Win A Room Makeover Hidden Treasures

Transcription

Win A Room Makeover Hidden Treasures
Wyndham Faces & Places
M A G A Z I N E
Hidden Treasures
Beyond The Main Attractions
Of Orlando And Hawai‘i
Win A Room
Makeover
Wyndham Vacation Resorts’
Newest Sweepstakes
colorado: on and off the mountain
VOLUME 5, ISSUE 3 - 2008
It Pays to Book Online at WyndhamVacationResorts.com
Book your next escape online and double your chances of winning “green” with Wyndham Vacation Resorts.
Take your new online reservation system out for a spin and you just might find yourself behind the wheel
of a new Toyota Prius or Ford Escape Hybrid or with $1,000 in your pocket — just for booking online!
How can you win? Simply book your next vacation online and
arrive at a participating resort and you are automatically entered to win.
For Official Rules and to learn about an alternative way to enter, visit
WyndhamVacationResorts.com.
eGrand Prize (2 winners): Your choice of a new Toyota Prius or a
Ford Escape Hybrid (retail value of vehicles is $22,875 to $26,640)
or $10,000 (USD) in lieu of vehicle
eSecond Prize (6 winners): $1,000 cash awarded each month
between July and December 2008
Book your next escape online today and win!
Odds of winning depend upon number of entries. Retail value of vehicles is $22,875 to $26,640.
Congratulations to FairShare
Plus® owner Cherry Velasco,
from Fremont, Calif., who
received a check for $1,000
from Franz Hanning to
commemorate the 100,000th
reservation made with the
new online reservation
system and to kick off the
Book Your Escape Online
Sweepstakes.
VOLUME 5, ISSUE 3
FACES & PLACES
FEATURES
14 Trail Blazin’ Through Colorado (cover
feature) Take a trip down the Rocky Mountain road to
Colorado for thrills during winter (and the rest of the
123
year!) on and off the mountains. By Grace Jidoun
20 Beach Towns in Winter Ideal weather, no
crowds, solitary strips of sand in which to plant your
beach chair — beach towns, including Panama City
14
Beach, Fla., Daytona Beach, Fla., and Oceanside, Calif.,
contain all this and more. By Eleanor Berman
24 Secret Gardens and
Veiled Passageways
Hawai‘i and Orlando are two of
the world’s most popular vacation
spots. Discover how you can get
away from the tourist-heavy areas
and find the hidden secrets of these
20 13
two travel meccas. By Kelly Hanlon
and Katharine Davis
In every issue
Departments
4 Snapshots
5 Insider
An insider’s look at Wyndham Vacation
Resorts happenings
13 Share Your Story Contest
How does your vacation ownership enhance
your travel experiences as a single? e Flip to
pages 11-12 to enter our Five-Year Anniversary
Exclusively for FairShare Plus® Members
Win a room makeover e Spotlight on Wyndham Vacation Resorts Lake Marion e 2008 Annual Owner Meeting
recap e Adventures by Wyndham in Puerto Rico e Play
Days Golf Tournament dates and Speed Into September
e Travel Planning Calendar
Photo Contest: Different Perspectives
30 FYI
31 Out & About
What Everyone Needs to Know
November 2008 – January 2009 calendar
of events
Shop from home with the Ask A Specialist program
e How to make an external exchange reservation for a
friend or family member
43 ResortReport
Resort happenings you need to know
On the Cover: Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad lets you relive the sights and sounds
of yesterday’s southwestern Colorado.
Faces & Places |
3
Editor’s Note
Being a resident of Orlando
for the last eight years, I was delighted to be commissioned with
finding my beautiful city’s hidden treasures for Secret Gardens
& Veiled Passageways (pg. 24).
Finding these little-known gems
was both exciting and fulfilling. I
challenge you to explore secret
spots like these in every destina-
snapshots
If you’ve recently visited one of our resorts, you
may have noticed many of your resort staff
proudly wearing Count On Me! buttons. Embraced
throughout Wyndham Vacation Resorts, our
service promise to you is to be responsive to your
needs, respectful in every way and to deliver a great experience. We strive to
not only meet your expectations of exceptional service, but to exceed them at
every interaction!
tion you visit — each one of your
resort locations has them — and
along the way, the staff here at
Faces & Places will help you to
find them.
It seems like it was just
yesterday that we were mailing
our first edition of Faces & Places
to you. Can you believe that it’s
already been five years? We’ll be
We are updating your Reservation Confirmation letters. In addition to a new
and colorful layout, the letter has been redesigned to be easier to read and
to help you find the information you need when you head out on vacation. To
make it even more convenient, if we have your e-mail address, you’ll receive
your confirmations exclusively by e-mail. Not sure we have your most current
e-mail address? Log on to your member home page to make sure your profile
and contact information is updated so that we can keep you up-to-date with
all the happenings at Wyndham Vacation Resorts!
celebrating with you by featuring
a fantastic photo contest. I hope
that each one of you will get
involved and submit your photo
entries that follow the theme: Different Perspectives. Be creative!
And look for the winning entries
in the final issue of the year.
As part of the WyndhamGreen program, you’ll soon be
seeing small changes at your resorts that can make a big
difference! We’ll be installing energy-efficient fluorescent
lighting, Lo-Flo faucets and shower heads, and Energy
Star appliances and equipment.
In this issue you’ll also find
other chances to win with the Book
Your Escape Online Sweepstakes
and the WIN it! DESIGN it! Sweepstakes. And of course you’ll also
get useful tips on great getaways.
It’s good to be green at Wyndham Vacation Resorts.
I welcome your comments
and suggestions for future issues of
your magazine. You can mail them
to my attention or e-mail them to
[email protected].
Wyndham Resort at Fairfield Mountains will
once again be a sponsor of the fourth annual
Hickory Nut Gorge Olympiad on Sept. 4-7, a
family sports festival for all ages and abilities
in Lake Lure, N.C. More than 20 events are
hosted by the Olympiad, including a regionally ranked triathlon, a race to the top of
Chimney Rock, a dynamic water ski show, a
“Taste of the Gorge” food festival and a youth
cheerleading clinic. Since 2005, the Olympiad has given more than $80,000 to area
charities and has recently been named a “Top 20 Event” by the Southeast
Kelly Hanlon, Senior Editor
4
| Volume 5, Issue 3 - 2008
Tourism Society. To register for an event or for more information, please visit
their Web site at hickorynutolympiad.com or call 828-429-9011.
insider
for fairshare plus® members
enter a NEW SWEEPSTAKES
WIN it! DESIGN it!
With the WIN it! DESIGN it!
tion between Aug. 15, 2008, and
Sweepstakes, you could win an
Dec. 15, 2008.
each resort will be collected and the
Interior Home Design package by
winners’ names will be chosen at
Design Poole, the award-winning
ing resort simply ask the concierge for
random. The prizes are:
interior design team who decorated
the WIN it! DESIGN it! Sweepstakes
e Grand Prize: Interior Design
the interiors of many Wyndham
entry form to fill out. You can fill out
Package by Design Poole
Vacation Resorts locations, just for
an entry form each time you vacation
(retail value $23,000-$39,600
vacationing with us this fall/winter!
at a participating Wyndham Vacation
depending on the room chosen)
Wyndham Vacation Resorts
Resorts location during the span of
or choice of $10,000
owners, Discovery Vacations by
the promotion! Please see Official
Wyndham members and their
Rules on reverse of entry form or
guests will be eligible to enter into
WyndhamVacationResorts.com.
$8,000) or choice of $2,500
our WIN it! DESIGN it! Sweepstakes
Estimated odds of winning are
eThird Prize: Home Design Piece
by vacationing at a participating
1:100,000 and depend on actual
(retail value up to $3,500) or
Wyndham Vacation Resorts loca-
number of eligible entries received.
choice of $1,000
When you arrive at a participat-
All completed entry forms from
e Second Prize: Outdoor Design
Package (retail value $7,500-
So what are you waiting for? Create lasting lifetime memories with
your family by calling today and talking to a Wyndham Vacation Resorts
vacation planning counselor to inquire about participating resorts.
1-800-251-8736
Pictured left: Wyndham La Cascada’s interior design provided by Design Poole.
Wyndham Faces & Places is published quarterly by the FairShare Vacation
Owners Association and participating Wyndham Vacation Resorts Property Owners’ Associations. © 2008 Wyndham Vacation Resorts, Inc.,
8427 SouthPark Circle, Orlando, FL 32819. All rights reserved.
Visit the Wyndham Vacation Resorts Web site at
WyndhamVacationResorts.com.
Editor in Chief Ruth Shively
Senior Editor Kelly Hanlon
Assistant Editor Katharine Davis
Creative Director Bill Olivari
Art Director Susan Myers-Feeney
Designer Lydia Paterson
Production Jamie Olson
Contributors Amy Bacon, Matt
Cooke, Robert Graham, Rick
Gregory, Tonia King, Cherie
Jeffries, Kelly Russ, Megan Pratt
Vacation Planning Center
1-800-251-8736
Press 1 for Reservations &
Vacation Planning
Press 2 for Financial Services &
Title/Ownership Information
Press 3 for Owner Relations &
Referral Program
VIP Reservations Hotline
1-888-884-4321
Vacation Break Travel
1-800-752-0203
Presidential Reserve
1-866-RESERVE (737-3783)
Faces & Places |
5
insider
for fairshare plus® members
resort
spotlight
Wyndham Vacation Resorts
Lake Marion
Once again, Wyndham Vacation
Resorts is opening new doors to
your traveling future by introducing
Wyndham Vacation Resorts Lake
Marion, located in beautiful Santee,
S.C. With a boat-load of exhilarating water activities, plush units and
picturesque surroundings, your stay
at Wyndham Vacation Resorts Lake
If that isn’t enough, in early
Marion is sure to fulfill your desire
2009 Wyndham Vacation Resorts
exploring the museum’s diverse
for the perfect vacation.
will introduce even more splendor
exhibits. Relish exceptional flora and
to this resort with the addition of
fauna with a trip to Edisto Memorial
Enjoy
a gift shop, community clubhouse,
Gardens, a historic site that is home
Nestled on Lake Marion’s Cha-
outdoor swimming pool and hot tub,
to Horne Wetlands Park, exquisite
pel Branch Creek, Wyndham Vaca-
exercise equipment and two out-
butterfly gardens and more than 50
tion Resorts Lake Marion provides
door tennis courts.
beds of prize-winning roses. View
owners with ample access to relax-
6
years of the region’s history while
FPO
the protected scenery and animals
ation and fun. The resort is
Explore
enveloped by nationally protected
Not only are the on-site ameni-
uge, which stretches for more than
natural beauty, establishing an innate
ties enough to ensure an unforget-
18 miles along the northern shore
serenity and guaranteeing a scenic
table vacation, Wyndham Vacation
of Lake Marion and protects 15,095
view right outside your window.
Resorts Lake Marion is located in an
acres for wildlife preservation.
You’ll find plenty of things to do
area full of worthy activities.
during your stay, and you don’t even
have to leave the property. Boating
a trip to Santee wouldn’t be com-
and fishing are this area’s forte. With
plete without a few rounds of golf
and take in the beauty of nature,
an on-site dock, water-lovers have
on one of the local courses. So don’t
or have a fully fun-filled vacation,
an easy-access gateway to Lake
forget to pack your golf clubs!
Wyndham Vacation Resorts Lake
Marion and Chapel Branch. Have a
Marion offers whatever you need
blast while cruising along the water
fishing at Santee State Park, or visit
for the ultimate getaway. So be
on jet skis and water skis, or dip
the 195-acre Old Santee Canal Park.
one of the first to experience all of
your fishing pole below the surface
While you’re there, make sure to
the enticing components of this
for the catch of the day in Lake
stop by the Berkley Museum, where
beautiful new resort. It’s sure to be
Marion’s fish-abundant waters.
you can learn about the last 12,000
a vacation you’ll never forget.
| Volume 5, Issue 3 - 2008
With a vast selection of greens,
Go biking, hiking, boating and
of the Santee National Wildlife Ref-
Experience
Whether you want to relax
insider
for fairshare plus® members
RECAP OF
OWNERs MEETING
2008 Owners Meeting a
Resounding Success
Owners also had a chance to
stop by the trade show and chat with
representatives from Party Week-
With more than 475 enthusias-
ends by Wyndham, RCI, Play Days,
coming
soon
Wyndham Vacation Resorts
Shawnee Village
Shawnee-on-Delaware, Pa.
tic attendees, the 2008 FairShare
Destination Deals, Owner Referrals,
Vacation Owners Association Annual
Wyndham Merchandise and more.
Meeting proved to be a resound-
ing success. The daylong event,
kicked off with a welcome from
which took place on May 29 at the
Franz Hanning, President & CEO of
Wyndham Orlando Resort, offered
Wyndham Vacation Ownership.
FairShare Plus members the oppor-
Peter Hernandez, Secretary and
seasonal outdoor pool and
tunity to gain a greater understanding
Treasurer of the Trust, shared a
miniature golf
of their vacation ownership, as well
financial review with owners, and
as the chance to connect with old
Deanne Gabel, FairShare Plus Plan
Mountain Ski Area and the
friends and make new ones.
Manager and Senior Vice President,
Delaware Water Gap
Owner Services, offered an update
National Recreation Area
This year’s theme, “Growing
After lunch, the general session
With You,” focused on the many
on the program and the changes
ways that our owners’ vacation
impacting the Web site, and pre-
needs have changed throughout the
viewed some of the new resorts that
years and how both the FairShare
owners will soon be able to visit.
Plus program and Wyndham Vaca-
tion Resorts have grown in response
Meeting is already under way. Keep
to those needs. Special thanks to
an eye out for your monthly elec-
Ernie Crews, Dale and Lynn Dommel,
tronic newsletter, the FairShare Plus
FPO
eLocated within the larger
Shawnee Village Resort
e41 units, including
38 standard units and
three Presidential Suites
eYear-round indoor pool,
eClose to the Shawnee
eAnticipated opening date:
Fall 2008
Planning for the 2009 Annual
Donovan and Pam McNamee, and
Insider, and your member home page
David, JoDeen, Valerie and Elise
at WyndhamVacationResorts.com
Mozena for sharing their personal
for the date and location.
experiences in a video that was
shared with the audience.
The day started off with an
exclusive VIP breakfast for Platinum owners, courtesy of Party
Weekends by Wyndham. Throughout the morning, owners attended
learning sessions and participated
in a friendly and popular round of
trivia competition.
Architectural rendering: changes may occur
during construction
Faces & Places |
7
insider
for fairshare plus® members
owners’
adventures
Rio Grande, Puerto Rico
April 24-27, 2008
Adventures by Wyndham kicked
off their 2008 trip traveling to the
tropical rainforests of Puerto Rico.
Owners stayed at the Rio Mar Beach
Resort & Spa, A Wyndham Grand
Hotel, and had a weekend of countless activities from which to choose.
The trip opened with a wonder-
ful welcome reception giving owners
time to mingle and get to know one
another. Later that evening they
dined on cuisine from of one of Rio
Mar’s premier restaurants, the Palio.
The following day it was time for a
guided tour of the El Yunque National
Forest. The forest has a number of
unique plants and animal species
such as the endangered Puerto Rican
Parrot (very rarely seen) and the tiny
coquis (indigenous tree frogs) that
serenade in the evening hours. The
next morning owners began their
day with a choice of a full spa treatment or golf. Later that afternoon
they traveled to historic Old San
Juan and enjoyed a tour of Fort San
Cristóbal and got the chance to do
plenty of shopping.
The popular Adventures by Wyndham program offers exciting, fully guided
travel packages designed for FairShare Plus members. For more
information on Adventures by Wyndham, visit WyndhamVacationResorts.com.
8
| Volume 5, Issue 3 - 2008
BY WYNDHAM
insider
for fairshare plus® members
play days
Travel Planning
EVENTS
Calendar
Are you ready to plan your next
Beautiful Courses, Beautiful People
vacation? The following chart is a
Register now and join other owners for the spectacular 2008 Fall Golf Tour!
Don’t miss this terrific opportunity to meet and play a round of golf with
owners of all skill levels who enjoy the game of golf as much as you.
Golf Course
Tournament Date
Wyndham Skyline Tower
Atlantic City, N.J.
The Links at Brigantine Beach Tue, Sept. 23, 2008
Wyndham Kingsgate
Williamsburg, Va.
Ford’s Colony Country Club
Tue, Oct. 7, 2008
Wyndham Cypress Palms
Orlando, Fla.
Falcon’s Fire Golf Club
Wed, Oct. 15, 2008
Wyndham Ocean Walk
Daytona Beach, Fla.
LPGA International
Mon, Oct. 20, 2008
Wyndham Palm-Aire
Pompano Beach, Fla. Palm-Aire Country Club
Mon, Nov. 3, 2008
Wyndham Ocean Boulevard Myrtle Beach, S.C.
The Pearl Golf Course
Wed, Nov. 12, 2008
Wyndham Grand Desert
Legacy Golf Course
Tue, Nov. 18, 2008
Las Vegas, Nev.
