Monday, December 21, 2009

Miami of the Middle EastLate holiday deals and last-minute breaks






'Late holiday deals to Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, plus offers on skiing breaks to the French Alps'

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Sunday, December 20, 2009

Miami of the Middle East


‘Tel Aviv's 100th birthday celebrations culminate next month. Paul Clements joins the party’

Founded 100 years ago on a vacant stretch of Mediterranean coast, Israel's second city was dreamt up as an overspill for Jaffa, the nearby medieval port town mentioned in the Old Testament. Now, Tel Aviv is a pocket-sized metropolis in its own right, with Jaffa one of its many gentrifying neighbourhoods.

With miles of boardwalked beaches, upscale shopping, world-class nightlife and head-turning buildings by some of the 20th century's leading "starchitects" (most notably those from the Bauhaus school), Tel Aviv lives up to its billing as the Miami of the Middle East.

An urban, sophisticated city, crammed full of impossibly beautiful people, it has been celebrating its centenary all year, with concerts, water displays and fireworks. Three walking trails covering key aspects of the city's attractions – its architecture, beaches and greenery – were unveiled last month. Travel you need: http://www.e-batteries.com.au/

The festivities culminate on December 15 with the opening of the Museum of the History of Tel Aviv-Jaffa (27 Bialik Street), housed in the former city hall. It documents the region's development using a mix of film, scale models and an exhibition of reportage photography.

If the centenary celebrations aren't reason enough to visit, prices for the five-hour flight are tumbling. Now that easyJet has launched a six-times-a-week service from Luton, the party is only just beginning.

Travel by…

Low-cost airline: easyJetoperates from Luton, from £103 return, while Jet2.com flies up to twice a week from Manchester, from £147 return. Of the full-service airlines, BMI is regularly the cheapest, flying twice-daily from Heathrow, from £308 return.

Ben Gurion International Airport is 14 miles south-east of Tel Aviv. A taxi to Rabin Square should take 20 minutes and cost about NIS100 (£16). Direct trains run to Tel Aviv's main station, Savidor-Merkaz (£2.15), but services are suspended for the duration of the Jewish Sabbath, between sunset on Friday and sunset on Saturday.

Stay at…

The city's most exclusive address, the Dan Tel Aviv, an exquisitely designed waterfront hotel with a newly renovated spa; doubles from £187.

For alternatives to the large chain hotels that predominate here, try the Montefiore Travel you need: http://www.e-batteries.com.au/, a new 12-room residence fitted out in contemporary colonial chic; doubles from £167. Architourists and cineastes alike will enjoy the 82-room Hotel Cinema Travel you need: http://www.e-batteries.com.au/, set inside a former Bauhaus-designed film theatre; doubles from £104.

Spend the morning…

Ticking off the city's 20th-century architectural treasures. Some of the most striking buildings in the so-called International Style – sleek-lined in concrete and glass – are within the White City, a Unesco-protected neighbourhood built by mostly Bauhaus architects who fled to Tel Aviv to escape the Nazis. Stock up on postcards and replicas in the Bauhaus Center Travel you need: http://www.e-batteries.com.au/, whose permanent collection offers a history of the dazzling style.

Have lunch at…

Manta Ray (Alma Beach, 00972 3 517 4773), a nautical-themed bar facing the lapping shore. Pick at fresh shrimps, or free-flowing, tapas-style bowls of squid, French beans and lightly spiced okra for about £5 a throw.

Spend the afternoon…

Lost in the Dizengoff Center, Tel Aviv's largest mall. The more fashion-forward locals prefer the groovy independents dotted along Nordau Street. Or head to Kikar Hamedina, a stately plaza that's home to the ritziest boutiques showcasing Israeli design talent, as well as chic cafés and galleries. For gourmet souvenirs, Olia Travel you need: http://www.e-batteries.com.au/ stocks custom-blended oils, tapenades and olive soap.

Dine out at…

Travel you need: http://www.e-batteries.com.au/, a serious-minded, modish gourmet favourite with ultra-modern luminous décor and ambitious kosher Med dishes; try the whitefish falafel. The wooden bar at French-Italian hang-out Herbert Samuel (Kaufman Street 6, 00972 3 516 6516, Travel you need: http://www.e-batteries.com.au/is perennially propped up by oenophiles sampling Israel's finest vintages over plates of anchovies, calamari and Italian hams.

After hours, night-owls refuel at the Dixie Grill Bar (120 Igal Alon, 00972 3 696 6123, Travel you need: http://www.e-batteries.com.au/, a 24-hour kosher diner owned by Israeli celebrity chef Haim Cohen and serving hearty burgers, Cajun chicken wings and fries with everything; mains from about £12.

