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Hotel Escondido is a hideaway oasis on the Mexican coast

A palm-thatched Design Hotel on Mexico’s Pacific Coast is the ultimate hideaway, as Celeste Mitchell discovers over a mezcal margarita and Oaxacan delicacies.

We’ve been on the road about half an hour when Google Maps catches up to the discreet sign on the roadside. A narrow sandy road takes us off the highway and weaves us towards the coast; spiny cacti puncture the landscape. We roll pass coconut palms with cows grazing underneath and fields of papaya trees hanging heavy with the fleshy fruit.

 

In the distance, a line of palapa roofs rise above the shimmer of the horizon and my anticipation builds for the 24 hours to come.

First impressions

On this virgin stretch of Mexico’s Pacific Coast, Hotel Escondido is the palm-thatched hideaway you never knew existed. Here, 16 bungalows sit side by side within the gnarled and seemingly hostile vegetation; paths passing by eight-foot cacti. This is a place to kick your shoes off on arrival and leave them off.

Hotel Escondido , Mexico’s Pacific Coast (30-minutes drive from Puerto Escondido)

We’ve been staying in nearby Puerto Escondido, an under-the-radar magnet for Canadian retirees and surfers in equal measure, who are drawn to its laid-back living and bombastic barrels that separate the men from the meek at Zicatela; Mexico’s pipeline. But here, I feel as though we’re on some far-flung island. A secret design-lover’s retreat, it’s part of the Design Hotels family.

The room

In our room, cross ventilation and aesthetic flow meet in the middle with sliding shuttered doors on both sides and a king bed as its centrepiece. From the bed, it’s just a few short steps to an oceanfront concrete plunge pool framed by coral sunloungers and a light blue hammock for two.

 

Materials are raw, natural and harmonious with the setting. Beautiful wide floorboards bleed into a solid timber bedhead and the bed appears to be floating. Wooden louvres send light and shadow dancing across the long wooden bathroom vanity, crowned with thick, rectangular concrete basins.

The bar

Setting down smoky mezcal margaritas at the beachfront bar once we’ve settled in, waiter Aris tells me the hotel was built around four years ago, “but we say it’s still a baby because it hasn’t gone through a hurricane". Architecturally impressive neighbour, Casa Wabi, was here first but apart from the artist residency, and a private home being built on the opposite side of the hotel, this stretch of beach is all ours. At least for the night.

 

“We normally serve our guacamole with the grasshoppers on top, do you want them?" Aris asks. Grateful that we’re still cemented in Oaxaca with its UNESCO-listed food culture, not an isolated hotel with Americanised food trends, it would be rude to say no. The added lime and chilli crunch gives a new dimension to an already cracking Mexican staple.

 

If we were relaxed in Puerto Escondido we’re practically catatonic here. I sip my margarita while sitting in a hammock chair, toes drawing lazy circles in the lap pool, eavesdropping on the couple at the other end of the bar, trying to single out what meagre Spanish words I know.

The private plunge pool

After watching the sun perform its nightly dive, and taking full advantage of our private plunge pool, I pick up the wooden torch from the nightstand and we pad along the beachfront to the open-sided dining room. Above us, a huge pendant light shade is stitched together from banana leaves, hanging from the soaring palapa roof.

Hotel Escondido , Mexico’s Pacific Coast (30-minutes drive from Puerto Escondido)

The food

There’s a set menu each evening for the small cluster of 32 guests, with dishes dictated by the freshest produce to take the fancy of the chef. Food is served in organic terracotta bowls and platters, fashioned by the hands of the locals of Nopala – a small village in the mountains nearby. Smoky gazpacho is poured from a chunky teapot over lobster tail pulled from the sea by local fishermen, then, fresh snapper, grilled over the coals is presented with a mound of watercress on a thick oversized platter. Fruit flan for dessert is washed down with a rosé from Guadalajara.

 

The next morning, a warm morning glow lights up the inside peak of our roof as the wooden fan pirouettes overhead. I feel pangs of envy at breakfast watching other guests pick at the buffet knowing they have more mornings ahead to try it all.

 

There’s also the matter of the spa and apparently, a secret underground club I haven’t had the chance to find. All the more reason to visit again, I decide.

