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RESORTS SPAS
Mystique
Ayurvedic spa on the African coast
Photo:
Guest Bianca Geddes takes a jacuzzi at a holistic
health retreat in Diani, Kenya, in this January 2005
photo.
DIANI, Kenya-
Here's a unique setting for an alternative holiday at
the seaside - no diving or energy-consuming water
sports, but a week of massages, yoga, and ayurvedic
treatments, combined with an all-vegetarian menu where
alcohol consumption is frowned upon. It may sound like
torture if your idea of a vacation is to party all the
time or experience thrilling adventures. But if you
are looking for something more serene, a spot along
the south coast of Kenya offers respite in the tropics
of the Indian Ocean. In one of my daily walks along
the beach in Diani, Kenya, a eight-kilometre stretch
of white sand about 483 kilometres from Nairobi where
I've vacationed in the past, I found myself ignoring a
"Private Property" sign, walking right past a tree
house and stepping into a deserted but carefully
maintained garden with a wooden platform to one side
and earth-coloured low-roofed buildings.
"Shaanti Holistic Health Retreat"
read an orange sign on a large stone next to the
secluded beachfront. I wasn't sure whether "holistic
retreat" meant I would come across a group of singing
monks or a religious sect performing rituals, but I
wanted to find out. Orange and red cushions and
mattresses covered a cement structure, which was later
described to me as the "chill-out room," as I reached
what seemed to be a reception area. Tasreen Keshavjee,
the managing director of Shaanti, approached me and with
enthusiasm explained exactly what the retreat was about.
"Shaanti represents a holistic approach to healing.
Since almost all ailments and disease originate from
stress and anxiety, the best way to cure them is to
attack the root cause. Take away the stress, take away
the anxiety and work on the mind and body so that the
process is sustainable," Keshavjee said. The retreat,
which opened in November 2004, is the first of its kind
in the area. Most of the numerous hotels that line this
tropical resort provide massages and other health and
beauty treatments, but Shaanti offers a specific healing
method aimed at improving both the physical and mental
state. The wooden platform on the beachfront is for
daily yoga lessons and the tree house is the vegetarian
restaurant. The buildings are rooms for overnight
accommodation. Signs are written in English with a
Hindi-styled font. Furniture is covered by the orange
and red cushions, which are made from the local East
African kikoy material, a colourful cloth originally
worn by men but recently very fashionable among young
local designers. Most of the floors are made from local
galana stone, and fishing canoes are used as shelves in
the restaurant and in the reception areas.
All these indigenous elements in the
decor help the retreat fit in with its
naturalsurroundings. Adding to this sense of harmony
with nature are troops of colobus, syke and vervet
monkeys that regularly feed, rest and play in the nearby
trees. Meeting Tasreen and seeing the beautiful setting
were all it took for me to book a massage - an abhyanga
- where warm medicated oils are applied to the body to
improve circulation and promote relaxation. Without
knowing what to expect, I walked into one of the small
makuti-roofed bandas (huts with straw roofs), where a
Kenyan girl shyly told me to take my clothes off. She
tied a long rectangular piece of cloth attached to a
string around my waist and had me lie on the massage
bed. Moments prior to the massage, the resident
ayurvedic doctor from Kerala, in southern India, met me
to see what type of herbal oils were best for me. I had
a slight cold, which was taken into account in the
choice of oils that were to be mixed and applied on my
skin. Ayurveda is a 3,000-year-old system of healing,
taught by "rishis" of India, or Hindu sages. It is
designed to create balance and tranquillity in body,
mind and spirit through massage, diet and meditation. I
had the most common type of treatment, but Shaanti also
offers steam treatments and other techniques for
rejuvenation and stress relief. As I lay on the massage
bed, the oils were heated and poured in a small bowl.
Then I was told to sit up, and the masseuse began
pouring the warm oil on my shoulders. This type of
massage consists of rubbing the oil up and down the arms
and legs by going over the back and stomach; it lasts an
hour. Unlike other types of massage, you don't relax
during the treatment, but the effects are intended to
last. The hour flew by. I was given a robe made of kikoy
to wear for the next hour while the oil soaked into my
skin. I headed towards the open-air "chill-out room,"
which looks out to the Indian Ocean, sat on a mattress
and ordered the juice of the moment - a freshly squeezed
watermelon and mango drink.
I was then advised to take a steam
bath with eucalyptus essence to make my cold go away and
make the oil soak into my skin faster. Once done with
the bath, I returned for more - an hour-long facial
massage, and a taste of the vegetarian menu, which, at
the customer's request, can be Indian food or
continental, always accompanied by freshly squeezed
juices. But according to the ayurvedic system, the meal
must include six basic tastes - sweet, sour, salty,
pungent, bitter and astringent. The tree house
restaurant overlooks the white beach. My meal started
with a green salad, followed by assorted tropical
fruits. The main course was a particularly tasty and
light curry served with cumin rice, lentils and chapati
- a puffy bread. After the meal there was a wide
assortment of herbal and Indian teas, which you can
drink in the chill-out room or on a chaise lounge under
one of the many umbrellas randomly placed in the garden,
again looking at the ocean. Kenya's coasts are becoming
known for diving and for opportunities to see whale
sharks, but Shaanti is yet another reason for travellers
- especially Western workaholics - to go to Diani. By
Beatrice Lacoo.
