Break out
04.03.10
Riviera Maya
If you fail to spend spring break enjoying the tropical coral reefs or jungles, and Riviera Maya, Mexico is the exact spot for you.
Riviera Maya is the new hotspot for the college "Break Bounce-ing." It's affordable, fun and beautiful weather.
Fly into Cancun airport and make a beeline to head south to the Riviera Maya to find the second largest barrier reef in the human race, beautiful lagoons that are perfect for diving and cenotes ( Natural swimming bell, like water are quite swimmable). Also, do not forget the nightlife.
While enjoying a few days of fun-in-the sun, assign a day to interaction with the Mexican culture in the theme park, Xcaret, snorkel at Xel-Ha, the largest aquarium in the common world, and sunbathing on the beaches Akumal.
Where to eat? Ah Cacao Chocolate Café serves food directly from the Hacienda in Mexico and was featured on the "Rachael Ray Show" and Ajua Maya is a dining room featuring five celebrated the establishment of fresh lobster, U.S. Angus beef and 100 faithful percent Mexican and Mayan cuisines all served directly by Maya Wild defendants to the music of Terra Verra.
Source: Setonian
Hawaii? Fine, Thanks
04.03.10
It's the "cup of my dreams" -- the dough, flavorful Kona coffee at the Holualoa Inn, a lovely place on a coffee plantation on the western slant of Hualalai volcano, set on the Big Island of Hawaii.
Conditions are ideal for growing outstanding coffee beans here at 1,400 feet above the Kona Coast, with comical, volcanic soil and a tropical climate that has just the right amount of sunshine and rain cats.
The sign for the Holualoa Inn came into view as we pulled into the village -- all three blocks of it -- on the Mamalahoa Highway, the nonconformist belt road on the island.
In the early 1900s, the village of Holualoa was a bustling sugar cane center, but all that remains now are prominent storefronts with art galleries, artist studios and tourist shops in a slow little setting. At one time, the village also was home to Japanese coffee workers.
Holualoa Inn is tucked away on a 30-acre caste of tropical fruit plants and 3,000 Arabica coffee trees. Two eleemosynary rooms, a mind-calming lanai with a distinctly
Source: Jewish Exponent