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Boing Boing -
1 days and 18 hours ago
I've just come back from a better honeymoon than I dared hope for, and it's largely thanks to the
amazing place I visited and the wonderful hotel I stayed at, so I thought I'd better plug both of
them. The place is Roatan, one of Honduras' Bay Islands, a little tropical island less than three
hours' flight from Houston (direct flights also go from Milan, Toronto and Miami in season), and
the hotel was Cocolobo, in the village of West End. First, a little about Roatan. This island is a
former British colony, with four main populations: English-speaking "islanders" descended from
freed slaves from the British era, Spanish-speakers from the mainland, Garifunan-speakers, and
expats from the US, Canada, Europe and elsewhere. It's a narrow, tropical island with a single
paved road and many unpaved tributaries, and it sits squarely on the second-largest barrier reef in
the world (itself a protected marine park reserve). We stayed in West End, a town that's touristy
enough that you can get a delicious meal at any of several restaurants and draw out cash from one
of the two ATMs (when they're working!), but also far enough off the beaten track that it felt
sleepy and safe and absolutely tranquil and isolated from the cares we'd left behind. A huge part
of that was Cocolobo, our hotel, where we stayed for about $75/night, in a large room with
air-conditioning, a ceiling fan, a back porch with a hammock overlooking the sea and the "iron
shore" (fossilized coral) with spectacular nightly sunsets, a pool, and delicious hot breakfasts
every day. Rory and Claire, our hosts, were magnificent, helping us find dive-shops, babysitting,
great food, and fun things to do while there. We dove every day, mostly with Ocean Connections (who
were fantastic) as well as with Coconut Tree. The diving was unbelievable -- clear seas, warm
water, and an amazing variety in dive-sites from high-speed drifts along the wall to mellow dives
among the giant barrel-sponges. There were turtles and rays and morays in plenty, and dolphins and
sharks, too, as well as a couple of challenging and spooky wrecks. Dives were very reasonable --
about $25/person including gear rental. We spent a lot of time at Cocolobo, too, relaxing and
reading, playing with the baby, snorkeling off the iron shore, getting online now and then. It was
incredibly comfortable and beautiful, besides. For meals, we favored the $6 lunch at Mavis and
Dixie's, right on the beach, where we got a generous portion of blackened wahoo, plantains, beans
and salad, usually with a fresh banana-pineapple smoothie. Sometimes we'd take the baby to the
secluded lagoon behind Mavis and Dixie's for a splash and a dig in the sand (the folks at the
restaurant even loaned us a spoon so she could dig in the sand!). There were lots of good dinner
options, but the most remarkable was Ooloontho, a gourmet Indian restaurant run by a Canadian-born
chef and his Indian-born wife. We ate dinner there twice and I was knocked off my seat both times
by the delicate flavors, the inventiveness, and the quality of the ingredients. I'll never forget
the calamari, and I'll never, never, never forget the banana bread-and-butter in a salt caramel
sauce! I was in Mumbai in September and while I ate some great food there, Ooloontho beats
everything I tasted in India or here in London. (Speaking of tastes, ZOMG, Bucanero hot sauce kicks
18 kinds of ass -- we brought home ten bottles!) We barely scratched the surface of all there is to
do in Roatan -- dolphin encounters, yoga, horseback riding, a butterfly reserve, zip-lines through
the jungles, and the world's deepest-diving civilian submarine (built by a hobbyist who taught
himself to weld!). Nearly every person we met was friendly and helpful. I've never felt so relaxed
in my adult life. We fell in love with the place and are hoping to return next year with our
extended families, taking over five or six of Cocolobo's 12 rooms, along with one of the smart
little self-catering cabins they were finishing while we were there. The hotel and island are the
picture of paradise: laid back, kid-friendly, warm and unspoiled. Cocolobo, My Roatan photos...br
style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=24599adac5dff3385292f596ce7f1839"img alt="" style="border:
0;" border="0" src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=24599adac5dff3385292f596ce7f1839"//a img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=24599adac5dff3385292f596ce7f1839" style="display:
none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/

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Boing Boing -
1 days and 19 hours ago
Ive just come back from a better honeymoon than I dared hope for, and its largely thanks to the
amazing place I visited and the wonderful hotel I stayed at, so I thought Id better plug both of
them. The place is Roatan, one of Honduras Bay Islands, a little tropical island less than three
