They are one of the biggest organizations for travelers and they give really good advise on places!
And I stumbled across this article!
Guess which country ranks 10? And Penang's "Keh Lok Si" where the facous pagoda stands is in the featured picture!!
Woo hoooo!!
Lonely Planet's Best in Travel 2014 - top 10 countries
These 10 countries are destined for an epic
year, whether they’re hosting festivals, cutting the ribbon on new
attractions or simply raising their game for travellers. Feast your eyes
on 2014's most unmissable destinations.
1. Brazil
All eyes on the pitch for 2014’s World Cup
As if endless strands of sun-toasted coast, mountains splashed with
Crayola-green rainforest and some of the planet’s most beautiful
colonial villages didn’t already add up to an unfair share of heaven, Brazil
goes and snags two of the most coveted sporting events in the world,
beginning with the 2014 FIFA World Cup and followed two years later by
the 2016 Summer Olympics. Tack on a recession-dodging economy, and boom!
Brazil is the belle of the ball.
Be it trekking across towering
windswept dunes peppered with cerulean lagoons in Lençóis Maranhenses,
exploring gilded colonial churches in frozen-in-time cities such as Ouro Preto or swimming in aquarium-like rivers near Bonito, Brazil’s diversity will leave you slack-jawed.
2. Antarctica
The adventure of a lifetimeTune into your average wildlife television program and you can’t fail to be dazzled by Antarctica’s majestic icebergs, calving glaciers and unexplored mountain ranges. Or you’ll watch its native penguin species frolic while avoiding fierce leopard seals and roaming pods of killer whales, as millions of seabirds spiral over the wild Southern Ocean. This year marks the centenary of the start of Ernest Shackleton’s infamous attempted Antarctic crossing. Visiting this pristine continent (which doesn’t have an indigenous population and is not actually a country) in 2014 is a chance to take life on and follow in the path of other intrepid explorers – but with cushier amenities.
3. Scotland
An eventful yearTo coincide with Glasgow hosting the XX Commonwealth Games in the summer of 2014, the city has had a multi-million-pound facelift: new sports venues, improved transport links and a regeneration of Glasgow Harbour. It is also the Year of Homecoming, a government initiative to welcome the Scottish diaspora back to the mother country by celebrating Scotland’s heritage, food and drink.
The phrase ‘there’s something for everyone’ applies: Europe’s biggest brass band festival blasts Perthshire, an orienteering contest around Scottish castles, the Spirit of Speyside Whisky Festival in May... Despite all this, politics will take centre stage: to be or not to be independent, that is the question. Hold onto your hats, Scotland.
4. Sweden
Food, culture and scary storiesThanks to the late Swedish author Stieg Larsson, most people have a sense of what Sweden’s like, even in the far north – cold, beautiful and a bit scary. Sweden is emerging with a new pop-culture persona. Perhaps not coincidentally, northern Sweden’s largest city, Umeå, is the European Capital of Culture for 2014. Then there’s the food. The capital has long been a stylish, top-notch destination for serious gourmands and boldly experimental chefs but lately the reputation and influence of Swedish cooking have spread beyond the country’s borders. Considering that Swedish cuisine is so strongly tied to locally sourced ingredients (be it seafood, game, berries, herbs or regional cheeses), it makes perfect sense to go to the source of all this fine food.
5. Malawi
The Big Five and beach life without the crowdsPicture this: mere hours after touching down in Malawi’s second-largest city, Blantyre, you check into superluxe digs (or pitch your tent) at the Majete Wildlife Reserve, which only 10 years ago lay decimated by poaching, but last year gained Big Five status thanks to a wildlife relocation project. You get up close to the aforementioned elephant, rhino, lion, leopard and buffalo without the pesky 4WD scrum so common in Africa’s best-known parks. Then perhaps it’s off to Lake Malawi for a spot of high-visibility snorkelling, or Mt Mulanje for a hike over hazy peaks in an otherworldly moonscape. And there’s always the Viphya Plateau, a haunting wilderness of grasslands and whaleback hills that feels downright prehistoric.
6. Mexico
The sleeping giant is waking7. Seychelles
Paradise within reach
These 115 divine islands strewn across the peacock-blue Indian Ocean
have all the key ingredients for a once-in-a-lifetime holiday, but their
reputation as a millionaire’s playground may have kept you away. Good
news: on top of exclusive island hideaways and elegant eco-villas, you
can benefit from the wallet-friendlier B&Bs, picturesque Creole
guesthouses and self-catering apartments that have sprung up over the
past decade. And if expensive air tickets deterred you from visiting,
rejoice! Increased competition has dramatically changed the situation
over the past few years. And there’s much more to do than sipping
cocktails on the beach. Hiking, diving, snorkelling, boat tours and
other adventure options are all readily available, with the added appeal
of grandiose scenery. Wildlife lovers will get a buzz too – the Seychelles is not dubbed ‘The Galápagos of the Indian Ocean’ for nothing.
8. Belgium
High emotions in Europe's underrated gemBelgium has picturesque cities – Bruges, Antwerp, Ghent – and in Brussels a walkable capital with great museums. The food and drink is a gustatory blast (think the world’s best beer, chocolate and chips), the countryside flat and placid, the seaside surprisingly chic, while cultural treasures range from medieval masters to Tintin. Yet the words ‘Belgium’ and ‘holiday’ don’t usually mix. From 2014, a huge influx of visitors is expected due to the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of WWI – a festival of remembrance lasting until 2018 – which may change preconceptions. Belgo-newbies will find medieval towns where culture and gastronomy meet, with Gothic buildings, paintings by Breugel, Van Eyck and Magritte, canals and cool shops. And they’ll discover mellow meadows, where cows moo beside monuments, and battlefields and cemeteries that testify to the horrors of a war now shifting from living memory.
9. Macedonia
Back to the future, Balkan-style10. Malaysia
A revitalised Malaysia goes back to businessWith its sights set on 28 million visitors to the country, Malaysia is rolling out an array of new attractions. The headline-grabbers are the largest bird park in Southeast Asia in Melaka (with 6000 birds featuring 400 species), and Legoland Malaysia and Hello Kitty Land in Nusajaya, which are packing in both locals and Singaporeans flocking across the causeway. The new second terminal at Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA2), catering mainly to the booming budget airline sector, is another major factor in attracting more visitors. Competitive fares offered by Malaysia Airlines, AirAsia, Firefly and new operator Malindo Air make getting around this widely spread-out country a cinch. Further afield, weekly direct links are now scheduled to destinations as diverse as Istanbul and Pyongyang. Amazing experiences await in Malaysian Borneo, from exploring off-the-beaten- track Kudat to indulging at the luxurious Gaya Island Resort on Pulau Gaya. And active travellers can discover the country on two wheels as cycle tourism takes off with guided tours in Sabah, a proposal to build a bike path around the coast of Penang, and a community project to map out cycle routes around Kuala Lumpur.
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