New Year’s Eve in Peru

Posted On December 9, 2006

Comments Dropped one response

Traditional rugs made of llama’s wool are displayed outside a moutain hut

It’s 5 a.m. on December 31, and Puno, a lakeside town in southeast Peru, is stirring. Coral pinks and tropical aquamarines creep into the sky. I gaze up at the rafters, tied with strips of llama skin. Closely following the dawn chorus of birds come the cries of children playing an impromptu soccer game by the railroad tracks. I watch them through the window. The game includes children of all ages, and the small children are swooped out of the action zone when the game moves their way. The one-room dwellings where many of these families live aren’t big enough for playing inside, so the kids are outside as soon as it is light.

The traders, too, are already arriving and setting up their stalls on the sidewalk, first laying down the cerise and blue woven cloths that serve women as baby slings, backpacks and, now, a cloth on which to arrange trinkets.

We bartered with the vendors yesterday to buy yellow underwear, which we plan to wear at midnight tonight, a Peruvian tradition said to bring good luck for the New Year.

Before we start on the day’s adventures, we enter the dining room to find a table spread with red and orange cloths. The smiling staff of our hotel has prepared a cornucopia of breakfast foods: quinoa, oatmeal, maca, or wheat porridge, fresh mangoes, papaya juice, bananas, oranges, crusty white rolls, strawberry jam and strawberry yogurt. Tea in hand, I gaze through the picture window at the distant mountains across the lake.

We leave the hotel in a private combi, a tour bus, to go up the mountain and visit the chullpas of Sillustani, pre-Incan funeral towers high above Lake Umayo. The chullpas were made of immense granite blocks, shaped into cylindrical forms that rise 
as high as 39 feet (12 m). It’s astonishing to see these jigsaw-puzzle structures in which massive stones were fitted together without the benefit of modern lifting equipment.

The scenery is akin to that of Pennine Mountains in Britain, albeit on a much larger scale. Purple heather blooms, and tufts of moorland grass, bleached at the tips, wave in the slight breeze. Alpacas graze alongside sheep, and are accompanied by shepherds holding large crooks.

It’s easy to indulge the fantasy of being lost in time and space, of being back in a purely agricultural society. When we give an eight-year-old shepherdess some fresh fruit, she tells us her name is Vanessa. To me, the highlands seem like a great place for meditation, but I can’t imagine any children I know being content to be so alone with the sky, the mountain spirits and the beasts. I wonder what Vanessa thinks of all day long as she watches the herd.

The view is spectacular; you only have to turn a few degrees to see a different panorama. The air is so clear that you can see for miles to distant peaks, and the gently moving clouds throw shadows on the mountains as though trying out different garments.

The ancestors of the indigenous people here buried their dead high in the mountains, in caves on inaccessible peaks. They believed that the dead would be closer to the spirit of the mountain that way. Families used to visit the graves once a year, bearing food and gifts.

We bring gifts to the living, handing out chalk, pens, flashlights, candy, fruit and sunscreen to kids who have few material goods. In return, they pose for photographs. The cute little girls know that if they clutch a lamb and gaze winsomely at us, we’ll surely take their photograph and give them a few coins. Even if they have never heard of Little Bo Peep, the pose of shepherdess comes naturally to them. They hug the lambs and cradle them as though they were dolls.

On the way down the mountain, our tour guide stops at a shepherd’s compound, which consists of two one-room dwellings linked by a fireplace and surrounded by a wall. The living quarters are low, small, and dark: One for his daughter and her family and one for him, his wife and two boys. The homes are built of dried mud blocks. They remind me of the wattle-and-daub cottages of medieval England.

The only light is from a strip of llama skin that has been coated in tallow, like the wick of a giant candle, dangling from the ceiling. One side of the hut is taken up with a bed in which the family sleeps. The other has a loom, and pieces of fabric and rugs made from llama wool, which the shepherd works on while there is light. His wife’s  communion and bridal shawl hangs there on the wall, a finely embroidered piece that looks incongruous in this smoky setting. The shepherd has also hung up his daughter’s school certificates; it’s the family parlor, with treasures on display.

