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Why Calgary Keeps On Impressing Me

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Calgary amazes me.

I've visited the city three times in the past 18 months and keep waiting for that moment when I can say, "A-ha, this town and it's people just aren't as appealing as they first seemed."

Instead, this time, I explored further, investigated deeper, and returned with the same conclusion as I previously did: It is a city whose economic boom has led to a blossoming of culture that has created one of the most vibrant and enjoyable places to visit in North America.

I laugh here. It is so easy to get along with Calgarians and easy, too, to become bemused by their spirit. At a concert featuring members of the Electric Light Orchestra, audience members eschewed the rules that forbid dancing in the aisles and boogied like it was 1979 at the Jubilee Auditorium. The band members, grey-haired and showing their age, grinned broadly and appeared stunned by the display from a crowd of people mostly from their generation. I was awed, remembering concerts at venues in Vancouver and Toronto where people of much younger age showed no rebelliousness when told to sit down at shows with more energetic music.

At Muse, the enthusiasm continues. The decor at this Kensington Village restaurant is fun-loving even though the food prepared by chef JP Pedhirney is meticulously created and presented with artistic flair. It's a pricey place to eat, with entrees starting at $36 and tasting menus ranging from $85 for five courses to $110 for eight. But it's well loved and well trafficked, as Calgary's business success has led to a high amount of discretionary cash in the hands of residents, thus allowing culinary talent like Pedhirney's to flourish. [Read Vacay.ca's feature on Muse.]

"Some people say there are more Americans living here than any other city outside of the U.S. and maybe that's why Calgary has such an entrepreneurial spirit," says Stephen Deere, who was raised in Calgary and is a co-owner of the restaurant.

On the night I visited, Muse was packed, with jovial tables kicking back wine from a solid international selection and dining happily on Pedhirney's cuisine, a mix of French and Italian flavours invigorated with contemporary elegance. The team at Muse embodies Calgary's community-mindedness. They're sharp, hard-working, quick with a grin, talented and genuinely gracious. It's not at all a surprise that you will enjoy your meal here.

Similarly, Model Milk will give you an experience you're not likely to find at most fine-dining restaurants. The Fish Tacos for Two ($52) feature a whole-roasted Chilean sea bass, served with a range of condiments -- including sriracha and pickled jalapeño peppers -- alongside house-made corn tortillas.

I'm not a fan of build-your-own-food concepts because, well, that's what diners pay the kitchen staff for, but this was awesome -- and fun. Newly opened Market serves a deconstructed Chicken Pot Pie ($16) for lunch that shows comfort food can be whimsical, too, and Yellow Door Bistro at Hotel Arts is another fresh spot that joins this city's incredibly hot dining scene.

See a Photo Gallery of Calgary After the Flood

When you're done eating, trek to the Calgary Zoo, which was devastated from the June flooding of the Bow River. It re-opened last month with a sobering display of posters that show the facts of the disaster, including $50 million in damage. The zoo is relying on -- what else? -- Calgary's civic-mindedness to recover, calling for visitors and donations.

Something tells me the people of this city will step up. [Read "7 Reasons to Visit Calgary After the Flood"]

While the approximately 100,000 United States citizens in the metropolitan area of Calgary may be responsible for plenty of the city's enterprising mentality, it is the character emanating from rural Alberta that I suspect is the pillar of Western Hospitality. Volunteers wearing the city's famed white cowboy hats are on scene to greet you at the airport. They evoke the Stampede, but also the memory of how Calgary and southern Alberta rallied to support each other during the summer flood. The city is back, more confident than ever.

None of what I write is to suggest Canada's third-largest municipality is without fault. As many frustrated Calgarians point out, the city of one million lacks great cultural festivals other than the annual Stampede, and while the culinary scene has emerged, Calgary is missing the quality of art and music to make it a rival to other metropolises. The mountain activities are farther away than they are in Vancouver and the nightlife is a distant trailer to what visitors will find in Montreal and Toronto.

For a down-to-earth good time and small-town friendliness in a big and safe city, though, Calgary rides high and alone on this continent.

My next visit will always be too far into the future.

MORE VACAY.CA COVERAGE OF CALGARY



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Obama's Life In Hawaii: A Travel Guide Through The President's Island Past

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Before there was President Barack Obama, the 44th president of the United States, there was Barry -- a basketball-loving, body-surfing local boy from the Hawaiian island of Oahu.

In an essay for his high school's alumni magazine, the Punahou Bulletin, published in 1999, Obama wrote of his home state: "The opportunity that Hawaii offered—to experience a variety of cultures in a climate of mutual respect—became an integral part of my world view, and a basis for the values that I hold most dear."

Make your Hawaii vacation a presidential one by visiting the historic places of Obama's early life.

Where he was born...
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Kapiolani Medical Center, Honolulu, HI: Visit the hospital where the voice -- or, more likely, the cry -- of the 44th U.S. president was first heard. Previously known as the Kapiolani Maternity and Gynecological Hospital, this is where the infamous question of Obama's Hawaii birth certificate began. The president was born here on Aug. 4, 1961.

Where he surfed...
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Sandy's Beach: Growing up on an island will make anyone a beach bum and the president is no exception. Obama grew up body surfing the shore break waves at Sandy's Beach Park on Oahu's south shore.

The popular wave is still buzzing with locals, playfully carving through the sandy barrels. The wave can be a little dangerous for the less experienced, but you can take some notes while watching the president surf Sandy's in a video here.

Where he went to school...
punahou school
Punahou School, Honolulu, HI: Pass by the hallways and classrooms where the president endured the typical awkward growing pains of high school. Punahou School is one of the most prestigious private, college preparatory schools in the state. It's where Obama wrote poetry for the literary journal, played on the junior and varsity basketball teams, and even sang in the choir during his freshman year.

