Monday, July 25, 2011

Biking through Tuscany? SI PER FAVORE!

Art in Voyage has created the perfect combination of favorite hobbies (well at least for me). In September, we will be combining the joys of History, Architecture, Art, Wine, Biking and most importantly (for me at least) FOOD! Join us as we embark in a 7 day journey through Tuscany's best kept secrets. Wineries complete with cooking classes, hilltop villages, monasteries turned into Bed & Breakfasts and food food food! Afraid to gain weight? On the contrary mon ami. This is how we lose weight and stay in shape. A great combination of walking, biking and Italy delicacy all while enjoying great company, laughter and fresh air.


But don't take our word for it, here what the experts at "Gude Toscana" have to say:



Biking in Tuscany Italy is an excellent way of enjoying the scenery and discovering the country side with all its rolling hills. When you cycle through the Tuscan country side you will come across all sorts of things like vineries, olive groves, wheat fields, forests, sunflower fields and numerous little villages and small cities filled with cultural treasures.


The best time for biking in Tuscany are the months May, June and September. During these months Tuscany is a bit more tranquil and temperatures don’t rise as rapidly as they do during some other months. 



And some recommendations from TURISMO TOSCANA.

Tuscany has a great variety of bike paths and scenic routes perfect for every type of cyclist, from the inexperienced to the truly expert. We of the social media team – beginners in the cycling world – have picked two bike trails that we think are pretty easy-going. Along these routes, we’ve thought about the most interesting art-historical items to visit and also about the local foods that you must taste while you’re in the area. 


1. The path of the Reclaimed Land, south of Arezzo

It’s a 65 km (40 miles) long trail, but it’s a easy path for hybrid bicycles. The Path of the Reclaimed Land retraces the ancient road that was once used for the maintenance of the Canale Maestro della Chiana and its locks.
South of Arezzo there’s a family-friendly bike trail on mostly flat land without traffic. This trail does not have much interesting art or food right alongside it because you’ll be going through agricultural areas. In fact it’s the montanous area around Arezzo that offers a wider variety of traditional foods starting with chestnuts that are the basic ingredient in many sweet (but not only) dishes, chestnut flour is used to make pasta but really just substitutes flour.
The path in fact is along a canal and has some interesting examples of hydraulic engineering. If you wish to detour from the path, though, you’re in a really interesting area that offers everything from medieval hill towns to thermal baths.


2. An itinerary of Medici Villas and Etruscan ruins in the "Montalbano" area near Prato

It’s a 38 Km (23 miles) path, average level for Mtb bicycles.  Departure from Seano to discover architectural wonders such as Villa la Ferndinanda and traces of the past as the Parish Church of San Leonardo.
Near Prato we’ve picked an easy bike route that is rich with cultural offerings. The Medici family built a number of villas in this area that are all visitable; Poggio a Caiano being the most intact of them and interesting for that reason, although Artimino commands an impressive view over its area and has a nice little Etruscan museumin the basement. This area is well known for its quality wines the Carmignano Super Tuscan, a great, aging wine that is also pleasant when young, the Barco Reale that takes its name from the ancient grand-ducal property, the Vin Ruspo (Rosé of Carmignano DOC), all with the same assorted base: this is the first denomination of Tuscan origin that prescribes, along with the Sangiovese, Cabernet (up to 20%), as well as the Canaiolo and other complementary vines.




Whether you decide to join us in September or travel at a different time, let us know how we can help. Our professional travel consultants and guides will design the perfect itinerary for you.


Our tour description is available by clicking hereWe are excited to be joining forces with our friends at I BIKE TUSCANY for this tour. We have designed it so all are welcome. Not interested in joining our small group of bikers? Not a problem as we can offer several options to keep you entertained.


We hope to see you on top of the hills in September.


