sábado, 15 de enero de 2011

India, Through a Birder’s Eyes

India, Through a Birder’s Eyes

Kuni Takahashi for The New York Times
Eyes on the skies at Chhatra Sagar, a luxury camp on the banks of a dam in parched western Rajasthan. Its reservoir attracts water birds. More Photos »
IT began with parakeets, the brash, busybody rose-ringed parakeets of Delhi, with their lipstick red beaks and their irrepressible chatter, gossiping in the crevices of 15th-century tombs.
Then one morning while I drank coffee, a shimmering blue-black sunbird came to drink nectar in my garden. At twilight one day, I looked up to see a hornbill perched on a neighbor’s tree. An interview with the prime minister of India was repeatedly interrupted by the calls of a cantankerous peacock in his garden.
And so went my discovery of the birds of India. It was an accumulation of accidental discoveries. A friend in Mumbai recommended that I check out the flamingos dancing in the stinky, mucky mud flats of Sewri. Then one day, not far from the Taj Mahal, a pair of sarus cranes, the tallest flying bird in the world, stood in a shallow pond. On a trip to the outsourcing hub of Bangalore, I was urged to drive off the highway to see pelicans roosting in banyan trees. And trekking across the Himalayan plateau called Ladakh one summer, I was stopped in my tracks by the sight of a black-necked crane flying across a still blue lake.
Most improbably of all, on a trip back to that clattering, honking, riotous city called Calcutta, where I was born, I woke up one morning to songbirds.
From the cold lakes of the Himalayas to the sand dunes of western Rajasthan to the tropical rain forests in the south, India hosts a dizzying variety of birds, like a dizzying variety of everything else. Residents and visitors, common and rare, more than 1,200 species have been recorded in India, which puts it somewhere between the United States (just under 900 recorded species) and Colombia (more than 1,800 species).
Several bird species in India are, however, endangered and their habitats are increasingly threatened, as this rapidly modernizing nation expands roads, mines and steel plants into environmentally sensitive areas. It helps that farming is done largely without the thrashers and tractors that ravage nests in more industrialized countries. Most of all, it helps that birds, just like millions of Indians, adjust to difficult conditions: They roost on rooftops. They hide their chicks in rice paddies. They fly away when they must.
“We think of nature as pristine,” said K. S. Gopi Sundar, an Indian ornithologist who studies cranes. “But it’s amazing what nature can do.”
Birding has taken me to some of the most extraordinary landscapes in this country — mangroves and desert, rain forest, cloud forest, mountains and miles and miles of coast.
But even in ordinary surroundings, birding has taught me to appreciate the rewards of being still. You hear a call. You look for a flutter. Suddenly something astonishing comes. And then goes.
What follows is a sampling of birding spots in North and South India. (The northeast and the Andaman Islands, two of India’s most important but least accessible birding areas, must be left for later.)
In an age of so much inconsequential tweeting, it’s worth recalling the advice of yogis: Sit still, they say, so still that a bird can land on your head.
North India: Delhi, Rajasthan, Himalayas
India’s crowded, boorish capital is an improbable haven of birds — and a natural place to linger for a few days, before venturing out to the wilds of the north.
In city parks, hoopoes and hornbills are plentiful; the haunting call of the koel can break the stillness of a muggy afternoon. Owls are everywhere. And on the flood plains of the Yamuna River, now a filthy drain that swallows the sewage of Delhi, a city of an estimated 18 million inhabitants, sits one of North India’s richest nature reserves, the Okhla Bird Sanctuary. At daybreak one scorching Monday at the end of May, I persuaded Mr. Sundar, the ornithologist, to take me there. A flock of garganey ducks was still hanging around before making its way to northern China. A purple heron — “rakish, with long thin neck” in the words of the Oxford “Pocket Guide to the Birds of the Indian Subcontinent” — landed in a clump of water hyacinth.
Mr. Sundar pointed to a tailorbird stitching its delicate, egg-shaped basket of a nest. In a bird version of “MasterChef,” if you will, the males of the species compete to construct the finest nest. The female chooses a nest (and nest-maker) of her liking.

