Mer, where you can bus back to Nice. Landscapes of Eastern Provence (£12.99; www.sunflowerbooks.co.uk ) has the route, or book a guided week in Nice with Ramblers Holidays (01707 331133, www.ramblersholidays.co.uk); from £368pp, excluding travel.
27 Smugglers’ haunts Cornwall Grade 3
At 630 blistering miles, the South West Coast Path has more ups and downs than Everest. That’s a lot of tramping, but on the 16-mile, two-day stage from Helston, on the suntrap Lizard peninsula, you can scoop off the cream. Among the highlights: smugglers’ tales and crab platters at the Halzephron Inn; heartbreakingly romantic Winwalloe Church, half buried in sand; harbour views from the Mullion Cove Hotel (01326 240328, www.mullion-cove.co.uk ; doubles from £120, B&B); and rock-pooling and ices at Kynance Cove. The Truronian bus (no T34) will whisk you from Lizard village to Helston. Buy a trail guide for £12.99 at www.aurumpress.co.uk .
28 Curry country India Grade 3
Cookery courses come no more organic than on a hike through the foothills of the Kumaon region, beneath the icy frieze of the Tibetan Himalayas. Lodging in village guesthouses along the trail, you’ll get stuck in with harvesting chillies, peppers and pomegranates from the terraced plots, and maybe even help tend the buffalo. Then you can help the Kumaoni women prepare aloo, parathaand raita, garnished with mint chatni. Best of all, you’re helping to bring a livelihood to a threatened mountain community, as part of the Village Ways project. A 12-night trip with six half-day walks starts at £678,excluding flights;01223 750049, www.villageways.com .
29 Nature’s hot tub Dominica Grade 3
The giddy peaks and steaming jungles of Dominica are built for adventure: next year, the island will open the Caribbean’s first long-distance trek, the 125-mile Waitukubuli Trail. In the meantime, the six-hour hike to the Boiling Lake, 3,000ft up in Morne Trois Pitons National Park, packs a mighty punch. The lake is a flooded fumarole, superheated to 92C by gases seeping from the volcano beneath. The route is packed with incident: you’ll begin with a swim through the cavern complex at Titou Gorge and end by simmering your calves in the sulphurous pools of the Valley of Desolation. It’s strenuous, and you’ll need a local guide (contact Dominica Tourism; 00 1 767 448 2045). Motmot Travel (01327 830918, www.motmottravel.com) has a 10-day Dominica Adventure Tour from £1,099pp, excluding flights.
30 The big melt Iceland Grade 3
The Vatnajokull icecap is Europe’s heftiest glacier, and, come spring, it sends blasting sheets of meltwater into the Jokulsa River, which has chopped a 300ft canyon deep into a desert of lava. Cataclysmic stuff, and you can feel the spray on a hike through the canyon to 150ft Dettifoss, the most powerful waterfall in Iceland - a country that offers quite a bit of competition. It’s a full day’s hike on a superlative scale, and High Places (0845 257 7500, www.highplaces.co.uk ) offers it as part of a two-week Iceland Contrasts holiday; from £1,620pp, excluding flights.
31 Footsteps of Apollo Crete Grade 3
Samaria Gorge is Europe’s original and best canyon descent - not to mention the longest (10 miles), deepest (4,000ft) and just plain awesomest. Clamber down at dawn from the Cretan highlands over titanic boulders and tinkling streams, feeding fig leaves to the kri-kri goats and urging each other on with tales about the trolls that might lurk among the 1,600ft walls of rock on each side. It’s where Apollo came on holiday after murdering Python, and it makes a great first trek for older kids, with a beach at the end for bathing. Buses run daily from Chania, round trip £20; gorge fee £4. Samaria is featured on an eight-day West Crete hiking holiday with Cretan Adventures (00 30 2810 332772, www.cretanadventures.gr ); from £678pp, excluding flights.
32 Sunny side up Bali Grade 3
Off to Bali? Don't forget to pack your fleece and head torch. You’ll need them on the night climb to Mount Batur, the island’s sacred (and still active) volcano. The idea is to start at 4am and reach the summit in time to watch the sun rise over the crater - but what you’ll remember is the moonlit ascent across steaming black lava slopes, pimpled with temples and staked out by apes.Up top, your guide will boil an egg for breakfast to demonstrate the fieriness of the volcanic pools. It’s a fun hike for fit children and features on a 14-day Volcanoes and Elephants family tour with Explore (0844 499 0901, www.explore.co.uk ); from £1,500pp (£1,335 for under12s), including flights.
33 Saruman’s lair New Zealand Grade 3
The Milford Track gets all the press - and, by gum, it’s good-looking, especially that whopping great fjord at the end - but it’s also rainy, fly-bitten and often overcrowded. The Kiwi cognoscenti favour the Routeburn Track, a trail with all the majesty for half the effort. A three-day, 20-mile tramp, it treads the snow-capped alpine saddle between Fiordland and Mount Aspiring national parks, with views into the Dart valley - which starred as Isengard in The Lord of the Rings. To download trail notes, visit www.doc.govt.nz . All Ways Pacific (01494 432747, www.all-ways.co.uk ) offers guided treks from £429pp.
34 The green cauldron Madeira Grade 3
Don’t look down! That’s the first rule of walking in Madeira, as you sneak along the slender parapets of the levadas - irrigation channels hacked into the suicidally steep mountainsides by workmen in wicker baskets two centuries ago. They now make brilliant catwalks into the subtropical island interior - so long as you’ve a head for heights. Don’t miss the Levada do Caldeirao Verde: it’s well railed and has monster views, with the 330ft Green Cauldron waterfall as a target. An 11-mile route features in Landscapes of Madeira (£12.99; www.sunflowerbooks.co.uk ); Sunvil (020 8758 4722, www.sunvil.co.uk ) offers a shorter version as part of a one-week walking holiday; from £939pp, including flights.
35 The edge of Europe Ireland Grade 3
Endless skies, emerald hills, whales and dolphins popping up to say hello . . . the Dingle Peninsula is the Ireland you’ve seen in all those glossy television commercials, and a gripping eight-mile yomp across the Three Sisters traverses the best of it. The Sisters are a trio of clifftop pinnacles crashing out into the surf, and the circuit from Dun an Oir via Sybil Point and along the switchback ridge requires a head for heights and good binoculars - southwest Ireland is the best place for land-based whale-watching in Europe. You’ll need OS of Ireland Discovery map 70.
36 Sacred steps Brazil Grade 3
Few city walks are more intrepid than the climb through the bairrosof Rio to the toe-tips of Christ the Redeemer. It starts with pure hedonism on sexy, surfy Ipanema beach; pauses for lunch on the chic streets of Lagoa, Rio’s lagoon district; then rises ever heavenward, fully 2,000ft, on the forested flanks of the Corcovado mountain. Five hours later, you’re at the feet of Cristo, soaked in celestial views and sweaty satisfaction. Or, of course, you could do it by coach. With Jingando (020 8877 1630, www.jingandoholidays.com), a week in Rio starts at £659pp, including the guided walk, but not flights.
37 Up in the gods Italy Grade 3
The Sentiero degli Dei, the Pathway of the Gods, is heavenly all right - but it’s not so much a path as a shelf, chiselled into the limestone cliffs high above the Amalfi coast. It offers balcony views of a shoreline of operatic grandeur: steepling white crags, azure ocean and pastel-shaded harbours twinkling 2,000ft (and 1,700 steps) below. Tiptoeing from Praiano to Positano along the vertiginous trail takes about four hours - or more if you pause for Europe’s most panoramic lunch, at the utterly delicious Trattoria Santa Croce, in Nocelle (00 39 089 811260). Lonely Planet’s Walking in Italy (£12.99) has the route, and it’s the highlight of guided and self-guided seven-day Amalfi itineraries from Headwater (01606 720199, www.headwater.com); from £1,099pp, including flights.
38 Migration route Tanzania Grade 3
The Ngorongoro Crater is the most compelling wildlife enclosure on earth: a natural bowl 2,000ft deep, brimming with 25,000 snarling and scarpering beasts, including the complete fistful of Africa’s Big Five. Standard safaris drive into the crater, but on foot you can escape your own species completely, apart from the Masai who guide you around the north rim, with a fair chance of glimpsing zebras, wildebeest and elephants behind every bush. Audley (01993 838500, www.audleytravel.com ) has a three-day tent-based trek that takes you miles off the beaten track; from £3,500pp as part of an eight-day Tanzania safari, including flights.
39 Here be dragons China Grade 4
It’s said that a tiger once hurdled Tiger Leaping Gorge to escape a hunter, but you won’t want to try it. It’s at least 100ft across - and 3,000ft down into the boiling Yangtze River. The High Trail shimmies along the precipices above. Walked by the stocky, smiley Naxi villagers for generations, it is two days and 15 miles of stupendousness, menaced by the steepling peak of Jade Dragon Snow Mountain. The trek features on a 21-day Journey Across China itinerary offered by Imaginative Traveller (0845 077 8802, www.imaginative-traveller.com ); £1,099pp, excluding flights.
40 On the Edge Cumbria Grade 4
There’s lots of competition in the Lake District, but Helvellyn is the most characterfulhill climb in Britain. It’s all about the mile to the summit: Striding Edge, a crazy series of dagger-sharp pinnacles that makes you feel you’re clambering along the spine of a stegosaurus. The full circuit from Glenridding, descending via Swirral Edge, takes about six hours (www.lakedistrictoutdoors.co.uk); you need OS Explorer mapOL5. Heart of the Lakes (015394 32321, www.heartofthelakes.co.uk) rents cottages across Cumbria; Dodd’s Lee, at Dockray, sleeps eight and starts at £555 per week.
41 High wire France Grade 4
Fancy a hike up a vertical cliff face? You’ll need avia ferrata - a network of iron cables, ladders and bridges allowing weekend strollers to reach parts usually reserved for mountaineers. Harnessed on the main cable, you can shimmy up the tricky sections without fear of falling. A spectacular first climb is the Rocher du Vent, in French Savoie, involving a hulking 2,400ft Alp, views of Mont Blanc and Lake Roselend, and a spine-tingling high-wire crossing between the twin summits. Essential Montagne (00 33-613 833 970, www.e-montagne.com ) can take you there from Bourg-St-Maurice:a guided day hike costs £50, or it’s £220pp for a four-day adventure package.
42 The ice man cometh Argentina Grade 4
Hikes don’t come more thrilling - nor chilling - than a once-in-a-lifetime crunch across the Perito Moreno glacier, in Argentina. It’s the most spellbinding ice cube anywhere -15 storeys high, three miles across and perpetually chucking vast icebergs into the Lago Argentino. You can view the show from the panoramic balconies, but to feel its full sound and fury, pay £50, pop on your crampons and follow your leader out into the white, dodging sinkholes, water slides and true-blue crevasses. Footloose (0845 330 6095, www.footloose.com ) has a 19-day Patagonia Adventure from £1,510pp, including the trek, but not flights.
43 Into the volcano New Zealand Grade 4
The best day walk on earth? Probably the Tongariro Alpine Crossing, over the smoking summit of one of New Zealand’s more temperamental volcanoes. It’s a hallucinogenic experience, crunching across spiky lava between boiling mud pools, sulphurous steam vents and crazy-blue crater lakes, and takes seven hours — longer if you attempt the tricky side scramble to Ngauruhoe, aka Mount Doom in the Lord of the Rings films. Local operators can bus you in and out (www.thetongariro crossing.co.nz). A seven-day itinerary starts at £1,995pp, including flights and a guided hike, with Bailey Robinson (01488 689700, www.baileyrobinson.com).
44 The Executioner Skye Grade 4
The Black Cuillin is Britain’s movie-star mountain range, the only one with the jagged rawness of the Andes or the Alps. You need ropes and a faraway expression to tackle the full seven-mile traverse, but not for Bruach na Frithe, an eight-mile up-and-down hike from the Sligachan Hotel. There’s steepness and scree, but no vertigo, and your reward is a big-screen panorama of the whole ridge, with Am Basteir, “the Executioner”, looming largest. For route notes, visit www.walkhighlands.co.uk . Wilderness Scotland (0131 625 6635, www.wildernessscotland.com ) includes the ascent on a seven-day Skye trekking tour; £825pp.