Bonus: Drive by Noelani Elementary School, where a very young Barry attended kindergarten in 1966. (Both school campuses are still open and active with students, but school approval is needed before stepping onto campus property.)

Where his parents when to college ... And made history...
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University of Hawaii, Manoa: The Obama family made history at the university in more than one way. Not only is it where Obama's mother, Ann Dunham, first met his biological father, Barack Obama Sr., sparking their eventual marriage on the island of Maui, it was also where Obama Sr., originally from Kenya, became the first African foreign exchange student in the university's history.

It's obvious that the president's intellectual side is inherited from both of his parents. Obama Sr. graduated from the University of Hawaii, Manoa with a B.A. in economics and continued his education at Harvard. Years later, Obama's mother would graduate from the same university, earning a B.A. in both anthropology and mathematics.

Where his mother's ashes were spread...
obama ashes hawaii
Lanai Lookout: Pay your respects to one of the most important people in our president's life, his late mother, Ann Dunham. Drive down to Oahu's southeast shore, past the famous Hanauma Bay, to a view point right before Sandy's beach. This is where Obama and his half sister said their final parting words to Ann, as they spread her ashes into the Pacific Ocean.

According to the Washington Post, "This was where Ann wanted them to toss her ashes. She felt connected to Hawaii, its geography, its sense of aloha, the fact that it made her two children possible -- but the woman who also loved to travel wanted her ashes to float across the ocean."

Humpback Whales Return To Hawaii, Do Their Best To Outshine The President

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The Obamas aren't the only VIPs enjoying a Hawaii homecoming right now. The humpback whales are back in town and it's arguably a bigger deal to those in the Aloha State than the president's arrival.

It's estimated that two-thirds of the entire North Pacific humpback whale population returns to Hawaii every December to breed, calve and nurse their young in the warm, shallow waters surrounding the island chain. (They stay through May.)

Adult male humpbacks range between 40 and 52 feet and weigh up to 45 tons. Despite their size, they are "surprisingly graceful acrobats." When they breach, up to 40 percent of their body is propelled out of the water.

For those of us not lucky enough to be with the Obamas and whales right now, here's a glimpse of what we're missing:

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The Best Places To Ski East Of The Rockies

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If you're into skiing or snowboarding, you know the West is where it's at to find North America's longest runs, busiest ski towns and dizzying vertical heights. But getting to Jackson Hole, WY or Whistler, BC isn't always practical or affordable for winter athletes living east of the Rockies.

We've compiled, in no particular order, our favorite ski resorts in the Midwest, North Atlantic, mid-Atlantic, East Coast and Eastern Canada. From Minnesota to outside Montreal, and all the way down to West Virginia, these mountains offer quality vertical and varied runs -- not to mention great vacation amenities -- to satisfy every skier and boarder.

Stay warm!

7 Reasons Not To Make A Bucket List

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They're fabulous in theory, but bucket lists -- from short ones to long ones to ones for the coming year -- can harm your travel life more than they help.

Here are seven reasons to ditch yours.

1. A bucket list gives you tunnel vision.
If you arrive in Australia fixated on that singular bungee jump that's been on your list for decades, you're a lot less apt to notice the kangaroo by the side of the road-- you know what we're sayin'? When you design an entire trip out of crossing off one specific activity, you automatically make that activity the "purpose" of the trip. Consequently, you're more likely to turn down any little side adventure, attraction, or spontaneous offer that steals time away from the trip's "purpose." And as we know, it's those random side adventures that make travel awesome.

2. High expectations will sabotage you.
You've been Googling pictures of that jellyfish lake -- where you can swim among golden jellies without a sting -- for years. So what if, due to migration patterns, the jellies aren't swarming on the day you finally make your visit? Major disappointment. Trip ruined. Your expectations have rendered this trip "a failure," and it's going to feel horrible. Much of the time, it's better to travel carefree, expecting nothing more than quality time with yourself or those around you.

3. Bucket lists make you travel for obligation, not pleasure.
You don't reeeally have money to spend on your bucket-list ticket to the soccer league finals, but you're doing it anyway because it's on your bucket list, gosh darn it, and how could you neglect something on your one and only bucket list? The truth is, though, that people change and their travel goals change. When you have a bucket list, you risk spending precious travel time on experiences you feel obligated to complete, not on experiences that you're craving at the moment. Travel when you want, and go where you want... follow your whims.

4. Bucket lists cause regret.
You're not a "bad" traveler because you didn't get to everything on your bucket list, or because you've yet to check anything off it yet. But that's the way we tend to think whenever make a list of sky-high goals. A bucket list automatically sets a travel standard for yourself, and it's a standard you're not likely to meet. Ditching it erases the potential for regret and allows you to celebrate the trips that you do accomplish.

5. You'll miss out on spontaneous getaways.
Bucket lists are not often cheap to complete. So if you're serious about your bucket list, you're much more likely to turn down all those little trips along the way, because you're saving money and energy for your "big" bucket list journeys. Spontaneity is pretty much the essence of travel, though, and when you look back, you'll be bummed that you didn't hop on your friend's last-minute road trip or that two-day-only deal with flights to Hawaii. Embrace last-minute adventures!

6. Bucket lists contribute to the one-upping epidemic.
And nobody wants to cause an epidemic. Bucket lists are all about doing the most epic thing, in the most epic place, to make for the most epic life. Though we may tell ourselves otherwise, way too often the real reason for wanting this epic-ness is so we can brag about it to others in conversation... and on Facebook... and on Instagram. There is a question the traveler must always ask himself: am I pursuing these experiences for my own enjoyment, or for the enjoyment of telling others how much I enjoyed them?