Tons of Play Days Fun for Fall 2008
Do you have a need…a need for speed? Visit any
of the following resorts locations during Speed
Into September and receive a 35 percent discount
coupon for the electrifying Richard Petty Driving
Experience during specific dates in September:
eWyndham Grand Desert, Wyndham Nashville,
Wyndham Governor’s Green, Wyndham
Kingsgate, Star Island, Wyndham Bonnet Creek
Resort and Wyndham Cypress Palms
For Fall Golf Tour registration fees,
Speed Into September, please log on to
WyndhamVacationResorts.com and look for the
“2008 Play Days Events and Dates” link
under the “Where to Go, What to Do” section.
Atlantic City
Orlando (Star Island,
Wyndham Bonnet Creek
Resort, Wyndham
Cypress Palms)
New Orleans (Wyndham
La Belle Maison)
Las Vegas
Myrtle Beach
Panama City Beach
San Diego
Lake Tahoe
San Antonio (Wyndham
La Cascada)
Honolulu
Smoky Mountains
Nashville
Williamsburg
Fairfield Bay
Fort Lauderdale (Wyndham
Palm-Aire, Wyndham
Royal Vista)
Daytona Beach
Orlando (Star Island, Wyndham
Bonnet Creek Resort,
Wyndham Cypress Palms)
Steamboat Springs
Aug.– Oct. 2009
additional details and more information on
Alexandria
Branson
Durango
Lake Lure
Oceanside
Pagosa Springs
Sedona
May - July 2009
Location
spring 2009 travel now.
Feb. - Apr. 2009
Resort
recommend planning your
Nov. 2008 - Jan. 2009
2008 Tournament Locations
guide for good availability. We
Faces & Places |
9
Party Weekends by Wyndham is the
ultimate owner benefit where you and
your friends can enjoy once-in-a-lifetime
experiences without using your points.
Here’s what owners Kathie and
Jim Kueven (pictured with
pro-golfers Boo Weekly, Tom
Pernice and 2007 Wyndham
Championship winner, Brandt
Snedeker) have to say about their
Party Weekends event in Orlando
for the Arnold Palmer Bay Hill
Invitational Golf Tournament:
“
I have to say this was one of the
greatest weekends we have ever spent.
Having recently seen the movie, ‘The
Bucket List,’ my husband and I agreed
that one item on our ‘bucket list’ was
to attend a professional golf tournament…From the moment we arrived at
Wyndham Bonnet Creek Resort until
the moment we left, we were treated
like royalty…
Join us in 2008 for Bette Midler, Cher or Elton John in concert.
Come to New York for a Broadway play. Relax under the sun
in Cancun, Puerto Rico or Hawaii. Or choose from one of the
many other exclusive weekends we have planned.
So gather some friends and join the party that includes dining,
drinks, entertainment and fun.
Space is limited for these exclusive Party Weekends, so call
today to ensure your name is on our guest list.
1-866-538-1208
Visit our Web site at
WyndhamPartyWeekends.com
”
Terms & Conditions: You (and spouse, if married) and your guest (and spouse, if married) must attend a sales presentation lasting 90 or 120 minutes on the benefits of acquiring ownership in a Wyndham Vacation Resort timeshare
resort. Your guests must be at least 21 years of age, employed full time or retired, have a minimum annual household income of at least $60,000, must not have toured a Wyndham Vacation Resort (“WVR”) within the last 6 months. Not valid in
conjunction with any other promotion. Wyndham employees are not eligible for this offer. A photo ID (i.e. driver’s license) and a major credit card must be presented upon check-in. Reservations are subject to availability. Transportation, parking
fees, meals not specifically included and incidentals such as phone calls and gratuities are not included. Wyndham Vacation Resorts reserves the right to substitute any advertised lodging or feature with one of equal or greater value. No pets
allowed. You may cancel your weekend up to 21 days prior to your scheduled arrival date. No changes will be permitted within 21 days of your scheduled arrival date. Offer cannot be combined with any other Wyndham Vacation Resorts offer
and is non-transferable. Your state may provide you with additional rights, which are attached if applicable. Harold H. Johnson, Real Estate Broker, N.P. Dodge Company. The price range of the interests offered varies from $6,400-$46,500 and is
subject to change without notice. Airfare is not included. Inventory may vary, including: Bonnet Creek 03/4-917/NJREC. WA UBI #601 892 544. Wyndham Vacation Resorts, 5259 Coconut Creek Parkway, Margate, FL 33063. Nevada Seller of Travel
Registration No. 2003-0261.
This advertising material is being used for the purpose of soliciting sales of timeshare interests.
The complete offering terms are in an offering plan available from the sponsor.
PHOTO CONTEST
Different Perspectives
Winning entries will receive
the following prizes:
Isn’t it remarkable how a vacation can make you see things from a different
perspective? Isn’t it incredible how time away from your everyday life can give
you a whole new point of view? When you set off on that special trip — whether
First Place: Digital SLR Camera
it’s a weekend getaway or a lengthy excursion, whether it’s to a destination that’s
Second Place: Camera/Camcorder
a short drive away or to a far-off land — everything that is old seems new, every-
Bag with Wyndham Vacation
thing that would normally be ordinary becomes extraordinary.
Resorts gifts
Third Place: Travel tote with
those “Aha!” moments, those special perspectives or points of view you’ve discov-
Wyndham Vacation Resorts gifts
ered while on vacation. Show us how you’ve found those moments through your
Owners’ Choice: Travel tote with
Wyndham Vacation Resorts ownership. Your photo should pertain to a Wyndham
Wyndham Vacation Resorts gifts
Vacation Resorts or exchange vacation taken between the years 2000 and 2008.
[
Wyndham Faces & Places Five-Year Anniversary Photo Contest celebrates
To enter the contest, please see the rules and entry form on the reverse page .
]
Faces & Places |
11
[ rules and entry form ]
Photo entries should be high-reso-
+
0
-
free and unlimited use of their photo-
5, Issue 4 of Wyndham Faces & Places.
lution and sent digitally on CD or DVD,
graphs by Wyndham Vacation Resorts
The winners will receive notification
or printed on photo-quality paper.
and its affiliates, including publication
and their prize via mail.
Your photo must be accompanied by
in future issues of Wyndham Faces
the Authorization and Release Form
& Places. Photos will not be returned
Mail all stories and photos to:
that appears below, which requires
once entered in the contest.
Faces & Places
your name, member number, address,
phone numbers, e-mail address (if
no later than October 3, 2008. The
Attn: Kelly Hanlon
applicable) and your signature. Forms
winning entries will be selected by
Wyndham Vacation Resorts
must be completed in full. By enter-
members of the magazine’s Editorial
8427 SouthPark Circle
ing the contest, participants agree to
Committee and published in Volume
Orlando, FL 32819 Different Perspectives Contest
Entries must be postmarked
$
AUTHORIZATION & RELEASE FORM
I,
,
authorize Wyndham Vacation Resorts, Inc., its
affiliates, successors and assigns, and its advertising agencies and other contractors (collectively
referred to as “Wyndham Vacation Resorts”) to
record: (1) the likeness and image of myself and/
or my property, including my residence(s) and my
place of business and; (2) all written and verbal
statements I provide to Wyndham Vacation Resorts,
on photographs, audio tape, film and videotape (the
“Images”) and to use and license others to use the
Images in any manner of media whatsoever, for
publicity, advertising, owner communications, training and sales purposes, including, but not limited to:
(a) photographs, audio tapes, film and videotapes;
(b) electronic broadcasts consisting of television
programs, television commercials, sales videos and
marketing videos; and (c) all internal and external
Internet online materials.
I further authorize Wyndham Vacation Resorts
to use my name, as well as the city and state of my
residence or place of business, in connection with
the Images.
For good and valuable consideration which I
acknowledge receiving, I release and hold harmless
Wyndham Vacation Resorts from any and all claims
and liability for damages for (i) libel, slander, invasion of privacy, right of publicity or any other claim
based upon use of the Images; or (ii) any blurring,
distortion, alteration, optical illusion, or use in
composite form, whether intentional or otherwise,
of the Images.
Print Name
I waive any right to inspect and/or approve
the finished product incorporating the Images or
the use to which the Images may be applied. Nothing herein will constitute any obligation on the part
of Wyndham Vacation Resorts to make any use of
the Images.
I represent that the granting of this Authorization and Release does not conflict with any existing
commitment on my part and that I intend for it to
be equally binding on my representatives, successors, heirs or assigns.
I have read and understood the contents of
this Authorization and Release.
Date
Signature
Please provide the additional information below:
Member Number
Street Address
City
Daytime Phone
E-mail Address
12 | Volume 5, Issue 3 - 2008
State
Evening Phone
Zip Code
Share Your Story
and I spent a week in North Carolina
Congratulations to winner Amanda French of
Orlando, Fla.!
The last Share Your Story topic was “As a single person, how do you use
your vacation ownership to enhance your travel experiences?”
Amanda received a check for $500 for her entry.
at both Wyndham Resort at Fairfield
Sapphire Valley and Wyndham
Resort at Fairfield Mountains in April.
We made unforgettable memories
whitewater rafting, mining for precious gems, canoeing, visiting the
Biltmore Estate and hiking at Chimney
Rock and Grandfather Mountain.
around $9,000 on all of these travels
In May, four of my girlfriends from
combined, and I had never been able
college and my sister were able to
to stay in accommodations as luxuri-
join me at Star Island in Orlando, Fla.
ous and convenient as those of the
We reminisced about old times while
eled to the Smoky Mountains in
Wyndham Vacation Resorts proper-
visiting Cocoa Beach, SeaWorld and
Tennessee from Central Louisiana to
ties. I immediately recognized the
Aquatica. My last Wyndham experi-
celebrate some special events in my
value that I would get out of FairShare
ence was with a group of friends at
life. I had graduated from college the
Plus as a frequent traveler and
Wyndham Palm-Aire in Pompano
previous spring, gotten my first “real”
young adventurer with many years
Beach, Fla. We lounged on the
job as a high school Spanish teacher
of travel ahead of me; the expense
beach and by the pool for two days
in August and turned 25 years old
of all of my college adventures
to celebrate Memorial Day weekend.
in November. Since traveling has
almost equaled the entire cost of my
always been a passion of mine, the
FairShare Plus deed!
has also allowed me to reach an
Thanksgiving break from school
important personal goal other than
presented the perfect opportunity to
merous benefits that I could derive
traveling with friends and family. Last
reward myself. I did not realize how
from becoming a FairShare Plus
year I made a decision to move to
much that particular vacation would
member. In addition to experiencing
Orlando from Louisiana to pursue
reward me — then and for years to
much nicer accommodations than
other career opportunities. During
come. I attended a presentation at
I would have been able to afford
the process of interviewing for jobs
Wyndham Smoky Mountains and
otherwise, I like the activities and
and looking for housing in Orlando,
became a FairShare Plus member. As
recreation provided by the resort as
I was able to use the Star Island and
a recent college grad and first-year
well as the discounted tickets to area
Wyndham Cypress Palms resorts to
teacher, I bought the only package
attractions and restaurants. Also, I
stay comfortably while not having to
that I could afford: a 168,000-point,
am thrilled at the prospect of being
add the cost of hotel rooms to my
odd year package. During the pro-
able to spend more of my hard-
list of moving expenses. Now that I
cess of deciding if FairShare Plus
earned money on vacation activities
live in Orlando, I have booked a unit
was right for me or worth the money,
rather than sub-par hotels and full-
at Star Island for my family to come
I recalled all the vacations that I had
price tickets to tourist attractions.
visit me. Their visit may not have
taken during my six-year college ca-
As a single person, I enjoy inviting
been possible without my FairShare
reer. I had traveled 32 times, whether
my friends and family to enjoy all
Plus membership. Now I just can’t
taking a weekend excursion or a
of the benefits of my Wyndham
wait to upgrade my FairShare Plus
more extended vacation. I had spent
ownership with me. My boyfriend
points package!
Singular Sensation
In November of 2006, I trav-
I was excited to realize the nu-
My FairShare Plus membership
Faces & Places |
13
14 | Volume 5, Issue 3 - 2008
trail blazin’ through
colorado
Hitting the slopes is easy when some of America’s top
ski destinations are just minutes away from Wyndham
Vacation Resorts properties. But nowhere are the
options so exciting as in Colorado. After talking to
many expert travelers (aka Wyndham Vacation Resorts
owners), we chose three destinations that are well
worth spending a week, or three. Steamboat Springs,
Pagosa Springs and Durango all offer a wide variety of
attractions, but beyond that, they’re great values. You
can schuss your way into some serious fun, or check
out other year-round activities, from cultural events to
outdoor adventures and even shopping.
Faces & Places |
15
Up In the Rockies
Owners can “ski-daddle” to one of
ranching and mining town of Steam-
several runs. Thrill-seekers usually head
boat that is still true to its ranching
On the Mountain
for Howelsen Hill Ski Area, the oldest
roots and lined with mom-and-pop
ski area in continuous use in Colorado,
stores. The charming Tread of Pioneers
When you think of Colorado
mountain towns, Aspen and Vail are
famous for its world-class ski jump-
Museum, in a restored Victorian home,
the places that jump to mind. But long
ing facility. A training ground for more
is a must-see, as are the weekly rodeos
before those mega-resorts started
than 60 Olympians, Howelsen features
held from June to August at Howelsen
drawing in the masses, the dramatic
cross-country trails, night skiing and
Park (SteamboatProRodeo.com). For
mountains of Steamboat Springs were
snowshoeing.
kids and young adults, Perry-Mansfield,
home to some of the most scenic
the oldest performing arts camp in
and challenging ski runs in the state.
No. 1 Family Resort in the West by Ski
the country, offers classes and work-
Today the small city welcomes just
Magazine for nothing. “Tree-skiing” is
shops nestled in the hills of Strawberry
18,000 visitors at peak season and is
the thing here: Many runs, particularly
Park (Perry-Mansfield.org). Meanwhile,
home to 3,000 acres with 165 trails,
Pioneer Ridge, Sunshine Peak and
adults can soak their sore muscles in
many of which have recently seen
Storm Peak, are protected from the
the natural mineral springs the area is
major improvements to the tune of
wind by gorgeous glades of aspen and
named for, a perfect way to relax after
millions of dollars. Less known than
fir. Add in Champagne Powder, the
an outdoor adventure.
its famous Rocky Mountain counter-
area’s trademark lighter-than-air snow,
parts, the area attracts fewer visitors,
and it’s no wonder young and old flock
which means no endless lift lines and
to these mountains.
But the area wasn’t ranked as the
easy access to classes. Combine this
Sing-Alongs and Butterflies
On the Mountain
with the area’s historical sites and
Off the Mountain
your brand-new FairShare Plus resort
Though Steamboat Springs offers
fame: When the rest of Colorado is
Wyndham Vacation Resorts Steamboat
a healthy dose of nature, it’s not a total
snow-deprived, nearby Wolf Creek
Springs and you have the making of a
retreat from civilization. In addition
Ski Area can always be counted on
great family vacation.
to the ski resort, there’s the historical
for continuous powder. This is due in
Pagosa has a unique claim to
PHOTOS: Below: Horseback riding in Steamboat Springs is a popular winter activity. e Opposite page, clockwise: Cowboys take to riding at
the Busted Spur Summer Rodeo series in Pagosa Springs. e Warm waters offer a soothing dip at the Pagosa Hot Springs.
BAILEY
Sue Bailey pictured below with her
grandchildren Bailey (8) and duVal (10) Goley.
16
large part to its location high up on
Busted spur rodeo
an alpine ridge, which also happens
to make it perfect for snow hounds
seeking a challenge. But even the
most avid skiers would be remiss
if they didn’t explore the mountain
The name may imply it’s broken, but be assured that everything in the
community of Pagosa Springs, which
Busted Spur Summer Rodeo Series is in top shape. Held in Pagosa Springs at the
is more like an upscale year-round
Archuleta County Fairgrounds during the summer, the rodeo makes a return
camp, what with campfire sing-
appearance every Thursday night from May until August. Locals and tourists
alongs, group hikes and arts and
alike come out to watch with anticipation as the cowboys and cowgirls show
crafts classes.
off their horsemanship, roping prowess and bull-riding abilities. Cheer on the
wooly riders, the youngest competitors attempting to ride a wooly sheep for
Off the Mountain
six seconds, the junior barrels competitors and the always exciting bull-riding
adults. Complete with a rodeo clown, who keeps the crowds entertained and
Laura and Timothy Allen, VIP
members from Mount Vernon, Mo.,
pays special attention to all the youngsters in the stands, this rodeo has it all.
celebrated their one-year anniversary
So once the snow has melted and the skiing has subsided, round up the fam-
in Pagosa Springs, and as all new
ily for some rustic fun at the Busted Spur Summer Rodeo. With snow-capped
couples should, they spent a relaxing
mountains lingering in the distance, wood barns within sight and the setting sun
day in a hot tub, or more precisely, a
acting as a natural spotlight, the setting is just right for a Western night.
hot spring. “There are fifteen pools all
along the San Juan River. Not only are
there lounge chairs for sunning, but
there’s an on-site spa. You can bring
food and drink with you and make a
day of it or just drop in spontaneously
and rent towels and robes. Just remember to reserve spa treatments in
advance. They book up,” says Laura.
