Cosying up to Conan

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/world/30366735

A fan strikes the same pose as Detective Conan while taking a photo with a statue of him in front of JR Yura Station in Hokuei, Tottori Prefecture.(Photo/The Yomiuri Shimbun)
A fan strikes the same pose as Detective Conan while taking a photo with a statue of him in front of JR Yura Station in Hokuei, Tottori Prefecture.(Photo/The Yomiuri Shimbun)

Cosying up to Conan

World March 30, 2019 01:00

By Naoko Sato
Yomiuri Shimbun
Asia News Network

Getting gleefully lost in the manga world in Tottori

A DETECTIVE. Ghoulish yokai. Gourmet dining.

What prefecture has these three disparate items in common?

Welcome to Tottori, the prefecture that produced Gosho Aoyama, 55, creator of the popular manga “Meitantei Conan” (“Detective Conan”); Shigeru Mizuki (1922-2015), of yokai manga “GeGeGe no Kitaro” fame; and Jiro Taniguchi (1947-2017), creator of “Kodoku no Gurume” (“The Lonely Gourmet”).

A fan strikes the same pose as Detective Conan while taking a photo with a statue of him in front of JR Yura Station in Hokuei, Tottori Prefecture.(Photo/The Yomiuri Shimbun)

It’s no surprise that manga fans from across Japan and around the world flock to the prefecture commonly referred to as the “Manga Kingdom.”

JR Yura Station, an entry point for Aoyama’s birthplace of Hokuei town, has a sign declaring it “Conan Station”. In front of the sign, young and old alike stop by a statue of Conan Edogawa, the main character of “Detective Conan”.

Striking the same pose as the young detective – pointing with his right index finger – they utter his famous line, “There is always only one truth!” and gleefully take photos.

The 1.5-kilometre Conan Street connects the station with the Gosho Aoyama Manga Factory, a museum where original Conan cels and other memorabilia are displayed. There, another statue of Conan stands next to statues of characters including frequent antagonist Kaito Kid. Everywhere one looks, someone is taking a photo with their favorite character.

The Jiro Taniguchi section in the Minato Sakai Koryukan hall in Sakaiminato. (Photo/The Yomiuri Shimbun)

“I’ve loved Conan since I was little, so I’ve always thought about coming here,” says Koharu Arie, 14, a second-year junior high schooler from Kama, Fukuoka Prefecture, who is visiting with her family. “I want to take loads of photos.”

The Detective Conan series made its debut in 1994 in the manga “Shukan Shonen Sunday”. High school-aged detective Shinichi Kudo is given a drug by a mysterious organisation, turning him into a child. In the persona of elementary school student Conan Edogawa, he sets about solving crimes in each mystery episode. In 1996, an animated cartoon was started and broadcast on the Nippon TV network.

The town, riding the character’s explosive popularity, started work on the commemorative street in 1999. The museum, which opened in 2007, has been thriving and drew about 127,500 visitors in 2017.

The manga is published in 25 countries and territories, with fans not only in Japan, but also in China, Taiwan, South Korea, Thailand and around the world. Every year, a Swiss family with a particular passion for manga visits the town for a weeklong stay, according to museum director Toshimitsu Ishida, 67.

“People come from around the world,” he says with a smile. “Conan is our town’s treasure.”

Nezumi-Otoko (Ratman) is one of the many characters sometimes seen on the Mizuki Shigeru Road in Sakaiminato, Tottori Prefecture. (Photo/Mizuki Productions)

As you near the Mizuki Shigeru Museum in the city of Sakaiminato, you might hear the visitors before seeing them, as screams of “It’s scary” and “Gyaaa”, ring through the halls of the memorial to the GeGeGe no Kitaro creator.

In 1993, a kilometre-long stretch of road connecting JR Sakaiminato Station with a shopping arcade was dubbed “Mizuki Shigeru Road.” It was lined with statues of phantoms, ghosts and other yokai characters from his most famous works, notably “GeGeGe no Kitaro” and “Akumakun.” The museum opened in 2003.

Along the road are a yokai shrine and souvenir shops paying homage to characters such as Kitaro’s father, Medamaoyaji, or the half-human, half-yokai Nezumiotoko.