Spend the evening…

On the tiles. A suitable springboard is Rothschild Boulevard, a ritzy, café- and bar-lined avenue in the White City with spotlit Bauhaus façades. For less raucous action, Lucas (3 Rehov Mazeh Street, 00972 3 525 2565, www.lucas.co.il) is a grown-up brasserie with a patio for al fresco carousing and imposing views of the Azrieli Center skyscrapers.

More boho-chic is Nana (1 Ehad Haam, 00972 3 516 1915), a bare-brick lounge bar near the beach kitted out like a Louis XV orangerie, with foliage creeping around the gilt-framed oil paintings, chandeliers and chaise longues.

Spend the next day…

Amid the old stone houses in the alleys of Jaffa, now colonised by art galleries and sculpture studios. According to legend, the port dates back some 4,000 years and was named after Noah's son. Be sure to take your camera and photograph the city's rolling coastline.

Alternatively, Jerusalem is just an hour away, and all major hotels will arrange excursions for you. A guide will not only unravel the significance of the various religious sites – from the Western Wall, and the gold-topped Dome of the Rock, to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre – they will help you negotiate the numerous security checkpoints.

At all costs avoid…

Tel Aviv's "celebrated" markets. The vast, open-air Carmel Market (Allenby Street) is good only for knock-off designer T-shirts; Jaffa's Shuq Hapishpeshim flea market specialises in scrap jewellery; and the reputed bazaar on Nahalat Binyamin Street is piled high with flick-knives, bootleg CDs, and – improbably – piles of yellowing 1930s newspapers carrying Hitler headlines.

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Monday, December 14, 2009

Shopping off the beaten rack


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Since the global economy took a nose dive at the end of 2007, New York stores have been holding a near-permanent sale. Whatever time of year you plan to visit, you’ll find bargains – and they are usually from the current season, because goods in New York hit the sales rails faster than they do in Britain.

But the city’s “holiday” sales start in earnest after Thanksgiving, on Black Friday (November 27 this year). This is the heaviest shopping day of the year, when American retailers traditionally slash prices. My top tip is to log on to New York magazine’s website, www.nymag.com, before you start shopping. Its “sales and bargain calendar” charts daily offers at all the retailers across the city; a sample from the past week’s calendar includes 80 per cent off lingerie, sleepwear and swimwear at La Perla, and a sale of pretty silk dresses (down from £221 to £72) by up-and-coming designer Lauren Moffatt.

“One of the best things about shopping in this city is that you never really have to pay the full price,” says Amina Akhtar, fashion editor for nymag.com. She recommends that shoppers ask if there are any sales or special promotions when they come to pay.

There are also the sample sales – which in New York are open to all . Most are centrally located, often at the designer’s headquarters in the Garment District (around the 30s and Broadway). This week nymag.com shows sales by Phillip Lim and J Crew at up to 80 per cent off retail prices.

Where to shop

If you go to one department store, make it Saks (Fifth Avenue at 49th Street; www.saksfifthavenue.com). They have a vast range of stock in all price brackets and their service is second to none.

On the third floor are 16 rooms for personal shopper consultations (001 212 940 4200 for appointments, which can often be made on the same day). It’s a free service no matter how much you plan to spend. A new designer floor opened in September selling 49 labels, while the eighth-floor shoe department is so large it has its own postcode (look out for the sale racks). Less expensive shoes are sold on the fifth floor.

For cosmetics I would recommend supermarket-style Sephora (www.sephora.com ), with 14 branches across the city. Stick to American brands like Benefit, Laura Mercier and Urban Decay for bargain deals. Make-up artists flock to Ricky’s (19 locations in Manhattan; www.rickysnyc.com) for its high-quality cosmetics, toiletries and luxury hair products, including Bumble and Bumble and “it” haircare brand Phillip B. Don’t be put off by the stores’ slightly trashy appearance; you’ll find some gems. Uptown on Fifth Avenue is Elizabeth Arden’s flagship Red Door Spa and shop (54th Street; www.reddoorspas.com); Eight Hour Cream is $17 (£10), and facials start at $75 (£45).

At Paragon Sports (867 Broadway; www.paragonsports.com) just north of Union Square, there is a huge selection of ski gear at great prices, as well as sports wear, every brand of trainers and the ubiquitous UGG boots which start at $139 (£83). Be warned: at weekends it gets busy.

For camera equipment, a trip to B&H Photo and Video (420 Ninth Ave at 34th Street; www.bhphotovideo.com) is an experience in itself: the superstore is vast, and the staff – all Hasidic Jews – efficient to a fault. The new Canon G11 camera is $499 (£312), compared with £459 in Britain. (See page 4 for camera comparisons.)

