Orbitz Blog

Articles Tagged ‘Gay Travel’

Hip hotels, good eats make gay-friendly Palm Springs hot

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Gay travel By Anthony Grant

“You’re all a vision in white!” intoned an on-fire Lady Gaga before a throbbing sea of gay humanity at Jeffrey Sanker’s White Party in Palm Springs. And right she was: the town that set the stage for the young, uber-talented lady’s meteoric rise to fame seemed momentarily transformed this April into a temple whose delirious card-carrying pagans were decked out in their brightest whites to fete the hottest gay icon since…Madonna?

If the White Party represents the apotheosis (fancy Greek word, I know, but, ahem, I’m still working the temple motif) of gay-friendly Palm Springs — and it does — then it's worth planning well in advance, for you can find a relaxed rainbow vibe in this desert town any time of the year. Of course, when it’s winter everywhere else, it feels like paradise in the Cali desert, but as temps rise from May to October, hotel deals abound. Here you can always count on time slowing down, with life centering around the swimming pool and Lady Gaga, I mean, sun worship. Let’s not be pokerfaced about it: Palm Springs is mountains, blissful breezes, palm trees, and powering down.

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Restaurants, gay bars to try on a New York vacation

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

New york hotel By Anthony Grant

In New York it’s hard to keep up with the restaurant scene because in even in a recession there are plenty of new openings. In a city with some 18,500 restaurants, there’s no excuse for not expanding your dining horizons. But I think the real secret to a memorable experience is to follow the buzz instead of the herd.

One of my favorites is Braeburn in the West Village, where a contemporary American bistro aesthetic prevails: Stained light walnut wood covers the floor, and the windows of the entrance and dining room are adorned with alder wood branches. If it’s chicken pot pie night you’re in for a treat, and on any night, the apple cider doughnut holes are not to be missed.

Though always buzzing with a hip international crowd, there always seems to be a table ready at Delicatessen, which of course is not really a delicatessen. It is, rather, a sleek downtown cafeteria for the 21st century. Expect the likes of Cheeseburger Spring Rolls (bechamel sauce is involved), grilled mahi mahi tacos, Prince Edward Island mussels and Grandma’s Meatloaf.

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Gay travel goes gourmet with Barcelona’s great eats

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

Gay-travel
By Anthony Grant

There are lots of cities with the Mediterranean for a backyard, but for me, none have the crackle or chemistry of Barcelona. Just saying it makes me hungry, and my most recent trip did not disappoint. Maybe it was the bread pudding with pineapple and bacon ice cream at the all-dessert wonderland called Espai Sucre, in the Born district by the harbor. Of course, I was at my happiest raiding the counters of Cacao Sampaka, in the Gothic quarter, for this chocolate shop’s heavenly bergamot-infused milk chocolate bars. (I missed the La Joya bars, made from the rare white Criollo cocoa bean, but that’s one more reason to go back).

Carrying gourmet Catalan chocolate bars around is the best fuel I could think of to get through a Barcelona vacation spent gawking at beautiful Art Nouveau buildings and striking Gaudi architecture. When a bigger appetite kicked in, though, I often found myself in the harborside Barceloneta district, where three great Catalan seafood spots are El Lobito, Jaica and El Suquet de l’Amirall. But Celler de Tapas is right on the Plaza Universidad and on the edge of Eixample, the gay district. But this modern, friendly eatery on your gay travel itinerary for the best patatas bravas — thick-cut French fries with spicy tomato sauce — in town, along with an easy-to-understand of menu of meatier tapas, many involving that succulent Spanish ham.

But speaking of succulence, how could I forget sleek Suculus, a new restaurant right in the heart of the gay district? The color scheme here is emerald green and ice white, and the what the kitchen turns out will seriously turn you on: cod au gratin with tender garlic in a red pepper sauce; gran masala tuna wrapped in Iberian cured ham; duck ham salad with dried fruits and nuts in a reduction of Pedro Ximenez and — my personal favorite — Toblerone Tiramisu. I also like the fact that the kitchen here is open until midnight.

Midnight is a fine time to have a glass of Rioja at the lobby bar of the gay Axel Hotel, the cool “hetero-friendly” hostelry that continues to be a fixture on Barcelona’s bubbling gay nightlife scene. There’s always a party of some kind brewing here.

