New Year’s resolutions for 2024 travel

It’s the final week of 2023, and here’s the travel news: An island resort is eradicating mosquitoes, a bridge in Vietnam was designed for aesthetics instead of transportation, and people around the world are about to enjoy New Year’s traditions.

New Year’s travel resolutions

As we look ahead to 2024, it’s a great time to plan for the year to come.

Eating marzipan piglets. Wearing red underwear. Buying a new suitcase. No matter where you are in the world, every culture has its own special way of ringing in the new year and bringing in good luck for the months to come. Many of these international traditions involve eating a special food or meal, like soba noodles in Japan or grapes in Spain.

And when it comes to making 2024 travel plans, it’s not just about where to go – it’s about how.

In the year ahead, there are lots of ways to be a more responsible traveler as you explore the world. You can rely on train and bus travel when possible, or seek out an airline that uses alternative fuels. You can stay at hotels that have environmental certification and incorporate sustainable elements. And thanks to Dubai airline Emirates, you can buy high-end luggage made out of recycled airplane parts.

And while you’re making resolutions, our roundups of the most unfortunate airplane incidents and the worst-behaved tourists of 2023 offer plenty of hints about what not to do.

<strong>The perks:</strong> Besides just preventing guests from getting bitten, the absence of mosquitoes has helped some of the Maldives' natural birds, plants and insects to flourish.
<strong>More than traps: </strong>The Soneva has educated their staff on ways they can prevent mosquito breeding, like identifying and eliminating places with stagnant water.
<strong>Soneva Fushi:</strong> This luxurious Maldives resort is trying to take luxury to another level -- by eliminating mosquitoes.

Soneva Fushi: This luxurious Maldives resort is trying to take luxury to another level — by eliminating mosquitoes.Courtesy Soneva Fushi

<strong>The method:</strong> Soneva has partnered with the Germany-based company Biogents to developed mosquito traps like the one seen here.
<strong>Getting there:</strong> The property is located on private Kunfunadhoo Island.
<strong>The history:</strong> Soneva Fushi was founded by Sonu and Eva Shivdasani (hence the name) in 1995.
<strong>Building a dream:</strong> The couple put green initiatives on the forefront when they opened the property, and that goal continues today.
<strong>More than traps: </strong>The Soneva has educated its staff on ways they can prevent mosquito breeding, like identifying and eliminating places with stagnant water.
<strong>How it works:</strong> There are two kinds of traps -- one that attracts mosquitoes looking to lay eggs, and one that imitates the smell of human sweat to draw in the insects.
<strong>The perks:</strong> Besides just preventing guests from getting bitten, the absence of mosquitoes has helped some of the Maldives' natural birds, plants and insects to flourish.
<strong>More than traps: </strong>The Soneva has educated their staff on ways they can prevent mosquito breeding, like identifying and eliminating places with stagnant water.
<strong>Soneva Fushi:</strong> This luxurious Maldives resort is trying to take luxury to another level -- by eliminating mosquitoes.
<strong>The method:</strong> Soneva has partnered with the Germany-based company Biogents to developed mosquito traps like the one seen here.
Soneva Fushi mosquito eradication program

Bye bye bugs?

One upscale island resort is resolving that its visitors won’t spend their trip scratching away at mosquito bites.

Rather than relying on eradication programs that use chemicals, the Soneva Fushi resort in the Maldives is experimenting with special traps that attract the bugs by smelling like people. Even better? The reduction in mosquitoes is helping native plants and flowers to thrive.

Whether your 2024 travel plans involve a Maldivian island or not, our partners at CNN Underscored, a product reviews and recommendations guide owned by CNN, have rated and reviewed the best bug repellents on the market.

A tiled interior room at the Zeyrek Çinili Hammam

A tiled interior room at the Zeyrek Çinili HamamMurat Germen

Turkish delight

All over the Northern Hemisphere, the chill of winter has set in. One way to get warmer is to visualize being in a hot, steamy place – like a Turkish hamam, for example.

The famous Zeyrek Çinili Hamam, which has been serving Istanbul for nearly 500 years, recently reopened to the public. It is currently a museum and is set to restart operations as a hamam with separate men’s and women’s sections in March 2024.

Visitors can experience three different levels: a cold room, a dry seating area and the 50C (122F) steam-filled hararet, whose centerpiece is the “belly stone.” In the museum, an augmented reality display showcases the hamam’s original dazzling tiled appearance.

As writer Alice Barnes-Brown put it, Zeyrek Çinili Hamam https://itusiapalagi.com is “set to be the only place in the city where you can learn something new, have an AR experience, drink a cup of coffee, get undressed in public – and still feel relaxed when you come out.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*