“It’s really something that there are so many yokai,” says Seiji Yamada, 52, an office worker from Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, accompanied by his wife. “I am completely immersed in the world of yokai.”

Tottori native Taniguchi, of “The Lonely Gourmet” fame, is particularly popular in Europe, and was the recipient of France’s Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters and other awards. There are said to be many people who visit the Tottori Castle ruins, Kurayoshi city’s white-walled storehouses and other locations depicted in his classic works “A Distant Neighbourhood” and “Chichi no Koyomi” (My Father’s Journal).

To promote itself as the birthplace of popular manga artists, Tottori Prefecture declared itself the “Manga Kingdom” in 2012. The list of related activities is wide – providing subsidies to local governments and entities; holding events featuring anime voice actors; displaying related art objects in Tottori Airport, which was nicknamed “Tottori Sand Dunes Conan Airport;” and holding an exhibition at the Minato Sakai Koryukan hall in Sakaiminato to introduce Tottori native manga artists.

It was manga and anime that provided the spark for the prefecture to be ranked No 1 among the “top 10 tourist spots you need to visit in 2019” on an internet site aimed at foreign travellers.

“The thrill of two-dimensional objects such as manga and anime becoming three-dimensional is very attractive,” says Yoshiyuki Nomura, 44, director of the Manga Kingdom Secretariat of the Tottori Prefectural Government Tourism and Exchange Bureau.

From Conan-themed handkerchiefs and candy to Kitaro teacups, from yokan sweets in the shape of the Ittanmomen yokai to bags depicting the Nurikabe yokai … Before you know it, your suitcase for the trip home is packed with manga character goods.

It is intoxicating to wander in the “Manga Kingdom,” which surely leads to hefty spending. One easily falls under the spell.

IF YOU GO

Gosho Aoyama Manga Factory is a 20-minute walk from JR Yura Station

Mizuki Shigeru Museum is about 10 minutes on foot from JR Sakaiminato Station

From JR Osaka Station to Yura Station, it takes about three and a half hours by express and other trains. To Sakaiminato Station, it takes about four and a half hours.

Both museums are open every day.

Reluctantly into the future

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/world/30366731

Photo/The Korea Herald
Photo/The Korea Herald

Reluctantly into the future

World March 30, 2019 01:00

By Lee Sunyoung
The Korea Herald
Asia News Network

Seoul’s Itaewon district is getting a makeover and the long-established expatriate community is unimpressed

WILL AN expat-friendly neighbourhood in Seoul retain its charm amid a wave of gentrification? Some say Itaewon has lost its soul and is now just another hangout for young Koreans.

Others say the neighbourhood has become safer and trendier – suitable for a wider range of visitors. And, if you stand in the right place, you can still find the same expatriate-led culture thriving, they say.

Photo/The Korea Herald

Whoever’s right, the debate is typical of what happens when neighbourhoods become gentrified.

Outsiders discover a less-developed area with unique characteristics and a vibrant local community. Money flows in, and trendier, fancier places pop up. Rents rise and many of the original residents and their favourite haunts are priced out.

“Itaewon was a rather run-down area for many years,” says Lance Reegan-Diehl, a Canadian who worked and lived in the area for nearly two decades.

“There were lots of reasons for that – no one knows exactly why – but the ‘small-town feel’ of Itaewon is gone.”

He was among the expats feeling the loss of once-famed bars, restaurants and shops, many of which were also run by expats. Franchise coffee chains, beauty stores and big fashion-brand outlets have replaced them and the area seems to draw more young Korean customers.

Photo/The Korea Herald

Nestled in the shadow of the city’s central mountain Namsan, Itaewon had long enjoyed unparalleled status as the nexus of expatriate life in Seoul, with its close proximity to the US military base and a large number of foreign embassies.

In a socially conservative and racially homogenous country, the neighbourhood was unique in its striking cultural diversity and laissez-faire atmosphere, although some Koreans feared it to be infested with crime, says Moon Gwang-lip, a former journalist who’s written a book of essays on Itaewon and its foreign inhabitants.

“Itaewon was never sophisticated or high-brow, but it had raw elements of culture and community. The forces of gentrification appear to be eroding them,” he says.

