TOURS & CRUISES
SO you've skied in St. Moritz, danced until daybreak at carnival in Rio and shopped till you dropped in Tokyo's Ginza. Now you seek a real adventure.
Bespoke travel may be in your future.
Bespoke — a fancy way of saying custom or tailor-made or independent — is one of the fastest-growing segments of the travel industry, fueled by affluent, been-there-done-that travelers who wouldn't be caught dead on one of those board-the-buses tours.
They want to float down the Ganges during a tribute to an Indian river goddess, take an early-morning alms walk with Laotian monks or come face to face with cannibals on the island of New Guinea.
For a price — as little as $300 per person per day (excluding airfare, but some of these travelers have private jets) or as much as $300,000 for a two-week dream journey for a family — anything is possible.
"This has been an incredible growth area," says John Clifford, president of International Travel Management in San Diego (www.internationaltravelmanagement.com). "It's probably 95% of my business. These are mature, well-traveled clients who've done London, Paris, Tokyo, Sydney. There's this craving for something that is not as sterilized. They want to connect with people and culture and cuisine."
His typical clients include "affluent couples in the baby boomer generation, Gen X singles, affluent gay clients."
Typically, bespoke travel begins with extensive interviews to determine clients' interests and such details as whether they're early or late risers.
Catherine Heald, who lived seven years in Hong Kong, is chairman and chief executive of Remote Lands travel in Manhattan (www.remotelands.com), specializing in bespoke travel to Asia — journeys that are "completely tailor-made and very high-end. "You're not just lumped in with a bunch of people who just get shoved onto buses and herded around," she said. "Our clients have done Europe to death. They've done South America and now they want to get more exotic. They want the next frontier, which is Asia. Or they've been to Asia and done the basic places and now want the deeper experience," perhaps being guests at a wedding or spending time in locals' homes.
One client will be staying in a maharajah's palace in Darjeeling, India. Another hopes to go to Indonesia's Irian Jaya to meet the last known cannibals. "You have to trek for four days through deep, thick jungle to get to them," Heald says. "It's not like they're on e-mail. Our contacts in Indonesia are searching for them."
Clifford's clients seek intimate boutique hotels and "something new that a travel magazine hasn't written about. The 'Survivor' show has led people to become interested in faraway places like Truk [or] Palau." Another destination of interest is Upper Mongolia, where there's a luxury tent village.
Hylton Lea of Santa Monica, a vice president of RéVive skin care, and his partner, Danny Robinson, shun programmed trips. "That's not what we do," Lea says. "We walk." But they rely on Clifford to find boutique hotels and good restaurants, whether in Istanbul, Paris or Buenos Aires.
"The places he puts you in, they're not flashy," Lea says. "They're these really cool little gems," such as the Gaia in Costa Rica, where a hotel car picked them up at the airport and "the general manager was at the gate [of the hotel] to meet us."
India is a specialty of Indian-born Pallavi Shah, owner of Manhattan's Our Personal Guest (www.ourpersonalguest.com). One goal, she says, is for travelers to "really get under the skin of a country."
The agency has arranged for clients to take part in an evening religious ritual on the Ganges in which they float down the river in a small flower-laden boat and light candles to the river goddess. Others have mingled with monks in Laos.
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