Turning Inside Out Pool Landscaping

Experts say more and more locals head onto large patios and , into pools and onto intricately landscaped lawns.

Last summer, Christine and Joseph added an in-ground to the yard of their Hollidaysburg home. It was an addition that they had wanted since moving into their home four years ago.

According to local experts, the DeLeos have hit two of the big of — pools, patios and and landscaping.

Pools are a key component of many , says , co-owner of &; in Duncansville.

“(Some) people will do their whole yard over when they put in an in-ground — and a little shed or something to store things in,” he says. “Above-grounds are usually not as elaborate, but they’re still building a shed or doing some . The becomes the of their backyard.”

‘‘What we do is kind of the backyard/outdoor room concept,’’ says , owner of Tussey Mountain in Hollidaysburg. ‘‘That varies from small to grand.’’

Martin, who has been doing for , says he’s seen the .

‘‘I think you’re seeing growth in it every year,’’ Martin says. ‘‘But in that last five years there seems to be more emphasis (on ).’’

Tussey Mountain also does more traditional , with elaborate lighting, , concrete walkways and pads and plants and trees.

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Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

Global Garden Products Market To Surpass Aed 835 Billion By 2010

Homeowners taking an avid interest in designing the outside of their homes and outdoor living in general have boosted the garden products market worldwide and it is projected to register strong growth and surpass AED 835 billion in sales by 2010.

Hillside Landscaping “It is in to be out-doors - whether you are cooking, entertaining, reading, relaxing or even working in the great outdoors and this new trend has ensured higher sales of garden products worldwide,” said Eckhard Pruy, CEO of Epoc Messe Frankfurt GmbH, organizers of Garden and Middle East, the region’s largest industry platform for design, garden equipments and outdoor living products scheduled to take place at the Dubai International Convention and Exhibition Centre from May 25 to 27 2008.

Mr. Pruy noted that the garden and business was driven by emerging trends and the rising popularity of garden as an extension of modern homes. Growing material comforts, increasing annual household incomes, and changing consumer lifestyles are resulting in increased investments in gardening, and garden landscaping, thereby creating ample opportunities for growth in the industry.

“Higher fuel prices are expected to further drive this trend as more people continue to stay closer to home for their entertainment and relaxation needs,” Mr. Pruy observed.

The trend towards turning the backyard and the garden into livable areas of a home is directly translating into business opportunities in the garden products market.

“Homeowners today are as focused on designing the insides of their homes as they are about decorating the outside of the home,” remarked Gavin A. Morlini, Senior Show Manager of Garden and Middle East.

He noted that homeowners are paying more attention to flowers and plants, exterior lighting, cozy couches and containers adding spots of color throughout the yard and an increasing number of people choose easy and simple gardens that are and full of color.

Mr. Morlini added:“ Home owners are choosing simple elegance over fussy gardens so less is in fact more and the buzz word is minimalism.“

The surge in garden activities such as lawn parties, backyard camping Hillside , barbeque with family and friends, are generating a need for equipping the garden.

The Garden and Middle East enjoys the support of RTA, GardenEx, Society of Engineers, and the Taiwan Importers and Exporters Association. Also participating in this year’s are country pavilions from China, Germany, India and Taiwan.

Show Profile:
Garden + Middle East is the only dedicated international trade event in the region for the and outdoor living industries. The show offers the perfect regional industry networking event to present the latest trends, products and services available to the sophisticated market of and outdoor architecture The next Garden+ Middle East is scheduled to take place from the 25-27 May in 2008, in the Dubai International Convention and Centre, . Show website: Show website: www.gardeningexpo.com

Company profile:
EPOC Messe Frankfurt GmbH is a subsidiary of Messe Frankfurt, the world’s largest trade fair organiser with its own fairground. It conducts over 150 events worldwide with 15 subsidiaries across Europe, Asia, America, Africa and the Middle East, and brings 800 years of experience to Dubai, the strategic hub for the region.
The successful portfolio of events of EPOC Messe Frankfurt GmbH in Dubai include: Intersec Middle East, Materials Handling+Logistics Middle East, Hardware+Tools Middle East, Garden+ Middle East, ISH kitchen+bath Middle East, Light Middle East, Beautyworld Middle East, Wellness &; Middle East, International/CES Hometech, Automechanika Middle East, Hillside and the Middle East Toy Fair.