For more information, contact ART IN VOYAGE at 321-800-3945 or email info@artinvoyage.com




Mikael Frank Audebert
Creative Director



Thursday, July 14, 2011

The new generation of all-inclusive resorts

A CNN/TRAVEL+LEISURE editorial piece - By Heidi Mitchell

The concept was a great one for a teenager: getting thrown into the pool by flirtatious staffers, eating all the French fries I wanted at every single meal, watching grown-ups humiliate themselves during "talent night."
But those spring-break trips to all-inclusive resorts that I loved as an awkward adolescent were something I have avoided at all costs as an adult. Swapping bracelet beads for drinks, competing with the throngs lined up for soggy burgers and watching people drink margaritas with breakfast is not my idea of a dream holiday. Nor is it my sister's; we agree that her memories of our childhood trips are just as well left in the past.
Travel + Leisure gallery: See the best new all-inclusive resorts
But as soon as we walked into the Deco-chic lobby of Couples Tower Isle, on Jamaica's northern coast, our distaste started to fade. With its white leather daybeds, vintage black-and-white photos of Hollywood glitterati and a two-tiered dining room lined with murals from the 1940's, the hotel looked like something straight out of South Beach. Not, as we'd worried, a flashback to the tackiest years of the eighties.
One of Jamaica's first resorts, Tower Isle was built in 1949 by local businessman Abe Issa, who latched onto the then-novel idea of keeping a hotel open year-round. It quickly became a magnet for the Hollywood jet set, attracting guests like Eva Gabor, Debbie Reynolds and Noël Coward. Some 30 years later, Issa had another brainstorm: reflag the hotel as Couples and introduce a fixed rate to encompass everything from meals to watersports. It worked: Issa's Jamaican-based brand soon grew from one to four resorts.
The concept wasn't new. Safari lodges had been luring travelers with a pay-one-price model for decades (It was Ernest Hemingway who popularized the safari on his first trip to Kenya in 1933). Club Med took the concept, merged it with French notions of joie de vivre, and opened its first fun-for-all-ages property, on Majorca, in 1950. And private island resorts and luxury hotels such as Antigua's Curtain Bluff have cultivated loyal guests through a similar model for years.
But as massive all-inclusives, some with 2,000 rooms, began to pop up on beaches everywhere, they earned a bad rap; their names became synonymous with booze cruises, bad buffet restaurants and anything-goes behavior (swinger parties, anyone?). "All-inclusive was code for budget travel -- budget lodging, food and beverage and service," says Lindsay Ueberroth, president of the Preferred Hotel Group.
The industry these days is renovating not only its properties, but its image. This past year, Couples Tower Isle poured $30 million into a makeover in an attempt to recapture its 1950s glamour.
And Couples isn't alone. At Sandals Resorts, founder Gordon "Butch" Stewart has handed the reins of the company over to his children, most notably 30-year-old Adam Stewart, who has spent some $300 million over the past two years in an attempt to reinvent the brand.
In addition to opening Fowl Cay Resort, in the Bahamas, where every villa comes with a boat for exploring the Exuma beaches, they're building overwater bungalows -- a first in the Caribbean -- at their St. Lucia outpost. Adam is also overseeing a $20 million transformation of what was recently a Four Seasons into an all-villa, all-suite resort.
"We could have stopped after we added three restaurants, a patisserie and a swim-up bar, but we didn't," he says of the latest addition to the 22-property chain. "But we're also upgrading the service, introducing white-gloved butlers, and adding indoor-outdoor showers."
Couples and Sandals have achieved a guest-return rate of 40 percent. "We're literally booked in every category for the next four months," Adam says. Indeed, that kind of demand is jump-starting a new breed of hotel. From Turks and Caicos down to Barbados, smart brands are trading hula-hoop contests and sing-alongs for scuba diving, bars staffed with hipster DJs and off-site excursions -- all included.
The sticker shock suffered at checkout is also evaporating, since gratuities and taxes are increasingly being wrapped into one easy-to-digest price. Value has always been a large part of the equation with all-inclusives, but now that sophisticated travelers have higher expectations, luxurious amenities are provided.
