健康水疗馆和个人护理,一个为您提供健康的服务平台,
采用泰国传统健康疗法和现代科学健康疗法相结合。
作为一个健康服务机构,我们将继承和推广传统的泰式按摩,
通过我们的专业服务,让泰式疗法能被广泛认知和接受。
康体乐园成为泰国的必游之地,已超过20年。我们主
要目的是传承可贵的知识。我们以顾客满意为首要,只为
了让康体乐园能成为康体保健的中心。服务有很多种类,
例如:从传统泰式按摩到理疗按摩。
我们不断改善,使它更加完善,无论是利用本地的知
识,还是使用科学研究的方法, 并且按照国际标准质量来
改善,为了给所有顾客在有限的时光中都能留下美好的体
验。
除了放松的按摩 还为顾客提供个人保健服务,都是用
高级护肤产品,由当地的天然草药和植物学组成,每一种
产品都含有天然维他命、植物提取物、纯精油,适合任何
皮肤,特别是需要精心护理的肌肤类型。
含有6种香薰精油,特别为调节身心平衡而设计,同时
也使您的皮肤恢复活力。健康水疗带给您的不仅仅是舒适
,还增添您的自信,让您的美丽能够自然散发出来。顾客
可以放心享受健康岛为您带来可以恢复自信的服务, 让康
体乐园成为最好的放松场所,给您新能量和健康的体验。
滴油疗法介绍
是传统印度医学
“阿育吠陀” 实行用在连续,柔和的温暖油往前额滴流去,只顾在眉毛之间的地方,阿育吠陀相信与称为“第三眼睛”。由特选搭配的油而同时沐浴行动创造了按摩之经验。从古代印度草医学始发,用两位按摩疗法技师一起和谐共时动手的动态流程,是一种很难配合的经验。
只能在健康水疗馆发现的事物
只能在健康水疗馆发现的事物
今日,我们在走近一步从当地的智慧完美一切让我们健康的方法。我们介绍康体乐园之地的个人护理馆藏用品,豪华程度的皮肤护理产品制定从当地的自然草药和植物。在科学方面研究而有条有理跟国际标准发展它们最大化之潜力为了创造持续漂亮而和气的无限美丽之经验,适合目前的时间有限的生活风格。每个产品包含自然来的维他命,从植物提取的物质和精油之独特益处和品格,完备为了每种需要特护的皮肤。齐备在 6 美感的香氛,非常特殊地设计让天然平衡您身心的作用,在复兴您的皮肤当中。健康之地给您不仅是舒服而是自信为了让您的美丽自然。
CNN 推荐Health Land是世界上最幸福的地方之一。
Recommended by CNN, Health Land is one of the most happiest places in the world. We are grateful and proud of this recognition and know that our efforts continue to help everyone escape from the stresses and strains in everyday life. Our aim is to consistently improve our products and services to ensure that our customers are always satisfied.
If January is getting you down, here are 16 places around the world that offer their own unique slices of happiness.
MORE: Back-to-work blues you’re feeling are real, and treatable
Surrounded by the glass and steel offices towers of Thailand's corporate set, and a short walk from Bangkok's equally hectic nightlife, the Sathorn branch of the Health Land Spa & Massagechain fills one of the city's few remaining stately old homes.
When the house was built, Sathorn Road would have been a country retreat from a much smaller city. Now it still feels like an escape from the city's relentless energy.
Beautiful, simple, and affordable, Health Land is where people can stop in for a quick foot massage or a long sequence of rejuvenating treatments.
Its therapists are all professional and extensively trained in the Thai traditional massage techniques that aim to release the energy that gets trapped in the body during the grind of daily life.
Surrounded by the glass and steel offices towers of Thailand’s corporate set, and a short walk from Bangkok’s equally hectic nightlife, the Sathorn branch of the Health Land Spa & Massagechain fills one of the city’s few remaining stately old homes.
When the house was built, Sathorn Road would have been a country retreat from a much smaller city. Now it still feels like an escape from the city’s relentless energy. Beautiful, simple, and affordable, Health Land is where people can stop in for a quick foot massage or a long sequence of rejuvenating treatments.
Its therapists are all professional and extensively trained in the Thai traditional massage techniques that aim to release the energy that gets trapped in the body during the grind of daily life.