7. A bucket list turns you into a tourist.
The issue here is how experiences make it onto your bucket list: much of the time, it's going to be because you saw them on a travel blog or on TV or in a guidebook. These activities are the coolest activities a particular town or region has to offer. But beelining for the regional hotspots, my friends, is what tourists do, not what travelers do. It is not the most authentic way to soak up local culture. Take that big-ticket music festival off your itinerary so you can escape crowds of foreigners and instead roll with the locals to where people really hang out.

7 Places You Should Only Go On The Shortest Day Of The Year

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Today (Saturday) is the winter solstice, also known as the shortest day of the year. This means that today, our great nation will receive a mere nine hours and 32 minutes of sunlight.

It also means it's a perfect day to visit those places where you wouldn't want to spend much time anyway.

If we had a speed-of-sound travel machine (which doesn't exist yet, but we're working on it), here are seven sites we'd hit up on the solstice... and on no other day of the year.

Stop 1: Oymyakon, Russia
This quaint Russian town is super charming... and also super frigid. Known as the coldest inhabited place on Earth, Oymyakon recorded a temperature of -90°F on its coldest day. NINETY DEGREES BELOW ZERO, people. During your visit, let local lumberjacks give you a tour of their village's post office and school. Maybe they'll even let you help load ice blocks onto a truck. It's a good thing you only have a couple minutes to spend here... you won't want to spend many more.
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Stop 2: Cuba
If it's illegal to spend money there, you might as well do it when you have the least amount of time to cause a stir. Hop across the sea, spend a few bucks on cigars, and make your stealthy exit (for how not to visit, see Beyoncé).
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Stop 3: Mount Etna, Italy
Europe's most active volcano has been eruptingalarmingly often in recent years, sometimes even coating the nearby town of Sicily in thick ash. Take a cable car up the side of the mountain and do a little off-road hiking around the volcano's volatile summit. Don't stay too long, or you might find yourself in a footrace with lava.
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Stop 4: Zurich, Switzerland
If you're gonna go to the most expensive city in the world, it'd be smart to visit when you have limited daylight hours in which to spend your cash. Beware the Sihlcity, Zurich's new 100,000-square-meter mega-mall-slash-cinema-slash-fitness-center-slash-nightclub complex. If you make it out alive, purchase a mug of the world's best hot chocolate, hit the (pricey) ski slopes for a run or two, and hightail it before you break the bank.
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Stop 5: Somalia
Ok, this miiight be the most dangerous tourist destination in the world right now. But the coastline is exquisite, and less daylight means less time for pirates to capture you, right?
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Stop 6: Disney World
We love it here, but let's face it: this place is very, very tiring. The best kind of day in Disney World is a nice, action-packed, short one... like the shortest day of the year, for example.
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Stop 7: Dallol, Ethiopia
In the mid 1960s, the average annual temperature in this former mining town was 96°F-- maybe that's why pretty much all the residents shipped out a few years ago. Dallol is still one of the hottest places on Earth, so it's a good thing that you'll only have a few hours to tour its volcanic hot springs and leftover mountains of sulphur. Such fun!
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'Step Into The Void' Is France's Answer To The CN Tower's Glass-Bottom Floor

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(Relaxnews) - It’s an invitation that’s not for the faint-hearted: 'Step into the Void' is the name of a transparent glass cube that simulates the sensation of stepping off the mountain cliff in the French Alps.

Located atop the Aiguille du Midi, altitude 3842 meters, in the Mont Blanc Massif range, daredevils step into the glass box “Pas dans le Vide” suspended more than 1,000 meters off the valley floor for an unparalleled panoramic view of their snowy surroundings.

Three years in the making, the structure is built from three layers of tempered glass and can withstand winds of more than 220 km/h and a maximum temperature of 60°.

step into the void

The attraction is accessible by the Aiguille du Midi cable car, a 20-minute journey from Chamonix.

It’s the latest glass-covered attraction to take visitors to new heights, following the Skywalk, a glass walkway overlooking the Grand Canyon, and the CN Tower in Toronto, which features a glass-bottom floor 1,122 m above ground.

The Step into the Void attraction opens Saturday, December 21.

'Stargazing In The Rockies' Showcases Alberta's Dark Skies (VIDEO)

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A stunning time-lapse video of stars in Alberta showcases the province's deep, dark skies.

"Stargazing in the Canadian Rockies" captures the brilliant stars in Jasper National Park, home to one of the world's largest Dark Sky preserves.

Filmed by photographer Jack Fusco during the 2013 Jasper Dark Sky Festival, the video features over 2,000 shots of the sky around Jasper National Park over two nights.

"I stayed out shooting and moving from spot to spot each night until just before sunrise," Fusco said on his website.

"The sky in the Columbia Icefield area was unlike any I had witnessed before," he added.

Some of the locations in the video include Pyramid Lake, the Athabasca Glacier and the province's picturesque Rocky Mountains.

Watch the video above and find more photos of Alberta's beautiful skies below:

Seeking Relief Outside Canada

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One of the unfortunate realities of Canada's monopolistic health-care system is that some people feel they have no choice but to seek the care they need outside the country.

And who can blame them?

Faced with waits for treatment that are often months long (sometimes stretching over a year), it should come as little surprise that many Canadians ultimately choose to be medical tourists. The question, of course, is how many?

While data on exactly how many patients seek treatment abroad are not readily available, it is possible to estimate this number using data from the Fraser Institute's annual waiting list survey and from the Canadian Institute for Health Information.

The Fraser Institute's annual waiting list survey asks physicians in 12 major medical specialties what percentage of their patients received non-emergency medical treatment outside Canada in the past year. In 2013, averaged across all medical specialties, almost one per cent of patients in Canada were estimated to have done so, the same as in 2012.

Putting these numbers together with data on the number of procedures performed in Canada from the Canadian Institute for Health Information reveals that a conservatively estimated 41,838 Canadians received treatment outside the country in 2013.

