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Holyoke Tourism Advisory Committee announces grant recipients, seeks new members

Holyoke Tourism Advisory Committee announces grant recipients, seeks new members

Yahoo03-06-2025
HOLYOKE, Mass. (WWLP) – The city of Holyoke's Tourism Advisory Committee (TAC) has awarded its first round of 2025 tourism event grants, funding 11 community events.
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The grant-supported events span a wide range of activities, from cultural festivals and historical tours to public art projects and sporting events, each chosen for its potential to promote tourism and showcase Holyoke's unique assets.
Among this year's funded events are:
Holyoke Pride Festival – June 11
Holyoke Paper Fest – June 7
Holyoke Historical Society Garden Tour – July 12
Paper City Oaks Semi-Pro Indoor Lacrosse at Fitzpatrick Arena – Summer 2025
The Great Holyoke Brink Race – October 11
Lemonade & Laughter at the Merry-Go-Round – Fall 2025
Holyoke Canals and Its Mills Tour – Fall 2025
Imagined Worlds Mural Project – in collaboration with the Holyoke Children's Museum
LOCULUS Presents: The Fourth Annual SIDEWAYS DOOR – A Festival of Ecstasies & Escape Routes – September 19–21
BBJ Spring Spectacular Showing: A Free Night of Musical Theater – Fall 2025
A full listing and event updates can be found at exploreholyoke.com.
In addition to celebrating these upcoming events, the TAC is actively recruiting new members to help shape Holyoke's tourism strategy. The committee is seeking individuals with experience in hospitality and tourism, including hoteliers, restaurant owners, and event planners. The city is especially interested in adding a youth member under 21 who resides in Holyoke and is eager to support and promote the city's cultural and recreational growth.
The Tourism Advisory Committee is composed of local experts and community voices, including representatives from institutions like the Wistariahurst Museum and the International Volleyball Hall of Fame. Members help allocate tourism funding, advise on promotional strategy, and support projects that enhance Holyoke as a visitor destination.
Those interested in applying for a seat on the committee are encouraged to send a cover letter and resume to vegaa@holyoke.org, directed to the Office of Planning and Economic Development.
WWLP-22News, an NBC affiliate, began broadcasting in March 1953 to provide local news, network, syndicated, and local programming to western Massachusetts. Watch the 22News Digital Edition weekdays at 4 p.m. on WWLP.com.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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In Europe's Largest Artificial Lakeland, Tourism Is At A Crossroads
In Europe's Largest Artificial Lakeland, Tourism Is At A Crossroads

Forbes

time7 hours ago

  • Forbes

In Europe's Largest Artificial Lakeland, Tourism Is At A Crossroads

The Rusty Nail, an observation tower in Germany's Lusatian Lake District. Aren Elliott From the top of the Rusty Nail, a striking architectural observation tower that stands sentinel over the Lusatian Lake District, you can see all the way to the Czech border. There are lakes, orchards, enormous windmills and, far in the distance, the Schwarze Pumpe power station, an 800 megawatt electric power plant that burns lignite coal. This is a picture of Germany's past — and future. "Germany is phasing out coal energy production by 2038," explains Heinz Müller, a former engineer who worked in eastern Germany's coal mines. It's also an image of Germany's tourism future. This part of the country used to have a reputation for its lignite strip mines and heavy pollution. It's a dramatic contrast to the scene today. Just below the Rusty Nail, there are pristine pine forests, lakes that glisten under the sun, and immaculate asphalt cycle paths. The only signs of human activity below are a few fellow cyclists. The air is clear again. Heinz Müller, a former engineer in eastern Germany's lignite mines. Aren Elliott After strip mining, a sustainable future Müller witnessed the region's transformation, which began with the end of mining in the late 1960s at what is now Lake Senftenberg. Authorities considered three possibilities: forestry and nature conservation, agricultural use, or recreational use, which entailed filling the pits with water. They chose all three. Lusatia's transformation isn't just an environmental project. "It's a natural example of sustainability," says Müller. This region, once an industrial powerhouse, is transforming into a service economy, with tourism at its heart. It's a colossal undertaking, a more than $2 billion regeneration program that has turned former opencast mines into Europe's largest artificial lakeland. 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Scotland's Instagram Highway became an overtourism nightmare. It could be worse
Scotland's Instagram Highway became an overtourism nightmare. It could be worse

