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Jonker Walk, Melaka(Malacca)

Information

A definite haven for antique collectors and bargain hunters. Authentic artifacts and relics, some dating as far back as 300 years, can be found among a host of interesting collectibles, each with its own history and mystery.

Jalan Hang Jebat, formerly known as Jonker Street, is known worldwide among serious antique collectors as one of the best places to hunt and bargain for antiques.

Recently, a new wave of cafes and craft shops have sprouted on this street, lending it a cultured air of old-meets-new.

How to get there

By Foot or Taxi

Because of Jonker Street’s very central location, it is very easy to get to and from if you are staying in Melaka.

Who to contact

For more information, please contact Jonker Walk Committee +606 � 2848282 or Tourism Malaysia Melaka Office at +606 � 288 3304 / 1549.

Accommodation Overview

Melaka has a wide range of accommodation available, from basic backpacker’s hostels to 5-star hotels.

View Accommodation In Melaka

Nearby Attractions

 Travellers Review

TripAdvisor
Traveller Reviews for Jonker Street
Jonker Street
TripAdvisor Traveller Rating:
4.0 of 5 stars

Based on 18 traveller reviews
TripAdvisor Popularity Index: #2 of 46 attractions in Melaka
Most Recent Traveller Reviews:
  • 15 Jun 2011: “Buying traditional stuff for my marriage near…”
  • 14 Jun 2011: “Must visit when you at Melaka”
  • 13 Jun 2011: “A must go place”
  • 5 Jun 2011: “enjoy the food here”
  • 1 Jun 2011: “Not really special”
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10 great outdoor adventures in Malaysia

  • Paul Bloomfield
  • Lonely Planet Author
Men and boys of Sea gypsy community working on wooden boats, north of Semporna.

There’s more than one Malaysia. There’s the modern, well-ordered state boasting the Petronas Towers, those twin rocket-ship behemoths in capital Kuala Lumpur. There’s bustling multicultural Malaysia, an ethnic and culinary mélange into which Malays, Chinese, Tamils and numerous indigenous groups contribute cuisines and customs. But there’s still – thankfully – wild, untamed Malaysia: jungle and reef, mountain and rainforest, river and ridge. Few countries in South-East Asia – or anywhere – match the range of opportunities for getting adventurous outdoors.

1. Dive the Semporna Archipelago, Sabah

Any spot described by scuba supremo Jacques Cousteau as ‘an untouched piece of art’ is pretty special. A submarine adventure around Sipadan – an elliptical island atop an oceanic pinnacle – takes the breath away: whale, hammerhead and reef sharks, manta rays, barracuda and turtles are regular dive buddies.

2. Surf the breaks of Cherating and Tioman Island

The swells of Indonesia to the south grab the headlines, but there’s ample action on Peninsula Malaysia’s east coast, too. Breaks around Cherating and off eastern Tioman see waves from across the South China hold five or six feet – plenty for both beginners and more-ambitious surfers.

3. Go batty in the caves of Gunung Mulu National Park, Sarawak

It’s a fine three-day trek through rainforest to the pinnacles, but the showpieces of the park are subterranean: the vast caverns, including the largest open to tourists – 2km-long Deer Cave. Come to discover what two million bats look (and smell) like.

4. Hike through the jungle of Endau-Rompin National Park

Tigers. Elephants. Tapirs. Leopards. Endangered Sumatran rhinos. They’re all here – though admittedly tricky to spot among the 870 sq km of lush lowland forest. A hike isn’t about ticking off species but, rather, camping in the primordial woodland, ducking under remote waterfalls, and watching for birdlife and monkeys.

5. Raft the Sungai Padas, Sabah

The Class I-II rapids of the Kiulu River are a mere nursery for the big adrenalin-pumper: Padas, with whitewater pushing III-IV over the 30km course. During breathers, grab the chance to gaze into the rainforest lining the river.

6. Wander among the tea plantations of Cameron Highlands

For a very English adventure – tea and strawberries: it could almost be Wimbledon – take to the trails around the hill station of Cameron Highlands. Amid the pleasingly geometric forms of the bushes of the tea plantations, stretch your legs in the cool high-level air for views of peaks and waterfalls.

7. Spot orang-utan from boat level on the Sungai Kinabatangan, Sabah

You could spot your ginger-mopped primate cousins at the rehabilitation centres of Sepilok or Semenggoh – but there’s nothing like delving into the jungle for some real wildlife-watching. Take an early morning boat ride on the Kinabatangan River for the chance of spotting shy pygmy elephants, proboscis monkeys and vivid birdlife.

8. Hike to the longhouses of the Kelabit Highlands, Sarawak

The chance to meet the indigenous inhabitants of Borneo and stay in their traditional longhouses is one of the key reasons for trekking into the steamy interior. Headhunters they may no longer be, but meetings with Borneo’s tribespeople still offer unique insights into fast-eroding cultures.

9. Snorkel the reefs of the Perhentian Islands

These almost stereotypically tropical-paradise islands off the peninsula’s north-eastern coast tempt with sand and snorkelling. From the fine beaches it’s the work of a moment to don mask, snorkel and flippers and drift over colourful coral. The islands are also a great place to learn to scuba dive, with varied sites and reasonable prices.

10. Summit Mt Kinabalu, Sabah

This huge grey lump of granite, soaring to a sharp 4,095m peak, looms large over northern Borneo; the two-day climb requires steely determination to tackle hours of solid uphill – but dawn views across to the Philippines on a clear morning offset even the most burning thighs.

THE SEVEN WONDERS OF AUSTRALIA

Date 04.04.2011
THE SEVEN WONDERS OF AUSTRALIA Australia is a land of stunning wilderness and fascinating cultural landmarks. Tourism-Review.com invites you to discover some of the best known sites – the seven wonders of Australia. Selected by Everything-Everywhere.com.