17
Wyndham Vacation
Resorts Steamboat Springs
celebrates its grand opening this fall
and invites you to come explore. The
new 71-unit resort features two on-site
swimming pools (one indoor and one
outdoor) and a hot tub to soak your body
after a long day of fun on Steamboat
Springs’ slopes. Like most Wyndham
Vacation Resorts locations, this resort
provides owners units with a kitchen,
washer and dryer and broadband Internet connection. And don’t forget a cozy
snuggle after a day in the cold — each
unit has its own fireplace.
PHOTOS: Above: Wyndham Vacation Resorts Steamboat Springs opens its doors this fall. e Tourists gather at one of the Mesa Verde National
Park cliff dwellings.
This young couple doesn’t lounge
have been visiting Pagosa Springs
dle-A-Saddle, where roasting marsh-
around all the time. One afternoon
for more than 20 years, and now
mallows and playing horseshoes is all
they went whitewater rafting with an
love taking their four grandchildren.
part of the fun.
outfit called Pagosa Adventures. “One
“I’ve watched the community grow
tip I wish I had known is to bring wool
in the arts. Wyndham Pagosa has
socks — they keep your feet warm and
been instrumental in nurturing this,”
repel water. The class makes a midway
says Sue, who takes advantage of the
On the Mountain
stop and it’s the perfect opportunity
many arts and crafts classes offered
No other place in North America
for a picnic. The guide will haul your
at the resort. “There’s always some
so completely transports its visitors
sack lunch,” says Laura.
kind of top-notch watercolor class that
back to the Old West as Durango.
many local residents take. Wyndham
Great day trips abound. Durango
from New Mexico, got up early one
Pagosa goes that second step and
Mountain Resort (formerly Purgatory)
morning for a hot-air balloon ride.
really delves into design, even with the
is filled with ski runs that in summer
“They dipped the edge of the balloon
children’s classes. It’s just wonderful,”
offer guests hiking, mountain biking
in the lake, it was amazing,” remem-
she says. One year, Sue’s grandchildren
and scenic chairlift rides. “It’s a great
bers Marcus. “One day,” laughs Maggie,
went butterfly chasing up through the
place for skiing if you have young
84, “we went off-roading in some
meadows. “The resort arranged for an
children. The slopes aren’t as difficult
pretty rugged country. We came
expert from a butterfly farm to guide
as Wolf Creek near Pagosa,” says Sue.
down a road the pioneers used and
the kids, and she showed them how
I’m sure they haven’t done any repairs
butterflies can land on your nose.”
country skiing or snowshoeing in Mesa
on it since.”
Verde National Park is an intriguing
Laura say nothing compares to the
(and peaceful) option. You’ll likely be
barbecue campfire hosted by Strad-
the only person in sight on the two
Marcus and Margaret Burr, retirees
Sue and Jerry Bailey of Houston,
Texas, owners of 2.8 million points,
18 | Volume 5, Issue 3 - 2008
When night falls, both Sue and
Authentically Old West
If there’s heavy snowfall, cross-
Viarengo
“Wyndham Durango is walking distance to the town, so you
don’t even need your car.”
— Ann Viarengo (pictured below)
with her husband, Vic.
roads where it’s permitted: Cliff Palace
is a chemical engineer and I found an
Loop and Morefield Campground
old chemistry set that I gave to him as
Loop (call 970-529-4461 for current
a present. And I always stop at Animus
conditions). Mesa Verde is worthy of
Quilts, it’s been there forever.”
an extended visit any time of the year.
A World Cultural Heritage Site, it offers
is the vintage, steam-powered Duran-
resort and may be hard to get
an up-close, awe-inspiring experience
go & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad.
into on short notice. If you own
with prehistoric relics and dwellings
Passengers are treated to vast vistas
there, take advantage of your
of the Ancestral Pueblo peoples. “You
of soaring aspens in the San Juan Na-
Advance Reservation Priority
can do a self-guided tour, but I highly
tional Forest, and in warmer months,
and book up to 13 months in
recommend a guide who can give you
a stop in the enchanting ghost town
advance. Owners who don’t own
access to special caves. Take lunch and
of Silverton, once a booming mining
at Wyndham Durango can book
you can have a nice picnic there,” says
town in the 1800s. For a calendar of
up to 10 months in advance.
Ann Viarengo of Arizona, who visited
special events on the train, like the kid-
Remember that the farther out
with her husband, Vic. To get oriented,
tastic Polar Bear Express, a journey
in advance that you book, the
make Far View Visitors Center your
to see Santa and his reindeer at the
better your chance of getting a
first stop in the park.
“North Pole,” go to DurangoTrain.com.
reservation.
The region’s centerpiece, however,
plus
pointers
Wyndham Durango is a smaller
It’s great “what I did on my vacation”
Off the Mountain
fodder for the kids, and an unbeatable
“Book early for a room on the
present to yourself that you can enjoy
lake at Pagosa. In the morn-
any time of the year.
ings, we watched the swans
The town of Durango is fascinat-
ingly Old West in feel, and is packed
with historic sites and architecture. “It’s
and doves from our balcony. It
a great walking town, and there are fun
was just beautiful,” remembers
vaudeville musicals at night,” says Sue.
Antiquing is fabulous here, and visitors
find collectibles galore. “My husband
Grace Jidoun is a Los Angeles-based writer whose
work has appeared in Bon Appétit, Westways, Glamour
and Money. She also tracks food and travel trends for
Iconoculture.
Margaret Burr.
Faces & Places |
19
BEACH
TOWNS IN
Winter
True beach lovers know a secret worth sharing: The seashore can be at its very best in winter, when
the summer throngs have gone home. In locations in Florida and California, where winter temperatures
usually are in the pleasant upper 60s, all you need is a windbreaker to enjoy a wonderful long walk or a
hunt for shells on wide open, solitary sands. The weather is ideal for golf, nature walks or fishing. Sightseeing attractions are not crowded, and you can browse the shops to your heart’s content with never a
wait for attention. Fresh seafood isn’t limited to the warm, summer months. In fact, oysters “r” in season
only in the cooler months, specifically those months containing the letter “r.” Plus, there is no problem
getting into the best restaurants.
Best of all, it’s easy to find choice accommodations off-season. Three of your Wyndham Vacation
Resorts properties are tailor-made for great winter getaways, each with its own set of lures. All these
properties offer ocean views that are no less beautiful in January than in July.
Queen of the Panhandle
World Marine Park, open through January,
dolphins. The park also features the
For most of the year, Panama City Beach,
has thrilling shows starring sea lions and
Fla., is packed. Some 27 miles of white pow-
Performing Parrot Show, where lively,
dery sand lures everyone, from families to
feathered stars include a bicycle-riding
college kids, on spring break and in summer.
parrot, a cockatoo on roller skates and
But you can enjoy this exceptional beach
a macaw that plays basketball. Another
without traffic or hassle in the peaceful win-
Panama City Beach attraction you won’t
ter. You’ll find out why so many “snowbirds”
want to miss is The Museum of Man in
favor this coastal region of northern Florida,
the Sea. This museum tells the history of
where there are 320 days of sunny skies, the
undersea exploration with displays of rare
weather is a lot milder than back home and
antique diving equipment and treasures
the living is easy.
recovered from sunken ships.
“So many families come in winter that we
At night, lots of folks head for the
continue our kids’ program year-round,” says
Ebro Greyhound Park, in Ebro, Fla.,
Jason Hall, Activities Manager at Wyndham
just north of Panama City Beach. Here,
Vacation Resorts Panama City Beach. “Peo-
spectators marvel at the speed of sleek
ple here play golf all year round. There are
greyhound racers in exciting competitions
five champion golf courses nearby, and the
starting in February.
“[Wyndham Panama City Beach]
is right on the beach with
fabulous views.”
— Ed Jordan (pictured above
with wife Shelley)
inshore fishing is actually better in winter,”
Hall advises. He reminds that many days are
warm enough to enjoy the resort’s heated
pools, and that the resort will have three new
America’s Best Climate
restaurants in operation, plus the new Sky-
bridge Bar, in winter 2009.
area has America’s best climate — never
too hot or too cold — and the seaside
Ed Jordan, a Wyndham owner from
Many say that the San Diego, Calif.,
Atlanta, Ga., has been to Panama City Beach
town of Oceanside, in northern San Diego
twice in the past year — both times off-
County, is no exception. “Days here seem
season. “It’s wonderful,” he says, “[the resort
even warmer than the thermometer says
is] right on the beach with fabulous views.
because we get so much sunshine,” Resort
And it’s a great place for evenings out — just
Manager Jeff Schwarz says. “Guests enjoy
a half-mile from Pier Park, with dozens of
the heated pool and outdoor hot tub
shops and all kinds of terrific restaurants.”
year-round,” he adds. “And this fall will
Ed likes the Back Porch Seafood & Oyster
see the opening of 333 Pacific, an upscale
House, and also looks forward to dining at
steak and seafood restaurant located on
Jimmy Buffett’s Margaritaville. For shoppers,
property. Year round, visitors love watch-
Pier Park offers everything from department
ing surfers in action and heading to the
stores like Dillards, to boutiques including
nearby harbor for deep-sea fishing and
Chico’s and Coldwater Creek.
pleasure cruises.”
Ed’s wife Shelley describes the resort as
Wyndham Oceanside Pier Resort is at
“classy,” and she loves the beach there. “The
the base of Southern California’s longest
sand is so white and beautiful,” she says. She
active recreational pier, which is right
reports that her 11-year-old daughter, Joy,
across from the beach, and where great
and her friend had a great time, too. “And
shopping is just a stroll away.
the resort keeps getting better,” Shelley says.
“They are adding like crazy.”
delightful nostalgia. Heritage Park Village
Off-season is also the perfect time to
Museum is home to an array of historic
discover Panama City Beach attractions that
buildings that center on an idyllic Main
may be forgotten during beach season. Gulf
Street lined with many of the town’s original
The town of Oceanside is full of
plus
pointers
Wyndham Ocean Walk
provides free parking for
one vehicle per unit. Additional vehicles can park
across the street at the
Volusia County Central
Parking Garage for a daily
charge, which connects to
the resort via an overhead
covered walkway.
Busier weeks at Wyndham
Ocean Walk and in
Daytona Beach are Jan.
24-Feb. 15, 2009, for the
Rolex 24 and Daytona
500; Feb. 27-Mar. 8, 2009,
for Bike Week; and Oct.
15-18, 2009, for Biketoberfest. Avoid the crowds
and low availability and
book for different weeks.
Cuisine
seaside
with a sunset twist
What off-season? The
dining opportunities in
both Panama City Beach
and Oceanside are more
than enough to whet your
appetite, any time of year.
In Panama City
Beach, diners can take
advantage of both the
ocean and its seafood
during a sunset dinner
and dancing cruise with
Lady Anderson. Taking
its name from Captain
Anderson’s Restaurant &
Waterfront Market with
whom it shares a marina,
the Lady Anderson dining
yacht features an all-youcan-eat shrimp and prime
beef buffet, as well as
live entertainment. So
dust off those dancing
shoes and get ready for a
romantic sunset sail off
the Florida coast.
In Oceanside, nothing
outshines Ruby’s Diner,
prominently located at
the end of Oceanside
Pier. The enchanting
blue and white building
houses more than just
great food — it houses
great memories as well.
Be transported back to
the 1940s as soon as you
open the front doors,
and afterward, re-enter
present times with a
leisurely stroll along the
pier. The Rubyburger
and Albacore Melt are
just a few examples of the
deliciously unique fare at
this delightful diner.
buildings and house period furnishings.
Everyone enjoys views from the restored
Non-stop Action
pier, originally built in 1888, which now
houses a restaurant and snack bar, as well as
Walk in Daytona Beach, Fla., is in the center
a bait and tackle shop. If you don’t want to
of tons of Daytona fun. Owners can experi-
walk the whole 1,942-foot distance, a trolley
ence the beautiful stretch of pedestrian-
will take you to the end for just 25 cents.
only beach. They can also be a part of the
non-stop activities at Ocean Walk Village,
Oceanside is also home to Mission San
There’s no doubt that Wyndham Ocean
Luis Rey, known as “the King.” It is the larg-
which is adjacent to the resort, and has
est of California’s historic Spanish missions,
a host of shops and restaurants, plus a
in a beautiful setting on 56 majestic acres.
10-screen movie theater.
“Besides its own attractions, Oceanside
“The biggest change at the resort in
is the perfect home-base for day trips ex-
winter,” according to Activities Manager
ploring Southern California,” Schwarz points
Crystal White, is that “more activities are
out. “Disneyland is an hour north, San Diego
geared toward adults — things like dance
45 minutes south and Hollywood is just one
lessons, poker night and adult-friendly crafts.
hour and 15 minutes away. If you don’t feel
There’s plenty to do, with two indoor pools
like driving, Amtrak’s Coaster Train will take
and a fitness center. And Daytona has lots of
you round-trip to San Diego for just $11. The
special events in winter,” she points out.
train can be boarded just three blocks from
the resort.”
International Speedway with the world-
Racing excitement begins at the Daytona
famous Rolex 24 in January and finishes
PHOTOS: Opposite page: Sunrise in Daytona Beach offers uncommon winter hues. e Above, clockwise: The white sand of
Panama City Beach is ideal for a winter walk. e The Ponce Inlet Lighthouse welcomes travelers year-round. e Mission San
Luis Rey is enveloped in the Oceanside sunshine.
with the crown jewel of NASCAR racing, the
donated by the former leader of Cuba,
Daytona 500, in February.
Fulgencio Batista. The museum also features
a wing with a trove of Coca-Cola memora-
The Daytona 500 Experience is open
year-round for a look at racing history and
bilia and a complete 1840s apothecary.
interactive fun. Here guests can broadcast
a race and take a tram tour that features a
a 30-minute drive. Daytona is also a great
ride through the raceway’s famed twin tun-
location for day trips to other less crowded,
nels and a view of the steep banking of the
year-round favorites, including Orlando, 56
racecourse. Crystal says the 500 Experience
miles away, and the Kennedy Space Center,
is great fun even for folks who aren’t race
an easy 64-mile trip.
fans, and she reminds that the concierge
office offers big discounts for guests.
the perfect time to visit these Florida and
California destinations. The only problem
The arts are on the off-season calendar
Golfers will find 25 golf courses within
So what are you waiting for? Winter is
as well, with the Halifax Art Festival in No-
with an off-season visit to any of these prime
vember and the Daytona Beach Winterfest
beach resorts is deciding what to do first.
in January, which features performances by
well-known orchestras and opera troupes.
Daytona’s Museum of Arts and Sciences
beckons with a rare collection of Cuban art,
Freelance writer Eleanor Berman lives in New York and writes
travel articles for many newspapers, including the Miami
Herald, New York Daily News, Pittsburgh Post Gazette and the
Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Berman is also the author of six
current travel guidebooks.
plus
pointers
During your stay at
Wyndham Oceanside Pier
Resort, pop into one of
the owner’s lounges atop
each tower. Both lounges
feature breathtaking
Oceanside and pier vistas,
perfect for a view of the
sunset or the surf action
outside below.
Secret
Gardens
eiled
V
Passageways
Unlocking The Hidden Secrets Of Orlando And Hawai‘i’
24 | Volume 5, Issue 3 - 2008
Faces & Places |
25
Orlando
By Kelly Hanlon
You’ve shaken hands with the Mouse and seen princesses and pirates. You’ve
sat in the splash zone at the great Shamu stadium. You’ve ridden the big green
Incredible Hulk Coaster to your heart’s content. Now it’s time to step out of the
box and discover what the locals love about Orlando.
02 Park Avenue
25 miles from Orlando resorts
Open daily, hours vary
ParkAve-WinterPark.com
03 Winter Park Scenic
40 miles from Orlando resorts
Open year-round, 8 a.m.–6 p.m.
BokSanctuary.org
You’ll find tranquility at the peace-
25 miles from Orlando resorts
Open daily (except Christmas), 10 a.m.–4 p.m.
ScenicBoatTours.com
ful and truly unique Bok Tower Gardens
upscale shopping, elegantly casual
in Lake Wales. The 205-foot Gothic
dining and lake views — it all combines
its worth a stroll a few blocks east
and art deco carillon tower shines like a
to create the magic of Park Avenue in
on Morse Boulevard for the charm-
beacon welcoming you to the gardens
Winter Park. Locals and visitors alike
ing Winter Park Scenic Boat Tour.
designed by famed landscape archi-
gather along the street for shopping
Daily tours on the hour offer group
tect Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. Take a
at well-known vendors like Restora-
and private cruises hourlong tours
rest in the shade and listen to the two
tion Hardware and Williams-Sonoma,
through the canals and beautiful
scheduled carillon concerts at 1 p.m.
and funky boutiques like Ten Thousand
lakes surrounding Winter Park. On
and 3 p.m. and hear the brief selections
Villages and BullFish. You can spend
the tour you’ll see local flora and
provided every half hour throughout
a late afternoon sampling wine at the
fauna, get to know the history of
the day. After strolling through the
Wine Room on Park Avenue and then
the area and marvel at the beautiful
acres of gardens filled with palms, oaks,
stroll to a shaded park for music and
homes that line the shore. Both kids
azaleas and magnolia blooms, take
art shows. And the dining is to-die-for
and adults will love the leisurely pace
a tour of Pinewood Estate, a Medi-
with indoor and outdoor seating at
of both the boats and the guides as
terranean-style mansion built in the
restaurants like local, casual favorite
the lake breezes cool your face and
early 1930s. If you’re lucky, you may be
Briarpatch or the sophisticated
the natural beauty of central Florida
greeted by a special musical perfor-
“progressive American cuisine” of
enchants your eyes.
mance at the estate. Owners will revel
Luma on Park.
in this hidden piece of heaven so close
Owners who enjoy Park Avenue might also
appreciate Thornton Park and downtown
Orlando (DowntownOrlando.com).
