Frommers.com Frommers.com
Community Blogs Behind the Guides
Frommer's guidebook editors share insight into finding the best the world has to offer.
Posts from June

With the summer holiday break imminent, it seems there are still a lot of families who have yet to plan where to go and what to do. We asked Mark Hodson, editor of 101 Holidays, to give us some recommendations on the best places to take your kids on holiday this summer. Mark is an award-winning travel journalist with more than 12 years experience writing for The Sunday Times and other newspapers.

Q: Where do you recommend for a family beach holiday on a budget?

A: The Vendee, an unspoilt region in Western France, has wide sandy beaches and is great value, particularly if you drive. Rent a villa at the Mas de St. Hilaire holiday village which has a large pool and oodles of children’s facilities. A week’s self-catering from 28 July costs a total of £886 for up to 5 people including Eurotunnel crossing with Wake up in France (www.wakeupinfrance.co.uk).

blog post photo

Mas de St. Hilaire, Vendee

Q: What about if you don't want to travel abroad, where would you recommend in the UK on a budget?

A: You could explore the beautiful Norfolk Broads on a motorised cruiser. It’s an ideal holiday for families that value their independence, and no experience is required. A week’s rental from 10 August for five people sharing a cruiser costs £233 per person based on 5 sharing with Waterways Holidays (www.waterwaysholidays.com).

 blog post photo

Messing about on the Norfolk Broads

Q: Where do you recommend for families with sporty children?

A: La Manga Club in Spain has superb sporting facilities -- including 28 tennis courts and eight football pitches -- and runs courses for kids throughout the summer. Prestige Holidays (www.prestigeholidays.co.uk) has a week’s B&B for 2 adults and 2 children at the five-star Hotel Principe Felice departing Gatwick on 16 July for £3,292.

blog post photo

La Cala restaurant, La Manga resort

Q: What do you suggest for teenagers that just want to sleep in late and laze beside the pool? 

A: A villa with private pool. There are some bargains in Greece including Villa Erimitis on the island of Paxos which is available with a 25% discount for a week from 16 July with CV Travel (www.cvtravel.co.uk). It costs £554 per person based on 4 travelling including flights, ferry and car hire.

 blog post photo

Villa Erimitis, Paxos

Q: Where do you recommend for families with very active children?

A: The Adventure Holiday Company (www.adventurecompany.co.uk) has multi-activity holidays for families. You could stay on Croatia’s Dalmatian Coast where kayaking, river rafting, hiking and biking are all included. A week departing 26 August costs from £3,896 for two adults and two children under 12 including flights.

blog post photo

White water rafting in Croatia

Q: What do you suggest for families excited by the Olympics? 

A: Sands Resort (www.sandsresort.co.uk) on the North Cornwall coast will run Olympic-themed kids activities this summer and has discounts of up to 20% during the Games. Facilities include adventure playgrounds, a swimming pool, climbing wall, zip-lining and free use of wetsuits and surf boards. A week’s B&B from 28 July costs from £1,742 for 2 adults and 2 children.

blog post photo

Sands Resort, North Cornwall

Q: What is a good option for large families that want to holiday together?

A: You could rent a large house and create your own private house party. The Big Domain (www.thebigdomain.com) has a huge selection including Plas Dinam, a Grade 2 Listed house in Powys with a tennis court, stables, billiard room and croquet lawn. It sleeps up to 30 in 14 bedrooms and costs £4,000 for a week beginning 17 August. 

blog post photo

Plas Dinam, Powys

Q: Any ideas for families that want to go abroad and be pampered, but are really strapped for cash? 

A: Stay at a chalet in the Alps. You’ll enjoy wonderful scenery, lots of activities and all your meals included - at low season prices. Esprit Family Adventures (www.espritfamilyadventures.com) has a week’s full-board in August at Chalet Hotel des Deux Domaines in Belle Plagne from £950 - the total price for two adults and two children. The Channel crossing costs an extra £125. 

blog post photo

In the Alps with Esprit Family Adventures

Q: What is the best option for families that want watersports beside a beach?

A: Mark Warner (www.markwarner.co.uk) has a winning formula at its Mediterranean beach clubs: all your meals, wine with dinner, kids clubs, tennis and watersports with tuition all included in the price. A week at Perdepera Beach Resort in Sardinia from 28 July costs from £3,796 for 2 adults and 2 kids.

blog post photo

Perdepera Beach Resort, Sardinia

 Q: Any suggestions for a family that wants something completely different?

 A: How about a luxury volunteering holiday in South Africa? You could combine a safari and Winelands tour with three days teaching students in one of Cape Town’s townships. Eight nights from 21 July costs £19,200 for two adults and two children under 12 including B&B in Cape Town and full-board safari at Sabi Sands with Hands Up Holidays (www.handsupholidays.com).

blog post photo

Volunteering holidays in South Africa

For more recommendations on summer holidays, please check out 101 Holidays at www.101holidays.co.uk. 



