Wellness Travel
Hudson Valley Travel: Explore Hidden Retreats

As the summer sun stretches long over the Catskill ridgelines and the meadows of the Hudson Valley hum with life, a quieter revolution is unfolding—one that has nothing to do with crowds or checklists, and everything to do with intention.
The Taste of Summer: Harney & Sons Teas Add a Layer of Luxury to Wellness-Focused Escapes with Alluvion Vacations – Luxury Travel – Wellness Travel – Emotional Wellness – Presented by Alluvion Vacations
At the forefront of this shift is Alluvion Vacations, a collection of design-forward retreats reimagining what luxury travel means in upstate New York. Far from the transactional rhythms of tourism, these properties offer something deeper: space to reconnect, slow down, and savor the details that too often disappear in the rush of everyday life.
It’s in this spirit that select Alluvion homes now feature a thoughtful offering from one of the region’s most beloved local artisans: Harney & Sons Fine Teas. Known for their elegant blends and generations-deep expertise, Harney & Sons brings an unmistakable sense of heritage to the modern wellness traveler’s table. From sun-brewed green tea on a wraparound deck to chamomile sipped beside a crackling fire pit, their teas are more than just amenities—they are part of the experience itself.
According to Dino Alexander, Director of Hospitality Experience at Alluvion Vacations, that experience is becoming more layered and intentional with each passing season.
“Our guests aren’t just here for the scenery anymore,” says Dino. “They’re looking for authentic moments—wellness that’s woven into the fabric of the stay. Local tea, locally roasted coffee, farmstand produce, natural bath products… these aren’t just nice-to-haves. They’re part of a larger story of place, purpose, and pleasure.”
And what could be more essential to summer in the Hudson Valley than a glass of perfectly brewed iced tea on a shaded porch? With a curated rotation of Harney & Sons sachets—ranging from crisp Japanese Sencha to fragrant herbal infusions—guests are invited to make their own rituals. The process is simple but meaningful: boiled water, a handful of ice, a view of the woods or mountains. It’s not just refreshment—it’s presence.
In his recent editorial review, From Hot Sips to Iced Elegance: Discovering the Best of Harney & Sons Fine Teas, wellness coach and lifestyle editor Maxwell Alexander explores the role of tea in the architecture of calm. The review is more meditation than product feature, capturing the nuance and comfort that a simple brew can bring—especially when paired with design-forward interiors and panoramic views at an Alluvion property.
This collaboration with Harney & Sons is just one example of how Alluvion Vacations is creating opportunities for local brands to connect with a global audience. Travelers come from all over the world to stay in these homes—not just to admire the architecture or hike the nearby trails, but to engage with the culture and community of the Hudson Valley. Through curated partnerships, Alluvion creates a bridge between artisans and guests, giving small businesses a platform while offering travelers something far more enriching than a branded mini bottle or mass-market product.
“Every partnership is about resonance,” adds Dino. “When we invite a local brand into one of our homes, it’s because they share our values: quality, sustainability, and a sense of place. And guests can feel that. They leave not just relaxed, but inspired.”
As summer stretches on and more travelers seek wellness over spectacle, Alluvion Vacations continues to lead the evolution of Hudson Valley tourism. It’s not about what’s trending—it’s about what’s timeless. And sometimes, that begins with something as simple as a perfect glass of tea.
Wellness Travel
A wholly trinity of wellness in Bali

Anyone looking at my browsing history 18 months ago would have found multiple searches for Pilates retreats, affordable retreats, and retreats where coffee isn’t banned.
Every retreat I looked at seemed to be too expensive, too long, or too hard to get to in my timeframe.
The more I looked, the less appealing it sounded to be eating set meals and attending twice daily exercise bootcamps.
I’ve discovered it’s easier to work wellness into a Bali stay. Most resorts have great accommodation/meal packages, including access to well-equipped fitness centres with a program of free and paid activities to enrich the mind and body.
Wellness Unbound is Nusa Dua resort The Mulia’s way of letting guests unwind at their own pace, embracing mindfulness, immersive cultural enrichment, nourishment, healing and movement.