Other great places for bargains are: Anthropologie (West Broadway, between Spring and Broome; www.anthropologie.com) for pretty homewares which are cheaper than in the new London store; Paige Premium Denim (869 Washington Street; www.paigepremiumdenim.com) in the Meatpacking District, for superbly cut jeans from $149 (£89); and Tommy Hilfiger (www.tommy.com), also on West Broadway, for classic American style. For more denim by up-and-coming and established labels, head to Intermix. I like the branch on 79th and Madison Avenue, but there are four others in Manhattan (www.intermixonline.com). If you have teenagers in tow, prices at the flagship Abercrombie & Fitch store (720 Fifth Avenue at 56th Street; www.abercrombie.com) are much cheaper than in the London store.

Lastly, don’t leave the city without visiting Michelle Obama’s favourite store, J Crew (www.jcrew.com); there are 10 branches, including two – at 484 Broadway and 235 West Broadway – devoted entirely to their stylishly preppy men’s clothes. Their Prince Street store in SoHo has rails of sale items on the lower floor that are worth a rummage. After all, if it’s good enough for the First Lady…

  • Visit in January or February and you can make significant savings on accommodation, eating out and theatre.
  • A flurry of new hotel openings this year has driven down room rates, particularly in low season. From mid-December, 10 hotels in the city’s Signature Collection (www.nycgo.com/signaturecollection) will offer three nights for the price of two between January 4 and February 28. The offer also includes a VIP shopping experience at Saks Fifth Avenue.

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Sunday, December 13, 2009

Christmas in Cologne -> Positively medieval


‘Nowhere does Christmas markets quite like the German city of Cologne, says Nick Trend’
The banks of the Rhine can be a bleak place in December – but not in Cologne, Germany's fourth largest city. This month it glows with life as no fewer than seven Christmas markets light up the old town and the square in front of the cathedral. The Dom, as it is known locally, is one of greatest Gothic buildings of Europe, an extraordinary bulk of chiselled stone and painted glass, of soaring spires and pinnacles, of angular struts and buttresses. The foundation stone was laid in 1248, but the building languished half- finished for hundreds of years and was only completed in 1880, after a 40-year construction project based on the original plans.
The Dom survived the Second World War largely intact, but the same can't be said of the rest of Cologne. Among the bland post-war rebuilding, however, the medieval heart of the city still beats. There are some fine Romanesque churches, half-timbered inns and houses in the old town, excellent museums, classic beer kellers, and restaurants serving a cuisine that can only have been conceived to fight off the winter chill.
Now is a great time to visit – not only for the markets, but because, on December 13, a new section of high-speed rail line opens. This cuts the journey from London by half an hour, to just over four hours.
Get there by…
Rail: returns from St Pancras via Brussels cost from £104 from December 15 onwards (www.eurostar.com) Air: Germanwings (www.germanwings.com) offers returns from Stansted for less than £40 in January.
Stay at…
The Dom Hotel (www.lemeridiendomhotelkoeln.com), right on the central square (Roncalliplatz), opposite the Dom. B & B in a double room, with a 3pm check out and a bottle of sparkling wine, from 225 euros. The three-star Hotel Ludwig (www.hotelludwig.de) has B & B doubles from 99 euros.
Spend the morning…
Exploring the Dom. Once you have marvelled at the Gothic vaulting and the sheer size of the interior, readjust your focus: the Dom's treasures are on a much smaller scale. Among the highlights are the great 13th-century gilded sarcophagus containing the relics of all Three Kings, the dramatic Gero Crucifix, a remarkable survivor from the 10th-century, and the "pixilated" stained-glass window installed by Gerhard Richter in 2007.
The Römisch-Germanisches Museum, just across the square, has an impressive collection of sculpture, artefacts and mosaics.
Have lunch… http://www.interbatteries.com.au/
Down by the River Rhine in the old town. The Haxenhaus (Frankenwerft 19, www.haxenhaus.de) has a fabulous beamed and panelled interior. Try the pork knuckle or Bratwurst (sausage), sold in metre or half-metre lengths. Wash it down with Kölsh – the traditional Cologne beer. Smaller, more intimate and just around the corner, at Salzgasse 13, is the Brauhaus Sunner im Walfisch, which serves a similar menu. Both charge about 25 euros a head.
Spend the afternoon…
At the city's main art gallery, the Wallraf-Richartz Museum, which has an excellent collection spanning the 13th to the 20th centuries. If you prefer to shop, there are seven Christmas markets, including the one opposite the Dom, and the "rustic" market in the Old Town.
If you are shopping for eau de Cologne, the original brand (dating back to 1709) is Farina. There is also a Chocolate
Museum by the river at Rheinauhafen 1a, which is also the location of a "medieval" Christmas market.
Have dinner at…
The Brauhaus Früh am Dom (www.frueh.de/gastronomie), a former brewery on several levels. In the keller, you can order traditional German dishes such as Gulaschsuppe Oma Früh im Brotlaib, a loaf of bread filled with stew, for about 15 euros. The contemporary cuisine at the excellent Oyster Restaurant (www.oyster-restaurant.com), on Thurmchenswall, is a little lighter, with the emphasis on fish; main courses are 20-30 euros.
Spend the next day…
Exploring Cologne's Romanesque churches. Look out for the Church of Saint Ursula, supposedly built on the site where the city's favourite saint – a British princess – was martyred at the hands of marauding Huns, along with 11,000 other virgins. It has an extraordinary collection of reliquaries and human bones.
Maria im Kapitol was built over the site of a Roman temple, and still preserves its 11th-century wooden doors (now in the south aisle). The Schnutgen Museum, in the former church of St Cecilia, has an excellent collection of medieval sculpture and glass – a new wing opens in 2010.
More information…
Cologne Tourism (www.koelntourismus.de) for museum opening times, as well as details of Christmas markets.
More inspiration…
The new Medieval and Renaissance galleries at the V&A (www.vam.ac.uk) in London, which reopen today after a major restoration programme, are a great place to visit before going to Cologne. Several key exhibits come from the surrounding area, including the Cologne Tabernacle and stained glass from Steinfeld Abbey.
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Sunday, December 6, 2009