After the shepherd has demonstrated his deadly accuracy with a slingshot and a rock that could kill a person as well as marauding pumas, he offers us a snack, a wheel of creamy llama cheese looks like Brie but has a chalky texture. This is accompanied by homegrown potatoes, small and knobbly, from the rocky ground. If there’s one thing Peru does well, it’s potatoes, there are hundreds of varieties.

After the repast, the shepherd, who is also a shaman, offers us some gray clay that’s supposed to help with digestion, and then prepares a New Year’s Eve spell for us. He burns herbs and ground powders in a handmade bowl and makes sure we each inhale the fragrance and immerse ourselves in the smoke. He asks where we’re from, and sends blessings bouncing back to different destinations.

I buy a rug from the shaman-shepherd; it reminds me of the ones my grandmother used to make. My new llama rug is beige, brown, and black, the natural colors of the llamas, and it won’t go with my color scheme. Yet, it means more to me than mass-produced ones, since I know that this shepherd has clipped the wool, which is done only every two years, spun it and woven it into a rug. It retains the smoky smell of his house.

The view from the man’s mountain hut is as fine as anywhere in Peru. The concept that the dead are looking down on us not from an intangible heaven, but from a cave in the mountains, is an idea that I like; it makes me feel very close to my late father and grandmother. It’s a fitting end to an old year, and a perfect welcoming of all that is to come in the New Year.

If You Go > Peru Tourism > www.peru.info/perueng.asp

Top 10 Christmas destinations to remember

Posted On December 6, 2006

Comments Dropped 2 responses

Pauline Frommer, daughter of travel guru Arthur Frommer and creator of the new Pauline Frommer’s Travel Guides, selected the Top10 destinations that will make a holiday vacation unforgettable.

· Santa Fe, N.M.: Join the Canyon Road Farolito Walk and visit the Christmas in Madrid Open House.

· London, England: Watch the Christmas Pantomimes, based on popular children’s stories and fairy tales, at the Barbican, Victoria Palace and Richmond theaters.

· Las Vegas: This city’s New Year’s Eve celebration draws thousands of revelers.

· Branson, Mo.: The entire area lights up with dazzling holiday decorations.

· Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: Reveillon, a New Year’s Eve celebration, includes an all-night festival on the beach with music, food and a fireworks spectacular.

· New York City: Who can resist the holiday trimmings on Fifth Avenue or the decorative windows of Saks Fifth Avenue and Lord & Taylor ?

· Rome, Italy: Pope Benedict XVI will offer the traditional Christmas Blessing from St. Peter’s Square, and the Vatican produces a New Year’s Eve fireworks show.

· Puerto Rico: Highlights include Old San Juan’s White Christmas Festival and the Bacardi Artisans Fair.

· New Orleans: Enjoy Papa Noel celebrations, bonfires along the Mississippi River and a New Year’s Eve Jackson Square Street Party.

· Sydney, Australia: Fireworks light up Sydney Harbor on New Year’s Eve.

Related Links > http://www.frommers.com/pauline

Top Ten Places to Ring in the New Year

Posted On December 1, 2006

Comments Dropped no responses

Pop the cork and party! Whether at home or abroad, a little champagne gets the celebration going. 3, 2, 1 . . . Happy New Year!

Whether counting down to 2007 at tried-and-true celebrations like New York’s annual Times Square extravaganza, or by eating a grape for every stroke of midnight in Barcelona, your adrenaline is sure to be racing as 2006 winds down in our favorite places to ring in the new year. We love the ultimate party city, Vegas, for its most over-the-top show of the year; schussing the slopes of the majestic Rockies; and even standing under the breathtaking fireworks cascade over Sydney’s harbor. Should you agree that one day of feting simply won’t suffice, experience the celebration Scot-style, with merrymaking in Edinburgh that lasts four long days or, head to the bustling Thailand capital of Bangkok, where you can ring in the new year no fewer than three times, Western, Chinese, and Thai style, between December and April. Beach-lovers can also experience sandy revelry with a twist on December 31 in Rio, Miami, and Goa.

