Reconnect With the World: How
to Travel With Intention

A stay in Costa Rica is a feast for the senses: sounds of ocean waves rolling in and out and animals rustling through the tropical dry forest, cool water hitting your skin as you swim beneath a thundering waterfall, the scent of the salty breeze. Tucked between two unspoiled beaches on the verdant north Pacific coast, Four Seasons Resort Peninsula Papagayo, Costa Rica is surrounded by rugged yet tranquil natural beauty that eases into your psyche, connecting you to this lush paradise. Our senses feed our brain information about the world around us, but if we let them, they can tell us much more.

“Your body is always speaking to you,” says Georgina Miranda, social entrepreneur, coach, activist and mountaineer athlete. “The question is, are you going to listen to it?” She recently explored this question during a visit to Costa Rica with Patrick Janelle – the creative director and world traveller behind A Guy Named Patrick – to record a podcast on personal experiences and perspective on exploring the world through our senses.

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For Miranda, who is also an energy practitioner and yogi, tapping into her senses and using them to keep her attention on the present moment is a big part of her mindfulness practice and of the way she moves through the world. In 2008, she set out to accomplish the Explorer’s Grand Slam – climbing the highest peak on each continent and skiing the last degree to the North and South poles – to raise funds for two non-profits combating gender-based violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Only 15 women in the world have ever completed the challenge, and Miranda is well on her way to adding her name to that list.

She has six of the Grand Slam summits done, including Mount Everest, and 10-plus years of far-flung adventures under her belt. And as she meets the challenges one by one, she’s seeing the world – and her place in it – in a new light. “There’s a moment when travelling that you realize you will never be the same because of what you’ve experienced,” Miranda says. “You have felt, touched, tasted and been immersed in a new reality, and so now your own reality is different. I felt this when I reached the top of Everest, and I felt it eating my first gelato when I was 21 years old and in Rome.”


Feeling is Believing

As she forges deeper connections to the destinations she visits and the people she meets, Miranda has a new-found appreciation for the life-changing benefits of travel. “It’s been in the recent years that [I realized] my travelling has changed so much. I no longer want to see the world – I want to feel the world,” she says. “And that really shapes how I travel.”

Explore Costa Rica with Four Seasons

For most of us, the seeing part of travel is easy enough. But how does one actually go about feeling the world? “It’s utilizing all of your senses, but then also the energy of a space,” Miranda says.

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It’s one thing to read about the biodiversity that exists on an island like Costa Rica and research the birds you’ll see, the animals you’ll encounter or even the average size of the swells you’ll surf. But it’s not until you’re walking among the towering trees on the Trail of Giants, looking up to see monkeys jump from branch to branch, or you’re sitting beneath a twinkling canopy of stars and sipping a Cabernet Sauvignon aged with a real meteor, that your recognition of the experience transforms it into something you understand not just with your mind and your senses, but with your entire being.

“My travels have helped me feel more connected and in touch with humanity and the earth,” Miranda says. “Time with pristine nature – no matter where I am in the world – and learning about new people is a gift. It offers a sense of renewal in my soul unlike anything else. It’s like coming home to a part of myself that was forgotten.”

The Power of the Present

Even if you don’t practice mindfulness, tapping into the feel and energy of the destination you’re in is something every traveller typically aims for. “I think one thing [you can do] is to just be fully present,” says Miranda, who is an energy practitioner and yogi. “If you’re travelling long distances, you get to a place and you might be so caught up in the excitement of the list of things you want to go see and do that you don’t give yourself the opportunity to actually just arrive and really be there.”

She suggests giving yourself 20 to 30 minutes upon arrival to be present in the moment. Don’t have anywhere to go or anything to do except observe. “It’s this art of being versus doing,” Miranda says. “And I think Western culture really encourages us to constantly be doing, but you miss out on so much magic.”