Kakadu National Park

Kakadu National Park

As the premier national park in Australia, Kakadu offers dramatic landscape, Aboriginal rock art and diverse and abundant wildlife. Waterfalls and gorges in the park such as Maguk, Gunlom, Twin Falls and Jim Jim Falls are also very popular. The Kakadu region is one of the world’s best for bird watching since 30 percent of the country’s bird species live there. Saltwater crocodiles, kangaroos and wallabies can be seen all over the park. Visitors can also explore some of the oldest aboriginal artwork in Australia. Many of the Kakadu rock drawings date back over 20,000 years.

Uluru

Uluru

Probably the best known natural icon of Australia, Uluru or Ayer’s Rock, lures crowds of tourists every year. The iron in the rock makes its colors change through the course of a day from bright to dark red. Uluru is sacred to the local aboriginal people, but it is also of considerable cultural and natural significance. As such, Uluru was inscribed in the UNESCO’s list of World Heritage Sites.

Sydney Harbor

Sydney Harbor

For many travelers Australia means Sydney and Sydney means the famous shell-shaped Opera House. This UNESCO World Heritage Site is one of the most famous performing arts centers in the world. Moreover, it is visited by some 1.2 million people a year. It is located in the Sydney Harbor close to the Sydney Harbor Bridge and is locally nicknamed “The Coat Hanger” because of its arch-based design. Visitors can take a ferry across the harbor, walk across the top of the bridge, have tea in the Opera House, and take a stroll in the nearby Royal Botanical Gardens.

Purnululu National Park

Purnululu National Park

Yet another World Heritage Site, the Purnululu National Park in Western Australia is famous especially for the Bungle Bungle Range. These beehive-shaped towers made of sandstone and rocks make the park the premier attraction in the region. The domes are unusual and visually striking with their striping in alternating orange and grey bands. Since the park is accessible only in the dry season (April to December) and only by four-wheel-drive vehicles helicopter tours are quite popular there.

Great Barrier Reef

Great Barrier Reef

The world’s largest coral reef system, the Great Barrier Reef stretches over 2,600 km (1,600 mi). It is composed of over 2,900 individual reefs and 900 islands. The reef is located in the Coral Sea, off the coast of Queensland. The reef is also the world’s biggest single structure made by living organisms. It consists of and is built by billions of tiny organisms, known as coral polyps and it supports a wide diversity of life. As such, it was inscribed in the UNESCO’s list of World Heritage in 1981. The reef is also a very popular tourist destination, especially in the Whitsunday Islands and Cairns regions.

Giant Eucalyptus Trees of Tasmania

Giant Eucalyptus Trees of Tasmania

Tasmania is well known to travelers looking for pristine beauty and unspoiled wilderness. Besides unique flora and fauna including the endangered Tasmanian Devil, it is also home to the giant eucalyptus tree. The Eucalyptus Regnanst, also known as the Swamp Gum, Mountain Ash or Tasmanian Oak, is the largest flowering plant and hardwood tree in the world. Historically, it has been known to attain heights over 100 meters (330 ft) and is one of the highest tree species in the world. The tallest measured living specimen, named Centurion, stands 99.6 meters tall in Tasmania.

The Great Ocean Road

The Great Ocean Road

The Great Ocean Road with its 243 km (151 mi) on the southern coast of Victoria is one of the greatest drives in the world. Carved by thousands of years of battering by the Great Southern Ocean, the sandstone formations along the Great Ocean Road are truly stunning. It is an important tourist attraction, which winds through varying terrain alongside the coast, and provides access to several prominent landmarks. Among them are the nationally significant Twelve Apostles limestone stack formation, London Bridge, and Lord Ard Gorge.

Pleasures of Penang Part 1

Pleasures of Penang

Dressed for Chinese New Year celebrations on Harmony Street in Georgetown. Photo: Mikkel Vang

Guide to Penang

When to Go

Aside from the rainy season, which runs from May to September, weather in Penang is consistently sunny, with daily temperatures often around 85 degrees.

Getting There

Singapore Airlines and Cathay Pacific offer daily flights from New York and Los Angeles, with connections through Singapore and Hong Kong, respectively.

Stay

Great Value Cheong Fatt Tze Mansion 14 Lebuh Leith; 60-4/262-0006; cheongfatttzemansion.com; doubles from $125.

China Tiger A 19th-century merchant house and a Deco-style shop-house make up the four comfortable suites and apartments. 25 and 29 Lebuh China; 60-4/264-3580; chinatiger.info; suites from $313.

Great Value Clove Hall Edwardian bungalow with six suites that have vaulted ceilings and colonial antiques. 11 Jalan Clove Hall; 60-4/229-0818; clovehall.com; suites from $182.

Great Value Eastern & Oriental Hotel 10 Lebuh Farquhar; 60-4/222-2000; e-o-hotel.com; doubles from $217.

Great Value Shangri-La’s Rasa Syang Resort & Spa This oceanside retreat on Batu Feringghi beach, half an hour from Georgetown, is also near the Teluk Bahang Forest Reserve. Batu Feringghi; 60-4/888-8888; shangri-la.com; doubles from $248.

Great Value Straits Collection 47-55 Lorong Stewart; 60-4/263-7299; straitscollection.com.my; suites from $139.

Eat

Kopi Cine 55 Lorong Stewart; 60-4/263-7299; lunch for two $35.

Pasar Air Itam Jalan Pasar Hawker Center, Air Itam; lunch for two $5.

Perut Rumah Nyonya Cuisine Try traditional Peranakan dishes such as marinated fish in banana leaves and pork stew. 17 Jalan Kelawei; 60-4/227-9917; dinner for two $30.