45 Cross country England Grade 4
The Hadrian’s Wall Path may be stuffed with roaming Roman history, but if you’re after epic English landscape, the Coast to Coast Walk takes the laurels. Mapped out in 1973 by professional grump Alfred Wainwright, it’s a two-week, 190-mile meander across the Lake District, the Yorkshire Dales and the North York Moors. That’s three national parks — the best three. And there are frothing pints and sustaining breakfasts to fuel your progress. Plan it yourself with Martin Wainwright’s guidebook (Aurum Press £12.99) or hire Coast to Coast Packhorse (017683 71777, www.cumbria.com/packhorse ) to book your B&Bs and move your bags; a 12-night self-guided tour starts at £670pp.
46 Grand traverse America Grade 5
Millions of tourists have brought their boots to the brink of the Grand Canyon, gazing down to where the Colorado River spins its silver thread 6,000ft below. Rather fewer have been down and dipped in their toes. The rim-to-rim traverse of the planet’s biggest hole in the ground is only 24 miles, but it’s iconically tough. There’s a 10-mile descent on the Bright Angel Trail, through a tumble of crimson towers, pink ravines and blasting waterfalls to the river, then it’s 14 zigzagging miles up the other side. You’ll finish smiling broadly through a coating of deep pink dust. The American operator Discovery Treks (www.discoverytreks.com ) offers assorted hikes in the chasm. Ramblers Worldwide Holidays (01707 331133, www.ramblersholidays.co.uk ) offers a two-day traverse on its epic 18-day Canyonlands tour; from £2,562pp, including flights.
47 The cradle of gold Peru Grade 5
A lost Inca city, pristinely preserved, panoramically located and accessible only on foot. No, not Machu Picchu. . . Choquequirao. The “new” Inca Trail is a rugged eight-day camping hike across the Apurimac canyon to the “Cradle of Gold”, its silver-grey temples and terraces looming enigmatically on a 6,500ft ridge. With the (original) Inca Trail becoming overrun and over-regulated, Choquequirao will get busier, so discover it before the hordes. Wilderness Journeys (0131 625 6635, www.wildernessjourneys.com ) has a two-week trip from £1,965pp, including flights.
48 Moon river Namibia Grade 5
Until there are package tours to the moon, we’ll have to make do with Fish River Canyon, an eerie, echoing gash through the Namib desert. Gullies plunge, buttresses fly, cobras hiss and spires and pinnacles of naked rock blush pink, ochre and bronze in the shifting sunlight. It’s a big-league backpacking trek through the ravine — 40 miles in four days if you go with Exodus (0845 863 9600, www.exodus.co.uk ), which combines the canyon trek with a walk on Sossusvlei, the world’s highest dunes; 15 days start at £1,699pp, including flights.
49 The big loop Alps Grade 5
The Tour du Mont Blanc is Europe’s highest hairy-chested hike, a 105-mile circuit right around western Europe’s tallest peak, as well as a few of its satellite summits. Marching out from Chamonix, the trail conquers three countries (France, Italy, Switzerland), dips into archetypal Alpine resorts and tops out at the Fenêtre d’Arpette, at nearly 9,000ft. A good starting point is the Tour of Mont Blanc trekking guide (£12.95; www.cicerone.co.uk ). If you don’t have a Brian Blessed beard and calves like a sucking pig’s, never fear: KE Adventure (017687 73966, www.keadventure.com ) has put together a guided hotel-to-hotel version, with meals and baggage transfers thrown in; 11 nights start at £1,295pp, excluding flights. You’ll still need to be fit, though.
50 Find that yeti Bhutan Grade 5
The yeti is the ultimate cryptozoological enigma: zero confirmed sightings, 15m search results on Google. While there are many mammoth Himalayan hiking adventures (Everest Base Camp, the Annapurna Circuit), on the Lunana Snowman Trek, you feel like a proper pioneer. It involves a month’s hardcore mushing across the snowbound 17,000ft passes of Bhutan, where the yeti, or Dredmo, is sacred. Himalayan Kingdoms (01453 844400, www.himalayankingdoms.com ) plans a super-tough Snowman Trek for October 2009; £5,895pp, including flights.
September 14, 2008
The world's 50 best walks
The Sunday Times presents the world’s best treks, from a grade-one pub stroll right up to a grade-five yeti hunt
Graded 1-5, with 1 the easiest and 5 the most challenging
1 Highlands for beginners Glencoe Grade 1
All great pub walks should involve a quick hit of scenery, then a slow sup by the fire - and the Clachaig Inn, buried among the man-sized mountains of Glencoe, has a cracker. A mile’s clamber on a pinewood trail brings you to Signal Rock, where, in 1692, government troopers gave the fateful command that triggered the Glencoe massacre. Highland scenery soars on every side, red stags bellow in the autumn rut ... and it’s all yours for barely an hour’s effort. And who cares if you feel a fraud back in the Boots Bar at the Clachaig (01855 811252, www.clachaig.com ), with its granite-jawed climbers and ice-axe decor? They do 160 malts and a tasty line in venison burgers.
2 Storm the ramparts Croatia Grade 1
It took a battering in the Balkans conflict, but Unesco restoration has turned plucky Dubrovnik into the loveliest medieval city under the sun. The hour-long circuit of its old town’s battlements is unforgettable, around an Escher-like collection of sand-castle sentry posts, helter-skelter stairways and crumbling catwalks, all poised on high cliffs against the bluest bit of the Adriatic. Go for sunset, then descend for cocktails at Bar Buza, on a craggy platform between citadel and sea. The ramparts are open 9am-7.30pm; £5.50; www.tzdubrovnik.hr/english/. Original Travel (020 7978 7333, www.originaltravel.co.uk ) has three nights in Dubrovnik from £540pp, including flights.
3 Tropical downpour Venezuela Grade 1
At 19 times higher than Niagara, Angel Falls is a wonder - but getting there is nearly as memorable as seeing it. After a half-day expedition by dugout canoe, it’s an hour’s scramble into the throb and fizz of the jungle. You’ll balance across branches, paddle through creeks - and suddenly it’s there, blasting straight out of the clouds into the lagoon below. All that remains is to cool off under the loftiest shower on earth. Last Frontiers (01296 653000, www.lastfrontiers.com ) has a 12-day Venezuela itinerary, with three nights at Canaima, from £2,339pp, including flights.
4 Stout and stanzas Dublin Grade 1
No city is as rich in pubs and poetry as Dublin, and Colm Quilligan’s literary pub crawl is a genius amalgam of both - a 2½hour stagger with Wilde, Joyce, Behan and Beckett. “Their search for an audience took them from the drawing room to the public saloon,” Quilligan says. His tour visits four favourite “Publin” watering holes, allowing time for internal lubrication between comic cuts of the writers’ work. The guides, all pro actors, begin with a shot of the black stuff - an excerpt from Waiting for Godot. Tours nightly, £10; 00 353 1670 5602, www.dublinpubcrawl.com .
5 Tortoise pace Seychelles Grade 1
On the island of Curieuse, giant tortoises patrol the shore, jacking themselves up on hydraulic legs to greet arriving sailors. The nature reserve here is full of wild wonders, not just the enormous - and enormously friendly - Aldabra tortoises, but giant palm spiders, black parrots and transparent ghost crabs, which blow across the sand like dandelion down. A boardwalk trail takes you through the mangroves and over the headland to emerge on Anse St José, the most beautiful beach in the Indian Ocean. Creole Travel Services (00 248 297000, www.creoletravelservices.com) can arrange your Curieuse excursion; Elite Vacations (01707 371000, www.seychelleselite.co.uk) has sevennight autumn packages from £1,145pp, including flights.
6 Into the underworld Morocco Grade 1
Potentially, Fez’s medina is the world’s longest city walk. The labyrinth of souks is unmatched and probably unmappable, with 9,400 alleyways, some so narrow you have to sidestep through. It’s a magic-carpet ride for the senses: the clang of metal workshops, the stink of the tannery, donkeys brushing past with toppling loads, traders hawking cloth, comestibles and cures for everything from haemorrhoids to a broken heart. A two-hour tour with a guide costs about £20 (Fez Tourism; 00 212 35 62 34 60). Best of Morocco (0845 026 4588,www.realmorocco.com ) has four nights from £595pp, with flights.
7 See the skulls New Orleans Grade 1
The cult of the dead is very much alive in New Orleans, and nowhere embodies the sultry strangeness of the city like St Louis Cemetery Number 1, the spookiest graveyard in the world. A guided walk invites you to meet its shrivelling citizenry, all of whom are buried above ground – some in temple-sized vaults, others barely covered by crumbling brickheaps. New Orleans Spirit Tours (£11; www.neworleanstours.net ) will show you around, and adds a visit to a modern voodoo temple. Bon Voyage (0800 316 0194, www.bon-voyage.co.uk ) includes the tour in a Louisiana fly-drive: nine days start at £599pp.
8 Woozle hunting East Sussex Grade 1
The most eye-boggling walk in southeast England? Easy: across the clifftops of the Seven Sisters. But the most cockle-warming? An “expotition” with Pooh and Piglet in the real-life Hundred Acre Wood. The magic of AA Milne’s universe owes much to the richly reimagined landscape of Ashdown Forest, the Sussex oasis of pine stands, gorse bushes and high, heathery places where Christopher Robin played. Grab a child as an excuse, collect a Pooh Country map from East Grinstead tourism (01342 410121, www.eastgrinstead. gov.uk ) and drive to Gills Lap car park.
9 Sydney-on-Sea Australia Grade 1
Everyone’s heard of Bondi Beach... but what about Tamarama, Bronte, Clovelly, Gordon’s Bay? The two-hour promenade from Bondi along Sydney’s eastern seaboard must be the world’s best walk you can do in your Speedos – it’s one knockout strand after the next. First up is Tamarama, known as Glamorama because of its rich and famous habitués; then picturesque Bronte, a good place for brunch; and Clovelly, the best spot for a swim. After 3½ miles, you’re at Coogee, for a milkshake and the bus back to Circular Quay. To print the trail, visit www.waverley.nsw. gov.au. Bonzer.
10 Snail trail Italy Grade 1
Siena is like a pop-up page from a storybook, all Rapunzel towers and medieval alleyways. What clinches its appeal for kids, however is thecontrade: the 17 neighbourhoods that compete in the biannualpalio horse race. Each has its totem – dragon, unicorn, giraffe, panther ... caterpillar. This turns a city walk into an I-spy trail, as each district has its fountain and its flag, as well as nameplates and knockers adorned with the sacred symbol. You can download a children’s trail at www.terresiena.it . ATG Oxford (01865 315678, www.atg-oxford.com ) includes a Siena stroll on its self-guided Tuscan walking holidays. Four nights start at £355pp, excluding flights.
11 Gilded prison Snowdonia Grade 1
With the imminent return of The Prisoner to our television screens, Portmeirion will soon be back in the limelight. It’s the supreme monument to British eccentricity, a high-camp Italianate village assembled in the 1920s using abandoned monuments and bits of scrap statuary, painted in zany colours and tattooed onto a remote headland overlooking Cardigan Bay. A walk there is relentlessly enchanting. You can tunnel through 70 acres of exotic clifftop gardens to find bricolage temples and lighthouses, then blink out across the expanse of Black Rock Sands. Open daily; £7, children £3.50; www.portmeirion-village.com
12 Eat the Apple New York Grade 1
The way to a city’s heart is through its stomach: at least, that’s roughly the premise of Addie Tomei’s belly-busting gastro-walks in the Big Apple. They take you a million miles from the staple tourist fodder of Broadway and Bloomingdale’s into neighbourhood New York – the steamy pasta kitchens of Little Italy and the fragrant bagel bakeries of the Lower East Side – sampling copiously as you go. Addie is the ideal brassy Brooklyn guide, but do bring your appetite: the Chinatown and Little Italy combo trip should come with a free high-colonic. Tours start at £60 with Savory Sojourns (00 1 212 691 7314, www.savorysojourns.com ).