Owners who enjoy Winter Scenic Park Boat Tour
might also appreciate Cypress Gardens
(CypressGardens.com) in Winter Haven, Fla.
01 Bok Tower Gardens
to the hustle and bustle of Orlando.
Boat Tour
Tree-lined streets, boutique and
Owners who enjoy Bok Tower Gardens might
also appreciate Harry P. Leu Gardens
(LeuGardens.org) in downtown Orlando.
01
26 | Volume 5, Issue 3 - 2008
02
03
If you’ve made it to Park Avenue,
04 Mount Dora
05 Charles Hosmer Morse 06 Mennello Museum Of
25 miles from Orlando resorts
Open Tues.–Sun., hours vary;
closed on all major holidays except
Easter and July 4
MorseMuseum.org
25 miles from Orlando resorts
Open Tues.–Sat., 10:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m.,
Sun., 12 p.m.–4:30 p.m.; closed on all
major holidays
MennelloMuseum.org
43 miles from Orlando resorts
Open daily, hours vary
MountDora.com
The distance may seem daunt-
ing but a day trip to Mount Dora is
like a journey to another world and
another time. This small-town artist
community is a quaint, lakefront New
England-style village known for its art
galleries, antique stores and outdoor
cafes. Enjoy the ambiance with a
horse-drawn carriage ride down
Donnelly Street and as a spectator of a
rousing game of lawn bowling. There’s
plenty of shopping (try Piglet’s Pantry
for homemade treats your pups will
never forget) and dining choices (kids
will love the cupcakes for any occasion
at Cupcake Delights). Mount Dora also
hosts several festivals throughout the
year, the most well-known being the
Annual Arts Festival Feb. 2-3. If you’re
in the mood for an evening of the arts,
Museum Of American Art American Art
The Charles Hosmer Morse
Just off of East Princeton Street
Museum of American Art, known to
near the Orlando Science Center, sits
locals as the Morse Museum, is located
the Mennello Museum of American
at the north end of Park Avenue and
Art. In the Mennello Museum’s per-
boasts the world’s most compre-
manent collection are paintings by
hensive collection of the works of
Earl Cunningham (1893-1977). Since
Louis Comfort Tiffany. The impressive
his death in 1977, Cunningham’s work,
collection includes Tiffany jewelry,
vividly colorful scenes of coastal
pottery, paintings, glass, windows,
towns, has received an overwhelm-
lamps and a chapel interior. The still
ing amount of attention and he has
and cool Morse Museum also houses a
secured a place as a major twentieth-
permanent collection of American art,
century American folk artist. There are
pottery and late nineteenth- and early
also traveling exhibits at the museum
twentieth-century American paint-
as well as a pretty park for picnicking
ings, graphics and decorative arts.
and a stroll.
Owners who enjoy the Morse Museum might
also appreciate the Orlando Museum of Art
(omart.org) on Mills Avenue in Orlando.
Owners who enjoy the Mennello Museum might
also appreciate the Orlando Science Center
(osc.org) on Princeton Street in Orlando and the
Orange County Regional History Center
(TheHistoryCenter.org) in downtown Orlando.
head to the Icehouse Theatre for some
show-stopping performances.
04
05
06
Faces & Places |
27
Hawai‘i
By Katharine Davis
Fact: Throngs of visitors have long flocked to Hawai‘i, despite its designation
as the most remote archipelago. Fiction: The best places to see are the places
that these same throngs of people already know about. So, if you’re aching for
a Hawaiian vacation but dreading the crowds found at the most well-known
locations, read on.
01 Pololu Valley
02 Queen Emma
lenging hike, don’t miss the Big
5 miles from Honolulu resorts
Open daily, 9 a.m.–4 p.m.
DaughtersOfHawaii.org/SummerPalace
Island’s Pololu Valley. Less known than
the famed Waipio Valley, Pololu Valley
Emma of Hawai‘i remains beautifully
maintains its under-the-radar status
intact in O‘ahu’s Nu‘uanu Valley. As
due in part to its location at the end
the wife of King Kamehameha IV,
of Highway 270. This trail isn’t for the
Queen Emma reigned from 1856 until
novice hiker, with its steep and often
her husband’s death in 1863. During
rocky trails, but the scenery through
that time, she acquired the unas-
the valley and along the stream more
suming, one-story home to which
than makes up for it. The trail ends
she added the Edinburgh Room in
at a remarkable black sand beach,
anticipation of the visit of the Duke
though it’s too dangerous for swim-
of Edinburgh. Today, visitors can find
ming, where hikers can sit back and
Victorian antiques, royal artifacts and
relax. Visitors not up for the strenuous
original acacia koa furniture. Listed
hike can enjoy the Pololu Valley over-
on the National Register of Historic
look on Highway 270 — it’s well worth
Places, the Queen Emma Summer
the drive.
Palace showcases the Hawai‘i of yes-
Owners who enjoy hiking Pololu Valley might
also appreciate hiking the Ala Hele Ike Trail in
Kaloko-Honokohau National Historical Park.
terday by hosting informative exhibits
68 miles from Kailua-Kona resorts
Open daily
For stunning views and a chal-
Summer Palace
28 | Volume 5, Issue 3 - 2008
Lending to Kaua‘i’s nickname, the
“Garden Isle,” Limahuli Gardens is a
lush blink-and-you’ll-miss-it attraction
along Kuhio Highway in Haena. Visitors
who stumble upon it soon discover a
treasure trove of terraced lava rock and
large expanses of indigenous, endemic
and native species. Plants range from
kalo, better known as taro and from
which the Hawaiian food poi originates,
to wauke, or paper mulberry which
was once used by Hawaiians to make
clothing and bedding. Wander at leisure
through the breathtaking gardens, using
the provided booklet as a guide to the
ethnobotanical plants, Hawaiian forests
and displaying artifacts from numerous
Owners who enjoy the Queen Emma Summer
Palace might also enjoy the ‘Iolani Palace
(IolaniPalace.org) in Honolulu.
02
10 miles from Princeville resorts; 33 miles
from Wyndham Kaua‘i Beach Villas
Open Tues.–Sat., 9:30 a.m.–4 p.m.
ntbg.org/Gardens/Limahuli.php
The summer retreat of Queen
royal families.
01
03 Limahuli Gardens
and legends that preceded them. The
gardens are spectacular, but so is the
view from the top — be sure to admire
the green mountains hovering behind
and the azure ocean sparkling ahead.
Owners who enjoy Limahuli Gardens might also
appreciate Na ‘Aina Kai Botanical Gardens
(NaAinaKai.org) in Kilauea.
03
04 Mokuauia Beach
38 miles from Honolulu resorts
Open daily
Located just off the coast of
05 Kilauea Lava Flow
132 miles from Kailua-Kona resorts
Open daily, 2 p.m.–8 p.m
nps.gov/Havo/PlanYourVisit/LavaFlows.htm
Recreational Pier
3 miles from Wyndham Kaua‘i Beach Villas
Open daily during sunlight
HawaiiStateParks.org/Parks/Kauai/Ahukini.cfm
O‘ahu’s Malaekahana Bay State
Recreation Area is the uninhabited
Volcano in action, visitors needn’t limit
island of Mokuauia Beach, better
their exploration to Hawai‘i Volcanoes
Ahukini State Recreational Pier is one
known as Goat Island. Unlike the
National Park. Erupting continuously
wrong turn out of the Lihue Airport.
beaches found on the North Shore
since 1983, Kilauea’s lava flow is actu-
It’s here, where Ahukini Road dead-
or even closer to bigger cities, Goat
ally visible from a designated area at
ends at Hanama‘ulu Bay, that those
Island has relatively few visitors. On
the end of Highway 130. Spectators
misguided, albeit lucky, travelers are
the lava rock island, adventurers can
can expect to drive along an unpaved
treated to a show of white-capped
find three separate sandy beaches,
road (open only from 2 p.m. until 8
waves crashing over a jetty of rocks.
perfect for sunning and swimming,
p.m.), hike over 0.5-miles of uneven,
With nary a person in sight, the
as well as a world of exploration and
dried lava, and be rewarded with phe-
area is wide-open for exploration,
plenty of wildlife. Accessible by foot
nomenal views of red, hot lava spilling
including taking a walk on the old
during low tide on calm days, when
into the ocean. During the day, plumes
wood and cement pier. Though the
it’s imperative that visitors wear
of smoke rise from the ocean as each
pier takes a visible beating from the
shoes to protect against foot injuries,
wave crashes against the lava, and at
ocean, it remains firmly planted in the
and by kayak on any day, Goat Island
night, the lava glows a brilliant ruby
sea, representing a time when the
doesn’t disappoint.
in the black ocean. The viewing area
shipments were plenty and the pier
is subject to close without warning;
was busy. Now, in place of ships, visi-
please check the Web site for updates.
tors find an occasional pole fisherman
Owners who enjoy viewing the Kilauea lava
flow might also appreciate visiting Mauna Loa
Volcano (hvo.wr.usgs.gov/MaunaLoa).
and unspoiled views of Kaua‘i and
Owners who enjoy Mokuauia Beach might
also enjoy Mokoli‘i Island, commonly called
Chinaman’s Hat.
To see the Big Island’s Kilauea
06 Ahukini State
All it takes to discover Kaua‘i’s
Hanama‘ulu Bay.
Owners who enjoy Ahukini State Recreational Pier
might also appreciate Haena Beach Park, with its
phenomenal scenery and nonexistent crowds.
04
05
06
Faces & Places |
29
F O R YO U R I nformation
exchange
Ask A Specialist corner
If you have questions, but you
don’t have plans to visit a resort
any time soon, you can “shop
from home” with Wyndham
Vacation Resorts’ Ask A
Specialist program!
Q: Can I book a vacation through my external
exchange company for a friend or family member?
A: Friends and family can enjoy vacationing as
much as you when using your external exchange
company. After speaking with a FairShare Plus®
Vacation Planning Counselor to deposit a week with
your exchange company, contact your exchange
company to check availability for where and when
The Corporate Direct Sales department is of-
your guest wants to travel. If the desired location is
fering pre-construction sales on the new Wyndham
available, your exchange company will confirm the
Vacation Resorts San Francisco. This fantastic
reservation and create a Guest Certificate with the
future resort will be situated just a few short blocks
name and address of your friend or family member.
from landmarks such as Union Square, Nob Hill and
Your guest will receive their resort confirmation in
Lombard Street. Owners will be sure to enjoy stay-
the mail.
ing in the heart of the downtown shopping, dining
and hotel district while taking in all the famous
able, you can begin a vacation search request for
sights of the San Francisco Bay area.
your friend or family member based on their travel
preferences. Once a match becomes available, your
If you are interested in learning more about
If the desired location is not immediately avail-
ownership at Wyndham Vacation Resorts San
exchange company will provide you 48 hours in order
Francisco or any of the other new and existing
to consult with your guest. Once a decision has been
Wyndham Vacation Resorts locations, the Ask A
made, call your exchange company to confirm and
Specialist team is on call to answer your questions.
the Guest Confirmation will be mailed to your guest.
Learn more about upgrading, referrals and mem-
Then, wish your friends and family bon voyage as
ber benefits. If you have an interest in adding more
they get set to experience a fantastic timeshare
vacation time to your ownership portfolio, contact
exchange getaway.
us by calling 1-800-786-6764 or by e-mail at
[email protected].
The following terms and conditions apply to the Destination Deals offers on the back page.
Terms & Conditions: : Must travel with spouse, if married, and attend a 120 minute timeshare sales presentation with Wyndham Vacation Resorts. Must be a Wyndham Vacation Resorts owner or be 21 years of age, employed
full time or retired, have a minimum annual household income of $50,000 and have not attended a Wyndham Vacation Resorts sales presentation within the last 6 months. Wyndham Vacation Ownership employees are ineligible.
Must present photo ID and a major credit card upon check-in. Reservations subject to availability. Transportation, room taxes (of $5-$26 per night), parking fees, meals not specifically advertised and incidentals such as phone calls
and gratuities are not included. Offers expire and travel must begin by 12/31/08. Harold H. Johnson, Real Estate Broker, N.P. Dodge Company. The price range of the interests offered varies from $7,300-$83,800 and is subject to change
without notice. Inventory offered may vary, including: Wyndham Bonnet Creek Resort. Wyndham Grand Desert. NJ Reg. No. 03/4-917/NJREC. NJ Reg. No. 99/38-007/NJREC. Void where state registration requirements have not been
met. Additional terms and conditions apply. Please call for details. Developer: Wyndham Vacation Resorts, 5259 Coconut Creek Parkway, Margate, FL 33063. WA UBI #601 892 544. Airfare is not included. Nevada Seller of Travel
Registration No. 2003-0261.
This advertising material is being used for the purpose of soliciting sales of timeshare interests.
The complete offering terms are in an offering plan available from the developer.
30 | Volume 5, Issue 3 - 2008
out & about
Wherever your next vacation takes you, be certain that good times lie ahead — whether
it’s taking part in the activities your resort has planned or stepping out and discovering the
destination. Keep in mind your resort concierge or activities staff can provide additional
information, including pricing and schedules, on programs taking place on site and off.
Tickets and discounts to local attractions and area activities are also available and vary by
site. Be sure to inquire what is offered at your destination!
FLORIDA
1
Destin, Fla.
The crowds of people clamoring
for their spot in the sun have all
gone home, leaving behind a city
wide open and filled with fun.
e First off is the Northwest Florida Fair held through Nov. 2 in
neighboring Fort Walton Beach.
With the theme “Bringing Back
the Good Times,” the fair does, in
fact, bring back the good times
with carnival rides, food and fun
to spare. e Save a little energy
for the 10th Annual Pinfish Classic on Nov. 1. Held at the pier behind AJ’s Restaurant, the fishing
event is free to anyone under the
age of 14. e Wine connoisseurs
won’t want to miss the Emerald
Grande Holiday Walkabout on
Nov. 4, which will feature the
champagnes of the seasons
and the delicious foods that
complement them. e Unwind
at the Independent Film Series
hosted by the Friends Guild of
the Destin Library on Nov. 18. An
award-winning independent or
foreign film is shown at 7 p.m.
and seating is limited to the first
60 moviegoers. e The Village
of Baytowne Wharf welcomes
Santa to Destin with its Nautical
Christmas: Village Tree Lighting
on Nov. 22. Upon Santa Claus’
anticipated arrival, the Village
Christmas Tree is illuminated
and a fireworks display explodes
over the lagoon. e If the kids
need more face time with Father
Christmas, they’re sure to get it
at the Kris Kringle Breakfast with
Santa on Nov. 29. Santa joins
children for breakfast at Beef ‘O’
Brady’s at 8 a.m. and again at
1
Finding your spot in the sand isn’t be a
problem in Destin.
9:30 a.m., and holiday arts and
crafts are also part of the festive
fun. e Ring in the New Year by
spending New Year’s Eve at Baytowne Wharf. With fireworks and
live music, it’s an event the whole
family can enjoy. e The fun never
stops in Destin.
2
anama City Beach,
P
Fla.
Located in the Florida Panhandle, Panama City Beach is
home to some of the best family
fun in all of Florida. e The streets
of Panama City transform from
a drab slate color into a brilliant
canvas boasting every color in
the rainbow during the 3rd Annual Madonnaro Street Painting
Festival. Be there Nov. 1-2 to
watch the transformation as the
works of art are expertly
translated onto the asphalt.
e Cruise on over to Emerald
Coast Cruizin’, Nov. 3-9, for a
great car and hot rod show. All
along the beach, car enthusiasts
can meander through the sands
as they admire the vehicles and
enjoy the live entertainment
at Frank Brown Park. e The
2
A day spent by the water in Panama City
Beach is a day well spent.
Shark’s Tooth Golf Tournament
and Benefit, Nov. 7-8, is played at
the area’s only private signature
course designed by Greg Norman, Shark’s Tooth Golf Club.
Cheer on the players as they play
the picturesque course in hopes
of raising scholarship money for
the Gulf Coast Community College Foundation. e On Dec. 6,
the Panama City Beach Jaycees
Christmas Parade sees more
than 130 floats and marching
bands parade through downtown,
spreading the holiday cheer.
e Sample hors d’oeuvres and
punch as you take the Christmas
Tour of Homes. Beginning at 1
p.m. on Dec. 7, five homes are
cheerfully decorated festively
for the holidays and open to the
public. e Find the perfect coastal
seat in order to catch the 22nd
Annual Boat Parade of Lights in
Panama City on Dec. 13. Beginning near St. Andrews Yacht Club
at 5:30 p.m., the festively, and
brightly, decorated boats pass
the Panama City Marina and end
at the St. Andrews Marina. e The
white sand, the blue water, the
family fun — you can find it all here.
