Cnn.com
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Now that day spas are turning up in airports, malls and beauty salons, destination spas are increasingly offering unique services and products to differentiate themselves from mainstream purveyors of massages and facials.
New services include unusual Asian healing practices and rituals inspired by American Indian traditions. Cleansers and creams are being made from local ingredients like blueberries, seashells or desert sage to identify spas with their locales. And packages are being aimed at niche markets -- couples, teenagers, pregnant women.
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The
number of men going to spas is on the rise too.
And thanks to the girlfriends' getaway phenomenon,
even the most exclusive spas -- places like Canyon
Ranch and Miraval -- are offering discounts for
groups as small as six or eight people.
All
these trends were in evidence among representatives
of 22 destination spas at an industry event held
in New York on July 28 by the International Spa
Association.
Here's
more on what's new.
Niche marketing
Spas
are attracting more and more couples, teens, pregnant
women and men.
Packages
for pregnant women typically include gentle yoga,
massage, facial and pedicure. Now California's Fairmont
Sonoma Mission Inn & Spa's "Mommy-to-be" package
has added another option -- "belly casts," in which
a plaster gauze mask is applied to the woman's belly
to create a life-size replica of her pregnant form.
It costs $159. The resulting sculpture can be displayed
and decorated.
At
the Sea Spa at Loews Coronado Bay resort in California,
"you wouldn't believe how many teenagers have spa
parties," said spokeswoman Anne Stephany. The spa
is opening a room later this month just for teens
that will have a colorful, fun Southern California
theme instead of the serene white walls found in
most spas. Designed by PBteen, the teen brand of
Pottery Barn, the room will have surf boards, tropical
flowers and shaggy rugs.
Men
now make up 29 percent of spa clients across the
industry, up from 24 percent three years ago, according
to the International Spa Association. Because of
the trend, "sports massages" and "executive men's
facials" are now regularly offered on spa menus.
"Most
men are introduced to spas by a girlfriend or spouse
and they go in kicking and screaming," said Lynne
Walker McNees, president of the organization. But
once they try it, they like it and come back on
their own, she said.
Couples
are using spa weekends both to relax and to reconnect
with each other, and many spas have treatment rooms
where couples can get massages side by side.
"One
of our guests came here with his wife three or four
times last year and told me, 'This is where I touch
base with my wife, because we're so busy the rest
of the time," said Valerie Clarke Simpson, spa manager
at the Sanibel Harbour resort in Fort Myers, Florida.
Asian and Indian influences
Yoga, tai chi, shiatsu, Thai massage and other Asian
practices involving relaxation, exercise, breathing
and meditation have long been spa staples.
Now destination spas are going increasingly exotic,
offering less well-known Asian treatments and creating
rituals with roots in American Indian culture.
At
the Lake Austin Spa Resort in Austin, Texas, guests
can get an acupuncture-derived "Manaka tapping treatment,"
where pressure points are gently tapped with a wooden
hammer and peg.
The
Spa at Mandarin Oriental, New York, is offering
shirobhyanga, a 20-minute head massage from India
designed to reduce tension and increase circulation.
A
"watsu" massage pool, where shiatsu massage is performed
in 98-degree water, is offered at the Loews' Sea
Spa.
Miraval in Catalina, Arizona, is known for its spiritual
approach to the spa experience (its full trademarked
name is "Miraval, Life in Balance"). The spa's "Restore
Your Heart" treatment has two components -- stone
massage, in which heated black basalt stones and
cool white marble stones are applied to the body;
and a "smudging" ceremony, in which dried herbs
like sage and sweetgrass are burned. The fragrant
smoke is waved into corners with a feather.
Guests
are also sent home with an abalone shell from the
Sea of Cortez, which the spa says will "repel negativity,"
and a "third eye stone," a talisman of "clarity,
vision and self-power."
Wyndham
Hotels & Resorts has just launched a boutique spa
called Sasura, where clients can take part in a
"sasura ritual" described as a "Japanese-inspired
process of renewal," complete with a gong, the scent
of lotus blossoms, and a green-tea wrap. The Sasura
spas will also specialize in services for travelers
seeking short getaways or single treatments.
Sasura
is "a balance of harmony and purity," said spokeswoman
Lorraine Park. "People are into the Asian arts and
things that are ritualistic."
Local
ingredients
"Spas
are so mainstream now that local ingredients and
local products are being used to create niches,"
said Kate Mearns, chairman of the International
Spa Association.
The
Cliff House Resort & Spa in Ogunquit, Maine, puts
organic Maine blueberries in its body wraps and
facial masks. At the Sanibel Harbour spa, scrubs
are made with pulverized seashells and sand, while
masks contain sea water, seaweed, sea salt and algae.
At
the just-opened spa at Mohonk Mountain House resort
in New Paltz, New York, bath oil is made from a
local witch hazel plant bearing red flowers instead
of the usual yellow. Exfoliants contain "Shawangunk
grit," made from local stone. "We're bringing elements
of nature into the spa with indigenous products,"
said spa director Hollis Beckwith.
Source : cnn.com
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