13 Village of the damned Derbyshire Grade 1
Death, pestilence and gruesome graveyards – the horrible history of Eyam is a winner with kids. In 1665, this bucolic Peak District hamlet went bubonic, as the plague arrived in a parcel of cloth from London, and villagers pledged to quarantine themselves. By the time the disease abated, 269 had perished. A 20p leaflet from Eyam Museum (01433 631371, www.eyammuseum.demon.co.uk ) sets you off on a tragic treasure hunt among the cottages where the story unfolded; or buy Making Tracks, which lists Peakland walks for children (£10.95; www.walking-books.com).
14 Rat run Paris Grade 1
Finding the entrance to the Paris sewers is easy – head for the Eiffel Tower, then follow your nose. The sewers have been, well, fundamental to the city’s cultural history, from Les Misérables to Delicatessen, and at the Musée des Egouts (93 Quai d’Orsay; £3.30), you can penetrate several hundred yards of tunnels. The ramshackle gangways make the walk an adventure, encouraging the sneaky suspicion that you might slip into the slop below. For a guided tour, contact Paris Walks (£8; 00 33 1 48 09 21 40, www.paris-walks.com).
15 Love Valley Turkey Grade 2
Out on the eastern edges of Europe, there’s a place where cavemen live inside strange stone spires shaped like huge phalluses. Sorry to be blunt, but the so-called “fairy chimneys” of Cappadocia are the fruitiest obelisks on the planet. Men have been hollowing their hobbit houses into the soft tufa rock since biblical times, and exploring here is a mythic experience – especially the Love Valley walk from Goreme, with 400 Byzantine churches chiselled into the rock. HF Holidays (0845 470 7558, www.hfholidays.co.uk ) includes it on an easy-going Caverns of Cappadocia trip; nine nights start at £1,435pp, with flights.
16 Chateau-hopping France Grade 2
The picture-book Château de Chaumont is France’s Chelsea, host to the Festival International des Jardins (www.chaumont-jardins.com ), and you could devote all day to a wide-eyed wander around the extravagant plots laid out by “landscape artists” from across the globe. But do it in half a day, then strike out on a bosky seven-mile meander along the Loire valley to the British-run Domaine du Prieure (www.les-metamorphozes.com ) for a taste of the Touraine wines – andchambre d’hôteif you decide to make a weekend of it. You’ll need Blue Series map No 20220 Ouest; alternatively, the route is offered by Belle France (01580 214010, www.bellefrance.co.uk ) as part of its Chateau to Chateau walking holiday. Eight days start at £801pp, including car ferry.
17 Subaqua scramble Thailand Grade 2
You don’t need a machete or a Tarzan chest wig to climb Erawan Falls, but they might just help. The cascade plummets through seven sensational tiers of tropical rainforest in Kanchanaburi province, northwest of Bangkok. The mile-long scramble to its summit gets more adventurous by the minute, as craggy pathways draped in lianas give way to rickety bridges and tree-branch ladders. Stopping to have a swim is irresistible – and, by the time you reach the top, you’ll be soaked anyway. Intrepid Travel (020 3147 7777, www.intrepidtravel.com ) has an eight-day Taste of Thailand tour, which takes in Erawan, from £915pp, including flights
18 Fat Duck Waddle Berkshire Grade 2
The Thames Path must be the world’s laziest long-distance footpath: all downhill from source to sea, no map-reading necessary, just stick to the river. The stretch running from Henley-on-Thames to Bray makes the perfect foodie weekend. The first day is a well-heeled six-mile wander along the rowing river of Jerome K Jerome and The Wind in the Willows. Stay at the Olde Bell, in Hurley (from £150, B&B; www.theoldebell.co.uk ), which has a scrumptious new restaurant, then press on via Marlow and Cookham to Bray, and the Fat Duck (www.fatduck.co.uk ), the ultimate gastronaut’s reward. Altogether you’ve pounded 18 miles (and gained 18lb, probably); www.nationaltrail.co.uk/thamespath .
19 Secret Eden Costa Rica Grade 2
Five hundred types of tree, 220 kinds of butterfly and more bird species than the whole of North America put together: the Corcovado National Park, in Costa Rica, is the most biodiverse place on earth. As you walk the beach trail from Sirena to La Leona, scarlet macaws wheel overhead, pelicans plunge into the waves, white-nosed coatis shovel for crabs and monkeys howl from the rainforest canopy. The jaguars and tapirs are tougher to spot, as are the deadly crocs and bushmaster snakes. You’ll be safe enough with a guide from Corcovado Adventures (www.corcovado.com ); or book a 17-day trekking tour with High Places (0845 257 7500, www.highplaces.co. uk ) for £2,190pp, including flights.
20 Port to port Portugal Grade 2
When is a wine tour not (quite) a wine tour? When it gambols among the sunshiny port estates of the Douro valley, in northern Portugal. This is a pointillist landscape of hill-hung vineyards staircasing steeply into the river - bizarrely evocative of the rice paddies of China. The circular walk from Pinhao up to Quinta do Noval, the Château Lafite of the port lodges, is vintage stuff: a seven-mile circuit, bits of it taxing, but worth every step for the outdoor tasting en route. Arblaster & Clarke (01730 263111; www.winetours.co.uk ) offers it as part of a week’s Douro ramble; from £1,399pp, including flights.
21 Heidi highs Switzerland Grade 2
Kandersteg is classic Switzerland: cuckoo-clock houses, blinding-white peaks and flower-pricked meadows full of cowbells and yodelling. It’s the starting point for the loveliest day walk in the Alps, around a luminous mountain lake called Oeschinensee. A hill-beating cable car from town cuts the circuit to seven miles, and the views are mind-altering. The Victoria Ritter (00 41 33 675 8000, www.hotel-victoria.ch) has high-summer family apartments from £144 per night - and does a mean fondue. Inntravel (01653 617906, www.inntravel.co.uk ) offers a sevennight walking package, based at the hotel, from £609pp, excluding flights.
22 The Postman’s Path Mallorca Grade 2
The dove-grey peaks of northern Mallorca are chunky with sea-view strolling. The Pilgrims’ Path is the loftiest, the Archduke’s Trail the maziest, but for a family-friendly flavour, base yourself in Soller, catch the bus to Deia, the artists’ enclave beloved of Robert Graves, and stride back en familleon the eight well-marked miles of the Postman’s Path, a panoramic mule track through olive groves and orange orchards. Holiday Walks in Mallorca (Sigma Press £9.95) has the route; Andalucian Adventures (01453 834137, www.andalucian-adventures.co.uk ) offers a week’s guided walking from £1,010pp, excluding flights.
23 Tomb raiding Jordan Grade 2
Even at 9am, tourist high tide, nothing dents the drama of a visit to Petra, the wondrous, whittled-out canyon city of the ancient Nabateans. What clinches its status as a New Wonder of the World, however, is the walk that gets you there - almost a mile between the sky-busting sandstone bulwarks of the Siq, a thin gulch etched with 2,000-year-old carvings and echoing with the clatter of ponies and traps. However hot you are, don’t miss making the extra hour’s climb, beyond the fabled treasury and the painted tombs, to explore the city’s immense mountaintop monastery, etched into its crag. For a rather longer trek to Petra, Walks Worldwide (01524 242000, www.walksworldwide.com ) has a 10-day Jordan Gorges holiday for £1,495pp, including flights.
24 Lilies and damsels Pembrokeshire Grade 2
If Monet had hailed from Pembrokeshire, he wouldn’t have needed to spend so much time gardening. Bosherston Nature Reserve (01646 661359) is a fairy land of lily ponds and woods squirrelled behind Broad Haven beach; and, come June, thousands of floating flowers explode into bloom, illuminating the most romantic evening walks imaginable. It’s a seven-minute stroll from Bosherston village, or an elementally gorgeous seven-mile circular hike across gull-draped cliffs from Stackpole Quay, where the National Trust rents cottages from £255 per week (0844 800 2070, www.nationaltrustcottages.co.uk ).
25 Mr Henderson’s Railway Spain Grade 2
The British influence on the Costa del Sol is a chequered one: fish and chips, flamenco nights, but also Mr Henderson’s Railway, built in the 1890s to link Gibraltar with the pueblos blancosof the Andalusian high country. It’s a stunner, and it makes an afternoon ramble out of Ronda excitingly easy. Alight in the snoozy hamlet of Benaojan and follow a crisscross track down through the Guadiaro valley, through almond groves and limestone ravines, to still sleepier Jimera, home to Restaurante Quercus (00 34-952 180041). There’s a station to whisk you back. For route details, visit www.andalucia.com . On Foot Holidays (01722 322652, www.onfootholidays.co.uk ) offers a version of the walk on its sevennight White Villages of the Ronda trip; £525pp, excluding flights.
26 The goat track France Grade 2
The 2,000ft plunge from La Turbie to the sea distils the best of the Côte d’Azur into five breathtaking miles. A short bus ride from Nice, this Tuscan-class hill town teeters on the Grande Corniche, and it’s all downhill into the cliffhanging village of Eze, skewered on its limestone spike. If you’ve the cash, and a change of shoes, the Golden Goat (www.chevredor.com ) beckons, with a Michelin-starred meal served before vivid views of the Med. The Grill du Château is a tasty cheaper option. Then it’s a knee-trembling descent on Sentier Frédéric Nietzsche to Eze-Bord-de-Mer, where you can bus back to Nice. Landscapes of Eastern Provence (£12.99; www.sunflowerbooks.co.uk ) has the route, or book a guided week in Nice with Ramblers Holidays (01707 331133, www.ramblersholidays.co.uk); from £368pp, excluding travel.
27 Smugglers’ haunts Cornwall Grade 3
At 630 blistering miles, the South West Coast Path has more ups and downs than Everest. That’s a lot of tramping, but on the 16-mile, two-day stage from Helston, on the suntrap Lizard peninsula, you can scoop off the cream. Among the highlights: smugglers’ tales and crab platters at the Halzephron Inn; heartbreakingly romantic Winwalloe Church, half buried in sand; harbour views from the Mullion Cove Hotel (01326 240328, www.mullion-cove.co.uk ; doubles from £120, B&B); and rock-pooling and ices at Kynance Cove. The Truronian bus (no T34) will whisk you from Lizard village to Helston. Buy a trail guide for £12.99 at www.aurumpress.co.uk .
28 Curry country India Grade 3
Cookery courses come no more organic than on a hike through the foothills of the Kumaon region, beneath the icy frieze of the Tibetan Himalayas. Lodging in village guesthouses along the trail, you’ll get stuck in with harvesting chillies, peppers and pomegranates from the terraced plots, and maybe even help tend the buffalo. Then you can help the Kumaoni women prepare aloo, parathaand raita, garnished with mint chatni. Best of all, you’re helping to bring a livelihood to a threatened mountain community, as part of the Village Ways project. A 12-night trip with six half-day walks starts at £678,excluding flights;01223 750049, www.villageways.com .
29 Nature’s hot tub Dominica Grade 3
The giddy peaks and steaming jungles of Dominica are built for adventure: next year, the island will open the Caribbean’s first long-distance trek, the 125-mile Waitukubuli Trail. In the meantime, the six-hour hike to the Boiling Lake, 3,000ft up in Morne Trois Pitons National Park, packs a mighty punch. The lake is a flooded fumarole, superheated to 92C by gases seeping from the volcano beneath. The route is packed with incident: you’ll begin with a swim through the cavern complex at Titou Gorge and end by simmering your calves in the sulphurous pools of the Valley of Desolation. It’s strenuous, and you’ll need a local guide (contact Dominica Tourism; 00 1 767 448 2045). Motmot Travel (01327 830918, www.motmottravel.com) has a 10-day Dominica Adventure Tour from £1,099pp, excluding flights.
30 The big melt Iceland Grade 3
The Vatnajokull icecap is Europe’s heftiest glacier, and, come spring, it sends blasting sheets of meltwater into the Jokulsa River, which has chopped a 300ft canyon deep into a desert of lava. Cataclysmic stuff, and you can feel the spray on a hike through the canyon to 150ft Dettifoss, the most powerful waterfall in Iceland - a country that offers quite a bit of competition. It’s a full day’s hike on a superlative scale, and High Places (0845 257 7500, www.highplaces.co.uk ) offers it as part of a two-week Iceland Contrasts holiday; from £1,620pp, excluding flights.
