Introducing the world tourism weirdest museums...

Introducing the world tourism weirdest museums... Hot stuff: The ketchup-red Currywurst Museum in Berlin treats visitors to the sights, sounds and smells of that much-loved German take on the banger

If you've ticked off the Tates, lost hours in the Louvre and seen enough fossils to last you a lifetime in the world's natural history museums, then you're probably looking for something a bit more exciting from your next museum visit.

Well, rest assured, however offbeat your preferred subject matter might be, the chances are there's probably a museum dedicated to it. And often you don't have to go out of your way to explore these oddities. In fact, many examples of the bizarre can be found at popular holiday spots and city break destinations.

So, whether it's hair - the world's largest collection resides in Turkey, dead cockroaches dressed up to look like celebrities (to be found in Texas) or dog collars that float your fascination boat, just step this way...

Currywurst Museum, BerlinThe Germans certainly do love their sausage. And what better way to honour the national banger than by putting it in a museum, in particular, the currywurst.

For 11 euros, visitors to Berlin can learn all about the culinary delight that is sausage - often sliced - in a sauce of tomato, curry powder, spices and Worcester sauce. The ketchup-red museum treats visitors to the sensory experience of currywurst from the sound of sausages sizzling to the smell of exotic spices.

There is even the chance to get behind a mocked-up sausage stand so you can actually imagine what it's like to serve up this much-loved snack.

The importance of the country's saucy sausage is proven both by the museum's location right next to the famous Cold War monument that is Checkpoint Charlie, and the capital's ongoing sausage war with Hamburg about which city really can claim to have invented it.

More info: www.currywurstmuseum.de


Introducing the world tourism weirdest museums... Stomach churning: An exhibit from The Parasite Museum showing a dolphin stomach infected by a parasite


Parasite Museum, TokyoWhen was the last time you took a moment to think about the mighty parasites of the world? Not too recently? Well, a visit to Tokyo's Parasite Museum can change all that.

A celebration of the world's greatest scroungers, the museum boasts 300 varieties of parasites with the piece de resistance being a 30-foot tapeworm pulled out of an unsuspecting woman who had reportedly picked it up eating sushi - that's all you need to take a vow of starvation.

As if that's not enough, the museum, which was set up by four scientists specialising in parasites and is also a research facility, has pictures alongside some creatures showing the adverse affect they have on their hosts.

The bonus is, this museum is free, which means more money to spend on souvenir t-shirts with pictures of parasites on, or even rulers and keyrings with dead specimens trapped inside. Lovely.

More info: www.kiseichu.org/english


Introducing the world tourism weirdest museums... What a way to go: Barcelona's Museum of Funeral Carriages has become an unlikely hit with visitors


Museum of Funeral Carriages, BarcelonaThere is a lot of beauty in Barcelona, from Gaudi architecture to the surrounding coastline, so you might question why anyone would want to forsake a few hours under the Spanish sun in favour of going underground to a dusty museum full of funeral carriages.

There's no accounting for taste though and this macabre museum has become an unlikely hit with visitors.

Perhaps it has something to do with the sense of adventure in finding it. Visitors have to report to the city's Municipal Funeral Services from where they will be guided to the basement by a security guard and the exhibition unlocked.

Or maybe it's the eerie silence that hangs heavy as you make your way around the exhibit's ornate carriages, which date from as far back as the 18th century and are manned by dummies (or are they?) in period costume.

Either way, the free attraction gives an insight into the Catalan capital's darker side. It will almost be a shame when the museum moves to the cemetery at Montjuic - although this doesn't look like it's happening any time soon.

More info: Museu de Carrosses FĂșnebres, Carrer Sancho de Avila 2, 00 34 93 484 17 00


Introducing the world tourism weirdest museums... Barking mad? The Dog Collar Museum in Leeds claims to display a 'unique collection of historic and fascinating dog collars'


Dog Collar Museum, Leeds Castle, Kent
Leeds Castle has a lot to offer visitors, 500 acres of parkland, sumptuous interiors, Henry VIII memorabilia and...a dog collar museum.

