Archive for October, 2007

What’s on in Knightsbridge

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

Knightsbridge is one of the best places to visit in London. You should also make time to dip into the local culture. The Victoria & Albert Museum and Natural History Museum are both are well worth a visit. You might also stroll through Hyde Park towards Kensington Palace stopping off at the always interesting Serpentine Gallery and the new Princess Diana memorial.Buckingham Palace and the West End theatres are only minutes away and don’t miss taking a ride on the London Eye whilst you’re in town.

Attractions
Victoria & Albert Museum
The London Eye
Buckingham Palace
Kings Road
Science Museum
Parks
Hyde Park
St James Park
Kensington Gardens
Physic Gardens

Eating Out
Harvey Nichols
Amaya
Zuma
Maroush
Sale e Pepe
Bibendum
Shopping
Harrods
Harvey Nichols
Sloane Street
Peter Jones
Selfridges

Cinemas
Kensington Odeon
Fulham CIneworld
Chelsea Cinema
Haymarket Cinema
Curzon Mayfair

Juliet Binoche. What to do in Paris.

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

Juliette Binoche
Actress

I have a special relationship with Paris because it belongs to my history and my memories. It is like a map of my heart. I was born in Paris, I lived in the suburbs as a child and I came back to do my studies when I was 15. When I was 19, I lived in 11 different places in the city. I had a suitcase which was my apartment. Each time I go to a part of the city, an event comes back to me as a memory, as a smell or as a sensation.

I remember seeing the rose windows inside Notre Dame. My mother asked me when I was six years old how I felt about seeing those and I said: ‘It’s the most beautiful gift you could have given me.’

We didn’t have a lot of money and my mother took my sister and me to the Louvre every Sunday because it was free. As a teenager I remember going to see movies. For me, Paris was the city of movies and I went to see a lot of Fellini films. I was only 14 and I was discovering movies and love. Those memories are imprinted on me.

Once, before I had decided whether to be in Les enfants du siècle, in which I played the writer George Sand, I was driving home through the 16th arrondissement. I had to stop at a red light and I saw rue George Sand. It was a sign I had to do the film. I had never seen this street before but the city made me change mind.

Paris has a very particular beauty because of all those megalomaniac kings and emperors and their need to have their names on places. When I see the Arc de Triomphe, even though it’s very Parisian, I feel ashamed because I hate what Napoleon did. And I’m amazed there’s no monument for the Algerians. Why does it all need to be about conquests? What about honouring the people we hurt?

Paris can be a stressful place because there’s not enough green for me and I don’t feel the seasons enough. But it always feels like home. I don’t feel French, but when I’m here I feel like I belong, because I know the city very well. I feel like I can answer back, and I can be myself because I know the rules.

Bikes in Paris

Monday, October 29th, 2007

Stephen Clarke
Writer

The new thing about Paris that I really love are these Vélib’ bikes. I’ve been living in the city for 14 years and it is like a breath of fresh air in Parisian life. You pay €1 and you can pick up a Vélib’ anywhere in Paris. The funny thing is, it has matured quickly and the whole system has become very Parisian.

At the bike stand where you hire them you have these mini-riots where the experienced people shove to the front of the queue and get impatient if tourists try to rent one. It has become very Darwinian, and Paris is a very Darwinian place.

It has also become very stylish - these Vélib’ people look down on your normal bike riders and rollerbladers. People dress really smart and Vélib’ about. It is a very popular way of chatting people up.

I find Paris endlessly fascinating. It is a city of extreme pleasures and extreme frustration. It is also a very crowded city, which is why Parisians have the sharpest elbows and tongues in the world. I always say if you’re living in the sea, it is best to mutate into a shark, so after living here for so long, I’ve mutated into a shark. Once you get into that shameless individualism you have a wonderful life. I drift through life now. I see a table in the sun and head for it and sit down and ignore any reserved sign. Paris does that to you.