3
3
It’s a race around the track at the
Daytona International Speedway.
Daytona Beach, Fla.
Daytona Beach offers yearround fun — and sun — for every
visitor. e While the sun can be
enjoyed from anywhere, the
fun starts at the UBS Halifax
Art Festival on Nov. 1 and 2
in downtown Daytona Beach.
Spend your Saturday and Sunday
browsing the local art exhibitions
while savoring the products of
the various food vendors. e The
Museum of Arts & Sciences
invites everyone to the 4th Annual Festival of Lights Nov. 21-29.
Bid on any of the more than 50
designer trees during the silent
auction or simply admire the
holiday decorations, wreaths and
settings. e Thanksgiving is all
about the turkey, but in Daytona
Beach it’s also all about the 35th
Annual Turkey Run. Held at the
Daytona International Speedway
Nov. 27-30, the event is known
as being one of the biggest and
most impressive car shows and
swap meets. Coinciding with the
Turkey Run is Hot Rods on Main
Street, Nov. 29, featuring a nighttime hot rod show, live music,
displays and food vendors. e The
Faces & Places |
31
Holiday Boat Parade on Dec.
6 ushers in the holiday season
with decorated watercrafts
on the Halifax River. Held just
south of Daytona Beach in New
Smyrna Beach, the boat parade
is fun for the whole family. e For
something quintessentially
Daytona Beach, don’t miss the
4
The night sky is illuminated with
Disney magic.
Rolex 24 at Daytona. On Jan.
24 and 25, the Daytona International Speedway begins its
Speedweeks at Daytona with a
bang — and a 24-hour race.
e Vacationers, start your packing.
4
Orlando, Fla.
There’s a whole cast of characters awaiting your arrival in
Orlando — and they’re in the
holiday spirit. e Walt Disney
World® Resort makes sure any
visit is magical, but especially
during the holidays. Beginning
Nov. 10 and lasting until Dec. 19,
the Magic Kingdom® Park hosts
Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas
Party. Stage shows, fireworks
and parades are all part of the
festivities. The celebration is different, but equally festive in Epcot®
during Holidays Around the
World. From Nov. 28 until Dec.
30, it’s an international affair
with customs and celebrations
reflecting the different cultures
and countries throughout the
world. At Disney’s Hollywood
Studios™, The Osborne Family
Spectacle of Dancing Lights is
a dazzling display of millions of
32 | Volume 5, Issue 1 - 2008
twinkling lights set to holiday
music. But the party doesn’t stop
there. Head over to Disney’s Animal Kingdom® Theme Park for
Mickey’s Jingle Jungle Parade.
e To celebrate the season free of
charge, visit Downtown Disney®
during the Festival of Seasons —
the shops, restaurants and enter-
5
Fort Lauderdale offers a colorful vacation.
tainment venues are decorated
for the season and offer the same
high-quality holiday cheer as the
theme parks. e The Historic Bok
Sanctuary commemorates the
season by decorating its 20-room
Pinewood Estate with all the glitter and garland befitting of the
holidays, Nov. 28-Jan.4. e Universal Orlando® Resort also gets
into the spirit during Grinchmas™
at Islands of Adventure and the
Macy’s Holiday Parade™, featuring the balloons from the Macy’s
Thanksgiving Day Parade®, at
Universal Studios. e A sojourn
to Orlando is the perfect gift to
yourself — and your family.
5
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Things remain hot in Fort Lauderdale long after the summer
sun has set. e Take a break
from watching impressive boats
navigate the Fort Lauderdale
waterways and see them up
close at the 49th Annual Fort
Lauderdale International Boat
Show. More than 1,600 boats,
including 160 super yachts, along
with accessories and electronics
are on display at the Bahia Mar
Yachting Center until Nov. 3.
e Celebrities certainly don’t shy
away from the excitement of Fort
Lauderdale, and you don’t have
to either. Catch Tina Turner in
concert on Nov. 2 at the BankAtlantic Center in Sunrise, Madonna
on Nov. 26 at Dolphin Stadium,
or Celine Dion on Jan. 30, also
6
Washington, D.C.’s sights shine brighter
in the white snow.
at the BankAtlantic Center. e If
musicals are more your style,
you’ve picked the right place
and the right time. The Broward Center for the Performing
Arts welcomes such Broadway
favorites as “Ian Fleming’s Chitty
Chitty Bang Bang,” Nov. 20-30,
“Avenue Q,” Dec. 30-Jan.11, “A
Chorus Line,” beginning Jan. 17,
and “Mamma Mia!,” beginning
Jan. 20. e The big city life can
be fun, but if you’re looking for
an old-fashioned good time,
look no further than the Broward
County Fair. From Nov. 20 until
Nov. 30, the Fort Lauderdale
Stadium houses talent shows,
stunt performers, food vendors and the always important
carnival rides. e Processing from
downtown Fort Lauderdale to
Lake Santa Barbara in Pompano
Beach is the Seminole Hard
Rock Winterfest Boat Parade on
Dec. 13. On this night, all eyes
are on the water as beautifully
illuminated ships parade along
the festively adorned coast.
e Fort Lauderdale offers the
perfect warm weather winter
pick-me-up.
SOUTHEAST
6
Washington, D.C.
Home to many of the most significant and recognizable landmarks
in the United States of America,
Washington, D.C. is more than the
nation’s capital; it’s the window
7
The Fifes and Drums march through
Williamsburg during the Veterans Day
Parade.
into the nation’s historic past.
e There would be no history if it
weren’t for George Washington
and the Continental Army — that’s
why it’s so fitting to spend Veterans Day at Mount Vernon. On Nov.
11, George Washington’s estate,
Mount Vernon, offers free admission to active duty and retired
military, but everyone is invited to
enjoy the festivities, which include
a performance by the all-veteran
Harmony Heritage Singers and
a wreath-laying ceremony by
the Sons and Daughters of the
American Revolution. e Alexandria’s Torpedo Factory Art Center,
located along the Potomac River,
is home to six art galleries and on
Nov. 13, visitors can peruse those
studios, meet the artists and enjoy
refreshments — all free of charge.
e Mount Vernon gets into the
holiday spirit with Mount Vernon
by Candlelight, Nov. 28-Dec. 14,
and Holidays at Mount Vernon,
Dec. 1-Jan. 6. Tour the mansion by
candlelight in order to meet “Martha Washington” and enjoy caroling around the campfire, or spend
the holidays the way George
Washington’s family would have
with 18th-century holiday activities
and holiday decorations. e On
Dec. 13, it’s Civil War Christmas in
Camp at the Fort Ward Museum
and Historic Site. Both kids and
adults can enjoy the Victorian
tree and decorations, readings of
“The Night Before Christmas” and
the patriotic Santa. Also on-hand
served in the military. e Before
the big seasonal activities begin,
enjoy the Chili Cook-Off on Nov.
15 at the Watermen’s Museum in
Yorktown. For the second year
in a row, the museum plays host
to numerous chili competitors
and even more numerous chili
samplers. e Weekends, beginning
nor, celebrates the season with
Centuries of Celebrations at Tryon
Palace. For the entire month of
December, Tryon Palace offers daily
tours of the beautifully decorated
mansion and gardens. Then, on
Dec. 13 and 20, the palace offers
Christmas Candlelight Tours to view
the home filled with dancers and
Photo: Craven County
Convention & Visitors Center
8
New Bern’s Tryon Palace decks the halls
for the holidays.
during this Civil War-era celebration are living history interpreters.
e In Washington, D.C., there’s no
time like the present to celebrate
the past.
7
Williamsburg, Va.
Walking through Colonial Williamsburg® is like taking a step back
in time. The dress, the architecture and the merriment are
so authentic, you might forget
what year it is. e Surrounding
settlements, such as Yorktown,
contribute to the genuine feel of
the area, especially with events
like the York Town Tea Party. Held
on Nov. 2 at 1 p.m., the tea party
commemorates the 1774 tea party
that preceded the Revolutionary
War. e You might forget what
year it is, but one thing you won’t
forget is what season it is — Colonial Williamsburg makes a point
of that. The fun kicks off on Nov. 11
with a Veterans Day parade down
Duke of Gloucester Street. The
Fifes and Drums are among the
marchers before the event ends
with a bang, literally, as militia and
cannon crews fire volleys in honor
of everyone who serves and has
9
Lake Lure is a winter wonderland.
Nov. 29 and ending Dec. 28, are
dedicated to the kids in Colonial
Williamsburg. A Kid’s Holiday
Weekend entertains everyone,
but most specifically children
ages 6 through 12, with fun, food
preparation demonstrations and
festive entertainment. e Things
really get into full swing with
the Grand Illumination on Dec.
7. The traditional 18th-century
pyrotechnics mark the official beginning of the holiday season in
Williamsburg as thousands look
on. e Come see for yourself how
Williamsburg makes yesterday
just as much fun as today.
8
New Bern, N.C.
With a visit to New Bern, you can
see the birthplace of Pepsi Cola,
visit North Carolina’s first permanent
capitol and experience small town
America at its best. e The Masonic
Theatre welcomes the Jarman Opry
Theater to its stage on Nov. 1. It’s
a night of classic country, bluegrass and gospel music in historic
downtown. e Tryon Palace Historic
Sites & Gardens, built as the Colony
of North Carolina’s first capitol and
once home to the state’s gover-
10
It’s time to hit the slopes in Sapphire.
characters celebrating the holidays,
the birthday of King George III and
the 1770 completion of the home.
e Join revelers on Dec. 6 to watch
as Santa arrives onboard a yacht
as the Coastal Christmas Flotilla,
complete with dazzling lights, impressive boats and festive music,
parades down the Trent River. e One
of the best ways to see historic New
Bern is by enjoying the Holly & Ivy
House Tour on Dec. 13. Spend the
afternoon oohing and ahhing at
the decorated historic homes and
enjoying holiday cookies and cider
at the Sugar Plum home. e For a
night of classical music, don’t miss
the North Carolina Symphony at the
New Bern Riverfront Conference
Center on Jan. 11. e Performing arts,
holiday celebrations and history —
it’s all part of a visit to New Bern.
9
Lake Lure, N.C.
Venture to Lake Lure for a chance
to take life a little slower and the
opportunity to appreciate nature a
little more. e Lake Lure’s neighbor
to the southeast, Hendersonville,
is home to the Foothills High
Games on Nov. 1. Dancers, sheep
herders, athletes and bagpipers
make the Scottish celebration one
not to miss. e In nearby Asheville,
the Asheville Film Festival has
everyone’s attention on the big
screen. Held Nov. 6-9, documentaries, shorts, animation and feature
films are presented to a captive
audience. e The beautiful Biltmore
House, the former home of the
Vanderbilts, becomes even more
exquisite during Christmas at the
Biltmore, Nov. 7-Jan. 4. Dozens
of Christmas trees, including a
35-foot Fraser fir, hundreds of
wreaths and an endless amount of
garland fill America’s largest home,
making the holiday season one
of spirited opulence. Or tour the
mansion by firelight and candlelight as musicians and choirs offer
enchanting entertainment during
Candlelight Christmas Evenings,
Nov. 7-Jan. 3. e Santa may have
an affinity for cookies and milk,
but that doesn’t mean he’s out
of shape. In fact, he proves he’s
anything but as he rappels from
Chimney Rock on both Dec. 6
and Dec. 13. Come cheer him on
from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. and see
the spectacle for yourself. e It’s
an Olde Fashioned Hendersonville
Christmas on Dec. 5 in the historic
downtown of Hendersonville. With
all the panache of the Victorian
era, the downtown transforms into
a bygone era with carriage rides,
carolers, refreshments and merchant open houses. e The allure of
Lake Lure is stronger than ever this
holiday season.
10
Sapphire, N.C.
In the mountains of North
Carolina, Sapphire provides all
the rest and relaxation needed
during a vacation. And the skiing isn’t bad either. e The area
surrounding Sapphire is a bit of
an artists’ haven, especially on
Nov. 3 when the Western North
Carolina Pottery Festival is held
in Dillsboro. The juried art show
features the work of more than
25 renowned potters, both local
and from around the country. e
All aboard the Polar Express! The
Great Smoky Mountain’s Railroad
becomes the Polar Express, Nov.
7-Dec.23, when the train departs
Bryson City for the “North Pole.”
As the children listen to the story
of the “Polar Express,” they can
also meet Santa and enjoy caroling. e The idyllic town of Highlands
hosts its very first Highlands Culinary and Wine Festival Nov. 8-11.
Area restaurants come together
to offer classes, tastings and
outdoor activities that are all tantalizing to the taste buds. e Mark
the calendar — the Cataloochee
Ski Area in Maggie Valley is
scheduled to open for the season
on Nov. 23. Anyone who brings
at least six cans of food to the
slopes on Dec. 2 receives a free
lift ticket during the Can - You Ski
event. Add skiing to the agenda
for Dec. 25 and you can join
Santa Claus himself on the mountain, and enjoy turkey and all the
trimmings in the lodge. Then on
on Nov. 8. Along with great
music, you can enjoy a tour of
the vineyard, a wine tasting at
2:30 p.m. and a whole lot of fun.
Bring the whole family! Those
under 18 and over 80 get in free.
Lawn chairs are encouraged. e
Start your Christmas shopping
a little early and have a ton of
fun doing it at the 27th Annual
Dickens Christmas Show and
Festival, Nov. 13-16. Here you’ll
step back in time as you wander
the Victorian market, where you
can purchase unique gifts for
your loved-ones from period-clad
vendors. e For a truly enchanting
evening, make your way to the
Brookgreen Gardens for Nights
of a Thousand Candles. On Dec.
5-6, 12-13 and 18-20, thousands
of lights twinkle all around from
the surrounding trees and garden
paths, as live musicians accent
the magic with their talent and
outdoor activities for the nature
enthusiasts. e Home to both Lake
Marion, a 110,600-acre lake, and
Lake Moultrie, a 60,400-acre lake,
Santee does not disappoint when
it comes to fishing opportunities.
The fishing is so good, in fact, that
Hill’s Landing hosts its 6th Annual
Hill’s Landing Catfish Tournament
Nov. 8-9. With docks directly
on Diversion Canal, the canal
that connects both lakes, Hill’s
Landing’s two-day tournament is
famous for its large catches. e For
those wanting to stick to dry land,
there’s the Palmetto Trail, great for
hiking and biking, and also Santee
South Carolina State Park. Anyone
looking to spot some wildlife in
its natural habitat should look no
further than Santee South Carolina
State Park. In November, bald
eagles are often spotted; in December, largemouth bass, striped
bass and catfish are the frequent
a town with fewer than 800 residents, Santee sure does know how
to keep the masses entertained.
13
Edisto Beach, S.C.
As the best-kept secret in all of
South Carolina, Edisto Beach has
long been a popular vacation
destination for South Carolina
natives. e The Edisto Island Museum presents the “Keeper of the
Gate” exhibit until Nov. 1. Thirtyfive photographs of celebrated
Charleston ironworker Philip Simmons’ work, including ornamental
wrought iron gates and balconies, showcase the blacksmith’s
abilities. The museum also hosts
an open house on Nov. 28. e In
nearby Charleston, the 2008
Charleston Farmer’s Market continues every Saturday until Nov.
29. It’s on these Saturdays that
Marion Square becomes a mecca
for finding fresh, locally grown
Photo: © Stone Mountain Park
11
A day in Myrtle Beach is relaxing regardless of the season.
Jan. 6 it’s Everything’s Elvis Day
where there are plenty of Elvis
sightings and peanut butter and
banana sandwiches. e Come to
unwind or come to ski — either
way, come to Sapphire!
11
Myrtle Beach, S.C.
While Myrtle Beach is known for
its sandy shores in the summer,
it also offers an exciting array of
fall and winter festivities, sure to
keep your vacation lively. e To
give the fall season a twist, head
over to the Island Fever Music
Fest at La Belle Amie Vineyard
12
Fishing is always in season at Santee’s
Lake Marion.
carolers usher in the holiday spirit
with song. e If you want to experience some true classical talent,
don’t miss violinist Joshua Bell
and pianist Jeremy Denk as they
display their exquisite virtuosity
at the First Presbyterian Church
of Myrtle Beach on Jan. 9. e You’ll
never have a dull moment when
you visit Myrtle Beach.
12
Santee, S.C.