See and Do

Goddess of Mercy Temple (Kuan Yin Teng) Lorong Stewart.

Khoo Kongsi 18 Medan Cannon; 60-4/261-4609; khookongsi.com.my; admission $1.60.

Pinang Peranakan Mansion 29 Lebuh Gereja; 60-4/264-2929; pinangperanakanmansion.com.my; admission $3.30.

St. George’s Church Lebuh Farquhar; 60-4/262-0202.

Penang, Malaysia has stylish hotels and some of Southeast Asia’s best street food.

From May 2011 By Guy Trebay

I had money to burn, thick wads of it, funny money colored bright orange and flaked with gold leaf.

Angling myself upwind of a ritual furnace at the gateway to the Goddess of Mercy Temple, banked in incense as thick as Newfoundland fog, I joined the crowd feeding fake loot to the tongues of flame. The offerings were, in my case, all-purpose: something for the ancestors, for living family and friends, for luck and prosperity and health, the usual stuff. But to the customary human importuning I also sneaked a silent request to the travel gods: “How soon can you get me back here?”

I was in Penang, a small island off the northwestern coast of Malaysia, half a world away from my front door. Few people of my acquaintance have heard of this lovely flyspeck, and the omission seemed more confounding the more time I spent there. Not only is Penang—or, anyway, its capital, Georgetown—so lightly touched by 21st-century modernity that you occasionally feel as if you have wandered onto a period film set, but its dense mesh of streets and cultures, its polyglot population, its infrastructure and sophisticated fusion cooking also call to mind another more celebrated island, the one I call home.

In certain ways Penang is like a Toytown version of Manhattan. An outpost of trade in an earlier era of globalization, the island leased by the British from the Sultan of Kedah—in an agreement forged by Captain Francis Light on behalf of the East India Company in 1786—once lay at the eastern extent of Britain’s imperial expansion. Briefly the most important of the British Straits Settlements, it eventually ceded that distinction to Singapore, which went on to claim an important place on the regional and world stages while Penang lapsed into a prolonged subtropical slumber.

In recent years this tiny Malaysian state has powered back into view, its fortunes revived as it transformed itself into Malaysia’s Silicon Valley. Though tourism lagged behind the boom, it is increasingly possible to find chic boutique hotels, the first stirrings of a culinary movement, and enlightened restoration projects that signal the end of Penang’s status as a secret shared only by backpackers and Malaysians who make pilgrimages there for the justifiably famous street food. But you would not necessarily notice these shifts if you happened to arrive by night, as I did, taxiing past the shadowed industrial campuses to fetch up in Georgetown beneath the porte cochère of the great white slab cake that is the venerable and deeply anachronistic Eastern & Oriental Hotel.

In the days when Penang was still an important port along global shipping lanes—a status predicated on its deep-water harbors and position in the Strait of Malacca—banking thrived there. So did trade of all kinds, most importantly in spices. One version of the origins of Penang’s name holds that it is a Malay (or possibly Tamil) word for betel nut, and starting as early as the 15th century, traders dropped anchor here to buy and sell cloves, nutmeg, star anise, bird’s nest, tin, pepper, and rubber and also, very profitably and for quite a long time, opium.

Immigrants followed, naturally, in flight from peonage and in pursuit of fortune. By the early 19th century Penang was already a mercantile, shipping, and banking center—the London–based banking powerhouse HSBC opened its first branch there in 1884—and the island’s lieutenant governor, Sir George Leith, could observe that there was probably not “any part of the world where, in so small a space, so many different people are assembled together, or so great a variety of languages spoken.”

As I read this an image rose to mind of the New York City subway, specifically the No. 7 train entering Manhattan carrying 21st-century immigrants from China, Cambodia, India, Thailand, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka—spiritual cousins of the industrious voyagers from those selfsame places who once arrived by boat in Georgetown and slowly grafted their customs, architecture, language, styles of worship and, equally important, of cooking onto the tidy little hive of a town.

The Next Resort Hot Spot: Malaysia

So you’ve done Bali, Phuket, and Ko Samui. Now you’re looking for a new frontier in Asian seaside luxury. Is Malaysia the spot?T+L tests the waters at the country’s top hideaways

From November 2001 By Peter Jon Lindberg

LOOKS PRETTY AMAZING, DOESN’T IT?STILL, TO REALLY APPRECIATE A PLACE, YOU NEED TO HEAR IT. So press your ear up to the page and listen. That’s the sound of a typical day at a Malaysian beach resort.

You don’t often find this kind of quiet in Southeast Asia—where teak chaise longues outnumber temples, sunburned Europeans outnumber chaise longues, and masseuse has replaced fishmonger as the most common occupation of coastal villagers. From Kuta to Ko Phi Phi, every beach seems to be the setting for a full-moon party, a volleyball game, or a Filipino band playing “Guantanamera.”

Not in Malaysia. Laid-back?This is a country whose most popular sports include kite flying and top-spinning. At Malaysia’s comparatively few beach resorts, the pervasive calm is broken only by the crash of a wave. (Okay, the Filipino bands are here, too, but find me one place they’re not.) Furthermore, few of your fellow Americans have even heard of these spots—they’re off dodging Jet Skis in Thailand.

So far Malaysia’s resort scene has been broadcasting at low frequency, but that’s sure to change. Tanjong Jara, an early pioneer, reopened in 1999 after a thorough upgrade. The Andaman on Langkawi added a seductive spa wing last year. And the Pangkor Laut Resort is pushing the luxury envelope with its new, over-the-top Marina Bay Estates, not to mention a spa of its own, set to open next year. Each of these spots feels desirably remote but is easily accessible via Kuala Lumpur. Clearly, it was time to check things out.

the datai: the jungle at its coolest
And you thought you knew air. You don’t—not until you’ve stood above the dewy, dripping jungle at the Datai, thrown your arms open, and inhaled, full-force, capping it off with a triumphant thump on the chest. This is air: spiked with jasmine, the humic tang of rain-forest soil, and a strong hint of the sea.