Not the most obvious choice of crowd-puller for the castle, the exhibition claims to display a 'unique collection of historic and fascinating dog collars'.

The assortment of canine cuffs spans five centuries and includes everything from strong collars designed to keep control of hunting dogs, to the sparkly fashion items 21st-century collars have become.

The first articles were donated by Gertrude Hunt in memory of her husband, John Hunt, a distinguished medievalist. But since then the trust has built on its collection and now boasts more than 100 collars and related items.

More info: www.leeds-castle.com


Introducing the world tourism weirdest museums... Members club: Iceland's Phallus Museum celebrates the study of the penis

Phallus Museum, IcelandThe land of fire and ice announces its popular attraction by saying it is 'probably the only museum in the world to contain a collection of phallic specimens belonging to all the various types of mammal found in a single country.'

And the museum is totally serious. Pass under the penis-shaped sign (of course) and you can enter the world of phallology - the study of the penis, and of its place in history, art, and society.
The exhibition contains a collection of over one hundred penises and penile parts belonging to almost all the land and sea mammals that can be found in Iceland.

Ranging from displays of blue whale members to those from mice and shrews, the museum also has a section on folklore with examples it claims are from elves, trolls and sea monsters.

If you are thinking that the museum is one member short, you would be right. But a 92-year-old volunteer has given the museum a legally-certified gift token for a future specimen belonging to homosapiens.

More info: www.ismennt.is/not/phallus/ens.htm


Introducing the world tourism weirdest museums... Going underground: Discover the less glamorous side of the French capital in the Paris Sewers Museum

Paris Sewers Museum, ParisTrust the French to make even city sewers chic. Centuries of art at the Louvre is so passe. Now fashionable tourists in the capital of romance flock to the city's underworld for their kicks.


Introducing the world tourism weirdest museums...
The ever-changing exhibits at Boston's Museum of Bad Art feature in themed areas such as 'blue people', 'poor traits' and 'unlikely landscapes, seascapes and still lifes'


The network of tunnels made famous by Victor Hugo's Les Miserables are brought to life under the Quai D'Orsay on the Left Bank where the museum introduces visitors to the world of sewage disposal from 13th-century drainage systems to the first closed sewers introduced in Napoleon's time.

Guides talk through the history of keeping Paris clean and the tunnels' past as a tourist attraction, when people could sail through the tunnels or be pulled along the pungent expanses in carriages.

There is no such transport now, but a walking tour of the vaulted subterranean channels is offered for any visitors who can cope with the stench. The tunnels, which follow the Paris roads, have blue and white street signs and each building's outflow is identified by the house number.

More info: Quai d'Orsay, 00 33 1 47 05 10 29

The Museum of Bad Art, BostonIn recent years Boston has become a popular shopping destination for long weekenders flying over from the UK. But even the most dedicated follower of fashion needs a break from the boutiques sometimes.

Enter The Museum of Bad Art, the world's only museum dedicated to the collection, preservation, exhibition and celebration of bad art in all its forms.

The ever-changing exhibits (there is no shortage of terrible art, it seems) feature in themed areas such as 'blue people', 'poor traits' and 'unlikely landscapes, seascapes and still lifes'.

Clashing colours, out of proportion figures and a general lack of talent will have even the most weary of visitors chuckling as they wander the halls.

It is all summed up in the museum's statement that it displays: 'the work of talented artists that have gone awry to works of exuberant, although crude, execution by artists barely in control of the brush. What they all have in common is a special quality that sets them apart in one way or another from the merely incompetent.'

More info: www.museumofbadart.org


Introducing the world tourism weirdest museums... Museum of Witchcraft, CornwallIf you thought Cornwall was the ideal spot for innocent beach holidays and country pursuits, then the world's largest collection of witchcraft-related artefacts will certainly change your mind.

One of the most popular museums in the South West, the collection has been going for forty years and visitors in search of some hocus pocus are still flocking.

The unusual exhibition was set up by Cecil Williamson, a man who had always dabbled in the occult and was even employed as an undercover agent by MI6 to collect information on the occult interests of leading Nazi military personnel.

With categories including everything from devil worship and satanism to the persecution of witches it's certainly a complete collection of all things dark.