Winter is the best time to visit Okhla, particularly for water birds: storks, flamingos, geese that can fly over Mount Everest. But even in the peak of summer — not exactly prime birding season — Mr. Sundar pointed out at least 20 species over the course of two hours: a yellow-footed pigeon, an oriole, a pair of partridges that waddled across the road just as we drove out.
The road out of Delhi offers three distinct birding habitats: plains, desert and hill. The first option: Hire a car from Delhi and take an extra couple of days on the well-trodden trail connecting Delhi, Agra and Jaipur to visit Keoladeo National Park in Bharatpur, the former duck-hunting grounds of maharajas and now the country’s best-known bird park.
If you’re spending a day in Agra to see the Taj Mahal, drive two hours to Bharatpur by nightfall and retire early. There are a variety of inns within a mile or two of the sanctuary — as well as a spartan state-run lodge right inside the park.The Birders Inn, where I spent one Christmas Eve, offers clean, unremarkable rooms encircling a pretty garden. The Laxmi Vilas is a renovated 19th-century palace. No matter where you stay, the real charm of Bharatpur is to wake up before dawn and head into the park. Songbirds stir themselves awake. Sambar deer come to drink at a pond. Painted storks spread their pink-dipped wings and alight from their roosts.
If the rains are good and Keoladeo’s lakes are full, the park in winter can host close to 400 species.
A road trip across the North Indian plains usually takes you along a noisy highway, past fields, markets and truck stops. But if you time it right (mornings and evenings are when birds are most likely to reveal themselves), you may well spot the sarus crane in a paddy field, standing nearly five feet tall on spindly pink legs. It is considered good luck for a newlywed couple to see a sarus on their wedding night. Locals believe the sarus mates for life. This is probably apocryphal. But how can seeing a sarus on your honeymoon be anything but a boon?
A second option takes you to the Kumaon Hills, a favorite of many birders because it covers such a wide variety of landscapes: the grasslands and gently rolling hills of Corbett National Park, the alpine woods just above, and then, farther up into oak and rhododendron forests that stretch up to an elevation of 8,000 feet. The rhododendron blooms from February to April, painting the forest red and drawing flocks of nectar-thirsty warblers. The village of Pangot, at about 6,500 feet, is a decent base from which to explore the hills.
The drive up the razorback hills to Pangot is a tricky venture. You may be rewarded by the sight of the reclusive cheer pheasant crossing the road. But you might also find that unseasonal rains have shut the road for fear of landslides. My one trip to Pangot, at what I thought was the tail end of a monsoon, was blanketed by rain. The tour group I used, Asian Adventures, did not warn me in advance of the roads or the rain, and I spent a wet weekend cooped up in a cabin in their Jungle Lore lodge without much electricity; the power was out, and soon the generator conked out too.
In all that rain and wind, the birds hid from view. But they couldn’t hold back their song. As I walked through the forest during an early morning dry spell, they sang and sang, like a choir performing for a blind woman in the mist. My guide could identify each bird by its call. A pair of rufous sibias screeched at each other from across the trees. A gray-headed canary-flycatcher trilled. White-throated laughingthrush giggled like schoolgirls. “Birdsongs,” says the blind narrator of “To the Wedding,” a novel by John Berger, “remind me of what things once looked like.”
The wind shook the rain off the trees. Two men, their bald pates shining, walked slowly up the gravel road, hands clasped behind their backs. The smoke of cooking fires rose up through the dark, damp forest. This is one of the great rewards of birding: In searching for birds, you end up hearing, seeing, smelling a great deal more.
In pursuit of a less rustic sensory feast, I went this winter to a luxury camp, Chhatra Sagar Nimaj, erected on the banks of a dam in parched western Rajasthan. I woke up before sunrise to the twitter — “see here, see here” — of a small, reclusive gray francolin. Mist hung above the water as I stepped out of my tent. Terns dived in for fish. A cormorant sat on the steps of the dam, jerking its neck forward and back, as if peering into the future, and then nervously turning right back to the past — or, more likely, just hunting for fish.
Even if not a storied birding destination, Chhatra Sagar can be a lavish one for the senses. A hundred years ago, a local Rajput noble known as Thakur Chhatra Singh dammed a stream that ran through his fields to store Rajasthan’s most precious resource: water. Ten years ago, his descendants cleverly leveraged it to draw tourists.

