You are here: Home >Archive for December, 2010

Top 10 Travel Highlights of 2010

In 2010, I moved halfway across the country, drove through six states, flew to many more, took two cruises, and visited eight countries in all. These 10 experiences encapsulated my year in travel:

1. Laguna Beach, California. I admit it: I watch too much of MTV’s reality TV. And while I avoided Laguna Beach in its early days, I eventually succumbed my senior year of college and have now seen every episode. So getting to stop by and sit at the same dinner table Lo was at when she had that terrible date while the rest of the gang was camping was way more exciting than it should’ve been. But exciting nonetheless!

2. The real Full House house, San Francisco, California. Continuing on my California and television theme, seeing the real Full House house (which is not one of the Painted Ladies across from Alamo Park) was the fulfillment of a dream of any good ’90s kid who loved TGIF.

3. The Blue Lagoon, Iceland. The icy blue water, the hazy mist, the volcanic rocks, a massaging waterfall — it all adds up to the Blue Lagoon, a mystical place that proved the perfect topper for my stay in Iceland.

4. Atlanta, Georgia. The only new U.S. state I made it to in 2010 (still 11 more to go!), Georgia has been on my list for a while now, and despite the sweltering July heat, I packed a ton into a less-than-three-day stay: Georgia Aquarium, CNN, The Colonnade, Centennial Olympic Park, Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site, The Varsity, The Flying Biscuit, and a cute vintage shop called My! My! My! Oh, and I made it to all my client meetings, too!

5. Dominica. Dominica is not an island I would drive around on. More than once, our tour bus came face to face with another on the narrow, winding roads, necessitating that someone backed up and just missed the edge of a cliff. But it’s said that Dominica is the only place Christopher Columbus would still recognize, and it was certainly beautiful in its rustic nature.

6. Seabrook, Washington. One of Washington state’s newest towns, Seabrook is a tiny beach community where the pace is a little slower. On a girls’ getaway with my family, we roasted marshmallows, hiked to the beach, cruised on old-fashioned bikes, and marveled at the adorableness that is this little village by the shore in the middle of nowhere.

7. The Celebrity Eclipse out of Miami. The latest ship from Celebrity’s Solstice class, the Eclipse, debuted this year, and it lives up to the hype. Elegant accommodations, fun entertainment, and more bars than you could visit in an evening make for a relaxing and classy floating escape.

8. Uppsala, Sweden. Learning about a different culture is one of the best parts of hopping a plane. I dedicated one day while in Uppsala to living like a typical Swede, which involved a traditional breakfast, recycling, fika, foraging for berries, and a trip to IKEA.

9. Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas. This may not count as traveling, given that I lived there, but as I was readying to depart Texas after four years, I fit in all my favorites and a few new things, plus I welcomed a steady stream of visitors. Strolling down Main Street in Grapevine, riding the mechanical bull at Gilley’s, reliving history at The Sixth Floor Museum, and entering the cowboy culture of Fort Worth will be missed.

10. The Winter Olympics, Vancouver, BC. I am a major Olympics buff who stays glued to the TV 24/7 during the Games every two years, so I was thrilled to attend my first one in person. After planning for almost two years, I couldn’t believe the time had actually come — and while it was exhausting, it was worth every sleepless minute.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

  • Digg
  • Del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Twitter
  • RSS

Slideshow Saturday: Westerhall Rum Distillery

Location: Grenada

(for a full-size version, click any photo)

Tags: , , ,

  • Digg
  • Del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Twitter
  • RSS

Healing Powers: Dallas’ King Spa & Sauna

Entrance to King Spa & Sauna (©King Spa & Sauna)

I can’t say I’ve ever felt like a pottery project becoming permanent before — until now, that is. I’m sitting in King Spa & Sauna’s Fire Sudatorium, legs crossed, head down, and it’s hot. Not August-afternoon hot or even Bikram yoga hot, but “oh my goodness, I’m like a piece of clay sitting in a kiln and baking” hot. Some people who frequent the spa make it 25 minutes in this 170-degree pressure cooker, but as the beads of sweat running down my body start to mirror the beginning of a rainstorm with their quickening pace, I relent. Five minutes. Not bad, I decide.

I’m here at the self-proclaimed nation’s largest Asian sauna, curious to see the Korean slant on R&R. After a shower and a soak in variously heated whirlpools (they range from 65 to 115 degrees), I emerge in the pink uniform provided to me and head for the saunas. (A word to the modest: The shower/baths experience is required and strictly sans clothing.)

There’s no set order for visiting the nine sauna rooms, so I start with the first one I see: Bulgama. It’s designed with amethyst crystals and a special stone called elvan that when heated up promises to purify the blood, eliminate extra body fat, and produce healthier hair. That all sounds like something I could use. The heat (120 to 155 degrees) seems threatening at first, but I soon feel relaxed. Next, I meticulously make my way through the rest of the rooms, each one offering something a bit different — like the Yellow-Soil Crystal Room, made with pure yellow soil, which can only be achieved by baking the soil for 100 hours at 1832 degrees; the golden Pyramid Room, which offers improved mental power and concentration; and the Base Rock Bath Room (built for $1 million, says the attendant), which relies on the Siraka stone, imported from Japan, to heal a host of ailments.

Fire Sudatorium (©King Spa & Sauna)

After my scalding-hot venture into the Fire Sudatorium, the world’s largest heated sauna, I bolt for the 35-degree Ice Room and find it feels downright heavenly (I tried to replicate the effect after spending time in a few of the other hot rooms, but found it only really worked after the hottest of them all).

The next morning I woke up and immediately felt great — the soreness that usually pervades my muscles from thrice-weekly weightlifting sessions was gone, and my skin looked dewy and felt soft. Was my blood circulation improved, my metabolism quickened, and my immune system strengthened, as the signs promised? There’s no telling. But for $17, I got to (tentatively) shed my inhibitions in a clothing-restricted locker room, hang out among 350-million-year-old rocks, and survive being roasted in a kiln-like contraption.

That’s good enough for me.

Check It Out:
King Spa & Sauna
2154 Royal Lane
Dallas, TX  75229
(214) 420-9070
www.kingspa.com

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Tags: , , , , , ,

  • Digg
  • Del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Twitter
  • RSS