Visitors can see old-fashioned dipping chairs, used to 'prove' whether a woman was a witch and ritual poppets - or dolls - which were supposedly used to inflict harm on others.

There is even a library of over 3000 books on witchcraft and the occult in case you want to get involved yourself...

More info: www.museumofwitchcraft.com
Museum of the Holy Souls in Purgatory, RomeOK, it doesn't exactly sound inviting.

Who wants to spend any more time in Purgatory than they absolutely have to?


Introducing the world tourism weirdest museums... Rome's Museum of the Holy Souls in Purgatory features bibles with scorched handprints that are hailed as signs from souls trapped in fiery Purgatory


Located in an eerie room off the Chiesa del Sacro Cuore del Suffragio church on the banks of the Tiber in Rome, the museum purports to show traces of apparitions who reside in Purgatory - the flaming half-way house where people pay for their sins before being allowed access to heaven.

Scorched handprints adorning bibles, tables and clothing are hailed as signs from souls trapped in fiery Purgatory trying to contact their loved ones to pray for them and reduce the amount of time they have to spend outside of heaven.

The collection was started by a priest who saw a figure in the midst of a fire that destroyed the altar in the church. He thought it must be a soul from Purgatory and started to collect information on the appearances of these pained souls from around the world.

More info: Chiesa del Sacro Cuore del Suffragio, Lungotevere Prati 12, Rome

Torture Museum, AmsterdamTulips and torture anyone? The Dutch capital is a multi-layered destination where pretty canals, world-beating art museums and historic sites sit alongside cannabis cafes and the infamous Red Light District.

Those looking for a side-serving of horror with their city break might find the Torture Museum holds the key.

With its darkened rooms and uncomfortable ambiance, the exhibit hopes to 'document the history of human cruelty' - just what you need on your holidays


Introducing the world tourism weirdest museums... Gruesome: Amsterdam's Torture Museum documents the history of human cruelty


Gruesome displays including a rusty guillotine, stretching tables, screws to crush your fingers, your head and any other body part and a chair of nails - just some of the instruments that will leave you grateful you live in 21st century Europe.

Anyone perplexed by what some instruments were used for will be enlightened by detailed explanations and old paintings showing how they were used to inflict maximum pain - the picture of how an old saw was used will have male visitors crossing their legs.

Fascinating and with a serious message, the museum points out to departing tourists that the USA still employs executioners and the death penalty still exists in countries around the world, begging the question, how much have times really changed?
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Costa Holiday to Estepona tourism

Costa Holiday to Estepona tourism Fun in the sun: Nothing to do but relax on the Costa del Sol


There was to be no shopping, cooking or chauffeuring. No nit combs and definitely no haggling over pocket money. My girlfriends, Serena and Alice, and I had exchanged eight feral, hyperactive children for sand, sea and the luxuriously refurbished Kempinski Hotel Bahia on the Costa Del Sol.

We bought trashy magazines and sat in the airport making plans to have no plans.

When we arrived, we went straight to the restaurant, crying 'Mojitos'. The first meal was an encouraging sign of what was to come - although I'm not sure if goat's cheese ice cream with aubergine will catch on.

Our room with a balcony overlooking the sea was lovely and there was a Haribo-filled mini bar. But the following morning, we had stonking hangovers. Staggering our way to the breakfast terrace, we popped aspirins with our freshly squeezed orange juice, and marvelled at the spread. There was even a chocolate fountain.

Although the hotel was full, it felt very calm. The beautifully lush gardens - including an organic vegetable patch - were sparkling from the sprinklers.


Costa Holiday to Estepona tourism Calm oasis: The gardens at Kempinski Hotel Bahia


There was no need to leg it for a sun-lounger - there are three pools and plenty of beach with oatmeal sand leading to clean-looking water.

We took a pedalo - with its own water-slide - and chugged off to explore the coastline.

I'd just bought an underwater iPod, which transforms the whole swimming experience.

After some fruit smoothies, we were lured back into the pool to do aqua aerobics with a very patient instructor.