Try a free 7am yoga class in the Eden Garden. Need more sleep and some extra help mastering those poses? I take a 9am private yoga class (from $66 per person per hour), sweat like there’s no tomorrow, then have an omelette, coffee and glass of antioxidant-packed jamu at The Cafe.
If you’re a guest of the suites or villas and want to avoid the temptations of the buffet, The Lounge offers a la carte options. Start with a fruit plate and fresh juice, then move on to an egg white and asparagus omelette.
Add in an afternoon class of dancercise, aerial yoga, or mat Pilates. More of a team player? Sign up for beach soccer, volleyball, tennis or ping pong.
After all that exercise, try a session in the Mulia Spa wellness suite with sauna and Asia Pacific’s first ice room (from $47 per person for 30 minutes). Book the hot and cold hydrotonic pool and it’s all yours for the session (from $29 per person for 30 minutes). There’s no sharing with strangers like many Aussie bathhouses.
I have a cultural enrichment session with Ni Wayan Weli, starting with Balinese dance moves. She looks graceful. I do not. Then I learn how to make a canang, the Balinese offerings basket, and to weave a red, white and black Tridatum the traditional bracelet that represents the three gods of Hinduism. These free activities are available to all guests.
Open since mid 2024, The Meru Sanur all-suite hotel sits in the Sanur Special Economic Zone for health and wellness tourism.
The Meru’s poolside breakfast buffet at Arunika has a clearly labelled wellness section with dishes including Bircher muesli, chia pots and grilled vegetables. There’s a gluten-free station, plenty of fresh fruit and two types of jamu.
Activities include yoga, aero boxing and soccer on Sanur’s longest and whitest stretch of beach.
Guests can go on a transformative journey at the recently opened Taru Pramana Spa and Wellness centre, where a wellness apothecary can create you a personal elixir, infused oil, or botanical balm.
I enjoy a relaxing massage with sound healing and the sleepier I get, the more I am convinced several people are in the room playing the singing bowls next to my head. Staff assure me it really was just the work of one therapist. The spa has changed since my visit, but a similar experience starts from $175 for two hours.
The Meru’s gym is in use by Indonesia’s national soccer team each morning of during my stay, so the equipment comes highly rated.
I’m one of only two in a free aqua aerobics class in the Bali Beach Pool – Sanur’s largest – which the resort shares with the Bali Beach Hotel.
A bike ride or healthy 10 to 15-minute stroll along the beachfront to the new Icon Bali Mall is recommended if your idea of wellness also involves retail therapy.
At The Laguna Resort and Spa in Nusa Dua, guests can learn how the immune-boosting elixir jamu is made as part of the 5.45pm daily Jamu Ritual at De Bale Bar and Lounge.
The activity celebrates Indonesia’s wellness and herbal heritage, with the featured jamu changing quarterly. I sip Loloh Cemcem, traditionally made from cemcem leaves (Spondias pinnata) in Penglipuran, a village in the Bagli regency.
On Thursday nights as dusk descends, a traditional Balinese story comes to life through dance and music performed by local students.
I’m so engrossed, I get a shock to find a performer dressed as a monkey has snuck up on me. It’s another way The Laguna helps preserve Balinese culture by weaving it into each stay.
After the performance, I am invited to a blessing ceremony outside the resort’s Hindu temple, complete with grains of sacred rice on my forehead and the gift of a Tridatu bracelet.
The ceremony is watched by the resort’s resident duck and chicken. Legend has it they escaped has being sacrificed and now roam the grounds as protectors.
Staying in shape at The Laguna is easy at the 24-hour gym with views of a lagoon pool and waterfalls. I finish my stay with a blissful one-hour traditional Balinese massage (from $150) while water flows outside.
+ Sue Yeap was a guest of The Mulia, The Meru Sanur and The Lagua Resort and Spa. They have not influenced this story, or read it before publication.
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themulia.com
themerusanur.com
marriott.com
Wellness Travel
Adapting to wellness trends in travel retail

The global travel-retail industry continues to see growth in the Wellness sector, with new innovations, spas and concepts being developed or adapted from domestic settings for travel retail.
One innovation to land in airports this year is beauty and bodycare brand Rituals’ Mind Oasis concept. The brand recently opened the first Mind Oasis wellness concept at an airport in travel retail at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol.