Top Deals for UK Travellers including Lake Garda, Barbados, Gascony, Tanzania and Reykjavik.

By Dinah Hatch

Deal 1: Lazing by the lake
Inghams has sliced a tempting £306 off its Lake Garda holidays for early July and is offering seven nights surrounded by olive groves and cypress tress for £359 per person. This is the ideal location for lazing by the water, strolling along the tree-lined promenades and road-testing Italian dishes in the many restaurants. The deal for the Northern Italy lakeside break is on a half board basis at the three-star Palme Hotel and includes return flights from Gatwick to Verona and resort transfers. Departure is on 11 July. The deal is also available from Birmingham and Newcastle for an extra £29 and £49 respectively.
Book: 01483791111; www.inghams.co.uk

blog post photo
Lake Garda, Italy, Nancy Beja

Deal 2: So cool and SoCo
Bag yourself a Barbados bargain at the three-star SoCo Hotel on the popular South Coast Board Walk with Tropical Sky, which is currently offering seven nights on an all-inclusive basis for £899 per person. That's a £400 per person saving on regular prices. The Miami Beach style hotel is within a few minutes' stroll from lots of good restaurants and bars and has a hip, young vibe to it, with each of its 24 rooms offering seaviews over the Caribbean. The deal includes flights from London Gatwick with Virgin Atlantic for departures 2-28 November.
Book: 0844 332 9371; www.tropicalsky.co.uk 

blog post photo
Barbados Fish, annebeamon

Deal 3: Farmhouse for less
Thanks to a last-minute cancellation, The Gascony Secret is offering a carefully restored, luxury six-bedroom 18th century farmhouse close to Aignan in the Gers in Gascony, south west France, for £560 under its brochure price. Les Deux Etangs, which sleeps up to 14 people and sits within 2.5 acres of land, has an all-weather tennis court, table tennis table, swimming pool and large sunbathing terrace and dining area with amazing views over the countryside. One week's rental costs £2,300 (or £164 per person) for departures 7 or 14 July.
Book: 01924 439521; www.gascony-secret.com

blog post photo
Bordeaux, Jpatf

Deal 4: Tanzania twin getaway
Fancy a twin-centre break under the sizzling African sun? Africa Odyssey has a two-stop Indian Ocean beach escape deal to Tanzania for £2,800 per person, saving £400 each on regular prices. You'll get seven nights full board at the glamorous Ras Kutani lodges which feature amazing food, billowing drapes around four poster beds, and secluded white sand beaches plus lagoon and coastal rainforest walks. Then you'll be transferred to Zanzibar's Ras Nungwi where you will stay five nights on a B&B basis. Ras Nungwi is famous for its great dive school, laid back social life and cracking seafood. The deal includes flights from Heathrow with British Airways. Departures are valid throughout July.
Book: 020 7471 8780; www.africaodyssey.com

blog post photo
Lion in Tanzania, Joey

Deal 5: Get hip in Reykjavik
Never been to achingly hip Reykjavik? Now could be the time as low cost carrier Iceland Express has just launched its summer sale. Fly to the Icelandic capital between now and 30 August for as little as £64 one-way (that's out of Edinburgh). You can also hop across to check out the hip Reykjavik scene from Stansted or Gatwick for £69 one way. Pleasingly (and unusually for a budget carrier) all the prices include taxes, surcharges, seat allocation at check-in, a 20kg bag in the hold and 10kg hand luggage. There is also no extra for flights booked on a debit card.
Book: 0118 321 8384; www.icelandexpress.com

blog post photo
Farm outside Reykjavik, muffale


I recently returned from a dizzyingly informative few days at the WTTC Americas Summit in Mexico. At this first-ever regional meeting, Mexican President Calderón, tourism ministers, travel company leaders, and luminaries like Mexican businessman and philanthropist Carlos Slim gathered in the Riviera Maya to discuss how important travel and tourism is as a global industry. (According to the WTTC, tourism currently constitutes 9% of the world’s GDP and sustains 255 million jobs.)  

My main takeaway from the conference, however, was that the Riviera Maya, a coastal region in the Yucatán Peninsula that stretches from 20 miles south of Cancún in Puerto Morelos to Punta Allen, a village within the Sian Ka'an Biosphere Reserve, is an incredible place to visit. From show-stopping performances at the archaeological park Xcaret to the laid-back beach town of Playa del Carmen, the region packs in a lot to see and do—it’s no surprise, then, that it’s one of the most popular regions in Mexico for foreign travelers. (A record-breaking 3.6 million people visited the Riviera Maya in 2011.)

blog post photo
A performance at Xcaret
Originally posted by Jennifer Reilly

For a handy rundown of the top things you might not know about the popular Riviera Maya, check out this Frommers.com slideshow: www.frommers.com/slideshow/index.cfm?group=830&p=1

Straddling between the chic French shops and trendy eateries of Marylebone 
Village and the vast designer department stores of bustling Oxford Street, the 
independently owned boutique-style Mandeville Hotel allows serious shoppers 
a luxurious spot to recharge.