"Because of the economic slowdown, guests want to know exactly what they're getting when they commit to staying somewhere," says Nikheel Advani, chief operating officer of Turks and Caicos-based Grace Bay Resorts. His latest property, the Veranda, offers guests one-sum pricing. "They don't want to worry about extra add-ons."
All those add-ons don't come cheap, naturally. The average nightly rate across the Sandals Resorts brand is $450 per person; at Couples, it's $350.
Industry insiders -- including top travel agents -- are keeping an eye on the transformation.
"All-inclusives aren't for everyone, and many top agents won't touch them for love nor money," says Kathy Sudeikis, vice president of corporate relations at All About Travel, in Kansas City, and a T+L Travel Agent Advisory Board member. "But the newest places deliver on price and privacy. They're evolving to appeal to the upscale client."
Sandals' Adam Stewart has targeted his customer: everyone. "I've never in my life heard anyone ask for less luxury," he says. He and other top hoteliers in the Caribbean and Mexico, where prices have skyrocketed but airfare is still affordable, are happy to deliver.
On the Riviera Maya, you can find a dozen new high-end all-inclusive brands like Now Jade and Secrets lining the seafront from the airport all the way down to Tulum. The Dominican Republic's current popularity is based almost entirely on this model, drawing some 4 million international passengers to its Punta Cana Airport alone each year (at least a half-dozen all-inclusives occupy that part of the island).
Even traditional hotels such as the Ritz-Carlton Golf Resort & Spa, Rose Hall, Jamaica, are now offering all-inclusive packages (though getting European guests to wear waterproof bracelets with their DVF bikinis is a challenge).
And according to Ueberroth, whose Preferred Hotel Group has recently added 20 so-called "unlimited luxury" resorts to its stable, the trend won't stop there: "We believe that well-executed all-inclusives will soon be popping up across the United States -- particularly in beach destinations like Hawaii."
"Couples only" all-inclusives are also evolving, welcoming pairs of every stripe: fathers with their sons, sisters like me and mine, single girlfriends, same-sex couples. Multigenerational and family travelers are heavily courted as well -- if kids are happy, wallet-toting parents are, too. The 615-room Beaches Turks & Caicos has a Martha Stewart Crafts Studio and Sesame Street characters roaming Grace Bay. Nearby, Veranda is introducing Sony PlayStations in each of its 120 guest quarters, as well as a chef from Bellagio.
Of course, selling discerning travelers on upscale all-inclusives has its challenges, I know. My sister and I were wary that this shift in the marketplace was more hype than reality. Guess what? Tower Isle was great.
We could have gotten certified to scuba-dive at an adjacent reef, worked out with a trainer or gone horseback riding on the beach. Instead, we lazed on the sand, gazing at the shades of blue wash into the horizon, and at photos on our iPads, courtesy of the resort's free Wi-Fi. We dined at 8 Rivers, a 1950s-era restaurant where beef Wellington is on the menu and Grey Goose martinis are shaken, not stirred.
We even met a couple from Pittsburgh who were on their 29th visit. "It's just so easy, and the service is really top-notch," the husband told me as we snaked our way up Dunn's River Falls, which James Bond made famous in "Dr. No." The cost of our off-site upstream hike? Nada.
When we moved to the Royal Plantation, one of Sandals' newest properties, the décor was more traditional but the feeling was much the same: that of pleasant surprise. In our plantation-style suite, candles and conch shells were arranged on the coffee table like a still life; a telescope was stationed on the balcony.
One of our butlers, Shelley, delivered canapés of smoked salmon and shrimp cocktails twice a day, and gave us a cell phone with her number programmed on it for 24/7 access. The bartender offered 12-year-old rum, and our other butler, Jason, escorted us to a nightclub in town and kept safely at bay the rowdy spring breakers.
Some of the things -- the champagne-and-caviar bar at Royal Plantation; spa treatments anywhere -- cost extra, but at least you know what you're paying before you check in.
I'll admit that some of the resorts' touches -- a menagerie of towel animals on our beds at Tower Isle; handwritten thank-you notes at Royal Plantation -- were a bit over the top. But did my sister eat her words? Did I? Yes...along with a second helping of steamed lobster, no extra charge.
Heidi Mitchell is a writer and editor based in New York. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and Town & Country.
Planning a romantic getaway? Contact ART IN VOYAGE at 1-888-610-TOUR (8687) or info@artinvoyage.com