The reservoir, full this year, thanks to good rains, is the centerpiece of the resort. Thirteen spacious tents face the water, including two that sit on a nearby hill.
On a guided walk along a dirt trail that encircles the reservoir, I could see through my binoculars a flock of bar-headed geese pecking at the grass on the far edge of the water. An antelope, known in Hindi as nilgai, ambled ahead of us on the path; it had lost one of its horns, presumably in a neelgai version of a barroom brawl. At night, from my tent, I heard jackals.
At sundown, a full bar was laid out under the stars. An inventive kitchen created a meal for a spice-averse Western palate: peas dipped in coriander pesto and a local delicacy of smoked, lightly curried lentil cakes. The spacious tents were equipped with space heaters, often fired by a generator, I later learned, because the electricity supply here, as in much of rural India, remains erratic.
Guests are served bottled water, a common amenity in luxury hotels in India, but excessive, it seemed to me, in a place where locals use and re-use everything nature gives them. (Properly filtered water is safe to drink across India.) And the service was characterized by too much ritual servility for my liking. Waiters bowed, holding trays laden with juice and rose petals, and a porter was deployed to haul a scope and guidebook during our walk, along with bottled water.
Western Ghats: Goa and Kerala
The Western Ghats is a mountain chain that runs nearly 1,000 miles parallel to the Arabian Sea, from just above Mumbai to the tip of the Indian peninsula. It contains craggy hills, tropical evergreens and several rivers that pour down into peninsular India. So rich is its variety of birds, snakes, frogs and butterflies that the Western Ghats is considered a global biodiversity hot spot in urgent need of conservation. Mining poses the greatest threat.
“You pick any spot in the Western Ghats,” said Rajah Jayapal, an ornithologist with theWildlife Conservation Society in India, “and you will see no less than 300 species.”
The Western Ghats also run through two of India’s most popular tourist destinations: Goa and Kerala.
Goa is a treasure trove of birds. There are shorebirds, forest birds, birds that forage in the mud flats along the Zuari River, great raptors that hover over paddy fields. I have spent entire mornings in a friend’s garden doing nothing but listening to bird songs: orioles, coppersmith barbets, Malabar trogons.
But the richer bird habitat in the Western Ghats lies in Kerala. Like the Kumaon range, it offers a variety of landscapes. You can fly into the spice coast port city of Cochin, drive past paddy fields and within two hours reach a low-altitude deciduous forest. After a day or two here, you can take a narrow, winding highway to highland cloud forests near Munnar. Then, a half-day’s drive east and you’re in the Indira Gandhi National Park in the Annamalai Hills, with its tropical wet evergreens that shelter the great hornbill.
Over Thanksgiving weekend, I went with friends to the edges of the Thattekkad Bird Sanctuary, a mosaic of 11 habitats packed into about 50 square miles about a two-hour drive from Cochin. Salim Ali, India’s most famous ornithologist, identified Thattekkad as having one of the richest concentrations of bird diversity in the country. But alas. The sanctuary was closed when I went — a fact disclosed by the tour operator, Kalypso Adventures, only after I had already reached its camp.
At the Hornbill Camp on the banks of the Periyar River, the tents were clean and comfortable, with a pair of lounge chairs on the porch, facing the river. Unwittingly, our visit coincided with one of Kerala’s most important Hindu pilgrimage seasons. So, at 5 a.m., I was jarred awake not by songbirds but by Hindu hymns blasting from loudspeakers at a nearby temple.
The clouds hung low as we drove uphill into the forest that morning. We parked and walked, following the droppings of elephants that must have passed by earlier that morning. A pair of white-bellied treepies flew ahead.

