Off Topic Holidays

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I've been monitoring this thread with interest, and agree as per your previous comment that Not606 City board is better than Google for these things.
As such I've just booked to go to Puerto de Mogan on Tuesday.

We now need to find somewhere decent for new years eve.
You won’t regret it. It is amazing, has a very classy undeveloped feel, no tall concrete hotels, no flashing lights. Just lots of nice bars & restaurants.
I recommend making use of the water bus too to visit other resorts. They run approx every hour
Let me know your thoughts on the place. Enjoy
 
You won’t regret it. It is amazing, has a very classy undeveloped feel, no tall concrete hotels, no flashing lights. Just lots of nice bars & restaurants.
I recommend making use of the water bus too to visit other resorts. They run approx every hour
Let me know your thoughts on the place. Enjoy
Is there enough to occupy you for a week during the daytime and would you go again?
 
Is there enough to occupy you for a week during the daytime and would you go again?

Yes. For sure, lots of things to do, lots of day trips to book. Lots of other resorts to visit on the water bus, or go up into the pretty mountain villages.
It is stunning, has a very rare feel to it. Yes, we will go back there, in fact I intend to have a look into property sales there over the next few weeks!!
 
After a chat with a travel agent, we have ruled out Cape Verde after he advised not leaving the hotel complex. **** that !!

So we have booked Puerto Morgan in Gran Canaria, known as Little Venice for all its canals. It looks stunning, have any of you visited there?
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I’m really surprised at that. We stayed in Sal last year. We did quite a bit of research and never read anything suggesting that. Their motto is ‘No stress’. i think everyone’s far too laidback to cause any problems!
 
I’m really surprised at that. We stayed in Sal last year. We did quite a bit of research and never read anything suggesting that. Their motto is ‘No stress’. i think everyone’s far too laidback to cause any problems!
I think he's on a retainer from the Canary Islands Tourist Board :emoticon-0105-wink:
 
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Thinking of booking Cyprus or Portugal for 2026.

Already booked Bratislava for my partners birthday for March.
 
Going to Reykjavic on Sunday for 4 days and doing the blue lagoon and northern lights boat trip. Any other recommendations whilst there? Me and the Mrs both don't drink so nothing alcohol related please.

Not sure if this is in your plans but if I went again I would hire a car and drive to explore more of the island.

Blue lagoon is great, we also went to a smaller local community pool.

We did a day trip to Gullfoss and the golden circle which was worth doing.

We were there in March, so the northern lights trip we went on was the last one of the year and we didn't actually see them very well. We went Whale watching and didn't see any Whales either <laugh> hopefully you have more luck than we did!

Loved it and will definitely go back again one day.
 
You won’t regret it. It is amazing, has a very classy undeveloped feel, no tall concrete hotels, no flashing lights. Just lots of nice bars & restaurants.
I recommend making use of the water bus too to visit other resorts. They run approx every hour
Let me know your thoughts on the place. Enjoy
Sat at the airport waiting to fly back.

Puerto De Mogan...wow, what a lovely place...great restaurants, and surroundings, all reasonably priced for what seems a similar setting to a Marbella/Puerto Banus upmarket type resort. Thanks everyone for the recommendations, we'll be back again at some point.

Footnote; I did drop a bollock, and booked our accommodation in Tuarito, which is 1 mile away from Mogan around a headland.(no issue i thought) However the road apparently has been shut for ages due to a landslide, so the actual trip into Mogan took 20 mins via taxi @ €25 each way, and the cheaper option of the bus was a bit iffy as they turned up when they felt like it.
 
Sat at the airport waiting to fly back.

Puerto De Mogan...wow, what a lovely place...great restaurants, and surroundings, all reasonably priced for what seems a similar setting to a Marbella/Puerto Banus upmarket type resort. Thanks everyone for the recommendations, we'll be back again at some point.

Footnote; I did drop a bollock, and booked our accommodation in Tuarito, which is 1 mile away from Mogan around a headland.(no issue i thought) However the road apparently has been shut for ages due to a landslide, so the actual trip into Mogan took 20 mins via taxi @ €25 each way, and the cheaper option of the bus was a bit iffy as they turned up when they felt like it.
Yes, unfortunately the road has been closed for years. You used to be able to walk along it after it closed but they built a big '**** off' wall on the final corner a few years ago and now you can't get past. It is possible apparently to walk over the headland but it's not a marked route and although I tried a couple of years ago to find it, I couldn't.

Before the tunnel was built and (obviously) before the coast road was closed, the only way in was round the headland.

Absolutely terrifying on the bus.
 

Hull’s maritime history thrusts city into world’s top places to visit in 2026​

Historic trawler and floating lighthouse among East Yorkshire city’s attractions as it gears up for tourism boost

Mark Brown North of England correspondent
Thu 1 Jan 2026 16.00 GMT
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Acombination of a world record-breaking trawler, a floating lighthouse and a dizzying array of maritime objects that include a stuffed polar bear called Erik are all helping to make Hull one of the top 25 places in the world to visit in 2026.

The East Yorkshire city is on the verge of completing an ambitious £70m transformation, which, supporters believe, will propel it into becoming an international tourist destination.


