Rock Climbing
Palm Springs Korakia Boutique Hotel – Something to Crow About
Author: Lena Hunt Mabra
Palm Springs Korakia Boutique Hotel – Something to Crow About
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Palm Springs is home to a world famous collection of modern architecture,
immaculate golf courses, gated communities, a bustling night life, trendy
shopping, and a brand new casino. However, Palm Springs also has a very eclectic
side which stems from its rich history. There was a time when this sun-drenched
desert valley was a cultural center for artists, musicians, dancers, and the
literati.
In spite of all the new resorts, the old Palm Springs is
making a new comeback. Guests are choosing smaller, more intimate hotels,
allowing them to live the destination instead of just visiting. They enjoy the
other side of Palm Springs, the side set to a beat of chamber music and a time
when writers and artists traded their works in the Bohemian manner.
Like
generations before us, people from around the globe flock to this desert oasis
to retreat. Perhaps we withdraw to escape the routine and stress of everyday
life. Maybe it’s to gain renewal through creativity, meditation, study, getting
back to nature, or just to chill and have a good time.
To escape means to
step into another pattern, a different time, and an unknown world. If this is
the side of Palm Springs that you want to experience, then I have the perfect
hotel for your great escape!
To get to it, you have to take a back
street, just a short walk from the main strip of restaurants and shops, but far
enough away that you are tucked into the shadow of the San Jacinto mountain peak
where you can hike trails that leading into the alp.
I appear at the
Korakia Pensione after one adventurous week of rock climbing and slumbering in a
pitched tent on the desert floor. Blackened from the sun and soil of my last
climb before the trip into town with beaten and dismantled luggage surrounding
my dusty feet, I can only envision the thoughts that flash through the minds of
the hotel staff as they greet me. I am quite a sight! However, their hospitality
is as warm as the heat of Palm Springs and owner Douglas Smith compliments my
tan.
Examining the lobby I suddenly realize that Korakia is unlike any
place I had ever abode before. I am whisked away to another country, a place
that can only be reached by crossing several oceans. There are soaring beamed
ceilings, white washed stone walls, rounded corners, and furnishings from all
over the globe, including an Italian sideboard and a chest and chairs from
Afghanistan. The staff wears simple, white linen clothing like Greek summer
attire.
What continent am I on? I ask myself as they check me in with
pen and paper. There is no computerized check-in process here. Messages are
individually delivered to the villas, bungalows, and guest houses. There is no
state-of-the art anything. No television. No email checking. No alarm clock in
the room. However, you can watch movies outside near the candle-lit pool and
outdoor fireplaces.
Relish the European tradition of nightly bed
turndowns with a chocolate treat and fresh flowers on your linens. Savor a
homemade breakfast with freshly squeezed juice from the ornamental citrus trees
growing right outside your room. Refresh from the desert sun in the cool
waterfalls of the stone fountain. Allow Korakia’s therapist Michael and Patty to
treat you to soothing massage modalities: couples massage, zen shiatzu,
reflexology, the Energy Works, or The Korakia Combination. Let time stand still
as you engage in conversation or relax in seclusion until the sun kisses the
mountains.
The key-hole grand entrance to the lobby houses huge,
intricately-detailed wooden French doors left open to unify the indoors with the
outdoors. A warm, citrus breeze drifts in from the front courtyard and demands
my attention to look up and examine the stone paved courtyard and the exotic
central fountain.
French doors on the opposite side are also left wide
open, framing a custom-designed mosaic pool (with a crow at the bottom of the
pool!). Fallen bougainvillaea petals surround the trees. Everything in me - the
writer, the dreamer, the artist, the photographer, the explorer, the individual
- sensorizes. Famous celebrities, renowned photographers, leading publications,
supermodels, and designers travel to this Mediterranean-but-in-the-U.S.A.
location for inspiration, too! Nothing is set up, staged, or propped. Everywhere
I turn is a perfect photo op or artist’s lookout point. Mix in Moroccan music,
heavily-spiced tea, and pine nuts for a transporting exprience!
The
Korakia comprises two historic villas. Scottish painter Gordon Coutts built the
original Moroccan villa and screen star J. Carroll Nash owned the Mediterranean
villa. Both villas were lovingly and tediously renovated by owner and leading
California architectural preservationist, Douglas Smith. Local handymen, not
master carpenters and landscape architects create the dream. His style of design
is more of an “un-design”, creating an atmosphere of originality. “Successful
design means that I was never here,” says Douglas.
Lovely and polite
General Manager Flor Schechtel invites me to stay in The Library, once the
unofficial cultural center of Palm Springs. How appropriate, putting a writer in
The Library; the perfect little extra touch.
Ignoring the need to wash
the traces of the rock climbing trip off my face, I plop into the luxurious,
exotic poster bed. The high wood beam ceiling draws my eyes upward but the
shelves of books draw them to the side.
I am sitting where THE artist
Gordon Coutts displayed and sold his paintings; surrounding me are rare and
first edition books from around the world. My mind was screaming! I could
vividly picture the artists and writers in their literary discussions and after
their time together, taking home a souvenir landscape painting. Even Winston
Churchill stayed here.
A few more I-cannot-believe-this minutes before I
open the French doors and kerplunk back into the fluffy feather bed with
exquisite linens, imprinted with the Korakia insignia. Every single piece and
design is a historical work of art. The high wood beam ceiling, Persian rug,
chairs from Afghanistan, vases from Greece, a pillow from Macedonia . . . my
eyes follow everything and then drift out on to the glorious private patio. It
is all so Moroccan, so perfect.
Then I touch all that I see. My fingers
follow the cool, smooth arches of the room. No acute angles anywhere. I move my
index finger over the signature in the books and smell their leather covers. I
sense the age of the manuscripts, the originality of the artwork, the history of
the place.
To read this entire feature FREE with photos cut and paste
this link:
http://www.jetsettersmagazine.com/archive/jetezine/hotels/calif/psprings/korakia/korakia.html
Lena Hunt Mabra, Jetsetters Magazine Editor – Read Jetsetters Magazine at
www.jetsettersmagazine.com To book travel visit Jetstreams.com at
www.jetstreams.com and for Beach Resorts visit Beach Booker at
www.beachbooker.com
About the Author
Lena Hunt
Mabra, Jetsetters Magazine Correspondent. Join the Travel Writers
Network in the logo at www.jetsettersmagazine.com
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