Cruising Solo

Silver Spirit, Silversea Cruises

Silver Spirit, Silversea Cruises

A cruise can be a wonderful way for a single traveler to take a vacation. It’s safe, it’s easy to meet like-minded people and, of course, a cruise is simply great fun. Cruises can also be terribly expensive, with some lines charging single supplements of as much as 100%.

One company bucking that trend is Silversea, which currently offers single supplements of only 10% to 25% on 22 departures between February and the end of May. Silversea further sweetens the deal by adding discounts of 50% to 60%, shipboard credits of $250 to $500 and free airfare. (Terms and conditions apply.)

Most of these cruises are Caribbean or Asian itineraries, but Europhiles should take note of the seven-night Southampton-Barcelona voyage on May 19 aboard Silversea’s newest vessel, Silver Spirit.

English Country House Hotels Make Changes

The Herb House Spa

The Herb House Spa, Lime Wood

Two English country house hotels south of London have announced renovation projects, even as a third opens a new spa.

Gravetye Manor, about 45 minutes from London at West Hoathly, will be closed through March for a major refurbishment of the Elizabethan stone mansion that includes updating much of the infrastructure, including new baths and the addition of 21st-century technology. Now under new ownership, the entire manor will be rewired and a new heating system installed. Public areas and bedrooms will receive a substantial makeover, while retaining the English country house feel that comes with fine antique furniture and real fires. Bright and cheerful floral fabrics will be used to bring the outdoors in, and restoration will begin on the estate’s gardens. During the three-month closure, staff will be in place to handle reservations for spring and summer.

Work is also under way at another Harper favorite, Chewton Glen in New Milton (about 90 minutes from London), through January and into February. A number of rooms are being renovated, along with some restoration work on the hydrotherapy pool in the spa. The hotel will remain open, management says, while keeping disruption to a minimum. Only the hydrotherapy pool will be unavailable during the project.

Meanwhile, December saw the opening of a sumptuous new 16,000-square-foot spa at Lime Wood, a recent Harper recommendation near the town of Lyndhurst, about 12 miles from Chewton Glen. The spa includes eight treatment rooms, a Bath House (complete with its own indoor pool) a Mud House, a Bath Garden (a double treatment room with its own outdoor whirlpool) and a hot pool, where guests may relax outside in quiet contemplation of the forest. A rooftop herb garden is intended for meditation. The Herb House will also feature the Raw Bar restaurant, serving salads and sushi.

A Window on the Past

Hotel Imperial

Hotel Imperial, Vienna

We recently had the fortune to obtain “New Horizons: The World Guide to Travel,” a guidebook published by Pan American Airways in 1955. This fascinating little paperback covers 78 countries, offering unique insight into a different era of travel.

Although the world has changed dramatically, we were delighted to find much that remains the same. Quite a few of the hotels Andrew Harper currently recommends have been at the top of their games for at least half a century, though the rates have risen just a bit:

London: “…Claridge’s, still the swankiest hostelry in town, is $15 and up. You’ll be treated royally. The Savoy*, of course, is known the world over, as is the Ritz. The fashionable Berkeley is equally fine. Rooms are $11 per night. The Dorchester is very good. Rates here begin at $10.50.”

Paris: “You can find anything you want at any price. In the de luxe group are: the Ritz, Plaza Athénée, George V, Meurice, Crillon, Prince de Galles*, Royal Monceau*, Raphaël*, and Bristol. Rates at official exchange run from about $10 a day and up single with no bath (no meals) at the top hotels.”

Zurich: “Although some are more elegant than others, there’s no such thing as a bad Swiss hotel… Rates in luxury hotels begin at $6 per day per person, meals included. In Zurich, the de luxe hotels are: Dolder Grand, Baur au Lac, Savoy*.”

Vienna: “In Vienna, the Imperial and the Grand* are now occupied by Russians, but the Bristol by Americans and tourists may stay there. $5 to $6 single, plus about $3.60 for meals.”

Athens: “There are many good hotels in Athens. In the de luxe group are: the Grande-Bretagne, the Athénée Palace* and the King George. Rates at official exchange, about $4 single with bath, European plan, at the best hotels.”

Adjusting for inflation, $10 is the equivalent of just $79.18 (in 2009 dollars) — not a bad price for a room in one of the best hotels in the world.

*Mr. Harper does not currently recommend these hotels.