Saturday, July 9, 2011

5 Unique Experiences in Italy

As I was doing some extensive research on the web to "spice up" a little our upcoming Biking Tour to Tuscany, I came across an interesting article on CNN.COM. Having traveled to Italy a lot over the past 10 years, I have done 3 out of the 5 experiences I am about to share with you. At Art In Voyage, we strive to and thrive at creating and designing travel journeys that meet your every expectations, wishes and budget. With us, no need to be an American Express(r) Gold or Platinum Card member to receive special consideration and treatment. We care for everyone of our guests, whether it is to join one of our well designed small group tours or to travel on your own with a plan in place, one we have created for you.

Now off to Italy with 5 unique experiences. Should one be of your liking, contact us at info@artinvoyage.com and we will make it happen.

(the following is copyrighted by Cable News Network and used with permission)


Stay in a Tuscan castle
Close your eyes and imagine the rolling hills and decadent wines of Tuscany. Now know that the reality of the place is even better. Twisted, knotted vineyards cover the rolling hills in patches of regimented rows that almost look like quilts. The air is fresh and sweet, and as you drive through the narrow curving roads, ancient towns and rustic old castles seem to pop up out of nowhere.
We rented a car for a more intimate look at the nooks and crests of Tuscany. Two things that made the visit all the more spectacular: our hotel and the wine.
Hotel Castello di Spaltenna is an ancient "castle" turned luxury hotel nestled in the vineyards of the Tuscan region of Chianti, close to the town of Gaiole. It's less an actual castle and more a medieval hamlet with a church that dates to the year 1000.
Three of us settled nicely into a two-bedroom suite with two bathrooms, a lovely living space and a fireplace for chilly nights. Staying here was a memorable splurge.
Our suite cost about €600 a night (about $870), but they have rooms available for around €200 (about $290) with breakfast included. Rates for simpler quarters on the premises can be as low as €130 a night (about $190).
The hotel has a Michelin-rated restaurant serving traditional Tuscan fare, but I was most taken with the early breakfasts on the terrace. Crispy, flaky croissants and tarts made by an in-house pastry chef, fresh scrambled eggs, yogurts, Italian meats, ripe fruit and fresh coffee complemented the roaring, lush summer just coming into full bloom.
The hotel also offers spa services, mountain bikes and suggestions for tours of the region.

Taste wine on a Chianti estate with ties to Mona Lisa
"I never drink when I am sober," joked Sandro Checcucci, our lively and thoroughly knowledgeable host at the Vignamaggio Estate in Chianti.
Sandro told us the 700-year-old estate has been making beautiful Chianti Classico wines for more than 600 years. But, he said, the vineyards have a much deeper past; they were cultivated by the Etruscans -- an ancient Tuscan civilization -- who made wine from the grapes grown on this land as far back as 500 B.C.
The castle itself has provenance as well. Vignamaggio Estate claims that Lisa Gherardini was born there in 1497. She would grow up into the mysterious woman immortalized in Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona Lisa." Guests can opt to stay in the estate's rooms and apartments.
Sandro was thorough in his tour, and we walked away with a real understanding of just what goes into making a true Chianti Classico wine. All wines labeled "Classico" come from grapes harvested, pressed and aged in a small 27-mile region in Chianti, the original growing region of Chianti wines.
The Vignamaggio Chianti Classico Riserva is a full-bodied wine with fruity notes. We lingered at a beautiful table set with regional salami and cheeses as we tried each of the estate's wines.




