EC members to stay until new election team picked

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30317069

Somchai Srisutthiyakorn

Somchai Srisutthiyakorn

politics June 03, 2017 01:00

By THE NATION

New commissioners due by October.

ALL FIVE members of the Election Commission plan to serve until their last day in office and won’t resign till replaced by new commissioners later this year, EC member Somchai Srisutthiyakorn said yesterday.

Somchai said he did not think any of the Election Commissioners would feel slighted over the likelihood that all of them would be replaced ahead of the next general election.

That was proposed by the National Legislative Assembly panel vetting the organic law on the Election Commission, which is required under the new Constitution for the next general election.

“All the current EC members will perform our duties strongly, and to the best of our ability, until the last day in office. This is a rule and we have to follow it,” Somchai said.

But he was unhappy with the NLA panel’s argument that future EC members would have more power under the new law so highly qualified people would be needed to do the job.

“Many of the current EC members meet the qualification requirements. Why do all of us have to go? I don’t think the argument is sufficient. The NLA committee has to explain to the public what the real reason is,” he said.

However, Somchai expected the NLA to agree with its panel when voting on the bill next Friday.

During their remaining time in office, he said EC members would focus on vital work to prepare for the next election before handing things over to their successors.

“I can assure you that none of the EC members will feel so slighted that they quit while serving as caretakers. Doing so will bring more problems rather than solving them. There will be a lack of quorum when having meetings,” he said.

Somchai was speaking at the side of a seminar held by the EC at a hotel in Phetchaburi’s Cha-am district. The event was attended by officials from the election agency.

He said that after leaving the EC he would return to the People’s Network for Election (PNET) and resume work monitoring elections. PNET would work with the future EC members to ensure that elections would be free and fair.

Somchai said he did not think replacing the current EC members would adversely affect the next election. “The new set of election commissioners will be in office around October. So they will have about a year preparing for the |election,” he said.

On the bucket list, seeing Thailand’s biggest tree

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30320543

Thailand July 12, 2017 12:59

By The Nation

Tourists continue to flock to the latest attraction in Phang Nga – a tree believed to be the country’s largest.

The 500-year-old tree, known as sapung in Thai (Tetrameles nudiflora), is more than 30 metres in circumference and above 50 metres in height.

It’s on Koh Yao Noi in the southern province’s Koh Yao district.

The locale on the shore of Ao Khien Bay has several other large sapung trees, but none this big.

Ao Phang Nga National Park administrators have only recently begun promoting the site as a tourist attraction, seeking to get visitors involved in conserving the trees, which are accessible only by boat or after a trek through the woods.

Tetrameles nudiflora – whose soft timber has been used to make matchsticks, canoes and ceiling boards – often grows to immense heights and widths.

Famous specimens wrap around the Ta Prohm temple ruins at Angkor in Cambodia and are admired in Vietnam’s Cat Tien National Park.

The last time a Thai sapung tree made headlines was last August, when a 40-metre-tall specimen was noticted in a cemetery in Tambon Chaiyapruk in Loei’s Mueang district.

A day in the country

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30320474

Thailand July 12, 2017 01:00

By Pattarawadee Saengmanee
The Nation

A short drive from Nakhon Ratchasima town, the pottery village of Dan Kwian and the silk creations of Japoh are well worth a visit

THE IDEAL base from which to explore Thailand’s lower northeast region, Nakhon Ratchasima is the kick off point for a wide range of excursions ranging from National Parks to farm tours and much more in between. Take Dan Kwian, for example. A mere 30-minute drive from the city, this village is famed for its durable pottery and earthenware, a labour of love that’s been passed down through the generations for the best part of 300 years.

Dan Kwian is famous for the long-lasting and lovely earthenware produced there, perfect to adorn outdoor gardens. 

Located on the banks of the Mun River, this hamlet has long been considered an excellent source of top-quality, smooth-textured clay perfect for shaping such functional items as water jars and kitchenware. The range of products has since expanded to include garden furnishings and in 2014, a pottery leaning centre, which is our destination for today.