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Designers up hip factor of Paris hotels

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Paris-hotels By Anthony Grant

Whether it’s the best of times or the worst of times there will always be Paris. The French capital is so dense with history and creativity that it’s almost immune from the slings and arrows of global economic downturn — especially if you breeze into town for a few days. If you do, some new Paris hotels will be vying for your attention.

One is the strangely named Mama Shelter, which makes up for in hipness (designed by Philippe Starck) what it lacks in central location. Though it may be a long way from the Seine, out in the Bagnolet section of the 20th arrondissement, hipsters are gonna love the fiesty melange of bare concrete walls, luxury linens and Chewbacca lampshades. The overall vibe is more of what the French call “hetero cool,” but you can think pink as you stroll past the nearby Pere Lachaise cemetery, last resting place of Oscar Wilde, and on up  to 184 Rue des Pyrenees, where you’ll find Le Riad, a gay-friendly Moroccan-inspired hammam, with mint tea and all.

Like Mama Shelter, the smaller but also new One by the Five goes for the hip factor, but it’s location on the Rue Flatters, in the fifth arrondissement, puts you closer to the Latin Quarter and the Seine. But there’s hip and then there’s Christian Lacroix. I said Lacroix, sweetie: and yes, you can channel Patsy and Edwina as you revel in the absolutely fabulous styling job Monsieur Lacroix gave to the Hotel Bellechasse, down the street from the mighty Musée d’Orsay. It’s a designer’s dreamscape. Ask for one of the Pompeii or Mousquetaire rooms.

As author of a well-known guidebook to Paris, I’m often asked where to go for a good meal in Paris that’s not too expensive. To give the complete answer, well, I’d have to write (another) book, but one of my favorites is right in the heart of the gay Marais district and it’s called Les Fous d’en Face. Reliable, delicious, cozy, with great wines, killer desserts and waiters with charming smiles: what more could you want? Spanish tapas, perhaps — if that’s the case, get grazing at trendy Toro, on the edge of the high-energy Montorgueil district. A stuffed bull’s head over the bar sets the tone. After dinner you could take in a late show at the UGC Les Halles multiplex. Beaucoup de French students!

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Gay travel: Hip ‘hoods, skiing in Chile

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

By Matthew Link

Santiago_chile

The one thing about Santiago, Chile’s amazingly modern glass-and-steel capital, is that you are never far from nature. I just returned from a trip there, and was shocked to see the almost 18,000-foot peaks of the Andes showing their heads from above the tall buildings. I had to spend a couple of days snowboarding in the rich spring snow of Valle Nevado, a mere 90-minutes drive from Santiago, tucked up a long valley that seems to head to the sky. With two other adjoining ski areas, Valle Nevado is South America’s largest ski area, with world-class dining and a worldly following to boot (I heard Portuguese, German, French, and of course American English).

Branko, a gay friend of mine who works in one of the best Santiago hotels, the Ritz Carlton, took me on one of the hotel’s side trips out of the city to nearby Cajon Maipo. Here, we rode horses inside a lush cactus-dotted valley with even more snow-capped Andes. Of course, we brought a bottle of excellent Chilean wine and drank that at the top of the peak.

That’s not to say there isn’t enough right in the immaculate city of Santiago to keep you busy for ages. The old colonial Bellavista area is a low-rise, leafy, laidback, and also gay-popular neighborhood where the hipsters hang out, patronizing the sophisticated and sleek New York-style bistros and artsy San Francisco-style bars. Bellavista is full of everything from small gay bear pubs to large multilevel gay discos with strippers. Sure, the scene may not be as big or out as in Buenos Aires or Rio, but I preferred the underground, local aspect to it all. I don’t think I saw one other tourist.

The next day, I strolled down JM De La Barra Avenue in the Parque Forestal neighborhood, where a long line of sidewalk cafes host gays sipping on cortado coffees and coyly eyeing one another. Chic Parque Forestal, with its jutting crown of Santa Lucia Park, its Art Noveau-era Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, and its designer shops and restaurants, looks like it could have all been imported directly from Paris. It’s no surprise that most of Santiago’s gay population resides in the tony apartments here.

Chile is enjoying a newfound freedom, after decades under the military abuses of the dictator Augusto Pinochet. Homosexuality was legalized in 1998, an anti-divorce law was finally abolished in 2004, and with a gay-friendly female president and talk of legalizing gay marriage in the air, Chile is sure to make a big bleep on the gay travel radar soon. I recommend getting there now before the rush.