Take a private tour of Renaissance Florence
If you have a limited time in Florence, there is no better way to experience the essence of the Tuscan city than to hire a private tour guide.
Walks Inside Florence tailored a three-hour tour to exactly the likes and dislikes of my family. Hate art? No problem! Love architecture? Fine! Want a tour of the city at night? A-OK.
We started our tour early, before the swarm of tourists invaded Piazza della Signoria and the temperatures soared. It's a little more expensive than a group tour but totally worth it. The tour company also offers small group tours, starting at €60 per person (about $85) for three-hour expeditions.
Our guide had everything planned, so we breezed through museum lines and enjoyed the Ponte Vecchio, the Palazzo Vecchio, the Baptistry, the Cathedral and much more. Our guide pointed out little secrets and unknown tidbits along the way and made our excursion to Florence memorable.

Tour the Amalfi Coast by boat
There is absolutely no better way to see the raw beauty of the Amalfi Coast than from the sea.
We arranged a private boat and guide from Lucibello, an excursion outfit in Positano, and were simply stunned by what we saw.
Rugged cliffs framing enormous caves ... ancient stairways carved into the stone ... secret grottos we explored from the water ... swimming holes where you can take a dip ... thousand-year-old Roman towers set up to protect the coast from pirates and other intruders.
Plan a longer excursion and stop off in a different coastal town for lunch, a swim or shopping.
Private boat excursions on the Amalfi Coast are definitely a luxury. Our four-hour tour of the Amalfi coast with a driver cost €450 (about $650). We could have spent close to $2,000 for a high-end speed boat for the day. Lucibello also offers much more affordable group tours every day, including a tour of the Amalfi Coast and round-trip excursions to nearby Capri starting around €30 (about $43) per person.

Stay in the summer palace of a king
Nestled in the elbow of the Amalfi Coast, Positano is a winding, ancient city built on ragged cliffs that drop straight down into the Tyrrhenian Sea.
The town is tiny, and in the beginning of June, it's covered in beautiful, delicate flowers that fill the air with a subtle fragrance. Lemon and orange trees line the streets and grow fruit the size of a human head.
The cliffs were settled by prehistoric man and over thousands of years have been settled again and again by different cultures. Because of the proximity to Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia, there is a distinct Moorish influence throughout the coastal towns.
The Hotel Palazzo Murat is a gorgeous hotel built in the 17th century in a traditional Neapolitan Baroque style. The large stone palace sits close to the beachfront in Positano. Many rooms have balconies covered in bougainvillea that look out over the cliffs and the sea. In 1808, King of Naples Gioacchino Murat (who was also the brother-in-law of Napoleon Bonaparte) decided to make the palace his summer home.
His vibrant gardens still grace the grounds of the palazzo. There is also a vegetable garden that provides fresh produce for the hotel's Michelin-rated restaurant. Stroll through the patio area in the afternoon, and you might see the chef making homemade pasta for the evening's meal.
Breakfast in the courtyard includes a full buffet of fresh fruit, pastries, cheeses and meats. Cocktail hour outside in the early evening is complete with live music and hors d'oeuvres.
The rooms in the original palace have high ceilings and rich, old-world charm. Depending on the season, the most luxurious rooms could cost around €450 ($650). I stayed in a newer part of the hotel, where the rooms are spacious and charming with colorful tiled floors and flower-covered balconies overlooking the gardens. These "superior" rooms cost about €240 (about $350) in peak season, but prices drop dramatically in the fall.
Vacationing in Italy is unforgettable at every budget. And if you can afford a splurge to enhance an already spectacular experience, do it! But most importantly, take time to talk to the locals, sit for long spells with a glass of house wine and a nice view, eat as much as you can hold and share the experience with people you love.


Safe Journey!

Mikael Frank Audebert
Creative Director