Top 10 extraordinary places to stay in 2014
Think back to where you stayed on your
 last trip. Was it simply a place to rest your head, or did it immerse 
you in local colour, surround you by wildlife and fire your imagination?
 We asked Lonely Planet’s authors and editors to nominate the most 
extraordinary hotels and hostels around the world. Our panel of travel 
experts whittled them down to 10 breathtaking choices - see which one 
inspires you to travel in 2014...
1. Mihir Garh (www.mihirgarh.com), Rajasthan, India
Step into the desert idyll that is Rajasthan's Mihir Garh. Image by James Kay / Lonely Planet.
Mihir Garh sits in splendid isolation amid the Thar Desert near Jodhpur.
 It looks like an enormous sandcastle, a mirage; but there is nothing 
insubstantial about this ‘fort of the sun’. It took 150 masons, artisans
 and craftsmen two years to build what the owners describe as ‘a dream 
realised'. Certainly, it has the feel of a place where commercial 
considerations play second fiddle to the unbridled pleasure of creation;
 hence the decision to have just nine huge - and hugely extravagant - 
suites. But the luxury isn't as important as the pervasive sense that 
someone has granted you access to their fantasy world.
From fireplaces fashioned from cow dung and clay to 
equestrian-inspired curtain holders, everything is custom-made. And how 
artfully it reflects the landscape: the rounded edges echoing the huts 
of the Bishnoi, a local tribe; India’s national bird fanning a 
bejewelled tail across a frescoed wall as peacocks shriek in the acacia 
trees outside; the mural of a Rajasthani beauty mirroring the elegant 
women in bright, block-printed saris at the roadside… The word 'bespoke'
 doesn’t begin to cover it.
“Few hotels are created without compromise; Mihir Garh is a
 rare example. This is not just a unique place to stay; it’s a shrine to
 the artistic and architectural traditions of Rajasthan in general and 
Jodhpur in particular.” - James Kay
2. Planet Baobab, Gweta, Botswana
Meet meerkats, spot elephants and 
rest your head in an African thatched hut at Planet Baobab. Image 
courtesy of Uncharted Africa Safari Co.
Botswana’s
 Makgadigadi Pan comprises the world’s largest network of salt pans - a 
thirsty, mirage-inducing landscape of flat, shimmering expanses under 
hard blue skies. Halfway along the sole tarred road through this arid 
moonscape, a statue of an anteater towers at the dusty verge. It is a 
surreal sight, and an appropriate signpost for the distinctive Planet 
Baobab, which is named after the baobab trees overlooking its thatched 
African huts.
Walkways wind between the impressive baobabs, their hefty 
trunks and intricate branches atmospherically illuminated at night, to a
 pool and bar-restaurant deep in the bush. Elephants gather at the 
neighbouring waterhole alongside more familiar horses, cows and donkeys 
from a nearby village - all acquire an exotic sheen in the hazy setting 
of a Kalahari sunset. Planet Baobab also runs some excellent excursions 
into the pans, including a night under the stars followed by a dawn 
meeting with meerkats.
“I visited Planet Baobab on a two-night side-trip from the 
Okavango Delta. Seeing lions in that bleached-out landscape was 
certainly memorable and I loved the lodge’s Afro-funk décor.” - James Bainbridge
3. Prendiparte B&B, Bologna, Italy
A bird's-eye view from the top of the Torre. Image courtesy of Prendiparte B&B.
A medieval high-rise turned romantic hideaway, the Torre 
Prendiparte is unlike anywhere else you'll ever stay. For you don't just
 get a room here, you get an entire 900-year-old tower. The 60m-high 
Torre, Bologna's second tallest, is one of about 20 that remain from the
 city's medieval heyday.  It was originally built as a refuge for the 
powerful Prendiparte family, but later became a seminary, and in the 
1700s served as a religious prison. The living area is on the first two 
floors and comprises a snug, classically-furnished living room, 
mezzanine bedroom, and kitchen. Above this is the former jail where you 
can still see graffiti left by prisoners on the 2m-thick walls. Further 
up, a rooftop terrace offers breathtaking views over Bologna's historic 
skyline.
“Like most people, I was pretty bowled over when I visited 
the Torre. I remember walking up its steep stairs and thinking how 
amazing it would be to have the whole place to yourself, even for one 
night.” - Duncan Garwood
4. Qasr Al Sarab, United Arab Emirates
Shade from the fierce desert sun at the Qasr al Sarab. Image courtesy of Anantara Hotels and Resorts.
