A dead-of-winter rite is ordering a bunch of seed packets
and visualizing spring planting. With COVID-19 still ravaging the world, summer
travel brochures are the new Burpee catalogues. Another mind game to occupy
your mind during quarantine is contemplating an overseas adventure. Here are
some places that are beyond the usual.
I once lived across from the playing field! |
Tours of New Zealand often bypass its capital city of
Wellington because its airport is
too small and too windy for today’s big jets. Grab a domestic flight and go
there. I’m biased after living there for a time, but it’s a hidden gem. Pack
good walking shoes as it’s hilly enough to make San Francisco seem like Iowa. Wellington’s
cable car system is actually used by commuters. Take it to the very top and
linger in the botanical gardens. Check out the “Beehive,” which is unique among
national capitals. Wellington is also the home of Te Papa Museum, often has leaping
dolphins in its harbor, and sports neighborhoods catering to all tastes. Cuba
Street isn’t as countercultural as it was in the Sixties, but echoes remain.
It’s also a cool cafĂ© town, has a vibrant arts community, and is home to both
Victoria University and filmmaker Peter Jackson’s Weta Studios.
So very Dutch |
Thinking of Amsterdam? Go, but don’t forget The Hague, another capital city that
doesn’t get a lot of love. The Hague is well worth a day or two. Like most
Dutch cities, it is spotless and there are lovely strolls through and around
gardens, palaces, ponds, old churches, monuments, and parks. There’s even a
beach, though I don’t recommend North Sea sunbathing. Its big draws are its
museums, including the wonderful Mauritshaus,
where you can feast on Rembrandt, Hals, Vermeer, and Dutch Golden Age painters,
but also modernists and surrealists. It also has terrific public art and
cultural events. If you wonder why it’s called The Hague, it’s because it’s a collection of towns that fused as a
city.
Hidden delight |
Portugal is still
overlooked among European travelers. If you go—and you should—don’t restrict
your trip to Lisbon. Obidos is just
an hour away, but this small town (just over 11,000) is a journey back to the
Middle Ages. It’s a white-washed beauty mostly contained by thick medieval
walls, many of which you can climb. (Be careful. There are few guardrails and often
the pathways are narrow.) Scrumptious pastries, a delicious cherry liqueur
special to the region, beautiful tiles, and lots of history make Obidos a
delightful visit. There are also tourist shops with a higher quality of items
than the ordinary.
Crusader fortress |
Can you go wrong on any of the Greek islands? Well, maybe
Mykonos, which is crawling with pasty British tourists. My favorite, though, is
Rhodes, whose Colossus (now
vanished) was one of the Seven Ancient Wonders of the World. You can get in
touch with your inner Crusader on Rhodes. Other than Carcassonne in France—another to put on your bucket list—you’d be
hard-pressed to find a better example of a medieval walled city. Some have said
the appearance of this World Heritage site is not “authentic,” but its fortress
is as close as you can get without a time machine. Plus, there is ancient,
Ottoman, and Jewish history to discover.
Be prepared to eat |
France? By all means go to Paris, but don’t neglect Lyons. It’s where the Rhone and Saone
rivers merge, and where terraces of hillside churches and bluffs provide
gorgeous panoramas of the waterways at your feet and the Alps in the distance.
You will find art, design, ethnic, history, and science museums galore, impressive
cathedrals, unusual markets, Roman ruins, and the home where the Lumiere
brothers birthed the film industry. Best of all, Lyons is a haven for foodies.
Some of its best restaurants are in Vieux Lyons, a Renaissance-vintage section at the foot of Fourviere Hill.
Lyons earns its status as a UNESCO World Heritage city.
Tranquility along the Mersey |
Unless you’re on a Beatles tour, Liverpool isn’t high on
anyone’s must-see list. But Port
Sunlight is a reason to venture nearby. This village of fewer than 1,500
souls is where Lever Brothers–now Unilever–set up a corporate utopian
experiment in 1887, named for their popular soap product. Corporate benevolence
faded in the 1980s, but Port Sunlight remains a sylvan bubble within an
otherwise gritty postindustrial corridor. When you get off the train at
Bebington, litter and seediness are all around. Then you walk through a tunnel
to the Port Sunlight side and everything is green and tidy as a pin. Lever
Brothers built all manner of amenities for workers: parks, wetlands, sturdy
brick row homes, free schools, a swimming pool, and even a temperance hotel.
The goal was to educate, Christianize, and elevate workers. The crowning jewel
is the Lady Lever Art Gallery, which features Pre-Raphaelite
paintings of such quality that you’d need to ferry across the Mersey to
Liverpool to see anything that rivals it.
Xi Valley |
I was underwhelmed by China, a nation hell-bent on
obliterating its past in the name of generic modernity. One exception, though,
is the Xi Valley. Cruise down the
river that cuts through sugarloaf mountains, small villages, and riverside
fields tended according to time-honored methods. In no time, you will
understand every Chinese watercolor you’ve ever seen. You can also sample snake
wine if you can get past the pickled poisonous serpent in the bottle. I didn’t.
I couldn’t.
Take that Sydney! |
Valencia always
staggers visitors to Spain. It’s the place to eat to eat paella, is filled with
its own blend of Gothic architecture,
has nearly two dozen museums, and is home to vestiges of Roman, Muslim, and
medieval cultures. It even has a sunny Mediterranean beach and holds what seems
to be some sort of festival every week. But what really grabs the eye is its City
of Arts and Sciences. Until 1957, the Turia River periodically flooded the
city, leaving swaths of death and destruction. That year, the city diverted the
flow of the river around rather than through the city. Twelve kilometers of old
riverbed is now a sunken park whose greenery is strategically offset by some of
the world’s most innovative architecture. You can see jaw-dropping examples
from such masters as Felix Candela and Santiago Calatrava. The latter’s opera
house puts the one in Sydney to shame. It’s what you get if you crossed a
hooded cobra with a bicycle helmet.
The hills are alive... |
Switzerland has many charms, but to get your full Heidi on,
head for the village of Gruyeres, as
in the cheese. Pig out on raclettes, paving stones of cheese that come with a
tableside contraption that melts it for easy schmears on your delivery device
of choice. There is a castle, an arts center, loads of eateries, and stunning
scenery, including mountainside pasturelands. Plan your visit well and part of
the journey involves a narrow-gauge open car train that wends through Alpine
villages, where school children and shoppers hop on and off.
Shetlands most colorful residents |
If that’s not rural enough for you, try Scotland’s Shetland Islands where you can get up
close and personal with puffins at Sumburgh Head near the airport. Rent a car
because the Shetlands are all about nature. It lies 110 miles north of the rest
of Scotland and consists of over 100 islands, just 16 of which are inhabited.
Oddly, its biggest island is called Mainland, where one finds Lerwick, its only
sizable settlement whose 7,000 residents make up one-third of those who live in
the Shetlands. As you might expect, not much happens on the isles—unless you go
in winter for Up Helly Aa, a Viking fire festival. The Shetlands are definitely
more Norse than Scottish. Be independent; it can be hard to find decent food,
but the pubs and beer are warm, there is amazing music to be heard, and Iron
Age culture to explore.
Rob Weir
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