Wanderlust, Issue 223 (Oct/Nov22) Sampler

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Incredible rail journeys across Latin America’s top trips Catalan Grand Tour The other Amazon river Cultural Kuwait Embracing Jamaica Coastal Maine Maldives eco-stays Taiwan Taking The Road Less Travelled Since 1993 � JAPAN

Photographers: Werner Forman & xPACIFICA

Bali, Indonesia

Despite being just one of 17,000-plus islands in the region, an estimated 40% of travellers to Indonesia spend time in Bali. Over the years, life there has evolved to suit the needs of these visitors in countless different ways, even if the bars and beach resorts of Kuta are a far cry from the yoga studios of Ubud. Yet it’s this adaptability – to be many things simultaneously – that has seen the largely Hindu island manage to keep its culture from being lost. Bali’s spiritual side still exists everywhere here, from festivals such as Galungun (pictured left), a time of prayers and feasts, to the locals that fill the island’s water temples. Tirta Empul (right), founded in 926 AD, is the largest of the 2,000 or so pura (temples) on Bali, and the purification rituals witnessed in its pools offer a glimpse into one of few facets of life to remain untouched by the island’s popularity.

© Werner Forman Archive/Heritage Images/Alamy & xPACIFICA/Alamy. Bali Mystique by Elora Hardy (£70; Assouline) is out now; eu.assouline.com

VIEWFINDER

WANDERSLEEPS

SONEVA FUSHI

ThegoesMaldivesgreen

From solar-powered stays to marine conservation projects – discover the resorts making meaningful efforts to lighten their footprint on the islands

There was a moment when it seemed like everyone on Instagram was sliding down Soneva Fushi’s waters lides, splashing into the pale turquoise waters of Baa Atoll UNESCO Biosphere Reserve. Either that, or they were zooming into Flying Sauces, its treetop dining experience that sits 18 metres high in the air and is reached via a 200m-long zipline. But there’s more to this resort than Instagram likes. Soneva has long been an advocate of responsible tourism, banning plastic straws as far back as 1998 and filter ing, mineralising and bottling their own water. That sense of sustainability extends to guest experiences as well. Alongside a rota of visiting experts that teach as much as they entertain, you can take night cruises with the resident astronomer or even book classes on glass-blowing using recycled bottles. Villas from £1,026pn, including breakfast; soneva.com

JOURNAL Maldives

Reviewed by Nicola Chilton

Beyond Jamaica’s beach resorts is an island of locals and tiny communities doing incredible things – and it’s a world every bit as enticing and welcoming Words Lyn Hughes TREASURES

The island of small

The trees around us dripped with mangoes, prompting Lucretia to ask if I liked them. I nodded, and so began my education in Mango 101, as she and Damien reeled off a litany of 20 varieties: Stringy, East India, Blackie, Julie,

THE MANGO QUESTION

She was married to Norman Manley, the first premier of Jamaica, and is still a revered figure here.The country’s top art school is named after her and her name came up a lot over the following days as locals proudly told me of Jamaica’s creativity.

I was lucky to have another super guide, Christopher Creary, leading my tour. A musician himself, he had known many of the reggae greats and told captivating tales of Bunny Wailer, Peter Tosh and Desmond Dekker.As he pointed to the murals, he talked us through the history of Jamaican music, from its humble origins of playing anything to hand (even kitchen utensils) through to its many genres, revealing that the word ‘reggae’ was first popularised by a song by Toots & the Maytals, called ‘Do the Reggay’. I left the city humming it with a note of regret for not having more time.

amaica has many personalities,” my guide, Lucretia, advised me as we rounded a bend in the road on the way to an unspoilt stretch of coast home to fishermen and farmers. I tore my gaze momentarily from the car window, as farmland and glittering ocean spilled into the distance, and nodded in agreement. By this time, I’d been on the island a few days and I was starting to see what she meant.