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If you are having a hard time switching gears and tapping into the present, head to the Resort’s Spa. A yoga session, spa treatment or meditation class can help you find balance and set your intention for your stay. The Resort’s Wellness Concierge is on hand to design a custom plan with you to help your best self emerge – centring your breath, body and mind for balance in your life.

Explore the world with Four Seasons

Stepping out into nature, even for a few moments, can also do wonders: Float in the clear blue waters surrounding the Resort, dive under the waves on a snorkelling adventure, or set off with the Resort’s in-house adventure outfitter, Papagayo Explorers, for a guided trek to help you discover the peninsula through experiences with purpose.

“If you’re open enough, you can let a lot of wonderful things come into your life when you travel,” says Miranda. “It snaps you out of autopilot and it gives you the opportunity to wake up to yourself again.”

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Stepping Into the Flow

When we can live with intention and travel with intention, it’s all the easier to experience that magic that Miranda talks about. We can choose a purpose for a trip – to get a break from work, recharge or strengthen bonds with loved ones – but she cautions travellers not to get too caught up in ticking boxes and checking off items on to-do lists.

“I think every experience can be abundant. And somehow, you’re limiting that abundance with a list,” she says. She knows first-hand the feeling of disappointment that comes with not being able to do every single thing she had planned for a trip, and how it can get in the way of focusing on the beautiful things she did do and the people she connected with along the way.

The unofficial motto you’ll hear almost everywhere you go in Costa Rica is “pura vida.” The literal translation into English is “pure life,” but in reality it’s much more than that. It’s an attitude, a way to approach life that says “it’s all good,” both when things are going your way and when they’re not – especially then. It’s an outlook that perfectly lends itself to staying present and being open to new connections and discoveries – and the benefits that life has to offer right here, right now.

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Having travelled so much over the years, Miranda has a motto, too. “It came to me around 25, I think, and it’s really shaped everything,” she says. “The extraordinary is always possible. Never limit yourself or life’s potential.” And the extraordinary, she notes, is not someone else’s extraordinary. It’s yours. It’s whatever that means to you.

Whether you’re climbing real mountains or figurative ones, the world is filled with endless possibilities for connection. Stay present and you’ll feel it.

RECONNECT THROUGH LIFE-CHANGING TRAVEL

Your journey begins here

Hotel on beach

Unforgettable Connections:
My Journey by Four Seasons Private Jet

Watching other people’s camera-ready lifestyles play out online can be exhausting. It’s enough to induce a major inferiority complex in the best of us.

So, when I had the opportunity to go on the trip of a lifetime with my family aboard the Four Seasons Private Jet, naturally, my first thought was: What should I wear? Would I need to pack my red-soled stilettos to fit in, though I knew I’d be hiking through rainforests and swimming with sharks?

Instead, I chose sensible sneakers, and prepared to explore – following the real influencers of the world, introduced to us by Four Seasons: home-grown artists, musicians, chefs, local guides, even animals who would change the way I thought about a destination or about myself.

The Jet’s incredible design made me think of the ultra-rare Jaguar XJ13.

My first stop was Miami, home of the Wynwood Walls art project, South Beach and the best Cubano sandwiches outside of Cuba. My companions and I spent our first night sipping mojitos at Four Seasons Hotel Miami and swaying to the sounds of Joe Donato’s jazz band at Ball & Chain, a historic venue that once hosted icons like Count Basie, Billie Holiday and Chet Baker.

At this stop on our Four Seasons–curated tour, Donato welcomed us personally into his corner of the world, where the club sits in the heart of Little Havana, across the street from Domino Park and near the world-famous Tower Theatre – three of Miami’s “grand traditions,” as he put it.

You won’t find this 70-something-year-old saxophonist on social media, but if you stroll through this neighbourhood on any given Friday night, you may just hear a few notes from his woodwind.

Experiencing jazz in Miami was unlike hearing it in any other city I’ve visited that’s known for the genre. Each destination has its own musical dialect; here, the sounds are often salsa- or rhumba-inflected. As a music lover, listening to Donato and his fellow artists in the open-air club on this warm Miami night inspired me – you can bet I’ll be dropping into more live music clubs throughout the world. You never know what sounds might help shape your visit and contextualize the cultural background of the place you’re visiting.