CNN

time10 hours ago

  • CNN

Scotland's Instagram Highway became an overtourism nightmare. It could be worse

Sign up for Unlocking the World, CNN Travel's weekly newsletter. Get news about destinations, plus the latest in aviation, food and drink, and where to stay. This past spring, when I pointed my car out of Inverness to begin a loop around Scotland's craggy northern shoreline, I was expecting trouble ahead. A decade ago, when the North Highland Initiative — a development charity set up under then-Prince Charles — renamed the circuit the North Coast 500 and started promoting the drive to tourists, I had been unconvinced it would work. I approved of any initiative aimed at drawing more visitors to a neglected part of my homeland, but recasting the ramshackle roads of the North Highlands as a desirable destination seemed like a stretch. Back then, the thought of the drive evoked memories from half a century before — of me and my nauseated siblings squashed inside a rusty Ford station wagon as it rolled through mile after mile of monotonous moorland. Also dampening my enthusiasm were recollections of the food endured in my 20s when introducing my girlfriend of the time to the region. She came up from England expecting langoustines leaping out of creels and venison from stags gralloched, or disembowelled, where they fell on a nearby bed of purple heather. More often than not, in the late 1980s and early 1990s, she had to settle for deep-fried scampi and frozen peas, garnished with a smear of tartare sauce squeezed from a plastic sachet. Yet the idea of making these overfamiliar highways and hostelries the theater for epic road trips worked. As a promotional move, the North Coast 500 was a masterstroke — too much of one, by most accounts. Thanks to the alchemy of marketing and social media, the 516-mile (830-kilometer) circuit, which starts and finishes in Inverness, became an irresistible, Instagram-friendly pilgrimage for people around the world, overwhelming the ability of the aging and underpopulated region, and its roads, to handle the pilgrims. Locals began losing patience with what happened next: Nose-to-tail motorhomes on single-track roads, grill dads scorching seafront meadows with disposable barbecues, everywhere becoming an open-air toilet. A decade after its launch, the NC500 is now seen as a textbook case of overtourism. At the end of last year, Fodor's Travel added the NC500 to its 2025 'No List' of destinations it recommends avoiding, on the grounds that the route's popularity had made it a threat to the natural environment and a 'nuisance' to roadside communities. But has it all been bad? 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As we walk up to Grant and Heather Mercer's Crofters Kitchen food truck there is a hum of quiet contentment from the surrounding picnic tables and the sight of Heather updating the daily-changing specials blackboard is equally reassuring. Grant, a 33-year-old with 17 years of experience under his head chef's hat, has just taken delivery of some wild halibut from a local fisherman and, hours after it was landed, it is going straight on the menu. It is just the kind of thing this veteran of Scotland's long-hours hospitality culture envisaged himself doing when he and Heather first decided to embark on this business venture. Their goal was to spend more time together as a family, while taking advantage of the demand generated by the NC500's success to serve up the kind of locally sourced, seasonal fare that remains the exception rather than the rule in these parts. 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According to the travel experts at Fodor's, the impact of NC500-led overtourism is now so severe it is 'steadily changing the region's culture,' while a recent article in the New York Times was headlined: 'Should You Drive Scotland's 'Ultimate Road Trip?' Locals Say Maybe Not.' Our trip left me unpersuaded — especially given that around one in seven of the region's jobs depend on tourism. Even if it were true that the culture of the Highlands is being re-sculpted by the invisible hand of tourism, would that necessarily be a bad thing? Our final hotel on the route provided an answer of sorts. It was the only one I'd been able to find in a 30-mile radius offering two single rooms for under $200 a night and my heart sank as we checked in — the hotel's public bar revealing itself as a grim haven from the brilliant sunshine, where the early evening crowd formed a depressing tableau of Scotland's public health challenges. 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How to spend a perfect 72 hours in Toronto: What to eat, drink, see and where to stay
How to spend a perfect 72 hours in Toronto: What to eat, drink, see and where to stay

Yahoo

time15 hours ago

  • Yahoo

How to spend a perfect 72 hours in Toronto: What to eat, drink, see and where to stay

Tariff-hit Canadians could do with a hug right now, and you can be sure of a warm welcome in Toronto, the country's largest city, which has a famously welcoming population, and a trendy (but not too try-hard) vibe. It's one of the most multicultural cities in the world, and a melting pot of cuisines. Among its 140 recognised neighbourhoods are three Chinatowns, a Koreatown, Greektown, Little Italy, Little Portugal, Little India and Little Jamaica. Plus, a new direct flight with Virgin Atlantic from Heathrow, and a strengthening pound, mean it's a great choice for a long weekend. Here's how to spend 72 hours there. Day one The CN Tower There's only one way to get your bearings and that's with a trip up the CN Tower, the icon of Toronto's skyline. Completed in 1976, it was the world's tallest free standing structure for 32 years until the Burj Khalifa in Dubai took the crown. Two million visitors a year take the ear-popping lift to the observation decks. 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