What Itaewon is changing into is a tidier place with glossy shops that offer a not-so-different consumption experience for Koreans, he added.

The Korea Herald took a stroll down Itaewon’s main street last weekend from the landmark Hamilton Hotel through back alleys to the Seoul Central Mosque, up Antique Furniture Street and further north to nearby Gyeongnidan and Haebangchon.

The main street had steady but limited foot traffic from the direction of the Itaewon and Noksapyeong subway stations.

Quite a few retail spaces were vacant. Clothing shops specialising in large sizes, tailors and leather shops were nearly devoid of shoppers, but two Olive Young stores were bustling with mostly young Asian shoppers.

A casually dressed expatriate haggled with a street vendor over a fake Nike cap and then walked away.

“It’s difficult to make a living,” said the vendor, who declined to give her name. “Koreans don’t buy from my stall and not as many foreigners come here to shop anymore.”

Near the mosque, women in hijabs were grocery shopping at a halal supermarket while African expats casually chatted in front of a convenience store.

Intentional efforts are being taken by the Muslim community to preserve what has become known as “Islamic Street”, according to an official at the Yongsan-gu Office, who pointed out that an African community also makes its home in the area.

An Indian resident in Haebangchon said that, despite many changes, Itaewon still holds a unique charm for foreign residents and visitors.

“Of course it’s changed a lot, but Itaewon retains the same old charm that I fell in love with when I first came to Korea back in 2002.”

Yet Itaewon’s changes so far may look trivial once developers start tearing down old homes and rebuilding residential areas.

“Itaewon sits near those hot residential areas expected to get a major upscale makeover in the coming years. For better or worse, changes are inevitable,” said a local realtor.

An elephantine task

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30366804

  • Visitors join a Walking with Giants tour.
  • Elephant masters from Surin’s Ban Ta Klang elephant village perform a traditional ritual to celebrate the Nation Elephant Day.
  • Animal osteopath Tony Nevin teaches visitors how to massage the elephants.

An elephantine task

big read March 30, 2019 01:00

By Pattarawadee Saengmanee
The Nation Weekend

A foundation dedicated to helping pachyderms and their mahouts holds and educational open day

SITTING ON a border of Thailand, Laos and Myanmar, the Golden Triangle Asian Elephant Foundation (GTAEF) in Chiang Rai recently opened its camp to celebrate the National Thai Elephant Day and give local and foreign visitors a chance to experience several educational activities about elephants and mahouts.

Set up in 2006 by the five-star Anantara Hotels chain, the foundation aims to solve the problem of elephants coming to city streets and generally improve elephant welfare in Thailand. Today, all elephants in its camp are rented from different villages to conduct the exclusive mahout and trekking programmes for the guests staying at Anantara Golden Triangle Elephant Camp and Resort and Four Seasons Tented Camp Golden Triangle.

 The Elephant Buffet is stacked high with fresh fruits.

“Anantara took over this property with its elephant camp back in 2002. We recognised the potential for tourism in the Golden Triangle and wanted to do more with the land. That gave birth to the idea of setting up the foundation and inviting mahouts to work with us rather than taking the elephants to towns to walk on the streets,” says John Roberts, director of Elephants and Conservation Efforts of Anantara.

“In those days, tourism in this part of the world was still relatively small and the mahouts had no other ways of making money.”

But despite the good intentions, the foundation hasn’t always had it easy. Last year, Anantara Hotels was put in the hot seat after the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Peta) released worrying video footage showing mahouts using bullhooks to beat and jab elephants during the polo matches, resulting in all the big names drawing back their sponsorship.

Anantara took quick action and launched the inaugural King’s Cup Elephant Boat Race and River Festival to replace its annual polo match. The charity event is taking place this weekend, joined by veteran Thai Navy paddlers and international teams from China and the Philippines.

“To improve the situation, we provide a positive and targetted training programme that can help the villagers teach their elephants without using bullhooks or hitting them,” Roberts explains.

“All mahouts learn the basics for controlling an elephant from their parents. It’s like learning to drive with our parents. It might not be the best way but this is tradition and the techniques have been passed on from generation to generation for 4,000 years. We don’t want to touch their heritage. We just come up with a different way that can help them do better.”