31 Footsteps of Apollo Crete Grade 3
Samaria Gorge is Europe’s original and best canyon descent - not to mention the longest (10 miles), deepest (4,000ft) and just plain awesomest. Clamber down at dawn from the Cretan highlands over titanic boulders and tinkling streams, feeding fig leaves to the kri-kri goats and urging each other on with tales about the trolls that might lurk among the 1,600ft walls of rock on each side. It’s where Apollo came on holiday after murdering Python, and it makes a great first trek for older kids, with a beach at the end for bathing. Buses run daily from Chania, round trip £20; gorge fee £4. Samaria is featured on an eight-day West Crete hiking holiday with Cretan Adventures (00 30 2810 332772, www.cretanadventures.gr ); from £678pp, excluding flights.
32 Sunny side up Bali Grade 3
Off to Bali? Don't forget to pack your fleece and head torch. You’ll need them on the night climb to Mount Batur, the island’s sacred (and still active) volcano. The idea is to start at 4am and reach the summit in time to watch the sun rise over the crater - but what you’ll remember is the moonlit ascent across steaming black lava slopes, pimpled with temples and staked out by apes.Up top, your guide will boil an egg for breakfast to demonstrate the fieriness of the volcanic pools. It’s a fun hike for fit children and features on a 14-day Volcanoes and Elephants family tour with Explore (0844 499 0901, www.explore.co.uk ); from £1,500pp (£1,335 for under12s), including flights.
33 Saruman’s lair New Zealand Grade 3
The Milford Track gets all the press - and, by gum, it’s good-looking, especially that whopping great fjord at the end - but it’s also rainy, fly-bitten and often overcrowded. The Kiwi cognoscenti favour the Routeburn Track, a trail with all the majesty for half the effort. A three-day, 20-mile tramp, it treads the snow-capped alpine saddle between Fiordland and Mount Aspiring national parks, with views into the Dart valley - which starred as Isengard in The Lord of the Rings. To download trail notes, visit www.doc.govt.nz . All Ways Pacific (01494 432747, www.all-ways.co.uk ) offers guided treks from £429pp.
34 The green cauldron Madeira Grade 3
Don’t look down! That’s the first rule of walking in Madeira, as you sneak along the slender parapets of the levadas - irrigation channels hacked into the suicidally steep mountainsides by workmen in wicker baskets two centuries ago. They now make brilliant catwalks into the subtropical island interior - so long as you’ve a head for heights. Don’t miss the Levada do Caldeirao Verde: it’s well railed and has monster views, with the 330ft Green Cauldron waterfall as a target. An 11-mile route features in Landscapes of Madeira (£12.99; www.sunflowerbooks.co.uk ); Sunvil (020 8758 4722, www.sunvil.co.uk ) offers a shorter version as part of a one-week walking holiday; from £939pp, including flights.
35 The edge of Europe Ireland Grade 3
Endless skies, emerald hills, whales and dolphins popping up to say hello . . . the Dingle Peninsula is the Ireland you’ve seen in all those glossy television commercials, and a gripping eight-mile yomp across the Three Sisters traverses the best of it. The Sisters are a trio of clifftop pinnacles crashing out into the surf, and the circuit from Dun an Oir via Sybil Point and along the switchback ridge requires a head for heights and good binoculars - southwest Ireland is the best place for land-based whale-watching in Europe. You’ll need OS of Ireland Discovery map 70.
36 Sacred steps Brazil Grade 3
Few city walks are more intrepid than the climb through the bairrosof Rio to the toe-tips of Christ the Redeemer. It starts with pure hedonism on sexy, surfy Ipanema beach; pauses for lunch on the chic streets of Lagoa, Rio’s lagoon district; then rises ever heavenward, fully 2,000ft, on the forested flanks of the Corcovado mountain. Five hours later, you’re at the feet of Cristo, soaked in celestial views and sweaty satisfaction. Or, of course, you could do it by coach. With Jingando (020 8877 1630, www.jingandoholidays.com), a week in Rio starts at £659pp, including the guided walk, but not flights.
37 Up in the gods Italy Grade 3
The Sentiero degli Dei, the Pathway of the Gods, is heavenly all right - but it’s not so much a path as a shelf, chiselled into the limestone cliffs high above the Amalfi coast. It offers balcony views of a shoreline of operatic grandeur: steepling white crags, azure ocean and pastel-shaded harbours twinkling 2,000ft (and 1,700 steps) below. Tiptoeing from Praiano to Positano along the vertiginous trail takes about four hours - or more if you pause for Europe’s most panoramic lunch, at the utterly delicious Trattoria Santa Croce, in Nocelle (00 39 089 811260). Lonely Planet’s Walking in Italy (£12.99) has the route, and it’s the highlight of guided and self-guided seven-day Amalfi itineraries from Headwater (01606 720199, www.headwater.com); from £1,099pp, including flights.
38 Migration route Tanzania Grade 3
The Ngorongoro Crater is the most compelling wildlife enclosure on earth: a natural bowl 2,000ft deep, brimming with 25,000 snarling and scarpering beasts, including the complete fistful of Africa’s Big Five. Standard safaris drive into the crater, but on foot you can escape your own species completely, apart from the Masai who guide you around the north rim, with a fair chance of glimpsing zebras, wildebeest and elephants behind every bush. Audley (01993 838500, www.audleytravel.com ) has a three-day tent-based trek that takes you miles off the beaten track; from £3,500pp as part of an eight-day Tanzania safari, including flights.
39 Here be dragons China Grade 4
It’s said that a tiger once hurdled Tiger Leaping Gorge to escape a hunter, but you won’t want to try it. It’s at least 100ft across - and 3,000ft down into the boiling Yangtze River. The High Trail shimmies along the precipices above. Walked by the stocky, smiley Naxi villagers for generations, it is two days and 15 miles of stupendousness, menaced by the steepling peak of Jade Dragon Snow Mountain. The trek features on a 21-day Journey Across China itinerary offered by Imaginative Traveller (0845 077 8802, www.imaginative-traveller.com ); £1,099pp, excluding flights.
40 On the Edge Cumbria Grade 4
There’s lots of competition in the Lake District, but Helvellyn is the most characterfulhill climb in Britain. It’s all about the mile to the summit: Striding Edge, a crazy series of dagger-sharp pinnacles that makes you feel you’re clambering along the spine of a stegosaurus. The full circuit from Glenridding, descending via Swirral Edge, takes about six hours (www.lakedistrictoutdoors.co.uk); you need OS Explorer mapOL5. Heart of the Lakes (015394 32321, www.heartofthelakes.co.uk) rents cottages across Cumbria; Dodd’s Lee, at Dockray, sleeps eight and starts at £555 per week.
41 High wire France Grade 4
Fancy a hike up a vertical cliff face? You’ll need avia ferrata - a network of iron cables, ladders and bridges allowing weekend strollers to reach parts usually reserved for mountaineers. Harnessed on the main cable, you can shimmy up the tricky sections without fear of falling. A spectacular first climb is the Rocher du Vent, in French Savoie, involving a hulking 2,400ft Alp, views of Mont Blanc and Lake Roselend, and a spine-tingling high-wire crossing between the twin summits. Essential Montagne (00 33-613 833 970, www.e-montagne.com ) can take you there from Bourg-St-Maurice:a guided day hike costs £50, or it’s £220pp for a four-day adventure package.
42 The ice man cometh Argentina Grade 4
Hikes don’t come more thrilling - nor chilling - than a once-in-a-lifetime crunch across the Perito Moreno glacier, in Argentina. It’s the most spellbinding ice cube anywhere -15 storeys high, three miles across and perpetually chucking vast icebergs into the Lago Argentino. You can view the show from the panoramic balconies, but to feel its full sound and fury, pay £50, pop on your crampons and follow your leader out into the white, dodging sinkholes, water slides and true-blue crevasses. Footloose (0845 330 6095, www.footloose.com ) has a 19-day Patagonia Adventure from £1,510pp, including the trek, but not flights.
43 Into the volcano New Zealand Grade 4
The best day walk on earth? Probably the Tongariro Alpine Crossing, over the smoking summit of one of New Zealand’s more temperamental volcanoes. It’s a hallucinogenic experience, crunching across spiky lava between boiling mud pools, sulphurous steam vents and crazy-blue crater lakes, and takes seven hours — longer if you attempt the tricky side scramble to Ngauruhoe, aka Mount Doom in the Lord of the Rings films. Local operators can bus you in and out (www.thetongariro crossing.co.nz). A seven-day itinerary starts at £1,995pp, including flights and a guided hike, with Bailey Robinson (01488 689700, www.baileyrobinson.com).
44 The Executioner Skye Grade 4
The Black Cuillin is Britain’s movie-star mountain range, the only one with the jagged rawness of the Andes or the Alps. You need ropes and a faraway expression to tackle the full seven-mile traverse, but not for Bruach na Frithe, an eight-mile up-and-down hike from the Sligachan Hotel. There’s steepness and scree, but no vertigo, and your reward is a big-screen panorama of the whole ridge, with Am Basteir, “the Executioner”, looming largest. For route notes, visit www.walkhighlands.co.uk . Wilderness Scotland (0131 625 6635, www.wildernessscotland.com ) includes the ascent on a seven-day Skye trekking tour; £825pp.
45 Cross country England Grade 4
The Hadrian’s Wall Path may be stuffed with roaming Roman history, but if you’re after epic English landscape, the Coast to Coast Walk takes the laurels. Mapped out in 1973 by professional grump Alfred Wainwright, it’s a two-week, 190-mile meander across the Lake District, the Yorkshire Dales and the North York Moors. That’s three national parks — the best three. And there are frothing pints and sustaining breakfasts to fuel your progress. Plan it yourself with Martin Wainwright’s guidebook (Aurum Press £12.99) or hire Coast to Coast Packhorse (017683 71777, www.cumbria.com/packhorse ) to book your B&Bs and move your bags; a 12-night self-guided tour starts at £670pp.
46 Grand traverse America Grade 5
Millions of tourists have brought their boots to the brink of the Grand Canyon, gazing down to where the Colorado River spins its silver thread 6,000ft below. Rather fewer have been down and dipped in their toes. The rim-to-rim traverse of the planet’s biggest hole in the ground is only 24 miles, but it’s iconically tough. There’s a 10-mile descent on the Bright Angel Trail, through a tumble of crimson towers, pink ravines and blasting waterfalls to the river, then it’s 14 zigzagging miles up the other side. You’ll finish smiling broadly through a coating of deep pink dust. The American operator Discovery Treks (www.discoverytreks.com ) offers assorted hikes in the chasm. Ramblers Worldwide Holidays (01707 331133, www.ramblersholidays.co.uk ) offers a two-day traverse on its epic 18-day Canyonlands tour; from £2,562pp, including flights.
47 The cradle of gold Peru Grade 5
A lost Inca city, pristinely preserved, panoramically located and accessible only on foot. No, not Machu Picchu. . . Choquequirao. The “new” Inca Trail is a rugged eight-day camping hike across the Apurimac canyon to the “Cradle of Gold”, its silver-grey temples and terraces looming enigmatically on a 6,500ft ridge. With the (original) Inca Trail becoming overrun and over-regulated, Choquequirao will get busier, so discover it before the hordes. Wilderness Journeys (0131 625 6635, www.wildernessjourneys.com ) has a two-week trip from £1,965pp, including flights.
48 Moon river Namibia Grade 5
Until there are package tours to the moon, we’ll have to make do with Fish River Canyon, an eerie, echoing gash through the Namib desert. Gullies plunge, buttresses fly, cobras hiss and spires and pinnacles of naked rock blush pink, ochre and bronze in the shifting sunlight. It’s a big-league backpacking trek through the ravine — 40 miles in four days if you go with Exodus (0845 863 9600, www.exodus.co.uk ), which combines the canyon trek with a walk on Sossusvlei, the world’s highest dunes; 15 days start at £1,699pp, including flights.