The Malabar parakeets — smaller and screechier than their cousins in Delhi — flitted through the forest. We watched three hill mynahs fly overhead when we heard the long, lilting song of the Malabar whistling thrush. We found the thrush, nearly as black as a crow, with a streak of blue across its head, sitting in a tree, just below a woodpecker. Our guide, Jijo Mathew, reckoned the thrush was happy to be singing like this. I couldn’t argue. So was I.
Late in the day, as darkness crept over a grove of ailanthus, Mr. Mathew extracted an MP4 player from his backpack, hooked it up to a small, plastic Radio Shack speaker and played an unusual track: the territorial call of a jungle owlet, going “kook, kook,” like a terrified kitten, drowning the silence of the forest.
The trick worked. Being territorial creatures, an owlet is irked by another owlet in its lair. And so, just as Mr. Mathew had intended, the recorded call prompted a real jungle owlet — indeed barely bigger than a kitten, with big curious owl eyes — to reveal itself. It fluttered in the trees. Then it came and sat on a branch right in front of us. Owlet stared long and hard. We stared long and hard back.
The forest soon grew dark. Owlet disappeared from view. Mr. Mathew dug into his bag of tricks and pulled out a flashlight. He shone the light across the forest, searching for small, bright eyes in the dark.

PLANNING
A word to the birder going to India: First, ask your tour agency or lodge operator about weather, road conditions, park closures and rain. If you’re visiting a body of water and there hasn’t been enough rain that year, water birds are unlikely to come. Second, do not assume that India’s ecological treasures are always well cared for. After I tried to visit Thettakkad and found it closed, I read in a newspaper that a local citizens’ group had sued the owners of a stone quarry for blasting near the sanctuary.
For the North Indian destinations, fly to New Delhi; there are many international flights daily. For the Western Ghats, Mumbai and Bangalore are the closest international airports; from those cities, take local flights or trains.
WHERE TO STAY
If you go to Corbett, there are a number of inns and cottages on the periphery of the park, including Camp Corbett (cornwall-online.co.uk/camp-corbett; cottages are $68 a person a night, double occupancy), run by Siddharth Anand. His guides can take you birding into Corbett and up to the Kumaon hills.
In Pangot, Mr. Anand runs a lodge called Mountain Quail (blazeatrailadventures.com; 2,400 rupees, or about $54 at 44.8 rupees to the dollar, for two). Its wood-paneled cottages are inviting, and the large windows of the dining room overlook a wide expanse of the Himalayas.
At Jungle Lore (pangot.com) two nights, with meals and birding guide, came to just under 16,000 rupees. I was first offered a cottage next to a neighbor’s barn. The aroma of cow dung was a little too overpowering for me. I asked to be moved. Corbett and Pangot are accessible by train (rctc.co.in).
In Goa, avoid the beach resorts and stay in a village inland; try to take a boat ride on the Zuari River. If you go to Munnar and Top Slip, there are a number of home stays, particularly in old plantation houses, listed in guidebooks and specialized Web sites likehomestayskerala.com.
Chhatra Sagar Nimaj (chhatrasagar.com; double rooms 19,800 rupees, including meals and tours) is a two-hour drive from the medieval fort city of Jodhpur, one of a handful of luxury resorts in Rajasthan that offers tourists a respite from the frenzy of India’s human habitats.
To go birding usually means dawdling for hours at your lodge or camp, which for me means that the food had better be good. At Hornbill Camp (thehornbillcamp.com; 5,000 rupees for two) in Kerala, the meals were among the highlights — fresh, local fare like vegetable avial, simmered in coconut milk, spice-rubbed fish, sweet buttery halvah for dessert.
Birding lodges should have proper coffee, since birding demands early morning wake-ups. I have been uniformly disappointed. If you care for good coffee, carry your own.
WHAT TO READ
Salim Ali’s autobiography, “Fall of a Sparrow,” offers a window into the making of an unlikely early Indian naturalist. For visitors to Kumaon, “Man-Eaters of Kumaon” is an old-fashioned, though amusing chronicle of how Jim Corbett went from being a hunter to a conservationist. I find the Oxford “Pocket Guide to the Birds of the Indian Subcontinent” easy to use.
Somini Sengupta is a former bureau chief in India for The New York Times
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Narrowing the Choices, Online

