Expat Living (Singapore)

TE COMPLE Y GETAWA

Hoi An makes many a traveller’s shortlist, but sleepier parts of the South Central Coast are asking visitors to stay and play too.

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What’s the trendiest place to be in Asia right now? Vietnam’s Son Doong cave. The world’s largest cave recently opened to tourists, and virtually every travel publicatio­n on the planet is writing about it. (We featured it in our June issue!) Then, a couple of months ago, Lonely Planet ranked Central Vietnam the 6th best place to visit in Asia Pacific for 2019. (Singapore was ranked number 4, thanks in part to Changi’s Jewel and the renovated Raffles Hotel.)

The area is enticing travellers to think beyond the country’s well-known “H” hotspots – Ho Chi Minh in the south, and Hanoi and Halong Bay in the north. The South Central Coast (the eastern lower half of Central Vietnam) is even battling its own H-towns – Hoi An and Hue – for attention.

Villas and views

Ever been to Quy Nhon? Not many have. Just five years ago, tourism was virtually non-existent in this central Vietnamese city (pronounced “kwee nyawn”) set between rugged mountains and a gorgeous coastline. Anantara Quy Nhon Villas is trying to change that. Following the success of Nha Trang to the south, Quy Nhon enters the luxury fray with the Anantara as its first five-star internatio­nal hotel.

With only 26 villas, the property is wonderfull­y intimate. There are six villa types – choosing the right one is a matter of two decisions: location (beachfront or hilltop) and size (one or two bedrooms). We chose a bi-level Ocean View Pool Villa with pool on the bottom floor and living quarters on the top. This is a great choice for families with young children; you get the splendour of a private pool without the skittishne­ss of having to watch the kids every second of every day. Extra-high balcony walls are constructe­d without horizontal (aka climbing) beams – another necessity for families.

Every villa has sweeping ocean views s with front-row seats for sunrise. We e awoke every morning to high-pitched, d, wall-shaking squeals of excitement over er the psychedeli­c swirls of pink and orange ge filling the sky. Oh, kids and the joys of 5am wakeups. We could have pulled the blackout curtains but honestly, this view iew was too good for that.

Days here are long ( see paragraph aph above...), but in the best of ways. The main pool is quiet until 4pm when the sun dips behind a western mountain, casting g the entire property into warm shadow. Then guests come out in droves – and by droves, I mean, oh, three families. This is a good time to amble to the private beach where the sand is soft for tender young feet and the waves thrilling but manageable.

Being away from it all has many benefits, but what about the drawbacks? First, it’s a matter of forgotten sunscreen; later, antibiotic ointment for a toddler toe injury. Do we have access to necessitie­s and medical care if we need them? It turns out, we do. The staff ran into town to fetch our requests and were poised to call a nurse if the toe didn’t heal (it did). Anything the resort didn’t have, they got us at no additional cost.

The property has a small gym, and there’s a kids’ play area at the 63-room Avani sister resort next door. But the biggest draw is the Anantara Spa – arguably, the mos most stunning part of both properties. There are two menus – one for traditiona­l services and another for Ayurvedic and Vietnamese wel wellness treatments. I loved my massage and fac facial but I really must try something new next tim time, like the singing ball chakra treatment or Shirodhara dripping oil therapy. The intimacy of the hotel is best felt at S Sea.fire.salt, a glass-enclosed restaurant s serving fresh seafood and the hotel’s housem made flavoured salt mixes (they offer 24). A At breakfast, platters of smoked fish, charcuteri­e, cheese, yoghurt and tropical fruit are delivered to the table alongside tall glasses of sweet Vietnamese coffee and homemade kombucha. Mains, like mixed berry crepes and quinoa bowls with cocon coconut yoghurt, chia seeds and goji berries, are made to order. Breakfast is serene and so very relaxing, a style I much prefer over big buffets. Lunch and dinner are the same – with so few people, you needn’t bother with reservatio­ns. Just sit down where you want for a lazy meal of prawn gazpacho and wagyu beef- stuffed banh mi. To celebrate our wedding anniversar­y, we dined on lobster bisque and tuna steaks cooked tableside on 200-million-year-old salt bricks. The staff even took the time to hang fairy lights over a special table set up on the main lawn. Meanwhile, a babysitter watched over three sleeping kids back in the villa. For sure, there are easier parts of Vietnam to get to. But the extra effort to reach Quy Nhon is rewarded with a chiller, less expensive five-star Vietnam villa experience.

A design delight

If you can judge a wedding’s formality by its invitation, then the same can be said of a hotel and its pickup service. As our train pulled into Da Nang, a Mercedes GLS 350 SUV awaited with sparkling San Pellegrino, Wi-fi and ipad for choose-your-own tunes.

This is my introducti­on to the very big, ig, very bold Interconti­nental Danang Sun un Peninsula Resort, a property that has as topped my hotel bucket list since it first st opened in 2011.

Set within the Son Tra Nature Reserve, e, the 201-room Bill Bensley-designed hotel el resembles a Vietnamese seaside village. . There is no main building, rather the hotel l is a series of freestandi­ng houses built from m the coastline to the top of a mountain n peak. Bensley, a Harvard- educated, Bangkok-based architect and designer, is the mastermind behind some of Asia’s most jaw-dropping properties, including The Siam Hotel in Bangkok and The St. Regis Bali Resort. For a cool $38K, ardent fans can join him on a luxury tour of his Southeast S h Asian properties, complete with a helicopter tour over Angkor Wat and dinner in his Thai home.

If the devil is in the details, then this place is the underworld. Here, the details have details. Every sink is bespoke, every beam carved, every entrancewa­y arched. “Basic” simply won’t do – not for a water faucet, not for a walkway. There is something interestin­g everywhere you look.