Hull is the only place in the UK to be included in National Geographic’s annual list of must-visit places, which also features Manila, Beijing and the North Dakota Badlands.

Eyebrows have been raised about the inclusion of Hull, a city that had a reputation problem even in the 17th century, when the poet John Taylor wrote: “From Hell, Hull and Halifax, good Lord deliver us.”

Neither eyebrow of Mike Ross, the city council’s Liberal Democrat leader, went up when he heard the news. “There was a sense of surprise for some,” he said. “But why shouldn’t Hull be one of the top 25 places? It has got so much going for it. This is a place that can do things and we want more people to see that.”

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The newly restored Arctic Corsair trawler, known as Hull’s Cutty Sark, one of several projects that are part of a £70m transformation of the city. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian
When the Guardian visited on a rainy day in December, it was clear that everything is nearly there. Finishing touches and final decisions are being made for a series of openings taking place in 2026.

The Hull Maritime project includes a new home for a restored trawler, the Arctic Corsair, known as Hull’s Cutty Sark.

A vessel called the Spurn Lightship, which for 50 years guided ships through the treacherous waters of the Humber estuary, will reopen to the public after a makeover.

Swathes of public space are being improved, including a £21m refurbishment of Queen’s Gardens, a former dock; and the city’s much-missed Maritime Museum will reopen after a five-year closure.

The ambitious project is a legacy from Hull’s UK city of culture success in 2017 and has had a number of frustrating delays, but 2026 will be the year things finally start happening.

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The Spurn Lightship will reopen to the public after a makeover. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian
The Arctic Corsair, the project’s centrepiece, is a deep-sea trawler built in 1960 that operated during the cod wars with Icelandand which once broke world records for landing the largest amount of cod and haddock in a year.

It is an emblem of Hull’s proud trawling history – still within living memory – and has been a visitor attraction since 1999. It was badly in need of restoration and closed to the public in 2018. Today, the 57-metre-long boat positively gleams.

The Arctic Corsair was restored by Dunston Ship Repairs in Hull, where it is docked, and everyone involved in the project has praised the company for going above and beyond what was expected.

For Dave Clark, the technical director at Dunston, it has clearly been a passion project but he will be happy when it makes its way to its permanent home. “People need to be on it, it needs to be seen,” he said. “People need to hear the stories, to see the working conditions … men working 16 hours a day.

“We are all from Hull and most of the people who work for us have been involved in the fishing industry their whole life and you can see the pride that has been put into it.”

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Hull Maritime Museum will reopen after a five-year closure. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian
Moving the trawler from its current berth to its dry dock home will be a huge challenge involving dredging and a possible 20-point

Men who used to work on the Arctic Corsair have also volunteered their memories and knowledge. They include Cliff Gledhill, a retired maritime engineer who seems to know every working part of the boat’s machinery and huge, labyrinthine engine room.

“It’s 52 years since I first came on this ship,” he said. “If the ship broke down, it doesn’t matter where it was … Iceland or Norway or wherever, the chances were that one of us [engineers] would go.”

He said the Arctic Corsair was important to Hull. “It was a very successful ship with quite a history. It was the pride of the fleet. This is going to be a massive attraction.”

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Cliff Gledhill, a retired maritime engineer, on the newly restored Arctic Corsair. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian
At the city’s Maritime Museum, housed in former dock offices, the rooms are still largely empty but the roof has been fixed, display cabinets are being put in place and boxes are ready to be emptied.

Robin Diaper, a curator, said the museum was a place for tourists to spend time but also somewhere local people could pop in to see Erik, the popular polar bear on long-term loan from Dundee, while they were shopping.

“We wanted to make the whole project world-class,” said Diaper. “It’s of a standard you might see in New York or Paris or London. But we also want a young mother from the Orchard Park estate to be able to just walk in and for it to be hers as well.”

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The Ferens Art Gallery in Hull city centre is also a draw for tourists. Photograph: Andrew Paterson/Alamy
Rooms in the museum that were previously off limits are being used to display far more objects, more boldly. The grade II*-listed former docks building was badly in need of restoration. When it rained, plastic sheeting had to be placed over whale skeletons hanging from the ceiling.

Hull also has the Ferens Art Gallery, the Wilberforce House Museum and its spectacular aquarium, The Deep. With everything happening in 2026 it is a world-class destination for visitors, say tourism officers.

For the council leader Ross, the challenge is for people not to be surprised they might have a great time in Hull, but to know in advance that they will. “If we can do that, we’ve made it,” he said.
 
I’m off to Barbados for two weeks on sat. Whilst we will stay in the hotel a bit as it’s an all inclusive place and my daughter is just short of 3, we I want to explore also. Any tips?
 
I’m off to Barbados for two weeks on sat. Whilst we will stay in the hotel a bit as it’s an all inclusive place and my daughter is just short of 3, we I want to explore also. Any tips?
The jeep safari is cool
Rum plantation tour is fab (don’t remember much from that one lol)
Where in the island are you staying? We normally stay on the platinum coast, st James & hole town area. Stunning. Enjoy
 
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