Interestingly, this year's estimate is a slight decrease from the 2012 estimate of 42,173. At the same time, the wait time from specialist consultation to treatment in Canada increased from 9.3 weeks in 2012 to 9.6 weeks in 2013.

Among the provinces, the estimated number of patients going outside Canada for treatment increased in Manitoba (1,636 this year vs. 1,435 last year), Ontario (19,118 vs. 15,725), and Nova Scotia (927 vs. 858). The figure was roughly the same for BC (8,146 vs. 8,132). On the other hand, the number fell in Alberta (5,527 vs. 6,661), Saskatchewan (714 vs. 1,380), Quebec (4,904 vs. 6,308), New Brunswick (372 vs. 997), PEI (8 vs. 28), and Newfoundland (486 vs. 649).

Among the 12 medical specialties, the largest numbers of patients receiving care outside Canada were estimated for urology (6,635), general surgery (5,537), and ophthalmology (3,083). Patients were less likely to be receiving cardiovascular surgeries (114), radiation treatment for cancer (127), and chemotherapy for cancer (249) in another country.

Those numbers are not insubstantial. They point to a sizable number of Canadians whose needs and health care demands could not be satisfied in Canada. They also point to a large market of patients that might choose to remain in Canada (and in their home province) if only they had that option. One can only wonder how many more would have liked to join them, but couldn't afford the travel on top of the privately funded care.

There are a number of possible reasons why Canadians ultimately received the care they required outside of the country. Some may have been sent abroad by the public health care system because of a lack of available resources or the fact that some procedures or equipment are not provided in their home jurisdiction. Others may have left in response to concerns about quality, seeking out more advanced health care facilities, higher tech medicine, or better outcomes. Others may have fled Canadian health care in order to avoid some of the consequences of waiting for care such as worsening of their condition, poorer outcomes following treatment, disability or death. And some may have done so simply to avoid delay and to make a quicker return to their life.

That a considerable number of Canadians traveled and paid to escape the well-known failings of the Canadian health-care system speaks volumes about how well the system is working for them. It leaves open the question of just how many more Canadians might choose medical tourism outside Canada if given the opportunity.

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Your Weekly Travel Zen: Holiday Lights

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holiday lights

This week's Moment of Travel Zen comes to us from Melissa de Castro. Of her photo she says:

Holiday lights are visionary joy. They allow us to pause and admire the beauty that adorns the world for the season. As the darkness if winter descends, the sparkle of glittering lights allows for an awakening of wonderment. Trees which otherwise would be unseen in the stillness of night, instead radiate the happiness of the season. Lights are strung from heights and decorate the air above, and invite us to look up and admire beauty. Holidays are precious gifts. They ask us kindly to remember to patient in a season that demands speed. Holiday lights are beautiful reminders to savor the joy of the moment, remember the love of the past, and look forward to the happiness that is yet to come.


Winter holiday lights bring happiness to people around the world. From Christmas trees to twinkling decorations to candles and stars, holiday lights bring us together for a festive season.

Where have you traveled for a moment of zen? Email travel@huffingtonpost.com with your travel zen or submit below!

These Cities May Be Small, But They Have Something To Brag About

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Most everyone knows the big named metropolis in every state, but what about the little guy who offers just as much excitement without all the hype and expectation?

Small cities scattered about this great nation can give you that urban feel without the hustle and bustle that can often overwhelm. But which cities should you see and which should you skip?

Real estate agency Movoto went out exploring to find the top 10 small cities deemed the most exciting in the U.S. Manhattan's little friend on the other side of the Hudson River, Hoboken, NJ, won the top spot on the list. The quaint little town once held the Guinness Book of World Record for having the most bars per square mile (impressive) and is home to Carlos Bakery, made famous by the TLC show Cake Boss.

You may not have heard of some of these lovely little cities, but you'll want learn more about them now. Remember: bigger doesn't necessarily mean better.

Check out Movoto's ten most exciting small American cities.
These Are the 10 Most Exciting Small Cities in America By Movoto Real Estate

Can we give a round of applause to New Jersey for having not one, but two of their small cities make (and top!) the list? Clearly, there's only one way to celebrate!
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5 Kid-Friendly New Year's Getaways

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(Photo: Yosemite Lodge)


If these days leading up to Christmas are overflowing with commitments, consider stealing away for a getaway at New Year's before the kids get back to school. While finding a fun, kid-friendly vibe on New Year's Eve can sometimes be a challenge, many hotels and resorts are offering special family-friendly celebrations complete with kids' menus and bedtime-friendly celebrations. So if watching the ball drop from your living room feels unexciting, consider these getaways to celebrate the arrival of 2014:

Yosemite Lodge
Where: Yosemite National Park, CA Why: Because this family-friendly Yosemite lodge delivers a winter wonderland setting this time of year. Holiday packages include dinner for two, followed by a live band and dancing, while the kids get their own party from 6pm to 9:15pm in another part of the hotel, with games, raffle prizes, a DJ spinning tunes, snacks, and an early balloon drop at 9pm. During the day, you get to explore the wintry side of the iconic park, with skiing, snowshoeing, and snow tubing at Badger Pass, an ice rink inside the park, story times, and daily nature walks. The two- and three-night New Year's Eve Celebration packages start at $578 for two adults; kids cost an additional $34.50 a night.

Hershey Lodge
Where: Hershey, PA Why: Because there is perhaps no sweeter place to ring in the new year than Chocolate Town, USA, where the air really does smell like chocolate and the Square in downtown Hershey throws one of the most family-friendly New Year's parties in the country. This year, the free concert will be headlined by teen pop sensations R5, and the midnight countdown will again be accompanied by a seven-foot-tall Hershey's Kiss rising three stories in the air. At the luxurious Hotel Hershey, the Hershey's Chocolate World New Year's Eve package starts at $780 and includes two nights' accommodations, holiday kick-off party, New Year's Eve grand dinner, New Year's Day breakfast, admission to Hershey's Chocolate World, and more.


