The 4 top "best-of travel" lists for the week

By Budget Travel
October 3, 2012
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Inspiration

This weekend: Stop traffic in Park City, Utah

Dining al fresco on a warm summer evening is a real treat—especially when you're dining in the middle of Main Street. The second annual Savor the Summit event in Park City, Utah, will shut down traffic along Main on Friday night, making way for The Grande Table. More than 20 restaurants will serve special menus. Free live music will play in seven spots. Last year, about 600 people participated. While in Park City, take advantage of free gallery events and street dancing—with bands like New Voodoo Swing scheduled to play, you know there will be impromptu dancing—plus, there's a beer, wine, and cocktail tent open to the public with drinks for purchase. Reservations are still available at a few of the restaurants. The forecast? Sunny and 70 degrees Fahrenheit. Call 435/565-3812 for more information.

Inspiration

Better than Stonehenge?

Today is the start of our series of interviews with the world's top guidebook writers. We're asking each writer a single question: "Think about a famous tourist attraction. Now what would you recommend as an alternative? With any luck, each answer will surprise and enlighten you. But don't get us wrong. These guidebook writers (and their publishers) are not dismissing any attraction that's rightfully famous. Everyone agrees you can have fantastic experiences at well known attractions. All we're trying to do here is recognize that—under some circumstances and for certain types of travelers—lesser known attractions may have their own appeal, offering comparable experiences. We begin our series with Stonehenge—a set of massive rocks arranged in circles between 3,500 and 5,000 years ago. We asked Anto Howard, co-author of Fodor's Ireland 2009. Here's what he had to say: Newgrange in Ireland (about an hour north of Dublin) is believed to be at least 500 years older. It's also a more impressive feat of engineering. The passage tomb is combined with an extraordinary astronomical machine to perfectly filter and amplify the few precious moments of dawn light on the winter solstice every year and cast them upon the ashes of the dead. The sunlight at dawn on that day is deflected by the exact design of the passageway and floods the burial chamber in the most perfect golden light, weather permitting. Here's the kicker—unlike at Stonehenge, where officials prohibit up-close encounters (with rare exceptions), at Newgrange you, the visitor, can go right into the heart of the tomb itself. At Stonehenge you're an awed spectator, at Newgrange you're an awed participant. Both places are man made, but the Irish alternative is certainly a more intricate and complex construction. Tip: Go near the winter solstice to feel the mystical effects. (The next one is December 21.) There are fewer visitors in the off-season. If you want to enter on the solstice itself, though, you'll have to enter a lottery, which you can do by visiting the office that's on the grounds of the site. For more info, see Newgrange's official website. Prefer an alternative to Stonehenge that's in England itself? Don't miss Avebury, about 25 miles from Stonehenge. It has its own group of impressive earthworks and megalithic monuments. In fact, the entire town—pub and all—sits within an ancient stone circle. Rather visit Stonehenge anyway? A guided day tour from London run by Stonehenge Tour Company has a starting price of $110. You'll save a bit of money by hopping the hourly rail service from Waterloo Station to Salisbury (90-minutes each way, $45 round-trip, off-peak, nationalrail.co.uk). From there, a 10-mile taxi ride to Stonehenge costs roughly $30; the bus (route 3) is about a third of that price. General access costs about $10. (For more info, visit this Stonehenge website.) Feel free to chime in with your own thoughts by posting a comment below. MORE FROM BUDGET TRAVEL Better than Buckingham Palace? [Link added to this post on June 18] Advice on seeing Dublin on the fly this summer Dublin, Air/4 Nights, From $399 A short getaway to the Irish capital, where you can visit ancient castles and St. Patrick's Cathedral, sample Guinness, or explore the lush countryside.

Deal alert: If it's Tuesday, this must be a hotel deal

Discount hotel promotions can arise any day, any hour. But hotel specials particularly pop up during the midweek malaise. Then, before you know it, the discounts disappear again. Here's how to make sure you won't miss out. Every Tuesday, Hotels.com hosts a 24-hour sale with rates that can be up to 40 percent lower than normal at properties all over the world, including New York City and Orlando. You don't have to actually stay over in the hotel on a Tuesday; it's just the only day you can book and get the hefty discount. Tuesday is also the big discount day for last-minute bookings with All Seasons Hotels, a solid brand affiliated with hotel giant Accor. When you book on a Tuesday with All Seasons, you can get two nights for the price of one for the upcoming weekend. A hotel in Orleans, France, for example, that was normally $85 per night is suddenly yours for Friday and Saturday night at that rate. FYI, All Seasons has more than 30 hotels—most in Europe, with a particularly big presence in France. Hump Day, meanwhile, is when Sol Melia Hotels announces Wednesday Web Weekend specials—deals for the upcoming weekend. A recent example: the four-star Tryp Diana hotel, at the airport in Madrid, Spain, was under $80 a night. Unfamiliar with these brands? Check out these and others in our story on 39 affordable hotel chains only locals know about. ALSO Three Affordable Mini Chains With rates as low as $36, these flashy new European hotels take the convenience of the pod concept and expand it with style.