Travel
From kayaking and hiking to cooking classes and zip-lining – Thai city that is top place to visit next year
WHEN we packed up our lives in the UK for a new adventure in Thailand, we headed straight for the island paradise of Koh Samui with its endless white sands and captivating coastal charm.
But as the initial excitement faded, we found ourselves restless.
It turns out the three of us weren’t the beach bums we thought we were!
When my partner and our son suggested we explore Chiang Mai, Thailand’s second-largest city, in the north, I was sceptical.
I’ve never been a fan of cities – they always felt too busy and overwhelming.
Fast forward a year, and I’m now completely smitten with our new home; you could call me a city convert.
While Chiang Mai lacks beaches, it more than compensates with its rivers, lakes, mountains, waterfalls, and parks.
The atmosphere here is relaxed and welcoming, a refreshing contrast to many other cities.
Despite its chill vibe, there’s no shortage of activities – from kayaking and hiking to cooking classes and zip-lining.
It’s no wonder that Lonely Planet named it one of the top places to visit in 2025.
I love wandering through the charming streets of the old city, still encircled by remnants of ancient walls and the Ping River.
The rustic, relaxed, tree-lined avenues are dotted with quirky shops and restaurants.
There’s a distinct wellness vibe, with massage parlours, spas, and health-focused juice bars on every corner.
The trendy suburb of Nimmanhaemin, affectionately known as Nimman, is a favourite among the digital nomad community and one of my top spots in Chiang Mai.
For coffee lovers like me, Chiang Mai is a paradise, boasting countless Instagram-worthy cafés.
Three favourites are Chom Cafe & Restaurant, No.39 Cafe, and Khaomao-Khaofang Imaginary Jungle, each offering enchanting settings complete with aqua blue lakes and manmade waterfalls.
Culinary capitals of the world
I can’t resist a good caramel macchiato – and here it’s just £1.60 a cream-topped cup.
Chiang Mai is often hailed as one of the culinary capitals of the world, and it’s easy to see why.
Khao Soi, a delicious Northern Thai noodle soup, is a must-try – only about £1.60 per bowl! Khao Soi Khun Yai, a tiny eatery in the old city, serves the best.
Don’t miss House By Ginger, known for its cosy, nostalgic decor and uniquely delicious Thai dishes.
For my birthday, we dined at The Little Glasshouse, where Chef Boy crafts exquisite European cuisine.
When I crave a taste of home, I head to Annie’s, Archers, or O.M.G Bar for the best roast dinners.
And for outstanding burgers, Smash Daddy’s is a must, while Chai & Thai in Nimman serves up mouthwatering Thai/Indian fusion.
After all that eating, there’s plenty of shopping to work off the calories.
For outstanding burgers, Smash Daddy’s is a must, while Chai & Thai in Nimman serves up mouthwatering Thai/Indian fusion
The main malls — Central Festival, Airport Plaza, and Maya Mall — offer a mix of high street and luxury brands.
And at night, the streets come alive with vibrant markets.
The Night Bazaar is perfect for haggling over souvenirs, while the Sunday Walking Street starts at Tha Phae Gate.
On weekends, I love visiting Jing Jai Market for organic produce and exploring the city’s thrift shops for hidden gems.
My love for elephants is huge (pun intended!).
Chiang Mai is home to several elephant sanctuaries where you can spend half or full days with these majestic creatures in their natural habitats.
I had an unforgettable experience at the Elephant Nature Park, an ethical sanctuary run by the wonderful Lek.
The Elefin Café is another gem; it’s a free-entry café in the mountains where you can grab a coffee and spend time feeding elephants while enjoying breathtaking scenery.
Hidden gems
Just watch out for the playful baby elephant that might try to pull you over with its trunk!
If you’re a fan of temples, Chiang Mai has the highest concentration in Thailand, with the most important being Wat Phra That Doi Suthep.
Perched on a mountain above the city, a cab driver once told us that you haven’t truly visited Chiang Mai until you’ve been there.
We climbed the 306 steps to the top, and the view was worth every drop of sweat.
If you prefer, a cable car will whisk you up for a small fee.
This city knows how to celebrate, hosting festivals for everything — flowers, food, music, and even digital nomads!
My favourites include the April Songkran Festival, where the streets transform into a massive water fight, and the Lantern Festival in November, where thousands of paper lanterns illuminate the night sky.
Chiang Mai is an incredibly affordable city with local beer at restaurants priced around £2.28. Cocktails start at just £5 in any of the vibrant bars, while local Thai dishes begin at £1.60.