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Matthew Link is the Editor At Large for The Out Traveler magazine, as well as a contributor to Newsweek. Having been to over 60 countries and all 7 continents doesn’t keep him from getting on the next plane away from his home in New York City.

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Lesbian travel company plans first cruise in 2009

Friday, October 24th, 2008

Lesbian_travel
By Lena Katz

New lesbian travel company Sweet is venturing into as-yet-uncharted territory, with a luxury cruise/volun-tourism cruise planned to depart New Orleans in 2009. The company has teamed up with Norwegian Cruise Line as well as Hands On New Orleans, a non-profit dedicated to hurricane relief and rebuilding.

"We look to provide eco-friendly and fun vacations that make the world a better place," explains Sweet’s founder Shannon Wentworth. She says that this large-scale inaugural cruise will offer an "alternative" for lesbians who might not feel comfortable in a classic, conservative hetero cruise environment. She also intends to provide a responsible way to go on a cruise — which many might concur is timely, considering the current cruise industry’s comparatively disconnected tourism practices.

"Lesbians are searching for more meaning. We’re working to preserve the places to which we travel, for future generations," she says.

Thus far, Sweet is focused on building its cruise offerings. However in the long-term, the company will expand into other travel arenas and destinations.  Already it spans the borders of "alternative lifestyles" travel and eco-tourism; Wentworth hopes to move into weddings as soon as same sex marriages are more widely recognized. Her first ideal destination would be the Riviera Maya. Already, she says many couples are planning to board in New Orleans for the inaugural cruise. Along with the appeal of celebrating amongst like-minded souls, there’s the hope of bonding with communities along the journey. Wentworth explains:

"We’re seen as people doing things to help them, so residents come out do these projects with us. Once they meet us, they’re going to realize that we’re just people…It builds bridges of understanding."

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Lena Katz lives on the Left Coast and writes about tropical islands, beach clubs and food, but her heart belongs to NYC.

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Add the Orbitz Travel Blog to your site

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

Travel_blog_widget
Want to add Orbitz Travel Blog features and tips to your own blog or Web site?

We’re happy to share, so we’ve created a collection of  easy-to-use widgets — featuring our latest travel stories — that you can drop into blogs, facebook and MySpace pages, iGoogle readers and a whole lot more.

And if you only want, say, stories about Las Vegas vacations, business travel or gay travel, you can tailor the content to your tastes and interests.

To add Orbitz Travel Blog content to your pages, just choose from any of the links below, design the Widgetbox widget that’s right for you, click "Get widget," and follow the instructions.

You can also take advantage of our RSS feeds with specialized Orbitz Travel Blog content.

Widgets and RSS feeds

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Revisiting Hawaii’s hula tradition

Monday, October 6th, 2008

Hawaiivacationgaytravel
By Matthew Link

Hawaii has finally entered the national political discourse as the place where Barack Obama hails from. Spending any time in the islands will show you a lot about how the Aloha State shaped the candidate, from racial tolerance to inclusion of all classes to speaking in mythological terms.

I just republished my gay guidebook to Hawaii, which I first wrote when I was a resident of the Big Island for five years in the late ’90s. I now live in New York City (the antithesis of Hawaii!), but researching the islands all over again brought back all the wonderful aspects of the state’s unique culture I had forgotten.

One of the most famous and most important parts of Hawaii culture is the hula dance. Hula itself has been called the lifeblood of the Hawaiian people, and along with mele (chants), it was the main form of storytelling and handing down of legends and historical events for the ancient Hawaiians, in place of a written language. For years, students would train under a kumu hula, who would scrutinize with an eagle eye to make sure not one movement was off, which might alter the meaning of a dance.

Interestingly, some scholars say men were the only ones allowed to dance hula in the very old days. Muscular males would enact the precise dance clad only in malo (loincloths), and Western missionaries suppressed what they saw as a lewd, suggestive dance. Not surprisingly, many mahu (the Hawaiian word for gay men) kept the dance alive in secret, and continue to be at the forefront of the dance’s revival today.

Nowadays, hula falls into two categories. The kahiko hula (ancient) involved traditional instruments or dress, and is serious in tone. A kumu hula sits on the ground drumming a hollow gourd and chanting an old mele, with the dancers also involved call-and-response chanting. The ‘auana hula (modern) is much freer and more jovial in style, and can depict topics as contemporary as airplane travel, surf tournaments, even basketball games! ‘Auana hula usually includes a band of some sort.