hours flight from Houston (direct flights also go from Milan, Toronto and Miami in season), and the
hotel was Cocolobo, in the village of West End. First, a little about Roatan. This island is a
former British colony, with four main populations: English-speaking islanders descended from freed
slaves from the British era, Spanish-speakers from the mainland, Garifunan-speakers, and expats
from the US, Canada, Europe and elsewhere. Its a narrow, tropical island with a single paved road
and many unpaved tributaries, and it sits squarely on the second-largest barrier reef in the world
(itself a protected marine park reserve). We stayed in West End, a town thats touristy enough that
you can get a delicious meal at any of several restaurants and draw out cash from one of the two
ATMs (when theyre working!), but also far enough off the beaten track that it felt sleepy and safe
and absolutely tranquil and isolated from the cares wed left behind. A huge part of that was
Cocolobo, our hotel, where we stayed for about $75/night, in a large room with air-conditioning, a
ceiling fan, a back porch with a hammock overlooking the sea and the iron shore (fossilized coral)
with spectacular nightly sunsets, a pool, and delicious hot breakfasts every day. Rory and Claire,
our hosts, were magnificent, helping us find dive-shops, babysitting, great food, and fun things to
do while there. We dove every day, mostly with Ocean Connections (who were fantastic) as well as
with Coconut Tree. The diving was unbelievable -- clear seas, warm water, and an amazing variety in
dive-sites from high-speed drifts along the wall to mellow dives among the giant barrel-sponges.
There were turtles and rays and morays in plenty, and dolphins and sharks, too, as well as a couple
of challenging and spooky wrecks. Dives were very reasonable -- about $25/person including gear
rental. We spent a lot of time at Cocolobo, too, relaxing and reading, playing with the baby,
snorkeling off the iron shore, getting online now and then. It was incredibly comfortable and
beautiful, besides. For meals, we favored the $6 lunch at Mavis and Dixies, right on the beach,
where we got a generous portion of blackened wahoo, plantains, beans and salad, usually with a
fresh banana-pineapple smoothie. Sometimes wed take the baby to the secluded lagoon behind Mavis
and Dixies for a splash and a dig in the sand (the folks at the restaurant even loaned us a spoon
so she could dig in the sand!). There were lots of good dinner options, but the most remarkable was
Ooloontho, a gourmet Indian restaurant run by a Canadian-born chef and his Indian-born wife. We ate
dinner there twice and I was knocked off my seat both times by the delicate flavors, the
inventiveness, and the quality of the ingredients. Ill never forget the calamari, and Ill never,
never, never forget the banana bread-and-butter in a salt caramel sauce! I was in Mumbai in
September and while I ate some great food there, Ooloontho beats everything I tasted in India or
here in London. (Speaking of tastes, ZOMG, Bucanero hot sauce kicks 18 kinds of ass -- we brought
home ten bottles!) We barely scratched the surface of all there is to do in Roatan -- dolphin
encounters, yoga, horseback riding, a butterfly reserve, zip-lines through the jungles, and the
worlds deepest-diving civilian submarine (built by a hobbyist who taught himself to weld!). Nearly
every person we met was friendly and helpful. Ive never felt so relaxed in my adult life. We fell
in love with the place and are hoping to return next year with our extended families, taking over
five or six of Cocolobos 12 rooms, along with one of the smart little self-catering cabins they
were finishing while we were there. The hotel and island are the picture of paradise: laid back,
kid-friendly, warm and unspoiled. Cocolobo, My Roatan photos...br style=clear: both;/ a
href=http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=24599adac5dff3385292f596ce7f1839img alt= style=border: 0;
border=0 src=http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=24599adac5dff3385292f596ce7f1839//a img
src=http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=24599adac5dff3385292f596ce7f1839 style=display: none;
border=0 height=1 width=1 alt=/

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Toutelatele.com -
2 days ago
img src="http://www.toutelatele.com/IMG/arton13446.jpg" align="left" width="210" height="150"
hspace="4" vspace="4" En Avignon, les festivités du Dîner presque parfait ne
dérogent pas à la règle : lundi 17 novembre, M6 a une nouvelle fois
dominé la concurrence sur la tranche horaire de son programme vedette. br /À partir
de 17h50, 2.7 millions de téléspectateurs se sont ainsi branchés sur la
chaîne privée pour suivre le concours des gourmets, soit 19.2% de part de
marché. br /Leader auprès de l'ensemble du public, un Dîner presque parfait a
une nouvelle fois fait une véritable razzia sur les ménagères de moins de 50
ans. 34.6% d'entre elles ont (...)
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