(MORE: View a family trip itinerary: 3 days in Hershey with kids.)


Purity Spring Resort
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(Photo: Purity Spring Resort)


Where: East Madison, NH Why: Because this lovely and kid-friendly New Hampshire resort throws a mighty New Year's Eve Family Celebration, offering a two-night all-inclusive package with a whirlwind of winter activities, including skiing, snowshoe tours, snow tubing, a torchlight parade, ice skating, music, fireworks, and bonfires. Indoors, kids can join parents in a pizza party, and watch the ball drop on the big screen. Meanwhile, "Tykes Night Out" entertains little ones with face painting, magic, and games. The package also bundles in breakfast, lunch, and dinner. All-inclusive rates start at $226 per night for two adults plus an additional $39.25 per night per child ages 4 to 12. There is an additional charge for horse-drawn sleigh rides and snow tubing, and babysitting can be arranged for $9 per hour, per child. To book, call 800/373-3754.

Legoland Hotel
Where: Carlsbad, CA Why: Because Kids' New Year's Eve is Legoland's biggest annual family-friendly party, allowing children to ring in 2014 without missing their bedtime. Channeling a decidedly Times Square vibe, Kids' New Year's Eve rocks the night with special musical performances from Grammy-nominated musical artists, a huge LEGO brick drop, and a spectacular fireworks display at 6pm. The Family Package for 4 starts at $689 and includes one night in a themed room at the Legoland Hotel plus four two-day resort hopper tickets, including admission to Legoland and Sea Life Aquarium.


(MORE: Read our review of the Legoland Hotel.)


Sunriver Resort
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(Photo: Sunriver Resort)

Where: Sunriver, OR Why: Because this kid-friendly resort near Bend, Oregon, kicks off its annual New Year's Eve Family Night celebration with board and arcade games, Wii with air guitars, prizes, ice cream sundaes, and sparkling cider for the East Coast countdown at 9 p.m. Afterward, teens can attend the "Rockin' New Year's Eve Teen Dance," with black lights, glow sticks, arcade games, and a mock-champagne toast at midnight, while grown-ups can head to their own celebration, billed as the biggest New Year's bash in Central Oregon. Not up for a party? Your family can sit down to a sumptuous three-course New Year's dinner at Meadows in the Lodge. During the holiday, the resort's best available rate starts at $187 a night. Admission to family night costs $30 per adult and $20 per child 12 and under; $25 for the teen dance; $50 per adult for the grown-up shindig. Alternatively, the holiday dinner costs $75 per adult and $32 for kids ages 6-12, with a kids' menu for the 5-and-under set.

Suzanne Rowan Kelleher contributed this to MiniTime.com.

Ice Storm Flight Cancellations, Travel Delays For Eastern Canada

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It may look like a winter wonderland out there, but it's shaping up to be a headache for anyone with travel plans on the East Coast, thanks to a late-night ice storm.

Airports and airlines are advising travellers flying in or out of any Canadian cities today to check with their airlines before leaving.

"Basically no matter where you are in the [eastern half of the] country right now, if you’re travelling between Canadian cities there’s a very good chance you’re going to have some headaches this morning," B.C. reporter Sherry Aske told CBC News.

Sunday's icy weather is already responsible for more than 120 cancelled flights at Toronto's Pearson International Airport. That number is expected to rise throughout the day, with even more flights delayed. The airport cautions any travellers heading to the airport to give themselves plenty of time today.




The situation isn't much different at the Toronto Island airport with dozens of cancellations and delays, according to the Toronto Port Authority's website.

Meanwhile at Ottawa's Macdonald-Cartier International, travellers can also expect dozens of delays and some cancellations. Montreal-Trudeau is also reporting a similar story with a handful of cancellations and dozens of delays as of Sunday afternoon.

Flyers can find more information about their flights by checking in with an airport's website. However, it's best to call your airline directly to make alternate arrangements.

Air Canada is allowing passengers affected by the storm to rebook without penalty, provided there's enough space. WestJet and Porter Airlines are also allowing their passengers to do the same via phone.

You can reach Air Canada's automated flight system at 1-888-422-7533.

Travellers flying with WestJet can call 1-888-937-8538 to rebook.

Flying with Porter? You can find out more about your flight at 1-888-619-8622.


But it's not just flyers the ice storm is impacting.

Via Rail is reporting delays on the Toronto-Montréal and Toronto-Ottawa routes due to the weather. Riders are urged to check this website for updates, or call 1-888-842-7245. Meanwhile, downed power lines and fallen tree branches are making for tricky driving and are the cause of extensive power outages across the Greater Toronto Area.

For travellers looking for visit friends and family within the GTA, GO Transit is warning its riders that service will be a bit slower today. Trains and buses are both running but trips will take a bit longer than usual.




Environment Canada for its part is advising people to be cautious and not to take any unnecessary risks.

"This will be one of the most heaviest ice rains or freezing rains we have seen in decades," said David Phillips, a climatologist with Environment Canada, in an interview with CTV. "I think it's important to be respectful of it and make sure you don’t do anything foolish."

Christmas In Hawaii: 7 Reasons It's Santa's Favorite

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The thought of a tropical Christmas may confuse many, but Hawaii proves that you don't need snow or freezing temperatures to fully embrace the Christmas spirit. Below, 7 reasons Hawaii Christmases are amazing:

1. Who needs chimneys when you can keep your window open on Christmas eve? Also, malasadas instead of cookies for Santa? Hawaii must be his favorite:


2. After all, even our governor looks like Santa:
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3. And our snowmen surf:


4. Our Christmas trees are edible:


5. And a white Christmas means something very different here:


6. Your options for an afternoon nap will be a touch more scenic than your couch:


7. Hawaii is Santa's last stop so it only makes sense that he and Mrs. Clause kick off their shoes, let loose, and stay a while:


Mele Kalikimaka, everyone!