Guaranteed Upgrades in Europe

Aquapura

Aquapura (Douro Valley, Portugal)

Hotels and resorts in the Andrew Harper Alliance offer our members all sorts of benefits, from complimentary breakfasts to shopping credits to electric bicycle rentals. The most popular benefit, however, has always been a guaranteed upgrade at the time of booking. Who wouldn’t want to pay for a deluxe room and stay in a junior suite?

A dozen of Mr. Harper’s favorite European properties offer guaranteed upgrades at the time of booking, based on availability:

A’jia (Istanbul, Turkey)
Hotel Schloss Dürnstein (Dürnstein, Austria)
Palais Coburg (Vienna, Austria)
Hotel De Tuilerieën (Bruges, Belgium)
The Halkin (London, England)
Hôtel Le Bristol (Paris, France)
Hotel Vier Jahreszeiten Kempinski (Munich, Germany)
Hotel Taschenbergpalais Kempinski (Dresden, Germany)
Cromleach Lodge (County Sligo, Ireland)
Gregans Castle Hotel (County Clare, Ireland)
Aquapura (Douro Valley, Portugal)
Taleon Imperial Hotel (St. Petersburg, Russia)

Caribbean Update: Dunmore, Four Seasons Nevis

The DunmoreThe Dunmore (formerly the Dunmore Beach Club) on Harbour Island, 50 miles from Nassau in the Bahamas, has undergone an extensive transformation since changing owners in September. The 16-room, eight-acre property, fronting a stunning three-mile-long pink-sand beach on the island’s eastern side, was acquired by Gil Besing and a group of investors. Besing is CEO of Dallas-based Cardinal Capital Partners, Inc.

The resort has been refurbished, inside and out. The upgrade retains the cottages’ classic decor with custom upholstered sofas, vintage rattan chairs and grass matting on the floors, and adds complimentary Wi-Fi and flat-screen satellite TV. New patio furniture has been added to the cottages’ private seaview terraces.

A new pool and a new open-air fitness facility overlooking the ocean were added, as well as a new arrival/reception building. The renovated clubhouse includes a new bar and expanded indoor and outdoor dining areas. New executive chef Shane Becker manages the hotel’s upgraded restaurant and bar with a new à la carte menu that features island cuisine. The restaurant, formerly available only to hotel guests, is now open to the public and offers fine dining in the upgraded dining room or under a new dining tent on the terrace overlooking the ocean. Beach-side food and beverage service is also available to hotel guests.

. . .

Elsewhere in the region, Four Seasons Resort Nevis reopened last month (December), more than two years after Hurricane Omar, swept through the islands of St. Kitts and Nevis in October 2008.

The $40-million project included restoring the beach, which was the biggest casualty from the hurricane, and refurbishing the resort’s 196 rooms and suites. All accommodations now feature a furnished outdoor veranda or patio reached through wooden-shuttered sliding glass doors. Oversized full marble bathrooms include a soaking tub and separate shower. Other changes include a new grill, new beachside cabanas and an on-site sailing school.

The task of repairing the damage and upgrading the facility was hampered by financing and funding issues. The resort will mark its 20th anniversary on Feb. 14.

Grand Award Winner: The Beverly Hills Hotel

The Beverly Hills Hotel

Copyright Andrew Harper

An iconic pink structure located at the corner of North Crescent Drive and Sunset Boulevard, The Beverly Hills Hotel opened its doors in 1912. Although we have sometimes eschewed the property because of its overt links to Hollywood celebrity, we have always been lured back by the tranquility of its 12-acre garden setting.

Beneath the porte-cochère, we were intercepted by a swarm of valet parking attendants, and despite our self-evident lack of A-list credentials, everyone was exceptionally polite and friendly. It was immediately apparent that considerable effort has been expended on the recent renovation of the public areas. Our Deluxe double room was similarly immaculate. The Beverly Hills has 204 rooms and suites, plus 21 bungalows (in which it is possible to take individual rooms). Bungalows come with separate entrances, living rooms and dining rooms. Some have pianos and Jacuzzi tubs, while the most opulent of all, four-bedroom #5, has a private lap pool.

Dining options at the hotel include the eccentric Fountain Coffee Room, which serves sandwiches and burgers at 19 barstools along a curved counter, plus the legendary Polo Lounge, for decades the Hollywood power lunch venue of choice. For some reason known only to the architect, to reach the delightful Cabana Café adjacent to the hotel’s celebrated pool, you must first pass through the reception of the 1,900-square- foot La Prairie spa. The pool and its 21 cabanas are part of Hollywood legend, but leaving its star-spangled history aside, it is just a wonderful place to relax on a sunny day, beneath the towering palms and overarched by the deep blue of a cloudless California sky.