Many Hawaii hotels and resorts have some sort of luau or hula show. Many can be cheesy, but check out of the partially gay-owned Old Lahaina Luau on Maui for a more traditional approach. The rural island of Molokai is famous as the legendary birthplace of hula (not to mention it’s home to a plethora of Polynesian transvestites), and the isle hosts the popular Molokai Ka Hula Piko festival for three days in May. Papohaku Beach Park comes alive with food, music, crafts, and excellent displays by proud local hula groups.

But by far the best hula experience you can ever have is at the Merrie Monarch Festival in Hilo on the Big Island. The festival is broadcast live across the state starting Easter Sunday and lasting a week. Tickets sell out months in advance — that’s why I’m telling you about it now! Many halau (hula troupes) compete from around the world, and some of the most beautiful men and women in the islands make for great eye candy.

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Matthew Link is the Editor At Large for The Out Traveler magazine, as
well as a contributor to Newsweek. Having been to over 60 countries and
all 7 continents doesn’t keep him from getting on the next plane away
from his home in New York City.

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Top U.S. haunted houses, Halloween events

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

Halloweentravel
No longer just for the little monsters, Halloween has evolved into an event for everyone — and a great excuse to hit the road for a fun and/or frightening adventure. Here’s a look at some of the top Halloween events from coast to coast.

Key West Fantasy Fest

Once a slow period for Key West hotels and other businesses, October is sizzling in the southernmost U.S. city thanks to Fantasy Fest,
which runs October 17 to 26. Loosely linked to Halloween, it’s a series
of over-the-top parades, performances and parties, including the Wild
and Kinky Luau, the Pet Masquerade and Parade, the Pirate Wenches in
Paradise contest, Sloppy Joe’s 25th annual Toga Party, the Pimp and Ho
Party and, well, you get the idea.

Universal Orlando — Halloween Horror Nights

If you’re looking for some serious Florida frights, check out Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Orlando, which continues through November 1. Described by
one critic as "the country’s best Halloween event," it includes haunted
houses, live shows and "scare zones" featuring an assortment of
monsters and maniacs wandering darkened studio streets as Bloody Mary
brings frightening urban legends to life.

Universal Hollywood — Halloween Horror Nights

On the other coast, our friend Freddy Krueger is loose on the backlot
at Universal Studios Hollywood. Halloween Horror Nights frights include
a Backlot Terror Tram, a Nightmare on Elm Street maze, new scare zones,
and another maze featuring killers from the new film "The Strangers."
It continues through November 1.

West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval

For a different kind of Halloween adventure, head to West Hollywood for Carnaval 2008.
The city hosts a series of events — including a Drag Race and Beauty
Pageant and Doggy Costume Conest on October 26 — that culminate on
October 31 with a giant costume party along Santa Monica Boulevard from
6 to 11 p.m. Some 300,000 revelers are expected at the party, which
describes itself as the world’s largest adult, outdoor Halloween event.
Tip: Don’t take the kids to this one.

Village Halloween Parade

New York City’s Village Halloween Parade touts itself as the country’s
largest, "most wildly creative" participatory event. Indeed, millions
are expected to join 50 bands, hundreds of puppets, some 60,000
elaborately costumed marchers and much more at the parade, which runs
along 6th Avenue from Spring Street to 21st Street starting at 7 p.m.
on October 31.

Terror Behind the Walls

One of the most inherently creepy events may be Terror Behind the Walls, now in its 18th year at the abandoned Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia.
"Terror," which runs through November 2, features 140 actors,
animatronic props, digital sound effects and Hollywood-caliber costumes
and makeup. But the star is the aging, 11-acre gothic prison, a
National Historic Landmark that is said to be haunted. Reservations are
recommended.

Bates Motel

Twenty miles west of Philadelphia, you can check into the "Psycho"-inspired Bates Motel Haunted House, promising what it calls the "most incredible display of terror and mayhem" this side of Hollywood (not recommended for kids under 8 or people with heart conditions). If you can handle it, the frights continue with the Haunted Hayride, a 25-minute ride through a haunted forest at Arasapha Farm.