1. Aspen
Snow bunnies will use any excuse to hit the slopes, and a New Year’s celebration is better than most. But, there’s way more than soft, wide mountain terrain to lure reveling holiday travelers to Aspen’s legendary runs. This fabled, fabulous resort has long played host to the free-spirited and the Forbes/Fortune crowd who can’t get enough of the sophisticated action on and off the slopes. Whether schussing down the slopes of Snowmass or Aspen Highlands, dining on gourmet cuisine, or savoring martinis with the well-heeled, Aspen makes for a glittering Alpine getaway and a stylish end-of-year send off.

2. Bangkok
New Year’s Eve is thrice as nice in Thailand, where you’ll have three annual chances to rid yourself of the old and ring in the new. First, there’s the New Year’s celebration with the Western world on December 31; the biggest event unfolds at Bangkok’s Central World Plaza where rockin’ Thai musicians and mesmerizing fireworks promise a party through the night (and a hangover to remember it by). Between mid-January and February, Thailand then tips its hat to its Chinese neighbor, with massive celebrations in Bangkok’s Chinatown, including colorful parades of dragons and lion dancers, fireworks, operas, and more. Finally, the centuries-old tradition of Songkran kicks off on April 13, a joyous occasion that celebrates the first day of the traditional Thai calendar with three days of parades, feasting, costumes, and, most outrageously, a water-throwing festival in which passersby are drenched with water balloons, water guns, buckets, you name it, an interesting custom that’s surely a byproduct of the region’s often stifling heat.

3. Barcelona
Don’t miss your siesta, Barcelona’s all-night New Year’s fiesta requires some stamina! The Spanish version of año nuevo kicks off with family and friends sharing a sumptuous meal and mucho vino at a private home or restaurant, the more exceptional restaurants, like Catalan-inspired Ca l’Isidre and upscale Jaume de Provença, must be booked well in advance. The onset of 12am means a frantic race to stuff your face with 12 good-luck grapes – one for each stroke of midnight. You’d be wise to concentrate on the task at hand, if you succeed at this long-standing Spanish tradition, you’re ensured a year of prosperity and good luck (otherwise, it’s said you’ll have a month of bad luck for every uneaten grape). Once the last one is downed, crowds spill out into the Gothic Quarter and Las Ramblas, drawn by the pulsating music and chatter emanating from numerous bars and nightclubs. The action stays pumping until dawn, just in time to catch the first sunrise of the year on the beach, with some hot chocolate and churros in hand!

4. Edinburgh
This Scottish capital boasts one of the world’s biggest New Year bashes: Hogmanay. At the close of each year, a four-day fête counts down to the big kahuna on December 31, complete with parades, concerts, carnivals, dog races, firework shows, and a slew of hedonistic events and parties. Major international artists perform along Princes Street during the Royal Bank Street Party on New Year’s Eve, while age-old national customs, like “first-footing”, are practiced all over town: Right after midnight, neighbors bring luck  and gifts of coal or shortbread, to their friends and family by being the first to set foot in their household in the new year.

5. Goa
Before creating that list of New Year’s resolutions for 2007, why not venture off to Goa for one last chance to enjoy a night of true hedonism? Located on the western coast of the Indian Peninsula, Goa’s lush green vegetation and breathtaking beaches not only offer some of India’s most beautiful natural scenery, but also serves as the backdrop for some of the globe’s hottest New Year’s celebrations, complete with all-night seaside bashes packed with partygoers entranced by techno music. If glow sticks and rave parties aren’t your thing, you can gamble the night away aboard India’s first and only offshore casino, the MS Caravela yacht, or, rent a motorbike and visit an old Portuguese fort or local fishing villages. Either way, if you’re looking for a place to kick back, party and relax, just follow the local Goan motto of sossegarde, take it easy, and enjoy the fun!

6. Las Vegas
Viva Las Vegas is never more vivacious than when the no-holds-barred party capital of the world hosts the biggest party of the year. Throwing down in Sin City has become a consistently bigger and better New Year’s phenomenon in recent years, as partiers are lured by dazzling pyrotechnics, wild street parties, super-chic nightclubs, gourmet restaurants, big-name performers and hundreds of thousands of fellow revelers with whom to enjoy it. The main action unfolds at the free “America’s Party”, when the Strip is closed to traffic and transformed into a viewing platform for a fantastic fireworks extravaganza that’s blasted into the night sky above the city’s neon lights. Part of the party takes place downtown, the Fremont Street Experience (tickets cost $80) becomes a huge block party complete with confetti, a massive wine toast, concerts by big-name rockers, and a five-block-long illuminated canopy 90 feet overhead, on which state-of-the-art sound-and-light shows are shown.