The GTAEF camp in the luxury Anantara Golden Triangle Elephant Camp and Resort occupies 2,000 square metres as is home to 25 rescued elephants and a small village of mahouts and their families. Many of elephants here came from the streets but others used to work for illegal logging camps or elephant shows. The camp pays Bt25,000 a month to provide mahouts with an guaranteed income and also supports their spouses in their silk weaving group.

For the recent celebration, the lush jungle was transformed into a ceremonial ground, where a group of elephant spirit men from Surin’s Ban Ta Klang Elephant Village performed a Kui traditional ritual to pay respect to the guardian spirits.

A long table was set up in the middle of the lush grounds packed with offerings and nang pa kam, a sacred 100-year-old robe made from buffalo leather that has been used to capture a wild elephant in the past.

“Being an elephant spirit man is local wisdom and passed down from father to son. We pray in the Kui language and blow sang (a buffalo horn), which is traditionally used to capture wild elephants. The offerings include a chicken chin, a pig head, fruits and bai si,” explains Uncle Chalerm Salangam, 70.

“Today, our village has 300 elephants and we’ve trained a new generation of elephant spirit men to maintain our traditions.”

The elephants themselves were more excited about the buffet, eagerly tucking into watermelons, coconuts, bananas, sweet corn, pumpkins and pineapples.

Elephant masters from Surin’s Ban Ta Klang elephant village perform a traditional ritual to celebrate the Nation Elephant Day. 

A short walk from the ceremonial venue, development manager Laddawan Yonthantham was acting as a tour guide to give visitors an introduction to sustainable elephant welfare management.

“About 30 years ago, the government enacted legislation to ban logging in the jungle and mahouts became unemployed. To generate income, they shifted to putting on elephant shows at tourist attractions or took their elephants to the city essentially to beg. Raising elephants is expensive as they need 200 to 300 kilograms of pineapples, watermelons and sugar cane, depending on their weight – and the average weight of an elephant is 2,500 kilograms,” Laddawan says.

“Our camp offers natural space near the river so that the elephants can exercise and eat organic fruits from the local plantations. Initially, we purchased some overworked and street elephants from mahouts but they bought new elephants to sell to us again. So, we rented the elephants and hired the mahouts to conduct eco-friendly activities for our all-inclusive hotel packages.

“Mahouts can take advantage of Anantara’s staff welfare programme, which includes a residence, uniforms and three meals a day. Based on sustainable living, it aims to keep them from falling back into the same cycle.”

Hotel guests can register for trekking and riding an elephant or learn the basics of being a mahout while the elephants get additional exercise. As we walk around the property, we see domesticated giant Bo and her friends jumping into the Ruak river and having fun in the clear water as they take their daily bath.

“We limit work to three-and-a-half hours and even have a customised exercise routine for elephants so that they can stay healthy. They love jumping into a mud pond to cool down,” says Laddawan.

Mahout Wattana Salangam and his giant friend Bo have worked with the elephant camp for 14 years. Before that they were in Bangkok, roaming the streets to earn money.

“I was in debt so I took Bo to Bangkok. We would walk around the streets and would collect about Bt2,500 a day. We made ourselves a camp on vacant land to save money. Then we moved to the elephant foundation in Phetchaburi and had to take care of many elephants, most of them belonging to other people. It was dangerous because most elephants only obey their owners,” Wattana says.

“Here, I started on a salary of Bt18,000 and now receive up to Bt25,000, plus extra income from guest activities. I’m happy to work here. My elephant has enough food no matter if I have work or not.”

An elephant splashes dirt to chase off bugs on his back.

“Our foundation doesn’t support mahouts to breed their elephants. Today, there are more than 4,200 house elephants and not all of them live in good conditions. We can’t release them to the forest because they have no skills to survive. Normally, elephants live in a group and don’t accept strangers,” Laddawan says.

An in-house veterinarian team is in charge at the positive reinforcement target training station where elephants learn to perform certain tasks such as raising a foot in a purely positive manner. A small branch is used but no punishments are meted out. Instead the elephants quickly learn about rewards.