*RESEARCH METHODOLOGY: The report is collated using data from companies in the major product segments of Garden &; Seeds, Lawn &; Garden Care, Garden Tools &; Implements, Garden Furniture, and Garden Accessories from USA, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Latin America, Middle East and the Rest of World. The data is based on historical annual market analytics and data obtained from key and niche players’ &; includes both primary and secondary research comprising select online sources.

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Monday, April 14th, 2008

Seven resortspas where you can unwind in the Wests Most Western Town

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — It’s been a long time since cowboys parked their ponies on Main Street in what was once proudly marketed as the West’s Most Western Town.

Today’s Scottsdale is two P.F. Chang’s, two California Pizza Kitchens and two Merrill Lynch offices.

It is art galleries and turquoise shops and boutiques and Beemer convertibles and monster serving monster subdivisions hidden behind faux-adobe walls.

It’s also the heart of Arizona’s SpringTrainingLand, making it unavoidable for fans of Giants (the resident trainees), Cubs (the economic engine), Brewers (the few, the proud) and other boosters in appropriate T-shirts brimming with delusionary optimism.

Fortunately, though you may have to look carefully, Scottsdale is still desert and the mountains — or at least a short drive from desert and mountains. To those who pine and whine over “the old Scottsdale,” we offer this from Jennifer Franklin, an actual native Scottsdalean who represents the Fairmont Scottsdale Princess:

“My old Scottsdale is the view of the mountains and seeing them turn purple in the afternoon,” she says. “I grew up with these mountains. They still turn purple in the afternoon …”

The Scottsdale Convention and Visitors Bureau guide lists 71 hotels and resorts. We won’t.

But among the 71 is a collection of resort-, often with a golf component, that’s a concentration of the breed rivaled in this country only in and around Palm Springs, Calif. To provide just a real good hint of what Scottsdale has to offer, we bring you profiles of seven, some among America’s premier resort properties and all with Scottsdale mailing addresses — which knocked out The Boulders (Carefree) and Royal Palms (Phoenix) and a couple of other good ones. Sorry.

The seven are not listed in any meaningful order. This isn’t a ranking. That’s for magazines, guides and TripAdvisor.

A couple of more points before we begin: The listed room rates, though accurate as can be, turn to fiction as occupancy loosens or tightens — so do check the resorts’ Web sites or call ahead; also, from mid-May (and sometimes earlier) until Labor Day (and sometimes later), when the weather here tends to get a little toasty, rates plummet, bringing luxury to within Best Western budgets. Packages (golf, spa, honeymoon, etc.), as well, can be attractive any season.

Finally, regarding our featured “favorite spa treatments”: None was actually attempted in the making of this picture. We were just intrigued by the menu descriptions. You will be too.

FAIRMONT SCOTTSDALE PRINCESS

This large spread manages to be an astounding desert resort without screaming, “Aren’t we an astounding desert resort?”

Take the spa, called Willow Stream. Remarkable. Inspired by the Grand Canyon and its Havasu Falls, cascades tumble down its multiple levels. “Just the power they have, in the middle of nowhere — it’s breathtaking,” spa director Jill Eisenhut says of the originals. “We tried to depict that feeling.” There’s more. Briefly: If Troon North is heaven for serious golfers, Willow Stream Spa is no less for serious spa-sters. (Both those suppositions are, naturally, open to debate — but not in this paragraph.)

The resort’s La Hacienda regularly appears with Chicago’s Topolobampo at the top among upscale Mexican restaurants in the U.S. Just added: Bourbon Steak, from award-winning chef Michael Mina.