For information on other Andrew Harper Grand Award winners, download a complimentary issue of Hideaway Report Online.

Grand Award Winner: The Ranch at Rock Creek

The Ranch at Rock Creek

Taking its name from a blue-ribbon trout stream that flows out of the wilderness along the Continental Divide, The Ranch at Rock Creek is surrounded by a magnificent 6,600-acre property.

Nine conventional rooms are housed within Granite Lodge, a log-and-stone structure that contains the dining room, a rustic lounge, a spa and a sod-roofed “saloon.” A quarter-mile away is a barn (with two lodgings), a romantic log cabin and eight wood-and-canvas cabins bordering the creek. These look like tents, but are warmed by gas fireplaces and contain plush beds that let you fall asleep listening to the water flow by. Luxurious private bathhouses are just steps away. Finally, two log homes offer three and five bedrooms, respectively.

Bluebird Cabin is the most romantic spot on the ranch, positioned for privacy at the edge of the rushing creek. And we envied the guests who had reserved the Trapper cabin, located a quarter-mile upstream from the other creekside lodgings, with a large etched-glass window facing the creek and a private streamside veranda, where a deep hot tub invites open-air soaks.

We were consistently pleased with the meals from the ranch kitchen. One evening we had George’s Bank sea scallops with white bean purée, cashew romesco sauce and braised leeks, and a perfectly done Montana rib eye with white cheddar gratin and grilled asparagus. Overall, this is a fine new property, and it joins a select list of Montana retreats where you can experience the thrill of the great outdoors, but still eat exceptionally well and sleep soundly in sophisticated comfort.

For information on other Andrew Harper Grand Award winners, please download a complimentary issue of Hideaway Report Online.

From the Travel Office: High Season Favorites

Il San Pietro, Positano

Il San Pietro, Positano

Each January brings a flurry of calls to the Travel Office, as members start to plan their vacations for the rest of the year. These members usually have the best luck reserving exactly what they want, even in high season at the most sought-after properties. This window of opportunity closes quickly, however, making it important to book space in certain destinations right now.

The legendary resorts along Italy’s dramatic Amalfi Coast routinely run out of space for the season by February or March.Il San Pietro and Le Sirenuse always seem to go first, followed quickly by the Santa Caterina, Palazzo Sasso and Hotel Caruso. It’s also wise to book certain European cruises right away; Baltic itineraries, French barge charters and cruises over the holidays fill up the fastest.

Holiday periods in the Caribbean are extremely competitive as well — many Harper-recommended island resorts sell out almost a year in advance for stays over Christmas. Beachfront accommodations and connecting rooms (for families) can be especially hard to come by later in the year.

Farther afield, the most intimate and ideally located safari lodges offer only a handful of rooms, making booking well in advance essential. South Africa’s Mateya Safari Lodge has only five suites, and Zarafa Camp in Botswana features just four luxurious tents. With 11 villas, Namibia’s Little Kulala seems quite large by comparison! New Zealand’s exclusive “super lodges” similarly limit guest numbers.

To take advantage of peak availability, contact the Travel Office at (800) 375-4685, (630) 734-4610 or reservations@andrewharper.com.

Otahuna Lodge: A New Zealand Landmark Reopens

Otahuna Lodge

Otahuna Lodge

When New Zealand suffered a magnitude 7.1 earthquake last year, the historic Otahuna Lodge sustained significant damage. The structure remained intact, but all 11 of its fanciful chimneys partially or completely collapsed, damaging the slate roof. Fortunately, no guests or staff were injured during the quake.

We feared this 2009 Andrew Harper Readers’ Choice Award winner might be lost, but after carefully restoring the chimneys and the roof and strengthening the property against future seismic events, Otahuna Lodge has once again opened to guests.

From the Harper Collection: “Evocative, historic seven-suite manor amid beautiful century-old estate gardens, 20 minutes outside Christchurch. Magnificently appointed public areas contain a superb dining room, library and guest lounge. Tennis, day spa, pool, fitness gym and stable for horseback rides.

“The spectacular 110-year-old gardens of Otahuna were laid out and cultivated under the direction of A. E. Lowe, who trained at Kew Gardens, London. Wide vistas over lawn and lake contrast beautifully with intimate walks winding through heavily wooded areas. The gardens of the country estate offer a range of guest amenities and activities, including swimming, croquet and petanque.”

From the Travel Office: Popular Harper Hotels

Grace Bay Club, Turks & Caicos

Grace Bay Club, Turks & Caicos

Below is a list of the hotels most frequently reserved by the Travel Office last week (January 2-8):