“Our camp set up this training in cooperation with Dr Gerardo Martinez, a world renowned large animal trainer from the Africam Safari Park in Puebla, Mexico. This target training can be used to train the elephant in the event that they need veterinary treatment. It can help feel free and release stress for both elephant and vet,” says Laddawan.

The camp also conducts Elephant Cognition (problem solving) Research. Here, visitors can see the elephants using their trunks to pick up tokens of different textures and work as a team.

Next door was the space for Elephant Osteopathy Demonstra-tions undertaken in collaboration with veteran British animal osteopath Tony Nevin. Adapted from techniques used with humans, the massage treatment is designed to relieve muscle tension and pain.

“We focus on the elephant’s spine and balance while walking. The massage starts from the neck and goes from rib to hip. This treatment can be used for other animals too, like giraffes, horses and ostriches,” Nevin says.

The Walking with Giants activity takes place in the early morning and takes guests to explore a trekking trail around the camp and learn about daily life of elephants. For example, elephants splash dirt over their back to chase bugs and black dung means they are eating too much dirt probably have flatulence.

Animal osteopath Tony Nevin teaches visitors how to massage the elephants.

“For the next step, we would like to help the elephants in several trekking camps have access to better welfare. We will also continue to train mahouts across Southeast Asia in positive reinforcement and elephant friendly training and handling techniques,” director Roberts says.

“We have teamed up with US Agency for International Development (USAID) to teach travellers not to buy ivory. We’re also working with Srinakharinwirot University, which is going to send students to the area where villagers are facing problems with elephants coming out from the forest. We will try to identify what is the best practice to keep both people and elephants happy when they come out from the national park.

 

PACHYDERM PARADISE

>> The Golden Triangle Asian Elephant Foundation is located in Anantara Golden Triangle Elephant Camp and Resort, Chiang Rai.

>> Find out details at http://www.HelpingElephants.org.

Air Asia apologises for its “Get off in Thailand” promotion

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Tourism/30366562

 
Photo from The Thaiger

Air Asia apologises for its “Get off in Thailand” promotion

Tourism March 26, 2019 13:01

By The Thaiger

5,420 Viewed

AirAsia has now apologised following an advertising campaign using the phrase “Get off in Thailand” was posted around the city of Brisbane to promote the airline’s direct route to Bangkok.

Collective Shout, a campaign movement against the objectification of women says the marketing gaff promoted sex tourism in Thailand.

Melinda Liszewski, a campaigner at Collective Shout accused the airline of “promoting sex tourism.”

Air Asia has responded… “AirAsia takes community feedback extremely seriously and the airline sincerely apologises for any inconvenience caused from recent concerns raised.”

 
 

“AirAsia can confirm the advertising campaign has ended and we instructed our media partners to have the advertising removed as soon as possible today from all locations.”

Brisbane City councillor Kara Cook branded the campaign an “absolute disgrace” and said “it should never have appeared on our city’s streets.”

The Australian regulator Ad Standards said while it had not received any complaints about the advertising on the bus, it had received one complaint about the same advertisement on a billboard.

The same ad is still on a billboard at Brisbane Airport, however the airport tweeted on Monday afternoon that it was being removed as a priority.

AirAsia began a new direct flight route between Brisbane and Bangkok in February this year.

An AirAsia spokesman said the campaign had since ended and the last advertisements were being removed around the city.

Source: https://thethaiger.com/thai-life/travel/air-asia-apologises-for-its-get-off-in-thailand-promotion

Pad by the park

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/sleep/30366710

Pad by the park

sleep March 28, 2019 15:18

By The Nation

ONYX Hospitality Group has unveiled a fresh new look for Shama Lakeview Asoke Bangkok, a year after the property was rebranded.

Featuring all-new studios, apartments, lobby, pool terrace and public areas, the property follows an extensive transformation by the developer JR Kyushu Business Development (Thailand).

Shama is the Sanskrit term for peace and tranquillity. The fresh new interiors conceptualised by Bangkok-based ASC Interior draw inspiration from the nearby Benjakitti Park and Lake which many of the apartments overlook, featuring a calming residential colour palette dominant with blues from the sky and lake, and greens from the park’s trees and shrubs.