Four Seasons Hotel Miami

After Miami, we stepped aboard the Private Jet – its incredible design made me think of the ultra-rare Jaguar XJ13 crossed with the sleek, future-forward sophistication of a Tesla – and headed to Four Seasons Resort Costa Rica at Peninsula Papagayo, where monkeys, geckos and tropical birds eyed my rum-based digestif, and whales frolicked by the shore.

On a catamaran sail through the Gulf of Papagayo, I chatted with Isabel Algaze Gonzalez, the Private Jet’s Harvard-educated doctor. When she was a child in Puerto Rico, she told me, her father would read her magazine stories about far-off expeditions.

Shaped by those stories, today she discovers new parts of the world through her research in hyperbaric and avalanche medicine, as part of relief efforts, and on expeditions including work at Everest base camps.

She hopes that her work might influence young girls from similar backgrounds to see that this type of career and way of exploring the world isn’t farfetched.

I was humbled by her story and all she has accomplished, and moved that she shared it with me. Meeting her reminded me why I chose a career in journalism, in part to highlight women around the world who are transcending traditional boundaries and pushing their limits in work and life – and it reminded me, whenever I can, to be such a woman myself.

Four Seasons Private Residences Costa Rica at Peninsula Papagayo

Back on the Private Jet, the onboard chef and his crew were busy serving up canapes inspired by and created from Colombian ingredients.

Later in our journey, when we arrived in Colombia and entered Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina Bogotá, my husband and I immediately took a seat at Castanyoles, where mixologist Carlos Igor Woyno Rodriguez concocted drinks for us from local fruits and regional spirits, including Brazilian Cachaça and rums from across the southern continent. Talking about his love of uniquely Latin American flavours led to him sharing stories of his youth in South America and his move to Canada. Now, back in Colombia, he is passionate about encouraging tourism – I now want to see (and taste) every place he described to us – and about being part of his country’s next era.

With those palate-enriching memories still lingering, we were back on the Private Jet, where the onboard chef and his crew were busy serving up canapes inspired by and created from Colombian ingredients.

Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina Bogota

After landing, we boarded the private cruise ship Silversea Silver Galápagos to sail through the natural wonders of the Galápagos Islands. We watched vibrant flamingos feeding their young in salty lagoons, blue-footed boobies – the iconic marine birds found only on these islands – relaxing on white-sand beaches, and dolphins circling us as if to say hello.

For a landlocked, prairie-raised girl like myself, the opportunity to swim with sea lions and sharks was a particularly emotional experience. Ernesto Vaca Norero, one of our resident naturalist guides, understood completely; he has been transfixed by the region and is now studying law in an effort to ensure the Galápagos remains protected. He and his fellow guides entirely changed my concept of the ocean and rid me of my fear of open water and the life beneath its surface. On our first trip out into the blue, Ernesto and the team swam with me, basically “hand-holding” me through the water as we navigated among trigger fish, sharks and sea lions. The sea lions reminded me so much of Labrador retrievers, playfully teasing me with their underwater agility, beckoning me to venture more fully into their beautiful ecosystem.

Moved to tears by the experience, I thanked our guides. “It never gets old for us,” they said. And now, I expect it never will for me.

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Some travel influencers online might define “perfection” on a purely surface level – but at its heart, the honour and pleasure of travel with this type of rare access lie in the deep and transformative connections you make, with people, with art, with music, with food, even with whole ecosystems. Because when you’re sitting in a bar in Bogotá drinking up conversation with locals, or watching in awe as sea lions whirl beside you in the ocean, all that matters is soaking up those moments and allowing them to change your life for the better.

Coming in 2021: even more opportunities to connect with the world on our new custom-outfitted Airbus 321 Neo. On our new Four Seasons Private Jet, sit back in one of only 48 custom-designed and handcrafted seats, and get to know fellow guests as well as our chefs, mixologists and other experts in a standing social area. 