Las Vegas Casino Holiday Exhibits Draw Tourists During Off-Season

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LAS VEGAS (AP) — Las Vegas has mostly shelved its attempt to rebrand itself as a family-friendly wonderland. But there's one exception: the dreaded holiday season, when visitor numbers crater and room vacancies soar.


In an attempt to lure tourists, Las Vegas casinos are staging increasingly elaborate holiday events.


The Bellagio has again transformed its conservatory into a faux winter wonderland featuring a 42-foot-tall Christmas tree, a life-sized candy house, a walk-through snow globe and topiary polar bears, all a few paces from the gambling floor.


The casino's famous dancing water fountains are leaping to Christmas classics, and tourists are taking photos with a 250-pound chocolate Grinch.


The Forum Shops at Caesars Palace is showing its Christmas cheer with "Elf Aquarists," divers in elf-style wet suits who feed the aquarium's tropical fish during daily shows.


Perhaps the most elaborate of all the exhibits is "Winter in Venice" at the Venetian, which the casino advertises as a public gift in banners strung outside its ersatz Italian facade.


December is traditionally the slowest month in Las Vegas. Last year, tourist volume fell from a high of 3.53 million visitors in March to a low of 3 million visitors in December, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority. November and January didn't look much better.


Keith Salwoski, spokesman for the Venetian and Palazzo hotel-casinos, said the winter extravaganza, now in its third year, has helped convince families to seriously consider a holiday vacation to Sin City.


"Every photo that is shared during the holidays, for instance, helps to change the perception of the destination for the Christmas traveler. Suddenly, spending Christmas in Vegas is on the radar of travelers," he said.


Beautifully costumed actors stroll around the casino halls, greeting children and posing for silly photos with adults. Outside, a 65-foot Christmas tree made of lights shines like a beacon, tempting pedestrians to come inside.


Helen and Bob Harrison spent a recent afternoon gazing at a cluster of white birds and poinsettias arranged in front of an indoor waterfall near a bank of slot machines at the Venetian. The Wichita, Kan., couple was celebrating their 60th wedding anniversary, and had decided to spend the week visiting all of the Strip's Christmas exhibits.


"I used to work in a flower shop, and I just love this. The design that goes into it — we don't have anything like that in our city," Helen Harrison said. "It's nice to not have to go to Europe to see all this stuff; it saves on travel."


The Cosmopolitan Las Vegas, a few blocks over, has doubled the size of its rooftop skating rink this year. Chief marketing officer Lisa Marchese said the casino is going for a "ski lodge perched over the Las Vegas Strip" aesthetic. Skaters can huddle around fire pits and buy s'mores kits for $14 (It's still the Strip, after all).


The rink at the Cosmopolitan is just one of several designed to entice desert visitors to casino properties. Caesars Palace, the Venetian and the Gold Spike are among those offering skaters an opportunity to lace up their boots for ice, real or artificial.


While most Las Vegas spectacles are designed to dazzle and erase the memory of home — with all its constraining social mores — the Christmas installations aim to remind tourists of their childhood.


"It's nostalgic," Marchese said. "I don't care where you grew up, I think everyone romanticizes the notion of skating in the winter."


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Hannah Dreier can be reached at http://twitter.com/hannahdreier


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Times Square Ball App Lets You Live The New Year's Drop From Anywhere

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By Natasha Baker
TORONTO (Reuters) - Revelers who can't make it to New York's Times Square to celebrate New Year's Eve can download an app to make sure they see the ball drop.
More than a million people from around the world flock to the famous area in midtown Manhattan which hosts one of the world's largest New Year's Eve celebrations. Another billion across the globe tune in on their televisions.
"It's one moment where 100 million Americans are all doing the same thing at the same time. They're all counting down to the same time thing," said Jeff Straus, president of New York City-based Countdown Entertainment, which organizes the annual event.
With the Times Square Ball app for iPhone and Android, people not near a television can tune in to the festivities from their smartphones. The app features a live six-hour webcast that will be available on New Year's Eve, with behind-the-scenes interviews, musical performances, countdowns and the fall of the Times Square Ball.
"We created the app because there's a whole other audience that can't be near their televisions or are overseas, but still want to be part of it and count down those final seconds with us," said Straus.
The app will include tweets from the Times Square Ball, which will be tweeting news and photos of the event from its perch high above the crowds.
"The ball's history goes back to 1907 when we had the first ball drop. It was basically a 5-foot (1.5-meter) ball of iron and wood with 100 125-watt light bulbs in it, which was the latest in lighting technology," said Straus.
It has been re-designed seven times since then. Over the years, computer controls and other features like strobe lights have been added.
The ball, which has been dropped every year since 1907 except for 1942 and 1943, is now over 12 feet in diameter, weighs nearly 6 tons and is adorned with over 32,000 LED lights in varied colors, according to the Times Square Alliance, white works to improve and promote the area.
The free app also has a countdown that can be configured to different time zones and is available worldwide.
People who want to join in on the fireworks on New Year's Eve in the London can download the free London New Year's Eve fireworks app for iPhone and Android created by the UK-based company Vodafone.
The app overlays the fireworks on display on the banks of the River Thames onto the smartphone camera. Its app will be released on December 30 at midnight.
(Editing by Patricia Reaney and Eric Walsh)

Ice Storm Causing Delays For Maritime Travellers

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The Christmas song I’ll be Home for Christmas is taking on a new meaning for travellers stuck in airports after an ice storm battered parts of Eastern Canada.