With a wide range of accommodation options, you can choose from budget-friendly hostels like B Innspire, which start at £17 a night, to luxurious boutique hotels like the lavish Inside House with rooms from £135per night.
Whether you’re looking to save or indulge, Chiang Mai has something for everyone.
So, next time you plan a trip to Thailand, don’t overlook Chiang Mai.
You won’t be bored, and you just might become a city convert, like I did.
GO: Chiang Mai
GETTING/STAYING THERE: Fly to Chiang Mai via Bangkok from London from £503pp return in January, on airlines including Thai Airways, Eva Air and China Eastern (skyscanner.net).
B Innspire Hostel has rooms from £17 a night (binnspire.com).
Rooms from £135 per night, in January, at the-insidehouse.com.
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Caribbean island with British Airways flights to open revamped £100million international airport next year
AN improved ‘world class’ airport is set to open on a Caribbean island next year.
Tobago, an island in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, was named as one of Lonely Planet’s Best Destinations to Travel to in 2025.
The island’s airport – ANR Robinson International Airport- currently has UK flights, with British Airways flying twice a week.
And next year, it is opening it’s huge new renovation.
Estimated to have cost around $130million (£100million), the expansion includes a new terminal with space for three million passengers a year, three times the current airport capacity.
Larger retail outlets and restaurants, as well as newer improved airport security are also part of the renovation.
The renovation is set to open by March 2025.
Couva North MP Ravi Ratiram said back in September: “The new airport terminal building and associated infrastructure works project is at this time 74 per cent complete.
“The project has been delayed, bits and pieces with respect to amendments and adjustments. I think it was affected by Covid as well, but the bottom line is, we are well on schedule now.”
The airport first opened in the 1940s although has been expanded since 2004.
Only British Airways has direct international flights from the UK.
The other airlines operating from the airport are Caribbean Airlines, with flights to Port of Spain, New York and Barbados, with Condor having seasonal routes to Frankfurt.
And Tobago is increasingly becoming a holiday destination for Brits, thanks to the direct UK flights with British Airways.
From 2022 to 2023, there was a 32 per cent increase in UK tourists visiting the island.
The island is just 25 miles long and seven miles wide, but has some amazing stretches of sandy beaches.
There is Turtle Beach, where you can see leatherback turtles or visit the UNESCO-listed Main Ridge Forest Reserve, the oldest forest conservation area in the western hemisphere.
There is even ‘Nylon Pool,’ a shallow coral pool named by Princess Margaret on her honeymoon because the water was as clear as her nylon stockings.
British Airways holidays can be found for £788pp with return UK flights, seven hotel nights and daily breakfast.
Tobago isn’t the only Caribbean island getting a new airport.
Dominica, different from the Dominican Republic, has revealed plans for a ew XCD$1billion (£292million) airport to welcome international flights.
Brits currently have to fly to the island via St Lucia, taking 15 hours.
And Barbuda has opened a new $14million (£10.8million) international airport.
Known for its pink sand beach, it hopes to open up to international commercial flights, currently only operating private jets.
Lonely Planet’s Best in Travel 2025
Top 10 best countries
- Cameroon
- Lithuania
- Fiji
- Laos
- Kazakhstan
- Paraguay
- Trinidad & Tobago
- Vanuatu
- Slovakia
- Armenia
While not in the Caribbean, the island of Bali could soon open a second international airport in the northern region.
With record numbers visiting the island, the second airport hopes to both ease congestion at the current airport and encourage tourism to other parts or Bali.
Travel
British Isle with Caribbean-like coastline is tipped as top winter destination – as temperatures rarely go below zero
SITTING in the English Channel, just off the western coast of France, Jersey is known for its sandy beaches and rich history.
While the Channel Island is popular with Brits in the summer, it’s been tipped as a top winter destination thanks to the mild temperatures.
As the most southerly of the Channel Islands, Jersey benefits from mild weather in the winter, making it slightly warmer than the UK mainland.
According to the island’s tourism board, temperatures in Jersey rarely drop below freezing, ranging between 5C to 8C in the winter instead.
Because of its warmer winters, the Channel Island has been tipped as a top winter destination by a team of travel experts from the travel booking site, Omio.
The travel booking website researched the best locations where holidaymakers could experience a Euro Winter, with St Helier, the capital of Jersey topping the list.
Google searches of St Helier as a winter holiday destination rose 171 per cent compared to last year.
As the island’s capital, there are plenty of activities to do in St Helier – especially if there’s a chill in the air.