YOUR JOURNEY BEGINS HERE

How do you want to explore the world?

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Reconnect With the World: How Travel
Can Free Your Creativity

When you sit down for a tea ceremony at Four Seasons Hotel Kyoto, you’re bound to hear the Japanese saying ichi-go ichi-e (literally, “one time, one meeting”). It’s a gentle reminder that every single moment – no matter how small – is a unique opportunity, never to be repeated.

For photographer and creative director Dave Krugman, noticing and capturing those moments, like his bamboo forest image above, is a way of life.

 


“One of the reasons I love to make photographs is because I find memory to be a very fleeting thing,” says Krugman. “For me, a photograph is a stimulus for a cascade of memories. And every time I look at a photo I’ve taken, it takes me back to that moment and the feelings I was having and the people I met and the environment I was in. That’s why photography is such an important part of my life.”

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In Kyoto, Four Seasons helped introduce Krugman to a variety of new people, environments and experiences: A Hotel guide led him on a tour of a 1,000-year-old bamboo forest, and the Concierge arranged a visit to a local lantern workshop, where artisan lantern masters taught him how to carefully layer thin sheets of paper over a frame to build his own mini lantern. Krugman also sat down at Four Seasons Hotel Kyoto with Poppy Jamie – an author, entrepreneur, and founder of mindfulness app Happy Not Perfect – to record a podcast sharing more about his personal journey and perspective on how travel is essential to a creative life.

“I’ve learned that everything we look at, there’s a craftsman behind it,” he said.

Known for his moody yet vibrant cityscapes and street photography, Krugman cites travel as one of the biggest influences on not only his art, but on his relationship with the world around him. “There is nothing more inspiring and invigorating than travel,” he says. “It always shows me that the world is so much larger than we imagine, so much more diverse. Witnessing this complexity and the vastness of the world is a humbling feeling, and it inspires me. Photography allows me to connect more deeply with all I see and all I experience.”

In Kyoto – and when travelling with Four Seasons – the opportunities for connection are seemingly endless.

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Discover experiences that bring history to life

With ancient architectural masterpieces around every corner, family-owned shops selling handmade creations that have been made the same way for centuries, and a culinary scene featuring everything from Michelin-starred restaurants to chic craft cocktail bars and unassuming noodle joints serving up delightfully slurpable bowls of ramen, Kyoto is a city of artisans.

Explore Kyoto with Four Seasons

“I love the attention to detail in Japan,” Krugman says. “I feel like everything has its place and its ritual and its reason. As somebody who is such a visual person, it’s a real treat to experience that.”

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The atmosphere at Four Seasons Hotel Kyoto is no different. Set around the 800-year-old Shakusui-en pond garden – itself immortalized in a 12th-century epic poem – every setting is created with care and intention. There is beauty and meaning in everything. All you have to do is be willing to connect with it.

“Being a photographer and traveller has absolutely shifted my perspective,” Krugman says. “If I’m in a place I’ve never been before, every single thing I see provides an incredible education about the area I’m in.”

Try activities outside your comfort zone

After travelling the world twice over, Krugman can attest to one of the most essential components of a successful trip, no matter the destination: Keeping an open mind.

“I try to leave a lot of breathing room for spontaneity and serendipity, because my favourite moments are when something happens, the path kind of diverges, and I’m exposed to this thing that I couldn’t have planned even if I wanted to,” he says.

This doesn’t just apply to travel, but to the creative process – and to some of the most worthwhile experiences. “The best experiences in my life have been things that are just outside my comfort zone,” says Krugman.

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In Kyoto, that could mean immersing yourself in the world of geiko and maiko – kimono-clad entertainers who perform traditional song and dance – at an ozashiki asobi dinner in the Gion geisha district. Learn the art of Zen meditation from the deputy head monk of Shoden-Eigen-in. Or head to Kibune train station for a walk along the river, passing crimson torii gates and fragrant cedar trees on your way to Kurama Temple for a traditional onsen bath. Being open to adventure can help you discover the city’s secrets.