49 The big loop Alps Grade 5
The Tour du Mont Blanc is Europe’s highest hairy-chested hike, a 105-mile circuit right around western Europe’s tallest peak, as well as a few of its satellite summits. Marching out from Chamonix, the trail conquers three countries (France, Italy, Switzerland), dips into archetypal Alpine resorts and tops out at the Fenêtre d’Arpette, at nearly 9,000ft. A good starting point is the Tour of Mont Blanc trekking guide (£12.95; www.cicerone.co.uk ). If you don’t have a Brian Blessed beard and calves like a sucking pig’s, never fear: KE Adventure (017687 73966, www.keadventure.com ) has put together a guided hotel-to-hotel version, with meals and baggage transfers thrown in; 11 nights start at £1,295pp, excluding flights. You’ll still need to be fit, though.
50 Find that yeti Bhutan Grade 5
The yeti is the ultimate cryptozoological enigma: zero confirmed sightings, 15m search results on Google. While there are many mammoth Himalayan hiking adventures (Everest Base Camp, the Annapurna Circuit), on the Lunana Snowman Trek, you feel like a proper pioneer. It involves a month’s hardcore mushing across the snowbound 17,000ft passes of Bhutan, where the yeti, or Dredmo, is sacred. Himalayan Kingdoms (01453 844400, www.himalayankingdoms.com ) plans a super-tough Snowman Trek for October 2009; £5,895pp, including flights.
2008年8月13日星期三
10款最适用于旅游者的数码相机
10 Top Digital Cameras For Travelers
Whether you're escaping the confines of your office to bask in the sun on some tropical beach, or a recent grad shaking off the obligations of school with a trot around the globe, you're going to want to make sure the memories of this relaxing excursion last for a very long time. Here are 10 top digital cameras that are lightweight, sturdy and will bring back the memories you want to keep.
Olympus FE-310
$140
The Olympus FE-310 is a great no-frills camera, perfect for travelers who want something small and unobtrusive. The 5x optical zoom lens is impressive for a camera of this size. Combined with the eight-megapixel sensor, this camera can produce some impressive results. The FE-310 also features face detection autofocus and auto-exposure, which help bring out the most important parts of your photos. The FE-310 uses a lithium-ion rechargeable battery, however, so don't forget to pack your charger or buy a spare.
Canon PowerShot A470
$120
The Canon PowerShot A470 is remarkably affordable yet still powerful enough to be an excellent travel companion. In addition to its small, portable profile, it uses easily replaceable AA batteries, which means you'll never have to worry about how you're going to replenish your power supply. The A470 is easy to operate and a great choice for budget-minded consumers.
Olympus 1030SW
$375
This camera can take a beating. Perfect for the adventurous types who scale mountains and dive into the ocean, the Olympus 1030SW is freeze-proof and crushproof. It can withstand a plunge of 33 feet into water and a fall from a height of 6 feet without significant damage. You pay a premium for such durability, but you also get an extraordinarily compact camera with a 10-megapixel sensor capable of capturing whatever dangerous activity you're doing in intimate detail.
Panasonic Lumix TZ5
$300
Panasonic has led the pack when it comes to combining compact size with extra-large features. The Panasonic Lumix TZ5 is its latest ultracompact extended-zoom model, which packs a huge 10x optical zoom lens into a stylish and easily portable body. The TZ5 is perfect for photographers who want the ease of a casual camera but the ability to take more impressive, more elaborate photos.
Canon PowerShot SX100 IS
$220
Canon has now jumped into the compact extended-zoom market as well, and the Canon PowerShot SX100 IS definitely is a worthy competitor to Panasonic's TZ5. Roughly similar in specifications (10x optical zoom, eight-megapixel sensor), the SX100 IS manages to cost about $100 less, meaning you get a great camera and still have a little extra play money on your trip.
Fuji FinePix S8100fd
$365
For travelers who crave extra power but really don't want to lug around a digital single-lens reflex (SLR) and a bunch of lenses as they jet around the world, the Fuji FinePix S8100fd occupies a happy middle ground. It's got high-quality, advanced features and a huge 18x optical zoom, allowing for extraordinary detail and composition. It's relatively large (4.3 inches wide by 3.1 inches high by 3.1 inches deep) and heavy (14.3 ounces), but if you're more concerned about taking excellent pictures than having an ultracompact camera, the S8100fd is a good option.
Canon S5 IS
$300
Another large (4.6 inches wide by 3.1 inches high by 3.1 inches deep; 15.9 ounces) advanced camera, the Canon S5 IS has a 12x optical zoom similar to the one on the smaller Panasonic TZ5. What sets this model apart is its versatility and the range of manual controls that allow a seasoned photographer to really take charge of the picture and a novice photographer to slowly learn the ropes. The zoom may not be as large as its competitors in this class, but it's still a strong camera that would serve any world traveler quite well.
Sony Cybershot H7
$300
The Sony Cybershot H7 is a significant rival to the Canon S5 IS and Fuji S8100fd. It's also relatively large (4.3 inches wide by 3.3 inches high by 3.4 inches deep; 13.2 ounces) and offers an intermediate-length optical zoom of 15x. But here's where the H7 stands out: It has a high-definition-TV output. You can connect your camera directly to an HDTV and view a slide show of your trip on the big screen. (Go ahead and add a musical track, too, to accompany those vivid images!) This feature requires the Sony VMC-MHC1 HD component cable, which is sold separately.
Nikon D60
$630, body only
For the past few years, Nikon's mission seems to have been to make professional-level digital photography more accessible to the masses. The Nikon D60 is another step in that direction, a top-notch digital SLR that is not only easy to use for novice photographers but relatively affordable as well. A camera of this magnitude is still a major commitment, however, and you'll have to do some research on the right lenses for the kind of shooting you want to do.
Canon Digital Rebel XSi
$800, body only
The Digital Rebel series has long been a way for advancing photographers to jump into the often confusing world of digital SLRs. It repackages the professional features of cameras like the Canon 40D in a simpler, easier-to-approach camera, introducing consumers to the power of SLR photography without overwhelming them. The XSi has made the Digital Rebel series even more approachable with the introduction of a "Live View" LCD, allowing you to preview photos on the display before you take them.
Whether you're escaping the confines of your office to bask in the sun on some tropical beach, or a recent grad shaking off the obligations of school with a trot around the globe, you're going to want to make sure the memories of this relaxing excursion last for a very long time. Here are 10 top digital cameras that are lightweight, sturdy and will bring back the memories you want to keep.
Olympus FE-310
$140
The Olympus FE-310 is a great no-frills camera, perfect for travelers who want something small and unobtrusive. The 5x optical zoom lens is impressive for a camera of this size. Combined with the eight-megapixel sensor, this camera can produce some impressive results. The FE-310 also features face detection autofocus and auto-exposure, which help bring out the most important parts of your photos. The FE-310 uses a lithium-ion rechargeable battery, however, so don't forget to pack your charger or buy a spare.
Canon PowerShot A470
$120
The Canon PowerShot A470 is remarkably affordable yet still powerful enough to be an excellent travel companion. In addition to its small, portable profile, it uses easily replaceable AA batteries, which means you'll never have to worry about how you're going to replenish your power supply. The A470 is easy to operate and a great choice for budget-minded consumers.
Olympus 1030SW
$375
This camera can take a beating. Perfect for the adventurous types who scale mountains and dive into the ocean, the Olympus 1030SW is freeze-proof and crushproof. It can withstand a plunge of 33 feet into water and a fall from a height of 6 feet without significant damage. You pay a premium for such durability, but you also get an extraordinarily compact camera with a 10-megapixel sensor capable of capturing whatever dangerous activity you're doing in intimate detail.
Panasonic Lumix TZ5
$300
Panasonic has led the pack when it comes to combining compact size with extra-large features. The Panasonic Lumix TZ5 is its latest ultracompact extended-zoom model, which packs a huge 10x optical zoom lens into a stylish and easily portable body. The TZ5 is perfect for photographers who want the ease of a casual camera but the ability to take more impressive, more elaborate photos.
Canon PowerShot SX100 IS
$220
Canon has now jumped into the compact extended-zoom market as well, and the Canon PowerShot SX100 IS definitely is a worthy competitor to Panasonic's TZ5. Roughly similar in specifications (10x optical zoom, eight-megapixel sensor), the SX100 IS manages to cost about $100 less, meaning you get a great camera and still have a little extra play money on your trip.
Fuji FinePix S8100fd
$365
For travelers who crave extra power but really don't want to lug around a digital single-lens reflex (SLR) and a bunch of lenses as they jet around the world, the Fuji FinePix S8100fd occupies a happy middle ground. It's got high-quality, advanced features and a huge 18x optical zoom, allowing for extraordinary detail and composition. It's relatively large (4.3 inches wide by 3.1 inches high by 3.1 inches deep) and heavy (14.3 ounces), but if you're more concerned about taking excellent pictures than having an ultracompact camera, the S8100fd is a good option.
Canon S5 IS
$300
Another large (4.6 inches wide by 3.1 inches high by 3.1 inches deep; 15.9 ounces) advanced camera, the Canon S5 IS has a 12x optical zoom similar to the one on the smaller Panasonic TZ5. What sets this model apart is its versatility and the range of manual controls that allow a seasoned photographer to really take charge of the picture and a novice photographer to slowly learn the ropes. The zoom may not be as large as its competitors in this class, but it's still a strong camera that would serve any world traveler quite well.
Sony Cybershot H7
$300
The Sony Cybershot H7 is a significant rival to the Canon S5 IS and Fuji S8100fd. It's also relatively large (4.3 inches wide by 3.3 inches high by 3.4 inches deep; 13.2 ounces) and offers an intermediate-length optical zoom of 15x. But here's where the H7 stands out: It has a high-definition-TV output. You can connect your camera directly to an HDTV and view a slide show of your trip on the big screen. (Go ahead and add a musical track, too, to accompany those vivid images!) This feature requires the Sony VMC-MHC1 HD component cable, which is sold separately.
Nikon D60
$630, body only
For the past few years, Nikon's mission seems to have been to make professional-level digital photography more accessible to the masses. The Nikon D60 is another step in that direction, a top-notch digital SLR that is not only easy to use for novice photographers but relatively affordable as well. A camera of this magnitude is still a major commitment, however, and you'll have to do some research on the right lenses for the kind of shooting you want to do.
Canon Digital Rebel XSi
$800, body only
The Digital Rebel series has long been a way for advancing photographers to jump into the often confusing world of digital SLRs. It repackages the professional features of cameras like the Canon 40D in a simpler, easier-to-approach camera, introducing consumers to the power of SLR photography without overwhelming them. The XSi has made the Digital Rebel series even more approachable with the introduction of a "Live View" LCD, allowing you to preview photos on the display before you take them.
5位顶级厨师推荐的环球大餐
Top Chefs Pick Meals Worth Traveling For
Some eat to live. Others live to eat.
They're called foodies, and they're so dedicated to their quest for the next great meal that many are willing to travel to the other end of the country and, in many cases, to the other end of the world just to experience it.
"People now more than ever are traveling specifically for one meal," says Erik Wolf, president and CEO of the Oregon-based International Culinary Tourism Association. "Everyone eats, but for some it's more important. It's an art form that speaks to all the five senses."
Twenty-seven million Americans participated in culinary activities while traveling in the past three years, according to the 2006 Culinary Travel Study compiled by the Travel Industry Association with the International Culinary Tourism Association and Gourmet magazine. Just over 12 million said that culinary activities were a key reason they chose that trip or destination. Sixty-four percent said their main form of a culinary activity was dining in local restaurants.
Why are so many willing to pack their bags for the promise of food nirvana?
Wolf points to the popularity of Food TV and the increasingly visibility of travel-related food shows on the cable channel such as Giada's Weekend Getaways and Rachel Ray's Tasty Travels.
But it's not just big-name restaurants and celebrity chefs luring people to travel for grub.
Richard Turen, owner of the Naperville, Ill., travel agency Churchill & Turen, specializes in culinary trips and says that travelers today want to discover out-of-the-way restaurants and local, authentic spots.
"It used to be that you name dropped that you had been to Paris and had dined at the fanciest restaurant there," he says. "Everyone's done this already. Now it's cool to say that you went to Paris and you discovered a great place that no one has ever eaten at."
Top Picks
Who's got a lock on that list? Seasoned chefs, some so fanatical about their chosen meal that they revisited it multiple times, some traveling intercontinentally for their fix.
