Published August 6, 2025 03:30PM
Destinations & Things To Do
From cosy retreats to hidden gems: How boutique hotels and homestays are preparing for increased festivities – Lifestyle News

As the festive season approaches, boutique hotels and homestays are gearing up to provide unique experiences that go beyond standard hospitality. With travelers seeking more personal and immersive stays, these intimate accommodations are stepping up their game to create memorable celebrations.
Boutique hotels are embracing local traditions, offering curated packages that highlight regional festivities. From special holiday menus featuring local cuisine to themed decorations that reflect the culture, these establishments are turning their spaces into festive wonderlands. Guests can enjoy cozy evenings by the fire, participate in local workshops, or join in community celebrations, creating a sense of belonging that larger hotels often lack.
G.S. Rathore, Founder of Jungle Camps India, notes, “Ahead of the festive season, we are preparing for a surge in travel demand, with an anticipated annual growth of 20-25% in wildlife tourism. Our lodges are offering personalized, immersive experiences, from customized itineraries to exclusive wildlife safaris.” Rathore emphasizes the growing preference for eco-friendly accommodations, stating, “With 70% of travelers preferring eco-friendly options, we are enhancing our sustainability initiatives, utilizing solar power, and supporting local communities.”
In urban settings, boutique hotels are adopting similar strategies. Ahsan Shervani, Vice President of Star Hotels Ltd, shares, “We are implementing extensive measures to provide an unparalleled travel experience. Whether in renowned destinations or hidden gems, our teams are prepping to offer curated local tours and delectable local cuisine, transforming each stay into a celebration of culture and adventure.”
Meanwhile, homestays are capitalizing on the desire for authenticity. Hosts are preparing to welcome guests with homemade treats and personalized itineraries that showcase hidden gems in the area. Many offer unique experiences like cooking classes, guided hikes, or artisan market tours, allowing travelers to connect with the local community meaningfully.
The shift towards immersive travel experiences is echoed by Amanpreet Bajaj, General Manager – India, Southeast Asia, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, for Airbnb. He states, “Immersive travel, or slow tourism, allows individuals to step beyond traditional tourism, seeking meaningful and authentic experiences.” This approach fosters a deeper appreciation for local cultures and supports community engagement.
Capt. Sarabdeep and Er. Hari, host of a unique Airbnb in Dehradun, has noticed this trend firsthand. “We’re seeing travelers move away from traditional luxury stays and instead seek experiences that offer depth and connection,” says Capt. Sarabdeep. Their home combines sustainable architecture with local traditions, creating a rich cultural experience. “It’s about creating a space where people can slow down and embrace local traditions,” adds Er. Hari.
Travelers across India are echoing these sentiments. Neha Sharma, a frequent traveler from Delhi, remarks, “I love finding places that reflect the local culture. It makes my trips more meaningful.” Another traveler, Vikram Mehta from Bengaluru, shares, “I prefer staying in homestays where I can interact with the locals and learn about their way of life.”
To accommodate increased demand, both boutique hotels and homestays are enhancing their booking systems and staffing to ensure seamless experiences. Sustainability is also at the forefront, with many properties incorporating eco-friendly practices to appeal to environmentally-conscious travelers.
Destinations & Things To Do
Indulge in Singapore’s Newest Attractions and Best Hidden Gems Over a 72-Hour Stay at The Capitol Hotel Kempinski Singapore

MY THREE-DAY ESCAPE TO The Capitol Kempinski Hotel Singapore was nothing short of indulgent. Nestled in the heart of Singapore’s civic and cultural district, this heritage property offered the ideal blend of historical grandeur and modern luxury I’d been craving.
Finding Sanctuary in The Heritage Suite
Checking into the 137sqm Heritage Suite felt like stepping into the Victorian era. Inside the historic Stamford House, this exclusive accommodation immediately put me at ease with neutral tones that evoked warmth and carefully curated antiques that paired perfectly with the building’s elegance. Custom-made furnishings blended into the decor, creating an atmosphere of refined sophistication that made me feel truly pampered.
The bathroom was a wonderful space for relaxing. A generously-sized escape featuring a free-standing deep-soaking bathtub was where I spent evening hours unwinding. The walk-in closet, separate rainfall shower with steam and private powder room added more luxury to the stay. The hotel’s suite privileges also made me feel well taken care of, from the 24-hour flexibility to the bubbly buffet breakfast at 15 Stamford and evening cocktails at the Executive Lounge from 6 to 8 pm each evening.
Singapore’s Cultural Heart
One experience I’ll never forget was exploring Singapore in a vintage Vespa sidecar. Racing through the historic streets with the wind in my hair, I felt connected to the city’s pulse in a way that most tours can’t match.
