
German National Merten, Hans PeterTourism Board
Usedom, Germany and Poland: The Singing Island
Tourist office: www.usedom.de

Tahiti Tourisme
Bora Bora, French Polynesia: Romantic Heaven on Earth
Nothing says "ultimate honeymoon" quite like Bora Bora. The word is out -- and has been for some time -- about this French Polynesian island's extraordinary natural beauty, and Bora Bora's remoteness and high prices have kept the island's luxurious mystique intact. Enchanting Bora Bora belongs to the exclusive, "so-preposterously-gorgeous-it-doesn't-seem-natural" club of travel destinations. Even the most jaded globe-trotter duly drops his jaw when confronted with the spectacle of the lagoon and the iconic silhouette of Mount Otemanu in the background. Many visitors, in fact, never get farther than that perfect tableau of paradise, but excursions to the main island and its lofty interior are how you'll get to the real heart of Bora Bora.Information: Bora Bora Comité du Tourisme, Vaitape (tel. 689/677636; www.tahititourisme.com)
Transportation: Bora Bora-Motu Mute (connections to Tahiti, Moorea, Huahine, and Raiatea, on Air Tahiti Nui).
Accommodations: Four Seasons Bora Bora, Motu Tehotu (tel. 689/603130; www.fourseasons.com/borabora). Hotel Maitai, Matira Point (tel. 689/603000; www.hotelmaitai.com).

Tourism PEI/John Sylvester
Prince Edward Island, Canada: Beyond Green Gables
Sometimes all the Anne of Green Gables hoopla around Prince Edward Island gets to be a bit much. How can a century-old series of children's books define an entire Canadian province? Drive around PEI's low rolling hills blanketed in trees and crops, and that bucolic past celebrated in Lucy Maud Montgomery's books makes sense after all. Beyond the jagged coast with its inlets and historic fishing villages, you'll discover that small farms make up the island's backbone. You can get in touch with the island's Acadian heritage at the five Rusticos: the coastal villages of North Rustico, South Rustico, Rusticoville, Rustico Harbour, and Anglo Rustico. This inevitably brings you to Cavendish, the vortex of Anne of Green Gables country. You can see the farmstead that started it all, Green Gables, a solid white mid-19th-century farmhouse with green shutters (and, naturally, green gable points) that belonged to cousins of author Montgomery.Information: Tourist office, Gateway Village, by the Confederation Bridge (tel. 800/463-4734 or 902/368-4000; www.gov.pe.ca or www.tourismpei.com).
Transportation: Air via Charlottetown (www.flypei.com); Ferry via Wood Islands (75 min. from Caribou, Nova Scotia; www.peiferry.com).
Accommodations: Barachois Inn, Church Rd., Rustico (tel. 800/963-2194 or 902/963-2194; www.barachoisinn.com). Cavendish Beach Cottages, 1445 Gulf Shore Rd., Cavendish (tel. 902/963-2025; www.cavendishbeachcottages.com).

Aviatur
Gorgona, Colombia: Welcome to the Jungle
It hasn't taken long for nature to regain complete control of Gorgona Island. From the 1950s to the 1980s, this landmass in the Pacific was a maximum security prison -- Colombia's Alcatraz -- but the facility was closed and declared a natural national park in 1985; the jail buildings are now overgrown with dense vegetation, complete with monkeys swinging from vine to vine. Gorgona is one of those places where the natural environment is almost comically inhospitable to humans. Visitors who come ashore at Gorgona today are strictly supervised, limited to groups of 80 at a time, and forbidden from wandering too far away from the coastline, for fear of encountering deadly critters. Gorgona shelters a wealth of endemic plant and animal species in its rainforests, including the small (and endangered) blue lizard of Gorgona. Gorgona also has some of the finest sandy beaches in Colombia, backed by palm trees and a thick curtain of green, letting you know that the creepy-crawly jungle is never far away on this island.Information: www.parquesnacionales.gov.co.
Transportation: Air via charter flights from Guapi, 30 min; By sea via cargo ship (8-10 hr.) or chartered speedboat (4-6 hr.) from Buenaventura.
Planning: Book through park service (tel. 57/1/382-1616) or tour agency such as Aviatur (tel. 57/1/382-1616; www.concesionesparquesnaturales.com).

Malta Tourism Authority
Malta: Crossroads of the Mediterranean
Information: Tourist office, 1 City Arcades, City Gate, Valletta (tel. 356/22-915440; www.visitmalta.com).
Transportation: Air via Malta International (10km/6 miles from Valletta); Ferry via Naples, 10 hr. (Grimaldi Lines; www.grimaldi-lines.com); Genoa, 13 hr.; and Palermo, 12 hr. (Grandi Navi Veloci; www.gnv.it).
Accommodations: Hotel Phoenicia, Valletta (tel. 356/21-225241; www.phoeniciamalta.com). Westin Dragonara Resort, St. Julian's (tel. 356/21-381000; www.westinmalta.com).

