Introduction |
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Planning Your Holiday |
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Area Guides |
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Holidays in Croatia |
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Features
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Croatia
in the summertime is a seductive place. At night, on board a yacht
in a secluded bay near the island of Vis, it is hard to conjure
up the bloody images of war that still dog the country's tourism
industry. The sea is calm, the sky is sprinkled with stars, and
the only sound is the hum of dinner conversation below deck.
Naomi Mapstone, The Financial
Times, August 16th 2003
New Tuscany, Croatia
offers the same high standards of your old Tuscany - an authentic
Mediterranean holiday, sun, sea, sand, and beautiful countryside,
no plebian crowds, high-rise hotels or unpleasant fast-food chains...
The Guardian, August 13th
2003
To read the rest of the article, click
here!
Vis has orchards of 1,000-year-old
carob trees, rare orchids, plants and herbs that are dying out
elsewhere in the Mediterranean, the most densely developed and
visited tourist region in the world.
Ian Traynor, The Guardian, July
21st 2003
To read the rest of the article, click
here!
A tortoise plodding
across the road brought our minibus screeching to a halt. We waited...at
first, I thought, for the creature to make it all the way to the
other side. The island of Mljet (a scrabble-lucky dip of letters
pronounced Milyet) is that kind of place, a tranquil oasis in
the sunny Adriatic where the keyword is "Polako" - "What's
the rush?"
The People, June 29th 2003
Zagreb is a delightful
city, with a rich and fascinating history and enough cultural,
historical and commercial delights to keep you occupied for several
days. Croatia's beautiful and extensive coast has the lion's share
of the country's tourists, but Zagreb is a wonderful weekend destination
- compact and friendly. When I visited, in mid May, the weather
was warm and sunny. Much of the central pedestrianised area of
the city was covered with cafes where locals sat, Mediterranean
style, sipping coffees and beers. "People are mostly here
to show off," said Hela, our pragmatic guide from the local
tourist office. "Showing off is the second national sport."
She didn't say what first was.
Imogen Tilden, The Guardian,
June 24th 2003
To read the rest of the article, click
here!
COULD Dubrovnik be the new
St Tropez? “Does it matter,” said my girlfriend when I told her
we were going to Croatia, “as long as all the men look like Goran
Ivanisevic?” After a long weekend of selfless, painstaking research,
I can report that they don’t all look like the handsome tennis
ace, but some do, and most are friendly, with impeccable manners.
And according to my partner, the girls are equally gorgeous, with
supermodel legs and cheekbones which could slice prosciutto.
Jill Hartley, The Times, June 21st
2003
To read the rest of the article, click here!
A YACHT is the ideal
place from which to bask in Croatia’s stunning coastal scenery.
The 700km (434 mile) island-peppered littoral that runs from the
Istrian peninsula in the North to just above Dubrovnik in the
south — the Dalmatian coast — is prime sailing country. From the
air it is a half-completed jigsaw puzzle with hundreds of pieces
waiting to be fitted in. From the sea, it is a labyrinth of lavender-scented
mountains soaring from the water.
Rory Ross, The Times, June
21st 2003
To read the rest of the article, click here!
Also, six suggestions for active
Croatia getaways.
Some 20 UK tour operators
are adding Croatia this season, including Simply Travel, Explore
Worldwide and Imaginative Traveller. “Croatia combines all the
components we look for,” says Rena Brennecke, marketing director
of Imaginative Traveller. “A less visited destination with good
hotels, extensive walking and trekking opportunities.” While previously
the focus was on lazing about, mostly on the beaches around Dubrovnik,
people are now exploring farther along the coast and on to the
Adriatic islands, with a greater emphasis on pursuits away from
the sun lounger.
Will Hide, The Times, June 21st
2003
To read the rest of the article, click here!
'The girls in Croatia
are the most beautiful in the world,' said our sea kayaking guide
Zeljko. 'The men are very tall,' he added. His claims were served
well by our kayaking partners - a Miss Croatia of two years' vintage
and her Adonis of a pro water-polo- playing boyfriend - but claims
like that serve only to remind that beauty is in the eye of the
beholder, height a relative concept... well most beauty, most
height, that is. I challenge anyone not to be bowled over by the
towering medieval city walls of Dubrovnik, the limestone cliffs
on the south Dalmatian coast of Croatia and that most translucent
of seas the Adriatic, especially when viewed from a kayak.
Tom Templeton, The Observer, June
8th 2003
To read the rest of the article, click
here!
The island
of Korcula, birthplace of Marco Polo, was a fairy-tale medieval
city with spectacular views across the mainland. Nearby Hvar had
rolling, lavender-covered hills and one of the prettiest ports
in Europe, with a cobbled square bigger than St Mark's in Venice.
Further up the coast, Istria boasted wonderful beaches and the
belle epoque town of Opatija.
Paul Mansfield, Daily Telegraph,
June 7th 2003
To read the rest of the article, click
here!
I went to Croatia
last year and spent two weeks in Dubrovnik. It knocked my socks
off. My biggest problem since coming back is to find words to
describe the indescribable.