It’s been eight years since the Datai turned the sleepy island of Langkawi into a bona fide luxury destination, albeit still a rather sleepy one. Located off Malaysia’s northwest coast, Langkawi is a popular holiday spot for Asians, Australians, and Europeans, rivaling even Penang to the south. There are now more than 20 resorts here—but you’d never know it from your balcony at the Datai. Set between the Andaman Sea and the mountains, hidden in an absurdly lush forest, the resort could be the secret lair of a Bond villain.

If it is, he has great taste. The style is what you might call Aman-wannabe, and I don’t mean that as a knock: balau wood floors so glossy you could dive into them; tile-roofed pavilions framed by frangipani and bougainvillea; altar-like beds swathed in impossibly white linens. A freshly plucked mango waits on your nightstand.

There are 68 guest rooms and suites in the main building, which emerges from the hillside like some ancient stone temple. Another 44 rooms are in villas scattered around the hillside (call for a golf cart when you tire of the steep climb to breakfast). Sheltered by thick forest, the villas offer more privacy, but for views, you’re better off in the main building’s corner and end suites, with their sweeping vistas of the jungle and glimpses of the sea beyond.

You could get your money’s worth here just breathing in and out, but for some people that gets old. Downhill at the beach, a mile-long crescent on a secluded cove, you’ll find just the right number of playthings: a few catamarans, a Windsurfer, nothing noisy. Borrow a kayak

and follow the otters across the bay, then play Spot the Hotel—it’s almost invisible from the water.

Just off the beach, the Mandara Spa gives treatments in an open pavilion above a forest stream. There’s something kinky about getting a peppermint footbath while being watched by a pack of lascivious monkeys in heat. I wasn’t complaining. Nor was my girlfriend bothered when a turmeric body scrub left her stained Bart Simpson—yellow. Nothing a head-to-toe slathering of freezing cold yogurt wouldn’t fix.

Food is the downfall of many a destination resort: What’s more frustrating than being stuck in paradise with nothing to eat?The Datai is a rare exception. Simple dishes and snacks are done with flair—there’s no better beachside lunch than the Datai’s chicken tikka sandwich and piquant Greek salad. And while complexity doesn’t often translate to the tropics, the chef has a sure hand with more creative dishes, such as a lobster salad served on a bed of leeks and capsicums with raisin seed—and—tomato vinaigrette.

No need for management to post a dress code: the Datai’s clientele wouldn’t dream of wearing Tevas to dinner. Guests tend to keep to themselves, so even when the resort is full—and it usually is—you feel like one of only a few dozen inhabitants. No waiting for beach chairs, no queues for the catamarans. Where is everyone? we wondered one afternoon, sipping apple-mint smoothies by a deserted pool.

Perhaps they’d taken a cue from the monkeys.

the andaman: casual and stylish?you got it
“The Datai sounds a little too quiet,” you may be saying. “Where can a family or an active couple go for some old-fashioned, let-your-hair-down fun?”

The answer is a quarter-mile down the beach. The Andaman is bigger, brasher, and younger than the Datai both in years (it opened in 1996) and spirit (Hobie Cats, anyone?). Yet it’s cut from the same stylish cloth, and its service, design, and location—plus the island’s best restaurant—place the Andaman in a league above Langkawi’s other resorts.

Unlike the Datai, whose jungle perch is a 10-minute walk from the beach, the Andaman sits just yards from the water, partially hidden behind a copse of keruing trees. All of the 181 guest rooms and seven suites are located in this four-story building; those at the eastern end, past the trees, have uninterrupted views of the bay. Standard rooms are on the small side, and pleasantly done up as 21st-century colonial bungalows, all earth tones and hardwoods, accented with Asian objets and a well-placed orchid. A bit hotel-ish, but very comfortable.

The Andaman is particularly good for children, who will love getting lost in the lagoon-style pool or roaming the grounds in search of “Monty the Monitor Lizard.” Meanwhile, you’re oblivious, sheathed in banana leaves and papaya oil at the brand-new hilltop spa—in a breezy pavilion with stunning views of the sea.

Skip the resort’s other restaurants and dine at the Gulai House, just down the beach. You follow the distant pings of a gamelan along a torchlit path—off we go to Tribal Council—and emerge before a thatched-roof house on stilts. Silk cushions surround low wooden tables; a copper pitcher holds frangipani-infused water for hand-washing. The Malay-Indian dishes balance subtle flavors with spicy kick, from the sampler of mackerel, lentil, and beef curries to the tangy date chutney and juicy tandoori chicken.

After a dessert of star fruit, rambutan, and yellow watermelon with macadamia ice cream, we strolled back along the darkened beach. We were amazed to see neon-blue flecks of phosphorescence aglow in the tide, washing in to form constellations on the sand. Jeez . . . ever get the feeling you’ve stepped into a brochure?

tanjong jara: off the path but right on the beach
If Langkawi is a mid-tempo antidote to Bali and Phuket, it seems downright frenetic compared to Terengganu, the predominantly Muslim state on the peninsula’s east coast. A conservative enclave whose revenue derives mainly from oil, Terengganu doesn’t go out of its way to attract travelers. Then again, it hardly needs to: off its coast lie three of Southeast Asia’s most pristine diving and snorkeling destinations—Great Redang, Perhentian, and Kapas. Renowned for years among savvy Asiaphiles, these islands have miraculously remained below the radar of mass tourism.

