What It’s Like to Hike the Indian Himalayas With a Luxe Resort as a Basecamp

Our writer felt like she had the mountains all to herself.

By Hillary Richard 26/11/2025

When you think of the Himalayas, India typically isn’t top of mind. The Indian Himalayas stretch from China to the border of Nepal, and those who know say the Kumaon region is the most majestic. Its star is Nanda Devi, once thought to be the world’s tallest mountain at over 8,000 metres (until a survey identified Everest in 1841). Nanda Devi, which means “Bliss-Giving Goddess,” has a UNESCO-recognised national park, and yet this mountain and her sisters are unfamiliar outside of India. Don’t expect to see a human traffic jam here like you do on Everest. In fact, during my week-long hike, I never saw another foreign traveller; instead, I connected with locals as I passed from village to village and experienced my own bliss at Shakti ultra-luxury lodges. I felt like I had the Himalayas to myself.

My host, Jamshyd Sethna, is a chic 72-year-old from Mumbai with flowing silver locks and equally flowing opinions. Sethna went to boarding school in northern India and began trekking around the area on his school breaks, falling for the raw beauty of the region. As an adult, he would make note of everything he was missing on his treks, like luxurious beds and higher-end amenities. Sethna created India’s bespoke Banyan Tours in 1996, so he was familiar with the luxury travel market. Ten years later, he decided to venture north and opened Shakti Himalaya—a luxury walking company offering curated journeys—out of sheer love of the mountains. Sethna was convinced there were plenty of travellers out there like him and his friends, who would want to see a truly authentic and otherwise inaccessible side of India on foot—but then retire to a luxury guest room, a drink by the fire, and excellent food. His clientele tends to be in their forties up to their seventies, and 40 percent are women on solo treks.

Shakti Prana lodges were built by hand, with stone carried up steep mountain passes.

Sethna has been personally involved in every aspect of the Shakti Himalaya experience from the start, focusing on sustainability at all turns. He scouted the locations for Shakti’s two newest properties over the last decade, settling on iconic mountaintops. Two new luxury lodges—Shakti Panchachuli, set against the border of the Panchachuli mountains, and Shakti Prana, in the shadow of Nanda Devi range—officially opened last month. Both are in keeping with Shakti’s focus on luxury, authenticity, high design and five-star service, but Prana, Shakti’s crown jewel, will be the first property open to multiple bookings at a time. (All of the four other Shakti properties in Kumaon are full buyout.)

Prana is remote: nearly five hours’ drive from Pantnagar Airport on hairpin mountain roads, and a steep mile walk (that takes nearly an hour) from the road to the property. On the journey up, I passed some of the mules that carried materials up and down the hill during construction. Because of its seclusion, Prana had to be built by hand. Each of the seven cottages has a floor-to-ceiling window with views of the jagged mountains, a wood-burning stove, a sitting room and a stone bathroom. Meals are safari-style, with a cocktail hour around the central lodge’s stone fireplace before a multi-course meal prepared by Chef Yeshi, a former Tibetan monk.

A morning tea unlike any others.

Mornings began, as they do at every Shakti property along the village-to-village hike, with a gentle knock on the door, the quiet delivery of an elegant ceramic pot of ginger tea and cookies. A hike through the Himalayas could bring any number of surprises, but each of the Shakti properties I stayed in had a consistent level of comfort and an impressive private chef. Breakfast in the dining room was a series of fresh fruits like papaya and pomegranate, homemade yogurt, granola with nuts, local eggs, and a variety of Indian dishes. Then I would meet up with Pujan Rai, who’s been a Shakti guide for nearly 20 years and runs on his days off from walking. Each day was different and customisable, depending on how far I wanted to walk and what we saw along the way. The trails weren’t on a map; they were designed by Rai and a rotating local guide in each area we visited.

On the last day of the Hindu holy festival of Navaratri, I stepped outside my cozy, revamped traditional mountain house to celebratory buzz. My first stop on the day’s nine-mile walk was at a nearby home where a woman in red blessed my forehead with a colorful paste and grains of rice. I walked through terraced farms, the Diodar forest full of pines and blossoming rhododendrons, and on to Jageshwar Dham temple complex—one of the holiest Hindu sites with more than 100 ancient temples — where priests anointed visitors with ashes, rice, flowers and powder. In between these points of interest were little moments of luxury, like fresh juice and a crisp cold towel on a cliff, and a mountaintop white-tablecloth picnic lunch catered by a private chef. Each night, we returned before sunset for a decadent and healthy multi-course meal.