The centre’s exhibition area is divided into three zones boasting rare and beautifully crafted crockery in different designs. The first room is dedicated to early editions of earthen jars and mortars, the iron content evident in their greenish hue. The potters later developed new techniques to produce vases, basins, lanterns and more complex water jars boasting flower, leaf and animal motifs. Next door, a replica of the village portrays the rural way of life of both farmers and craftsmen while the third and final zone is home to a thoroughly modern video set up screening a 10-minute video that explains how villagers borrowed Japanese techniques to control temperatures and create new kilns.

“We used to have more than 200 kilns. Our clay is light red, durable and rich in iron and bronze. We started producing earthen jars for sale during the government of Chomphon Por (Field Marshal Plaek Phibunsongkhram) after World War II,” says villager Kultida Choomuenwai, who then leads us to the local market where we admire and shop for lamps, jars, mortars and flower pots, many of them bearing auspicious Chinese symbols.

Our next stop is Japoh village in Pak Thong Chai district, home to a Lao Vieng community known for its top-quality mud mee silk. Visitors can explore its history at the House of Antiques, which looks back at the ancestors of the current inhabitants and records their journey from Vientiane to this remote part of the Nakhon Ratchasima countryside.

Housed in a replica of a traditional Korat-style house, the museum is home to a collection of more than handwoven mud mee silk more than 100 years olds and the antique wooden looms on which much of it was woven.

Baan Japoh is considered the best source of silk, with its enhanced design techniques and designs boasting contemporary twists.

Another highlight is the house of Supang Tangklang, the owner of Mai Thong Suranaree (Golden Silk Suranaree), part of which has been turned into a boutique offering her latest collections and a demonstration on how to dye silk using local plants and flowers.

“I use ebony to get black, mangosteen peels, neem and pradu for gold, mahogany for orose and lac for red,” she explains, adding that she combines traditional Isaan pattern with modern graphic to give her silk a contemporary twist.

“I’ve been working with local villagers in developing designs and techniques to make silk more modern. I used to export obi belts for yukata to Japan, which were very popular with Japanese shoppers,” says Supang.

>>The writer’s trip was sponsored by Kantary Hotel, Korat

 

LOCAL PRIDE

>> Dan Kwian Pottery Village Learning Centre is at 222, Dan Kwian district, Nakhon Ratchasima. Call (044) 338 105-6.

>> For more about Mai Thong Suranaree at Pha Mai Pak Thong Chai at Mai, visit the Thong Suranaree page (in Thai) on Facebook.

Green season festivities

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30320457

Thailand July 11, 2017 17:15

By The Nation

The Tourism Authority of Thailand has just published a list of festivals scheduled for August and September.

One of the must-sees is in Phitsanulok in the lower northern region, where the annual Long Boat Racing Tradition returns to the Nan River on September 16 and 17. A fierce competition that takes all the oarsmen’s might, the winners get to take home the royal trophy from His Majesty the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej and HRH Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn. The race field is categorised in five types based on size of boat. Visitors can also take part in merit-making ceremonies also held on boats.

Those heading further north can join the unique Akha Swing Tradition, which is held to show gratitude to the goddess Um Sa Yae for ensuring abundant crops. Held in Chinag Rai’s Akha village from early August to the end of September, it offers visitors a chance to appreciate and learn about ethnic traditions and the simple way of life on the hills.

Over in the northeast region, Ubon Ratchathani is offering the Marvellous Shrimp March, during which ten of thousands of shrimps appear at night in August and September at Kaeng Lamduan in Nam Yuen District.

South of Bangkok golf fans won’t want to miss the Hua Hin Golf Festival 2017 and play nine courses in the seaside towns of Cha Um and Hua Hin for just one price. Meanwhile cyclists should prepare for the 16th International Mountain Bike Competition that will take place on August 26 and 27 at Bhumibol Dam in Tak province.

Shoppers can take advantage of special discounts on airfares at the 21st Travel Around Thailand and Around the World fair running from August 10 to 13 at Queen Sirikit National Convention Centre.

Find out more by calling 1672 or check out http://www.TourismThailand.org/thaifest.

Nakhon Phanom all set to host regional meeting

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30320456

 

Thailand July 11, 2017 16:55

By The Nation

Nakhon Phanom has been selected to host the Mekong Tourism Forum 2018, its Governor announced this week.

Sitting on the bank of the Mekong River opposite Laos, the provincial capital is considered a cultural influencer in the Isaan region and draws visitors for its many unique cultural attractions like the annual illuminated boat procession in October that marks the end of the Buddhist Lent.