PRACTICAL TRAVELER

Narrowing the Choices, Online

WHEN it comes to planning a vacation, travelers can either spend hours online figuring out where to go, which flights and hotels to book, and what to do when they get there, or they can call a travel agent to figure it out for them. Now, a new breed of members-only Web sites is offering something in between.
Call it the curated search. These hybrid sites aim to eliminate much of the annoyance of online trip planning by winnowing the selection of hotels and destinations to an edited list, which has been vetted to appeal to the sensibilities of affluent travelers. Instead of 600 hotels in Los Angeles, for example, you may get only 11. An added attraction: travelers are offered the personalized help of offline experts to customize their vacation.
The sites include Jetsetter.com, which this week introduced an edited list of hotels and vacations that have been reviewed by Jetsetter correspondents. Unlike the hotel deals that are offered through the site’s popular flash sales, these accommodations can be booked at any time. Jetsetter is also testing a program that, for a fee of about $150, pairs members with travel writers who have been to the selected destination.
MyLittleSwans.com, a new high-end travel site, is focused primarily on family travel with suggested itineraries for more than 30 destinations, based on vacations taken by the founder, Katrina Garnett, a Silicon Valley entrepreneur, and her family. Members can duplicate those experiences, which include camel rides in Morocco and tango lessons inArgentina, or work with the same operators and guides the family used on their trips to customize a new vacation.
NextGreatPlace.com, a start-up, is creating a matchmaking service for travelers seeking high-end vacations at screened resorts, villas and other properties. And at least one members-only site, RueLaLa.com, has teamed up with Virtuoso, an upscale travel agent network, to offer members who book luxury travel deals a free consultation with travel experts.
The sites are aimed at travelers frustrated with sites that fail to simplify the planning and booking process. “The old infrastructure needs to be taken apart for online travel,” said Ms. Garnett of MyLittleSwans, referring to the searches that require travelers to sift through hundreds of options. “People are looking for what’s trusted and vetted.”
Indeed, a study by Forrester Research found that in the first three months of 2010, the number of leisure travelers in the United States who liked using the Web to plan and book their vacations dropped to 47 percent, down from 53 percent in 2007. Overall the growth of online leisure travelers is expected to slow, increasing by just 3 percent between 2009 and 2014.
MyLittleSwans was partly born of Ms. Garnett’s own frustrations. Booking sites, she said, didn’t offer insider access, and many agents didn’t have the local insight of an on-the-ground tour operator. “I was always calling different travel agents and asking, ‘Have you been there?’ They’d say no. I’d know more about a place before booking a trip than they would.”
So after years of friends copying her upscale family vacations, she created the site, which lists her itineraries and puts travelers in touch with tour operators and local guides she has vetted.
NextGreatPlace.com aims to gain traveler trust by using a 300-point checklist of amenities such as air-conditioning and DVD players as a way to ensure that accommodations meet certain quality criteria.
Jetsetter’s new hotel collection, dubbed Jetsetter 24/7, filters hotel options to a list of about 150 properties that include brands like Banyan Tree Hotels & Resorts and the Rocco Forte Collection and boutique hotels like the Chambers in New York. Each hotel is vetted by a Jetsetter staff member who has visited the hotel, though not necessarily anonymously. Vacations to Machu Picchu and other destinations will also be offered. Detailed reviews are posted on the site, along with pricing and availability, and a staff of 12 is on hand to assist travelers by phone or e-mail.
Jetsetter is also testing a paid planning program that pairs members with one of 200 travel journalists who have written for publications like Fodor’s guidebooks or Travel & Leisure, and who can suggest itineraries and restaurants and offer other tips to help round out a trip. The fee varies by request but is expected to be $125 to $200.
The Jetsetter program, called the Expert Planning Service, is aimed at Gen Xers like Libby Sullivan, a regional sales manager for a software company in Philadelphia. She is accustomed to booking trips online, but doesn’t want to spend hours planning a trip. “My husband and I are both executives, and our time is very valuable,” she said. “It’s too overwhelming to research this stuff.”
Ms. Sullivan recently tested the Expert Planning Service for a Miami trip. Jetsetter put her in touch with Paul Rubio, an economist turned travel journalist who has written for Fodor’s guidebooks. He suggested the stylish Mondrian South Beach after hearing Ms. Sullivan’s criteria. Though she has yet to take the trip, she said the recommendation “looks absolutely spectacular. It’s a small boutique, exactly what we wanted.”
Membership is easy to obtain. For example, Jetsetter members can invite anyone to join, while travelers without a friend in the network can request membership on the site. MyLittleSwans.com requires travelers simply to register.
Such sites may hold potential for travelers looking for new planning options, but they do have drawbacks. For one thing, the sites are aimed at well-heeled travelers, offering little to those on a budget. Although Jetsetter offers luxury for less through flash sales, MyLittleSwans offers potential savings by cutting out the middlemen, .
“That’s great if you’re someone at Goldman Sachs,” said Henry H. Harteveldt, a travel analyst at Forrester, but not “if you are someone who has a more modest income.”
Secondly, the options might be too limited for some travelers. MyLittleSwans features roughly 35 destinations, though its recommended suppliers can plan trips in more than 80 countries. And NextGreatPlace.com, which debuted this month, has only four properties in two destinations — Vail, Colo., and Cabo San LucasMexico. Its goal is to establish 100 destinations in five years.
And while the sites specialize in the experiential side of a trip — hunting down the perfect Italian villa, for instance — getting there requires more work on your part. Jetsetter doesn’t offer car rentals or flights. And while a travel adviser at MyLittleSwans is available 24/7 via e-mail and phone, the site doesn’t handle bookings, but rather makes referrals.
So if you’re looking to splurge on a vacation but find the options presented by large travel sites like Expedia or Travelocity too daunting, these curated search sites will quickly supply you with filtered recommendations so you don’t have to waste hours online. But if you want to find a budget hotel in Barcelona, a search engine like Expedia, not Jetsetter, might be better.
And if you want a personal advocate in case your flight is canceled and you end up stranded at the airport instead of ensconced in that perfect Tuscan villa, better call a travel agent.