One of those is Chocolate Bar Jersey – an independent shop where holidaymakers can purchase handmade chocolate.
Other places to shop include the Liberty Wharf Shopping Centre, a restored Victorian shopping centre that’s home to top brands and cafes, and Voisins Department Store.
Mont Orgueil Castle is another popular attraction to visit in Jersey in the winter.
Bird watching is another popular pastime in the winter, with the best months for bird watching between October and March.
This is because plenty of birds migrate to the island for the winter.
Jersey is also said to be home to a year-round dolphin population, meaning holidaymakers may be able to spot the aquatic creatures in the winter.
Earlier this year, Jersey was named one of the world’s best islands in the Condé Nast Traveller’s 2024 Readers’ Choice Awards.
Jersey is known for its wide variety of beaches, with its coastline often being compared to more exotic locations like the Caribbean.
Beauport Beach, which is close to St Brelade’s Bay, is described as a hidden gem.
Arriving at the beach is an adventure, with a steep pathway of steps tumbling down from the cliff face from a small car park.
The south side of the beach is surrounded by granite cliffs and is a well-known sun trap, making it an ideal place for a walk.
Plenty of Jersey’s beaches are surrounded by palm trees, giving the island a tropical feel.
The harbour town of St Aubin’s, located on the southwest side of the island between Portelet Bay and St Helier, is another popular destination on the island.
Originally a fishing village, St Aubin’s used to be the island’s economic centre, with the harbour being central to the town’s history.
Its fort is another highlight, with holidaymakers able to reach the structure at low tide.
Jersey is a paradise for food lovers – with the island making the most of its local produce like Jersey royal potatoes, Jersey milk, and seafood.
Jersey milk is used to make butter and ice-cream, which is available from many of the island’s cafes and beaches.
The Michelin-starred restaurant – Bohemia Bar & Restaurant at The Club Hotel & Spa in St Helier is one of Jersey’s top offerings.
With its chic atmosphere, bright linen-clad tables, dark wood walls, and modern European cuisine made with local, seasonal, and fresh ingredients, the restaurant has held on to a Michelin star for 20 consecutive years.
Other awards under its belt include four AA Rosettes and a place in the top 1,000 restaurants in the world by LA LISTE in 2022.
The island can be a budget-friendly holiday destination depending on the type of accommodation and activities you choose.
There’s a variety of budget-friendly accommodation options, including guesthouses, B&Bs, and Airbnbs.
Holidaymakers can save money by exploring Jersey on foot thanks to the compact size of the island.
The easiest way to reach Jersey is via ferry or plane, depending on where you live on the UK mainland.
Condor Voyager is a high-speed ferry from Poole to St Helier that takes about four hours. A standard car trip for two can cost from £75 per person each way.
Commodore Clipper is a conventional ferry from Portsmouth to St. Helier that takes about 10 hours and 20 minutes. The average price for a foot passenger is £206, and the average price for a car is £436.
And EasyJet offers cheap flights to Jersey starting from £26.99 in November.
What is it like to visit Jersey?
Head of Travel (Digital) Caroline McGuire visited Jersey last year, here’s what she thought of the British Isle.
IF I told you there’s an island an hour’s flight from the UK, with a Caribbean-like coastline, that gets summer quicker than England and you don’t need a passport – you’d think I was pulling your leg.
But such a unicorn does exist in the English Channel: Jersey.
When my family and I visited earlier this year, every beach was outstanding, the weather glorious, the food a fantastic hybrid of French and English tastes.
And, perfect when travelling with a four-year-old, almost everywhere could be reached in 20 minutes by car.
Jersey calls itself “curiously Brit . . . (ish)” and it sums up this island, 14 miles from the coast of France, perfectly.
Reached by plane in an hour or by car ferry from Poole in four hours, it is part of the Channel Islands — British Isles but not controlled by Westminster — so you don’t need a passport to visit.
We enjoyed St Ouen’s so much that we returned twice.
Once for some sandcastle-building and a bracing swim — 11C in late April — and again for a hike along the rugged coast towards the bottom of the island, via the 6,500-year-old La Sergente Tomb and up to Britain’s southernmost lighthouse, Corbiere.
Also stunning was St Brelade’s Bay, which regularly features on lists of best beaches in the British Isles, thanks to its white sand, shallow surf and clear water.
The island’s proximity to France means it is full of history.
Jersey and Guernsey were the only part of the British Empire occupied by the Nazis in World War Two, and the Germans built secret tunnels to defend themselves from the Allied Forces.