You can kickback with afternoon tea or cocktails at the new Reform Social & Grill or book a room and soak your tired limbs in a deliciously smelling hot bath with complimentary Etro toiletries from Italy. 

On arriving at this grand building, staff are quick to welcome you in. As you 
enter the lobby area, the individuality of the design by one of London's top 
interior designers hits you with a cute model vintage racing car taking centre 
stage. 

blog post photo

All the rooms in this five-story building have also had an interior designer's 
touch, with flashes of colour and glints of mirrored chrome against a natural 
backdrop of woody, country colours.

blog post photo

Bedding and beds are the most important thing if you're staying for long, and 
in a hotel in this setting, you expect nothing less than crisp white linen, soft 
touch duvets and feather pillows. And you won't be disappointed when you 
slip between the sheets. 

blog post photo

Showers are also a big selling point nowadays and most rooms at The 
Mandeville have both a hand-held and power shower either above the bath or, 
in the junior suites, in a separate walk-in shower. Afterwards you can wrap 
yourself in the biggest and fluffiest bath towels I've enjoyed in a hotel. The 
Etro toiletries also include good-size shampoo and conditioner, and hand-held 
ionic hairdryers have been placed in all of the closets so you won't have to 
leave the room with wet hair. 

Free internet and Wi-Fi is provided, which is sometimes still a rarity even in 
top city hotels. Plugs are both UK and European. 

Rooms also have a Nespresso machine for guests to enjoy a quick coffee 
shot, although if you're like me and enjoy a cup of tea and a biscuit as you 
wind down (or even to start the day), you'll have to call room service as there 
are no kettles provided. The room service menu is excellent however with 
meals served 24 hours, and if you don't want to call down, you can pick from 
a small selection in the paying minibar, which you'll find in most rooms. If you 
enjoy breakfast in bed, this can be ordered to your room, but to refuel 
properly, head downstairs and choose from the healthy buffet with fruit, 
yogurts, smoked salmon, cold meats, cheeses, cereals and mini pastries or 
order an English breakfast or an egg dish from the selection on the breakfast 
menu. 

With a mix of rooms ranging from singles to the beautiful Terrace Suite with its 
own cute flower-filled rooftop terrace, guests stay here from one night after 
their wedding next door to much longer stays. Business clients from the swish 
upmarket brands in the area lay their heads here during the week, while the 
weekends are much quieter. Aside from being close to Oxford Street and Marylebone with its Sunday market, the Mandeville is also a short walk to trendy Soho, a bit further to the 
Museum
, and almost halfway between Regent's Park and Hyde Park.

blog post photo

But you don't need to head far for somewhere to eat, as the crowning glory at 
the Mandeville has to be the Reform Social & Grill, that literally only opened in 
May 2012. Not only has it had a complete refit befitting of the area, but it has 
a completely new name. The shiny chrome bar and luxurious leather bar 
stools are the perfect place to start your evening with a selection of cocktails. 
We were welcomed in and tempted to try one of five small taster cocktails 
prepared by mixologist Andre, and each had our favourites: so if you want to 
treat me, buy me a Daughters of Albion with a cucumber twist. 

The theme behind the Reform is a mix of gentleman's club with social area 
filled with armchairs and leather sofas, a chrome bar which glows amber with 
its huge selection of whiskys, and the grill which combines a French bistro 
look with copper wall coverings and rich, soft leather banquettes. Tucked 
away in the corner is a private area for up to 10 diners. 

blog post photo
The British-inspired grill menu is exceptional and the chef prepares starters 
from around the country: think pheasant scotch egg or Cornish mackerel and 
squid on a bed of samphire. Follow that with traditional grill dishes such as 
porterhouse or a really succulent rib-eye steak that just melts in the mouth. 
Fish dishes include fish pie with scallops or the freshest lobster you'll likely 
find around Oxford Street, and well worth heading here for. Dishes are all 
accompanied with artisan breads from London's The Bread Factory. Finish up 
with classic desserts that might include sticky toffee pudding with clotted 
cream ice cream, a chocolate pot with salted caramel or a cheeseboard with a 
selection of five British cheeses. So even if you're not stopping in the hotel, 
the Reform is definitely worth arranging an evening out with friends and 
enjoying the drinks and food. 

Photos & stay courtesy of: The Mandeville Hotel, Mandeville Place, London W1U 2BW. www.mandeville.co.uk. Tel: 0207/935-5599


Community Blogs