We came across the instructor throughout the day in different guises. He seemed to be in charge of the popular kids' club and was multi-tasking heroically as a giant chicken, a clown and Mister Squirrel-head.

The hotel seems genuinely concerned to provide guests with the most pampered holiday possible. There are 230 employees to 340 inhabitants and the staff are assiduous.

The whole pool area is surrounded by lawns. And there are large double beds under canopies. Inviting. For a considerable sum they could be fitted with clean linen and decked with fruit baskets and buckets of Champagne


Costa Holiday to Estepona tourism Sun-baked streets: Estepona old town


That evening, we went to watch polo in nearby Sotogrande - a strange combination of heart-stopping, decadence and fun.

Next morning, we had a minor crisis when we lost Alice's teapot. We had been making our drinks with her own special blend - she is in the trade, and an unrepentant tea snob.

The pot had been mistakenly removed by the maid and was recovered instantly - the hotel dealt with the incident as though we had mislaid a diamond ring.

A range of mopeds and motorbikes are available for guests to hire, including a selection of Harley-Davidsons.


Costa Holiday to Estepona tourism Sitting comfortably: Imogen Stubbs and her friend take to the wheel


We hired three gleaming, sexy black mopeds, unbelievably easy to ride. We felt at least as cool as those trans-global bikers Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman.

I felt like a fabulous, carefree teenager - despite the fact that I was only going 15 mph and had one of my contact lenses hanging off my nostril.

We hit the nearest town - Estepona, which was touristy with a busy beach and had fresh sardines cooked on a fire in an old fishing boat.

We also scootered to a market. It was full of the usual ubiquitous knick-knacks and we made the same old mistake of buying floaty things in turquoise and orange.


Costa Holiday to Estepona tourism Roaring to go: Imogen Stubbs sets off on a girls' weekend


The old port in Estepona,has little squares and avenues of lime trees. under which you can eat lunch. Our translated menu was delightful: 'Striped funny tuna, Iberian ham of acorn, Secret prey sirloins and Small buns of hard larded pigs.'

As we left the hotel, I realised that, having initially squirmed at the polished floors and vast, shiny foyers, I had become very fond of the calm of the Kempinski.

It was a really enjoyable break for three middle-aged mothers who wanted to have the illusion - even for a brief time - that they were hip, carefree and fun.

Travel factsNightly rates at Kempinski Hotel Bahia Estepona start at £161 for a double room & breakfast (00 34 95 280 9500, kempinski.com/estepona). Flights to Malaga from £77 return (08719 40 50 40, monarch.co.uk).
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The Burghal of Bordeaux France Tourism breadth accomplished shops and museums anticipate visitors

The Burghal of Bordeaux  France Tourism breadth accomplished shops and museums anticipate visitors


he Burghal of Bordeaux  France Tourism breadth accomplished shops and museums anticipate visitors


he Burghal of Bordeaux  France Tourism breadth accomplished shops and museums anticipate visitors


he Burghal of Bordeaux  France Tourism breadth accomplished shops and museums anticipate visitors

The burghal of Bordeaux maintains some 18th aeon adroitness amid its downtown, breadth accomplished shops and museums anticipate visitors. Bordeaux is activity through an burghal amend appointed to be completed by 2009. Until then, some barrio may be hidden by scaffolding, and anchorage may be awash with architecture detours. Bordeaux, the better burghal in southwest France, is acclaimed throughout the apple for its wine and countryside vineyards. While the burghal is not a archetypal of avant-garde burghal planning, that is changing, as a tram and added avant-garde accessories are actuality developed. The surrounding country is some of the best admirable in France, and travelers attractive to see arresting vineyards, and sample affluent red wines will not be abort with a cruise to Bordeaux wine country.
The Bordeaux airport is amid 6 afar west of the city, and offers approved flights to Bordeaux from about Europe. If you're on the continent, analysis for flights to Bordeaux France on bargain Ryanair and Air France. Rent a car at the Bordeaux airport to bout wine country, or booty a auto into the city. Bordeaux France offers abounding admirable places to stay. Be alert of the breadth about the alternation station, as it has a acceptability for actuality seedy. The top end auberge is the Auberge Burdigala, a modern, 4-star hotel. La Maison du Lierre is a adequate townhouse with a arresting staircase. The auberge de Seze is in an affected 18th aeon building. The Auberge Excelsior offers inexpensive, simple rooms.
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Syria tourism,Ruins at Palmyra,Taking it easy in the Dead Sea,Damascus