Sexy Boutique Hotel Dublin. The Dylan

Monday, October 29th, 2007

Is this the best best luxury boutique hotel in Dublin? Must be the most romantic hotel in Dublin. As everyone from taxi drivers to bar staff and shop assistants will tell you, Dublin has changed and is still changing. In the Eighties, it was rudely alive, rough around the edges and obviously, shockingly poor in parts. But now the city is booming.

The dilapidated dock area is being rebuilt in glass and chrome, new office blocks have sprung up around the River Liffey, and Dublin today is a place where conspicuous consumption is celebrated.

The Dylan complements this perfectly. Formerly the old Royal Hospital Nurses’ Home, latterly the rather run-down Hibernian Hotel, the Dylan is now a beautifully designed 44-bedroomed boutique hotel. In Dublin, the D4 postcode is shorthand for a certain type of swank and there’s no denying that the Dylan’s ultra-modern bar, all angles and reflections, plays to that flash attitude.

Initially, it appears that this is a hotel you stay in to make a point, to see and be seen, rather than to relax in and feel at home. Yet appearances are truly deceptive. From the moment my husband and I arrived, we felt relaxed and suitably pampered, the reception staff were incredibly efficient, the highly-rated Still restaurant lived up to its billing with an outstanding menu centred around well-presented local produce, and our suite was so comfortable that it was quite easy to imagine spending the whole weekend simply lounging around in it.

This sense of welcome elevates the Dylan above its peers. For just as underneath new Dublin’s trappings, old Dublin’s rambunctious heart still beats, so beneath the Dylan’s highly polished surface lurks the warmth and, most importantly, the substance of a classic country hotel.

The Royal has re-opened. Luxury Boutique Hotel in Bath

Friday, October 26th, 2007

The Royal a luxury hotel in Bath has just re-opened. 31 bedrooms, including two with four-poster beds, and an established reputation for good food and a friendly atmosphere. Close to all of Bath’s leading attractions, this Georgian hotel sparkles following a full refurbishment. If you contact the hotel direct ( The Royal ) you should be in time to secure a deal for dinner, bed and breakfast in one of the new superior rooms. Currently available from only £120 per night with a complimentary glass of Champagne before dinner on the first night.

Blue rhubarb discovery in Black Mountains

Friday, October 26th, 2007

Blue rhubarb has been discovered in Minchinhampton say Hargeisa Tulip Growers Guild.

Best ski resorts in Europe. Fantastic chalets.

Wednesday, October 24th, 2007

Cervinia, in Italy’s Aosta Valley, is by no means the most attractive of resorts but a combination of year-round sunshine, glacier skiing, high-altitude and reliable snow make it worth a visit. Situated on the Swiss-Italian border, visitors can ski over to neighbouring Zermatt for a day trip when the intermediate pistes become less challenging. Both resorts offer skiing with a panoramic view of the majestic Matterhorn, or Mount Cervino, as it is known in Italy. When in Cervinia, stay at the Hotel Hermitage, a rustic yet elegant lodge that has breathtaking views, an excellent restaurant with a fabulous wine cellar and spa, gym and indoor pool. www.hotelhermitage.com

ZERMATT, SWITZERLAND

Zermatt is nothing short of spectacular. Set high in the Alps, no cars are allowed in the town, so golf-buggies or horse and carriage transport skiers. The skiing is excellent and snow-sure and skiers can enjoy the glacier in Cervinia if they cross the border. The best view in the Alps is when skiing down from Plateau Rosa in Cervinia into Zermatt village with the Matterhorn as a backdrop. Zermatt also has some of the best restaurants in the Alps, although the prices reflect this in peak season. Chalet Zen, a private home which is available to rent, is ultra-luxurious. Close to the ski lifts and a short stroll from town, it has an outdoor hot tub, steam shower, plasma screen TVs and broadband internet. www.descent.co.uk/index/287