Kids? Here’s a clue: Across from the adult check-in area is one for kids — yes, for kids — with a mini-staircase to ease communication with the desk clerk. The big people tell the little ones about such diversions as a covered sandbox, four-story water slides and catch-and-release fishing lagoon.

Bigger kids? The TPC Stadium club, one of two on-site 18-hole courses, is home to the FBR Open, renowned among PGA tour events for its unique tolerance for, um, fan participation (that is, noise).

Five pools. A “fragrance garden” (fragrance seasonal). There’s a resident desert tortoise . . . but explorers will find ungroomed desert “within five minutes of leaving the parking lot,” notes a spokeswoman.

The rooms? Really, really nice.

Downside: It’s a little away from the action. Minor.

Favorite spa treatment: Desert Moonlight Massage, $179.

7575 E. Princess Dr.; 800-344-4758; www.fairmont.com/Scottsdale . 651 rooms, including suites 25 suites and 125 casitas; rates from $459.

WESTIN KIERLAND RESORT %26amp; SPA

There’s nothing wrong with this hotel other than it feels like it got lost on its way to downtown Phoenix. Or downtown Dallas. Or suburban Kansas City.

This is an 11-story, 732-room (plus suites, plus casitas) godzilla of a hotel in low-rise country that, try as it does (and it really tries), can’t escape the sense it’s a convention hotel with privileges, not the resuscitative “resort %26amp; spa” the name suggests.

Businesspeople who haul the spouse and kids along will make the family happy. The requisites are in place: pools, water slides, a “lazy river,” Kids Club, Teen Lounge, spa. But.

The overwhelmingly marble lobby feels about as leisurely as the Sears Tower concourse. Yes, you can see golf though the lobby glass — lots of bunkers glare menacingly on the finishing hole of the Acacia nine. But.

There’s even a designated “director of fun”: cannonball contests, watermelon-eating contests.

Of course, adjacent to the hotel is Kierland Commons: 70 “high-end” retailers, along with restaurants everyone comes to Scottsdale to enjoy: Morton’s, the Cheesecake Factory, Tommy Bahama’s Tropical Cafe and Emporium …

The three nines of golf are here. Also here: air-conditioned golf carts. Explains a spokeswoman: “Keeps you cool on the back of the neck when you’re dripping sweat.”

There are hints of Arizona — a narrow Grand Canyon mural over a lobby bar, that sort of thing — but no real .

The signature restaurant is the much-praised Deseo (nuevo Latino). The creative Agave spa offers such treatments as a Gingerbread Massage: “When you’re all through, you get a gingerbread cookie.” A bagpiper pipes in the sunset.

A first-rate hotel. Plenty of parking. Pet friendly. If you’re stuck in a meeting, the spouse and kids won’t complain. If you’re on expense account, treat ‘em all to steaks at Morton’s. There it is.

Favorite spa treatment: Ice Cream Pedicure (you pick the flavor), from $95.

6902 E. Greenway Pkwy.; 800-354-5892; www.kierlandresort.com . 732 rooms, plus 55 suites and 32 casitas; rates from $369.

FIRESKY RESORT %26amp; SPA

Most convenient of this collection to downtown Scottsdale, the former SunBurst (opened in 1961 as the Executive House) was sold and in 2005 became the Caleo Resort %26amp; Spa; Kimpton Hotels, noted for breathing style into other people’s dowdy properties, took it over later that year and in spring 2007 re-introduced it as FireSky.

So it’s evolved, from a classic (then faded) throwback Southwest property (desk clerks in cowboy hats?) to a classically Kimpton Southwest property with emphatic dashes of non-terra cotta color, a little healthy quirkiness (lightweight cheetah-pattern lounging robes instead of white terry) and an attitude Kimpton fans recognize.

“We’re not out to be the most expensive hotels,” says a rep, quoting the company mantra. “We want to be the most loved.”

That includes lovable touches like free shuttles into town and back, free afternoon wine-tastings, free other things.