Letters to the Editor, MSNBC Travel,
June 3rd 2003
I have just
discovered one of the world’s great drives. I’d love to give you
directions, but it’s not some three-hour Sunday excursion. It’s
Croatia. The whole coast. As the crow flies, that’s about 440
miles of seashore on roads that wind around dramatic cliffs through
sleepy villages, flying over crystal Mediterranean waters, surveying
magnificent mountains floating in the distant sea.
Jason Cochran, MSNBC Travel,
May 29nd 2003
Plitvice is essentially
a series of lakes that cascade one into another. That sounds state-park
dull until you’re told that the top lake is at a relatively high
altitude and the last one is deep in a chasm, so most waterfalls
are stunners that are at least a few stories tall. Add to that
the way they were formed: Plitvice is a sort of landed coral reef
in that the leading edge of the lakes — the waterfall walls —
are not rocky cliffs but were gradually constructed over time
by calcium deposits (travertine). So the whole area is a mossy,
cool, cloistered affair, and the waterfalls aren’t harsh and loud
but smooth, soft, and seemingly designed to lull the visitor into
a powerful desire to picnic. It takes about two hours to stroll
from the topmost lake to the bottom along a series of handmade
catwalks; a half-hour of the journey is on an electric ferry across
one of the middle lakes (included in the ticket price of about
$10).
Jason Cochran, MSNBC Travel, May
22nd 2003
The road
from Ston to Orebic was glorious. One minute we were driving just
metres from limestone pebbled beaches, where the translucent green
shallows quickly gave way to depths so blue they look artificial.
The next minute we were zig-zagging upwards, past vineyards and
olive groves bearded by pine forests. And almost every corner
offered a new view of the Adriatic that had us quickly running
out of clichés.
Susan Russell, South Africa
Sunday Times, April 20th 2003
To read the rest of the article, click here!
Opatija - on Croatia's
Adriatic coast 100 miles south of Italy - is steeped in nostalgia.
Now largely unknown, it was once one of the richest, most stylish
and most fashionable resorts in the world.
In 1844 a wealthy local named Ignacio Scarpa from the nearby city
of Rijeka built a holiday home in the Gulf of Kvarner. Surrounded
by thickly wooded hills, medieval castles, pebble beaches and
fishermen's villages, Scarpa's villa, Angiolina, was a neo-classical
masterpiece set in manicured gardens.
Others followed,
and soon the fledgling resort was attracting the Austrian Imperial
family and other European heads of state. Where royalty goes,
celebrities, politicians and artists follow. By the time the railway
from Vienna reached Opatija in 1873, it was becoming a sort of
"Nice of the East", with glorious fin de siecle architecture,
villas, sanatoria, pavilions, gardens and stylish esplanades for
its wealthy and distinguished visitors.
Paul Mansfield, The Daily Telegraph,
February 19th 2003
To read the rest of the
article, click here!
Like a giant
festive etch-a-sketch, every major cathedral, museum and city
wall was outlined in golden lights, a warming sight coming from
the freeze of London and stopping en route at Zagreb, a bleak
and wintry -8°.
Snaking around the hair-pin coastal bends from the local airport
through rolling chalky mountains and pine trees, we suddenly caught
sight of Dubrovnik, rising from the cobalt blue Adriatic.
Jo Tweedy, This Is Travel,
February 3rd 2003
To read the rest of the article,
click here!
In an article entitled "20 Dream
Holidays for the 21st Century", Croatia was named 'The new
Riviera':
Those in the know are forsaking the crowded
Côte d'Azur and heading for the Istrian Riviera, Dubrovnik and
the necklace of sun-drenched islands off the coast of Croatia.
Steven Spielberg, Sharon Stone and Clint Eastwood are admirers
of the sparkling Adriatic with its pine forests, olive groves,
vineyards and fishing villages, and Princess Caroline of Monaco
has bought her own place off the Istrian peninsula. There are
still 1,185 uninhabited islands if you want to buy your own, though
it'll cost you up to £1 million. But there are plenty of treats
for the rest of us here in one of the most affordable dream destinations.
Regular ferries hop between islands such as Hvar, famous for its
lavender, rosemary and honey, and gutsy Korcula, birthplace (they
claim) of Marco Polo. Look out for the spirited Moreska dance
performed every week in summer. Star turn on the mainland, Dubrovnik,
is nearly back to its best after a civil-war battering and ranks
among the Med's most stunning medieval walled cities.
The reality Many hotel
rooms cost less than £30 a night; package holidays start around
£200 a week. Information: Croatian National Tourist Board (020
8563 7979).
Jill Crawshaw, The Observer, January
26th 2003
In an article about summer breaks that were recommended
for "older couples and empty nesters":
Walls 24 metres (80ft) in height punctuated
by high towers make a grand spectacle of Dubrovnik's old town,
and this World Heritage Site is the opening focus of a small-group
walking week that will spill into surrounding areas of southern
Croatia. The botanical gardens on the nearby island of Lokum will
be explored, coastal walks arranged, and museums toured. As these
holidays are linked to the Ramblers Association, you have an inside
track to their outlook, style and client base.
Ramblers Holidays charges £398-£425, including flights and half-board
accommodation. Details: 01707 331133, www.ramblersholidays.co.uk.
The Times, January 11th 2003 |
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