Syria tourism,Ruins at Palmyra,Taking it easy in the Dead Sea,Damascus Gleaming the the desert: Ruins at Palmyra, Syria


Queen Petronella, take your throne, says my guide Abdul, while gesticulating wildly, his baggy pantaloons flapping like sails in the breeze. It is sunrise and I'm standing in the ruins of the ancient city of Palmyra in Syria.

The light flickers from ochre to gold then rose. Abdul has been telling me about the beautiful third-century Queen Zenobia, who chased the Romans from Palmyra before being defeated and dragged to Rome in golden chains. The remains of her throne are just a few feet away from me.

'She loved Palmyra,' says Abdul. 'She killed herself when she was taken from it.'

The morning finally reaches its full splendour and the columns, which once adorned the main street seem to whisper exotic secrets, while a lone eagle wheels overhead.

There is something about Syria and neighbouring Jordan which is catnip to women.


Syria tourism,Ruins at Palmyra,Taking it easy in the Dead Sea,Damascus Ancient Palmyra: Men on camelback at the UNESCO World Heritage Site


And not just to exotic eastern Queens. For hundreds of years it has held an extraordinary lure to upper-class English women. The 18thcentury Lady Hester Stanhope, niece of William Pitt the Younger, was the first society gal to hop off to the desert.

The Hon Jane Digby, a Regency belle, left her husband Lord Ellenborough to marry a Bedouin sheik, becoming reputedly the first European woman to wed a Muslim. (They honeymooned at Palmyra.)

She divided her time between the desert and Damascus. Every day, she washed her husband's feet with her hands, as one horrified English visitor exclaimed: 'Glorying in it!'

Then there was the Victorian, Isabel Arundell, niece of Lord Arundell who, as a young girl, read Tancred, Disraeli's novel about the Middle East, and confessed to having a ' hopeless craving for Bedouin Arabs and all thing Eastern'. To assuage that craving she married explorer Richard Burton, whose translations of erotic Eastern works made him infamous, and moved with him to Syria.

I am here to discover the inexorable appeal of the desert - and doing it the plush way.


Syria tourism,Ruins at Palmyra,Taking it easy in the Dead Sea,Damascus Desert charm: Young Beduin and camel in Palmyra desert


Damascus has been called 'the pearl of the desert'. Its fragile white minarets yearn towards the sky. The old town has seven gates and is beyond the ruins of a Roman wall. There are white and pink marble palaces with mosaic floors. I see the remains of the house where St Paul converted to Christianity.

The town has the oldest souk in the world - a shopping centre that's 2,000 years old.

I repair to the Four Seasons hotel. It has a lobby out of the Arabian Nights, sumptuous rooms and wonderful Syrian restaurant.

In the morning I visit Jane Digby's house. There are still two perfectly preserved rooms, right down to the European wallpaper. Her husband, Sheik Medjuel, couldn't get used to houses and slept in a tent in the garden. Nearby is the street where Isabel Burton lived. 'Damascus has my heart,' she wrote. 'Oh, the glorious nights we spend looking at the clear sky and swapping tales of heroism.'

When I see some Bedouins, I immediately understand why upper-class misses fell like dominoes. Shorter than the average Englishman, they have classical features, questing eyes, slim figures and charming manners.

They all seem to speak good English. One is riding a white horse. It rears and he laughs carelessly, pushing glossy hair from his forehead. 'Will you kidnap me?' I plead. ' Tomorrow morning at dawn,' he says obligingly.