Salem, Massachusetts — Haunted Happenings

Salem, Massachusetts, near Boston could make a good case for being one of the world’s Halloween capitals. And throughout October it offers up Haunted Happenings, a series of alternately disturbing and historic events highlighting its enduring association with witchcraft. Among the highlights is "Spiritways: A Night in Besieged Salem Village," described as a terrifying, full-immersion visit to the Salem of the infamous "afflicted girls" (not recommended for young children). At "Cry Innocent: the People vs. Bridget Bishop," audience members are on a 1692 jury as Bridget Bishop is brought up on witchcraft charges. Visitors also can check out the popular Salem Witch Museum.

San Francisco Halloween Festival

San Francisco’s hosting what it calls an all-inclusive, all-ages festival in the parking lot of AT&T Ballpark from 4 p.m. to midnight. It will include a haunted house, a food pavilion, classic horror movies, music, performance art and more. The festival says the streets surrounding Lot A will be transformed into a "safe and fun Halloween wonderland" featuring ghosts, zombies, black cats, drag queens and a whole lot more.

Krewe of Boo, New Orleans

The obvious go-to destination during Mardi Gras season, New Orleans’
is making a move to become a Halloween hot spot with its inaugural Krewe of Boo
Parade on October 31. The Uptown event — featuring 22 floats and
hundreds of costumed characters along St. Charles Avenue and Canal
Street — promises a family-friendly parade mixing Halloween-style fun
with New Orleans tradition. Following the parade is the Halloween
Costume Expose, which is expected to attract several thousand
partygoers.

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Gay travel: Top California honeymoon destinations

Monday, September 8th, 2008

Gay_travel_santa_barbara
By Matthew Link

My cousin and his long-time partner got married recently in Pacific Palisades in L.A. Both dressed in white tuxes, with flowers all around, it was such a normal (for lack of a better word) ceremony — so traditional, in fact, that my Mormon aunt and uncle attended it as if it were any other marriage. (These were the same people who voted for California’s anti-gay marriage amendment.) The heavily populated Golden State has helped make same-sex unions, legal here earlier this year, almost ordinary in the U.S. And it’s about time!

So whether you’re hitched or just want to have a honeymoon-style romantic vacation, here are my top 10 recommendations in California (my home state), perfect for cuddling up with your main squeeze.

1. Lake Tahoe –- This turquoise jewel deep in California’s majestic Sierra Nevada range is home to gay ski weeks and a longtime gay lounge. Rent a house or cabin on the North Shore for ideal seclusion.

2. San Diego –- This mellow, friendly city has great gay beaches, several gay-populated districts, multiple gay lodgings, and history and culture to boot. Bring your surfboards to catch some waves at gay favorites Black’s Beach or San Onofre Beach.

3. Santa Barbara –- Art galleries, Spanish architecture, and an affluent, progressive populace makes this a natural choice for a gay honeymoon. Be sure to spend time cuddling on one of the cliff-lined gay-popular beaches too.

4. San Francisco –- You’ll both leave your heart in the gayest city in America, ground zero for California’s gay marriage movement. Stay in cozy Victorian gay B&Bs, eat at excellent gay restaurants, take gay tours, and bask on gay beaches (at least when the fog rolls out!).

5. Palm Springs –- Although known for the sexual temperature of its lavish gay resorts, this queer desert hideaway is home to a number of couple-friendly gay lodgings, as well as elegant Mid-Century vacation home rentals.

6. Russian River -– A favorite getaway for bears and lesbians, this friendly area deep in the woods of northern California is the gayest rural area you’ll find in the U.S., with mellow queer resorts, bars and paddling on said river.

7. Big Sur –- Although it’s the site of recent brush fires (which thankfully didn’t totally destroy it), this quiet yet dramatic area — perched on impossibly sloping mountains spilling into the sea — is home to artsy, bohemian residents, gay-friendly beaches, and even gay vacation rentals.

8. San Luis Obispo — Slowly coming on the LGBT travelers’ radars is this gorgeous oak-filled college town halfway between L.A. and San Francisco, home to many gay businesses and a lovely gay-popular beach cove.

9. Laguna Beach –- This tony, sun-drenched beach town in Orange County has long been a gay getaway. Expect serene coastlines, art galleries, and glistening Speedoed boys.

10. West Hollywood –- Known more for its randy nightlife than romance, L.A.’s queer enclave is nonetheless a tranquil locale (once you get off of Santa Monica Boulevard), with good-looking residential areas, shopping and above-par restaurants.

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Matthew Link is the Editor At Large for The Out Traveler magazine, as
well as a contributor to Newsweek. Having been to over 60 countries and
all 7 continents doesn’t keep him from getting on the next plane away
from his home in New York City.

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