Organised by the Mekong Tourism Coordinating Office, the forum gives stakeholders in the region, both public and private, a platform for joint discussions on the promotion and marketing of travel and tourism to and within the GMS countries – Cambodia, China’s Yunnan and Guangxi Provinces, Lao PDR, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam. It also promotes sustainable growth in the industry and invites keynote speakers to talk on tourism issues.

“Nakhon Phanom, which borders the Mekong River, is an ideal venue for this regional conference. The province offers amazing Mekong scenery and culture, and of course, warm Isaan hospitality. We’re excited to showcase this lovely province to delegates of the MTF 2018,” said governor Yuthasak Supasorn.

The name means the city of mountains and the Tourism Authority of Thailand is promoting it as an up-and-coming tourist destination in Isaan thanks to its modern infrastructure and convenient road and air connections.

Tourist attractions include Wat Phra That Phanom, the neo-colonial Provincial Governor’s Residence Museum and Mekong Underwater World, which teaches visitors about the underwater life and ecosystems of the river.

The third Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge across the Mekong connects Nakhon Phanom with Lao PDR’s Thakhek Khammouane region and both Nok Air and Thai AirAsia offer daily flights from Don Mueang International Airport.

The city has a good range of high-quality hotels with the more upmarket hotels offering Mekong River views. There has been an increase in people visiting Nakhon Phanom for meetings and conferences, and Nakhon Phanom University participates in the Thailand Convention and Exhibition Bureau’s MICE Curriculum Programme, ensuring that the region will have professional meeting and events expertise on hand as the sector grows.

MTF was organised by the Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA) in 1996 and the hosting rotated among GMS nations until 2005. The event was revived by the Mekong Tourism Coordinating Office in 2010 and is now held annually. MTF was most recently held in Thailand in 2012 in the northern province of Chiang Rai. Last year, the Forum was held in June in Luang Prabang, Lao PDR.

Thai water parks among Asia’s best

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30320241

Thailand July 09, 2017 09:25

By The Nation

3,052 Viewed

Three Thai water parks have been listed among the Top 10 in Asia in travel website TripAdvisor’s 2017 Travellers’ Choice awards.

Ramayana Water Park in Pattaya took third spot among the 10 and Black Mountain Water Park in Hua Hin sixth spot. Also in Pattaya, Cartoon Network Amazone is making a splash and was named the seventh-most popular water park in Asia.

“I would like to extend my warmest congratulations to these three parks in Thailand for winning positive reviews from travellers from around the world,” says Tourism Authority Governor Yuthasak Supasorn. “These awards certainly help to further strengthen the image of Thailand as a family-friendly destination.”

The award winners were determined using an algorithm that took into account the quantity and quality of user reviews and ratings posted around the world in the past 12 months.

TripAdvisor users praised Ramayana Water Park for its “beautifully clean water” and “excellent rides” and called Black Mountain “safe”, “family-friendly” and “a great day out”. Cartoon Network Amazone was hailed as “state-of-the-art” with both “simple and daredevil” slides.

Ramayana opened in May last year and covers 100 rai (160,000 square metres), making it one of the largest water parks in Southeast Asia. It boasts 21 rides and more than 50 other attractions, including two children’s zones, a “lazy river” and a floating market.

It’s 20 kilometres south of Pattaya, close to Khao Chi Chan, known for its giant Buddha etched into the side of a mountain, and next to Silverlake Vineyard.

Black Mountain, which opened in 2011, covers 40,000 square metres. It’s got a 17-metre-high tower from which nine different water slides radiate, plus a spectacular wave pool, a lazy river, a beach-infinity pool and children’s pool.

It’s about 15 minutes from Hua Hin town centre.

Cartoon Network Amazone is the world’s first Cartoon Network-theme water park. Opened in 2014, it features 10 entertainment zones and more than 150 water attractions. It’s in Bang Saray, about 20 minutes’ drive south of Pattaya.

Beauty in shades of blue

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30320226

Thailand July 08, 2017 12:00

By The Nation

4,522 Viewed

A dream vacation in Maldives has suddenly become lot more affordable thanks to special prices from Amari Havodda Maldives, which is offering 40-per-cent off during its seven-day flash sale, with Beach Villas priced from US$ 270-plus (around Bt9,200) per night.