This is especially true of the Royal Residence by the Sea – the grand dame of the property. The villa has two levels with dual living rooms (one anchored by a baby grand Steinway piano), a dining room set for ten, a master bedroom overlookin­g a 13 13-metre lap pool and a mesmerisin­g view of Monkey Bay. The room comes with a pri private butler, in our case Vu, whose job is not so much to do as you ask but to predict wh what you want. He zooms us around the pro property on a buggy, reminding us of spa appointmen­ts, dropping off three- tiered trays of afternoon tea and greeting us with fresh coconuts after a session of paddleboar­ding at the beach. He’s less butler, and more your right brain – because who really wants to think on holiday? If this is the best the hotel has, what about its most basic? Classic Rooms have the same soaring ceilings, the same marble tubs (mined from Non Nuoc, or Marble Mountain, south of Da Nang), and the same smashing coastal views. These rooms are perfect for a couple or a small family. Speaking of families, the resort is all about them – and at the same time, not. There are separate pools for

families and couples, and kids aren’t allowed in the Club Lounge, which serves breakfast, afternoon tea and evening cocktails. They do, however, rule the roost at Planet Trekkers, a fab kids’ club with supervised hourly events like yoga and cookie decorating. Ever seen one of those claws-out legs-splayed cat-bathing videos on Youtube? That was me trying to extract my own three, a fight we didn’t wage during 6pm movie time, affording us an easy couples-only dinner – no babysitter required.

The resort’s 39 hectares (about twice the size of Fort Canning Park) can be explored through a daily wildlife tour hosted by resident zoologist Anthony Barker. Through it, we learned that the “moth” we saved that morning was actually a Brown King butterfly and that the resort is home to six different monkey families, each with 10 to 30 members each. Monkeys are, of course, adorable when they aren’t making complete menaces of themselves. This doesn’t include the critically-endangered red-shanked douc langur, a docile primate of which 800 of the estimated 1,200 left in the wild live around the resort.

Food is remarkable, and not just at La Maison 1888, a restaurant helmed by three-michelin-starred chef Pierre Gagnaire. There’s also Barefoot, with lobster, sea bass and colossal king prawn dishes served on the beach, while the mountain-top Citron is a Vietnamese powerhouse with offerings separated by their North, Central and South origins.

Even in monsoon season (November to January), the hotel is popular for the HARNN Heritage Spa, which offers compliment­ary essential oil mixology classes. In one, I discover my prominent element is metal (rigid, inflexible – moi?) and my daughter an earthy wood (energetic, independen­t – definitely). We both took home a compliment­ary essential oil blend: a lemongrass one to lighten me up and a light rose mix to ignite her six-year-old “passions”.

The spa boasts a Pedi:mani:cure Studio by French podiatrist Bastien Gonzalez – one of 20 in the world (The St. Regis Hotel Singapore has another) – which has been named the World’s Best Nail Studio Brand for four years in a row. Everything you know about pedicures (foot soak, cuticle cutting, nail colour) is out in this dry treatment performed by a trained podiatrist. To try it equals addiction.

From the hotel, you can explore some of the most famous spots in Central Vietnam – UNESCO World Heritage sites like Hue, Hoi An and the ancient temples of My Son. The Ba Na Hills are also close. It’s these, plus the lesser-known and harder to reach spots – places like the Red Sand Dunes and the caves of Phong Nha-ke Bang National Park – that are really setting the region on fire.

“The firm tree does not fear the storm.” – Indonesian proverb “Bali is one of the few cultures with origins in one of the great ancient cultures which is still alive.” Arthur Erickson, architect “Long live my land, long live my state, My nation, my people, entirely, Let us build its soul, let us build its body, For the Great Indonesia” – First stanza of Indonesia’s national anthem

Couples visiting Telunas Private Island, which is accessible by boat from Singapore, will appreciate the resort’s brand new adult-only Ridge Villas. Each villa offers a fabulous view of the sea and a private plunge pool, with a spacious master bedroom, an open-air living room, and an oversized ensuite bathroom with an indoor/outdoor shower. Note that there are only five Ridge Villas, so they fill up fast!

This is a family-friendly destinatio­n too, and the fifteen overwater villas include a kids’ loft and allow you to fish right from your deck. There’s a school break right around the corner, so this could be the ideal spot for your next family trip.

Telunas Resorts continues to strive to impact Indonesia for a better tomorrow by digging wells in local communitie­s, protecting endangered sea turtles and the environmen­t, repairing and painting schools, and replacing roofs for local islanders. Guests can get involved by helping to release baby turtles, planting mangrove trees or visiting a local school. Whether you want to spend an hour or an entire day, you can join in the effort to preserve the area’s culture and environmen­t during your Telunas stay.

Book online at telunasres­orts.com or email stay@telunasres­orts.com.

We’ve been lucky enough to visit Villa Borobudur Resort, and we can tell you now that it has a location to be envied. It’s positioned on the hillside of the Menoreh mountains in Central Java, overlookin­g a vast valley of lush vegetation and the renowned Merapi volcano. It’s also just 3km from the world’s largest Buddhist temple, Borobudur.

There are seven uniquely designed villas on site, all with personal staff and private swimming pools, and with an emphasis on privacy, while the colourful and flavourful food reflects authentic Indonesian culinary traditions.

Guests can expect around-the-clock personal service and a full range of activities and services that explore Javanese nature, culture and arts. There are sunset yoga classes to take part it, or sunrise meditation sessions in the temples surroundin­g the resort; or, you can hike the region’s volcanoes, experience a memorable road-trip or cycling session, and even discover Javanese spirituali­ty. There are tailored programmes and offers available too – so, if you have a particular holiday wish list you want to satisfy, do ask about it.

+62 851 0052 5520 | villaborob­udurresort.com

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