The National Gallery is just a stone’s throw from the hotel and was a wonderful place to spend an afternoon losing myself among the artworks. The gallery is also home to Violet Oon, where I dined on authentic Peranakan dishes that delighted me with their unexpected, complex flavours. Each recipe told a story of Singapore’s multicultural heritage, perfectly complementing my cultural journey.
The hotel offers a private guided Heritage Tour led by the hotel’s Heritage Curator. It’s a fascinating journey into the iconic history of Stamford House, Capitol Building, and Capitol Theatre — where Charlie Chaplin and Ava Gardner graced the stage. Understanding that I was sleeping within walls that witnessed nearly a century of Singapore’s evolution added texture and depth to my experience and made every moment feel special.
Culinary and Wellness Indulgences
Staying in a storied heritage hotel, it seemed right to treat myself to Heritage Afternoon Tea and I heartily recommend it. Available daily in the Lobby Lounge, at 12:30 or 3 pm, I chose the earlier seating to savour my cultural voyage through time. I enjoyed three courses that represented a selection of some of the nation’s iconic dishes, interpreted with playful textures, flavours and presentations that celebrated Singapore in the most satisfying way.
If you’re looking for a refreshing drink that comes with an intriguing narrative, try the Plantation 1840 at The Bar at 15 Stamford. As I sipped it, I learned the story of Joseph Balestier, the first US Consul to Singapore, and his wife, Maria Revere, who was the daughter of American Civil War midnight rider, Paul Revere. The couple once lived on the site where the Capitol Building stands today.
The couple’s legacy lives on through The Bar’s bell-ringing ritual. Inspired by the Revere Bell displayed at the National Museum of Singapore — the only Revere Bell outside the US — the ringing of the bell is a sound I won’t forget.
The spa’s Singapore Massage was the perfect finale to a day when I’d done hours of walking. This unique treatment combined Chinese Tuina techniques to ease muscle tension and promote qi circulation, Malay abdominal massage to remove “angin” (wind) and improve circulation, and Indian foot massage with Kansu bowl, which honours Ayurvedic traditions. The multicultural therapy left me relaxed and invigorated.
Neighbourhood Steeped in Culture
The hotel’s location in Singapore’s cultural district proved ideal for exploration. Historic architecture surrounded me at every turn, while world-class museums, galleries and cultural institutions were within easy walking distance. The blend of colonial grandeur and modern innovation in the neighbourhood perfected my visit.
Those 72 hours at The Capitol Hotel Kempinski weren’t just a hotel stay — they were a trip into Singapore’s soul, delivered with unparalleled luxury.
For more information, please visit www.kempinski.com/en/singapore
Article Sponsored by The Capitol Kempinski Hotel Singapore.
Images courtesy of The Capitol Kempinski Hotel Singapore.
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Destinations & Things To Do
The National Park Service is Reinstalling A Statue of This Confederate General

The NPS says that refurbishing and reinstalling the toppled statue “aligns with federal responsibilities under historic preservation law”
(Photo: ERIC BARADAT/AFP via Getty Images)
The National Park Service will restore and install the bronze statue of a Confederate general in Washington D.C. five years after it was torn down during the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests.
According to a news release from the agency, reinstalling the statue of Albert Pike, a brigadier general in the Confederate Army during the U.S. Civil War, “aligns with federal responsibilities under historic preservation law, as well as recent executive orders to beautify the nation’s capital and re-instate pre-existing statues.”
The NPS statement, issued on Monday, August 4, says that the statue, which was originally installed in 1901, a decade after Pike’s death, is intended to honor his leadership in the order of Freemasons, an exclusive and secretive fraternity. The statue honors his “32 years as Sovereign Grand Commander of the Ancient Rite of Scottish Freemasonry,” the release reads.
The news release does not mention Pike’s military service with the Confederate States of America during the U.S. Civil War.
Prior to its destruction in 2020, Pike’s statue was the only statue of a Confederate officer in the U.S. capitol, outside of museums. However, the statue, which was erected by Freemasons, did not explicitly mention Pike’s military service, and he was not depicted in uniform. An inscription on the plinth read: Author, Poet, Scholar, Soldier, Jurist Orator, Philanthropist, Philosopher.
According to The New York Times, Pike served as a diplomat to Native American tribes that the Confederacy hoped to enlist to fight the Union, and only commanded his troops in a single engagement, the Battle of Pea Ridge, which saw his unit routed. Pike was later charged by his commanding officers with insubordination and treason, and escaped punishment by resigning his command.
In the years following the war, Pike also had ties to the Klu Klux Klan, however critics have disputed that he was a member of the racist organization. A biography entitled, A Life of Albert Pike (1997), says Pike once declared that “the white race, and that race alone, shall govern this country.”