They’re also extremely pet friendly. If you don’t bring your own animal, your room’s work desk will get a live goldfish. Dogs and cats are offered facials. True. The goldfish are not.

“If you bring an elephant …”

The changeover renovations are largely complete; the rooms already have their flat-screen TVs and other contemporary touches. The main is just fine; a second has a sand (though surfless) beach. Firepits (a Scottsdale standard) are all over the place here but not all merely decorative: Guests, on request, are provided the makings of s’mores. Lovable.

The spa (products by Jurlique) is small but interesting; treatment rooms are more Victorian than health-clubby. Golf? Not here.

What is here? A nice place to sleep and relax and spend a little downtime between bursts of busy-ness — but for most guests and unlike many other properties in this list, Scottsdale is the destination and

FireSky is the base.

Favorite spa treatment: Fabulous Furry Facial/Pooch Smooch (for your dog), $70.

4925 N. Scottsdale Rd.; 480-945-7666; www.fireskyresort.com . 204 rooms, including eight suites; rates from $379.

FOUR SEASONS RESORT SCOTTSDALE AT TROON NORTH

It’s technically in “Scottsdale” but a good 20 miles from urbanity, so if you’re coming to Arizona for baseball and rowdy fun you might want to consider something not quite this close to Utah.

For others, of course, that’s a strength.

“If you want the desert,” says a spokeswoman, “you’re going to get it here.”

In many ways, this is the un-Phoenician: We’re talking intimate and luxurious, not in-your-face opulent. (Both Travel+Leisure and Zagat call this Arizona’s best hotel.) Instead of crystal in the lobby, the light fixtures look like wagon wheels, sort of.

All rooms, recently renovated (flat-screen TVs, of course), have working fireplaces. Pinnacle Peak is less than a mile away; a trail leads from the resort, through the desert, to the base, and hiking the hike (escorted or not) is encouraged. This place doesn’t try to deny the desert; it embraces it. Suites have telescopes so guests can scan the clear desert night-time sky.

Two sizable pools, one of them for adults only. Best kids’ game room (air hockey, foosball, big-screen video-game wall) of the group.

This is a prime golf destination: The two Troon North golf courses, reconfigured last fall (to rave reviews), are legendary; though separate from the resort (it’s a “partnership”), tee times are set aside for guests and all but guaranteed.

The spa is smallish but sweet; the essentials are here. Opening in time for spring training: a new featured restaurant (Talavera) and bar. In sum: This is prime Four Seasons, with the comforts and service Four Seasons loyalists expect.

Favorite spa treatment: Golfers Massage (kneading of tight muscles with warm golf balls), $155.

10600 E. Crescent Moon Dr.; 480-515-5700; www.fourseasons.com . 210 rooms and suites; rates from $555.

THE PHOENICIAN

You’re greeted in the lobby by crystal chandeliers. The intent is to impress, and the Phoenician succeeds — even before the concierge offers the self-guided audio tour of the property’s $25 million (their estimate) art collection.

The resort has nine pools and 12 tennis courts, one of the courts regulation Wimbledon-worthy grass. Opened in 1988 and now one of Starwood’s Luxury Collection, a complete of rooms and suites (all now have at least one 42-inch flat-screen TV, plus tweaked decor) has attempted to reinforce its (the desert, after all) as well as the property’s position among the nation’s finest spa-resorts.

Marie Elaine’s, its featured restaurant (modern French, not cheap), is a knockout, including the view. The Phoenician has the near-standard three nines of golf, on-site, to mix and match. The spa (at 22,000 ) is complete, though less a showplace than some others in this group.

In its Canyon Suites, an exquisite boutique hotel within the hotel, you can get a “therapeutic turndown.” Which is: “We’ll come in at night,” explains a spokeswoman, “and offer a pitcher of chilled water and then draw your bath with a variety of soothing salts . . . ”

Nice feature: an expansive garden featuring 350 varieties from around the world. Another: a 165-foot water slide and other kiddie concessions — but this is primarily a place for grown-ups intent on dazzling (and/or seducing) other grown-ups.

