Editor’s note

by | Apr 14, 2017 | Apr - May 2017

The grass is always greener on the other side.

[vc_row][vc_column width=”1/4″][vc_separator color=”black” border_width=”10″][vc_custom_heading text=”Singapore”][vc_separator color=”black” border_width=”2″][vc_widget_sidebar sidebar_id=”sidebar-page”][/vc_column][vc_column width=”3/4″][vc_column_text]

The grass is always greener on the other side. True? I live in the clean and green city of Singapore, tropical, hot, humid, efficient with good food; everything always works. On the contrary, my dreams are painted with the colors of the Caribbean. I dre am of blues on whites, steel drum music and breezy plantation houses overlooking vibrant blue bays and endless oceans.

My desire for living life ‘island style’ in the Caribbean took root well before the concepts of education, finance and taxes got advocated. It was the allur e of Nassau, the colorful & noisy carnival of Jamaica, the exotic tales of Trinidad & Tobago, the voodoo stories of Haiti and perhaps the Britishness of Barbados that got the better of my imagination. Perhaps there was an element of Tom Sawyer spirit that allowed this dream to flourish.

A recent review of Mustique Island and it’s oh-so-fabulous private villas, painted with a heavy brush of elegance, gave reality to the island style living life. There is no going back now. Jamaican Planters Punch Rum trumps Singapore Sling any day. Having said that, fly in to Changi, get into a cab and head home along the tree & bougainvillea laced East Coa st Park Expressway of Singapore – this is civilization. Always.

We thus outline our anthem for this edition of the magazine; isl and getaways & island living. On the topic of island living, the rest point has got to be the quintessential Villa; huge, elegant, breezy, a citadel of luxury perched at a vantage point overlooking th e realm of beaches, coves and the emerald sea beyond. Our featured article, Citadels of Luxur y covers the perfect villas for every season & mood.

When it comes to islands, selecting the preferred is a monumental task. There are simply too many of them, all unique, filtering in lists based on mood and personal preferences. We select the jewels in and around South East Asia that are abundant in such luxuries as solitude, wellness, history and celebrity spotting. On to the Caribbean, where we e xplore the wild and new; more reasons to drop anchor here. The Mediterranean can’t possibly be far behind. High-end hideaways to bohemian beach bars, the magic of Ibiza runs deep. We round up with a peek into the latest happenings in Bali and Sri Lanka; both islands with similarities running deep yet each at a different stage of tourism development.

Happy Reading.

Subscribe to the latest edition now by clicking here.

 

If you would like to comment on this story or anything else you have seen on World Travel Magazine, head over to our Facebook page or message us on Twitter.

And if you liked this story, subscribe to our bi-monthly World Travel Magazine, a handpicked selection of editorial features and stories from Global Destinations, Inspire Me, Insider, Style File, Wellness & Travel, City Travel, Suite Life, At Leisure, Short Breaks and much more.

[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Tags :

World Travel Magazine Edition

Newsletter

Kandy to Ella Train: Sri Lanka’s Tea Country by Rail

On the slowest, most beautiful train ride in Asia, a carriage full of strangers, and a grandmother who found her childhood at 6,000 feet.

Swimming With Humpback Whales in Vava’u, Tonga

On swimming with humpbacks in the South Pacific, the fear that comes before wonder, and the day the ocean rearranged what I thought I knew.

Essaouira in July: Morocco’s Cool, Windswept Coast

A July guide to Essaouira, Morocco: the windswept Atlantic coast where the alizés keep the blue-and-white medina cool while the interior swelters.

Why the Matterhorn Is Better in Summer, Not Ski Season

The world photographs the Matterhorn in snow and skis past its finest season — green, golden, warm, and half-empty of everyone still dreaming of powder.

Torres del Paine in Winter: Patagonia’s Puma Season

In July the crowds are gone from Torres del Paine, the light lies gold all day, and the pumas step out against the snow — and the place is yours.

Why Busan Beats Seoul: Korea’s Easy Coastal City

Korea’s coastal second city has the beaches, the seafood, and the film-festival swagger — and none of Seoul’s restless ambition.

Guelaguetza 2026: Oaxaca’s Hill of Beautiful View

In Oaxaca this July, sixteen cultures climb one sacred hill to dance — and the whole festival turns on what happens at the end of each performance.

Inside Punakha Dzong: The Himalayas’ Great Fortress-Monastery

Punakha Dzong may be the most beautiful building in the Himalayas — a masterclass in how architecture can hold a whole civilisation together.

Ubud, Done the Way the Locals Would

Bali’s cultural heart in peak dry season — a field report on how to find the real Ubud beyond the yoga-retreat clichés.

Thai Islands That Flip the Calendar: Where to Go this Summer

In July, Phuket is green. Not the marketing green of a...

Related Articles