Explore the world with Four Seasons

“My travel philosophy is to go into every situation with an open mind and a big smile,” Krugman says. “That attitude can open up so many doors for you.”

Uncover a new perspective on everyday life

For Krugman and for many of us, travel is much more than just a vacation. It offers a chance to connect with the world around us and discover new ways of doing things. Simply being somewhere new invites us to look at things differently, even something we do all the time – like sipping tea.

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Discover centuries of tradition and spiritual beauty at a Tea Master Ceremony in the Hotel’s Shakusui-tei – the intimate Tea Ceremony Room. A local tea master will teach you the history of the brew and the Japanese rituals for steeping, pouring and savouring the perfect cup – a flavourful taste of local customs.

“There is no better education than travel, because you’re exposed to so many new ideas, ideas you never even knew existed,” Krugman says. “And when you can incorporate that into your day-to-day life, you just grow with every new experience.”

RECONNECT THROUGH LIFE-CHANGING TRAVEL

Your journey begins here

Kyoto lanterns

Making Waves: Inside Four Seasons
Pop Down Miami

Every December, the art world congregates in South Florida for two jam-packed weeks of cultural and aesthetic indulgence, during which a veritable Who’s Who roster takes over Miami. On December 7, many of them could be found onboard the 300-foot (95-metre) superyacht KISMET for the third Four Seasons Pop Down, the event concept specifically designed to offer guests an immersive brand experience beyond the walls of hotels and resorts. Sixteen Four Seasons mixologists and chefs hand-selected from around the globe ensured that those in attendance were well-cared-for, while Questlove, ensconced in a second-floor DJ booth, provided the soundtrack.

Transportive Sips

Exquisitely crafted cocktails and culinary delights are a Four Seasons hallmark, and Pop Down Miami was no exception. Wherever you went on the seven-storey KISMET (the personal vessel of Four Seasons Hotel Toronto owner Shahid Khan), offerings abounded. And their credentials were impeccable: Participants for each Pop Down are selected out of more than 100 submissions from across the Four Seasons global portfolio. A few of the evening’s master mixologists included Fatima León of
Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City, Keith Motsi of Four Seasons Hotel Beijing and Ashish Sharma of Four Seasons Hotel Kuala Lumpur.

The colours, the people and the cocktails were inspiring for me. – Fatima León

León shook up the complex and tropical Surrealismo, a crowd-pleaser made with tequila, guava and cotton candy, topped with a butterfly confection. “The experience of being in Miami for Pop Down was amazing,” León says. “The colours, the people and the cocktails were inspiring for me” – so much so that she’ll be revamping the menu at her own Fifty Mils bar, and adding her creation, next year.

Michelin-Starred Eats

Michelin-starred chefs Daniel Boulud, of Café Boulud and d|bar at Four Seasons Hotel Toronto, and Mauro Colagreco of the newly reimagined Four Seasons Resort Palm Beach showcased their mutual talents in the form of caviar, crab and lobster gelée; egg cups stuffed with truffle, mushroom and foie gras bavarois; and a warm mushroom tart with Parmesan and black truffles. Speaking of Florie’s, his new post just up the coast in Palm Beach, Colagreco compared it to Mirazur, his lauded oceanfront restaurant in Menton, France. “It’s an amazing project, a very beautiful oceanfront resort, so there’s lots in common,” he says. “We have a pizza oven, a tandoori, a yakitori – many methods of cooking with fire.”

Artful Immersion

On KISMET’s lower deck – also known as the spa level, complete with barbershop, sauna, pedicure station and hair salon – the sensorial experience continued as guests, surrounded by citrus trees, were invited to create customized perfumes from French fragrance house Atelier Cologne. Also on board: two-storey video walls displaying time-lapse images of the artistic process of Spanish artist Ignasi Monreal, whose digital paintings are featured in
Four Seasons: The Art of Hospitality, a new coffee-table book from Assouline.