The same can be said for Tanjong Jara, Terengganu’s foremost resort. Why this place isn’t fully booked throughout the season is a mystery to anyone who’s made the trek. Maybe the trek has something to do with it: there’s not much else to draw you here unless you’re a diver or a fan of kite-flying contests. But despite (or because of) the somnolent surroundings, I met guests who’d been ensconced at the resort for weeks and still hadn’t finished soaking it up.

Kuala Terengganu, the tiny state capital, is 45 minutes by air from Kuala Lumpur. The coastal drive from the airport to the resort can take almost twice as long, depending on how much ginseng tea your driver’s had. Schoolgirls in bright blue-and-white chadors trade gossip at roadside fruit stands, and that’s about as lively as it gets here.

The original resort, opened in 1979, was far more modest than today’s incarnation, with its wooden villas built in the style of 17th-century Malay palaces. An overhaul added such frills as air-conditioning and alfresco bathtubs, and a newly upmarket Tanjong Jara reopened in 1999.

The 10 villas and 44 two-story, two-unit cottages are strewn over a swath of grassy beachfront, none of the rooms more than 100 paces from the water. All face the sea, but you’ll definitely want a villa for a front-row view—a wall of floor-to-ceiling windows open to the ocean breeze. Furnishings are smart and simple, closer to those of a beach cottage than an aggressively designed resort.

Terengganu’s season runs roughly the reverse of Malaysia’s west coast; here the monsoon shuts things down from November through March, which is the dry season everywhere else. During our visit in February, the water was off-limits because of six-foot swells. (In summer, the sea is as clear and sleek as glass, and the resort runs diving expeditions to nearby islands.) We took solace in the small but excellent spa, where massage oils are blended with herbs from the adjacent garden.

The more ambitious entrées at the resort’s restaurant were disappointing, so we stuck to unfussy local dishes like nasi goreng (spicy fried rice with meat and vegetables). And there was that steady supply of obscenely fresh fruit—mangosteen, honeydew, papaya—that made cooked food seem almost barbaric by comparison.

pangkor laut: over-the-top luxury—and your own island, too
A sister property to Tanjong Jara, Pangkor Laut is the sole occupant of a 300-acre, jungle-shrouded island that is straight out of Cast Away. (Eighty percent of the island is protected forest.) The resort turns up on a lot of Top 10 lists, and last year it was a location for the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue. Not to worry: that eight-foot python wrapped around Heidi Klum was imported.

So what’s the big deal?Well, some of us are still trying to figure that out. Granted, there is something special about sharing an entire island with just a few hundred other guests. And only a curmudgeon wouldn’t swoon at the sight of the villas rising on stilts from a moonlit bay. But if you’re accustomed to staying in the sort of places where nature seems ridiculously well-behaved, Pangkor Laut comes off as pretty scruffy around the edges. Try not to notice the soda bottle floating in the harbor or the weeds poking out of the tennis court. Service can be lackadaisical (on the 20-minute boat ride from the airport, my bags were left uncovered at the prow and got thoroughly soaked). Aside from a dinner at Samudra, the excellent Malaysian restaurant, the food was mediocre. And what’s with the lack of fresh fruit?Four types of juice available, all of them from a can?

Such kinks and gaffes are hard to ignore, but the future may be brighter: the management is busy reinventing the resort yet again. Construction has begun on a village-size spa complex that will open in 2002 as a resort unto itself, with 23 over-water villas and its own restaurants. And for the truly indulgent (any of you left?), there’s the new Marina Bay, a collection of eight ultra-exclusive “estates” on the far side of the island, whose rates start at $8,000 for a minimum three-night stay. Yikes. What you get: Anywhere from two to four separate villas for up to eight people; a pool; living, kitchen, and dining pavilions; a few lily ponds; a butler; and a chef on call 24/7.

In contrast to the spartan and dim interiors at the main resort, Marina Bay has a tastefully opulent, pan-Asian look—enormous teak beds, Balinese sculptures, rattan armchairs. Worth it?Look out your villa window at any given moment to see an attendant plucking a fallen leaf off your front walk. Your dollars at work. Of course, for a price like that, you could just build your own pool at home, but you’d still be missing the private island.

the facts
Malaysia is predominantly Muslim; the less-developed east coast is more conservative than the west. The country’s only recent incidents of violence against tourists occurred last spring in the Malaysian state of Sabah, more than 700 miles east of the Malay Peninsula, where the resorts mentioned here are located. For an up-to-date travel security report, check the State Department’s Web site, www.travel.state.gov/travel_warnings.html, or call 202/647-5225.

Most overseas visitors to Malaysia fly into Kuala Lumpur, the hub for almost all domestic flights (each of the resorts is within an hour’s flight of K.L.). You can reach Langkawi via a nonstop flight from Singapore as well.

Malaysia’s west coast (Langkawi and Pangkor Laut) is most pleasant from November through May, while the east coast (Terengganu) is best from April through October. Monsoons strike the east coast between November and March—don’t go then; severe storms frequently disrupt flights and ferry routes. Check with each resort at any given time, as weather can vary greatly even in the same general region. The good news: high temperatures hover around 85 degrees year-round throughout the country.

THE DATAI Jalan Teluk Datai, Pulau Langkawi, Kedah; 60-4/959-2500, fax 60-4/959-2600; doubles from $340, villas from $395. Several daily flights from Kuala Lumpur serve Langkawi. From the airport it’s a 40-minute drive.

THE ANDAMAN Datai Bay, Jalan Teluk Datai, Pulau Langkawi, Kedah; 60-4/959-1088, fax 60-4/959-1168; doubles from $330, suites from $660. Next door to the Datai.