Specially-commissioned art, installations and furnishings throughout the property’s communal spaces and its 429 studios and apartments bring in the elements of the nearby park, reflecting the clouds mirrored on the lake’s surface, trees billowing in the breeze and stonework from the pavements.

In a nod to the property developer’s Japanese roots, Shama Lakeview Asoke has also introduced a collection of tatami studios and one-bedroom apartments, each fitted with a raised tatami seating area – ideal for relaxing tea sessions, informal gatherings and lazy afternoon naps.

As guests and residents move through the lobby, they are greeted by a custom Murano glass chandelier of wave-like ripples, serving as a reminder that the serenity of Benjakitti Park and Lake is just a stone’s throw away. The lobby connects to a lounge area with a co-working corner and coffee bar operated by the neighbouring Coffee Club.

In celebration of the reopening, the property’s newly renovated serviced apartments offer 20-per-cent discount off all rates available at http://www.Shama.com for stays between April 1 to May 31. The offer also includes complimentary upgrade to a lake view apartment, with ONYX Rewards members also enjoying double points redemption.

Harmony by the ocean

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/sleep/30366689

Harmony by the ocean

sleep March 28, 2019 01:00

By THE NATION

Six Senses Hotels Resorts makes its way to Cambodia with the opening of its new property Six Senses Krabey Island that offers guests beautiful views of the rocky coastline and azure waters.

Located just a 10-minute drive from Sihanouk International Airport, the 40 luxury villas are sustainable and thoughtfully-designed, with green living roofs and maximum use of natural daylight.

Each villa comes with a sundeck for lounging and alfresco dining and an infinity-edged plunge pool and rain showers, plus a bedroom in the groundbreaking Sleep With Six Senses standard to ensure a good night’s sleep.

The resort has two restaurants with dishes prepared using only local produce and seasonal ingredients, mostly grown at its own 3,700-square-metre organic farm and herb garden. The Tree restaurant offers a modern twist on traditional Khmer cuisine with a creative interpretation of Southeast Asian flavours while AHA serves an eclectic menu of light yet satisfying international favourites for lunch and dinner.

 

There is also the Sunset Bar, furnished with comfy sofas, lazy hammocks and a generous side order of sun dipping over the Gulf of Thailand. An ice cream parlour serves up more than 15 flavours daily on a complimentary basis for guests.

The expansive Six Senses Spa pays tribute to the sacred Khmer Kbal Spean River, offering a wide range of holistic rejuvenation and beauty treatments. It also incorporates a comprehensive gym, rooftop yoga pavilion, indoor aerial yoga studio, Crystal Water Room, Meditation Cave and the Alchemy Bar, for blending natural skin care products and essential oils using pure local ingredients.

During the day, there are several fun activities for all ages and energy levels including water sports, fishing, snorkelling, speedboat excursions to neighbouring islands, an organic farm visit with cooking classes, night sky observatory, horizon lap pool, jungle fitness circuit and the open-air Cinema Paradiso.

To celebrate its opening, the resort offers a 20-per-cent discount and guests can take advantage of complimentary daily half board, daily wellness activities and complimentary wellness screening at the Six Senses Spa when booking a minimum three-night night stay.

Online booking can be made at http://www.SixSenses.com.

Living like a local

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/sleep/30366566

Living like a local

sleep March 26, 2019 14:55

By The Nation

Leading Japanese lingerie brand Wacoal Corp moves into the hospitality business by turning a traditional Kyoto-style townhouse into the Kyo no Ondokoro Fuyacho-Nijo private villa that is scheduled to open this Saturday (March 30).

Situated to the south of Kyoto Imperial Palace, this is its fourth property and can accommodate up to eight guests. Aiming to maintain the beautiful Kyoto-style traditional houses, the Kyo no Ondokoro project offers unique accommodation, where travellers can stay and live like locals.

Occupying more than 180 square meters, it is a mixture of traditional Japanese design and modern art, boasting a living room that is used for performing a tea ceremony, a bathroom complete with Shigaraki-ware bathtub and a kitchen equipped with all kinds of kitchen appliances and tables so that guests can prepare their own meal. The villa also had Wi-Fi, washing machines with dryers and irons, making it a perfect choice for a long stay.