 

Chef Yeshi prepares a healthy yet decadent meal.

As the days went on, my guides and I walked through more red rhododendron blossoms blanketing the ground, green pine forests and past mountain stretches that glittered with gold pyrite. We found snow leopard paw prints and spotted pine martins and eagles. A local guide brought us to his home to meet his wife and daughter and try fresh buttermilk straight from one of their cows. We spotted endangered orchids growing wild on trees in a forest days later. We paused to watch the drama as a family of farmers chased a gang of bold monkeys away from their crops in a military-like operation. We passed animals grazing and were joined by curious dogs who wanted to pass the time. Village children far off in the distance yelled and waved hello. It felt mentally immersive but physically challenging. One day’s walk was only six kilometres, but the equivalent of 70 stories of elevation. This is the Himalayas, after all.

After days of trekking village-to-village, I arrived at Prana during an unseasonably hot haze on the brink of a thunderstorm. The stars of the region—those spectacularly tall mountain ranges—were hidden behind an atmospheric gray wall and a dry, oppressive heat for days.

Goat traffic jam.

On my second to last night, thunder echoed and bounced across the valley. Once the rain cleared the air, the bright white peaks of Nanda Devi glowed against a pink sky at sunrise. Eager to see these towering snow-capped peaks from as many angles as possible, I asked my guide to have breakfast early and start toward the Jhandi Dhar ridge walk. I walked up a ridge, then down into a valley before ascending back up, a natural rollercoaster with sweeping views on each side of the mountain spines. A herd of goats swarmed me on a steep peak, chomping any low-hanging tree branches and bushes in between bleats and a soundtrack of ringing collar bells. From there, more ups and downs along the ridgeline over Kanoli village, broken up by a local farmer asking if we’d like to share some chai. Nanda Devi was off in the distance, the crisp white outline of the peak blending in with the rest of the snow-capped range. At the 2.5-km summit of my journey, I stopped to admire the views with fresh juice and homemade cookies.

The trip ended 78 kilometres, 436 floors, and 123,318 steps through the Himalayas later, on foot. On the final night of the trip at Shakti’s Panchachuli property, I watched the sun spread its final colours across the terraces and valleys below, while enjoying a drink on the stone terrace. I listened for the sounds of any far-off tigers and wondered if they could see the stone house’s lights twinkle on. I thought about the trip, remembering the feeling of smiling people pressing colourful paste onto my forehead for blessings, and the raining red rhododendron flowers in the forests, and discovering new-to-me foods. While some adventures involve scaling the world’s largest peaks and checking off bucket lists, others summon the feeling of exploration by connecting with the landscape in a slow and thoughtful way.

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Omega Just Unveiled 9 Watches in Its New Constellation Observatory Collection

The line-up shows up a bevy of metals and colours, too, as well as two new calibres.

By Nicole Hoey 31/03/2026

Omega’s latest watch is in a universe of its own.

The Swiss watchmaker just unveiled its new Constellation Observatory Collection today, the next step in its Constellation lineage and the first two-hand hour and minute timepieces to ever earn Master Chronometer certification. And if you were paying attention to any of the dazzling watches spotted at the Oscars this year, you would’ve caught a glimpse of the new line already: Sinners star Delroy Lindo rocked one of the models on the Academy Awards red carpet, giving us a pre-release preview of the collection.

Developed at Omega’s new Laboratoire de Précision (its chronometer testing lab open to all brands), the collection houses a set of nine 39.4 mm watches. The watches underwent 25 days of scrutiny there, analysed via a new acoustic testing method that recorded every sound emitted from the timepiece to track irregularities, temperature sensitivities, and more in the name of all things precision. (Details such as water resistance and power reserve are also thoroughly examined.) This meticulous process is all in the name of snagging that Master Chronometer label, meaning that the timepiece is highly accurate and surpasses the threshold for ultra-high performance. The Constellation Observatory Collection has now changed the game, though, thanks to its lack of a seconds hand.