5 Reasons To Own A Portable Car Battery Charger:interbattery

It's easy to understand why a car battery charger is a great tool to have around. Cars, lawn equipment and motorized toys have batteries and may need occasional charging. Outdoor toys and lawn equipment especially need it due to infrequent use. Since some equipment does not have an on board generator it is up to the user to recharge to continue use.

Not everyone knows how easy it is to have their own portable car battery charger. They are actually rather simple to operate and have. You can get one that is basically an on or off operation or a complicated as monitoring and self adjusting charging voltages.

Here are five reasons why it is easy for anyone with a car, truck, or outdoor vehicle to own one:

1. You can take it anywhere

The great thing about these devices is that you really don't need a set space for them. Years ago you set the charger on a shelf or parked its cart in a corner and that's pretty much where it set. The newer units can pretty much be used anywhere you can find an electrical outlet.

2. They can be small and compact

You can find them light and small enough to fit in toolboxes and glove boxes.

Thanks to newer technologies electrical components can be smaller and lighter. Some chargers are as light as a couple of pounds. As long as you have a power source available, usually an ac outlet, you can be charging in minutes.

3. Cheap enough to own

With the same technologies that made these marvels lighter and smaller also means they are cheaper to produce. This has meant manufacturers producing more therefore lower prices. Add in to the mix resources such as Ebay and Amazon and bargains can be found. Chargers can be had for less than $100 and many times less than $50.

4. Extend the life of your battery and save

Newer units such as tenders can keep the battery topped off without boiling out the electrolyte and therefore potentially destroying your battery. One person was able to keep the same battery for his hobby car for over ten years thanks to a specialized charger. How much could this save you over the course of several years?

5. Keep your recreational toys on the ready

Ever had a spur of the moment idea to take the motorcycles out on the first nice spring day? If your battery did nothing but sit during the winter you might not get out as quick as you'd like. Having a charger can keep the battery up and ready to go when you are.

Although you would need a charger more if you own motorcycles, RVs, or other outdoor toys that are used infrequently, even car owners should own one as a precaution. With small size, light weight and low cost there isn't a reason why you shouldn't have one in your garage, closet, toolbox, or glove box. Add the fact that you could even possibly extend the life of your battery adds that much more value to your small investment.
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external laptop battery charger

The Power Outside - External Laptop Battery Charger - Emergency Charger

Anyone who has ever owned a laptop computer knows that it can sometimes take quite a long time for a laptop to charge the battery. One of the ways around this problem is to get your hands on an external laptop battery charger, which can really help to speed up the process, and can be used to charge a second to battery, always a good idea when you are a heavy user of the computer. This article will look at a few considerations that need to be borne in mind when buying this extremely useful laptop accessory.
The first thing to remember is that choosing a charger needs to be done with great care, since at the very least you may end up with a charger which does not charge your battery properly, or could even cause damage to the battery itself, and you could be left with no power at all for your laptop. In the least worst case you could end up with a battery that is only partially charged, which means your notebook might run out of power after just an hour or so of operation, which could cause you a lot of trouble if it happens in an opportune moment.

In the worst case scenario you could end up with a battery charger causing a lot of damage to the battery itself, which means you have to then go out and buy a completely new battery pack, which of course can be very expensive.

One of the most common mistakes is to buy a charger which is not a suitable for the type of battery itself, usually a charger that is too small to take the battery. There are some types which can charge different sizes, but these are usually only supplied by manufacturers to charge the various sizes of battery for their complete laptop range. They are not usually available for different models. It is usually better to find a universal type of charger, possibly with a docking system.

An external battery charger can be a real boon, but, as you can see, you really do need to take a lot of care when you're choosing one because the wrong choice could leave you with practically no battery at all.
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