7. Miami
While the winter chill keeps many of us bundled up and indoors on the big eve, South Beach is as hot as ever and we’re not just talking about the weather. Miami’s trendy Art Deco neighborhood buzzes with a sexy scene that’s even more energized than usual when the year comes to a close. Cool and well-dressed hipsters bounce from bar to club, not to mention scads of Hollywood A-listers who flock south for some of the year’s most exclusive and unabashed fiestas. Don’t have an invite? You can still stop by an array of hot spots like the Delano, Mynt Lounge, or Prive, to hobnob and people watch. For something a little less velvet rope, Miami’s Bayfront Park hosts South Florida’s largest on-the-house party, with a free concert, a countdown to midnight with the big Orange drop (the New Year’s ball that slowly descends the side of the InterContinental hotel), and a dazzling fireworks display over Biscayne Bay.

8. New York
For the ultimate New Year’s experience, there’s no better place to be than in the center of the City that Never Sleeps. Times Square has been home to the renowned “ball drop” celebration for 100 years (it debuted in 1907); today, millions of visitors flood New York City’s confetti-covered streets to partake in an all-night, over-sized street party filled with live music, celebrity visits, and tons of Happy New Year paraphernalia. For those wary of late-December weather forecasts, have no fear, you can always join the excitement without bundling up, as local bars and night clubs buzz with their own private parties, many of which last until the wee hours of the morning. Plus, if you’re looking to join the festivities from home, tune into the live TV coverage of the annual event along with audiences worldwide.

9. Rio de Janeiro
Sure, Carnival might get all the glory, but New Year’s Eve in Rio de Janeiro is memorable in its own right. An extravagant beachfront spectacle, known as Reveillon, sees an eclectic blend of traditions unfold along Copacabana, attracting some 2 million faithful practitioners of the Umbanda religion and the Candomblé religion and a lot of curious tourists. Sure, you’ll get your no-less-than-spectacular fireworks, delectable Brazilian food, and pulsating samba music to enjoy during the warm summer day’s festivities, but you’ll also see ritualistic offerings to the sea goddess, Iemanjá, made by a group of white-clad, candle-holding, revelers who rush to the surf to release small wooden boats. Tradition holds that if the goddess is pleased with a boat’s inner offerings (normally flowers, perfumes, or other similar trinkets), it will be carried out to sea and the bearer bestowed with blessings, if not, count yourself unlucky. Either way, Brazilians sure know how to party and, as night falls, DJs start up their sound systems and dancing and drinking lasts til dawn. Luxury beachfront hotels host private balls and parties, to boot, they’re also a great spot for tuckered-out revelers to enjoy champagne breakfasts as the first light of January 1 approaches.

10. Sydney
Sydney is renowned across the globe for hosting one of the ultimate New Year’s Eve bashes. Indeed, this Aussie capital pulls out all the stops, with an array of glamorous citywide celebrations and a stellar pyrotechnic presentation over the harbor. Bursts of dazzling colors explode over the Sydney Harbor Bridge and dance on the water and over the Opera House’s scalloped roof. Plenty of New Year’s Eve cruises sail around the harbor to provide unparalleled views of the spectacular extravaganza. And since it’s summer down under, you can delight in sun-drenched spoils the next day. With a chic urban vibe, gorgeous surf-swept beaches, rocking nightlife, and an edgy art scene, there’s plenty to soak up after you recuperate from a champagne-filled night you won’t soon forget.

Travel experts’ top ten new year breaks

Posted On November 29, 2006

Comments Dropped no responses

Over 130 travel experts have clubbed together to name their top ten new year breaks.

As well as favourites such as Sydney, Rio and New York, the Association of Independent Travel Operators (AITO) also added some more unusual destinations, such as the French ski resorts of Chamonix, Dublin and Vienna.