Dozens of flights at airports across the Maritimes were delayed or cancelled on one of the busiest travel weekends of the year. On Monday morning passengers at the Halifax Stanfield International Airport were still contending with a mess of delayed flights.


Passenger Sheehan Kirkwood said getting home is frustrating. 


"I've been away from my family for about five months now straight without seeing them. Christmas without them would be pretty heart breaking," he said Sunday night.


Peter Spurway, spokesperson for Halifax airport, said flights coming in from Toronto were delayed causing an uproar in the system.


Flight cancellations of both arrivals and departures are reported at airports in Saint John, Moncton and Fredericton, but some flights are reported as being on schedule.


Freezing rain warnings remain in place for the southern two-thirds of New Brunswick and P.E.I.


CBC meteorologist Peter Coade said he expects the freezing rain in southern New Brunswick to change to rain tonight as the trough of low pressure that has been almost stationary through the weekend to be pulled north today. Coade says that will also raise the likelihood of the snow in the rest of New Brunswick becoming mixed with or even changing to freezing rain later in the day.


The brunt of the ice storm that hit Ontario on Sunday is causing minimal damage in Nova Scotia.


The RCMP reported about two dozen collisions on Sunday, but there were no serious injuries.


“All of this brand of weather will come to an end overnight tonight as that low pressure centre moves across to the island of Newfoundland and Labrador taking this inclement weather with it,” said Coade.


At 7 a.m. AT there were around 5,000 NB Power customers without electricity in southwestern New Brunswick.


Crews in Nova Scotia restored the last cluster of outages early Monday morning in Amherst.

Planet Appetite: A Taste of the Eastern Townships, Quebec, Canada

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Farmers of the Eastern Townships, a fertile land of forests and rolling hills, on Quebec's border with the USA, are coaxing the best out of their soil and restaurants are working wonders with their produce

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It's around a 2 hour drive from Montreal to Compton, my first stop in the Eastern Townships. As you enter the region, you realise you're out in the wilds when road signs warn of Moose crossing. I'm thinking that this is unlikely until I pass an accident on the highway - there's been a collision and a rather distraught woman is standing in the middle of the road looking at the damage to her vehicle. It's September and I drive through a green and pleasant land of rolling hills, lush forests and cultivated fields. Many of the country roads are unsurfaced, probably because the harsh winters make them impossible to maintain.

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This south-eastern corner of Quebec borders the USA and the states of Vermont and Maine are neighbours. After the American War of Independence, farmers loyal to the English crossed over and settled here. Others followed them later, attracted by lush and fertile land, and the English place names reflect this. Ironically the area now is almost 100% French speaking, although most people do have some English, and they have the legendary Gallic pride in their food.

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Cheese
I'm hungry after my drive so I pull into Fromagerie la Station in Compton for a taste of their cheeses. Simon-Piere Bolduc's great grandfather Alfred established the farm in 1927 and they've been rearing Holsteins since the 1960's. All of Simon's 80 cows are descended from the same herd and the farm became organic in the 1990's. They've been making cheese here since 2004 and winning prizes everywhere for their raw milk products. I particularly like their Alfred Le Fermier, named after Simon's ancestor, a hard cheese, ripened over a period of eight months on wooden boards. It tastes flowery and nutty and Simon allows me a bite of some that's been aged 24 months and it blows my mouth away.

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Wine
Of course wine is the natural partner for cheese and the region has a total of 26 vineyards - there's even a signed Route Des Vins which links 20 of them. The valley of Dunham in Brome-Missisquoi County is home to L'Orpailleur, the first and largest vineyard in Quebec, founded in 1982. You'd think the winters would be too cold for grapes but they've adapted the Northern European techniques of covering the roots with earth in November and carefully removing it in the spring. Even so if the temperatures drop more than -15 degrees C, they light fires to protect them against frost. It obviously works - in 1985 the first harvest produced only 15,000 bottles but today they're up to more than 185,000. The main grapes are Seyval and Vidal, both white varieties and their champagne style Orpailleur Brut, made from 100% Seyval is very good indeed.

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Domaine Ives Hill, on the banks of Moe's River, was originally a dairy farm but now has 7000 blackcurrant bushes, plus many wild blackberries. As well as syrups and comfits, they're now making wine from their fruit. The technique is similar to the grape process except they add yeast and sugar and let the berries ferment for 21 days. After the seeds sink to the bottom, the must is pressed and the resulting liquid rests for 6 months. It's pressed a further 4 times before filtering and bottling. Murmure, made from wild blackberries, is good with Foie Gras or goat cheese and the blackcurrant, Domaine Ives Hill, works well with game or chocolate. They also make a low alcohol Cassigara which is blackcurrant wine mixed with wild blackberry juice. It's refreshing drinking, similar to Sangria.

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Apples and Cider
Apples are a major crop in the Townships and the Le Gros Pierre orchard consists of over 8,000 apple trees. You can pick your own apples, sample their delicious juice and even tuck into apple pie in the restaurant. Owner, Diane Goyette tells me she wants kids to come here so they can understand how apples are produced and it's a delightful spot. I leave munching their Les Croustilles de Pommes, apple chips, a natural product with no preservatives.

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Of course with apples comes cider and Domaine Pinnacle was the first to produce ice cider. It was Christian Barthomeuf's idea to utilise French ice wine methods, where the grapes are left to freeze on the vine, and do the same with apples. They stay on the trees until the frosts between Christmas and new year, and are then pressed frozen - the juice is left outside to freeze some more to concentrate the flavours and then left to ferment, with added wine yeast, for around 8 months. Their Signature Special Reserve squeezes 8 kg of apples into one 200 ml bottle and it shows. This makes the perfect digestif and is also good with blue cheese. It's worth mentioning their Domaine Pinnacle Réserve 1859, a blend of ice cider and calvados, aged for 2 years in Appalachian oak barrels, with an alcohol content of 16%.