Though it stood for over a hundred years in Washington D.C.’s Judiciary Square neighborhood, just a few blocks from the National Mall, Albert Pike’s statue sparked controversy. Union Army veterans petitioned the government to block the statue’s installment when it was first approved in 1898. The D.C. Council first began petitioning the federal government to remove the statue in 1992, and renewed said petition as recently as 2017.
Congressional delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, who represents the District of Columbia in the House of Representatives, introduced a bill to remove the statue in 2019, but it was destroyed before the bill passed. (Norton’s legislation was later passed by the House Committee on Natural Resources.)
In a press release on August 4, Norton decried the decision to restore and reinstall the statue, calling it, “as odd and indefensible as it is morally objectionable.” She said she planned to reintroduce her bill to have the statue removed permanently.
“Pike served dishonorably,” Norton said. “He took up arms against the United States, misappropriated funds, and was ultimately captured and imprisoned by his own troops. He resigned in disgrace after committing a war crime and dishonoring even his own Confederate military service. Even those who want Confederate statues to remain standing would have to justify awarding Pike any honor, considering his history.” (Her reference to a “war crime” refers to the actions of Cherokee under Pike’s command at the Battle of Pea Ridge. There were reports of the Cherkoee scalping federal dead.)
In its announcement of the statue’s restoration, the NPS specifically cited two of President Trump’s executive orders: “Making the District of Columbia Safe and Beautiful” and “Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History.” The latter executive order has been used as justification for other major changes in national parks across the country, including signs asking visitors to report negative information about past or living Americans.
The agency plans to have Albert Pike’s statue fully restored and installed in October.
Destinations & Things To Do
Is Whole-Body Cryotherapy the New Ice Bath? I Tried It to Find Out.

Dogsledding taught me how to endure the cold—but cryotherapy felt like a different beast. Here’s how my body reacted to the rising health trend.
(Photo: Anna Matviienko/Getty, Abigail Wise)
Published August 6, 2025 02:26PM
I went to CryoEffect, a self-described “Cold Spa” in the Chicago suburbs, in the middle of the weekday, when I was told it would be pretty empty. The only customer was a guy in the back who had just gotten out of a full-body cryotherapy treatment—basically, three minutes naked in a -200 degrees Fahrenheit freezer—and was reclining in compression boots that went all the way up his legs. He was coming to CryoEffect daily as part of a fitness project, because, as an airplane salesman, he’d made a bet with a client that he could lose 30 pounds in 30 days. If he won, his client would pay him $50,000.
“What if you lose the bet?” I said.
“He’s not going to lose the bet,” said Miriam, the Cold Spa’s owner. She had a great smile and curly hair, and her wrists were adorned with crystal bracelets, which she made herself and sold at a table by the door. Each crystal helped with different things, like creativity and self-love. But most customers just bought them based on which colors they liked best.
The guy beamed. He was confident about the bet. “In two and a half weeks, I’ve already lost 27 pounds.”
“You should donate the money to the owner of CryoEffect,” said Miriam.
Did he feel, I asked, like time in the freezer was helping his goal?
“For sure,” he said. “You come out, and it’s almost like you’re crafted. Like, you’re shaped.” He sort of pawed the air, like he was patting a Greek statue. “Everything is tighter. It’s amazing! And my sinuses are better, too.”
Well, who doesn’t want to be crafted like a statue? That sounded pretty good to me, especially since I’d come to try out full-body cryotherapy myself. My reasons were simpler: I’m a long-distance dogsledder, a lover of deep cold, and I’ve spent a lot of time winter camping in 30 or 40 below zero—so I was curious about how the Cryo experience would compare. Temperatures in the walk-in freezer got down to—apparently—-260 degrees Fahrenheit, but some users described the sensation as that of standing next to a fridge with an open door. These things are not the same. How cold would it really feel? And would it scratch that cold-weather itch, even in summer? I felt uniquely qualified to evaluate.
Plus, the freezer therapy came with a bunch of supposed benefits—some of them even backed by science, like improved mood and less muscle soreness after workouts. And dozens of cryotherapy services have popped up in the Chicago area alone. Proponents argue that the cold decreases inflammation—picture an ice pack on an injury, but for your whole body—and causes your blood to redirect to your core, so that when it comes back to your extremities, it’s carrying extra nutrients and oxygen.
Do whole-body cryo fans care about the FDA’s statements that “there is very little evidence about its safety or effectiveness”? Not particularly. Search #cryotherapy on any socials, and you’ll find countless posts about pain relief, athletic performance, and improved energy. I gotta say, I believe it: regardless of direct physical effects, the intensity of three minutes in a deep freezer would make for a hell of a placebo.