Favorite spa treatment: Myoxy Caviar Facial, $250.

6000 E. Camelback Rd.; 800-888-8234; www.thephoenician.com . 647 rooms and suites; rates from $750.

CAMELBACK INN: A JW MARRIOTT RESORT %26amp; SPA

Part of the fun of staying here is imagining what Scottsdale was like when the resort opened in 1936. For a generation and more, this was a prime hangout for movie stars and others of means.

It’s grown under Bill Marriott from 118 rooms to today’s 453 — yet the basic concept is unchanged: adobe-style casitas scattered about the irregular desert terrain between Camelback and Mummy Mountains. “You’re integrating the Southwest, the desert,” says a spokesman.

And, oh yeah, they’re integrating significant construction. It will be April or May before a new main building (including restaurants, one the latest in the BLT Steakhouse group), ballroom and other elements are ready to go. Guests in most casitas will be oblivious to what’s going on — hilly terrain can do wonders to deflect visual nuisance — but still. Watch for discounted rates.

The spa — revolutionary when it opened in the 1980s, updated four years ago — remains best known for its lap (with mountain views) and the attached Sprouts healthy-foods restaurant. Its facilities are low on frills but competitive.

There’s one other in operation, and at this writing one other restaurant, a casual one (burgers, etc.) alongside that ; compensating is the relative nearness to downtown Scottsdale eateries.

Guests have access to the nearby Camelback Golf Club.

Regulars who love this place will deal with the construction the way good parents unconditionally love their sometimes-wayward teens. Newcomers will have to adjust. The management is certain that will be easy.

“This was a quality five-diamond resort from Day 1,” says the spokesman, “and it continues to be.”

Favorite spa treatment: Adobe Clay Purification Wrap, $135.

5402 E. Lincoln Dr.; 800-24-CAMEL; www.camelbackinn.com . 453 casitas, including 27 suites; rates from $359.

HYATT REGENCY AT GAINEY RANCH

Maybe this is what the Westin Kierland wanted to be but couldn’t quite pull off.

The Hyatt Regency dates to 1986, which makes it a pioneer of sorts here in pioneer country. The feeling may be country club with strong hints of corporate and convention business, but that formality eases with a walk through its gardens, the layout and lighting fixtures recalling Frank Lloyd Wright during his Japanese period, the sounds of falling water everywhere.

Like the Westin, golf (three nines, again) is visible through the lobby’s glass wall — but here the emotion is more liberating than decorative. Can’t explain why. Ask an architect. It just is.

Above the lobby is a Native American and Environmental Learning Center, where, on this day, a young non-native guest is being taught how to lace moccasins by a Hopi expert. “We provide the venue,” says a spokeswoman, “and they are able to tell the story.”

In Camp Hyatt, a concept born here at Gainey Ranch 20 years ago and widely emulated, kids fiddle with crafts steps away from a local tarantula (”We’re all about learning and discovery.”) in a glass case.

Spa Avania, 2 years old, is big and dreamy: Everything is time-pegged (energetic in the morning, increasingly mellow toward evening), from the background music (guests can select their own during treatments) to the vigorousness of the massages to the beverages provided.

New hotel rooms are on the way; that project begins in April. (No more bathtubs. “People don’t use them anymore.”) Two restaurants opened in October: SWB (for Southwest Bistro) and the Italian Alto Ristorante, which throws in a free gondola ride for dessert.

At night — and this is true of most of the resorts in this package — the mix of lights, from lanterns, from firepits, creates its own world . . .

Nice.

Favorite spa treatment: Anti-Age Performance Facial (for men): $160.

7500 E. Doubletree Ranch Rd.; 480-444-1234; www.scottsdale.hyatt.com . 490 rooms, plus 25 suites and eight casitas; rates from $439.