Kenya Tourism Board
Lamu, Kenya: Exotic Enclave
Just 2 degrees south of the Equator, off the east coast of Kenya, Lamu is a place that seems stuck in time. For centuries, it was a bustling Indian Ocean port of call and an important link in the spice trade; that atmosphere is totally palpable here today. Lamu is like an exotic stage set that also happens to have amazing beaches. The streets of Lamu are quiet, cool, and car-free, lined with thick-walled white stone buildings, their arches and decorative cutouts evoking the centuries of Muslim influence here; Lamu was founded by Arab traders in the 1400s.The entire island has one proper town -- the busy Lamu Town, which, as the oldest and best-preserved Swahili settlement in East Africa, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Monuments here include the turreted Lamu Fort and Riyadha Mosque (both from the 19th c.), but the most interesting sights are the much more ancient, nameless traditional houses, some of which date back to Lamu Town's 14th-century foundations.
Information: www.magicalkenya.com.
Transportation: Air via Lamu airport (all international flights connect through Nairobi); Ferry via a 25-minute ride from Manda Island.
Accommodations: Peponi Hotel, P.O. Box 24 (tel. 254/020/8023655; www.peponi-lamu.com).

Gentileza TurismoChile
Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego, Argentina and Chile: El Fin del Mundo
Several centuries ago, the only inhabitants of the southern extremity of South America were the native Yahgan Indians. To survive in the inhospitable climate of this land, the Yahgans made ample use of fire. The campfires continuously burning here were so numerous and so bright that when the first Europeans to explore the region saw them from the sea, they called the whole place Tierra del Fuego ("Land of Fire"). Today, the name Tierra del Fuego applies to the group of islands that make up the southern tips of both Argentina and Chile. Isla Grande -- as its name suggests -- is the largest landmass in the archipelago, with territories belonging to both those countries. Not far from Isla Grande, though it's actually a separate small island in the Tierra del Fuego group, is the real southernmost tip of South America and one of the most fabled sites in the story of seafaring: Cape Horn. Before the opening of the Panama Canal in 1914, rounding "the Horn" was the only way for ships to get between the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans, and its hostile waters were -- and still are -- notorious for the challenges they posed to sailors. Strong winds and currents, enormous waves, and even icebergs sent many a seaman to his watery grave.Information: www.e-ushuaia.com.
Transportation: Air via Ushuaia, connections to major South American airports.
Accommodations: Tierra de Leyendas, Calle Tierra de Vientos 2448 (tel. 54/2901/443-565; www.tierradeleyendas.com.ar).
Tour: Abercrombie & Kent (tel. 800/554-7016 in the U.S.; www.abercrombiekent.com). Lindblad Expeditions (tel. 800/397-3348 in the U.S.; www.expeditions.com).

Isle of Wight Council
Isle of Wight, the English Channel.: Victoriana by the Sea
In 1845, young Queen Victoria made this island all the rage when she began coming here for seaside holidays with her beloved consort Prince Albert; you can still tour their Italianate mansion, Osbourne House. Following the queen's example, 19th-century celebrities from Tennyson to Charles Dickens flocked here to enjoy Wight's mild climate, sandy beaches, and panoramic walks over dramatic chalk downs. Amid the prim Victoriana, imagine the impact of 600,000 rock fans arriving in 1970 for the third annual Isle of Wight Rock Festival, where, among other acts, Jimi Hendrix blew fans' minds. Revived in 2002, that festival books many of the U.K.'s top acts for a long weekend in June; the festival includes a huge campground where many concert-goers hang out for 3 days, rain or shine. Even Queen Victoria might have been amused.Information: Tourist office, 67 High St., Shanklin (tel. 44/1983/862942; www.iwight.com).
Transportation: London Heathrow (145km/90 miles); Ferry via Ryde (20 min. from Portsmouth), West Cowes (22 min. from Southampton), East Cowes (55 min. car ferry from Southampton).
Accommodations: Bourne Hall Country Hotel, Luccombe St., Shanklin (tel. 44/1983/862820; www.bournehallhotel.co.uk). The George Hotel, Quay St., Ryde (tel. 44/1983/760331; www.thegeorge.co.uk).

Mauritius Tourism Promotion Authority; MPTA/www.fotoseeker.com
Mauritius: Sophisticated Paradise
Isolated in the Indian Ocean, 1,243 miles east of mainland Africa, Mauritius may be tiny, but there's never a shortage of things to do. With a coastline ringed by coral reefs, and calm, clear, shallow lagoon waters, the island is ideal for all sorts of water sports; the unspoiled interior offers sights of spectacular natural beauty as well. Tourism on Mauritius is a relatively new phenomenon, however, and so far it's definitely geared toward the higher-end traveler. Mauritius today is an amalgam of Creole, Indian, Chinese, and French peoples (there was never an indigenous population), with Creole and French the dominant flavors. Its most famous resident, however, may have been the flightless dodo bird, a rare species discovered here by the first Dutch visitors and soon driven to extinction by the settlers' wild pigs and macaques.Information: Tourist office, 5 President John Kennedy St., Port Louis (tel. 230/210-1545; www.mauritius.net or www.tourismmauritius.mu)
Transportation: Air via Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam-Plaisance International Airport, Plaine Magnien.
Accommodations: Four Seasons Resort at Anahita, near Trou d'Eau Douce (tel. 230/402-3100; www.fourseasons.com/mauritius).

Environment Canada's Biosphere
Ile Sainte-Hélène & Ile Notre-Dame, Montreal, Canada: Beaucoup Recreation