TANJONG JARA RESORT 8 Batu, Kuala Dungun, Terengganu; 877/757-5288 or 60-9/845-1100, fax 60-9/845-1200; doubles from $185, villas from $290. Fly from K.L. to Kuala Terengganu, the state capital (one hour); from the airport it’s a 60- to 90-minute drive by chauffeured limousine to the resort.

PANGKOR LAUT RESORT/MARINA BAY ESTATES Pulau Pangkor Laut, Lumut, Perak; 877/ 757-5288 or 60-5/699-1100, fax 60-5/699-1200; doubles from $185, Marina Bay estates $8,000 for three nights, $14,000 per week. From K.L., the resort can arrange either a flight (40 minutes on a small propeller plane) to Pulau Pangkor or a limo (three hours) to Lumut, from which a private ferry (30 minutes) brings you to Pangkor Laut.

The 13 Most Haunted Hotels In The World

by thejetpackers Wed, Jun15, 2011

If you plan on traveling during the Halloween season, get into the spirit (get it?) and stay at a haunted hotel.  They’re just like regular hotels, except you spend a terrifying night with all the lights on as ghostly intruders walk through the walls of your room to watch you in your most intimate moments.

If that sounds appealing for some reason, check out the hotels on our list of the 13 Most Haunted Hotels In The World…

Banff Springs Hotel – Alberta, Canada

Dying gets a bad wrap.  Just look at the positive: you don’t have to go to work anymore.  However, not everyone hates their job.  One of those people was Sam, a bellman at the Banff Springs Hotel .  He loved his job so much that he returned to work… after he died (get a life, dude… oh, wait…).  That’s right, Sam the white-mustachioed bellman still wanders the halls of the hotel, helping guests locked out of their room and doing favors — without even asking for a tip.  The other ghosts at the hotel aren’t as helpful.  In 1932, a bride died on her wedding day when her dress caught on fire and she tumbled down the stairs. Now her ghost can be seen dancing alone in the dining room and generally depressing the guests.

But the most frequent ghostly activity occurs on the eighth floor. Rumor has it than an entire family was murdered in room 873, including a little girl, whose fingerprints couldn’t be wiped away from the mirror. Seeing as how guests would find that terribly creepy, the room was sealed off with bricks and the wall painted over to hide its existence. Even though no one can go inside the room and the hotel denies the room exists, guests report hearing noises coming from room 873.

Castle Leslie – County Monaghan, Ireland

In 2002, everyone’s favorite one-legged golddigger, Heather Mills, married everyone’s third favorite Beatle, Paul McCartney, at the Castle Leslie in rural Ireland. But that’s not the scariest thing about this place. It’s said to be haunted by a handful of members of the famous Leslie family, many of which have died in the castle over its 300-year history. Even one of the young Leslie men named Shane, who died in a war, returned to the castle as ghost to watch over the lake (apparently sensing the need for a life guard at the lake). But perhaps the most famous ghost in the hotel isn’t a person… it’s a dog named Punch.

Crescent Hotel – Eureka Springs, Arkansas

The idea of a tall handsome man showing up to your hotel room and asking “are you waiting for me?” sounds attractive to some amorous travelers… but things get scary when he suddenly vanishes into thin air.  This man is just one of the frequently seen ghosts who haunt the Crescent Hotel.  There’s also an Irish stonemason who frightens guests in room 218, where he fell and died during construction; guests complain of banging on the walls, lights turning on and off, and the ghostly hands of the man reaching out from the mirror. Then there’s a woman who frequently appears in room 419 and introduces herself as a cancer patient to guests and housekeepers.  That’s because back in the 1930′s, a man named Dr. Normal Baker turned this hotel into a hospital promising to cure cancer patients… but it was all a sham. Many people died in the hotel because they didn’t receive proper cafe, including the woman in 419.  Unfortunately, she’s stuck with Dr. Baker, who also never left.  He’s sometime seen in the hotel’s recreation room, the same place where he often spent time not helping the cancer victims he promised to help.

Farnsworth House Inn – Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

It’s not unusual for places in and around Gettysburg to be haunted by the spirits of dead Civil War soliders, but what makes the Farnsworth House Inn so special is that it’s haunted by 14 ghosts. During the Civil War, Confederate soldiers used this house as a sniper stronghold. In one tragic incident, a solider accidentally killed a civilian named Jennie Wade; that young solider is said to remain in the house out of remorse. After that incident, the soliders gave away their hiding spot and many were killed in a shootout — the building is riddled with over 100 bullet holes that can still be seen today. There’s even a nurse named Mary that continues to console soldiers in the afterlife, as well as a ghost of a young boy who was run over and killed by a horse and carriage in front of the house.

The Heathman Hotel – Portland, Oregon

The Heathman Hotel is famous for its popular restaurant, luxurious accommodations… and one ghostly resident. Legend has it that not long after the hotel opened in 1927, a woman fell out of room 703 and plummeted to her death. Now, that woman is haunting all of the rooms that she passed on the way down to the pavement. Guests staying in any room that ends in an “03″ report hearing noises, objects moving on their own, cold spots, and in the case of room 703, a ghostly face peering out of the corner of the room.  We sincerely hope the hotel staff tells guests about this before staying in that room because no one feels comfortable with the idea of a ghost watching them do it.

Hotel Del Coronado – San Diego, California

Ghosts don’t tend to haunt ugly hotels because no one wants to stay in an ugly hotel — not even a dead person. However, when a hotel is given four stars by AAA and named one of the Top 10 Resorts In The World according to USA Today, it makes sense that a ghost would want to hang around forever. That’s why we’re surprised that there’s only one ghost haunts that the Hotel Del Coronado (make it two after I go; this place rules). Her name is Kate Morgan, and back in 1892, she committed suicide on the beach just outside the hotel after her estranged husband stood her up. Today, guests who stay in room 3327, the room where Kate stayed, say lights flicker on and off, objects float around the room and the temperature fluctuates drastically. Some have even seen her ghostly apparition walking the halls in the black dress she died in.  Men who’ve hit on her using the pick-up line “Heaven called, they’re missing one of their angels” are sorely disappointed when she disappears.