SCOTTSDALE BESTS

Best if you love the desert: Four Seasons at Troon North

Best if you love : Fairmont Scottsdale Princess

Best if golf is why you’re here: Four Seasons, Fairmont

Best honeymoon spot: The Phoenician

Best for families with little kids: Hyatt at Gainey Ranch

Best for families with tweens: Four Seasons

Best for families with teens: Westin Kierland

Best if you collect classic hotels: Camelback Inn

Best spring training base: FireSky, Camelback Inn, Hyatt

Best fun vibe: Hyatt, FireSky

Best for a quiet escape for two: Four Seasons

Best destination with other couples: Fairmont

Best if you must bring your dog: FireSky, Westin

Best for dining on-site: Phoenician, Fairmont

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Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

Worlds tallest building completion delayed by 4 months developer says

DUBAI, — The world’s tallest skyscraper under construction in this Gulf city-state will take longer than planned to finish, its builders said, putting off the opening planned for the end of this year.

The Burj Dubai tower currently stands over 1,700 feet tall. The state-owned developer Emaar Properties said completion would be postponed until sometime in 2009. It did not give specifics, but the newspaper Gulf News and the online news site ArabianBusiness.com said the delay would be four months.

“The company would rather opt for a nominal delay in total quality execution of the Burj Dubai… than compromise on any aspect of quality,” Emaar, one of the main builders in this Gulf boomtown, said in a press release without elaborating.

Emaar did not give the reason for the delay.

The final height of Burj Dubai is a closely guarded secret. Emaar’s representatives previously said the tower will stop somewhere above 2,275 feet.

Last summer, the company said the skyscraper had reached 1,680 feet, surpassing Taiwan’s Taipei 101 which has dominated the global at 1,667 feet since 2004.

When completed, the Burj Dubai will feature more than 160 floors, 56 elevators, luxury apartments, boutiques, swimming pools, , exclusive corporate suites, Italian fashion designer Giorgio Armani’s first hotel, and a 124th floor observation platform.

Thousands of Asian workers are currently working on skyscraper’s cladding. The $1 billion Burj — the Arabic word for “tower” — is in the heart of downtown Dubai, a 500-acre development area worth $20 billion.

The downtown Dubai area will eventually have 19 residential towers, nine hotels, the Dubai Mall, and a 30-acre artificial lake.

Construction on the skyscraper, determined to break world’s record in its climb to the sky, began in 2004. Work has been frenzied, with laborers working 24-hours days in three shifts. At times one story was raised every three days.

The architects and engineers are American and the main building contractor is South Korean.

Copyright document.write(new Date().getFullYear()); Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