A watch from the Constellation Observatory Collection, with the Observatory dome on display. Omega

“Until now, precision certification has required a seconds hand,” Raynald Aeschlimann, president and CEO of OMEGA, said in a press statement. “The development of a new acoustic testing methodology has made that requirement obsolete. It is this breakthrough that has enabled us to present the Constellation Observatory, the first two-hand watch to achieve Master Chronometer certification.”

In addition to notching its place in history, the collection also debuted a new pair of movements: the Calibre 8915 and the Calibre 8914, each perched on a skeletonised rotor base. The former’s Grand Luxe iteration will appear on the 950 Platinum-Gold model in the collection, which offers up that base in 18-karat Sedna Gold alongside a Constellation medallion in 18-karat white gold with an Observatory dome done in white opal enamel surrounded by stars. The second Calibre 8915, the Luxe, will find its home on the other precious-metal models in the line, either made with the brand’s 18-karat Sedna, Moonshine, or Canopus gold seen across the case, the hand-guilloché dial, and, of course, the movement itself. (Lindo chose to rock the Moonshine Gold on Moonshine Gold iteration, priced at approximately $86,000, for Sinners‘s big night at the Oscars.) As for the Calibre 8914, it can be found in the collection’s four steel models.

 

Omega Constellation Observatory Collection
A look at a gold case-back from the collection. Omega

Each model is a callback to myriad design features on past Omega models. That two-hand dial, for one, comes from the 1948 Centenary (the brand’s first chronometer-certified automatic wristwatch), while the pie-pan dial (seen in various blue, green, and golden hues throughout the line) and that Constellation medallion caseback both appear on watches from 1952. The star adorning the space above 6 o’clock also harks back to 1950s timepieces from Omega. And to finish off the look, you can opt for alligator straps in a variety of colours, or perhaps a gold iteration to match the precious-metal models; the brick-like pattern on the 18-karat Moonshine bracelet was also inspired by Omega watches from the ’50s.

We’ll have to keep our eyes peeled for any other Constellation Observatory timepieces (or any other unreleased models from the brand) at the rest of the star-studded events headed our way this year—perhaps the Met Gala?

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Inside Loro Piana’s First Sydney Boutique

A first Australian address brings the Italian house’s textile-led approach to retail full circle.

By Horacio Silva 26/03/2026

On the fourth floor of Westfield Sydney, near the Castlereagh and Market Street entrance—in the space formerly occupied by Chanel—Loro Piana has opened its first Australian boutique. It is a significant address change for that corner of the mall, and a meaningful one for the Italian house, which has sourced Australian merino wool for decades but until now had no retail presence here.

The facade is understated—creamy, tactile, more about texture than theatre. Inside, the store unfolds across a single, expansive level divided into distinct men’s and women’s wings. The separation is clear without being heavy-handed: womenswear leads from soft accessories and leather goods into ready-to-wear, while menswear occupies its own assured territory, with tailoring and outerwear given proper breathing room. Footwear (supple loafers, luxurious slides, pared-back sneakers) is particularly strong, and the sunglasses are a quiet standout: mineral-toned frames with a disciplined elegance that feels entirely of the house.

That same restraint carries into the interiors, where the surfaces do much of the talking. Walls are wrapped in the company’s own linen and cashmere; carpets are custom, dense underfoot, softening the acoustics and the pace. Oak and carabottino wood add warmth without fuss; marble accents introduce a cool counterpoint. The effect is a composed space calibrated around material, proportion and restraint.

The Spring 2026 collection now in store underscores that sensibility. Silhouettes are elongated and fluid; cashmere, silk and featherweight merino move in sandy neutrals, creams and muddied earth tones, with flashes of marigold and pale turquoise breaking the calm. Tailoring is softly structured and projects confidence without aggression. Leather goods arrive in buttery skins that feel almost pre-lived, as though time has already worked its magic.

What distinguishes Loro Piana, particularly in a market that has grown noisier by the season, is its refusal to perform luxury in an obvious register. There are no oversized insignias telegraphing allegiance. Instead, the status is encoded in fibre count, in hand-feel, in how a coat hangs from the shoulder. It assumes the wearer knows and, crucially, does not need to announce it.