Le Pavilion – New Orleans, Louisiana

The four ghosts that haunt Le Pavilion have been the subject of over 100 catalouged sightings and incidents. The most frequently seen ghost is Adda, a teenage girl who was killed by a horse and carriage just before she was about to board a ship with her family. Sometimes guests see her ghostly spirit manifest in her old room on the third floor, asking for a ride to the docks. The second ghost is a prankster who wears bell bottoms and walks shoeless through the halls; he likes to rip the sheets off the bed and move thing around people’s rooms. The other two ghosts are a happy couple who stroll around the hotel grounds holding hands, though we’re not sure how happy they were in real life because they stayed in different rooms. His former room on the fourth floor often smells like the cigars he smoked, even when nobody has been inside (can’t quit a bad habit even when you’re dead), and the girl’s former room on the third floor often smells like her rose perfume.

Lizzie Borden Inn – Fall River, Massachusetts

The Lizzie Borden trial was like the O.J. Simpson trial of its time. In 1892, Lizzie was accused of killing her father and stepmother with a hatchet in their home. Even though the overwhelming consensus was that Lizzie did it, she was eventually acquitted (apparently using the same “if the glove does not fit, you must acquit” defense). Today, guests who don’t like to get a good night’s sleep can stay in the rooms where the bodies were discovered. Many have reported seeing ghostly black mists, hearing noises, feeling cold spots, and some have even seen the shape of a body indented into the bed where her father was murdered.

Ostrich Inn – Colnbrook, England

This story will make you never want to sleep in a hotel again. In the 17th century, the Ostrich Inn was a popular place for travelers.  But for some reason, no one ever noticed that over 60 people never left.  That’s because the owners installed a secret trap door under the bed in what they called the “best room” in the hotel.  This room was located right above the kitchen.  When their guests fell asleep, the owners would pry open the trap door and tilt the bed so that the guest would slide into a boiling cauldron.  Many of the victims still haunt the Ostrich Inn, probably to make people realize how ridiculously unobservant they are (seriously, no one realized that people were going in and not coming out!?).

Provincial Hotel – New Orleans, Louisiana

Any time a hospital is converted into a hotel, you’re asking for problems. And that’s exactly the case with the Provincial Hotel. It used to be a Confederate hospital during the Civil War, and many of the soldiers that died inside its walls have never left.  But here’s what’s really scary: one particular solider has a thing for country music. Whenever the radio is turned to classical, the ghost quickly changes it to a country station. And if the guest insists on changing the station back, he’s been known to materialize and frighten them away from the radio.  Don’t mess with a ghost that digs country music (we really hope that’s not the preferred musical genre in the afterlife).

Queen Mary Hotel – Long Beach, California

When the RMS Queen Mary was in service, it was only involved in one tragedy (when it crashed into another boat and killed people on that boat). Oddly enough, it’s experienced more tragedies since being permanently docked in Long Beach. In typical California fashion, most of the hauntings take place at the pool. A young girl who drowned in the second class pool now haunts the first class pool (because it’s easy to get past the bouncer as a ghost). She’s accompanied by another woman who was murdered in the first class women’s change room. Together they walk around the pool, leaving wet foot prints on the deck and making splashing noises… even when the pool is empty. Some guests have even seen the ghosts of the women wearing bathing suits from the eras in which they died.

Schooner Hotel – Alnmouth, England

The Schooner Hotel has twice won the title of Most Haunted Hotel in Britain thanks to over 3,000 ghost sightings through the years. The hotel has been the site of so many murders, suicides and massacres — some involving babies thrown into a fire — that 60 individual ghosts inhabit the property. To get revenge, they freak out guests by making eerie noises, turning on electrical devices, opening and closing doors and sometimes manifesting into ghostly form.

Stanley Hotel – Estes Park, Colorado

Remember “The Shining”? Well, Steven King conceived the idea for that book during a stay at The Stanley Hotel. The freaky thing is, he didn’t know the place was haunted until after he started developing the idea.  Maybe he got the idea because he heard the ghostly voices of kids running through the halls, or had an encounter with the alleged “ghost thief” that steals people’s jewelry (we think the thief is really just an employee wearing a white sheet and pretending to be a ghost). The hotel is also believed to be haunted by the former owner, Freelan O. Stanley, and his wife, Flora. Apparently Flora liked to entertain her guests, and she continues to do in the afterlife: her ghost is often seen playing the piano in the lobby.

Have you ever stayed in a haunted hotel?

 

Ways to Make Your Vacation Sexier

travelsexy360

If you want to have an erotic vacation, you need to have the right attitude, and a bit of planning. Here are same ways to make your trip sexier, and have memorable moments of your lifetime.

Romantic vacation ideasPack for Pleasure

Instead of simply depending on the destination for sexiness, carry your own materials that can allow you have pleasure even at most boring destinations. Have a discussion with your partner on what things can make your trip more fun and lovable. This can include any thing like massaging book, sexy bikini, massage oil, silk scarves, and …….use your wild imagination.

Leave Worries at Home

Even if it means not carrying your cell phone. Have a peaceful vacation by leaving behind all the worries. Have a deal with your partner to simply discuss about each other and other trivial things, and not about work, family, or outstanding bills.Romantic Couple

Have a New Vacation

Instead of simply following the tradition, and doing the routine, try some thing new every day, every moment. Have a new drink, try new fantasy ideas, a new position, new dance step, or simply a new partner (just kidding). More than unsuccessful tries, you will enjoy the experiments and unexpected results.