Boys survive being tossed from overpass

DALLAS (AP) — Motorists watched in horror Wednesday as a woman tossed two young boys off a freeway overpass, then took the two-story leap into rush-hour traffic herself. But the shocking moment had an incredibly fortunate ending. Police said Khandi Busby and her children, ages 8 and 6, somehow survived the fall onto Interstate 30’s fast lane and the rush of vehicles. “It was really miraculous that we didn’t have some fatalities with this incident,” Dallas police spokesman Sgt. Gil Cerda said. Busby, 27, was in fair condition, a hospital spokeswoman said. Police said her sons were stable at another hospital, but hospital officials declined to comment later Wednesday. The three were able to speak with investigators, although the 8-year-old may have suffered internal injuries. Busby had not been arrested as of Wednesday but could face two charges of attempted capital murder, Cerda said. “The why remains a mystery to us,” police Lt. C.L. Williams said. “If you try to apply logic to these incidents, they totally defy any logical explanation.” Shortly before 6:30 a.m. Wednesday, Busby and her sons walked away from her father, who had stopped for gas while driving them to a friend’s house. Police do not know why Busby left with her children. “She was not fleeing for her safety,” Cerda said. “She just threw them over and decided to throw herself over.” Her father tried to follow the three in the car but was unable to get to them before they reached the overpass east of downtown Dallas. Police said each boy struggled with Busby as she picked him up and threw him onto the far left lane of the freeway, where cars swerved to avoid them. Police believe Busby and the 8-year-old were struck by cars, which managed to miss the younger brother and avoid collisions, Cerda said. Motorist Sondra Plunk said traffic was moving at 35 to 40 mph when one of the boys fell in front of a van one lane over and about a car length in front of her. The van fishtailed as its driver slammed the brakes and swerved around the boy. Plunk, 44, said the boy landed on his side and then immediately popped up onto his hands and knees, staring directly into the van’s headlights. “I saw his face,” Plunk said of the boy. “I saw the fear in his face. He rolled to all fours. Knowing he was still alive, knowing he was still conscious and he had the presence of mind to think, ‘My God, I have to get out of here.’” Medical experts said two-story falls can be fatal, but not always. Dr. Dave Milzman, a member of the American College of Emergency Physicians, said that if someone lands feet first their odds of surviving a fall from 22 feet are good. “As long as they landed kind of upright, it’s not that unusual not to injure themselves severely,” Milzman said. Busby has a criminal record, including convictions for assault and criminal trespass of a habitation. Child Protective Services had intervened with her on at least three occasions for incidents that police described as relatively minor. In October 2004, investigators substantiated allegations that the boys were unkempt and wore dirty clothes. Busby was ordered to take parenting skills training. In March 2005, the boys were placed in foster care following a domestic dispute between Busby and her boyfriend. Busby was arrested, and the boys stayed in foster care for about five months before moving back in with their mother. A third allegation in October 2006, involving neglectful supervision, was unsubstantiated by state investigators. — Associated Press writers Jamie Stengle and Terry Wallace contributed to this report. %26copy; 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy.

Purchase this AP story for reprint.

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Saturday, March 15th, 2008

Historic West Virginia resort unable to capture fifth star

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. Despite a $50 million renovation, a fifth star has once again eluded The Greenbrier.

The Mobil Travel Guide released its annual ratings of the world’s finest properties Monday but gave West Virginia’s historic resort only four stars for 2008.

The guide, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, issued five stars to properties in Wyoming and Utah for the first time The Four Seasons Resort in Jackson Hole, Wyo., and the Stein Eriksen Lodge in Park City, Utah.

Also on the five-star list for the first time are the Boston Harbor Hotel and The Sanctuary on Kiawah Island in South Carolina. A total of 41 lodgings, 17 restaurants and three earned five stars.

But landing in the second tier was The Greenbrier, which lost its fifth star in 2000 after nearly four decades. Last winter, owner CSX Corp. undertook renovations including wireless Internet, fresh guest room decor and flat-screen TVs to keep the resort attractive to a new generation of well-heeled traveler.

Managers and employees were disappointed by Monday’s news, said spokeswoman Lynn Swann, “but we’re not giving up. While we know what their standards are, they don’t share their reports with us,” she said. “However, we continue to work on those standards to make sure we meet or exceed them.”
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Friday, March 7th, 2008

Stein Eriksen Lodge gets 5 stars in Mobil guide

The Mobil Travel Guide has bestowed one of the hospitality industry’s most prestigious designations, the Mobil Five Star award, upon Stein Eriksen Lodge in Park City, making it the first Utah property to achieve this distinction.

The Mobil Travel Guide, originator of the star ratings certifications, is celebrating 50 years as a trusted name in travel evaluations. In this year’s edition, which was released Monday, only 61 hotels, restaurants and in the U.S. and Canada reached the coveted five-star level.

The Stein Eriksen Lodge was one of four properties to make the guide for the first time.

Four other Utah properties received four-star ratings in the 2008 guide:

%26#8226; The Grand America Hotel, Salt Lake City.

%26#8226; Riverhorse on Main restaurant, Park City.

%26#8226; The Glitretind restaurant, Park City.

%26#8226; The Spa at Stein Eriksen Lodge, Park City.

Mobil’s ratings are based upon anonymous visits by staff members and a ratings process based on more than 750 standardized criteria.