Sydney’s luxury landscape has matured in recent years; global houses no longer test the waters but commit to them. Yet Loro Piana’s arrival feels different. It is not trend-driven expansion but material logic. For a country whose sheep stations have long contributed to the house’s fabric story, this boutique reads almost as a thank-you note written in cashmere.

 

Photography: Courtesy of Loro Piana.

 

 

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This Stylish, Water-Resistant Dopp Kit Might Be the Last One You Ever Buy

Patricks’s limited-edition wash bag is designed to keep liquids in and out, so it can come along wherever your travels take you.

By Justin Fenner 11/03/2026

If all you’re going to do is look at it, a leather Dopp kit from a fashion house is a fine choice. But if you take travelling seriously—and do it often, for business, pleasure, or both—such a bag will inevitably end up blemished with droplets of water or stained by errant flecks of toothpaste. Get stuck with a cavalier team of baggage handlers, and it can even get soaked in your favourite fragrance or anti-ageing serum.

But Patricks, the high-performance Australian grooming brand stocked in Harrods and Bergdorf Goodman, has a solution. Its limited-edition bathroom bag, called BB1, is purpose-built to protect everything inside and out. Conceived by industrial designer George Cunningham with brand founder Patrick Kidd, the cuboid design is executed in a water-resistant recycled nylon you can rinse clean. It’s lined with a thin layer of shock-absorbing foam to safeguard your products, but if a bottle somehow gets cracked in transit, the two-way water-resistant zippers and sealed seams (which keep liquids from seeping in or out) ensure that whatever leaks won’t ruin your cashmere. Inside, two dual-sided zippered compartments are ideally sized to fit toothbrushes, razors, and other small essentials.

And though its clean lines and rugged construction make it undeniably masculine, its greatest feature is borrowed from women’s makeup bags. Like the best of these, BB1 unzips to lie flat, giving you unobstructed access to everything inside. Well, you and the 999 other gentlemen who move fast enough to snag one. $289

Courtesy of Patricks

1. Hanging Loop 

The G-hook system isn’t just a stylish handle: You can also use it to hang the bag from a hook or secure it to your carry-on.

2. Two-Way Zipper

The closures are water-resistant in both directions, meaning liquids won’t get in or out.

3. Fold-flat Construction

BB1 opens to 180 degrees, letting you scan its 4.2-litre capacity at a quick glance.

4. Technical-Fabric Shell

The durable recycled-nylon is easy to maintain and woven to survive splashes and leaks from your go-to products.

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You Can Now Place Bets on the Future Prices of Rolex Models

And which models will get discontinued next, thanks to a new collaboration between Kalshi and Bezel.

By Nicole Hoey 11/03/2026

You can bet on pretty much anything these days, from when Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce will get married to who will be the next James Bond—and now that includes the Rollies on your wrist, or on your wishlist.

Prediction market platform Kalshi, regulated in the U.S., and luxe watch marketplace Bezel have teamed up on a new platform called Watch Futures that allows users to splash down cash on where they think the prices of a particular luxe timepiece are going, whether that’s a Rolex Submariner or a coveted Patek Philippe, Time & Tide reported.

You can also place a wager on which models might be discontinued, as well as any future launches from the top watchmakers on the new platform; with Watches and Wonders coming up, it’s certainly a well-timed launch that could see a lot of activity as a slew of new releases are announced at the event.

Watch Futures is all based on Beztimate, Bezel’s system (once used only internally) to help it accurately calculate the market price of a timepiece. It draws data from real-time transactions, live bids, verified sales, and other market offers to spawn its own series of independent valuation models to establish a watch’s value. From there, it’s up to bettors to place their wagers, and then the platform will showcase any price fluctuations or other updates as time goes on.

This new platform could have some pretty large implications for the watch industry.  As any horological savant would know, the internet and collectors alike are constantly chattering about which models are on the way out or when a certain timepiece of the moment’s time in the limelight will fade, of course, having a large impact on the prices of said model. And now, a Watch Futures user can have a direct stake in where a model is headed—and if they own said timepiece, it can be a protection from dwindling values on the marketplace, say, if a user places a bet on their model losing value and that actually comes to fruition.