Almost everyone I meet is friendly and polite. One night I eat in a Bedouin tent, made from goat hair, as in Biblical times. The men do a strange, swaying dance for me and rush to refill my plate with sweet cakes


Syria tourism,Ruins at Palmyra,Taking it easy in the Dead Sea,Damascus Indulgence: Taking it easy in the Dead Sea


The following day Abdul drives me into Jordan, leaving me with another guide. After a few hours we reach Petra, 'the rose red city half as old as time'. Lady Hester Stanhope was so captivated she lived in a nearby cave for two months. Petra has appeared in numerous films, including Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade, but its reality surpasses them all.

The path to the city is rocky. It's night and the way is lit by candles. All at once I see the Treasury building, built in 500BC.

It is surrounded by caves where the Arabs once lived, and also used as tombs. More Bedouins ride by and I catch a lift. Jane fell in love with her sheik after she rode pillion on his mare, and Isabel Burton rode for weeks from here to the desert of Wadi Rum (where Lawrence of Arabia was filmed.)

The Wadi Rum looks like a delicious banoffee pie. The population used to be 25 per cent Bedouin; now it is only two per cent. This is partly because King Abdullah provided cheap housing.

A Bedouin in a concrete mansion block loses half of his appeal. 'Do you miss your tent?' I ask one man. 'No. Now I have TV and a toilet,' he replies disappointingly.

The Four Seasons in Amman, Jordan's capital, apple-white with its limestone houses, improves my mood. Instead of an umbrella by the pool you get your own tent. I have a facial, using 1,000-year-old methods, that leaves me looking Bedouin-ready. (I had looked 1,000 years old when I arrived, but now I look a youthful 500.)


Syria tourism,Ruins at Palmyra,Taking it easy in the Dead Sea,Damascus Exotic delights: Bazaar in the old quarter of Damascus, Syria


I've two days left at the Dead Sea. Hester Stanhope is said to be the first Western woman to float on its crust of salt. I'm staying at the Kempinksi Ishtar, an extraordinary edifice 'inspired by the Hanging Gardens of Babylon'.

It has swimming pools that look like natural lakes. Verdant gardens are literally suspended above. The hotel is so huge you need a map, which I am given. My room is more like a private cottage. From the terrace I can see Jericho on the other side of the glassy sea.

The Russian finance minister and his entourage are staying here.

They drink Champagne for breakfast and have their own private entrance to the spa, which is the largest in the Middle East.

Lady Hester said sunsets on the Dead Sea were worth 'a hundred English summers'. The hotel has a minaret with a terrace bar, so I sit and watch as the sky turns from peony to aquamarine and emerald.

At night, myriad fountains come alive with tiny lights. Flares throw the lemon trees into relief. I sit outside the Italian restaurant with the Russian oligarchs. They order lobster. There is no camel meat here - it's not standard fare any more, so I have a pizza. When I go to bed, I dream of Bedouins dancing wildly until they drop with exhaustion. Would I follow the example of those other English women and wash their feet? Just try to stop me.

Travel factsAbercrombie and Kent has a ten-day itinerary in Syria and Jordan from £3,682pp based on two people travelling together, including economy flights with BMI, transfers, guide and driver (0845 618 2213, abercrombiekent.co.uk).
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The Timit in Beautiful Hong Kong Tourism and Travell Guide

The Timit in Beautiful Hong Kong Tourism and Travell Guide Limitless: Hong Kong's soaring buildings are intoxicating

There are only two places in the world that do not disappoint when you first glimpse them. The first is Manhattan - I always tell my cab driver to make sure he takes a bridge rather than a tunnel, and the first sighting of the jagged skyline never fails to make the hairs on the back of my neck stand up.

The second has to be Hong Kong. I've booked myself into the luxurious Peninsula hotel and it has sent one of its fleet of vintage Rolls-Royces to collect me from the airport. Consequently, I doze in the back, lulled by its squashiness and smoothness, and so only get my first glimpse of the harbour as I enter my room - a penthouse suite.


The scene spread before me is like something out of the movie Blade Runner:

skyscrapers, low-flying helicopters (the hotel's helipad was used in The Dark Knight), and the harbour with its low-tech boats crawling to and fro. Every building is a light show and so every night at eight I make sure I am in my spa bath, windows on all sides, to treat myself. Much of Hong Kong is built on land reclaimed from the sea, and on money, but it's good to know it still, precarious in the midst of a recession, knows how to have fun.

