Leah Nahimov is a pioneer. She’s also something of a magician.Somehow, she and her husband Gadi have managed to create a little piece of France slap bang in the middle of the Negev Desert.
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French Cheeses in the Negev
15/06/2013This entry was posted in Europe and Middle East, Hotel Reviews, Israel, The Negev and tagged French cheese, Guide to The Negev, Holidays in Israel, Israel, The Negev on .Relaxing With Water Maidens in Eilat
15/06/2013This entry was posted in Eilat, Europe and Middle East, Israel and tagged Dolphin Reef, Eilat, Israel, Water massage on .Well this was a first. Lying on my back in the water with my eyes shut, listening to underwater music whilst being gently twirled around by a water therapist. This is relaxation Jim, but not as we know it.
it is instead, relaxing with water maidens in Eilat.
Read the full story hereDiving with Dolphins in Israel
15/06/2013This entry was posted in Eilat, Europe and Middle East, Israel and tagged Eilat, Israel, Swim with Dolphins on .‘That’s Dana’ said Andrew my diving buddy, pointing at the glorious streamlined body leaping fully out of the water to assembled gasps, ‘she’ll come over to say hello when we’re down there’. I truthfully had a moment, right there and then.
Read the full story hereJerusalem. Thousands of years in the making.
13/06/2013This entry was posted in Europe and Middle East, Israel, Jerusalem and tagged Best sights in Jerusalem, Guide to Jerusalem, Jerusalem guide on .It was a sound that, given the circumstances, instantly transported me back thousands of years to Jerusalem.
Read the full story hereKempinski Hotel Corvinus
13/06/2013This entry was posted in Budapest, Europe and Middle East, Hotel Reviews, Hungary and tagged Best hotels in Budapest on .Any hotel that lends its name to a former king has to be confident its service and facilities can live up to the regal billing. And when you come to think of it, any guest should be made to feel like a proper member of the royal family anyway.
Read the full story hereIceland. The Elvin Queen at the Top of the World
13/06/2013This entry was posted in Europe and Middle East, Iceland and tagged best things to do in Iceland, Guide to Iceland, Northern lights in Iceland, Top attractions in Iceland on .Iceland sits atop the world like an Elvin queen; her stunning beauty there for all to see, but beware of the deadly temper awaiting underneath that veneer, boiling away below the surface, bursting out fire and brimstone if her day’s not turning out too good.
Read the full story hereMielcke & Hurtigkarl Copenhagen’s best restaurant.
09/06/2013This entry was posted in Copenhagen, Denmark, Europe and Middle East and tagged best restaurant in Copenhagen, Copenhagens best restaurants, eating in Copenhagen on .Andy Mossack visits Mielcke & Hurtigkarl and says it’s the best restaurant in Copenhagen.
Read the full story hereAvli Lounge Apartments. 5 Star luxury Cretan hospitality.
09/06/2013This entry was posted in Crete, Europe and Middle East, Greece, Hotel Reviews and tagged Avli Hotel, Avli Lounge Apartments, Crete, holidays in Crete on .Andy Mossack stays at the Avli Lounge Apartments in Rethymon and enjoys five star Cretan hospitality.
Read the full story hereFuertenventura. Small but deliciously formed.
08/06/2013This entry was posted in Canary Islands, Europe and Middle East, Spain and tagged Canary Islands, Fuertenventura, Guide to Fuertenventura on .Fuerteventura is the second largest island after Tenerife, and with only 60 miles separating the Punta de la Entallada on its east coast from Cape Juby in Morocco it enjoys something like three thousand hours of sunshine a year.
Read the full story hereGran Canaria. The miniature continent
01/06/2013This entry was posted in Canary Islands, Europe and Middle East, Gran Canaria, Spain and tagged Canary Islands, Gran Canaria on .All the Canary islands have a unique volcanic landscape. They were born from volcanic eruptions some 20 million years ago (although there have been a few more since) and the lava, now cooled to a blackish rock-like substance called lapilli, has left its footprint everywhere, and even more extraordinarily, has been used to fuel agriculture, vineyards, black beaches and some stunning architecture.
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