Health Land Spa & Massage; 120 North Sathorn Rd., Silom, Bangrak, Bangkok 10500 Thailand
Its therapists are all professional and extensively trained in the Thai traditional massage techniques that aim to release the energy that gets trapped in the body during the grind of daily life. People tend to get picky about their barbeque, but the Moonlite has carved out a niche that everyone respects.
What started as a small roadside restaurant has grown into a landmark, famed for its hickory-smoked mutton.
People who remember the 30-seat place that Moonlite started as may not recognize the 350-seat destination that it’s become, but it’s still a family business cooking meat the way they’ve always done, in a way that tastes like home.
Moonlite Bar-B-Q Inn; 2840 W Parrish Ave., Owensboro, KY 42301
MORE: Where are the world’s happiest countries?
In early April, cherry blossoms bloom along Kyoto’s Okazaki Canal.
The city is famous for its blossoms, but along the canal a footpath passes under the trees right alongside the water, which reflects the flowers back up.
The stroll is like walking through a pink floral tunnel, but only for a short time each year. This is a happiness that has to be seized when the moment is just right.
Scientists say that chocolate actually does trigger chemicals in the brain that make people feel happier. Some studies indicate that dark chocolate helps with memory and heart function.
But there’s chocolate, and then there’s Mary — the nearly century-old chocolatier on Brussels’ Rue Royale.
Mary Delluc opened her business in 1919. Her reputation for exacting standards made her a chocolate purveyor to the kings.
Today there are branches throughout Belgium, and even one in Ohio, and anyone can enjoy her little bites of happiness, with caramel, pralines, almond paste or liqueurs.
Mary; Rue Royale 73, Brussels 1000 Belgium
Cape Town’s Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden, on the slopes of Table Mountain.
Not many cities have natural getaways in the middle of them, or at least not on the scale of Table Mountain, which defines Cape Town’s landscape.
Busloads of tourists get dropped off at the cable car, which whisks people up and down the mountainside every few minutes. But the ascent doesn’t have to be a hurry.
Trails up the mountain lead away from the crowds and into an experience of nature in the middle of the city.
“The best part about hiking up Table Mountain is that you don’t have to drive very far to escape the concrete jungle,” says South African hiker Lynette Bannatyne, who’s tackled ascents across the country.
“The mountain is situated in the middle of the greater city. From any angle it’s a tough vertical climb to get to the top but worth every step for the magnificent views from the summit.”
Few places evoke “away from it all” like Malpes, the Indian Ocean island nation of tropical paradise beaches.
Even within Malpes, the Gaafu Dhaalu Atoll is pretty far away. From the capital Male, it’s about an hour flight to the nearest airport and then a boat ride to get to a resort.
Once there, villas are perched on stilts over the water for an experience of solitude, but with room service.
The Okavango Delta is one of Africa’s great protected wildernesses, and is the star attraction in Botswana’s famed eco-tourism.
The region covers up to 15,000 square kilometers, where the Okavango River pours water into the Kalahari Desert, fanning out in annual floods that are the life force for all plant and animal life in the region. The juxtaposition of a vast wetlands surrounded by desert makes it an example of how determined living creatures are to survive.
Travel here is, by design, very expensive, in order to limit the number of people affecting the ecosystem.
Luxury safari operator &Beyond runs several lodges, such as the Xaranna tented camp on an island in the Delta.
“The Okavango Delta offers a special brand of peace and tranquility,” says Joss Kent, CEO of luxury travel company andBeyond.
“Secluded among clear waterways and wooded islands, life slows down to a different pace here.”
MORE: Africa’s ‘happiest’ countries revealed
One of the last old-school baseball stadiums in America, Wrigley Field is a place to experience the up-close joys of baseball, rather than the spectacle of oversize sport.
For years, journalist Carrie Kaufman worked nearby and still loves the experience.
“Wrigley Field, on a warm summer night when the breeze off Lake Michigan makes the flags flutter and your cheeks flush with relief from the damp heat.
“No matter where you sit, you are close to the field, which makes you feel both the intimacy of the game and the immensity of it.
“The players, standing just feet away from you, feel like giants. And the vendors in the stands hawking hot dogs and beers and Italian ice really are a study in that particular species of Chicago native.”
Wrigley Field is such an evocative place, a paint brand has started selling a line of colors inspired by it.