Nancy Oakes, chef and owner of Boulevard in San Francisco, a 2007 James Beard nominee for Outstanding Restaurant, has traveled to Canneto sull'Oglio in Italy (north of Parma) six times to eat at Dal Pescatore, a three-star Michelin restaurant with classic Italian food.
Her favorite items on the menu? Deboned frogs legs that are fried and served in a garlicky green sauce made with olive oil; snails prepared in the same sauce and a suckling pig with a crispy skin that is roasted tender.
"The meal is a dream," she says. "It sticks to the Italian philosophy of not muddling up the food with a lot of ingredients and everything comes straight from the town."
For Laurent Tourondel, partner in six BLT restaurants, the ambiance was a major factor in his ultimate meal. He ate green curry, papaya salad and chicken with basil at Sala Mae Rim at the Four Seasons Chiang Mai in Thailand. He says the food had "bold, assertive" flavors, but the setting made it an amazing sensory experience.
"I was eating while overlooking rice fields with pink buffalo," he says."It was well worth the 18-plus-hour flight to get there."
Travel-worthy meals are just as available stateside. David Waltuck, owner and chef of Chanterelle in New York and 2007 James Beard winner for Best Chef in New York, found his ideal meal at Fore Street, a restaurant in Portland, Maine, that emphasizes using local ingredients in its dishes.
He ate the mussels and grilled rabbit and says he was taken in by the freshness of the food and loved that all the products were local.
"It was so appealing because it is very different from what I do, which is thought-out, formal French food," he says. "I went back to the restaurant a few weeks later."
Of course, not everyone can swing the cost to fly to a destination to indulge in a fantasy meal.
Still, it might be worth saving your pennies for these places. Since chefs, who can be the harshest food critics, have given them their seal of approval, they must be pretty good.
Who: Laurent Tourondel, partner in six BLT restaurants
The Meal: Green curry, papaya salad and chicken with basil at Sala Mae Rim at the Four Seasons Chiang Mai in Thailand
Why: "The food had bold, assertive flavors and a unique combination of spicy and sweet that balanced each other. The meal was an amazing sensory experience because of the taste and the setting. I was eating while overlooking rice fields with pink buffalo. It was well worth the 18-plus-hour flight to get there."
For more information, visit www.fourseasons.com/chiangmai/dining.html.
Who: Grant Achatz, chef at Alinea in Chicago and 2007 James Beard winner for Best Chef in the Great Lakes
The Meal: The chef's tasting at Per Se in New York
Why: "The most memorable dishes were the chad roe porridge with Persian lime salt and bonito flakes and foie gras in a jar with quail. I worked with Thomas [Keller] for four years so I really know the food, but these dishes surprised me. The flawless service and the setting, which had a great view of the city, helped too. All the factors collided together to create this amazing dining experience."
For more information visit www.frenchlaundry.com/perse/perse.htm.
Who: Martin Heierling, chef of the Sensi at the Bellagio in Las Vegas. The restaurant features Italian, Asian, seafood and grilled specialties.
The Meal: The tasting menu at the French restaurant Cyrus in Healdsburg, Calif.
Why: "I experienced the tasting menu at Cyrus and enjoyed the entire experience from the caviar cart at the beginning of the meal to the foie gras three ways. I especially liked the interesting flavors and Asian influences on the dishes that former Lespinasse colleague Chef Douglas Keane created."
For more information www.cyrusrestaurant.com.
Who: Andrew Carmellini, executive chef and partner of A Voce in New York
The Meal: Sushi tasting at Sushi Dai in Tsukiji Market in Tokyo
Why: "This is a place in the market where all the fishing brokers go to eat sushi, so it's very bare-bones. I went four years ago for breakfast and got a sushi tasting where I sat at the bar and the sushi chef served the fish piece by piece. I still remember the bonito. The rice was warmed perfectly, there was just the right amount of wasabi and the fish was so fresh. The combination was so good that I ordered six more pieces."
For more information, call: 03/3547-6797
Who: Francois Payard, Pastry chef and owner of Payard Bistro and Patisserie in New York, Sao Paulo, Tokyo, soon to open in Rio de Janiero and at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas
The Meal: Bouillabaisse at Tetou in Provence, France
Why: "Bouillabaisse [a hearty mix of seafood] is one of my favorite dishes, and this 87-year-old restaurant does it best. The thing that makes it is the freshness of the seafood--it is caught that morning."
For more information, call: 011-33-4-93-62-71-16.
Who: Patricia Yeo, executive chef and co-owner of Monkey Bar and Sapa in New York
The Meal: Grilled Wagyu beef and kingfish carpaccio with blood oranges at Tetsuya's, a Japanese restaurant in Sydney
Why: "It wasn't just the food that made this is an exceptional meal. It was the whole package. You walk in and enter a Japanese garden, so you feel tranquil right away. The food is served on really fine china and crystal glasses which is so in sync with how fantastic the cuisine is. It's not overly seasoned so the ingredients speak for themselves. And, the fish is so fresh that you can almost feel is pulsing."
For more information visit www.tetsuyas.com.
Who: Rick Moonen, executive chef of Restaurant RM and R Bar Café at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas
The Meal: Grilled Octopus and Braised Lamb at Kyma in Atlanta
Why: "This Greek restaurant serves up innovative food in a hip environment. The grilled octopus and the braised lamb are a celebration of authentic Greek food presented in a clean way. I would walk to Atlanta just to eat here again."
For more information, visit www.buckheadrestaurants.com/kyma.html.
Who: Marcus Samuelsson, executive chef and co-owner of Aquavit and Riingo restaurants in New York
The Meal: Le Louis XV, Alain Ducasse's restaurant in Monte Carlo
Why: "I first went to this restaurant 15 years ago when I had hardly any money and had saved for months for a meal here. What I remember most is the luxury in everything from the setting to the dishes to the service. The foie gras was soft, the turbot was perfection and the waitstaff was all over the guests. My ticket and hotel cost less than the meal. Since then, I've traveled and eaten a lot, but this meal is still the most memorable experience."
For more information, visit www.alain-ducasse.com.
Who: Nancy Oakes, chef and owner of Boulevard in San Francisco, nominated for the 2007 James Beard Award for Outstanding Restaurant
The Meal: Snails, frog legs and suckling pig at Dal Pescatore in Canneto sull'Oglio, Italy (north of Parma)
Why: "This three-star Michelin restaurant sticks to the Italian philosophy of not muddling up food with a lot of excess ingredients. Plus, all the ingredients come right from the town. The frog legs are deboned except for one bone and fried crispy and served with a garlicky green sauce made with olive oil. The snails are done the same way. The suckling pig is roasted tender and has a crispy skin. This meal is a dream. I first went in 1990 and have traveled five times to eat it again since then."
For more information, visit www.dalpescatore.com/home_en.asp.
Who: David Waltuck, owner and chef of Chanterelle in New York and 2007 James Beard winner for Best Chef in New York
The Meal: Mussels and grilled rabbit at Fore Street in Portland, Maine
Why: "What I loved about this meal is that most of the products are local, and the food is so specific to the region of New England. Everything is cooked on a wood fire grill, and the menu completely changes every few weeks. It was so appealing because it is very different from what I do, which is thought-out, formal French food. I went back to the restaurant a few weeks later!"
For more information visit www.forestreet.biz.
Who: Roy Yamaguchi, founder and chef of Roy's, a chain of 35 Hawaiian fusion restaurants
The Meal: Truffle soup with puff pastry, sautéed sweetbreads, roasted squab with cabbage and a Grand Marnier Souffle at Paul Bocuse in Lyon, France
Why: "I had worked at the L’Ermitage hotel [in Los Angeles] in the 1970s with the chef from this restaurant, and I visited his place in Lyon in 2005. I was blown away because some of the dishes I had learned back then, like the truffle soup, were on the menu. It is traditional French food with deep flavors, and the chefs spend hours making the sauces used in the dishes. You could tell there was so much heart and passion in the food."
For more information visit www.bocuse.fr.
Some eat to live. Others live to eat.
They're called foodies, and they're so dedicated to their quest for the next great meal that many are willing to travel to the other end of the country and, in many cases, to the other end of the world just to experience it.
"People now more than ever are traveling specifically for one meal," says Erik Wolf, president and CEO of the Oregon-based International Culinary Tourism Association. "Everyone eats, but for some it's more important. It's an art form that speaks to all the five senses."
Twenty-seven million Americans participated in culinary activities while traveling in the past three years, according to the 2006 Culinary Travel Study compiled by the Travel Industry Association with the International Culinary Tourism Association and Gourmet magazine. Just over 12 million said that culinary activities were a key reason they chose that trip or destination. Sixty-four percent said their main form of a culinary activity was dining in local restaurants.
Why are so many willing to pack their bags for the promise of food nirvana?
Wolf points to the popularity of Food TV and the increasingly visibility of travel-related food shows on the cable channel such as Giada's Weekend Getaways and Rachel Ray's Tasty Travels.
But it's not just big-name restaurants and celebrity chefs luring people to travel for grub.
Richard Turen, owner of the Naperville, Ill., travel agency Churchill & Turen, specializes in culinary trips and says that travelers today want to discover out-of-the-way restaurants and local, authentic spots.
"It used to be that you name dropped that you had been to Paris and had dined at the fanciest restaurant there," he says. "Everyone's done this already. Now it's cool to say that you went to Paris and you discovered a great place that no one has ever eaten at."
Top Picks
Who's got a lock on that list? Seasoned chefs, some so fanatical about their chosen meal that they revisited it multiple times, some traveling intercontinentally for their fix.
Nancy Oakes, chef and owner of Boulevard in San Francisco, a 2007 James Beard nominee for Outstanding Restaurant, has traveled to Canneto sull'Oglio in Italy (north of Parma) six times to eat at Dal Pescatore, a three-star Michelin restaurant with classic Italian food.
Her favorite items on the menu? Deboned frogs legs that are fried and served in a garlicky green sauce made with olive oil; snails prepared in the same sauce and a suckling pig with a crispy skin that is roasted tender.
"The meal is a dream," she says. "It sticks to the Italian philosophy of not muddling up the food with a lot of ingredients and everything comes straight from the town."
For Laurent Tourondel, partner in six BLT restaurants, the ambiance was a major factor in his ultimate meal. He ate green curry, papaya salad and chicken with basil at Sala Mae Rim at the Four Seasons Chiang Mai in Thailand. He says the food had "bold, assertive" flavors, but the setting made it an amazing sensory experience.
"I was eating while overlooking rice fields with pink buffalo," he says."It was well worth the 18-plus-hour flight to get there."
Travel-worthy meals are just as available stateside. David Waltuck, owner and chef of Chanterelle in New York and 2007 James Beard winner for Best Chef in New York, found his ideal meal at Fore Street, a restaurant in Portland, Maine, that emphasizes using local ingredients in its dishes.
He ate the mussels and grilled rabbit and says he was taken in by the freshness of the food and loved that all the products were local.
"It was so appealing because it is very different from what I do, which is thought-out, formal French food," he says. "I went back to the restaurant a few weeks later."
Of course, not everyone can swing the cost to fly to a destination to indulge in a fantasy meal.
Still, it might be worth saving your pennies for these places. Since chefs, who can be the harshest food critics, have given them their seal of approval, they must be pretty good.
Who: Laurent Tourondel, partner in six BLT restaurants
The Meal: Green curry, papaya salad and chicken with basil at Sala Mae Rim at the Four Seasons Chiang Mai in Thailand
Why: "The food had bold, assertive flavors and a unique combination of spicy and sweet that balanced each other. The meal was an amazing sensory experience because of the taste and the setting. I was eating while overlooking rice fields with pink buffalo. It was well worth the 18-plus-hour flight to get there."
For more information, visit www.fourseasons.com/chiangmai/dining.html.
Who: Grant Achatz, chef at Alinea in Chicago and 2007 James Beard winner for Best Chef in the Great Lakes
The Meal: The chef's tasting at Per Se in New York
Why: "The most memorable dishes were the chad roe porridge with Persian lime salt and bonito flakes and foie gras in a jar with quail. I worked with Thomas [Keller] for four years so I really know the food, but these dishes surprised me. The flawless service and the setting, which had a great view of the city, helped too. All the factors collided together to create this amazing dining experience."