Another man walked into the spa—clearly a regular, because he wasted no time slipping behind a curtain and changing into the spa-issued bathrobe, socks, and slippers before stepping into the cryo chamber, which looked like a cross between an upright fridge and a coffin. Lights flashed; white steam poured over the top. He spent the entirety of his three-minute treatment chatting with Miriam about his daughter’s upcoming wedding, even when a deafening fire alarm went off, which Miriam shouted was a false alarm from the office next door. I covered my ears; he ignored it. He seemed to be a superhero of ignoring sensory input. When his time was up, he stepped out of the tank like it was nothing.
Now it was my turn.
The inside of the freezer-coffin was lined with some sort of black quilted poly that was coated in frost. I opened the door and stepped onto a carpeted platform, which rose up until my head poked out an opening at the top. I wore a bathrobe over my underwear, but now that I was fully enclosed, I took off the robe and handed it to Miriam; no one could see my body, but I felt very exposed. The air already felt frigid. How much colder would it get? I started to get nervous.
A screen at the top of the tank read -97 degrees Fahrenheit, with 2 minutes and 54 seconds left. Within two seconds, temps dropped another 20 degrees. It felt like someone was pressing solid ice cubes to every inch of my skin. I had the urge to crouch down and make a ball, wrapping my arms around my legs to preserve heat, but I was afraid to bend at all and brush the frosty lining of the tank.
With a strong hissing sound, mist started to pour out around me, rising up to my neck. The temp dropped to -165.7 degrees Fahrenheit, which did not feel at all like standing in the open door to a refrigerator. It felt like I was standing in an oddly windless tundra—naked. I suppose, if I hadn’t seen the thermometer, I would have estimated the temperature to be around -40 degrees Fahrenheit, which is still very chilly to be naked. I guess that’s what they call a dry cold.
“Your skin receptors are talking to your brain,” Miriam said calmly, outside the coffin, as if those words meant anything at all. “Your blood is rushing to your core to protect your vital organs. When you step out of your three minutes of torture, your blood will rush back where it belongs and fight inflammation along the way.” She started listing the conditions this would help: brain fog, stress, depression, anxiety, acne, rosacea, scarring… (Conversely, the FDA warns of asphyxiation, frostbite, eye injury, and burns.)
It was hard to focus on what she was saying, which was surely the point; she was well-practiced in distracting people from the pain of cold. Still, the sensation of cold won over. It felt like thick needles were stabbing slowly into my shins and arms.
“You’ll be amazed how well you sleep tonight,” said Miriam cheerfully.
With 53 seconds to go, I started laughing from the pain. Miriam recommended that I put my arms up above the tank. “That leaves the girls exposed,” she warned a few seconds too late. My forearms were covered with the biggest goosebumps I’d ever seen.
With ten seconds to go, she traded me the mittens for my room-temperature bathrobe, which felt unbelievably toasty, like it had been warming for hours in the hot sun.
Normally it takes me a long time to warm up after being in deep cold—a half-day inside, at least, for the bone-chill to go away. I can mush in the morning, sit by a fire all afternoon, and still want a hot bath to warm up fully for bed. But within seconds of stepping out of the freezer-coffin, I felt fine again, except that my legs were as numb to touch as if they’d been novocained. It was kind of fun to poke them. My clothes, when I put them on, felt balmy. I wanted to skip around. I stepped back onto the street and everything seemed brighter. Almost sparkling. I had survived!
Apart from a brief euphoria, I noticed no other effects of the treatment, though to be fair, most advocates of cryotherapy recommend a series of sessions in order to get the benefits. But it certainly gave me a feeling of accomplishment far beyond what I’d normally get from three relatively passive minutes of my day. Would I do it again? Sure—but I’m more likely to DIY it by stepping outside in pajamas on a winter morning before I drink a cup of coffee, or running out of a sauna and into a snowbank for fun. If I’m a believer in cryotherapy, it’s because I am, above all, a believer in the power of cold—to invigorate, to calm, and to cast the world in beauty that wouldn’t be quite as visible at other times. Sometimes winter really can cure what ails you—and if a freezer-coffin can help me glimpse that on a summer day, consider me sold.
Blair Braverman is a columnist and contributing editor for Outside, a long-distance dogsledder, and author, most recently, of Small Game and Dogs on the Trail.
She’s completed some of the toughest dogsled races in the world, including the Iditarod, the Kobuk 440, and the Canadian Challenge, and co-runs the dog team BraverMountain Mushing with her husband, Quince Mountain, in northern Wisconsin. They share the team’s many adventures on Patreon.
Blair’s a contributor to The New York Times, Vogue, Esquire, This American Life, and elsewhere. She recently hosted the BBC Radio 4 show Animal and is survival correspondent for the podcast You’re Wrong About. She’s spoken about resilience in the wilderness for companies including Microsoft and Google.
Her favorite pieces she’s written for Outside are about competing on the Discovery show Naked and Afraid, being a woman alone in the woods, learning to write, and mischievous sled dog Blowhole.
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