What I like most about the Chinese is that they try to make everything beautiful: even a humble delivery of vegetables, which I find myself sitting next to on the green and white Star Ferry from Kowloon, is trussed up in Chinese newsprint, bound with pink raffia, and nestled in reed baskets.

The ritual surrounding afternoon tea at The Peninsula - an event that always seems to make those 100 Things To Do Before You Die lists - is like watching an elaborate dance: the waiters never hurry, despite the queue for a table that snakes out of the door and alongside the luxury stores outside. (Prada and Versace have numerous size zero clothes - here, it seems, and on Rodeo Drive, are the tiniest women on the planet.)

Just like Manhattan, the best way to see Hong Kong is on foot. And so I decide to take two very different guided tours: one relentlessly urban, the other romantically rural.




The first is an architectural walk through the glass-and-steel cathedrals in which is worshipped the biggest religion of the Far East: money. On Saturday morning, I find myself at the Planning and Infrastructure Exhibition Gallery. I love skyscrapers, the Machu Picchus of our own (probably equally doomed) civilisation.

I've taken similar tours through Manhattan and Chicago, and there really is no better way of understanding a city than to appreciate it through the eyes of its architects.

We start at the HSBC HQ, designed by Norman Foster in 1985, wind our way using the Central Elevated Walkway (so clever - the commuters rushing to work don't have to compete with traffic) to gaze at the round windows of Jardine House, and finally end up at the Bank of China, designed by the Chinese-American architect I. M. Pei, the man who gave us the Pyramids at the Louvre in Paris. Outside, the edges are sharp, like the blade of a knife - the building created a stir when it was approved, as it had no curves, considered essential in Chinese culture, and the approval of feng shui masters had not been sought first.

Inside, the building is hollow, like a piece of bamboo. As long as you take your passport, you can whizz up to the 43rd floor to drink in the view. Right next to it is the International Finance Centre, the seventh-highest building in the world, with its spectacular crown.

My walk, too, takes me on the famous half-mile network of escalators towards Soho (it is located south of Hollywood Street), where I can peer into people's living rooms, and marvel at the jumble of gaudy neon street signs strung across the narrow roads, past the Victorian police station, and the old governor's house in the midst of its leafy gardens.

But it's the new buildings that set your pulse racing - the sheer optimism and audacity of constructing the 118-floor International Commerce Centre on the waterfront in West Kowloon, with the top 15 floors reserved for the Ritz-Carlton hotel, which opens this year. Its rooms will surely have the best view in the world. Hong Kong has a vitality you don't find anywhere else.


The Timit in Beautiful Hong Kong Tourism and Travell Guide
The brightest minds in the world come here, make money and leave (I cannot tell you how many beautiful children I see, in a crocodile from the International School, the progeny of rich bankers and beautiful women), making the atmosphere uniquely charged. But while cities like London and New York are surrounded by tangles of motorways and suburbs, the surprise is that Hong Kong is incredibly wild and unspoilt: more than 70 per cent is made up of rural mountains, forests and outlying islands with deserted beaches, where you can spot the famous white dolphins basking.

First, though, I take a very steep tram to the Peak, a good place to get your bearings, and take in the view. Then, with a couple of hours to spare, I take a walk through bamboo forests to the Dragon's Back, on the south-east corner of Hong Kong Island, where rich city boys paraglide at weekends, but where I am content to just gaze at the inappropriately named Repulse Bay, which is quite stunning, and at the multi-million-pound mansions squatting around the golf club.

If you have a day to spare, do as I do and take a hike in the Sai Kung East Country Park, on the easternmost edge of the New Territories, a place accessible only by foot or boat. But remember to bring a sunhat, sun cream, rucksack containing bottled water and walking boots. Slightly more leisurely is a trip to Macau, a World Heritage site, where the villages date back to the 16th Century, and betray their Portuguese colonial past to this day in a fabulous fusion of cooking styles.