Although it may be billed as
a golf destination, Santee still
provides plenty to do during the
winter months — starting with
13
Take time to unwind in peaceful
Edisto Beach.
catches of the day; and in January,
Canada geese, finches and juncos
are numerous. e Nearby Elloree
celebrates the start of the town’s
holiday season with a two-day
Lights of Winter Celebration
beginning Nov. 15. Watch as the
beautiful downtown trees are illuminated for the first time. e To see
some more dazzling lights, make
plans to attend the Swan Lake
Fantasy of Lights in Sumter. The
Swan Lake Iris Gardens feature
more than 1 million lights, creating
a winter wonderland every night
from Dec. 1 through Dec. 21. e For
14
Christmas tales delight the kids at Stone
Mountain Christmas.
produce, unique art and live entertainment. Not in town to catch
the Farmer’s Market? Not to worry
— the Holiday Farmer’s Market fills
the same spot Dec. 6-21, where
you can find natural wreaths,
baked bread and fresh greenery in
addition to fresh produce. e The
town of Edisto Beach celebrates
the holidays on Nov. 29 with the
18th Annual Edisto Beach Christmas Parade and then again on
Dec. 7 with the Edisto Community
Chorus Christmas Concert. e The
28th Annual Charleston Parade of
Boats on Dec. 6 proceeds through
the Charleston Harbor with decorated boats that are sure to get
everyone in the spirit. An exciting
fireworks display marks the end
of the night. e Then on Dec. 7, the
28th Annual Charleston Christmas
Parade features bands, floats, performers and plenty of marchers
through the streets of Charleston.
e With just one visit to Edisto
Beach, you’ll be in on the secret
that South Carolinians share —
time spent in Edisto Beach is time
well spent.
14
Villa Rica, Ga.
In the heart of the Deep South,
Villa Rica resides little more
than 30 miles outside of Atlanta.
One wouldn’t suspect the close
proximity to such a large city by
visiting the town, which remains
worlds away from the bright
lights and constant excitement of
the state’s capital. e On Nov. 7-8,
15
A walk in the snow leads to unassuming
sights in Hancock.
local stores host the Downtown
Merchants Holiday Open House,
just in time to jumpstart the holiday shopping season. e Venture
to Atlanta for Stone Mountain
Christmas, Nov. 8-Dec. 30 at
Stone Mountain Park, to listen to
the Christmas Story aboard the
Scenic Railroad, experience the
Polar Express 4D Attraction and
watch fireworks and live holiday
shows. e For those planning to
spend Thanksgiving in Villa Rica,
a free turkey might make the
holiday that much nicer. Bring the
family to the 9th Annual Turkey
Festival on Nov. 13 at the Villa
Rica Civic Center and Sports
Complex for a chance to win
a turkey by competing in dart
throwing. The kids can also have
their faces painted, win goodie
bags and play numerous games.
e Villa Rica welcomes Santa to
town on Dec. 6 with the Christmas Tree Lighting and Arrival of
Santa. The whole town comes
out to see the tree illuminated
and offer the man of the season
a warm welcome. e Children age
8 and under can dine with Santa
Claus on Dec. 13 at the 18th
Annual Breakfast with Santa.
Breakfast is free and provides
the perfect opportunity for kids
to tell the bearded man their holiday wishes. e Although a visit
to Atlanta is well within reach,
Villa Rica provides the perfect
mix of relaxation and activity to
entertain the entire family.
16
The view is pretty spectacular in Newport.
Northeast
15
The Berkshires, Mass.
Ski season in the Berkshires is in
full swing, especially in Hancock.
So grab those skis and head for
the mountains. e Not a skier? Not
a problem. Dine like a Shaker during Shaker Suppers at the Hancock Shaker Village on either Nov.
8 or Nov. 29. Immerse yourself in
the culture as you dine by candlelight in the historic Brick Dwelling.
The food is always guaranteed to
be fresh with an ever-changing
menu that uses only in-season
ingredients. And with a buffetstyle dining expeience, you can
tailor the Shaker-style meal, and
fill your palate with the flavors of
your choice. When the dining is
done, sit back and relax as you
are entertained by an authentic
Shaker music program. e The
24th Annual Festival of Trees is
held at the Berkshire Museum in
Pittsfield from Nov. 15 until Jan.
4. More than 200 trees, creatively
decorated with holiday cheer
by local businesses, schools and
organizations, are on display and
promote the environmentally
friendly theme of a “Green Christmas.” e A hallmark production of
the theater, “A Christmas Carol”
is performed at the Berkshire
Theatre Festival in Stockbridge
from Dec. 11 until Dec. 30. A bit
of an annual tradition here in the
Berkshires, the story of the trans-
17
Shawnee-on-Delaware is a quaint town
waiting to be discovered.
formation of Ebenezer Scrooge
is one that can be enjoyed by the
entire family year after year. e The
ski-in and ski-out accommodations are unbeatable, especially
since Jiminy Peak is now covered
with powdery snow. The conditions couldn’t be any better for a
perfect day out on the slopes or in
next to the fire. So strap on your
skis and slide into fun.
16
Newport, R.I.
The wealthy families of the
Gilded Age knew exactly what
they were doing when they
chose Newport as their vacation
spot. The city was just as great
then as it is now. e Pulling out all
the stops, the Newport mansions are elegantly decorated in
the spirit of the season. Take a
Victorian Christmas Tour at the
Astors’ Beechwood Mansion, Nov.
5-Dec. 30, to celebrate the way
the wealthy once did. The Beechwood Theatre Company portrays
members of the Astor family and
their servants, even leading songs
and holiday fun in the ballroom.
To see additional homes exquisitely decorated for the season,
choose to tour The Breakers, The
Elms or Marble House anytime
between Nov. 15 and Jan. 4. e It’s
time once again for Greenvale
Vineyards’ Annual Harvest Fair.
Held Nov. 8-9, the harvest fair
features vineyard tours, live music
and special entertainment for
the children. If you can’t make it
to the festival, you can still visit
the vineyards — there are daily
wine tastings until 5 p.m. e Do
you hear that? It’s your stomach
grumbling in anticipation of Newport Restaurant Week, held Nov.
9-15. Indulge in a three-course
meal without overindulging your
wallet. Fine restaurants throughout the city offer unique menus
and reasonable prices during the
weeklong event. e On Dec. 6 you
can meet Frosty the Snowman
and see Santa and Mrs. Claus
sail into Newport at the Bowen’s
Wharf Christmas Tree Lighting &
Open House. e Newport’s legacy
continues to endure. And it’s
because of the city’s past that
Newport’s present is so enjoyable.
17
The Poconos, Penn.
Shawnee-on-Delaware in the
Poconos is beautiful year-round,
but especially during the wintry
white months. e Neighboring
Stroudsburg invites everyone
to attend the Tree Lighting in
Courthouse Square on Nov. 28.
The tree illumination begins at 6
p.m. and features live music and
shopping opportunities. e Also
on Nov. 28 and lasting until Nov.
Photo: Wisconsin Dells Visitor
and Convention Bureau
18
You can bet on a good time in
Atlantic City.
29 is Honesdale for the Holidays
in historic Honesdale. Catch the
Santa Parade and tree lighting
in Central Park on Friday before
getting some shopping done
on Saturday. e Lantern light
leads the way through the Quiet
Valley Living Historical Farm
during the 18th Annual Old Time
Christmas. Follow a costumed
guide as you tour the buildings
and historical displays, Dec.
6-13. e The Shawnee Mountain
Ski Area typically opens for the
season in early December, so
don’t forget to pack the boots
and skis. With 23 trails and
slopes, there’s plenty of variety
for all members of the family.
Not up for a long day of skiing
down the mountain? Try out the
snow tubing park for an equally
exhilarating time. e Head over to
Hawley for the 7th Annual Chili
and Wing Cook-Off on Jan. 25.
The cooking begins at noon and
lasts until 4 p.m., and the judging begins as soon as the food
touches your tongue. Place your
vote for your favorite dish and
you might just help a competitor
go home a winner. e Shawneeon-Delaware and all of its neighbors in the Pocono Mountains
are geared up to provide an
unforgettable vacation.
18
Atlantic City, N.J.
With the waves crashing just
beyond the pier and the lights
never ceasing to shine, Atlantic
City is just as good now as it is
19
Take a ride in style during Wisconsin
Dells’ Flake Out Festival.
during the summer — perhaps
even more so. e If you haven’t
been striking gold in the casinos,
perhaps you should take a break
and visit the Wheaton Arts and
Cultural Center’s Museum of
American Glass. The museum
has more than 15,000 American
glass pieces, but the 125 most
significant of those pieces are on
display in the “Treasures from the
Collection” exhibit until Jan. 5.
e They’re not exactly new in
town, but the New Kids on the
Block perform on Nov. 7 at the
Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa. Relive all the pop music memories
of the past while creating new
ones. e The Atlantic City Boardwalk Hall is sure to be packed on
Nov. 22 when Madonna brings
her much-buzzed-about tour to
the Jersey shore town. Reserve
your tickets today for the 8 p.m.
show. e Ornaments come to life
with high-flying acrobatics and
high-energy music during the
“Cirque Dreams Holidaze” at the
Trump Plaza Hotel Casino. Come
witness the magic Nov. 28-Dec.
28. e To catch a few chuckles,
don’t miss “The Last Comic
Standing” performance at the
Trump Taj Mahal Hotel Casino
on Nov. 29. e Also at the Trump
Taj Mahal is Kenny Rogers on
Dec. 12 and 13. Singing both hits
and holiday tunes, Kenny Rogers
is sure to put on a good show.
e The colder months haven’t
slowed the performances and
excitement one bit.
20
The view doesn’t get better than this in
the Great Smoky Mountains.
Midwest & Plains
19
Wisconsin Dells, Wis.
The snow may be falling outside,
but the water couldn’t be any
warmer inside. “The Waterpark
Capital of the World” lives up
to its name, even in the winter,
but it also offers so much more.
e Work on your island cooking
skills every Saturday at Jammin’
Caribbean Dish. As your Jamaican chef teaches you the ins and
outs of cooking, you help to prepare a gourmet meal. It’s perfect
for spicing up those chilly nights.
e The Charlie Daniels Band,
part Southern, part Western,
is all about the North when it
performs Nov. 15 at the Crystal
Grand Music Theatre. Equipped
with his signature belt buckle
and cowboy hat, Charlie Daniels
leads the pack as the band lights
up the stage starting at 8 p.m.
e Also at the Crystal Grand
Music Theatre is the Oak Ridge
Boys Christmas Show, Dec.
6-7. Showcasing their four-part
harmonies, the Oak Ridge Boys
celebrate the season with their
country music talents. e Though
it’s not exactly the kind of
water you can splash around in,
Wisconsin Dells celebrates the
frozen form of its most abundant
liquid with the Flake Out Festival,
held Jan. 17-18. Serving as Wisconsin’s official snow sculpting
competition, the festival is without a doubt the biggest event
21
Enjoy the simpler things in life in
Fairfield Glade.
to happen all season. Watch as
creations are made from the
snow, but also take a ride in a
horse-drawn wagon, observe an
ice carving demonstration and
take part in the winter games.
e It’s winter in the Wisconsin Dells
and it couldn’t be any better.
Midsouth
20
Smoky Mountains,
Tenn.
With its landscape being the
backdrop of the Great Smoky
Mountains, Sevierville always has
a majestic air. e Now imagine this
natural beauty being paired with
the holiday spirit, illuminated with
millions of twinkling lights. That’s
what you see during Gatlinburg
Winter Magic, from Nov. 5 to
Feb. 28. e If you really want to
bump into some fun, hop on to
one of downtown Gatlinburg’s
old-fashioned hay rides. See the
Great Smokies and the Gatlinburg
Winter Magic lighting displays from
a different point of view as you’re
pulled in a fun-filled wagon. The
rides run from Sept. 1 to Nov. 30.
e For another unique way to get
around town, catch Gatlinburg’s
guided Trolley Ride of Lights, Nov. 1
to Jan 31, and enjoy the spectacular
holiday glow. For a really incredible
view of the displays, pick up the
Winterfest 3D Glasses at the Sevierville Visitor’s Center on Highway
Photo: Arkansas Department of
Parks and Tourism
Photo: Tennessee Tourism Department
22
It’s a Country Christmas at Nashville’s
Gaylord Opryland.
66. The ordinary Christmas lights
are instantly transformed into extraordinarily luminous snowflakes.
e Dollywood really embraces the
Christmas season and gives you
and your family the chance to enjoy
some enticing holiday fun. With 4
million lights, sensational shows,
larger-than-life-sized toys and an
18-foot-tall Christmas tree, there’s
plenty to see and do for the holidays at Dollywood, from Nov. 8 to
Jan. 3. e Don’t forget to get some
of your holiday shopping done, too.
The Tanger Five Oaks Factory Outlet Center is the perfect place to go
— especially on Nov. 27, when they
are having their Midnight Madness
Sale. e Sevierville is the perfect
place for you and your family to go
to have mountains of fun.
21
Fairfield Glade, Tenn.
A quiet respite from everyday life,
Fairfield Glade is located on the
Cumberland Plateau and subtly
combines the stages of Nashville
with the natural beauty of the
Smoky Mountains. e It’s the local
events in Fairfield Glade, like the
Plateau Bowl ‘n Roll, that make
your stay feel less like a vacation and more like a return home.
Held on Nov. 4, the Bowl ‘n Roll is
hosted by the Art Guild of Fairfield
Glade and features a soup course
and impressive hand-made ceramic bowls. e The name isn’t fancy
but the stage show is at the USO
Type Event on Nov. 8. The stage at
the Palace Theatre in downtown
Crossville, Fairfield Glade’s nearest
23
This bald eagle sits observant in Petit
Jean State Park.
neighbor, transforms into a bygone
era with music, performances and
special guests from the U.S.A. circa
World War II. The two showings
make it twice as easy to catch
this show sponsored by the Crab
Orchard Chapter of the Daughters
of the American Revolution. e The
bands are marching and the floats
are floating down Main Street
during the Crossville Christmas
Parade. On March 6, police cars,
fire trucks and Santa Claus spread
holiday cheer as they make their
way through town. e There is a
hint of Russia in Middle Tennessee when “The Nutcracker” is
performed at the Cumberland
County Playhouse. First created
for the Russian Kirov Ballet, “The
Nutcracker” here is directed by
two Kirov-trained ballet dancers,
ensuring the classic is danced
masterfully. e Find your place
on the Plateau with a visit to
Fairfield Glade.
22
Nashville, Tenn.
Nashville is making a name for itself — and not just for its country
music. There’s a reason the rich
and famous are flocking to the
relatively quiet Tennessee city —
now it’s your turn to discover why.
e Music remains Nashville’s claim
to fame, and many of its talents
are showcased at the Americana
Folk Festival on Nov. 1. Thirty
bands perform folk, bluegrass,
jazz and American music onstage,
staging a “picking party” in the
heart of Montgomery Bell State
24
Branson makes sure that every visitor
has a happy holiday.
Park in nearby Dickson. e One
needn’t look farther than the
Gaylord Opryland Resort and
Conference Center to find a
major source of entertainment in
the city — especially during the
holiday season. “A Country Christmas®” presented by Nissan brings
shows, sculptures and spectacular
sights to the hotel from Nov. 14
until Jan. 4. The story of “How the
Grinch Stole Christmas” is told
through interactive frozen sculptures during ICE!™. Also part of “A
Country Christmas” is the “Radio
City Christmas Spectacular®”
starring the Radio City Rockettes®
until Dec. 28, Treasures for the
Holidays Craft Show and the
Hall of Trees. To top it all off, the
expansive resort is also bedecked
with more than 2 million Christmas lights, truly creating a winter
wonderland. e A never-beforeseen production of “The Nutcracker” is performed by the
Nashville Ballet Dec. 12-21. Putting a Tennessee twist on the
classic ballet, the story remains
the same but the setting is new:
the 1897 Tennessee Centennial
Exposition. e This Southern town
is much more cosmopolitan than
one might imagine — visit Nashville to discover what all the buzz
is about.
23
Fairfield Bay, Ark.
The beauty of Arkansas is obvious along the shores of Greers
Ferry Lake. And the excitement
of Fairfield Bay is evident during a
trip to Arkansas. e The fun starts
right away at the Chili Cookout
in Greers Ferry on Nov. 1. Local
businesses and organizations
compete in the Chili Challenge,
providing samplers some of the
best chili around. e Attention
shoppers: The merchants of Heber
Springs are hosting a Christmas
Open House on Nov. 2. Enjoy the
sales and refreshments offered in
the fully decorated shops as you
browse the holiday gifts. e The
Ozark Folk Center in Mountain
View holds the 6th Annual Fall
Bluegrass Festival Nov. 6-8. For
some finger-pickin’ good music,
you don’t want to miss this threeday music event. e Petit Jean
State Park invites you to live like
the early Arkansans once did — at
a primitive mountain camp. At the
11th Annual Mountain Rendezvous,
Nov. 28-30, attendants are able
to watch tomahawk throwing and
muzzleoading rifle demonstrations
for free. e For a more modern
gathering, attend Petit Jean State
Park’s Christmas Open House on
Dec. 6. Free of charge, this event
features the park decorated for
the holidays, entertainment, crafts
and photographs with Santa.
e Start the year off with the exciting Eagle Awareness Weekend at
Petit Jean State Park, Jan. 10-11.
Bald eagle sightings are the goal
of the weekend, and programs,
including field trips to Holla Ben
National Wildlife Refuge, are part
of the fun. e Fairfield Bay is a slice
of nature’s paradise in the heart
of Arkansas.
24
Branson, Mo.