ST. ANTON, AUSTRIA

Considered to be one of the best ski resorts in Europe, St Anton has everything from challenging skiing (not for beginners) the best après-ski in the world (the Krazy Kangaruh) and non-stop nightlife, all situated in a picturesque Austrian village. For those who want to experience St. Anton but are beginners, there are buses into neighbouring Lech and Zürs where the slopes are much easier. We recommend you stay at Chalet Landhaus Moos, out of town but nearer the après-ski bars that you pass on the way down from the slopes. www.skivaldirect.co.uk

ST. MORITZ, AUSTRIA

Fashionable with the A-list as well as a wealthy European crowd, St Moritz has gourmet restaurants and superb shops as well as some amazing skiing. The resort boasts 350km of groomed pistes and, if you aren’t big on skiing, there are polo tournaments, horse races, cricket matches and show jumping - all on ice - to keep you entertained. There is a handful of chic places to stay: The Chesa Albertini chalet has an elegant but homely feel while boasting state-of-the-art facilities (it even has a home cinema). www.chesaalbertini.ch

COURCHEVEL 1850, FRANCE

Courchevel is perenially popular thanks to its immense range of skiing, forming part of Les Trois Vallées, and the fact that the slopes are great for skiers of all abilities. Adjoining resorts Meribel and Val Thorens are easily accessible from here so there is an added flexibility to roam free on the vast number of runs that the resorts have to offer. Within Courchevel itself there are no end of upscale bars and restaurants and great nightlife. Le Kilimandjaro hotel is a five-star, grandiose establishment with spa facilities and 30 bedrooms and suites housed in seven chalets. www.hotelkilimandjaro.com

VERBIER, SWITZERLAND

Verbier is not the place for beginners but, for off-piste skiers, it is up there with Zermatt (although its mountain restaurants are not to the same standard). High-altitude runs such as Stairway to Heaven and Hidden Valley are a must for intermediate skiers and when there is fresh powder, Verbier is unbeatable. If that is not enough you can easily ski into Chamonix in France, and Italy’s Aosta Valley on the same ski pass. If you stay at the elegant Verbier Lodge you can also book heli-skiing and extreme skiing. The look is modern and fresh, decorated in scarlet, yellow and electric blue. One apartment has a modern wood-burning fire. On the wooden-decked terrace of the hotel is a Jacuzzi to which the south-facing ground-floor apartment has direct access. www.thelodge.virgin.com

Boutique Hotel in the Cotswolds

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2007

It’s easy to work out which are the best boutique hotels in the Cotsolds - or any other area for that matter. All you need do is see what well respected sites like Mr & Mrs Smith, Tablet Hotels, Best Loved Hotels and Intelligent Traveller say and work out the common themes.

Luxury ski chalet in Verbier

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2007

The first ski chalet from Virgin Limited Edition will be “the most luxurious of its size in the Alps available to rent.” Sir Richard Branson has a knack for choosing the most dramatic settings on earth for his hideaways: the Caribbean’s Necker Island, the soaring foothills of Morocco’s Atlas Mountains, and now, the iconic Swiss ski resort of Verbier, celebrated as much for its world-class terrain as for its legendary après-ski. This mountain retreat opens its doors for the first time in January 2008 and will be open year-round. Just minutes from the ski lifts, The Lodge, Verbier features nine rooms and suites (plus a kids bunk room that sleeps up to 6), private pool, mini ice rink, and indoor and outdoor spa areas. The ultimate alpine escape doesn’t come cheap. Rates for exclusive use in winter range from GBP 35,250-59,000 per week for up to 18 guests. Rates in summer start from GBP 555 per person for a three night stay. You also get most meals, all drinks (Champagne too), and 24-hour driver service from Verbier.

Best luxury ski chalets in France

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2007

Yellowstone Chalet, St Foy, France

When I first went skiing, chalets were so small, and ski clothes so big that my brother and I could hardly fit in the same room when we were both wearing our C&A salopettes. In fact, our matching ski suits were so bulky that, instead of taking up space in the family suitcase, Mum made us wear them on the aeroplane. It was great fun, though the chalet was never luxurious (we slept in bunk beds) and the food was always meagre, prepared by a girl who would clearly rather have been skiing by day or drinking her body weight in beer by night. Anyway, it’s all changed. I can fit my ski suit in my luggage, for one thing, and chalets are more like five-star boutique hotels. At the least that’s what the Yellowstone Chalet in Sainte Foy is like.