8 Hotels to Look Out for in 2011

OPENINGS

8 Hotels to Look Out for in 2011

The Rasa in Jaipur, shown in a rendering, will unveil its canvas and glass tents in March.
THE global economic forecast may be dim, but travelers can look forward to distinctiveness among the class of 2011 hotel openings. In Hong Kong, the city’s tallest skyscraper will become home to a hotel. In India, a resort made of box-shaped tents will take shape. And in New York, a Latin import will have its debut. These and three other newcomers aim to inspire travel strictly for the in-house amenities, activities and design.
David Durbak
Blue-hued rooms at the Dream South Beach, expected to open Feb. 1.
no credit.
A room at the Rosewood San Miguel de Allende, opening next month.
RITZ-CARLTON, HONG KONG
When the hotel opens in Hong Kong’s tallest building in March, the rooms at the Ritz-Carlton, Hong Kong(ritzcarlton.com) will be higher above street level than those of any other hotel in the world. Lodged in the International Commerce Center on Levels 102 through 118, the hotel will be surrounded by glass walls that ensure skyscraper views of Hong Kong Island and Victoria Harbor from all of its 312 rooms, the top-floor bar, the outdoor terrace, the gym and the pool, which has a ceiling that shows video. Even 11 spa treatment rooms on the 116th floor will have floor-to-ceiling windows that reveal the sights. Ritz-Carlton promises a casual atmosphere at its six bars and restaurants, including one with Asian tapas beside the rooftop fire pits. Doubles from 6,000 Hong Kong dollars, or $787 at 7.6 Hong Kong dollars to the U.S. dollar.
RASA
JAIPUR, INDIA
In March, just over nine miles from downtown Jaipur, theRasa resort (sterlinghotels.com/rasa) will unveil 40 square tents with glass wall facades and canvas sides, blending modern design with nature-based tourism. Each Rasa tent will have a four-poster bed, full bathroom and a private box-shaped outdoor pavilion. In a dramatically arched dining room, the resort’s restaurant serves organic produce grown on site. The futuristic compound adjoins Amer Fort, a 16th-century fortress with ornate interiors, and offers access to Kanak Vrindavan Valley, a garden popular with birders. Doubles from $360.
HOTEL MISSONI KUWAIT
KUWAIT CITY, KUWAIT
In time for Kuwait’s 50th anniversary of its independence from Britain, Hotel Missoni Kuwait (hotelmissoni.com) will open in February with 169 rooms, all overlooking the Arabian Gulf. Inspired by the Missoni fashion line, known for its multicolored patterns, the design is pegged to bold color — more than 85 different shades — including mosaic tiles laid out in Missoni’s signature zigzag stripes at the bottom of the swimming pool. Wares from restaurant china to beach towels were custom designed by Missoni for the hotel, its second, which will also host an Italian restaurant, an 18th-floor lounge serving global fare and a Six Senses Spa set to open in summer. Doubles from $320.
CORINTHIA HOTEL LONDON
Tucked into a block between Trafalgar Square and the Thames, the Corinthia Hotel London (corinthialondon.com), opening April 2, occupies a building that was originally a hotel but spent 71 years as government offices. It will contain 294 rooms, several within turrets, and all with muted color schemes and spacious marble bathrooms. A 23,000-square-foot ESPA spa provides 15 treatment rooms, a lap pool and cafe. The chef Massimo Riccioli, who runs La Rosetta in Rome, will create a seafood restaurant in the Corinthia, the ninth of the family-run, Malta-based luxury Corinthia Hotels group. Doubles from £450, or $670 at $1.51 to the pound.
