Zip-lining in Cuba, volcano climbing in Nicaragua and a Mamma-Mia-themed disco-dining venue in Stockholm are just some of the new travel experiences on offer around the world this year.
Travel guide company Lonely Planet has published a free ebook, New in Travel, in which its experts list 31 of what they rate as the best new openings, activities and attractions.
One of the unique inclusions that caught our eye is a new ecotourism facility – the aptly named Center for Extreme Tourism – which opened towards the end of last year in at the San Cristobel Volcano Nature Reserve in Nicaragua. Incorporating a hotel and visitors’ centre, it features trails leading right up to the rim of the 1745m active San Cristobel Volcano, as well as promoting the Route of the Colonial Cities and the Volcanoes, which runs through Nicaragua’s Pacific Coast and takes in some of Central America’s oldest cities.
Also likely to appeal to adventure lovers is a new Canopy Tour zip-lining experience traversing 1100m of tobacco plantations and limestone cliffs in the Valles de Viñales national park in Cuba; Singapore’s first underwater dive trail at the Sisters’ Island Marine Park, and “Fatbike” tours across the soft sands around Gansbaai on the Western Cape of South Africa.
For a more relaxed outdoor experience, you can walk on water at Lake Iseo in Italy thanks to an artwork named The Floating Piers being created by “landscape-altering artist” Christo. The 3km-long yellow floating walkway will link the islands of Monte Isola and San Paolo, but will be open for only 16 days from June 18 this year.
The one Australian experience to make the Lonely Planet list is also an artwork. Field of Light, an installation by British artist Bruce Munro, will open in the desert near Uluru in April and will feature more than 50,000 frosted-glass spheres on thin stems which will bloom like glowing flowers after dark.
Also relatively close to home is Te Ara Hura (Path of Discovery), a new 100km walking track around New Zealand’s Waiheke Island, which takes in “sweeping beaches, compact coves and rocky headlands” and is suitable for either shorter walks or longer, multi-day treks.
Another island recommended by Lonely Planet is St Helena, where Napoleon Bonaparte was exiled. Home to hundreds of unique native species – and a 500-year-old turtle called Jonathan – it will become more accessible later this year with the opening of a new airport and direct flights from Johannesburg.
One of the quirkier new experiences to make the cut is Mamma Mia! The Party, an “interactive disco-dining experience set within a Greek-style tavern”, which will surely prove irresistible to fans of ABBA visiting Stockholm in Sweden.
Lonely Planet’s full list of 31 recommended New in Travel destinations is below (along with the date they opened or are due to open), with more information in the free ebook available for download here.