Things may have slowed down in
Branson, but that doesn’t mean
the city has come to a halt —
there’s still plenty to do in this always exciting city. The lights are
still shining and the amusement
parks are still amusing. e Silver
Dollar City boasts more than 4
million lights during An Old Time
Christmas, Nov. 1-Dec. 30. In between thrills and screams on the
park’s rides, take in the holidaythemed shows, like “Frosty, the
Snowman,” and enjoy spending
time with the family while witnessing craft-making and holiday
traditions. e If the millions of
lights in Silver Dollar City don’t
satiate your need for Christmas
lights, the Branson Area Festival
of Lights should do the trick. All
of Branson is illuminated with
the special light displays, some
of which happen to be drivethrough displays, from Nov. 1
until Dec. 31. In addition to the
twinkling lights, there are holiday
shows and unbeatable shopping.
e One light display not to miss is
the Enchanted Forest Light Display at Indian Point Village. The
drive-through display is free to
the public and its masterpiece is
the Freedom Tree, a spectacular
mix of red, white and blue lights.
e For the 74th year in a row, Veterans Day in Branson is marked
by the Veterans Day Parade &
gives you the opportunity to hear
the talented and original musician Theresa Andersson as she
performs a set of her eclectic
songs. Relax and sip cocktails as
she croons her award-winning
talent on Nov. 21 on Royal Street.
e Surround yourself with fragrant
flowers and festive lights at the
Celebration in the Oaks City Park’s
annual lighting exhibit at New
Orleans Botanical Garden in City
Park. This spectacular display is
open on weekends starting Nov.
28, and open nightly Dec. 5-30.
e To experience a different kind of
Christmas story, don’t miss “The
Best Christmas Pageant Ever.”
Watch as the replacement director
of the annual church Christmas
pageant struggles with his rambunctious cast — the Herdman
kids. You’re sure to laugh at this
hilarious tale, which is performed
by all children, Nov. 29-Dec. 7.
of the largest street parties in the
nation. e Let the fun begin with a
festive trip to New Orleans.
26
San Antonio, Texas
Remember the Alamo — and
SeaWorld San Antonio and Six
Flags Fiesta Texas — when visiting San Antonio. Home to these
attractions and so many more,
San Antonio proves that Texas’
second largest city is second to
none. e For five days, from Nov.
5 until Nov. 9, San Antonio invites
you to treat your taste buds to the
flavorful New World Food & Wine
Festival held throughout the city.
Festival events include a Texas
Vintner Cruise on Nov. 5, in which
you cruise the San Antonio River
with a Texas winemaker, and The
Grand Tasting on Nov. 8, which
provides the opportunity to dine
with celebrity chefs. e After pampering your sense of taste, why
Dec. 5-21. Sing along to the traditional carols, sung by floating bell
choirs, folk groups and Latino ensembles, during the Boat Caroling,
and admire the more than 6,000
luminarias lining the walkway of
the River Walk during the Fiesta.
e Just remember to have fun in
San Antonio.
West
27
Steamboat Springs,
Colo.
The powder is fresh and so is the
destination. Spend the winter
carving the snow, enjoying the
town and reconnecting with the
family in Steamboat Springs. e The
impressive mountain and ski trails
open for the season on Nov. 26.
Lift tickets are specially priced with
Photo: New Orleans CVB
25
New Orleans’ French Quarter is dressed
for the occasion.
Ceremony. As the culmination of
a weeklong celebration of all veterans, this year’s march parades
through downtown Branson on
Nov. 11. e As expected, Branson
does it big yet again.
Gulf States
25
New Orleans, La.
New Orleans is truly a new New
Orleans. Come see for yourself.
e Concerts in the Courtyard
26
The San Antonio River Walk is aglow
until Jan. 1.
e Football fans should tackle the
opportunity to grab tickets to see
the New Orleans Saints play in
their home stadium, the Louisiana
Super Dome. In November and
December the Saints play against
the Green Bay Packers, Atlanta
Falcons and Carolina Panthers.
Also, don’t miss the 2008 Allstate
Sugar Bowl Football Classic on
Jan. 2. e What better place to
usher in the New Year with a bang
than New Orleans? Put on your
party hat and head out to Jackson
Square in the French Quarter,
where you can be a part of one
27
You’ll experience a Rocky Mountain high
in Steamboat Springs.
not pamper your ears? The famed
and historic Vienna Boys’ Choir
performs on Nov. 14 at Trinity University’s Laurie Auditorium. e The
San Antonio River Walk is illuminated by more than 122,000 lights
during the FORD Holiday River
Parade & Lighting Ceremony on
Nov. 28. The lights stay lit until Jan.
1, but the decorated floats make a
one-time appearance during this
nighttime parade. e The San Antonio River Walk keeps the festivities
going with the FORD Holiday Boat
Caroling, Nov. 29-Dec. 21, and the
FORD Fiesta de las Luminarias,
28
Fresh powder awaits your arrival in
Pagosa Springs.
revenues benefiting the Steamboat
Springs Winter Sport Club Scholarship Fund. The funds raised on
Scholarship Day, the formal name
given to opening day, provide monetary support to local children participating in programs run by the
Steamboat Springs Winter Sports
Club. e Light Up the Night on Nov.
28 at the community tree-lighting
on the lawn of the Routt County
Courthouse. The Emerald City
Jewel Singers perform, Santa poses
for pictures and you can register to
win Downtown Dollars to be spent
doing some downtown shopping.
e For six days, Steamboat Springs
becomes the venue for musicians
to perform. With more than 40
live performances and 18 different
bands, Steamboat MusicFest, Jan.
6-11, provides a fantastic line-up of
rock, country, blues, bluegrass and
folk music, to name a few genres.
Spend an entire day rocking out
or opt to join the festivities after
hitting the slopes — either way,
there’s bound to be a concert at a
time that’s right for you. e Coinciding every January with the National
Western Stock Show in Denver, the
Cowboy Downhill is the only time
you can watch more than 100 professional rodeo cowboys compete
in a unique ski rodeo. e This city
has certainly earned its name as Ski
Town U.S.A.
28
Pagosa Springs,
Colo.
Named for the natural hot springs
in the middle of town, which
remain open year-round, Pagosa
Springs remains hot long after
the weather has turned cold.
e Chimney Rock stands proudly in
Pagosa Springs, offering opportunities for archaeological adventures, but although the formation
is closed to visitors during the
winter months, you can still help
the 2009 season by attending the
Fundraiser Bazaar on Nov. 15 at
the Pagosa Springs Community
Center. e There’s no shame in putting off your holiday shopping until
the last minute, especially when
there’s a two-day, no-tax event
in Pagosa Springs. The Parade of
Stores, beginning Dec. 5, offers
fantastic shopping, which is made
even more fantastic because it’s
tax free. e Also on Dec. 5 is the
Festival of Trees at the Pagosa
Springs Community Center. Come
out to see all the trees beautifully
decorated with what is sure to
be Colorado flair. e The Pagosa
Springs Chamber of Commerce
and Visitor Center invites everyone to enjoy Christmas in Pagosa
on Dec. 6. Delight in posing with
Santa and watching the Lighting of the Chamber at 5:30 p.m.
29
The snow-covered town of Silverton
awaits your arrival on the Durango &
Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad.
e Of course, the main draw to
Pagosa Springs in the winter is the
phenomenal skiing at Wolf Creek
Ski Area. The area brags of being
one of the oldest ski resorts and of
having light powdery snow. With a
summit altitude of 11,900 feet, you
can bet the skiing is awesome and
the views are even better. e With
hot springs and white winters, the
conditions couldn’t be better in
Pagosa Springs.
29
Durango, Colo.
The mountains are now a solid
shade of white and you’ll be
green with envy if you miss out
on all the great opportunities
in Durango this season. e Main
Avenue is always teeming with
excitement but especially on
Nov. 11 during the Veterans Day
Parade. The streets are filled with
floats and proud veterans as
people gather along the sidewalk
to offer cheers and a resounding “thank you.” e The San Juan
Symphony performs on Nov.
23 at the Community Concert
Hall at Fort Lewis College. The
program, titled “New Wine:
Same Bottle,” showcases classic
compositions by Mozart as well
as jazz-infused pieces by James
P. Johnson. e Performing since
they were formed in 1969, The
Bar D Wranglers are a bit of a
legend and so is their Westerntinged holiday show, “The Bar D
Wranglers’ Christmas Jubilee,”
Dec. 13 at 7 p.m. e Clara and
the Sugarplum Fairy seem to be
30
The already colorful Grand Canyon adds
white to its spectrum.
everywhere during the holidays,
even Durango. The State Street
Ballet of Santa Barbara dances
“The Nutcracker” on Dec. 19 at
the Community Concert Hall at
Fort Lewis College. e The Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge
Railroad translates the story of
“The Polar Express” into real life
from Nov. 16 until Dec. 28. All
aboard for an all-around good
time. e Just minutes from the
Durango Mountain Resort, you’re
in the prime location for some of
the best skiing in all of Colorado.
e So whether you grab the skis or
stick to the in-town entertainment,
good times await in Durango.
30
Flagstaff, Ariz.
Flagstaff is poised to make this a
vacation you never forget. e One
way to ensure you won’t forget
it is with a day trip to the Grand
Canyon. The South Rim remains
open throughout the winter
months, while the North Rim is
closed for the season upon the
first heavy snow. You can take
a walk on the wild side, if you
please, with the Hualapai Tribe’s
Grand Canyon Skywalk. The relatively new and very impressive
Skywalk is suspended 4,000 feet
above the Colorado River and
the canyon, providing incredible
views in every direction, including down. e If the landscapes of
the Grand Canyon have inspired
you to explore the terrain a little
more, you can reach for the sky
when you attend Family Day at
31
The sun casts a spotlight on Sedona’s
Red Rocks.
the Vertical Relief Climbing Center. The entire family, from the
youngest to the oldest, is offered
lessons and tips on rock climbing
every Saturday. e The Museum of
Northern Arizona aims to uncover the mystery of the sickle-claw
dinosaur with its “Therizinosaur”
exhibit. Discovered in Utah, the
mysterious dinosaur’s unearthing
has since prompted the museum
to ask questions of its visitors
while allowing the visitors themselves to form the answers. e The
Arizona Snowbowl is expected
to be open for the season by
mid-December. With an average snowfall of 260 inches, the
Snowbowl provides the perfect
place for skiing, snowboarding
and playing in the snow in general. With 32 runs, four lifts and a
ski school, there’s something for
every ability. e Experience the
adventure in Flagstaff.
31
Sedona, Ariz.
Artists and vacationers alike
flock to Sedona for the incredible
scenery and the warm community.
From the Red Rocks of Sedona to
the holiday celebrations, there’s
hardly a dull moment. e “The 25th
Annual Putnam County Spelling
Bee,” the Tony Award-winning
musical, is performed at the Del
E. Webb Center for the Performing Arts on Nov. 10. The show,
which stars six kids trying to make
sense of winning and losing, is
already charmingly funny, but with
the addition of willing audience
Photo: Las Vegas News Bureau/LVCVA
32
A fresh layer of snow makes Lake Tahoe
even more appealing.
members, it is made hilarious as
the audience becomes the spellers. e The 18th Annual Red Rock
Fantasy, presented from Nov. 20
until Jan. 1, consists of more than
50 creative light displays and
1 million lights. Held at the Los
Abrigados Resort & Spa, Red Rock
Fantasy promises to illuminate the
holidays. e The American Ballet
Theatre II performs at the Del E.
Webb Center for the Performing
Arts on Nov. 22. Thirteen dancers,
all between the ages of 16 and 19,
comprise the company and have
been chosen from around the
world. To see budding talent and
possible future stars, don’t miss
this performance. e Santa makes
an early stop in Sedona on Dec.
5 just in time for the Holiday Tree
Lighting. As holiday music sets the
tone and Santa works the crowd,
the tree in uptown is lit for the
first time. e The Festival of Lights
continues the holiday cheer on
Dec. 13 at the Tlaquepaque Arts
and Crafts Village. Held for the
34th year in a row, the festival
features thousands of luminarias,
live entertainment and energetic
dancers. During this event, the
American Cancer Society offers
special luminarias to be personalized for friends and family who
have fought cancer. e After slowing down in Sedona, you’ll feel
rejuvenated and relaxed.
32
Lake Tahoe, Nev.
Nevada is known for its worldclass casinos, but there’s so
33
The lights never stop shining in
Las Vegas.
much more! Lake Tahoe is the
perfect place to see a different side of this state. e You
don’t have to be from Nevada
to take part in their strong state
pride. On Nov. 1 in Carson City,
celebrate Nevada’s 144 years of
statehood with the Nevada Day
Parade. The parade is the highlight of the Hollywood-themed
festival, which takes place Oct.
30-31 and Nov. 1-2. e On Nov.
15, The Grass Roots perform a
line-up of their top-40 hits from
the late ’60s and early ’70s at
the Horizon Casino Resort. e The
Valhalla Holiday Gala is the perfect way to kick off the holiday
season. Held in the naturalistic
setting of the Tallac Historic Site
on Dec. 6, the gala features food,
beverages, dancing, entertainment and a silent auction. Make
sure you get your tickets in
advance because this event sells
out fast! e If you’re into extreme
sports or like to watch other people who are, then the Lake Tahoe
Adventure Film Festival is the
perfect way to satisfy your appetite for fearless feats. It is held
at the MontBleu Resort Casino &
Spa on Dec. 13 and features tons
of action-packed films showcasing base-jumping, rock-climbing,
snowboarding and much more.
e Sojourn with Clara as she wanders the land of sweets with her
dear Nutcracker Prince. Catch
a performance of Tchaikovsky’s
classic ballet, “The Nutcracker,”
from Dec. 19-21 at the MontBleu
Photo: Knott’s Berry Farm
Photo: Courtesy of AOCVCB
34
A blue sky and palm trees guarantee that
every day in Anaheim is a perfect day.
Resort Casino & Spa. e And of
course, don’t forget that snowcovered Lake Tahoe boasts ideal
skiing conditions —
­ not to mention the views are phenomenal
from atop the mountain. e Don’t
miss out on the excitement of
Lake Tahoe. Book your trip today!
33
Las Vegas, Nev.
With plenty of events and a bevy
of great performers, you’ll never
have a dry moment in Las Vegas.
e There’s no better place to be
for top-of-the-line entertainment.
During November and December,
you have the chance to see dozens of world-famous musicians
and comedians. Elton John performs his latest show, “The Red
Piano,” at Caesars Palace, Oct.
22 through Nov. 9. Using the rich
imagery of Hollywood and Las
Vegas icons, this visually stunning performance takes John’s
finely-tuned performance skills to
a whole new level. e Madonna
delivers yet another stellar
performance at the MGM Grand
Hotel and Casino on Nov. 8.
Other top musicians, such as
Barry Manilow, Tony Bennett and
Tom Jones hit the stage, as well
as side-splitting comedians like
Howie Mandel, Jay Leno and Ray
Romano. e So you want to have
a good time in Vegas, but did
you think you could do it free?
You can bet on it! On Dec. 3 you
can do just that at the 22nd annual Downtown Hoedown. This
event, which kicks off the Na-
35
The views of the water and the fun of
Oceanside Pier are just outside your door.
tional Finals Rodeo, is perfect for
people who like great music and
a great time. Live music is performed on two main stages and
a whole lot of fun is sure to be
had. e If you want to take a break
from shows and casinos, the First
Friday Art Celebration is the way
to go. This monthly art extravaganza features the work of more
than 100 diverse and talented
artists. Marvel at the intricacies
of the various works of art, such
as paintings, ceramics, photography, jewelry and sculptures, as
you enjoy the food, drinks and
entertainment of the Las Vegas
Arts District. e You won’t want to
miss a moment in Las Vegas.
34
Anaheim, Calif.
Whether you want to spend your
holidays observing the marvelous
giants of the sea, or with the
Disneyland® Resort family, Anaheim is a superb place for family
fun. e November is a prime time
for whale-watching off the coast
of Anaheim. Dana Wharf Sportfishing offers whale-watching
excursions, and during November both blue whales and gray
whales are expected to be seen
romping through the California
waters. As you embark on your
sea-borne journey, you can count
on an entirely unique experience.
You never know what you’ll see
and the possibilities are endless! For a really exclusive tour
of the seas, you can book your
own private exhibition! So zip up
you can dance the night away.
Swing into action and grab your
tickets today. e The beaches
are calling. All you have to do is
answer! Your Oceanside vacation
is sure to be unforgettable.
36
36
Learn all about the history of the
Gaslamp Quarter at the California Fall
Back Festival in San Diego.
your windbreaker and hop on
one of the Dana Wharf Sportfishing vessels to experience the
wonders of these great ocean
giants. e There’s no better way
to celebrate the fall and winter
seasons than doing it the Disney
way in Anaheim. Don’t miss
Disneyland Resort’s Pixar play. It
runs through Dec. 31 and features
a slew of your favorite fun and
friendly Disney Pixar characters.
Join friends from “a bug’s life,”
“Monster’s Inc.,” “Finding Nemo,”
“Toy Story,” “The Incredibles”
and “Cars,” as they surprise you
with interactive effects, a super
soundtrack and plenty of laughs
for the whole family. e It’s all
treats and no tricks when you
celebrate Halloween at Disneyland. Celebrate the autumn
season as your favorite Disney
characters get festive and fun
for the harvest-time holiday. The
fun and games go from Sept. 26
to Nov. 2, when they transition
into the next stage of fall fantasy
as the magical holiday season
comes full-swing. Extravagant
lighting displays illuminate the
park and bring forth cheer and
joy for the season. e You’ll love
every second of your vacation
in Anaheim.