Rising from the shifting sands, Qasr Al Sarab appears like a
 mirage on the edge of the vast Empty Quarter desert. Outside high 
crenellated walls echo fortresses of old. Inside rooms continue the 
dream of Arabian Nights with sumptuous fabrics, carved Islamic designs, 
woven rugs, wooden doors and metalwork lanterns. The Library's 
museum-quality artifacts come from a time when the area's few residents 
were date farmers or Bedouins.
Delve into the regional culture further with 
tastefully-done resort activities. Have your hands painted with henna or
 learn about the indigenous saluki dog breed, then trek across 300m-high
 dunes on camelback or 'dune-bash' down them in a 4WD.
Afterwards, dinner is a luxe affair poolside or lounging 
above on terrace divans. You might even opt for a Bedu feast on carpets 
fireside in the sand. A mere 200km south of Abu Dhabi, this desert 
resort by Anantara is a world apart.
“On our visit to Qasr al Sarab, we stood atop a distant 
dune talking to a fourth-generation falconer, while his fifth-generation
 son played nearby. Holding and witnessing the power of their 
magnificent birds was a definite high.” - Lisa Dunford
5. Cradle Mountain Lodge, Tasmania, Australia
A natural hideaway in the remote and romantic Cradle Mountain Lodge. Image courtesy of Cradle Mountain Lodge.
A stay at Peppers Cradle Mountain Lodge (www.peppers.com.au/cradle-mountain-lodge)
 plunges you into the heart of Tasmania’s wilderness, with luxury that 
feels as organic as your surrounds. The cabins are nestled privately in 
the bushland, with wallabies bounding past the windows and wombats 
shuffling amid the trees. Locally sourced game, wine, cheeses and honey 
permeate the restaurant’s menu, one of Tasmania’s best. The view from 
the spa is a dense thicket of King Billy pine trees. Your immersion into
 Tasmania’s wilds would be total, if you weren’t being so thoroughly 
spoiled by the five-star service.
Travellers can choose from couples’ or family cabins, right
 up to suites with private outdoor tubs and fuel-efficient fireplaces. 
But you didn’t come to Cradle Mountain just to relax: walking trails 
spiral directly out from the lodge, right on the border of Cradle Mountain-Lake St. Clair National Park.
 Serene Dove Lake is a few minutes’ drive away, along with the thrusting
 silhouette of Cradle Mountain itself. And for a closer look at 
Tasmania’s most famous native animal, the lodge is moments from the 
Devils@Cradle sanctuary (www.devilsatcradle.com).
“Wildlife is best viewed from an outdoor hot tub. Don’t get
 me wrong, I was happy to be exhausted by long hikes in the national 
park and even I enjoyed Cradle Mountain’s dramatic weather. But the 
thrill of spotting echidnas and pademelons from the silky waters of a 
private hot tub is hard to forget.” - Anita Isalska
6. Free Spirit Spheres, British Columbia, Canada
Get back to nature in a suspended spherical treehouse. Image courtesy of Tom Chudleigh at Free Spirit Spheres.
Suspended in the trees on sturdy guide ropes, Vancouver Island’s Free Spirit Spheres (www.freespiritspheres.com)
 look like giant eyeballs peering deep into the British Columbia 
woodlands. Step inside and the handmade orbs – accessed via spiral rope 
staircases or slender steel bridges – are lined like comfy boat cabins 
with built-in beds and cabinets.
But while they also house handy conveniences like kettles 
and iPod speakers, the real point of these gently-swaying, bauble-like 
treehouses – with individual names like Eryn and Melody – is to 
encourage you to commune with the region’s curious birds and chattering 
squirrels and immerse yourself in the natural world.
It’s not like roughing it in a walk-in bird’s nest, though.
 The tranquil site’s immaculate ground level amenities include showers, 
sauna and a full kitchen – complete with a barbecue on a covered porch –
 while leaf-dappled trails wind around the area’s duck-studded pond and 
lure you into the surrounding forest.
“A sigh-triggering escape from the city, my early morning 
wake-up call at the Free Spirit Spheres was a symphony of birdsong 
playing all around me – plus a mohawk-topped Steller’s Jay eyeing me on 
the other side of my porthole window.” - John Lee
7. Taşkonak Hotel, Göreme, Cappadocia, Turkey
Hide away in a rock-carved hotel in Cappadocia, Turkey. Image by Jeanna Nash, courtesy of Taşkonak.
For travellers who want to experience a modern twist on 
Cappadocia's troglodyte living, Göreme village's cave-hotels are just 
the ticket. Taşkonak Hotel is cut into the hillside itself, utilising 
the traditional village architecture to turn what was once a family home
 into an intimate, yet well-priced, hideaway.
This small and friendly hotel has oodles of rustic charm. 