A private island luxury retreat tucked away in the pristine Gaafu Dhaalu Atoll, Amari Havodda Maldives offers a getaway experience in one of the most beautiful spots in the Maldivian archipelago. Surrounded by an untouched house reef, the property features a choice of overwater or beach villas, warm and friendly spaces and a variety of activities for different age groups. Designed around the concept of natural simplicity inspired by the relaxed lifestyle of the local islands, the resort is ideal not only for couples, but also for families and friends travelling together.

Water sports enthusiasts will enjoy a wide range of pursuits from jet-ski excursions to stand-up paddle boarding to windsurfing and banana boat rides. Non-swimmers are well catered for too, with land-based activities including indulgent treats at Breeze Spa, beach volleyball, tennis, yoga sessions and private cooking classes.

This offer is valid for stays from Wednesday (July 12) to October 31 and applies to all villa categories on a full-board basis, except the Overwater Pool Villa. The full-board plan includes breakfast, lunch and dinner at the resort’s market-inspired Amaya Food Gallery, one guided house-reef snorkelling tour per person with use of related snorkelling equipment. Cancellation without penalties can be made up to 30 days prior to arrival.

To plan your getaway, visit www.Amari.com/havodda-maldives and use the promotional code “FlashSale” to enjoy a discount on the full-board rate.

Double the fun, double the points

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30320224

Best Western Patong Beach

Best Western Patong Beach

Thailand July 08, 2017 11:30

By The Nation

3,444 Viewed

Staying at Best Western’s hotels and resorts in Asia is even more rewarding this summer, following the launch of the new Double Points promotion.

From now until September 20, Best Western Rewards members will earn twice as many reward points when they book a stay at any participating properties in Asia.

The promotion covers some of Asia’s most desirable destinations, from cities such as Tokyo, Bangkok, Manila and Jakarta to world-class beach resorts including Bali, Boracay, Phuket and Okinawa. Alternatively, guests seeking a true taste of Asian culture can choose to explore destinations like Mandalay, Vientiane, Buriram or Malang.

“There is no better time to visit Asia than in the summer months,” said Olivier Berrivin, Best Western Hotels & Resorts’ managing director of International Operations – Asia. “In countries like Japan, the weather is warm and pleasant, making it ideal for outdoor exploration. Meanwhile in many Southeast Asian destinations it is the green season, allowing guests to enjoy the lush scenery and cultural heritage away from the peak season crowds. Guests can stay at hotels across the region and earn twice as many Best Western Rewards points, which can then be redeemed for even more room nights and other benefits in future.”

All guests booking stays at Best Western’s hotels and resorts in Asia this summer will also be guaranteed complimentary in-room Wi-Fi. Bookings must be made either directly with the hotel or via www.BestWesternHotelAsia.com.

To sign up for membership, visit www.BestWesternHotelAsia.com/create-account, and you could earn double points on your next booking.

For more information about the promotion, go to www.BestWesternHotelAsia.com/offers/double-point-asia.

Can an airport be a destination?

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30320217

(Photo: Facebook)

(Photo: Facebook)

Thailand July 08, 2017 07:32

By Mike Maceacheran
The Statesman
Kolkata

3,539 Viewed

Airports, for most travellers, tend to fall into two categories. The first is the shoot-me-now domain of the budget airline, where passengers are kettled into pens akin to those found in a knacker’s yard. The second is the not-as-smart-as-it-thinks international hub.

This is a place where rush-hour crowds, a dire lack of seating and offensive coffee see you trot to the gate as fast as possible. The less time spent in these vacuous, cookie-cutter hangars, the better. But – wait – there is a third.

A holy grail game-changer, with easy-on-the-wallet street food, custom furniture and vernacular architecture. And Changi Airport, on a spit of reclaimed land in Singapore, claims to be such a utopia. Here, I’ve heard, it’s not uncommon for fanatical locals to spend all weekend eating, drinking and shopping without once leaving the mall-like hive of terminals.