It’s spacious enough to take a little while to get to know your way around it, but cosy enough to pad around barefoot, thanks to under-floor heating everywhere. It’s built from local wood and stone, with huge limed wood beams, a giant-size fireplace in the sitting room, high ceilings and a balcony on three sides to admire the view over the Tarentaise Valley.

There’s also wifi access, a television room, and a gym (in case skiing all day isn’t enough exercise for you) as well as a sauna, and an open-air Jacuzzi, where you can sit at night in deliciously boiling bubbles and admire the distant lights of Les Arcs.

The bedrooms all have soft pillows and crisp linens on the beds, flat-screen TVs, and the en suite bathrooms have two basins (I don’t know why that feels so luxurious, but it does), squashy white towelling robes, a huge bath and Elemis goodies to soothe tired muscles.

There are three full-time staff and a chef. Everything is done for you, as in a luxury hotel, but you have the run of the place, and can help yourself to anything in the kitchen whenever you feel like it. On arrival, you’re offered a Kir Royale and canapes. The food is excellent; locally sourced, fresh, plentiful and varied. Breakfast is huge: porridge, warm croissants, proper coffee, bacon or a perfectly cooked boiled egg - and newspapers. Tea is homemade goodies like muffins or caramel mud cake.

Aperitifs - the bar and its well stocked cellar are always open - are served before dinner, which is superlative: perfectly pink Beef Wellington, rack of lamb with mango and mint salsa, spinach tagliatelle with Roquefort and walnut cream, then peach and cherry trifle, or Grand Marnier pancakes, and then cheese and more wine. Of course, if this doesn’t appeal, you can request different meals in advance.

There’s an excellent concierge service too, which will do everything for you apart from the actual skiing. They will pre-book your boots, skis, passes and guides, organise a helicopter transfer, a massage in your chalet, or Pilates, or reflexology, or husky rides, or ice-climbing or snowmobiling …

The little details: Speakers for your iPod are concealed within the art works on the wall. Complimentary transfers let you ski in the neighbouring resorts of Val d’Isere, Tignes, La Rosiere and Les Arcs.

OTT: Jacuzzi with in-built CD player so you can practice your singing in the bath.

The firm: Premiere Neige (0870 383 1000; yellowstonechalet.com) has nine chalets in St Foy, but the super-luxury Yellowstone operates separately.

The damage: You can book the whole chalet, sleeping up to 15, from £10,250 to £20,250 per week, or a double room from £850pp, with food and wine but not flights.
Kate Johnson

Haus Glacier, Zermatt, Switzerland

In its two French resorts, Val d’Isere and Meribel, chalet company VIP has built up a collection of traditional, cosy chalets with such comforting names as the Farmhouse and Brioche. Expanding into Switzerland, however, this small company (classier sister firm of Snowline) has forsaken rustica for smaller, apartment-style buildings located in the heart of urban Zermatt. Well, in the village centre.

Given that the new Haus Glacier was converted from a language school before the start of last season - and is bang on the main street - it feels surprisingly quiet and swish. It doesn’t have the olde Swisse charm of the nearby Chalet Gamatchi, but it is comfortable and modern, and easing the pain of the trek to hire skis or boots, it has uniquely convenient access: a lift straight from the chalet to the heart of the ski shop. It’s handy for nightlife too: the T-Bar club is only about 10m further across the street.

Haus Glacier’s massive flat-screen TV has its satellite channels tuned to news in the morning, maybe hinting that this is a chalet more aimed at the executive weekend away. VIP says all its chalets have generously proportioned living areas, high quality sound systems and an open balcony or terrace for soaking up the late-season sun.