The Timit in Beautiful Hong Kong Tourism and Travell Guide Rich culture: Shopping for Chinese delicacies in one of Hong Kong's teeming markets


I do my walks - to the Dragon's Back and the country park - with Marco, a former Swiss banker but now an extremely knowledgeable guide from a small company called Walk Hong Kong. Feeling more adventurous, though, I catch a ferry on my own to one of the 260 outlying islands. Lantau, the largest, is an hour by ferry from Hong Kong Central. This is where the real Chinese live, or expat hippies desperate to escape the rat race, in a jumble of houses overlooking a sandy bay, the mountains looming behind.

If you don't have vertigo, you can catch a Crystal Cabin cable car into the hills, from where you can watch the fishermen on sampans in the harbour and see the bronze statue of Buddha. Cheung Chau is lovely, too, only 20 minutes from Central.

On a beach I cool off by dipping my toes in the sand, and feel a million miles from the teeming humanity of the city.


The Timit in Beautiful Hong Kong Tourism and Travell Guide
Travel factsBritish Airways (www.ba.com) flies to Hong Kong twice daily from Heathrow. The flight time is about 12 hours. Return fares start at £571.20.

Room rates at the Peninsula start at HK$4,200 (about £330). Suites cost from HK$11,800 (£1,004) per night. Call 00800 2828 3888, www.peninsula.com. For further information on Hong Kong, visit www.discoverHongKong.com.

Liz Jones's latest book, The Exmoor Files: How I Lost A Husband And Tried To Find Rural Bliss (£6.99, Weidenfeld & Nicolson), is out in paperback.

The original of this article appears in the April edition of High Life magazine, available on all British Airways flights and at bahighlife.com
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Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam tours and travell

Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam tours and travell

First time arrived, I wasn't struck although I couldn't speak their language because the situation in The international airport there which is called Tan Son Nhat was clean and tidy. The immigration officer also welcome us warmly. I just prepared not so much Dong (Vietnam money)as I have no plan to stay long at first. This is a city to explore on bike or foot. The city was so crowded but clean enough. Districts 1 and 3 are very well kept up and contain many nice restaurants, hotels, museums and many of the attractive tourism. We could take a look at historical French buildings in District 1 that still well taken care although already 50 years. Later from Ho Chi Minh City, traveled to the Cu Chi Tunnel and War Remnant Museum that used to be a war place long time ago. Don't miss to travel with small boat to the Mekong River Delta where you can felt the traditional atmosphere of local inhabitants.
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Japan a Beautiful Places Tourism and Travell Guide

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Mount Rushmore,near Keystone, South Dakota, is a Monumental Granite Sculpture in United State tourism

Mount Rushmore,near Keystone, South Dakota, is a Monumental Granite Sculpture in United State tourism
Mount Rushmore,near Keystone, South Dakota, is a Monumental Granite Sculpture in United State tourism
Mount Rushmore,near Keystone, South Dakota, is a Monumental Granite Sculpture in United State tourism
Mount Rushmore,near Keystone, South Dakota, is a Monumental Granite Sculpture in United State tourism
Mount Rushmore,near Keystone, South Dakota, is a Monumental Granite Sculpture in United State tourism

Mount Rushmore,near Keystone, South Dakota, is a Monumental Granite Sculpture in United State tourism

Mount Rushmore,near Keystone, South Dakota, is a Monumental Granite Sculpture in United State tourism

Mount Rushmore,near Keystone, South Dakota, is a Monumental Granite Sculpture in United State tourism

Mount Rushmore,near Keystone, South Dakota, is a Monumental Granite Sculpture in United State tourism


Mount Rushmore National Memorial, near Keystone, South Dakota, is a monumental granite sculpture by Gutzon Borglum (1867–1941), located within the United States Presidential Memorial that represents the first 150 years of the history of the United States of America with 60-foot (18 m) sculptures of the heads of former United States presidents (left to right): George Washington (1732–1799), Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826), Theodore Roosevelt (1858–1919), and Abraham Lincoln (1809–1865). The entire memorial covers 1,278.45 acres (5.17 km2) and is 5,725 feet (1,745 m) above sea level. It is managed by the National Park Service, a bureau of the United States Department of the Interior. The memorial attracts approximately two million people annually.
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