The room rates range from 50,000 (Bt14,500) to 100,000 yen per building. Other services include a left luggage area and a concierge corner to provide information on tourist attractions.

Find out more at http://www.Kyo-Ondokoro.kyoto/en/

Snuggling up to a unicorn (yes, really)

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/sleep/30366576

Snuggling up to a unicorn (yes, really)

sleep March 26, 2019 06:05

By The Nation

In celebration of ‘Unicorn Day’ on April 9, Booking.com is offering three lucky guests the chance to make their unicorn dreams come true, by immersing themselves in an amazing fairy-tale apartment surrounded by the world’s favourite mythical creature – the unicorn.

The Unicorn House, tucked away in the centre of Milan and available during the city’s Design Week, is a fully customised experience, with everything, from ceiling to floor covered by magic horns, stars, fluffy clouds and dazzling rainbows.

The Unicorn House will be available exclusively on Booking.com for three nights only so customers must be quick if interested in snapping up this rare gem. At 10am (CET) on March 28 and April 1 one night will become available for booking on April 10, 11 and 12 respectively on a first-come, first-served basis. This unique experience can be booked for just 70 euros by visiting https://www.booking.com/hotel/it/the-unicorn-house.en-gb.html.

Unicorn mania is a global phenomenon, dominating the web with more than nine million posts on Instagram alone (using #unicorn).

To make Unicorn House even more incredible, Booking.com will provide guests with a welcome hamper full of unicorn themed goodies and a unicorn cake design class taught by famous cake designer Eleonora Di Simine (Nana&Nana cakes). And, after sleeping in a customised bedroom complete with unicorn bedding, bathrobes, pyjamas and slippers, guests will enjoy a delicious unicorn-themed breakfast. This dreamland stay is designed to exceed the expectations of even the world’s biggest unicorn fans.

“This multi-coloured fantasy home is just one example of more than 5.7 million reported listings in homes, apartments and other unique places to stay available to book and start your own adventure on Booking.com. We’re excited to invite guests to stay at Unicorn House, where they’ll be sure to have an enchanting and magical experience,” said Alberto Yates, regional manager at Booking.com.

Hi-tech scooters get trial run in Tokyo’s business district

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Startup_and_IT/30366368

Hi-tech scooters get trial run in Tokyo’s business district

Tech March 24, 2019 01:00

By The Japan News/ANN

4,109 Viewed

TOKYO – A group of companies, including NTT Docomo Inc. and Mitsubishi Estate Co., has begun trial runs of a new high-tech scooter called Rodem, offering tourists the chance to cruise around Tokyo’s Marunouchi district for free.

The one-person vehicle is equipped with a tablet device that allows users to access information on restaurants and shops in the area while on the move. Docomo and the other firms aim to use the vehicle to develop new services for tourists.

Three vehicles are being used for the test rides, which run from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Friday.

Rodem was originally developed by Fukuoka Prefecture-based robot manufacturer Tmsuk Co. as an electric wheelchair for use in nursing care. Drivers control the vehicle using a joystick and can travel at speeds of about 6 kph.

The companies have prepared several tours. In the “history experience tour,” riders can take in historic architecture while videos on the tablet offer explanations. They can also hold up the tablets to display information on surrounding restaurants using augmented reality technology, or AR.

Pretty posh for Havana

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/world/30366331

  • The swimming pool on the rooftop of the Gran Manzana Hotel in Havana is a tourist magnet.
    The swimming pool on the rooftop of the Gran Manzana Hotel in Havana is a tourist magnet.

Pretty posh for Havana

World March 23, 2019 01:00

By Agence France-Presse
Havana

Cash-strapped Cuba is now tapping into the high-end luxury tourist market

IN HAVANA there’s a shop selling a camera for more than US$25,000 (Bt790,000) – roughly 850 times the average monthly wage in Cuba.

The eye-popping sum earned predictable scorn on social media, but it begins to make sense when seen through the lens of the island’s fledgling bid to tap into the luxury tourism market.

The exclusive camera store and other boutiques featuring A-list brands like Versace and Armani are located in a shopping gallery on the ground floor of the swanky Gran Hotel Manzana.

The mere existence of the shops certainly seems incongruous in a country that has been governed as a one-party communist state since 1959, and where the average wage is $30 (Bt950) a month.