Jamaica is often reduced to a string of cliches: there’s the Bob Marley tours, the all-inclusive resorts, the marijuana aficionados. But between the beach parties and neverending skank beat of daily life, you’ve got a world of people doing incredible things that go unseen. In my brief time here I’d met artists, conservationists and locals proud of their communities and eager to show them off.They’d opened my eyes to a side of the island I hadn’t considered: a thoughtful, artistic place where even the capital held unexpected treasures.

Yet it’s the country’s music scene, not art, that is responsible for Kingston’s UNESCO Creative City status. I found the two combining in an initiative aimed at regenerating the capital’s downtown, which has seen artists invited to create music murals aroundWater Lane.As Janet Crick of Kingston Creative explained: “There’s a stigma about downtown. Initiatives like this are trying to bring people in and change perceptions.”

Indeed, when I arrived here I had allowed a day to see Kingston, the folly of which was soon revealed.This restlessly creative city is intent on reinventing itself and I had left little time to see its progress. But in the downtown National Art Gallery, I found the perfect introduction to the country, past and present.

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The museum’s collection extended up to and beyond Jamaica’s gaining of independence in 1962, as it severed 300 years of British rule. The muse um’s Dwayne Lyttle steered me around early wooden carvings by the island’s indigenousTaino people (“of course, the most famous artefacts are in your British Museum”) and examples from the colonial years, when wealthy sugar and tobacco plantation owners commissioned artists to capture their likenesses and riches.

“Signposts pointed to places Britishdisconcertinglywithnames–IrishTown,Newcastle,Clydesdale–asgoatsbrowsedtheroadside“

Perhaps most interesting of all were the works of the nationalist movement that started with the arrival of an inspirational British-born artist and educator called Edna Manley in 1922.

I saw a different side of Jamaica the next day as I headed up into the Blue Mountains. The winding road was flanked by lush, tropical foliage and stands of bamboo. Signposts pointed to places with disconcertingly British names – IrishTown, Newcastle, Clydesdale – and goats browsed the roadside indifferent to the traffic.“Stay there unless you want to be goat curry!” driver Damien would mutter every so often.

“J

spread:Previous Images;AWL spread:this HughesLyn JAMAICA www.wanderlustmagazine.com 127

The city that sets the rhythm (this page; clockwise from top right) The varied murals of the Water Lane art district cover the history of Jamaica’s music, but also increasingly contemporary topics too; the majority of the artists are Jamaican and a high percentage are women; QR codes on some of the murals give a further VR experience; to really appreciate the area, take one of the guided tours, especially if Christopher Creary is leading it; (left page) Treasure Beach proudly declares its community spirit; (previous spread) a gnarled, lone tree grows on the edge of the beach where you’ll find Jack Sprat

DISPATCHES

The art of (re)building history

JOURNAL Kuwait

As Kuwait wrestles with old ghosts and lost traditions, a decades-long project remapping the country’s cultural landscape is starting to pay off Words & photographs George Kipouros

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– here are just a few. Already a member? Head to wanderlustmagazine. com/your-wanderlust to find out more.

VIRTUAL EVENT: Algeria (December tbc)

Stanfords is the UK’s leading specialist retailer of maps, travel books and accessories, beloved by explorers and keen travellers. Members can get 25% off the price of any books featured on our ‘Read This’ page (p35) and 15% off any other purchases from the Stanfords website.

The Wanderlust Club has a great range of exclusive offers, competitions and events for our members

WIN! A copy of Into Iraq by Michael Palin

25% or 15% OFF! Purchases from the Stanfords website

Algeria is one of the most fascinating countries in North Africa, combining a cultural legacy that stretches back millennia alongside some of world’s most dramatic scenery. Wanderlust contributing editor Mark Stratton will be sharing captivating tales from his recent visit.

Michael Palin kept a journal while making his latest TV series on Iraq, and it vividly brings to life the daily encounters, experiences, highs and lows as he travels through this complex land. Members can win one of three copies.