The island also has fortifications from the Napoleonic Wars and English Civil War, but our favourite was 13th-century Mont Orgueil Castle, where displays reveal tales of life inside its walls over the years.
Our visit was made extra-special by the dress-up room which allows both adults and children to dress up as knights, jesters and princesses to explore the castle.
Pretending to fire a cannon over the ramparts while dressed as a knight was brilliant fun — as in fact, was the entire trip.
When it comes to family holidays, you’d be hard pressed to find better.
Meanwhile, these are six secret holiday spots in Europe.
And this French holiday spot has been described as “unfairly overlooked”.
Travel
Ancient English forest that starred in two Disney films has roaming deer and unique attraction reopening next year
THE Ashridge Estate in Hertfordshire has been used as a backdrop for several blockbuster films thanks to its ancient woodland.
Managed by The National Trust since 1926, the Ashridge Estate is part of the Chiltern Hills, an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
The National Trust still uses livestock to help maintain the diverse habitats, with foresters felling timber to keep the woodland healthy.
With its beech and oak woodlands, fields of bluebells in the spring, and roaming fallow deer, the 5,000-acre site has proved a master in conjuring up wonderful settings.
Disney films such as Angelina Jolie‘s Maleficent and the musical fantasy Into the Woods, starring Meryl Streep, Emily Blunt and James Corden, were all shot in the ancient woodland.
Fantasy movies like Stardust and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire were also filmed in the forest.
And if Ashridge Estate is good enough for Hollywood stars and big-name productions, then it is certainly somewhere Brits should visit for a day out.
This National Trust walk gives some of the best of the autumn colours in the less-trodden areas of the beautiful Ashridge Estate in Hertfordshire.
The 5,000-acre site is home to over 80 miles of pathways, with navigation website Komoot listing 19 different walks – although there are probably many more.
One of those is the Ashridge Estate Boundary Trail – North, a circular walk through the northern half of the site where ramblers pass through Ivinghoe Beacon and Incombe Hole.
A huge draw for visitors is the deer that roam on the historic estate.
The deer were introduced in the 13th century by Edmund Earl of Cornwall who founded a monastery on the site where Ashridge House now stands.
A deer park was created next to the monastery, with the woodland creatures remaining on the site for hundreds of years.
Nowadays, deer roam freely on the huge site, with three different species on the site, including Fallow deer, Muntjac deer and Red deer.
Ashridge Estate is also known for its bluebells, with the flowering attracting large numbers of visitors each year.
The blooming date for bluebells varies depending on the weather, but they’re usually visible in April and May.
Dockey Wood is the best place to view bluebells in Ashridge Estate, with visitors charged a small entry fee of £3.50 to visit last year.
Bridgewater Monument, which is currently closed for conservation works, is set to reopen in Spring 2025.
Before its closure, 15,000 visitors would climb its 172 steps to the viewing platform every year.
From the viewing platform, visitors can see Wembley Stadium and Canary Wharf on a clear day.
Pitstone Windmill is another top attraction to visit in the woodland.
It’s thought to be one of the oldest post mills in Britain, with visitors able to explore its inside and learn how it works.
Pitstone Windmill is set to reopen in May for the summer season.
There’s also a visitor centre on-site, with a plant shop and a second-hand bookshop, and a cafe on the site.
Ashridge Estate has a 4.5/5 star rating on TripAdvisor from hundreds of reviews.
One person wrote: “The Ashridge Estate covers a large area, and there are plenty of walks to explore.”
“There is some really beautiful scenery to enjoy so have your phone or camera ready to capture what you see”
Another person added: “Stunning gardens and a lovely tea room. There is so much to explore that you would want to spend a day here if the weather is good.”
Ashridge Estate is free to enter, with the ancient forest open throughout the year.
It’s a 90-minute drive from London.
Inside the UK’s free ‘indoor rainforest’
Exploring the Amazon rainforest or going on an adventure in the jungles of Borneo might seem like impossible dreams for some.
But at the heart of a UK city there’s a huge rainforest-like attraction, with hundreds of exotic plant species, that can be visited for free.
The Barbican conservatory in London is described as both a “utopia” and “a favourite” place for those living in the capital.
The indoor garden is the second largest conservatory in the city, but it doesn’t cost anything to enter, with guests able to meander around its walkways and paths at their leisure.
Small terrapins and exotic fish can be seen swimming in ponds inside, adding to the feeling that you’re in a tropical landscape.
Meanwhile, these camping etiquette mistakes will make other campers hate you.
And these are the best campsites to visit in the UK.
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