Wrigley Field; 1060 W Addison, Chicago, IL 60613-4397
MORE: 2916: The best sports year ever?
Just outside Valparaiso, Emiliana Organic Vineyards create wines in a storybook fashion: on a wine farm where flowers and food crops grow as well as grapes, with alpacas, horses and geese in the fields. It’s the childhood image of a farm, except that this one produces award-winning wine. In the world of organic farming, Emiliana’s approach is called biodynamic, because of the interplay between different species of plants and animals. For example, the chicken coops have wheels, so the hens can feed on insects all over the farm.
It’s a beautiful setting to experience practical ways of working with the earth.
Emiliana Organic Vineyards; Avenida Nueva Tajamar 481 Of. 905 WTC Building, South Tower Las Condes, Casablanca, Chile
MORE: World’s best wine trails
A mollymawk — a type of albatross — lands on water near Ulva Island.
New Zealand doesn’t lack for natural beauty, but Ulva Island shows what the country was like in the distant past. Farm animals were never introduced here, and no invasive animals or pests live in these forests. Local birds that sometimes struggle elsewhere in the country — including the iconic kiwi — thrive here. Ulva Island is open to the public, but visitors have to follow strict biosecurity standards, including washing shoes to remove foreign soil and checking gear for even small insects that could pose a threat. Ulva is a reminder that nature can manage all on its own.
For a more scientific look at where to find happiness, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon commissioned the first World Happiness Report in 2012 to look at how people feel about their own lives.
The goal is to use that data to help steer policy. 2016’s report found, for the third time, that Denmark is the world’s happiest country.
Among the reasons cited is the Danes’ good work-life balance, with a relatively short average week working and five weeks of vacation a year.
That means they have plenty of time for enjoying a meal with family and friends, cycling, or just relaxing. There’s nowhere more Danish to experience life than Nyhavn, the old port in Copenhagen that’s now home to restaurants and music along the canal.
Too cute: Pandas in China 02:39
Pandas make people happy. And what’s not to love?
They’re cute, cuddly, furry, and they’re herbivores.
That last bit’s important because at the Giant Panda Research Base in Chengdu, China visitors can actually hold a baby panda. The research center operates the most successful panda-breeding program in the world, with more than 80 pandas in residence. Chengdu is one of China’s mega-cities, known for making iPhones as much as for traditional culture.
But the province of Sichuan is home to 80 percent of the world’s giant pandas, and playing with one is quite simply a joy.
Giant Panda Research Base; Sichuan Sheng, Chengdu Shi, Chenghua Qu, China
On the border between Argentina and Brazil, Iguazu Falls are actually a system of 275 drops that create tiers of waterfalls in a horseshoe shape that’s dotted by islands, draped in mist, and linked by rainbows. Like a scene from “Avatar,” or an actual scene from “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” the falls are nature at its most dramatic and humbling. MORE: Iguazu Falls: Why you need to see this natural wonder
Osho was a 1970s mystic who became known as the “sex guru” (though only for straight people) whose followers gained notoriety over a bioterror attack and murder plots in Oregon.
That might not sound like the best introduction to a sexually recharging getaway, but the meditation resort in Pune has been running since 1974, with (pricey) wardrobes, activities and meditations where thousands of people still go to find a certain kind of awakening.
This is the kind of resort that requires an HIV test upon entry, to experience what it describes as “a unique combination of the meditation qualities of a Gautama the Buddha and the resort qualities of a Zorba the Greek. Zorba the Buddha in fact!”
Osho International Meditation Resort and Guesthouse; 17 Koregaon Park, Pune 411001, India
The massive sandstone rock formation in central Australia is one of those places that puts life into perspective.
It’s sacred to the indigenous people in Australia, even as it’s become one of the country’s most recognizable destinations.
Author Joanne Fedler, whose recent books have focused on improving family and romantic relationships, says Uluru is “a place to quietly contemplate your insignificance.”
She says it’s “a place that exudes peace and ancient tranquility, spoiled only by the tourists who ignore the requests not to climb on it due to its sacred significance to the Aboriginal people.
“Be sure to catch it at sunrise where the rock turns a luminescent orange — for a short while.”
source: http://edition.cnn.com/2017/01/16/travel/world-happiest-places/index.html