I have a 48-hour layover in Singapore coming up, so instead of going into the city, I’m going to have a holiday in the airport, from Saturday to Monday morning. 9.00am. Departures level, a little bleary-eyed from an overnight flight, and I’m zipping to T3 on the Skytrain, a landmark monorail that shocked everyone as Asia’s first driverless train when it opened in 1990, and now ferries passengers between the terminals. We whisk past Changi’s latest madcap attraction; the Jewel, a new, S$1.7b terminal-in-progress that’s due open in 2019.

Once finished, it will house a hedge maze, 130ft waterfall, tropical canopy walkway, and “indoorto clouds”. Barmy? Even Singaporeans think its nuts. 10.00am. Indoor clouds are just the start here at the world’s sixth busiest airport. Eyeing the airport diorama on the public concourse, it’s clear the razzamatazz is relentless.

A fourth terminal, with a walk-through street of fake Peranakan shophouses, is due to open in October. Terminal 5 will arrive in 2020. 11.00am. To get from here to an early lunch, I experience the first of Changi’s marketing brainstorms: a ride on the world’s tallest airport chute, the Slide@T3 (free ride for every £5 spent).

It’s a fun diversion, yet little more than a novelty, a six-second fart down a 12m-high tube, shuttling me from one floor to the next. Still, the kids seem to love it. 11.15am. Singapore fosters one of the world’s great street cuisines, and for many its symbol is the steamed bun.

The xiaolongbao is the staple of dozens of hawker dishes, so I plump for an early lunch at Sino-French lovechild Paradise Dynasty in the T3 public food court. Here, the menu fuses the traditional bun with cuckoo-crazy flavours – crab roe, cheese, garlic, foie gras, and the restaurant’s signature, black truffle.

I order the lot (£15 for 8) and instantly regret it. 1.00pm. In a post-dumpling sweat, and through immigration and security, I seek-out the free 24-hour transit cinema to hunker down; an easy win to pass a couple of hours. Ben Hur is on, and it’s epically disappointing. 4.30pm.

My mood brightens at Changi’s Butterfly Garden in the T3 Transit Area. It’s a curious thing to hear the buzz of 1000-odd fruit-feeding butterflies at the same time as the growl of jet engines and the gush of a cascading waterfall; more so when the cocoon cages are prised open so passengers can see the chrysalises up close.

One man takes a selfie for Facebook: Me and a Western Pygmy Blue, chilling at Changi. 6pm. It’s now deep into day one and I haven’t even considered a fish pedicure. Still, at the Wellness Oasis, pocketed in the underbelly of T2, the thought of tiddlers nibbling the skin off my toes (£13.50, 30 minutes) does little to distract me from one simple fact: I still have almost 36 hours to go. 8pm.

Around this time, I begin to crave meaningful conversation, so detour to the nearby Whiskey House, a leather-andlamps club on a mezzanine above the mammoth Duty Free. “Take a seat,” the barman suggests, pouring out a spectrum of top-shelf drams. It’s a solid gold guarantee of missing a flight, yet I drain five, staying long enough to discover the secret stash beneath the counter.

“These are only for the big spenders,” he says with a wink, producing a £400 bottle of peaty Macallan. “How about one for the road?” How about a double, I say. 10pm. So here I am, still: oblivious to the thousands of passengers who’ll fly into the night, drinking a vintage single malt in a haze that’ll hopefully see me through to tomorrow.

I stagger along the emptying corridors back to my hotel, not really knowing what day or time zone I’m in. The Aerotel Transit Hotel in T1 is Asia’s first passenger transit hotel, complete with rooftop swimming pool, gym and Jacuzzi. Rooms are bookable by the hour – a six-hour stint costs around £60.

Day two: 8.30am. In the cold light of day on the T2 concourse, it’s feeding time at the Koi Pond. The orangey-silver fish skim the surface to a crowd of wide-eyed infants, who ooh and aah as bubbles pop the surface.

“Relax,” the attendant says pointedly to me, perhaps noticing my puffy eyelids and heightened stress levels. He has a point: having long checked out of the hotel, I find myself back in the transit zone far sooner than I’d like. “The koi have all their teeth removed,” he continues.

“They don’t bite.” I think, it’s time to move on. 10am. I could go shopping – Changi is teeming with outlets, including places like Bengawan Solo, where you can buy stinky durian cake (from £8). But like most airport shopping, it’s a mix of the unaffordable (Michael Kors) and the unappealing (McDonalds).