For more information visit www.frenchlaundry.com/perse/perse.htm.
Who: Martin Heierling, chef of the Sensi at the Bellagio in Las Vegas. The restaurant features Italian, Asian, seafood and grilled specialties.
The Meal: The tasting menu at the French restaurant Cyrus in Healdsburg, Calif.
Why: "I experienced the tasting menu at Cyrus and enjoyed the entire experience from the caviar cart at the beginning of the meal to the foie gras three ways. I especially liked the interesting flavors and Asian influences on the dishes that former Lespinasse colleague Chef Douglas Keane created."
For more information www.cyrusrestaurant.com.
Who: Andrew Carmellini, executive chef and partner of A Voce in New York
The Meal: Sushi tasting at Sushi Dai in Tsukiji Market in Tokyo
Why: "This is a place in the market where all the fishing brokers go to eat sushi, so it's very bare-bones. I went four years ago for breakfast and got a sushi tasting where I sat at the bar and the sushi chef served the fish piece by piece. I still remember the bonito. The rice was warmed perfectly, there was just the right amount of wasabi and the fish was so fresh. The combination was so good that I ordered six more pieces."
For more information, call: 03/3547-6797
Who: Francois Payard, Pastry chef and owner of Payard Bistro and Patisserie in New York, Sao Paulo, Tokyo, soon to open in Rio de Janiero and at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas
The Meal: Bouillabaisse at Tetou in Provence, France
Why: "Bouillabaisse [a hearty mix of seafood] is one of my favorite dishes, and this 87-year-old restaurant does it best. The thing that makes it is the freshness of the seafood--it is caught that morning."
For more information, call: 011-33-4-93-62-71-16.
Who: Patricia Yeo, executive chef and co-owner of Monkey Bar and Sapa in New York
The Meal: Grilled Wagyu beef and kingfish carpaccio with blood oranges at Tetsuya's, a Japanese restaurant in Sydney
Why: "It wasn't just the food that made this is an exceptional meal. It was the whole package. You walk in and enter a Japanese garden, so you feel tranquil right away. The food is served on really fine china and crystal glasses which is so in sync with how fantastic the cuisine is. It's not overly seasoned so the ingredients speak for themselves. And, the fish is so fresh that you can almost feel is pulsing."
For more information visit www.tetsuyas.com.
Who: Rick Moonen, executive chef of Restaurant RM and R Bar Café at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas
The Meal: Grilled Octopus and Braised Lamb at Kyma in Atlanta
Why: "This Greek restaurant serves up innovative food in a hip environment. The grilled octopus and the braised lamb are a celebration of authentic Greek food presented in a clean way. I would walk to Atlanta just to eat here again."
For more information, visit www.buckheadrestaurants.com/kyma.html.
Who: Marcus Samuelsson, executive chef and co-owner of Aquavit and Riingo restaurants in New York
The Meal: Le Louis XV, Alain Ducasse's restaurant in Monte Carlo
Why: "I first went to this restaurant 15 years ago when I had hardly any money and had saved for months for a meal here. What I remember most is the luxury in everything from the setting to the dishes to the service. The foie gras was soft, the turbot was perfection and the waitstaff was all over the guests. My ticket and hotel cost less than the meal. Since then, I've traveled and eaten a lot, but this meal is still the most memorable experience."
For more information, visit www.alain-ducasse.com.
Who: Nancy Oakes, chef and owner of Boulevard in San Francisco, nominated for the 2007 James Beard Award for Outstanding Restaurant
The Meal: Snails, frog legs and suckling pig at Dal Pescatore in Canneto sull'Oglio, Italy (north of Parma)
Why: "This three-star Michelin restaurant sticks to the Italian philosophy of not muddling up food with a lot of excess ingredients. Plus, all the ingredients come right from the town. The frog legs are deboned except for one bone and fried crispy and served with a garlicky green sauce made with olive oil. The snails are done the same way. The suckling pig is roasted tender and has a crispy skin. This meal is a dream. I first went in 1990 and have traveled five times to eat it again since then."
For more information, visit www.dalpescatore.com/home_en.asp.
Who: David Waltuck, owner and chef of Chanterelle in New York and 2007 James Beard winner for Best Chef in New York
The Meal: Mussels and grilled rabbit at Fore Street in Portland, Maine
Why: "What I loved about this meal is that most of the products are local, and the food is so specific to the region of New England. Everything is cooked on a wood fire grill, and the menu completely changes every few weeks. It was so appealing because it is very different from what I do, which is thought-out, formal French food. I went back to the restaurant a few weeks later!"
For more information visit www.forestreet.biz.
Who: Roy Yamaguchi, founder and chef of Roy's, a chain of 35 Hawaiian fusion restaurants
The Meal: Truffle soup with puff pastry, sautéed sweetbreads, roasted squab with cabbage and a Grand Marnier Souffle at Paul Bocuse in Lyon, France
Why: "I had worked at the L’Ermitage hotel [in Los Angeles] in the 1970s with the chef from this restaurant, and I visited his place in Lyon in 2005. I was blown away because some of the dishes I had learned back then, like the truffle soup, were on the menu. It is traditional French food with deep flavors, and the chefs spend hours making the sauces used in the dishes. You could tell there was so much heart and passion in the food."
For more information visit www.bocuse.fr.
15个SEX SELLS广告
15 Ads That Prove Sex Sells ...Best?
Sex sells. Advertising and sex have been tied together since advertising became a big business. The use of sexually suggestive images to sell just about everything really emphasizes the point that sex is a merchandiser's best friend.
Here are some recent ads where sex is used to sell all sorts of products. Looking at these ads, would you agree that sex really sells... best?
1) Lingerie
Let's start with one of the most popular example of so called "sexy" (and after reading this, you may think one of the classiest of suggestive) advertising campaigns.
The Victoria's Secret Angels.
For the consumer, it makes sense to use sex to sell lingerie, men's cologne, even liquor, but what about using sex to sell some of these other products?
2) I will let you guess what product this print ad is for...
A vacuum.
That's right. A company in Germany sells their household appliances, including vacuums, using images of women in fishnets and men tied up.
Maybe S and M does something for those looking to purchase a new vacuum? Who knew?
Do you see the vacuum in the bottom left corner? Look carefully, or you may miss the point of the ad.
Moving on...
3) Renova Toilet Paper
What about this print ad for Renova, a toilet paper brand? What's sexy about toilet paper?
4) Volvo Cars
Even automobile companies seem to believe sex sells best.
This suggestive advertising is from Volvo, and its titled "We Are Just As Excited As You Are."
Nice parking brake...
5) Coffee
What about this ad for an Italian coffee company? Coffee makes everyone think of sex, doesn't it?
6) Lynx Body Wash
And of course, what better way is there to sell men's body wash then with a sexy woman, slick and wet, in the shower? This print ad is for Lynx body wash.
Talk about gettin' dirty....
7) Carl's Jr. Hamburgers
Who could forget the infamous Paris Hilton ad? Remember Paris in a bikini washing a Bentley while eating a Carl's Jr. famous burger?
Doesn't everyone eat grease dripping burgers while washing their cars?
8) Milk
What about this Milk Gives ad that was displayed all over Canada to inform the public of the health benefits of drinking milk?
It's an eye-catching way to show the "benefits" of drinking milk.
9) PETA Fruits
Even PETA seems to believe that sex sells. This television commercial promotes the purchase of fruits and veggies. Who knew that buying produce could be such a turn on?
Along with saving animals, one fur coat at a time, PETA is apparently a good judge of melons too.
Or what about the newest PETA campaign.
And who better to promote the cause than America's favorite Playboy bunny...naked?
10) PUMA Clothing
There is really nothing to say that can add to this ad. Well, personally, I think they took "Sex Sells" just a little too far.
11) Herald Towers Condominiums
This is a print ad for the Herald Towers Condominiums in New York. What does sex have to do with real estate?
12) Che Magazine
This suggestive ad campaign was used in Belgium to promote a new men's magazine, Che. (OK, so maybe for a men's magazine, using sex to sell is an obvious marketing choice.)
13) Playstation 2
What better way to sell one of the hottest video game machines around then sex?
14) iPod
Take one of the best selling electronics products in the world. Combine it with sex and create something with even more heat? How much hotter can you get?
15) Aprilia Scooters
"On my scooter everything has to be perfect. " This newspaper ad is for an Italian scooter company targeting men.
Sex sells. Advertising and sex have been tied together since advertising became a big business. The use of sexually suggestive images to sell just about everything really emphasizes the point that sex is a merchandiser's best friend.
Here are some recent ads where sex is used to sell all sorts of products. Looking at these ads, would you agree that sex really sells... best?
1) Lingerie
Let's start with one of the most popular example of so called "sexy" (and after reading this, you may think one of the classiest of suggestive) advertising campaigns.
The Victoria's Secret Angels.
For the consumer, it makes sense to use sex to sell lingerie, men's cologne, even liquor, but what about using sex to sell some of these other products?
2) I will let you guess what product this print ad is for...
A vacuum.
That's right. A company in Germany sells their household appliances, including vacuums, using images of women in fishnets and men tied up.
Maybe S and M does something for those looking to purchase a new vacuum? Who knew?
Do you see the vacuum in the bottom left corner? Look carefully, or you may miss the point of the ad.
Moving on...
3) Renova Toilet Paper
What about this print ad for Renova, a toilet paper brand? What's sexy about toilet paper?
4) Volvo Cars
Even automobile companies seem to believe sex sells best.
This suggestive advertising is from Volvo, and its titled "We Are Just As Excited As You Are."
Nice parking brake...
5) Coffee
What about this ad for an Italian coffee company? Coffee makes everyone think of sex, doesn't it?
6) Lynx Body Wash
And of course, what better way is there to sell men's body wash then with a sexy woman, slick and wet, in the shower? This print ad is for Lynx body wash.
Talk about gettin' dirty....
7) Carl's Jr. Hamburgers
Who could forget the infamous Paris Hilton ad? Remember Paris in a bikini washing a Bentley while eating a Carl's Jr. famous burger?
Doesn't everyone eat grease dripping burgers while washing their cars?
8) Milk
What about this Milk Gives ad that was displayed all over Canada to inform the public of the health benefits of drinking milk?
It's an eye-catching way to show the "benefits" of drinking milk.
9) PETA Fruits
Even PETA seems to believe that sex sells. This television commercial promotes the purchase of fruits and veggies. Who knew that buying produce could be such a turn on?
Along with saving animals, one fur coat at a time, PETA is apparently a good judge of melons too.
Or what about the newest PETA campaign.
And who better to promote the cause than America's favorite Playboy bunny...naked?
10) PUMA Clothing
There is really nothing to say that can add to this ad. Well, personally, I think they took "Sex Sells" just a little too far.
11) Herald Towers Condominiums
This is a print ad for the Herald Towers Condominiums in New York. What does sex have to do with real estate?
12) Che Magazine
This suggestive ad campaign was used in Belgium to promote a new men's magazine, Che. (OK, so maybe for a men's magazine, using sex to sell is an obvious marketing choice.)
13) Playstation 2
What better way to sell one of the hottest video game machines around then sex?
14) iPod
Take one of the best selling electronics products in the world. Combine it with sex and create something with even more heat? How much hotter can you get?
15) Aprilia Scooters
"On my scooter everything has to be perfect. " This newspaper ad is for an Italian scooter company targeting men.