The concept is already available in several Rituals’ domestic stores, and the 40sqm airport area is an addition to the brand’s new 141sqm shop in Schiphol’s Lounge 1 that opened on 21 March 2025.
Read the full report here in the June/July edition from page 76. Please note – you must be logged in (as a free subscriber) for the link to work.
Wellness Travel
In the Age of Biohacking, Nature-Based Saunas Are Still the Most Restorative Wellness Getaways

The water was somewhere in the 50s, according to guesses from a smattering of locals doing the same. We submerged to our necks and shivered for as long as I could stand it. We didn’t worry about the exact temperature or how long we stayed, and distracted ourselves with the birds and rhythm of the morning. I’m by no means a regular cold plunger, but this felt truly restorative. More so even than the precisely measured hot-cold cycle in an upscale sauna complex I did with the same friend during his bachelor party in Las Vegas.
The benefits of hot-cold water treatments are a big part of today’s wellness conversation. Travel companies have responded, with hotels and day spas promoting treatments measured to the half-degree, catering to those determined to not let a vacation interrupt their biohacking routines.
Yet what if true wellness requires a more hands-off approach? Something more connected to nature than to what you can keep on a spreadsheet?
These questions resonate with the founders of a Fjord, a new floating sauna and plunge experience in the Richardson Bay, just north of San Francisco in Sausalito. Recently opened, it’s the first floating sauna in the San Francisco area, and Fjord saw an immediate response to their anti-biohacking approach to sauna culture.
Fjord intentionally avoids wellness tropes, instead positioning itself as a recreational and social experience built around thermal activities, co-founder Alex Yenni tells me. Fjord’s approach is “more pure fun and not so hardcoded in body optimization.”
Photo: Fjord
Fjord has access straight into the water and Mount Tamalpais in the distance. It offers a “rare opportunity for people who live in the Bay Area who’ve never swam in the bay,” Yenni says, a “floating destination where it’s just silence and seagulls and sailboats and seals and weird weather patterns and microclimates. It’s a very immersive environment.”
Fjord makes the biohacker’s definition of “optimization” feel far away even here in Silicon Valley, where much of the biohacking tech is developed.
Balancing nature in wellness tourism
The Global Wellness Institute predicts that “wellness travel” — loosely defined as any travel where a major focus is on improving one’s mental or physical wellbeing — will be a $1.4 trillion industry by 2027. It’s one of the fastest growing travel categories, and hotel programs and companies that cater to tourism have quickly moved to meet the moment. The number of hotels offering wellness programs is growing, even if it doesn’t always make money. That’s led to everything from your standard massage business, to a Six Senses resort with the “latest targeted biohacking tools” (and dog massages, for what it’s worth), to on-site genetic testing.
Within the broad wellness umbrella, an analysis of TripAdvisor reviews, bookings, and recommendations found that one of the biggest subsects of wellness travel revolves around water experiences: cold plunges, thermal spas and hot springs, and wellness cruises.
Photo: Fjord
The places that are most overly coded as wellness getaways often tout precision and science, whether it’s 24/7 tracking of your vitals or hot-cold water treatments timed down to the second. It’s a data-backed approach to answer what biohackers are looking for. Over analyzing can ruin the whole point, however.
“When we’re fixated on timers and exact temperatures, we often miss the profound relaxation and joy that practices like sauna bathing can offer,” says Marcus Coplin, a naturopathic medical doctor and the medical director for The Springs Resort in Colorado and Murrieta Hot Springs Resort in California, both of which are fed by natural flowing, deep-earth geothermal mineral water that’s unique to place. “The most compelling research on sauna benefits comes out of cultures where it’s a social, recreational, or even ritualistic activity, ingrained into daily life. These cultures often use saunas as a way to disconnect from the daily grind and reconnect with loved ones and community.”
Contrast therapy, or alternating hot and cold exposure, can help with relaxation and clarity, says Tammy Pahel, the vice president of spa and wellness at Carillon Miami Wellness Resort and the chief wellness officer at Alchemy Wellness Resorts. Pahel adds that “perhaps the most compelling aspect of sauna culture today lies beyond the physical. Increasingly, wellness seekers are drawn to thermal rituals not only for their benefits, but for their feeling of a reconnection with self, breath, and presence. There’s an emotional intelligence in these rituals, a capacity to ground us in the body and the moment.”