To see Watch Futures in real time (and scope out how some pieces in your collection are faring), you can use the Kalshi app or its website.

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Mauve on Up

Brisbane boutique stay Miss Midgley’s offers a viscerally human experience—especially if you dig pink.

By Horacio Silva 17/12/2025

On a sun-bleached corner of Brisbane’s New Farm, where the scent of frangipani mingles with the clink of coffee cups, stands a building that has lived more lives than most people. Once a premier’s residence, an orphanage, a hospital and a private school, the 160-year-old stone structure now finds itself reborn as Miss Midgley’s—a boutique stay that teaches a masterclass in how to make heritage feel modern.

Designed and run by architect-mother-daughter duo Lisa and Isabella White, Miss Midgley’s captures the cultural confidence of a city in bloom. Nowhere is that new confidence more visible than along James Street—the leafy, slow-burn heart of the city’s fashion and dining scene—where Miss Midgley’s sits quietly at the edge, its shell-pink façade glowing in the subtropical light.

Built of Brisbane’s rare volcanic tuff, the building’s soft mauves and pinks are more than aesthetic; they are its identity. Locals still remember its 1950s incarnation as the Pink Flats, and the Whites have honoured that legacy with a contemporary blush-toned exterior, chosen to harmonise with the stone’s peachy undertones. Inside, those hues continue in dusty terracottas, russets and the faint shimmer of brass tapware. “Design can’t afford to be for the sake of fashion,” Isabella White has said. “It has to respond to what’s in front of you.”

That sentiment is tangible in every corner. Five apartments, each with their own idiosyncratic floor plan, occupy the building. Ceilings bloom with heritage plasterwork, 19th-century wallpaper fragments have been preserved in the kitchens, and tiny hand-painted notes left by the architects point out original quirks: a misaligned beam here, a hidden archway there. It’s a kind of adult treasure hunt for design lovers, where discovery feels personal and unforced.

Even the picket fence, a heritage requirement, has been reimagined in corten steel—a sly nod to regulation turned into sculpture. It’s this blend of reverence and rebellion that gives Miss Midgley’s its edge: heritage without starch, nostalgia without sentimentality.

True to Brisbane’s easy elegance, luxury here is measured not in marble or minibar but in proportion, privacy, and personality. Each apartment—from the Drawing Room and the Assembly Hall to the Principal’s Office—is a self-contained sanctuary with its own kitchen, large bathroom and outdoor space. The ground-floor units open onto leafy courtyards and welcome small dogs; upstairs, the larger suites spill onto verandahs shaded by jacarandas.

At the heart of the property lies a solar-heated pool hemmed with tropical greenery and fringed umbrellas—more mid-century Palm Springs than colonial Brisbane. Around it, guests share a petite laundry, a communal library and that rarest of urban luxuries: a car park per apartment. The atmosphere is quietly collegiate—a handful of travellers who might nod to each other on the stairs but otherwise inhabit their own creative bubbles.

The hotel’s namesake, Annie Midgley, lends the project both its name and its spirit. An ambidextrous artist and teacher, she famously instructed two students at once, writing with both hands simultaneously—a fitting metaphor for the dual vision the Whites bring to the building: one hand rooted in history, the other sketching toward the future. “Not famous, yet known,” goes the property’s understated tagline—and indeed, Miss Midgley’s has quietly become that most desirable of addresses: the one whispered about by people who know.

Sustainability isn’t an accessory here; it’s structural. The adaptive reuse of the heritage building is its boldest environmental act. Solar panels power the property; an electric heat pump warms the pool; recycled decking and tiles frame the courtyard. The metre-thick tuff walls regulate temperature naturally, and the amenities follow suit—refillable bath products, biodegradable pods, Seljak blankets spun from textile off-cuts, and compendiums wrapped in Australian-made kangaroo leather. It’s slow luxury in the truest sense.

In a world of carbon-copy hotels, Miss Midgley’s feels deeply human—a place where history isn’t curated behind glass but lives in the warmth of stone and the flicker of afternoon light. The lesson it offers is simple and resonant: that the most elegant modernity often comes not from reinvention, but from listening to what’s already there.

 

 Miss Midgley’s

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