1 - Paris, France
Paris is an ideal way to have a stylish start to 2007. Elegant restaurants serving fine food lend themselves perfectly for a romantic New Year’s Eve.

Recommended restaurants include the Michelin-starred Les Ambassadeurs, which is ideal for taking a romantic stroll after your meal and seeing the lights and fireworks of the Place de la Concorde. If you are feeling energetic then you can head for one of the trendy clubs on the Champs Elysées.

2 - Sydney, Australia
One of the best fireworks displays in the world can be seen as midnight strikes on New Year’s Eve in Sydney. In addition, British holidaymakers can bask in the heat of the balmy night as December marks the height of the Australian summer.

3 - New York, United States
Much colder, but no less fun, holidaymakers going to New York for New Year’s Eve can watch the countdown Times Square, a tradition dating back to 1906. And once 2007 starts there is no better place to be for the January sales.

4 - Rome, Italy
For a lively New Year’s Eve in Rome you can go to the Piazza del Popolo and enjoy both classical and rock music acts playing long into the night. Plus there is more to see with the New Year’s Day Parade.

5 - Reykjavik, Iceland
Reykjavik’s skies come to life as hundreds of families across the city launch their own fireworks displays on the stroke of midnight.

6 - Amsterdam, The Netherlands
More fireworks - Leidseplein, Dam Square, Nieumarkt and Rembrandtplein are all good places to see the displays.

7 - Chamonix, France
Holidaymakers get together and party after a day’s skiing on the legendary Alpine slopes.

8 - Dublin, Ireland
Refinement and culture are top of the bill at Dublin’s New Year’s Eve gala concert of classical music at the National Concert Hall.

9 - Copacabana, Brazil
One of the best-known New Year’s parties, Brazilians take to Rio’s most famous beach for a lengthy fireworks display and the age-old custom of throwing white flowers into the sea.

10 - Vienna, Austria
Celebrations start from the early afternoon of New Year’s Eve with a special trail in Vienna’s historic centre. Holidaymakers are offered sparkling wine and food from across the world along a trail through the city, with entertainment from live music and hits from an operetta stage. When the bells ring in the New Year, thousands celebrate to the sound of the Blue Danube Waltz.

A Christmas polar adventure holiday

Posted On October 26, 2006

Comments Dropped no responses

If most adventure holidays are just not adventurous enough, then you might want to consider saving up to have the adventure of a lifetime with a trip to the Arctic or Antarctic.

Among the polar trips adventure holiday specialist Exodus is launching for 2007 to 2008 is a new trip to Antarctica from Argentina. Exodus’ new adventure Christmas holiday, Shackleton’s Trail, is an exploratory trip to the remotest regions of Antarctica from Argentina.

For 17 days from December 2007 to January 2008 travellers will experience perhaps the most unusual white Christmas on the planet. Highlights on the voyage are huge icebergs, a chance to see thousands of adelie penguins on Paulet Island and even the occasional emperor penguin when passing an iceberg. The one-off trip costs £4,919.

There are also three other holidays available in the southern hemisphere, with a variety of departures available from 15 to 23 days.

The longest of these is an exploratory voyage across Antarctica, the Falklands and South Georgia over 23 days where you can learn about each area’s history, as well as take in the wildlife and stunning scenery. Prices start from £6,049 with two departures available in November 2007.

At the other end of the planet is Exodus’ 12-day Spitzbergen Adventure in northern Norway. This has been updated to include a new Special Photography Charter, which leaves in July 2007 and is led by explorer-anthropologist Martin Gray and the BBC’s Planet Earth editor Andy Chastney.

Highlights include lunar landscapes, a wide variety of wildlife, icebergs, glaciers and sea cliffs. Prices start from £2,899 per person.

Polar Expeditions programme manager for Exodus, Paul Goldstein, said: “For anybody who has visited the poles, they’ll know that there’s no experience like it, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Those lucky enough to sample Shackleton’s Trail or learn from Gray and Chastney may well reach the zenith in polar adventure, even for those who have visited these polar areas before.”

For more information see www.exodus.co.uk

Other tour operators that offer similar packages include www.Explore.co.uk, www.Arctic-experience.co.uk and www.Naturetrek.co.uk