The benefit of saunas and cold plunges, Coplin adds, is from regularly building your body’s response to low-dose temperature stress (regularity being the key word here). Constant monitoring and rigid routines can negate any positive effects of the practices themselves when sticking to the program becomes a chore.
Big data has its place, but at the end of the day, it’s about feeling well, not just measuring it, Coplin adds.
“The moment wellness becomes about performance rather than presence, you’ve lost the therapeutic benefit,” says Ryan Pomeroy, who leads Pomeroy Lodging, which has Nordic spas in Alaska and Canada.
“You simply can’t replicate what nature provides,” Pomeroy says. “Nature adds elements that can’t be measured or optimized: the sound of wind through trees, the changing seasons, the visual meditation of mountain landscapes and rock formations. These aren’t just nice-to-haves. They’re therapeutic in ways that indoor facilities simply cannot replicate.”
And, importantly, it’s difficult to over optimize in nature where you can’t control the sunrise or the temperature. “The unpredictability forces you into presence rather than performance,” Pomeroy says. “Indoor facilities, no matter how well-designed, become another controlled environment where people can fall back into tracking and measuring.”
Bridging recreation and wellness in a natural environment
Photos: Fjord
At Fjord, the more relaxed approach has clearly been well received by the city and the community. Reservations are booked out for months. It’s a departure from the lifestyle that Yenni had prior after nearly 20 years in the creative agency world. That line of work left him unfulfilled, he says. It spurred the desire for a reinvention focusing on what can be felt in person rather than transmitted through film sets and streamed videos.
The core mission is to “break people out of their hermetically sealed bubbles” and help them “actually feel something visceral,” Yenni says.
His cofounder at Fjord, Gabe Turner, had a similar motivation at a similar time. Together, they set out to bring a California ethos to the global appreciation of hot and cold experiences at Russian banyas, Finnish saunas, Japanese onsens, and Turkish hammams.
Photo: Fjord
Fjord represents a move “toward something more analog,” Yenni says, offering a “real physical and social connection.” Something different than the lackluster sauna and super-chilled tub in a windowless room that’s familiar in urban hot and cold spots. Without the natural environment, “the third leg of the stool is missing: reconnection and the experience of being in nature.”
While Fjord opened at a time when wellness travel and interest is very much having a moment, Yenni and the Fjord team started planning before the current hype and are intentional about avoiding the typical wellness tropes. Still, it doesn’t hurt that the benefits of hot-cold experiences has gone mainstream. “The work has been done for us that there’s enough critical awareness around the benefits around hot and cold,” Yenni says.
Fjord’s tagline of “feel something” targets an experience that’s not specifically what one would find at a high-tech, data-backed treatment center. It’s more in the lane of a recreational and social experience, with the added benefits of being good for you.
Location may be one of the most important factors in a natural sauna experience, but it’s not always an easy find. Permitting a location with natural beauty was “probably the hardest part about the project” for Fjord, Yenni says. It involved approval from eight different agencies, and a strong commitment to sustainable design. Architect Nick Polansky reused abandoned infrastructure like a decommissioned wave attenuator from the 2013 America’s Cup, repurposed second-hand shipping containers, and utilized sustainable second-growth California redwood for Fjord. Clean electric and no toxic runoff helps Fjord “blend seamlessly into the environment” and be good stewards to the nature around them, Yenni says.
Photo: Fjord
Fjord’s approach clearly resonates with the public just as much as my first plunge in the Bay did years ago. Guests run the gamut in age, background, and culture, from young adopter types to the elderly, Yenni says. It has had to shut down its booking platform a couple of times already due to being book out for months at 100 percent utilization.
Yenni and the Fjord team are “sprinting to figure out how we offer this to more people.” They’re already in talks with the city of San Francisco about potential partnerships for expansion. More saunas as social spaces that embrace their surroundings through thoughtful, sustainable design can only be a good thing. In time, the biohackers may realize that, too.
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