The 10 rooms (five of them cave-suites) are bursting with Cappadocia's 
cosy village-aesthetic. Stay in one of the roomy cave-suites and you get
 the full troglodyte experience. There's a breakfast full of homemade 
goodies and freshly baked treats, and you can eat it on a terrace that 
has serious wow-factor views - overlooking the village and rippling 
moonscape of rock valleys beyond that have stamped this region with a 
Unesco World Heritage listing. What makes this place special though is 
its home-from-home ambiance with management that goes out of their way 
to help.
“Göreme has dozens of beautiful cave-hotels but Taşkonak 
manages to dish up the cave-suites and stupendous views Cappadocia is 
famous for without breaking your budget.” - Jess Lee
8. Thonga Beach Lodge, iSimangaliso Wetland Park, South Africa
Bed down after a day of whale-spotting and 
beach-hopping at South Africa's Thonga Beach Lodge. Image courtesy of 
Thonga Beach Lodge.
It ticks all the right boxes. Luxury resort by the beach. 
Environmentally friendly. Remote. And it's one of few such lodges within
 the extraordinary 328,000 hectare iSimangaliso Wetland Park, a Unesco 
World Heritage site. Its spacious huts are scattered through dune 
forest, some with spectacular views of the Indian Ocean (it's a given 
the interiors feature tasteful New York-meets-African decor and all the 
trimmings). Whales frequently pass by, and Loggerhead and Leatherback 
turtles nest on the nearby beaches.
Action addicts can canoe on Lake Sibaya or take the plunge 
on deep sea dives, while those wanting relaxation can opt for the wide, 
white beach and spa treatments. Foodies, meanwhile, get their fill from 
the lodge's kitchen - think fresh seafood and salads.
“For me, the 'not-to-be-missed' activity was the walking 
tour with a local guide, Eugene, the nearest thing to an African David 
Attenborough. He ticked off everything from the local mahogany tree to 
dung beetles. After being warned of the shy but extremely dangerous vine
 snake, I was thrilled to identify one later in the day.” - Kate Armstrong
9. Saugerties Lighthouse, New York State, USA
Step back in time at the historic Saugerties Lighthouse. Image courtesy of Saugerties Lighthouse.
Saugerties Lighthouse is an historic 1869 landmark that 
makes a wonderful base for exploring the scenic Hudson Valley. Located 
100 miles north of New York City, the red brick building has played a 
pivotal role in safely guiding steamboats, barges and other vessels 
safely along the Hudson River over the years. More recently (in the mid 
1990s), the lighthouse was transformed into a two-room B&B, 
providing safe haven of a different sort. Its rooms have quaint touches 
of Americana - antique furnishings, quilt bedspreads - and ample natural
 light, with windows overlooking the river (the West Room also has views
 of the Catskill mountains).
There's no air-conditioning, but with cool river breezes 
it's never needed. To reach the lighthouse, guests stroll along a 
half-mile long boardwalk through lush wetlands, which fills with 
birdsong at dawn and dusk.
"Anyone can visit the lighthouse, but to experience the raw beauty of
 this place, I highly recommend staying the night. Watching the play of 
colours on the river at twilight and hearing the surrounding wetlands 
spring to life in the early morning hours - you can almost forget what 
century you're living in." - Regis St. Louis10. The Gibbon Experience Treehouse (www.gibbonexperience.org), Bokeo Reserve, Laos
Swing through the trees like a gibbon in this outstanding treehouse experience in Laos. Image by Richard Waters / Lonely Planet.
Imagine waking to the sonorous call of the endangered 
black-crested gibbon, stretching in your bed a hundred feet up in the 
triple canopy, and nursing a coffee on your balcony as you watch the 
dawn mist crowd in over the jungle valley below. The tree houses erected
 by conservation group Animo are a thing of architectural wonder, 
straddling the giant trunks of strangler fig trees.
But more extraordinary still is that to reach these 
vertiginous eyries you'll have to trek through the fecund realm of the 
tiger, then catch a series of exhilarating zip lines strung across the 
forest canopy, before flying into your night's accommodation. Your 
dinner has wings too, delivered fresh from a nearby campfire by an 
ex-poacher turned guide. Music is the ambient sound of cicadas, lights 
that of fireflies. Entertainment? Your fellow travellers, a candle and a
 shared story.
“Doubtless the most magical two nights I've enjoyed in this most special of countries.” - Richard Waters 
 
These types of equipped bedrooms usually deliver no cost wi-fi web establishments, toned screen Television sets with wire, no cost nearby calls (some in addition provide no cost telephone long distance calling), in-suite laundry washing establishments, underground car parking, health and fitness center, children's pool, cleaning service program, and many others. Lodges charge some sort of extraordinary total for laundry washing. Considering Vancouver Corporate Rentals it's Important
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