The swimming pool on the rooftop of the Gran Manzana Hotel in Havana is a tourist magnet. 

But the hotel isn’t exactly looking for locals to buy in – it attracts “a clientele of private planes, princes and celebrities”, according to general manager Xavier Destribats.

The Gran Hotel Manzana, the first ever five-star establishment in Havana, opened in 2017 in a sumptuous historic building that was, at the beginning of the 20th century, the island’s first shopping mall.

The property run by Swiss group Kempinski is “the first genuine luxury hotel in Havana”, said Destribats.

“It’s the first hotel with a 1,000-square-metre spa,” he said. All the rooms are at least 40sqm, with prices ranging from $370 for a basic room in low season to $5,000 for the presidential suite.

“There was a certain type of clientele that didn’t travel to Havana, or Cuba, because there wasn’t the standard of luxury five-star hotel like in cities such as Paris or London,” Destribats explained.

The hotel terrace offers stunning views over Havana’s colourful historic neighbourhood where many Cubans live in dilapidated buildings that have fallen into disrepair or have vegetation sprouting from them.

“It really doesn’t feel like Cuba, clearly not – it feels like being in the United States, Miami or Puerto Rico,” said Celia Liegeois, a 26-year-old from Paris.

Having travelled around the island nation for three weeks, she and a friend had decided to spend their last few days relaxing by the hotel’s rooftop pool.

Nearby, Suki Lu, a recently arrived 28-year-old Chinese television presenter, was impressed at what she saw. “It’s beautiful. Look at the sunset! It’s truly addictive,” she said.

“I live in Dubai, so when you talk about luxury hotels, the level there is really high, but I think I’ll like this hotel,” she said, while her friend used a camera drone to get an aerial view of the building.

The largest single group of visitors to the Gran Hotel Manzana – one-fifth of the total – is comprised of tourists from the US, although there are plenty of visitors from Europe, Asia and the Middle East.

The Kempinski group, which hopes to open two or three more hotels in Cuba, is of course not the only chain to show an interest in the ultra-luxury market.

In September, Spain’s Iberostar opened its second five-star hotel, the Grand Packard.

French hotel giant Accor is planning on opening its own luxury establishment on the Malecon, Havana’s famous seaside boulevard, next September.

Ancient American cars are still a common sight in Havana, like this one out front of the Gran Manzana.

It will include a chocolate shop on its ground floor and a restaurant and concert space on its roof.

The employees’ outfits will be designed by Spanish fashion designer Agatha Ruiz de la Prada.

However, there is a slight catch – in every case, the hotels are owned by Gaviota, the Cuban army’s branch dedicated to tourism.

The foreign hotel groups are only allowed to run the establishments, all built by French group Bouygues, which has a long-standing local presence.

Authorities don’t publish the army’s revenues, but this alliance between hoteliers and the military landed the luxury hotels on Washington’s blacklist.

US tourists are technically banned from staying in the hotels – but they can easily circumvent restriction by either paying in cash or booking through travel agents.

Beyond hotels, developers have more ideas to entice those with deep pockets.

“There’s a plan to build golf courses in partnership with real estate groups,” said industry expert Jose Luis Perello.

The opening of a luxury hotel means Cuba has turned a corner, he said.

“Since it opened up to international tourism more than 20 years ago, Cuba has focused all its plans and strategies on sun and beach tourism” for the masses, Perello said.

That category currently accounts for 73 per cent of the 70,000 hotel rooms on offer in Cuba. And those who rent them usually don’t spend much money.

The same goes for cruise ship tourists – while the number of cruises docking in Cuba has exploded, passengers only spend an average of $15 a day on land.

That isn’t great news for Cuba, which welcomed 4.7 million tourists in 2018 – it needs the cash.

The government, which has been subjected to US sanctions since 1962, used to depend on aid from Venezuela, its oil-rich ally. But with Venezuela in turmoil, Cuba is scrambling for other sources of hard currency and its economic growth has stagnated at around one per cent – not enough to cover the population’s basic needs.

Opening luxury hotels is “a new stage” but also “a necessity”, Tourism Minister Manuel Marrero Cruz has said.