Have More Aphrodisiacs

If you try hard enough, you will get aphrodisiac items even in the most rural or pastoral area. And if you are in a city, you will get plenty of them. Not many scientists believe such things exist. However, instead of simply believing them, better try yourself.

Shed Clothes

Planning for erotic trip means shedding clothes more than usual. However, if you start feeling shy or embarrassed after reaching the vacation spot, you will miss the opportunity. Before going for such trip, find places in neighborhood that can allow you shed your clothes like a private Jacuzzi, nudist beaches, private pools and so on. Bare skin has the potential of sending electrical jolts in your partner’s body.

Ways to surprise your partner

Don’t be Shy to Use ‘Do Not Disturb’
How to enjoy vacation

Hey, remember, this is a romantic trip. You have come this far only to have some sensuous moments with your loved one, and not get disturbed. If you are in a hotel, ask the authorities not to disturb you until you want them to.

Be Crazy

You are not on a professional tour, and you don’t have to be formal with your partner. Be naughty, be caring, and be sensuous. Do things that you usually don’t do everyday. Tell you partner how much you love her in public, grab her by….well, fill in the blanks.

Surprise Your Partner

Make your trip a memorable one for your partner. Surprise her every day. Take her to a new place, gift a sex toy, bring her a new pair of lingerie. Do something that surprises her.

The Sizzling Sand and Women in Australia

admin / August 12, 2010 /

Around 85 million years ago, our planet’s tectonic plates shifted and cracked, forming several plates we now know as continents and islands. One such similar crack on the other side of the equator separated Australia and New Zealand, allowing Tasman Sea to fill up the empty landmass.

Australia, today, is the biggest island on our planet with over 16,000 miles of coastline and more than 11,000 beaches. New Zealand, although not as great as Australia, has more than 2,000 beaches and around 9,000 miles of coastline.

Australia beaches girls

However, with such great coastline come big threats. The Australian water is home of many mystifying and dangerous sea creatures on earth. Going far into the beach is one of the most dangerous ways to enjoy your vacation. However, people enjoy more on the coastal land than in water. There are several sexy beaches in this part of the planet. Some of the best ones include Bondi beach in New South Wales and Gold Coast’s Rainbow Bay in Queensland.

If you are in western region of Australia, Cable Beach and Cottesloe gets the sexy nod, while the northern territory is embellished with Mindil Beach, which is known for its Sunset Markets with over 260 elegant stalls. If you are compiling a list of sexy beaches in Australia, don’t fail to include St. Kilda Beach in Melbourne.

Australia sexy beaches

If you enjoy sports with a spice of sexiness, surfing cannot be more pleasurable anywhere but at Rainbow Bay. The Snapper Rocks here are known for having the best wave in the world. More than surfers, the audience, most of them topless, throng the place, and it can be hilariously crowded during vacations.

On the other hand, Cottesloe is more of a romantic beach. Most of the crowd is young and beautiful, visiting this beach to search for and meet other beautiful people. The ocean sunset on the East Coast is probably the best place to spend an evening, if you find someone there.

Australia beaches

An equivalent of Bondi is St. Kilda in Melbourne, a bit grubbier though. However, the sexiness has nothing to do with the beach but the abutting Australian cosmopolitan city. Due to the adjoining city, you will find many bars, pubs, clubs, and exotic restaurants around the beach.

Restaurants around the beach

More than 80% of the Australian population resides within 31 miles of the coast. Most of them love to swim, fish, play games, fly kites, gulls to sun, sip a latte, or simply hang out. The Australian coast is surrounded by Southern, Indian, and Pacific Oceans. There aren’t any privately owned beaches, but you can find many nude and clothing-optional beaches, if you like it that way.

Australia islands naked women

European travel can be such a heady pleasure

admin / December 23, 2010 /

It was a sultry summer back in the 80’s I think it was, and I was starting to see these bikes zipping around the United Kingdom’s capital city. These easily acquired push-bikes were had for as little as a quid and one could not miss the sponsor splashed on the bikes. Barclays; I won’t forget the name easily since it played such a large part in shaping present day me. Travel can do that, widening your horizons and revealing yourself in a new light for even you.  As one of 50 people that were gifted a chance by Barclays for European travel that summer, I was amazed that a teenager like me could win something like this.

Paris, Brussels, Heidelberg, Brunnen and Venice. These are some of the finest cities anyone can cram into their European travel itinerary and I got to experience them in world-class fashion. Five star travel all the way is a very big deal for a seventeen year old with raging hormones. I would have probably gone berserk if they crammed Amsterdam into that list. Not something you’d expect someone who won his way in thanks to a short story I submitted based on a fictional England in 2010, eh? I don’t remember much of it except that it was about a captured terrorist and life lessons, but my pretentious execution must have won me some brownie points to score that trip!

It was all part of a marketing campaign by Barclays, but honestly, it must be the least cost-effective advertising campaign of all time. The idea was to promote banking as a career and make us fall in love with Barclays, and fall in love I did. But it was not Barclays, but a beautiful young Parisienne that I fell in love with. At the time, I felt it would be forever, but it was to be nothing more than a summer fling and then a little more. But it was such sweetness to have been with her. Every moment was filled with joy, every tomorrow brimming with surprises. Lovely, lovely Sophie. I wonder sometimes whether life and the passing years have been kind to her.

To have never been out of the country before then and to now find love and such freedom, such temptation was incredible. I remember getting very drunk, smoking a lot and exploring every inch of Sophie when the moment permitted it. There were no strings attached and no limits. The channel cut us off and liberated us, and the European travel memories I have will live with me forever.

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