All Recreation & Leisure Articles
  • Airlines unveil more affordable flights for fall

    Bambi Majumdar Travel, Hospitality & Event Management

    Fall deals seem to have made travel more fun and affordable for Americans. Budget airline Frontier Airlines recently made quite a wave in this regard. It announced up to 90 percent off flights as a part of its Labor Day campaign. Other airlines came up with deals, too, but none as impressive as Frontier’s for domestic flights. Under this promotion, one could get one-way flights for as little as $20 and round-trip tickets for around $40. These are remarkably inexpensive fares for domestic travel.

  • Travel2020: Top airport amenities fly beyond duty-free

    Lark Gould Travel, Hospitality & Event Management

    Think your airport is just a place to board planes? Think again. Airports, where the average traveler spends 137 minutes per trip lining up, sitting down, pacing, waiting … and waiting for their plane to start boarding, are now becoming destinations in their own right — hubs of shopping, stylish dining, entertainment, exercise, even pampering. According to Dolby & Holder consulting group, passengers are wasting 47 percent of this “dwell time,” resulting in some $6 billion in lost revenues for airports. Some airports are getting wise to ways of entertaining this captive audience.

  • 4 new attractions open in Times Square

    Dave G. Houser Travel, Hospitality & Event Management

    Often described as the "Crossroads of the World," New York City’s Times Square is one of the planet’s best-known and busiest pedestrian areas. But for decades, it was a seedy, crime-ridden space, most notable for its go-go bars, peep shows and adult theaters. A major cleanup of the neighborhood, led by Mayor Rudy Giuliani and a local business alliance, began turning things around in the mid-'90s. Just when the thought was that Times Square had it all, four major themed attractions have opened in this Midtown tourist mecca within the last year, vying for visitors’ attention with a variety of immersive and interactive experiences.

  • Can the US do ‘slow’ urban development?

    Lucy Wallwork Construction & Building Materials

    The Cittaslow ("Slow City") movement, launched by a group of small Italian towns in the late 1990s, professes to "do for urban planning what the Slow Food movement has done for agriculture." It calls for a slower form of city- and town-making based on values of environmental sustainability, craft, seasonality, and the revaluing of local history and heritage. As their manifesto states, the movement strives for "towns where men are still curious of the old times."

  • RV habits that transferred home

    Cindy Belt Recreation & Leisure

    We were full-time RVers for four years, along with part-timing it for several years. Life is a bit different when traveling full-time in an RV. Now that we’ve returned to a house, I have found some habits from RV life have continued. For example, in the RV, I had a foot of hanging space, two drawers, and a piece of carry-on luggage that stored my business clothes. I found that I didn’t need nearly as many pants, blouses, and other clothes as I had in the closet at the last house.

  • How to find a new, affordable place to hunt in Texas

    John McAdams Recreation & Leisure

    I think we can all agree that finding a quality place to hunt at a reasonable price in Texas can be a pretty challenging endeavor. Since upwards of 97 percent of land in the state is privately owned, there aren’t many public land hunting opportunities in Texas. So, if you or someone you’re close to is not a landowner, then you probably only have two choices: either hunt out of state or shell out some serious cash for a hunting lease or a guided hunt on private land. What if I told you there was another option, though?

  • Nothing — repeat nothing — is more important than safety when handling…

    Irwin Greenstein Recreation & Leisure

    Many shooters get so focused on making the shot that they lose track of what’s going on around them. Once that happens, it’s simply a matter of time until an accident happens with your shotgun. Ignoring or forgetting the safety basics are very easy to do. Shooters get complacent, overconfident or distracted. Eventually, every shooter at one time or another does something unsafe with a shotgun. The doctrine of shotgun safety prevents you from accidentally firing your gun — either through human or mechanical error. There are no shortcuts to safety, and the rules are never relaxed.

  • Travel2020: Dark tourism now a magnet for families

    Lark Gould Travel, Hospitality & Event Management

    Dark tourism, a term more recently associated with quirky destinations associated with death and dying thanks to a trendy Netflix series, is now becoming popular with an unlikely fan base: families. That’s because the term is taken for its more literal locution as a place where light is at its slightest and dark skies full of stars are at their brightest. Also known as "astrotourism," the concept is taking over in some spots, according to John Barentine, director of public policy for the International Dark-Sky Association.

  • 6 surprising fall foliage destinations

    Dave G. Houser Recreation & Leisure

    It’s a New England tradition as the weather cools and the leaves begin to change. Leaf peepers come out in droves to watch Mother Nature change her clothes. But the Northeast is far from the only region in the country to exhibit brilliant fall colors. Some places you might never associate with fall colors present dazzling foliage displays. Here are six of them.

  • Urban regeneration: The takeover of ‘cappuccino urbanism’

    Lucy Wallwork Construction & Building Materials

    Citizens of "regenerated" districts will find the sight of yet another boutique café opening up on their local main street familiar. But as the pavements in the "thriving" cities of the West fill up simultaneously with cappuccino vendors and a growing homeless population, the cognitive dissonance becomes hard to ignore. Some are starting to ask if what has become known as "cappuccino urbanism" papers over a shallow approach to urban regeneration and belies a crucial lack of imagination.