WIN! A copy of the Ariel Atlas of Ancient Britain

David Abram has spent 40 years researching Britain’s ancient sites and spent the last two years photographing them from above. In this beautiful book you’ll find inspiration aplenty, with many of the locations featured little known to travellers and rarely visited. We have three copies to give away.

15% OFF! Lorton & Horn travel wallets

We love the Lorton & Horn range of quality travel wallets, organisers and other travel goods, and you will too. Made from high-quality vegetable-tanned leather (there are also vegan versions) and available in a range of desirable colours, they are not only practical but super stylish too. Better yet, they can be monogrammed to make the perfect gift.

* See full terms and conditions at https://shop.wanderlust.co.uk Or you can visit our shop https://shop.wanderlust.co.uk,onor call 01371 853641 and use the code 18FOR12 Scan to redeem the offer: Worldwide offer! An additional 6 months of travel inspiration for just £35 UK / £45 EU / £55 ROW 18 months for the price of 12! TRAVEL FURTHER 18 inspiration,ofmonthstravelwhichincludes… Ninedoublecollectableissues 1,800+ pages of travel deliveredideastoyour door Full digital access Read the magazine online and on the go Members-onlywebpage Access all past editions since 2010 £50 travel voucher! Use with some of the best operatorstour members-only…Exclusive competitions,Events,prizesandworkshops FREE POSTAGE WORLDWIDE

Drifting Brazil’s Río Negro with an Indigenous guide reveals not just a hidden world of flooded forests, but the Amazon as seen through the eyes of the people who know it best

Words & photographs Alex Robinson

The of thepromiseAmazon

All aboard! (this page, top to bottom) The Iara, one of Aracá Expe ditions’ AirãothetravellerstheboutiqueploresriverwoodentraditionalAmazoncruisers,exthewatersincomfort;boat’screwandposeonprowinNovovillage;( pre vious spread) Saro Munduruku, of the Ríothehighpointsextraordinaire,guidetoaslothinthetreesinfloodedforestNegro 88 October/November 2022

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he evening was velvet dark. The air was sweet with the scent of night flowers and filled with an orchestra of cicadas and tree frogs. Far off in the forest, I heard the whippoor will-trill of a nightjar. Somewhere out there, close by, a jaguar was padding through the trees. She knew we were there. We’d seen her footprints in the mud, on the trail next to the river as we’d walked up; we’d smelt her acrid feline musk in the air. But jaguars steer clear of people, even on the flanks of Brazil’s Aracá, the wildest, remotest mountain in the tropics. Here, untouched Amazon forest and river, lily-filled lakes, reed beds and swamps spread for hundreds of kilometres all around, unbroken by road or town. I wasn’t frightened, but my nerves were tingling. Tomorrow we would summit Aracá, a vast tabletop of cliffs and rock born when life on Earth was single-celled and the Amazon, Antarctica, Africa and Australia were all one continent. As we walked from the boat launch to the trailhead, its face looked as sheer and high as Ireland’s cliffs

“Our Amazon journey was no mere ‘jungle cruise: it was a pilgrimage through nature; medicine for the soul“

The first morning of our voyage, during one of the rain storms that sweep across the northern Amazon, we’d put on our trunks, headed to the open area of the boat deck and opened our arms to fat drops of the pure water that fell like beads from the sky, before warming our bodies in the rich sunlight

A PROMISE KEPT

My fellow travellers, Rob and Raphael, were awake too. I could just about see their faces in the dying glow of our campfire, staring up through the forest canopy at the shim mering stars. They, too, felt a change. Since we’d arrived five days ago from a grey Heathrow, the weight of city life had been lifted from our spirits by the presence of seemingly endless nature, our bodies relieved of all tension by fragrant, oxygen-rich air and the world’s greatest flow of fresh water.