Instead, I follow the “Art Appreciation Trail”, a series of a dozen or so blink-and-you’ll-miss-them installations to ponder a bubble dog in the style of Jeff Koons. 11am. Existential crisis looming, I seek out the Cactus Garden. It rewards the creeping claustrophobia of the airport with runway-fresh air, a bar purveying judgment-free mid-morning beers, and an ark’s worth of prickly pears, aloe vera and dragon trees.

1pm. Before I can eat, I’m going to have to work out where.The airport lists around 140 restaurants, and at “Singapore Food Street” in T3, I find a line-up of hawker stalls – that quintessential Singapore experience, only rather more upmarket. I opt for barbecued stingray from Tak Shing BBQ (£8), a disappointing leathery slab of fish. 3pm I’m using what I’m enthusiastically told by a janitor is the “world’s best airport toilet”.

I watch a plane taxi onto an airbridge in front of a panoramic, floorto-ceiling window, then let it all hang loose and have a strangely enjoyable pee. 7pm. Now what? To return to the Cactus Garden? Or revisit the slide with my remaining token? On the advice of my new airport chums, I try to score a free Singapore Sling, the ultimate symbol of the country, at the sublimely-ornate Raffles House Cocktail Bar in T3 – I’ve been told that Changi’s “hidden secret” is that every passenger is entitled to one – but hopelessly fail.”No purchase, no free drink,” I’m told.

So much for rewarding my airport loyalty. 8pm. Instead, I hustle my way into the Ambassador Transit Lounge (£33) and strap in for a final few hours, underlining the fact that to have a really good time at Changi – as at any airport – you need to spend far more money than you’d like. 1am.

At last, my flight blinks onto the departures board and I flop at the gate. Before I’d arrived in Singapore, the cliche I’d heard was it was sanitised, sterile, conservative and boring. Changi clearly didn’t get that memo.

A beach to call your own

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30320138

Thailand July 07, 2017 13:00

By The Nation

2,750 Viewed

Bored of visiting the same hotel pool every day? The travel website Booking.com has rounded up the top hotels in Asia with direct and easy access to a private beach, so holidaymakers can enjoy the sand, sun and waves without even having to leave the hotel property.

Located in Asia’s most popular destinations, each of these private beaches is just a short flight away.

W Retreat Koh Samui – Surat Thani, Thailand

This luxurious 5-star hotel boasts its own sandy beachfront. Each stylish villa has a large deck with a private pool and free WiFi. Silk lamps and designer furnishings give each villa a relaxed yet elegant feel. During the stay, you can enjoy free ice cream, bottled water and soft drinks at the Sweet Spots located all over the property.

Chateau Beach Resort Kenting – Kenting, Taiwan

Located on Dawan seashore, the rooms on the ground floor offer direct access to the beach through the French doors. But don’t be upset if you are not on the ground floor – you can also enjoy the fantastic view from your private balcony with a nice cool beverage. Chateau Beach Resort Kenting is only about a 3-minute drive to the night market where you can enjoy the local scene and eat your heart out!

Samabe Bali Suites & Villas – Bali, Indonesia

The perfect location for honeymoon lovers who can enjoy a once-in-a-lifetime romantic dinner by the beach, while witness the sun cast its golden rays down upon the clouds, turning them fire red. The property is only six kilometres from Museum Pasifika, eight kilometres from Garuda Wisnu Kencana cultural park, and just 30 minutes by car from Ngurah Rai International Airport.

Hotel Pullman Danang Beach Resort – Danang, Vietnam

The resort is just three kilometres from downtown Danang, keeping you away from the noise, hustle and bustle of the city. You may hesitate choosing between enjoying the infinity pool or beach, but you will certainly love the beach BBQ here at night.

Palau Pacific Resorts – Palau

With a living room right above the sea, the ocean is your private swimming pool. You can even walk down to the sea from your bedroom. The area is popular for snorkelling and diving, with a PADI 5 Star dive centre located at the resort.

Plantation Bay Resort and Spa – Cebu, The Philippines

The property features one of the world’s largest privately owned lagoons where you can go kayaking, swimming and indulge in some yoga. Adventurous divers will love it here, as there is a 300-metre deep cliff just within a hundred metres of the shore, offering steep wall and wreck diving.