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Getting there

Fly to Puerto Escondido via Mexico City with VivaAerobus, Interjet or Aeromar. Alternatively, you can fly to Huatulco, one-and-a-half hours south of Puerto Escondido, which is serviced by Air Canada and larger US airlines. We hired a car in Puerto Escondido for the 30-minute drive but transfers can be arranged via the hotel.

 

A new highway linking Oaxaca City with Puerto Escondido – pipped to cut travel time from eight hours to two – is due to open in 2018. But with stalled construction and ongoing financial strife, the feeling from locals is it could still be a long time coming.

Staying there

Rooms at the adults-only Hotel Escondido start at $336 per night. To book, go to designhotels.com.

Playing there

Tours of artist residency, Casa Wabi, which was created in 2014 by Mexican artist, Bosco Sodi, and designed by Japanese architect Tadao Ando, are available three times per week. Bookings can be made at reception at Hotel Escondido. The name is a twist on the Japanese concept of ‘wabi sabi’, which means the art of finding beauty in imperfection. Don’t leave without contemplating the meaning of life for a few minutes in the meditation observatory.

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Join whale researchers on this private luxury island in Panama

    Kassia Byrnes Kassia Byrnes
    This luxury private island stay in Central America is taking whale watching to a whole new level.

    The only thing better than spotting humpback whales as they make their yearly migration? Doing so during a stay on a private 14-island archipelago set off Panama’s Pacific coast. Which is exactly what you can experience during the soon-to-be-launched Whale Weeks program on Islas Secas, as part of its wider Marine Safari experience for guests.

    What is Islas Secas?

    islas secas aerial
    Islas secas is nestled off Panama’s Pacific coast.

    Located 20 miles off Panama’s Pacific coast, and on the doorstep to the region’s incredible marine environments, Islas Secas offers luxury accommodation across three properties: Casitas, Tented Casitas and Casa Cavada. The latter is the crown jewel, a four-bedroom exclusive-use super-villa perched high on the cliffs for seemingly endless views of the ocean. Not to mention it’s surrounded by tranquil rainforest. On the property itself, find a semi-Olympic-sized infinity pool, and indoor and outdoor dining areas.

    Islas Secas sits within a vast marine ecosystem, boasting abundant wildlife, the largest Pacific coral reefs in Panama and two protected marine parks. This is why the property focuses on guest experiences to deepen the learning and engagement of the environment around them.

    What to expect from Whale Weeks?

    Humpback Whale jumping on its back near islas secas
    The resort’s marine program will focus on humpback whales in August.

    Whale Weeks will be a month-long program starting in August, designed to showcase the annual humpback whale migration. Guests will have direct access to the waters, researchers and conservation work surrounding this annual event.

    Hear first-hand field stories from, and ask questions of, marine mammal scientists working for Panacetacea, who will be living on site for the entire month. Join expert-led whale-watching expeditions, take part in Whale Songs & Science sessions exploring humpback behaviour and acoustic monitoring and listen to whale vocalisations recorded through hydrophones.

    Once they’ve left the water, guests can become part of the research team by uploading whale photographs to Happywhale, contributing to a global database that helps researchers and citizen scientists identify individual whales and track migration patterns.

    While the focus may be on the humpbacks, guests will get a look into other underwater residents as well – including Panacetacea’s recent confirmation of a resident population of Bryde’s whales. Guests will be able to learn how scientists use field observation, drone work, acoustic monitoring and habitat mapping to understand their behaviour and distribution.

    Whale Week sits within Islas Secas’ wider Marine Safari offering, which also includes snorkelling, scuba diving, kayaking, stand-up paddleboarding, nature cruises, conservation talks, birdwatching and private island excursions.

    The details

    islas secas pool
    Spend your downtime relaxing by the pool.

    Dates: Whale Weeks run throughout the month of August, but wider Marine Safari offerings can be enjoyed year-round
    Cost:
    Starting from $3500 per night on an all-inclusive basis, including all dining and drinks, one spa treatment per guest/per stay and a variety of activities on and off-island.
    Contact:
    islassecas.com or call 800-377-8877.

    Hotel Escondido is a hideaway oasis on the Mexican coast