And that wasn’t the only artwork on view. At Island Gardens Marina, where the superyacht was docked for the occasion, attendees were greeted by Glass Horizon, the latest Skynet installation from artist Patrick Shearn and studio Poetic Kinetics. The sculpture, 35 feet (11 metres) high, was constructed using rope, monofilament net and approximately 67,000 holographic Mylar streamers, spanning 10,800 square feet (1,003 square metres). No invitation was needed to take in its iridescent charms, on display throughout the weekend.

Next up? In early 2019, the global series moves to Hong Kong. Watch this space for more.



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YOUR JOURNEY BEGINS HERE

Discover a world of artistry and imagination.

Toronto skyline

The Best Art You Haven’t Seen in Miami and Bogotá

Galleries on the verge. A Cindy Sherman right in your hotel. You can brave the crowds (and the parties) of an international art festival or schedule around it, but don’t overlook the galleries, museums and installations that keep these art capitals abuzz year round. We’ve gathered insider tips on how best to explore the scene from Four Seasons team members on the ground.

If you examine the original architecture of the storied Surf Club, now part of
Four Seasons Hotel at The Surf Club, you might spot some similarities to the Bass, Miami’s cutting-edge contemporary art museum. Though both have been expanded and renovated, their original structures were designed by acclaimed art deco architect Russell Pancoast in the 1930s. The parallels don’t end there. Much of the art on display inside The Surf Club was created by artists whose work appears, or has appeared, at the Bass.

 

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“The primary exhibition for this season is from Italian photographer Paola Pivi, who has two pieces on display,” says Gabriela Navarro, the Head of Creative at the Hotel. “One of them, an alligator roaming through whipped cream, was actually conceived of here.” Last year, the Bass exhibited works by Ugo Rondinone, and a painting from his Target series remains on display in the Hotel’s Marybelle Penthouse Suite. “We have a fabulous collection of contemporary art at the Hotel,” Navarro says. “I don’t think very many people know this, but we have a Sterling Ruby and a Cindy Sherman as well.”

Several prominent private collectors in Miami have art on view in spaces open to the public. “You have the Rubell Family Collection, the Margulies Collection at the Warehouse and the de la Cruz Collection,” Navarro says. “ICA, the Institute of Contemporary Art, where multiple collectors display their works in one space, opened last year.”

Or you could take a boat tour, she says. “Some collectors have large pieces from prominent artists displayed in their gardens on Indian Creek Island, right across from The Surf Club. So if you’re water bound, you’ll see beautiful works from artists like Richard Serra, Ugo Rondinone and Alexander Calder.”

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Both Four Seasons Hotel Bogotá and Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina offer exclusive passes to BARCÚ (Bogotá Art and Culture), a festival in the city’s La Candelaria neighbourhood that’s an ideal complement, or alternative, to ARTBO. (The two take place concurrently every October.) Four Seasons guests get a private tour guide and VIP access to exhibitions and workshops that span art, music, dance, film and food.

 

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Widely considered the art capital of Latin America, Bogotá is home to more than 100 galleries. In addition to the renowned art festivals, devote a day or two to browsing the city’s San Felipe, La Macarena and Quinta Camacho neighbourhoods. One gallery in particular not to miss: FLORA ars+natura, which offers studio space and residences to artists creating works with themes of nature and the Earth. It was established in 2015 by José Roca, a former curator of Latin American art at the Tate in London, who returned to his hometown to open it.

 

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“It’s an independent space for contemporary art in San Felipe,” says Paula Gamboa, Four Seasons Director of PR and Marketing Communications. “The area is known for its working-class roots and mechanical engineering businesses; it had no galleries at all prior to the arrival of José Roca.” Back at either hotel, your art tour continues: Both properties feature modern art from Colombian artists like Leyla Cárdenas and Vicky Neumann.

YOUR JOURNEY BEGINS HERE

Where will you seek inspiration next?

Cityscape