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The Imperial Airways de Havilland DH86, named Dorado, at Kai Tak, in Hong Kong, which completed the in 1936. Photo: Handout
Opinion
Travellers' Checks
by Adam Nebbs
Travellers' Checks
by Adam Nebbs

Flying from Hong Kong to Da Nang once took almost six hours

  • These days the popular route is flown by a number of airlines and usually takes about 90 minutes
  • With the Vietnamese destination growing in popularity, there are now more than 30 flights operating between the two cities

The first flight to carry airmail from England to Hong Kong – which The China Mail described as “epoch-making” and The Hongkong Telegraph as “a milestone in the history of aviation in Hongkong” – arrived here on March 24, 1936. The Imperial Airways de Havilland DH86, named Dorado (pictured above, at Kai Tak airport), had set out from Penang, in what was then Malaya, the previous day, and flown in that morning (with only one passenger) from the town of Tourane, on the east coast of French Indochina.

This was the end of an eight-day journey for the mail, which had been carried as far as Penang by an Australia-bound Imperial Airways flying boat. From Victoria Harbour, HMS Hermes (the world’s first purpose-built aircraft carrier) sent up nine Royal Air Force planes to escort Dorado on its final approach into Kai Tak airport, where hundreds of spectators were waiting.

Tourane was the last of more than 20 stops on the Imperial Airways passenger and mail route from England to Hong Kong until the end of 1937, when Dorado and sister plane Delphinus were re-routed through Bangkok. By the time scheduled flights to and from Hong Kong resumed in the year 2000, Tourane had been renamed Da Nang. Pacific Airlines operated an on-again, off-again service to the Vietnamese port city for a couple of years, then CR Airways took over the route for a while in 2006 (and changed its name to Hong Kong Airlines later that year).

Da Nang didn’t really catch on with Hong Kong tourists, though, until Dragonair began scheduled flights in 2013. HK Express followed in 2015 and Jetstar Pacific (the former Pacific Airlines) resumed the route in 2017. Next month, low-cost airline VietJet will launch daily flights on the route, raising the number of weekly flights from Hong Kong to Da Nang, and its now burgeoning inter­national luxury hotel and resort scene, to almost 30.

Dorado and Delphinus took about 5½ hours to make the trip. The flying time these days is usually 90 minutes or less.

The Anantara Iko Mauritius Resort opens in Indian Ocean island nation

The Anantara Iko Mauritius Resort, from the Thailand-based property group, is now open. Photo: Handout

Thailand-based Anantara Hotels, Resorts & Spas has opened an attractive property on the less-developed southeast coast of Mauritius. The 164-room Anantara Iko Mauritius Resort is secluded but close to the island’s airport, which is convenient for those wanting to make a 45-minute hop over to the island of Réunion, a French outpost that offers some incredible mountain hiking and a surprisingly rich taste of French culture in the middle of the Indian Ocean.

Air Mauritius flies to Mauritius twice weekly from Hong Kong in just under 10 hours. For a closer look at the Anantara Iko Mauritius Resort, and its opening rates, visit anantara.com. The most current guidebook will be the 10th edition of Lonely Planet’s Mauritius, Réunion & Seychelles when it is published next month.

Aman Resorts to launch its own private jet

The Aman Private Jet, which will offer luxury packages in keeping with the upmarket resort brand. Photo: Handout

Aman Resorts has announced the launch of the Aman Private Jet, a Bombardier Global 5000 that can carry up to 12 passengers around the world in “consummate privacy and comfort”. Describing the plane as “an airborne extension of the Aman resort philosophy”, the company will offer tailor-made itineraries to its various worldwide properties.

For a look inside the aircraft, and packages including Bali & Beyond, The Secrets of China, Indochina Past & Present and From the Himalayas to the Sea, visit aman.com. Prices, apparently, are offered only on request.

Deal of the week – two nights in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

The Four Seasons Hotel Kuala Lumpur is included in Lotus Tours’ two-night package to the Malaysian capital. Photo: Handout

The Furama Bukit Bintang is the entry-level hotel offering with Lotus Tours’ two-night Kuala Lumpur package, which starts from HK$2,310 per person (twin share). For HK$2,670 you can upgrade to the more centrally located, 22-year-old JW Marriott, while the Four Seasons, which opened last year near the Petronas Towers, is offered from HK$3,330.

Flights with Cathay Dragon and daily breakfast are included with the package, which will be available until the end of March with occasional high-season surcharges. For more hotel choices, other details and reservations, visit lotustours.com.hk.
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