上海交大高教院发布世界大学学术排名500强
2008年08月14日
上海交通大学高等教育研究院近日公布由其独立研究完成的“2008年世界大学学术排名500强”。根据排名,中国内地“最牛”高校绝大多数都在200名以外,无一进入百强之列。
“世界500强”排名中,前十名依次是:哈佛大学、斯坦福大学、加州大学-伯克利、剑桥大学、麻省理工学院、加
州理工学院、哥伦比亚大学、普林斯顿大学、芝加哥大学、牛津大学。根据该研究团队的定义,排名前20名的大学才可以称为“世界顶尖大学”。
处于21名至100名的大学,才配得上“世界一流大学”的头衔。世界百强中,美国大学所占份额最多,达54%,其次分别是英国11%、德国6%、日本4%。中国内地的北京大学、上海交通大学、清华大学、浙江大学、南京大学等今年都在 201名至302名的组别里,复旦大学更是排到了303名至401名的组别里。
但从近几年的历届排名来看,内地大学进入“500强”榜单的数量在不断上升。 2003年内地有12所大学入围,2004年为14所,2005年为17所,2006年为18所,2007年为23所。2008年增幅更为明显,达到了 30所,四川大学、华中科技大学、哈尔滨工业大学、大连理工大学等7所学校也进入榜单。
交大研究人员通过对我国名牌大学各大学科领域的世界排名和学术指标进行分析, 发现内地高校理科和工科的科研产出规模虽然较大,但高质量论文比例较低,同时缺乏国际级学术大师和重大原创成果。清华、北大等传统名校,SCI论文虽然都已超过2000篇,与排名21名至100名大学的SCI论文数量相当,但代表原创性研究的指标数据却不高,影响其排名。
上海交通大学高等教育研究院近日公布由其独立研究完成的“2008年世界大学学术排名500强”。根据排名,中国内地“最牛”高校绝大多数都在200名以外,无一进入百强之列。
“世界500强”排名中,前十名依次是:哈佛大学、斯坦福大学、加州大学-伯克利、剑桥大学、麻省理工学院、加
州理工学院、哥伦比亚大学、普林斯顿大学、芝加哥大学、牛津大学。根据该研究团队的定义,排名前20名的大学才可以称为“世界顶尖大学”。
处于21名至100名的大学,才配得上“世界一流大学”的头衔。世界百强中,美国大学所占份额最多,达54%,其次分别是英国11%、德国6%、日本4%。中国内地的北京大学、上海交通大学、清华大学、浙江大学、南京大学等今年都在 201名至302名的组别里,复旦大学更是排到了303名至401名的组别里。
但从近几年的历届排名来看,内地大学进入“500强”榜单的数量在不断上升。 2003年内地有12所大学入围,2004年为14所,2005年为17所,2006年为18所,2007年为23所。2008年增幅更为明显,达到了 30所,四川大学、华中科技大学、哈尔滨工业大学、大连理工大学等7所学校也进入榜单。
交大研究人员通过对我国名牌大学各大学科领域的世界排名和学术指标进行分析, 发现内地高校理科和工科的科研产出规模虽然较大,但高质量论文比例较低,同时缺乏国际级学术大师和重大原创成果。清华、北大等传统名校,SCI论文虽然都已超过2000篇,与排名21名至100名大学的SCI论文数量相当,但代表原创性研究的指标数据却不高,影响其排名。
令人叹为观止的8大寺庙
Breathtaking Monasteries Around the World
1 Tiger's Nest Monastery (Bhutan)
Taktshang is the most famous of monasteries in Bhutan. It hangs on a cliff at 3,120 metres (10,200 feet), some 700 meters (2,300 feet) above the bottom of Paro valley. Famous visitors include Ngawang Namgyal in the 17th century and Milarepa.
The name means "Tiger's nest", the legend being that Padmasambhava (Guru Rinpoche) flew there on the back of a tiger. The monastery includes seven temples which can all be visited. The monastery suffered several blazes and is a recent restoration. Climbing to the monastery is on foot or mule.
2 Madonna del Sasso Monastery (Switzerland)
This beautiful pilgrimage church Madonna del Sasso with its Capuchin monastery is towering high above Locarno. The old town enjoys the most glorious of locations, on a broad sweeping curve of a bay in the lake, and also clocks up the most sunshine hours of anywhere in Switzerland.
The monastery has a spectacular view of the town beneath it was built to honour the Virgin Mary, who was said to have appeared in a vision in 1480 and was completed by 17th century. The monastery's museum hosts a remarkable collection of sacred art. The twenty-minute walk up through the lush ravine of the Torrente Ramogno is a romance in itself.
3 Yumbulagang Monastery (Tibet)
Yumbulagang , palace of mother and son in Tibetan dialect, is the first palace and one of the earliest buildings in Tibet and it has a history of more than 2,000 years. Destroyed during the Cultural Revolution it was rebuilt in the 1980s. The walls are painted with beautiful murals which tell the early history of Tibet.
It's said that it was built for Nyatri Tsanpo, the first Tibetan King by Bon believers in the 2nd century BC. Then it became the summer palace of Songtsan Gampo and Princess Wencheng. The 5thDalai Lama changed it as the monastery of Old-Yellow Hat Sect (Kadamspa).
4 Gregoriou Monastery (Greece)
The Monastery of Gregoriou was built on a beautiful location at the south-west side of Mount Athos, dedicated to Saint Nicholas. The monastery was founded in the 14th century. It occupies the seventeenth rank in the hierarchical order of the twenty Athonite monasteries. It is considered to be one of the most well-organised and strict coenobitic monasteries. It is inhabited by 70 monks (1990). Its katholikon was built in 1768, in accordance to the Athonite plan. The church's walls were decorated in 1779 by the holy monks Gabriel and Gregory from Kastoria. The Church's narthex (vestibule) was added later. Aside from the katholikon, the monastery also features many chapels. The library is relatively poor since it was destroyed by raids and fire during the revolution of 1821. Today, it features 297 manuscripts and 4,500 printed books. The monastery also features a fragment of the True Cross and relics of saints. The monastery's treasury is very rich in relics from various eras and also houses many chrysobulls, siggilia, etc. The bones of St Niphon, Patriarch of Constantinople, are displayed in a special crypt in the katholikon. The library is richly stocked and well-organised. It contains some 804 manuscript codices, theological, ecclesiastical or liturgical works. One manuscript is an illuminated 13th century Holy Bible.
5 Metéora Monastery (Greece)
The Metéora (Greek: "suspended rocks", "suspended in the air" or "in the heavens above") is one of the largest and most important complex of monasteries in Greece, second only to Mount Athos. The monasteries are built on natural sandstone rock pillars, at the northwestern edge of the Plain of Thessaly near the Peneios river and Pindus Mountains, in central Greece. The Metéora is home to six monasteries and is included on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
6 Gradac Monastery (Serbia)
Endowment of Queen Helen (of the Anjou) wife of Serbian King Uros I. It is located 20 km north from Raska and was built in the 13th century. The church is predominantly in the style of the autochthonous Raska school, though with certain Gothic elements.
7 Ngaphechaung Monastery (Burma)
Ngaphechaung Monastery is located in Inle Lake, on the way to Phaung Daw Oo Pagoda. This is an attractive wooden monastery built on stilts over the lake at the end of the 1850s. Aside from its collection of Buddhas the monastery may be of interest to visit because its monks have taught a few of the many cats living with them to jump through hoops. 25 minutes boat ride to visit and ancient monastery built on huge pieces of teak wood with traditional architecture and see the popular jumping cats leap through the hoops.
The monastery is also known for a collection of old Myanmar's Buddha images from different areas that are worth seeing. Nga Phe Chaug is the biggest and oldest monastery on the Inle Lake and is worth visiting for its historical purposes and architecture as well as its cats.
8 Montserrat Monastery (Spain)
The Santa María de Montserrat monastery is located in the Montserrat mountain in Catalonia. The Virgin of Montserrat famous statue is here; ñegend has it that the Benedictine monks could not move the statue to construct their monastery, choosing to instead build around it. The statue's sanctuary is located at the rear of the chapel, where an altar of gold surrounds the icon, and is now a site of pilgrimage.
1 Tiger's Nest Monastery (Bhutan)
Taktshang is the most famous of monasteries in Bhutan. It hangs on a cliff at 3,120 metres (10,200 feet), some 700 meters (2,300 feet) above the bottom of Paro valley. Famous visitors include Ngawang Namgyal in the 17th century and Milarepa.
The name means "Tiger's nest", the legend being that Padmasambhava (Guru Rinpoche) flew there on the back of a tiger. The monastery includes seven temples which can all be visited. The monastery suffered several blazes and is a recent restoration. Climbing to the monastery is on foot or mule.
2 Madonna del Sasso Monastery (Switzerland)
This beautiful pilgrimage church Madonna del Sasso with its Capuchin monastery is towering high above Locarno. The old town enjoys the most glorious of locations, on a broad sweeping curve of a bay in the lake, and also clocks up the most sunshine hours of anywhere in Switzerland.
The monastery has a spectacular view of the town beneath it was built to honour the Virgin Mary, who was said to have appeared in a vision in 1480 and was completed by 17th century. The monastery's museum hosts a remarkable collection of sacred art. The twenty-minute walk up through the lush ravine of the Torrente Ramogno is a romance in itself.
3 Yumbulagang Monastery (Tibet)
Yumbulagang , palace of mother and son in Tibetan dialect, is the first palace and one of the earliest buildings in Tibet and it has a history of more than 2,000 years. Destroyed during the Cultural Revolution it was rebuilt in the 1980s. The walls are painted with beautiful murals which tell the early history of Tibet.
It's said that it was built for Nyatri Tsanpo, the first Tibetan King by Bon believers in the 2nd century BC. Then it became the summer palace of Songtsan Gampo and Princess Wencheng. The 5thDalai Lama changed it as the monastery of Old-Yellow Hat Sect (Kadamspa).
4 Gregoriou Monastery (Greece)
The Monastery of Gregoriou was built on a beautiful location at the south-west side of Mount Athos, dedicated to Saint Nicholas. The monastery was founded in the 14th century. It occupies the seventeenth rank in the hierarchical order of the twenty Athonite monasteries. It is considered to be one of the most well-organised and strict coenobitic monasteries. It is inhabited by 70 monks (1990). Its katholikon was built in 1768, in accordance to the Athonite plan. The church's walls were decorated in 1779 by the holy monks Gabriel and Gregory from Kastoria. The Church's narthex (vestibule) was added later. Aside from the katholikon, the monastery also features many chapels. The library is relatively poor since it was destroyed by raids and fire during the revolution of 1821. Today, it features 297 manuscripts and 4,500 printed books. The monastery also features a fragment of the True Cross and relics of saints. The monastery's treasury is very rich in relics from various eras and also houses many chrysobulls, siggilia, etc. The bones of St Niphon, Patriarch of Constantinople, are displayed in a special crypt in the katholikon. The library is richly stocked and well-organised. It contains some 804 manuscript codices, theological, ecclesiastical or liturgical works. One manuscript is an illuminated 13th century Holy Bible.
5 Metéora Monastery (Greece)
The Metéora (Greek: "suspended rocks", "suspended in the air" or "in the heavens above") is one of the largest and most important complex of monasteries in Greece, second only to Mount Athos. The monasteries are built on natural sandstone rock pillars, at the northwestern edge of the Plain of Thessaly near the Peneios river and Pindus Mountains, in central Greece. The Metéora is home to six monasteries and is included on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
6 Gradac Monastery (Serbia)
Endowment of Queen Helen (of the Anjou) wife of Serbian King Uros I. It is located 20 km north from Raska and was built in the 13th century. The church is predominantly in the style of the autochthonous Raska school, though with certain Gothic elements.
7 Ngaphechaung Monastery (Burma)
Ngaphechaung Monastery is located in Inle Lake, on the way to Phaung Daw Oo Pagoda. This is an attractive wooden monastery built on stilts over the lake at the end of the 1850s. Aside from its collection of Buddhas the monastery may be of interest to visit because its monks have taught a few of the many cats living with them to jump through hoops. 25 minutes boat ride to visit and ancient monastery built on huge pieces of teak wood with traditional architecture and see the popular jumping cats leap through the hoops.
The monastery is also known for a collection of old Myanmar's Buddha images from different areas that are worth seeing. Nga Phe Chaug is the biggest and oldest monastery on the Inle Lake and is worth visiting for its historical purposes and architecture as well as its cats.
8 Montserrat Monastery (Spain)
The Santa María de Montserrat monastery is located in the Montserrat mountain in Catalonia. The Virgin of Montserrat famous statue is here; ñegend has it that the Benedictine monks could not move the statue to construct their monastery, choosing to instead build around it. The statue's sanctuary is located at the rear of the chapel, where an altar of gold surrounds the icon, and is now a site of pilgrimage.
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