THE GREAT GETAWAY MARRAKECH HOTEL & SPA
MARRAKESH, MOROCCO
Fifteen minutes south of Marrakesh en route to the Atlas Mountains, The Great Getaway(the-great-getaway.com) aims to offer guests access to both city and country, with Land Rover tours in the surrounding desert and guided shopping excursions in the city. The 20-room compound opens in March with accommodations including mountain-view rooms in the main lodge and villas with two bedrooms and their own orange, lemon or pomegranate orchards. Four air-conditioned luxury tents include fireplaces and free-standing copper bathtubs. The nearly five-acre, clay-walled resort hosts a palm-ringed swimming pool and traditional hammam for on-site diversions. Doubles from 140 euros, or about $183 at $1.31 to the euro.
DREAM SOUTH BEACH
MIAMI
Using a star motif and sky-blue color scheme, the boutique hotelier Vikram Chatwal is bringing an ethereal sensibility to the 108-room Dream South Beach(dreamsouthbeach.com), expected to open Feb. 1. Dream connects two previously separate four-story Art Deco buildings using an entry courtyard with wall fountains and bamboo plants, and a rooftop walkway. Frosty-blue-hued rooms feature hanging crystal light fixtures, etched mirrors and geometric-patterned headboards. The chef Todd English will manage food and beverage operations, which cover the lobby restaurant, the rooftop poolside lounge and the minibar goodies. Doubles from $275.
HÔTEL AMERICANO
NEW YORK
The Mexico-based Grupo Habita runs stylish hotels in Acapulco, Playa del Carmen, Puebla and Mexico City. In March it plans to make its debut north of the border with the 56-room Hôtel Americano (www.americanohotel.com), on 27th Street in Chelsea, near the second phase of the High Line elevated promenade, which is also scheduled to open this spring. The Mexican architect Enrique Norten designed the 10-story building, and the French designer Arnaud Martigny has outfitted the minimalist interiors with glass-enclosed showers, concrete floors and platform beds. Most amenities — a contemporary Latin-accented French bistro, two subterranean bars and a rooftop pool and lounge — will open by summer, when visitors will be able to walk off a meal or drinks on the promenade. Though rates have not been set, the company said it expects doubles to start around $325.
ROSEWOOD SAN MIGUEL DE ALLENDE
SAN MIGUEL DE ALLENDE, MEXICO
Americans have been going to San Miguel de Allende, in Mexico’s central highlands, since the 1950s, when military veterans found that their G.I. Bill benefits were good for tuition at the Instituto Allende. The Rosewood San Miguel de Allende (rosewoodsanmiguel.com) has carved out a 13-acre enclave behind the art-centric school, where on Feb. 8 it is opening 67 rooms featuring beamed ceilings and outdoor patios or terraces. The colonial-inspired compound will also include a rooftop tapas bar framing views of the town cathedral, two swimming pools and a spa with five treatment rooms. And the resort offers its own educational opportunity: the chef will teach Mexican cooking. Through April 20, doubles from $295, including breakfast.