The Zermatt chalets are in the vein of Malmaison hotels: not excessively luxurious but neatly done, minimalist and with nothing out of place. In particular, Haus Bor has eye-catching design and furniture. When I visited, we ate well, although not all the dishes were quite at restaurant level. The house wines are very decent and you can trade up.

The little details: Champagne and excellent canapes on tap. Massages, costing extra, are guaranteed available in chalet each night.

OTT: The electronically controlled, jet-cleaning and blow-drying toilet in another VIP chalet, Haus Bor. Just don’t let some joker slip off with the remote.

The firm: VIP (08701 123 119; vip-chalets.com) has a total of 19 chalets in Val d’Isere, Meribel and Zermatt.

The damage: VIP offers seven nights at Haus Glacier in Zermatt from £699 per person on a catered basis, including return BA flights from Gatwick and transfers.
Gwyn Topham

Chalet Du Cret, Val D’isere, France

So this is what it must be like to be Roman Abramovich. Guests at the Chalet du Cret enjoy Perrier Jouet champagne and U’Luvka vodka on tap, and for the duration of their stay are attended to by cool, black-clad henchmen and the odd glamorous eastern European hostess, ready to discreetly furnish such essentials as hand warmers, water and chocolate bars.

Little wonder that the company behind it, Descent International, has become a favourite with billionaires and celebrities. The identities of guests are kept strictly secret, except for when Victoria Beckham stayed at Descent’s chalet in Courchevel - the 150 paparazzi camped outside were a bit of a giveaway.

There are typically four or five staff in each chalet, including a full-time chef. Among Cret’s hosts is an ex-policeman who collects us from Geneva in a 4×4. It turns out that this isn’t the only transfer he does: we get driven the few hundred metres to the lifts in the morning, where we are presented with our skis, lift passes and sun cream, and introduced to our instructors (the best in Val, we’re assured). We can’t fail to ski well: this is tackling the mountains in much the same way as the royal family once shot tigers.

At the end of the day, as we reach the bottom of the home run, the chalet manager - think a cross between the Milk Tray man and Jeeves - is already there to pick up my skis, drive me home, and even try to unbuckle my boots. I’m too embarrassed to let him, but I guess you could get used to it.

The chalet itself puts the average stripped pine interior to shame. This building has been around for hundreds of years, and was lately converted from its most recent incarnation as an upmarket restaurant. It has got all the atmosphere a Francophile snob could want, hiding artfully installed facilities. The discreet, modern kitchen is fitted with chefs in mind (for once this is chalet food that genuinely could be described as top restaurant quality). An upstairs lounge room has the kind of solid desk and sleek computer terminal that blends in enough to not startle the holidaying guest, but still is reassuringly executive, should you suddenly feel the need to sell your stake in Gazprom.

There is art on some walls, enormous stuffed stags on others. A great log fire is always burning. The soft white Russian down duvets are so snug that one night I don’t even realise that I’ve left the balcony door open, and sleep through a snowstorm coming into my room.

Outside, we splash around in the hot tub, a few metres away from a centuries-old chapel that now comes with the property - ski wedding, anyone?

The little details: Rather than anything so infra dig as guests struggling down to the ski hire shop, the staff of Ogier Sport (Val’s best, according to Descent) come to the chalet with skis and boots that magically fit.

OTT: All who stay can enjoy a five-course meal at which every course - from soup to dessert - is accompanied by a differing vintage of Perrier Jouet champagne. Oh, champagne is used in the cooking, too. Beyond that, it’s only the limits of your imagination and offshore bank account: from little treats such as ice karting through to (literally) parachuting in a Father Christmas.

The firm: Descent has 17 chalets in resorts including Val d’Isere, Meribel, Klosters, Courchevel, Les Gets, St Moritz and Zermatt.

The damage: Descent chalets are priced for exclusive bookings only. A week at the Chalet du Cret in Val d’Isere sleeping 12 costs from £23,340-£43,465.
Gwyn Topham