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  • TRAVEL

    Soulful trips

    Life, Suwitcha Chaiyong, Published on 15/08/2023

    » When mentioning spiritual tourism, people think about visiting sacred places and obtaining objects that bring fortune. However, spiritual trips created by Sook -- an enterprise from the Thai Health Promotion Foundation -- were designed to help travellers learn about Thai art, architecture and the meaning of symbols that adorn various places. The activities are specifically tailored for travellers and aim to enhance their knowledge and discover their inner selves.

  • TRAVEL

    Renewed interest in Japanese sumo proves big pull for tourists

    AFP, Published on 13/08/2023

    » TOKYO: Their interest piqued during Covid lockdowns and by a new Netflix drama, a fresh rush of foreign tourists are flocking to Japan for a look inside the insular world of sumo.

  • TRAVEL

    Floral fantasy, food galore, dancing fountains and more at Wynn Palace

    Guru, Pornchai Sereemongkonpol, Published on 13/07/2023

    » Located in the Cotai zone of Macau, Wynn Palace, the younger sister property to Macau's first Las Vegas-style resort Wynn Macau, puts on a really big show from the moment guests arrive to the moment they leave to ensure a truly memorable stay.

  • TRAVEL

    Once upon a time in Paris

    B Magazine, Published on 28/10/2018

    » If one was lucky enough to have lived in Paris while young, wrote Ernest Hemingway, the city would remain with you for the rest of your life. Humphrey Bogart echoed the sentiment with that classic movie line from the closing frames of Casablanca. "We'll always have Paris," Rick, his character, tells the woman he will never see again. And even Art Buchwald, the humour columnist, weighed in, titling his charming memoir I'll Always Have Paris.

  • TRAVEL

    A journey in George Town

    Life, Melalin Mahavongtrakul, Published on 04/12/2014

    » A day, a bike and a world heritage site. If you ever get to spend a day in George Town, Penang, the first thing you must do is rent a bicycle. It costs just RM10 (around 100 baht) per day to explore the artsy streets of the Unesco World Heritage Site in Malaysia in a fun and interesting way.

  • TRAVEL

    Into the sublime

    Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 27/11/2014

    » Swami Yoganand twists his rubbery legs and crosses them behind his neck in a geometric composition. Boneless? Shape-shifter? Of course not, it’s just that his lithe, 106-year-old body — the centenarian yogi is a vegetarian and his food is always uncooked — has reached the level of physical suppleness that most of us stiff-jointed urbanites can’t even imagine. The swami, an honorific for a religious teacher, has taught yoga for 86 years, and he’s still doing it almost every morning at a school in Rishikesh, a northern Indian town by the Ganges.

  • TRAVEL

    Works in progress?

    Life, Pichaya Svasti, Published on 09/10/2014

    » It was about 130 years ago that Thai Buddhists of Mon descent started making use of the sala kan parian, or "preaching pavilion", at Wat Tha Kham in the Bangkok district of Bang Khunthian. Since the pavilion was situated right next to the canal it was the first structure in the temple compound people would encounter after disembarking from their boats. 

  • TRAVEL

    Scare up a fabulous time in scotland's first city

    B Magazine, Published on 15/09/2013

    » 'What not to see?" exclaimed my Scottish friend Fiona, her long blonde curls waving in the air, when asked about her dear hometown of Edinburgh. I was unsure if her excitement came from pure Scottish pride, or her heavy afternoon consumption of English lager under a rare sunny sky in Cardiff. Having listened to Fiona unrelentingly blab about how hot, hip, modern and rich in history Edinburgh is _ far outreaching premier European destinations such as London, Paris and Berlin _ I was sceptical of the objectiveness behind her claims.

  • TRAVEL

    Poles Apart

    Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 16/05/2013

    » The spirit of rebirth is almost palpable as you walk the streets and hear the stories of Warsaw. Wiped off the map in the 19th century, reduced to ashes by German planes and panzers in 1939 and consigned to suspended animation during the four decades of repressive Stalinist rule that followed, this metropolis _ and the country of which it is capital _ has endured a succession of traumatic misfortunes that it has somehow survived, integrity intact, to reassert its proud identity in the 21st century.

  • TRAVEL

    After the revolution

    Life, Vasana Chinvarakorn, Published on 15/05/2012

    » How irresistibly intoxicating the taste of freedom can be! Even for a non-drinker like me, a glass of Cuba Libre (Free Cuba), a mix of rum, Coke and lime, seemed to have unlocked a new door of endless possibilities. Soon I found myself clapping hands along with those dark-skinned dancers engaging in the colourful orgy of salsa up on the stage right in front of us.

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