For a detailed explanation of how Mobil Travel Guide compiles its star ratings as well as a complete list of starred properties, visit www.mobiltraveguide.com

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Friday, March 7th, 2008

WHAT DO WOMEN WANT? THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS- EUROPEAN SPAS COMBINED WITH CULTURAL CITY EXPERIENCEs

February, 2008 When its time to celebrate special birthdays, reunions or get-togethers with old friends, girls just want to have fun. And more and more, that fun involves spa experiences, preferably in a foreign country, which adds a touch of the exotic to the standard massage fare.

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Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

WHAT DO WOMEN WANT? THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS- EUROPEAN SPAS COMBINED WITH CULTURAL CITY EXPERIENCES

When its time to celebrate special birthdays, reunions or get-togethers with old friends, girls just want to have fun. And more and more, that fun involves spa experiences, preferably in a foreign country, which adds a touch of the exotic to the standard massage fare.

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Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

Cheap Hot Tubs Spain are They Worth Buying

Should you consider buying a cheap Chinese Hot Tub or a proper made American or European Product?

Well what are the advantages and disadvantages?

The price is one consideration as cheap Chinese poorly produced goods are cheaper than properly made American or European products.

The pumps in the Chinese seem to be of a reasonable quality

The Jets may be made outside of China or they could be Chinese but it does not matter as the Jets they install are very basic even lacking the ability to adjust up or down. Over a little while the chemicals that are used in Hot Tubs will destroy the moving parts of the Jet, something that the American have had some 40 or 45 years to solve

What other drawbacks are there?

The first and major one is that the designs are out of date and lack the developments that the Americans have developed in both Hydrotherapy and Hydro massage. After all Roy Jacuzzi was of Italian origin and was not borne in China other wise he might have been called Roy Chiang Kai-shek.

Also it is a lot easier to understand and indeed telephone Americans or Europeans it is a lot harder to telephone China. Our client tried it two or three times to no avail.

The Chinese tubs are made in an oppressive regime where athletes attending the cannot even have freedom of speech. This reminds one of a similar european country run by a dictator some years ago in the 1930’s.

The point is the labour conditions are poor. The quality control does not exist. How can I say this, simple, we have recently installed a Chinese spa for a client

The spa looked good until we probed a little.

The problems

Bad wiring - cables dragging on the floor not properly tied up or secure/ Low capacity cables and badly layed out

No floor, so the whole spa was exposed to the ground the elements and those lovely little beasties that chew threw car ignition leads and those beasties will make mince meat of the cables on this spa

The frame was made of iron and looked like it had been assembled by a couple of children. It was not square or properly put together. The filter was designed in such a way so that the water would not flow from top to bottom so that the whole of the filter would not be used. Very bad design.

The circulation pump would not start as it was cabled up incorrectly on the main circuit board. Not a problem that was an easy fault to fix.

However, the pump has no timer or ability to be programmed, it is either on or off.

The Ozone was pathetic in that it just seemed to produce big bubbles and not ozone and in a small area only the ozone was not being injected into the water.

No insulation what so ever either on the side panels and whilst heat rises a lack of a floor is a definite disadvantage. This spa may have an initial lower cost but the total cost over its useful life will probably be very expensive. This is a bit like spoiling the ship for a happorth of tar a famous old English expression but as with all things you tend to get what you pay for.

As they say if you pay peanuts you get monkeys or what I would call a pig in a poke. I would not give you house room for one and if you offered me one for free I don’t want it as the thought of catching alight or shorting out is too much of a risk to take;

People often think that buying some thing that looks good for peanuts is a clever idea but when it comes from a country that whilst an engineering giant is many decades behind the west in basic manufacturing standards and all it really has is very very cheap and inexperienced labour.

The best advice remains buy a product from a reputable American manufacturer and from our point of view whilst it was an interesting experience we will not touch a piece of junk like that again.

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Tuesday, March 4th, 2008