Travel Briefs

The Cliffs of Moher Visitor Experience has launched a new free app called “Cliffs of Moher” for Apple and Android. The app provides an audio guide and accompanying photos for 12 marked sites on the cliffs. Download from the App Store or Google Play.

Talking statues, shrinking rooms, underground labyrinths, a griffin, a glass pyramid: these are a few of the weird wonders at the Forbidden Corner (Tupgill Park Estate, Middleham, Leyburn, North Yorkshire, DL8 4TJ, U.K.; phone +44 [0] 01969 640638), one of Britain’s oddest attractions. Initially one man’s private pleasure garden, the park was opened to the public in 1994.

Admission through prebooked tickets only (online or call). £11 (near $16.50) adult, £10 senior, £9 child (4-15), and under four free. Open 12-6 Mon.-Sat., 10-6 Sun., April 1-Oct. 31. Sundays only, November until...

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­In Christ­church, New Zealand, after the Cathedral in the Square was badly damaged in the 2011 earthquakes, the church decided to construct a Transitional Cathedral while deciding whether or not to rebuild the primary cathedral. 

The walls of the triangular-shaped Transitional Cathedral, designed by Shigeru Ban, comprise 98 massive cardboard tubes up to 20 meters long. The tubes are strong, fireproof, waterproofed with polyurethane and flexible enough to withstand earthquakes. The building has a concrete floor, laminated-wood supporting beams, a polycarbonate roof and a large...

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An hour and a half northwest of Riga, Latvia, is the Cēsis Castle complex, comprising the Medieval Castle (built 1209) and the manor-house-like New Castle (built 1777), which has reopened with its 18th-century appearance restored.

The New Castle holds the Cēsis History & Art Museum (Pils laukums 9, Cēsis, Latvia; phone 64121815), with a collection that includes armor, coins, everyday items and more than 300 watercolors from the 19th and 20th centuries. The museum is open daily except Mon., May 1-Sept. 15, and is open Tues., Wed. & Fri.-Sun., Sept 16-April 30. Entry, 1.20...

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The preparation of blowfish, or puffer fish, must be done carefully, as certain parts contain a deadly neurotoxin. In Tokyo, laws coming into effect in October will allow restaurants each to serve blowfish without a license to do so. Officials noted that outside of Tokyo, where restrictions on serving blowfish have been less stringent, very few poisonings have occurred. Within Tokyo, the licensing requirement had led to blowfish being served mainly in expensive, high-end restaurants.

The app Waterkeeper Swim Guide, available on iOS and Android devices, has data on many beaches in Canada, Mexico and the United States. The app detects the user’s location and shows which beaches are safe to swim in, accessing recent data from government agencies and local Waterkeeper Alliance chapters. The data is also available online at www.theswimguide.org.

Auto Europe (888/223-5555) now allows travelers to rent motorcyles in Cancún, Mexico; Spain, and France. Models available include Harley-Davidson, Ducati, Honda and BMW. Rates vary by country, make and model but typically run $300 to $1,000 per day, including insurance. 

Bookings must be made by phone; info is not on the website. A US motorcycle driver’s license is required to make a reservation. There is no upper age limit. Some bikes come with a “saddlebag” for a backpack or small duffel. 

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Self-playing pianos, a wind-up banjo, an automatic xylophone and an enormous gramophone are among items on display at Keith Harding’s World of Mechanical Music (The Oak House, High St., Northleach, Glos., GL54 3ET, U.K.; phone +44 [0] 1451 860181).

The shop/restoration workshop/museum displays instruments, music boxes and automata from before the days of broadcasting. Open 10-5 daily except Christmas and Boxing Day. Shop admission is free; museum admission costs £8 (near $13) adult, £7 senior or £3.50 child.