This trip was all thanks to Saro. I looked across at him – the only one of us asleep, snoozing with an arm across his eyes, content and peaceful as ever. I’d met him years before, on a visit to an eco-lodge a few hours from Brazil’s Amazon capital, Manaus. As he guided our small group through creeks and along trails, I’d been struck by his deep knowledge of the forest and its animals, his effortless exper tise and his charisma. Tall and strong, with long dark hair and deep, peaceful eyes, he radiated the quiet power that

of Moher; as lonely and wild as a Southern Ocean iceberg. My muscles were tired from the hike to the camp. I’d eaten well and I was as snug as a bug in my hammock, but how could I sleep? After two years trapped by COVID-19 lockdowns, I was in life-giving wilderness, on an adventure I had never imagined. My mind was racing with excitement.

that soon broke through the clouds. Perhaps it was then that we realised our journey along the Amazon’s Río Negro was no mere ‘jungle cruise’: it was a pilgrimage through nature; medicine for the soul. And like many such things, it had happened unexpectedly.

RIO NEGRO, BRAZIL www.wanderlustmagazine.com 89

Words Anna Udagawa

Japan often feels like it was made to be seen by train, but its networks can be daunting to newcomers and old hands alike. Here’s how to plan your perfect rail adventure…

LIFEJAPANONTHERAILS

spread:Previous Alamy; spread:this OxleyGrahamUdagawa;AnnaAlamy; 110 October/November 2022

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I had booked late, so was sat at a table, but the prize seats were undoubtedly those that swivelled to face the window. My Japanese wasn’t good enough to understand every part of the journey that the MC described

during the 50-minute ride from Shin-Takaoka to Johana, but it didn’t matter. Just having an MC added to the fun of the experience. And for those who had ordered food, there was soon the distraction of bowls of sushi and glasses of sake being delivered to their seats.The entertainer even had a sasara (or bin-zasara), a percussion instrument used for folk songs and local dances, and played by moving it around like a wave.

On a shinkansen, most people read, sleep or look at their laptop, as they’re typically travelling too fast to enjoy the scenery. But I had no desire to do that here.There was always something to look at – even when stopping at stations, locals would sometimes wave at us. I will never forget my journey on a Japanese sightseeing train, but this is just one flavour of rail travel here. For anyone exploring Japan at large or making day trips from its cities, the skinkansen are invaluable. So, we’ve put together five itineraries that make the most of a country that practically lives on rails.

A smooth operator (this page, clockwise from top) The interior of the Belles Montagnes et Mer sightseeing train shows a divide between the more coveted seats that swivel and those arranged around tables that require plenty of compensatory neck twisting; the train pulls into the station; one of the entertainers on board plays a traditional sasara; beautiful Inami woodcarving decorates the carriage; food and drink is delivered to your seat; (opposite page, left to right) the upper two floors of Kyoto’s Kinkaku-ji, which was formerly a retirement villa for a shogun until his death in 1408, are covered in gold leaf; the shinkansen has been a popular form of travel in Japan since the first Tokyo-Osaka line opened in 1964; (previous spread) wandering Yasaka-dori in Kyoto affords fantastic views of the pagoda at Hokan-ji temple

ransferring from a 12-car Hokuriku bullet train (shinkansen) to a one-car sightseeing train, named Belles Montagnes et Mer, was like travelling back in time. Gone were the reclining seats and leg room; the hi-tech toilets and the smooth journey.These were replaced by beautiful Inami woodwork, ceiling fans, a Master of Ceremonies and an entertainer. Indeed, the interior and entertainment on many of Japan’s sightseeing trains – dubbed ‘JoyfulTrains’ by one rail company – often reflect the crafts and traditional skills that go into them. For travellers, it turns a simple train journey into a cultural experience.

South, Central and North America reveal not just wild rainforest and bustling cities, but colonial and Indigenous histories every bit as dense and illuminating. These trips capture all that and more…

We pick our top trips in…

Latin America

On sale 24 November NEXT ISSUE Alamy Yourguideto sustainableexploringSpain + Rediscovering ancient Diriyah Adventures in the Torres Strait Islands USA’s Great Lakes by boat Best alternative winter experiences

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