35
Oceanside, Calif.
California’s beaches always
guarantee an excellent vacation,
and so do the state’s attractions.
Oceanside is the best of California — it offers a beautiful setting
37
Hardened lava and new, green life are a
stunning contrast on the Big Island.
and much, much more. e It’s
always exhilarating to watch
brave surfers ride the Oceanside
waves. On Nov. 1-2 you can go
to the South Harbor Jetty to see
talented men and women glide
seemingly effortlessly across the
water as they compete for first
place at the NSSA Open Season.
e Celebrate life by remembering
those who have passed. On Nov.
2 there is a parade in honor of El
Día de los Muertos, or The Day
of the Dead. This cultural event
consists of two stages, 20 altars,
arts and crafts for the children,
a chalk cemetery, and retail
and food vendors — it truly is a
unique experience. e If you want
to take a day of your vacation to
give thanks by giving back, then
join the crew of the San Luis Rey
River Cleanup in tidying up the
local beaches by removing trash
and debris from the shores, and
in turn creating a safer, healthier
beach. Spend your day with the
soothing sounds of the waves
as you make friends and make a
difference on Nov. 8. e Cinderella
and Prince Charming wouldn’t
pass up the opportunity to go to
the Oceanside Winter Ball, and
neither should you. Everyone age
55 and up is invited to attend this
charming event on Dec. 14 at the
Beach Recreation Center, where
light refreshments are served
and attendants are offered the
chance to win great door prizes.
Music is performed by Jay Wimmer and the Big Bad All Stars so
San Diego, Calif.
Just like the surf, the fun never
stops in San Diego. From sun
up to sun down, there’s always
something going on in California’s
second largest city. e El Día de
los Muertos, or The Day of the
Dead, is a Hispanic tradition that
is celebrated in San Diego at the
Bazaar del Mundo until Nov. 2. In
honor of the deceased, there are
decorated altars, traditional terra
cotta and wood decorations and
plenty of goods. e Travel back in
time to the days when San Diego
and the Gaslamp Quarter were just
being developed. Geared toward
children, the Union Bank of California Fall Back Festival on Nov.
2 teaches the history of the area
with gold panning, puppet shows
and cultural dances. e Do the math:
60 of San Diego’s finest restaurants, 30 gourmet food companies
and more than 700 wines and
spirits combine to make one good
time at the San Diego Bay Wine
& Food Festival, Nov. 11-16. During
the five-day festival, take advantage of the wine-tasting seminars
and cooking classes. e The 35th
Annual Port of San Diego Boat
Parade of Lights, Dec. 7-14, is a
floating holiday celebration. Stand
along the water's edge to watch
the colorful and bright boats pass
by. e This isn’t your typical drivethrough. Load the family into the
car for an evening of bright lights
and holiday cheer. The Holiday of
Lights at the Del Mar Fairgrounds,
Nov. 20-Dec. 31, boasts more than
400 light displays with themes like
Candy Cane Lane and the Twelve
Days of Christmas. e Curious as to
how Shamu spends the holidays?
Wonder no more — he spends
them at SeaWorld’s Holiday Celebration, and you can too. From
Nov. 28 through Dec. 31, there’s a
Skytower Tree of Light, “Shamu’s
Holiday Night Show” and reindeer
in the park. e Isn’t it time you go to
San Diego?
Hawai‘i
37
The Big Island,
Hawai‘i
The Big Island offers big excitement, regardless of the time
of year. e Every Saturday, the
Keauhou Farmers Market offers
the best Hawaiian-grown fruits,
vegetables, flowers and coffee.
Located in the Keauhou Shopping Center in Kailua-Kona, the
market also offers live music.
e The world-famous Kona Coffee
is celebrated during the Kona
Coffee Cultural Festival, Nov. 7-16.
The only coffee festival in all of
the United States, the event has
taken place for 38 of the 180
years the coffee has been cultivated. So raise a glass of freshly
brewed coffee to celebrate the
beverage and enjoy the more
than 50 planned events. e If you
march to the beat of a different
drummer, you’ll appreciate the
Annual Drum and Percussion
Festival on Nov. 8. Local artists
span the globe when it comes to
the percussion stylings they perform, including those of Hawai‘i,
Africa and the Caribbean. e Hawai‘i
Volcanoes National Park is erupting with the holiday spirit during
Christmas in the Country, Nov.
22-30. Demonstrations, book
signings and handmade decorations are all highlights of the holiday event. e The Christmas Craft
“Eg”stravaganza is held Nov.
21-22 in Hilo. Purchase unique
holiday gifts, on display by more
than 100 crafters, for friends and
family back home. e Visit Hawai‘i
Volcanoes National Park again
on Dec. 17 and be treated to the
21st Annual Holiday Concert.
Local talent, sing-along carols
and a festive environment act as
a gift to the community from the
national park. e For a little taste
makes its way through town. The
entire town of Waimea, which was
the first town in Hawai‘i to commemorate the holiday, celebrates
the season with festive lights,
refreshments and entertainment.
e Cue the ukulele music — it’s time
for a Hawaiian vacation.
Photo: Courtesy of USVI Tourism
38
Surfers converge on the beaches of
the North Shore for some of O‘ahu’s
best surfing.
39
Capture your piece of paradise in Kaua‘i.
40
The vistas of St. Thomas are almost too
breathtaking to capture.
Caribbean
40
of culture, literally, make plans to
attend the 11th Annual Traditional Mochi Pounding. The village of
Wailea invites you to learn how
to make rice cakes (mochi) the
traditional way. As elders tell
stories, everyone participates
in pounding the rice cake for
good luck. e Culture and character abound on the Big Island
of Hawai‘i — and it’s yours to
share in.
38
O‘ahu, Hawai‘i
Pearl Harbor, Waikiki Beach, the
North Shore — the list goes on
and on. There’s a reason everyone has heard of most of the
attractions on O‘ahu — they’re
too good too miss. e Also too
good to miss is the Restaurant
Row Farmer’s Market in Honolulu. Fresh, locally grown produce
and fruit are offered every
Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
e November 7 is the 3rd Annual
Book Day at the Queen Emma
Summer Palace. Local authors
and refreshments are on-hand
and admission is free. e Winter is
peak season for surfing in O‘ahu,
especially on the famed North
Shore. That’s why there are so
many surf competitions between
November and December — so
find a place in the sand and
watch some of the best surfers in
the world compete for the best
waves in the world. First off is
the Vans Triple Crown of Surfing
competition, Nov. 12-Dec. 20,
which is comprised of the co-ed
Reef Hawaiian Pro, Nov. 12-24
at Haleiwa Ali’i Beach Park, the
O’Neill World Cup of Surfing, Nov.
25-Dec. 6 at Sunset Beach, and
the all-female Roxy Pro Hawaii,
Nov. 25-Dec. 6, also at Sunset
Beach. But the biggest waves
are caught during the Billabong
Pipeline Masters, Dec. 8-20. Held
at the Ehukai Beach Park, the
masters welcome the top professional surfers to compete in the
final world crown and Vans Triple
Crown decider. e More than 75
artists showcase their wares
during the Waikiki Artfest, Nov.
15-16. Admission is free on both
Saturday and Sunday, and the
jewelry, clothing, ceramics, quilts
and more are all hand-crafted
by Hawaiian artists. e The Hula
Film Festival at Bishop Museum
is coming to a close and the last
chance to view a screening is
Nov. 18. A film highlighting the
hula is shown, preceded by a
special introduction by a Bishop
Museum cultural expert. e Come
out to the State Capitol in
Honolulu to watch the Opening
Ceremony of Hawai‘i’s Legislature
on Jan. 21. Witness the pageantry
and aloha associated with the
traditional event. e Say aloha to
O‘ahu this winter.
39
Kaua‘i, Hawai‘i
Live the simple life, if but only for a
few days, while relaxing on the Garden Isle. After visiting Waimea Canyon and the Na Pali Coast, be sure
to experience the lesser-known
attractions — the small towns and
their local events. e Immerse yourself in the life and culture of Hawai‘i
with a lesson in lei making. Learn
how to string together foliage and
fresh flowers to create a beautiful
lei during Aloha Friday, every Friday at 9:30 a.m. at the West Kaua‘i
Visitor Center. e Or, if you choose,
spend a Monday morning exploring the historic town of Waimea
with a guided walk. The two-hour
walk departs every Monday at 9:30
a.m. from the West Kaua‘i Visitor
Center and takes visitors back in
time to the place Captain Cook first
made landfall in Hawai‘i and the
landmarks left behind by famous
residents. Along the way you’ll also
learn about the last King of Kaua‘i,
the agriculture of the area and the
missionaries that settled in the
area. e Admission is free for the entire family on Nov. 1 for Ohana Saturday at Kaua‘i Museum. At 11 a.m.
and 1 p.m., special presentations
are made by the Kaua‘i Humane
Society to discuss the unique and
important relationship between
Hawaiian residents and the island
animals. e The Annual Christmas
Craft Fair is once again held at the
Kaua‘i Museum on Dec. 5. Held
during the Festival of Lights, the
craft fair allows time for visiting the
museum, participating in Hawaiian music and hula performances,
dining on some delicious food, and
most importantly, shopping the
goods provided by local artisans.
e On Dec. 20 in Waimea, the
Waimea Lighted Christmas Parade
St. Thomas, U.S.V.I.
When it’s cold in the continental
United States, you can guarantee
it’s warm in St. Thomas. If you’re
aching to don a bathing suit
in the middle of winter, you’ve
come to the right place. e
November 1 is the perfect day
to lounge at the beach. Known
as Liberty Day and D. Hamilton
Jackson Day, Nov. 1 is a Virgin
Islands holiday celebrating the
advancements made by St. Croix
resident Jackson for the people
of the islands. e On Nov. 28 the
party heads to St. Croix for Jump
Up. Held four times throughout
the year, Jump Up is a street
party in Christiansted that offers store sales, live music and
activities for the children. e The
4th Annual St. John Christmas
Children’s Parade provides the
perfect opportunity to island hop.
A sight to behold, Santa with a
torch in hand leads the parade
through Cruz Bay as live music,
including that of the children’s
steel pan band, enlivens the
crowd. Each child is given a gift
from Santa at the end of the evening. e The parade starts at 6:30
p.m. but after it’s finished, the 4th
Annual St. John Christmas Music
Festival takes to the stage at
7:30 p.m. “Jazz in the Moonlight”
is free to everyone and features
a 13-year-old jazz pianist and a
13-year-old jazz trumpeter as well
as Ms. Maryel Epps. e Come to
relax in St. Thomas and see the
excitement of the Virgin Islands
in the process.
ResortReport
Whether you’re
in the planning
stages for your
next vacation or
your bags are
Wyndham Vacation Resorts
at Glacier Canyon
packed and you’re
ready to head out
the door, we want
to keep you
up-to-date on
the exciting
enhancements
your associations
are making to
your resorts!
Wyndham La Cascada
Wyndham Bonnet Creek Resort, in
Wyndham Vacation Resorts
Panama City Beach
Wyndham Kona Hawaiian Resort, on
Orlando, Fla., continues its expansion for
the Big Island of Hawai‘i, broke ground
your future enjoyment! The resort has
over the summer for its next exciting
recently opened the doors to its fifth tower,
phase, which will include 103 units and a
Torre De La Luna. Construction on the new
new swimming pool. Located on the south
Lazy River, pool and bar, and the amphi-
side of the resort, this construction is
theater at Torre del Cielo and Torre de Luna
expected to last into 2010.
is well under way and should be available
Wyndham La Cascada, in San Anto-
by spring 2009. Our sixth tower, Torre del
nio, Texas, will be downsizing its on-site
Sol, as well as the Wyndham Hotel, are
deli and grocery, Hippos, to offer a limited
both moving forward on schedule and are
selection of staple items. You’ll find the
expected to open in the summer of 2010.
nearest full-service grocery store located
Torre del Sol will also have its own ameni-
approximately 6.5 miles from the resort.
ties, including extensive water-fun features.
This fall you’ll see lots of changes for
This fall, take advantage of the heated
indoor pools at Wyndham Vacation
your benefit at Wyndham SeaWatch
Resorts at Glacier Canyon and Wyndham
Plantation, in Myrtle Beach, S.C. In addition
Tamarack. For your comfort, the outdoor
to the freshly updated lobby, you’ll also no-
pools will be closed during the cooler
tice exterior renovation work taking place at
months.
Villas I and II. Break out your laptops — the
The expansion at Wyndham Vacation
resort now offers complimentary wireless
Resorts Panama City Beach in Panama
in all units. If you are planning to pack your
City Beach, Fla., will continue throughout
swimsuits, please keep in mind that in early
the next few years to provide you with
November the pools will be re-enclosed
even more amenities and retail options,
with glass and will no longer be heated.
including new fitness and activities centers.
Call now to make reservations
1-800-274-4001
Offer Code: OWN3725
See page 30 for qualifications and terms & conditions.
www.ownergetaways.com
109
$
per package
Orlando, FL
3 Days & 2 Nights Escape
119
$
per package
Las Vegas, NV
3 Days & 2 Nights Escape
eAccommodations at one of our Wyndham Vacation Resorts
locations in Orlando (if available), Best Western Lake Buena Vista
Resort Hotel, Wyndham Orlando or comparable area hotel rated
3 stars or higher for 2 adults and 2 children (under age 18)
Plus your choice of either:
e2 Adult Theme Park Tickets to your choice of one of the following:
Universal Studios®, Islands of Adventure®, any Walt Disney World®
Theme Park or SeaWorld® Orlando (retail value up to $151) OR
e$100 Dinner Certificate to a popular area restaurant such as the
Crab House, Red Lobster or Olive Garden
e A
ccommodations at our Wyndham Grand Desert resort (if
available), the Tuscany Suites & Casino, Harrah’s Las Vegas Casino
& Hotel or comparable hotel rated 3 stars or higher for 2 adults
and 2 children (under age 18)
Plus your choice of one of the following:
e $50 Coupon for Gaming Chips at Harrah’s Las Vegas Casino &
Hotel OR
e 2 Show Tickets to a Las Vegas Show such as Vinnie Favorito or
The Improv (retail value up to $99) OR
e 2 Tickets to Harrah’s Buffet or Rio’s Buffet (retail value up to $75)
Mention Offer Code: OWN3725
Retail value: $230-$575
depending on room availability, travel dates
and additional feature(s) selected
Mention Offer Code: OWN3725
Retail value: $162-$743
depending on room availability, travel dates
and additional feature(s) selected
69
$
per package
Branson, MO
3 Days & 2 Nights Escape
Branson, MO
e A
ccommodations at one of our Wyndham Vacation Resorts
locations in Branson (if available), Travelodge at the Falls, Howard
Johnson or comparable
rated
or higher
for 2 adults
3 hotel
Days
& 32stars
Nights
Escape
and 2 children (under age 18)
Plus your choice of either:
e $50 Dinner Certificate to a popular area restaurant such as
McFarlain’s OR
e 2 Tickets to a popular area show such as Dixie Stampede® or
Legends in Concert (retail value up to $96)
Mention Offer Code: OWN3725
Retail value: $132-$343
depending on room availability, travel dates
and additional feature(s) selected
69
$
per package
79
$
per package
Pocono Mountains, PA
3 Days & 2 Nights Escape
e A
ccommodations at Wyndham Vacation Resorts Poconos (if
available), The Shawnee Inn Historic Hotel, Howard Johnson or a
comparable area hotel for 2 adults and 2 children (under age 18)
Plus your choice of one of the following:
e $50 Dinner Certificate to a popular area restaurant such as
Alaska Pete’s or Shawnee Inn & Golf Resort Restaurant OR
e 2 Shawnee Mountain Ski Lift Tickets (retail value up to $94) OR
e 2 Water Tubing Tickets (retail value up to $42) OR
e 2 Canoe Rental Tickets (retail value up to $64)
Mention Offer Code: OWN3725
Retail value $148-$447
depending on room availability, travel dates
and additional feature(s) selected
ADDRESS SERVICE
REQUESTED
Smoky Mountains, TN
3 Days & 2 Nights Escape
e A
ccommodations at our Wyndham Smoky Mountains resort (if
available), Governors Inn, Oaktree Lodge or comparable hotel
rated 3 stars or higher for 2 adults and 2 children (under age 18)
Plus your choice of either:
e $75 Dinner Certificate to a popular area restaurant such as Texas
Roadhouse OR
e 2 Adult Dollywood® Tickets (open seasonally, retail value $91)
Mention Offer Code: OWN3725
Retail value: $203-$393
depending on room availability, travel dates
and additional feature(s) selected
This advertising material is being used for the purpose of soliciting
sales of timeshare interests. Vacation package requires 120-minute
timeshare sales presentation with Wyndham Vacation Resorts.
5259 Coconut Creek Parkway
Margate, FL 33063
PRESORTED STD
U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
HICKORY NC
PERMIT NO. 104