Trendy American spas include exotic influences, niche
markets...
Photo:
In this photo provided by Jacob Chin, a model is given
a therapeutic stone massage using heated black basalt
stones and cool white marble stones Aug. 6, 2005, at
the Miraval Life in Balance Spa in Catalina, Ariz.
NEW YORK- Now that day spas are
turning up in airports, malls and beauty salons,
destination spas are increasingly offering unique
services and products to differentiate themselves from
mainstream purveyors of massages and facials. New
services include unusual Asian healing practices and
rituals inspired American Indian traditions. Cleansers
and creams are being made from local ingredients like
blueberries, seashells or desert sage to identify spas
with their locales. And packages are being aimed at
niche markets - couples, teenagers, pregnant women.
The number of men going to spas is on the rise too.
And thanks to the girlfriends' getaway phenomenon,
even the most exclusive spas - places like Canyon
Ranch and Miraval - are offering discounts for groups
as small as six or eight people. All these trends were
in evidence among representatives of 22 destination
spas at an industry event held in New York on July 28
the International Spa Association.
Here's
more on what's new. Niche Marketing: Spas are attracting
more and more couples, teens, pregnant women and men.
Packages for pregnant women typically include gentle
yoga, massage, facial and pedicure. Now the Fairmont
Sonoma Mission Inn and Spa in California's Mommy-to-be
package has added another option - belly casts, in which
a plaster gauze mask is applied to the woman's belly to
create a life-size replica of her pregnant form. It
costs $159 US. The resulting sculpture can be displayed
and decorated. At the Sea Spa at Loews Coronado Bay
resort in California, "you wouldn't believe how many
teenagers have spa parties," said spokeswoman Anne
Stephany. The spa is opening a room later this month
just for teens that will have a colourful, fun Southern
California theme instead of the serene white walls found
in most spas. Designed PBteen, the teen brand of Pottery
Barn, the room will have surf boards, tropical flowers
and shaggy rugs. Men now make up 29 per cent of spa
clients across the industry, up from 24 per cent three
years ago, according to the International Spa
Association. Because of the trend, sports massages and
executive men's facials are now regularly offered on spa
menus. "Most men are introduced to spas a girlfriend or
spouse and they go in kicking and screaming," said Lynne
Walker McNees, president of the organization. But once
they try it, they like it and come back on their own,
she said. Couples are using spa weekends both to relax
and to reconnect with each other, and many spas have
treatment rooms where couples can get massages side
side. "One of our guests came here with his wife three
or four times last year and told me, 'This is where I
touch base with my wife, because we're so busy the rest
of the time,' " said Valerie Clarke Simpson, spa manager
at the Sanibel Harbour resort in Fort Myers, Fla. Asian
and Indian Influences: Yoga, tai chi, shiatsu, Thai
massage and other Asian practices involving relaxation,
exercise, breathing and meditation have long been spa
staples. Now destination spas are going increasingly
exotic, offering less well-known Asian treatments and
creating rituals with roots in American Indian culture.
At the Lake Austin Spa Resort in
Austin, Texas, guests can get an acupuncture-derived
Manaka tapping treatment, where pressure points are
gently tapped with a wooden hammer and peg. The Spa at
Mandarin Oriental, New York, is offering shirobhyanga, a
20-minute head massage from India designed to reduce
tension and increase circulation. A "watsu" massage
pool, where shiatsu massage is performed in 37 C water,
is offered at the Loews' Sea Spa. Miraval in Catalina,
Ariz., is known for its spiritual approach to the spa
experience (its full trademarked name is Miraval, Life
in Balance). The spa's Restore Your Heart treatment has
two components - stone massage, in which heated black
basalt stones and cool white marble stones are applied
to the body; and a smudging ceremony, in which dried
herbs like sage and sweetgrass are burned. The fragrant
smoke is waved into corners with a feather. Guests are
also sent home with an abalone shell from the Sea of
Cortez, which the spa says will repel negativity, and a
third eye stone, a talisman of "clarity, vision and
self-power." Wyndham Hotels and Resorts has just
launched a boutique spa called Sasura, where clients can
take part in a sasura ritual described as a
"Japanese-inspired process of renewal," complete with a
gong, the scent of lotus blossoms, and a green-tea wrap.
The Sasura spas will also specialize in services for
travellers seeking short getaways or single treatments.
Sasura is "a balance of harmony and purity," said
spokeswoman Lorraine Park. "People are into the Asian
arts and things that are ritualistic." Local
Ingredients: "Spas are so mainstream now that local
ingredients and local products are being used to create
niches," said Kate Mearns, chairman of the International
Spa Association. The Cliff House Resort and Spa in
Ogunquit, Maine, puts organic Maine blueberries in its
body wraps and facial masks. At the Sanibel Harbour spa,
scrubs are made with pulverized seashells and sand,
while masks contain sea water, seaweed, sea salt and
algae. At the just-opened spa at Mohonk Mountain House
resort in New Paltz, N.Y., bath oil is made from a local
witch hazel plant bearing red flowers instead of the
usual yellow. Exfoliants contain Shawangunk grit, made
from local stone. "We're bringing elements of nature
into the spa with indigenous products," said spa
director Hollis Beckwith. -By Beth Hapaz
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