En este día...

On This Day in HistorySaturday, January 15th
The 015th day of 2011.
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Today's Highlights in History
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On Jan. 15, 1967, the first Super Bowl was played as the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League defeated the Kansas City Chiefs of the American Football League, 35-10. (Go to article.)On Jan. 15 , 1929Dr. Martin LutherKing Jr. , the black Baptist minister who led the American Civil Rights Movement in the 1950's and '60's with his doctrine of nonviolent resistance , was born. Following hisdeath on April 4 , 1968, his obituary appeared in The Times. (Go to obit. |Other Birthdays)
Editorial Cartoon of the Day

On January 15, 1881Harper's Weekly featured a cartoon about the Balkans. (See the cartoon and read an explanation.)

On this date in:
1559England's Queen Elizabeth I was crowned in Westminster Abbey.
1844The University of Notre Dame received its charter from the state of Indiana.
1929Civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was born in Atlanta.
1973President Richard Nixon announced the suspension of all U.S. offensive action in North Vietnam, citing progress in peace negotiations.
1976Sara Jane Moore was sentenced to life in prison for her attempt on the life of President Gerald Ford in San Francisco.
1978Serial killer Ted Bundy murdered two students in a sorority house at Florida State University in Tallahassee.
1992The Yugoslav federation effectively collapsed as the European Community recognized the republics of Croatia and Slovenia.
2001Wikipedia, a web-based encyclopedia, made its debut.
2004The NASA Spirit rover rolled onto the surface of Mars.
2005A military court at Fort Hood, Texas, sentenced Army Specialist Charles Graner Jr. to 10 years behind bars for physically and sexually mistreating Iraqis at Abu Ghraib prison.
2009US Airways Capt Chelsey Sullenberger guided a jetliner disabled by a bird strike just after takeoff from New York's LaGuardia Airport to a safe landing in the Hudson River. All 155 people aboard survived.

Current Birthdays
Matt Holliday turns 31 years old today.

AP Photo/David Zalubowski Baseball player Matt Holliday turns 31 years old today.

64Andrea Martin
Actress
54Mario Van Peebles
Actor, director
44Lisa Lisa
Singer (Lisa Lisa and Cult Jam)
43Chad Lowe
Actor
40Regina King
Actress
36Mary Pierce
Tennis player
30Pitbull
Rapper, reggaeton artist
Historic Birthdays
Martin Luther King
 
1/15/1929 - 4/4/1968
American minister and civil rights leader 

(Go to obit.)

51(Jean B. Poquelin) Moliere
1/15/1622 - 2/17/1673
French playwright

75Jean Coralli
1/15/1779 - 5/1/1854
French dancer/choreographer

76Abigail Kelley Foster
1/15/1810 - 1/14/1887
American feminist/abolitionist

83Josef Breuer
1/15/1842 - 6/20/1925
Austrian physician/physiologist

84Pierre Samuel du Pont
1/15/1870 - 4/5/1954
American businessman

78Arturi Virtanen
1/15/1895 - 11/11/1973
Finnish biochemist

83Goodman Ace
1/15/1899 - 3/25/1982
American writer/producer

64Gene Krupa
1/15/1909 - 10/16/1973
American jazz drummer

52Gamal Nasser
1/15/1918 - 9/28/1970
Egyptian Prime Minister

Go to a previous date.
SOURCE: The Associated Press
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