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Union Libre has 550 apple trees and does fire and ice - ice cider, of course, but the fire is their invention. After the apples are picked, they're pressed and the juice heated slowly so the water evaporates. Only a quarter of the original volume is left and it's then fermented in stainless steel vats for several weeks. The result has an alcohol content of 11% and goes well with cheese. Their Fortified Fire Cider has added calvados and is aged in oak barrels for 6 years. It makes a good aperitif or dessert wine with blue cheese and chocolate.

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Places to Stay and Eat

Compton
Le Bocage is a charming country house hotel in a colonial mansion dating back to 1825. There are just 4 rooms, furnished with antiques, and the 6 course dinner makes it worth a detour. François Dubois, chef and owner, offers only 2 choices for each course and stipulates that couples must choose differently. Standouts include guinea fowl, stuffed with wild boar, and lavender crème brûlée. You can also bring your own wine which, of course, should be from one of the local vineyards.

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North Hatley
For luxury and outstanding food go to Manoir Hovey, a Relais & Châteaux hotel on the shores of Lake Massawippi. It was modelled on George Washington's Mount Vernon home but has been resort since 1950. Le Hatley restaurant is the jewel in its crown and the food is inventive, delicate and delicious. Local ingredients are to the fore and include pigeon breast, smoked goat and scallops, with a cheese cart the biggest in the province. I can't fault the food here and the dining room's lakeside panorama is magnificent.

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Sutton
A useful base for exploring the Dunham valley is the Gîte Vert le Mont Bed & Breakfast in the neighbouring town of Sutton. Lynda Graham has 5 rooms and serves a tremendous breakfast which includes her home made preserves. The village has plenty of restaurants and Le Pleasant Hotel & Café is few minutes' walk away. What you'll get here is good bistro food, perfectly cooked - I enjoy outstanding fries with my steak and their lemon meringue is even better than my mum's.

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For FREE brochures, advice and information call Tourisme Quebec: 0800 051 7055 between 3pm and 10pm daily or send an email.

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Tourism Eastern Townships has more information about the region.

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Quebec Original
has practical information including a full list of UK based tour operators featuring holidays to Quebec.

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Keep Exploring has information about Canada.

Air Canada flies direct to Montreal from London.

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All pictures copyright Rupert Parker

19 Things You'll Only Appreciate If You Studied Abroad

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Because as someone famous once said, "the best things you learn aren't learned in a classroom."

1. Contrary to every mother's belief, you won’t even feel sick if you eat gelato for every meal.
Or pizza. Or crepes. Or empanadas. Or anything in the top, bad-for-you section of the food pyramid. We’re on a budget here, people.


2. Humans are inherently kind.
Strangers will go far, far out of their way to help you get around. All you must do is ask sincerely and thank copiously.
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3. Just because something is in a guidebook doesn’t mean you have to go look at it.
Exhibit A: Manneken-Pis.
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4. It’s better for everyone if we just pretend Euros are dollars.
Just forget the exchange rate, and stop converting every price to dollars in your head. It causes too much pain.



5. Ryanair seats do not recline.
…but you could’ve guessed that from the prices.



6. America is not the center of the universe.
There are other people living on this planet, and they live differently than we do, and they are really happy that way. It’s an awesome thing to realize.
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7. Doner kebab as drunk food is one thousand times better than nachos as drunk food.
Mostly because nobody’s really sure which animal that shaved meat comes from. What a fun, mysterious taste bud adventure!
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8. Every person in a hostel is a potential best friend.
And sometimes they’ll agree to travel with you for days or weeks, after knowing you for a mere day. Voilà! Lifelong pals!



9. Trains don’t always depart when they say they will.
…or ever.



10. It is not only possible, but socially permissible, to wear the same outfit for seven days in a row
How else are you going to fit your suitcase into the easyJet carry-on box? All you really need are a few colored scarves… that way, people won’t notice the same T-shirt recurring in photo after photo.


11. English truly is the universal language.
And people who are learning English looove to practice it with you, even if they don't make sense.



12. Dinnertime in America is seriously warped.
Why did the Founding Fathers decide to eat at six when everybody else on the planet waits till 10?



13. Spontaneity is rewarded.
Like that time you snagged the one Euro flight to Finland in an online promo. Or when you bought a last-minute ticket to the show in Ibiza. They weren’t the most logical decisions, to be sure, but they’re memories you’ll replay in your mind forever.
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14. Nothing bonds you like traveling.
The way to know if you’re truly friends with someone? Food poisoning from the street fruit. Or a seven-hour bus delay. Or Wizz Air.



15. Studying abroad involves, on average, about four minutes of actual studying.
Shh, don’t tell.



16. Taxi drivers are some of the greatest people on Earth.
They just love to talk. And they’re so enthusiastic. And they drive you places so you don’t get lost like usual.
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17. Traveling solo reveals hidden talents.
You wouldn’t have thought you could navigate a Czech subway without a map… but you did.



18. The Guinness Storehouse is a legitimate historical site.
No, we’re not proud of this fact. But at this point, it’s pretty much true.
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19. Study abroaders are incredibly lucky people.
Very few humans get to spend carefree months exploring the world beyond their hometown, let alone during college. To study abroad is a privilege, and an awesome one at that.
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7 Spectacular Hotel Breakfasts

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Breakfast is known as the most important meal of the day. But while its pragmatic benefits aren't lost on most, what of its more indulgent possibilities? Thankfully, the best hotels in the world guarantee morning spreads that are meant to impress as much as sustain.

From brioche French toast with orange butter and passion-fruit syrup to black pudding and bacon, these 11 hotel restaurants excel at showing off their culinary skills bright and early.

--Chadner Navarro

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