Entries Tagged as 'Destination Spa'

Spa Deals to reduce recession depression stress

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Soft-Price Pampering: Spas Reflect the Economy

Spas have been working hard over the past few years to market themselves as a necessary part of a healthy lifestyle, not an indulgence. But now that consumers are feeling anxious about paying for even more basic needs - like gas, house payments and butter - some spas are responding with a different strategy to appeal to stressed-out, maxed-out customers: discounts.

“We kind of looked at this recession we’re in and said, look, for the next few months, or until this recession can somehow be evaded, let’s cut our core program price in half,” said Alan Coombs, owner of the Green Valley Spa in St. George, Utah.

A recent headline on the spa’s Web site read, “RECE$$ION DEPRESSION?” and Mr. Coombs said he has had a great response to the offer: $248 a night per person for the All About Fitness program, which includes lodging, meals, fitness classes and daily hikes in the nearby canyons and desert. (Weekend rates and spa treatments are extra.)

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“Even in recessions or difficult times, spas are busy because people need what we have to offer,” Mr. Coombs said, an observation few people suffering from economically induced tension would challenge.

Whether the most anxious consumers can spring for a relaxing massage is another matter, but a growing number of spas are offering deals to attract customers during tighter times, a trend that may have as much to do with technology as with the economy.

A lot of spas are just sending certain specials to people who are on their e-mail list, many spas use these lists to promote spa deals that aren’t advertised on their Web sites.

Following the example of airlines and hotels, which have long relied on technology to adjust their prices based on changing supply and demand (a practice called “revenue management”), more spas are using this strategy to beef up their bookings during slow times. For the most part, these deals involve midweek and off-season discounts, last-minute specials and packages that are cheaper than booking several services à la carte.

Best Spa Deal Finder

While destination spas have traditionally offered lower room rates Sunday through Thursday or during their low seasons, like summer in a hot climate, these types of discounts are now spreading to treatment prices as well.

For instance, the Oasis Day Spa in New York City has been running a Two for Tuesday special for the past two years. Customers who book two 60-minute treatments on a Tuesday, usually a slow day, get the second one for half price. This year, the spa is also doing a Wednesday promotion with selected massages and facials priced at 1998 levels.

“We’ve always run specials, but more so now,” said Niki Tortoreti, Oasis Day Spa’s marketing director, noting that Tuesday and Wednesday are now just as busy as Saturday.

That’s not marketing hype. I recently took advantage of the Wednesday special to get a 60-minute Swedish massage for just $70. It was a great deal (the regular price is $110) and a great massage, but the relaxation area felt like the waiting room at a crowded doctor’s office, with a dozen people in bathrobes listening for a therapist to pop in and call their name.

Sometimes, these midweek discounts are small, like the $15 you can save on a 50-minute massage at the spa at the Four Seasons Hotel in New York City ($195 Monday through Thursday).

But when these deals include lodging, the savings can be substantial. Summer rates at the Miraval resort in Tucson, AZ., are about $200 less than during peak season (about $600 a night, including meals, programs and a $125 spa credit). And when customers bring a friend between June 16 and Sept. 22, they both can save an additional 20 percent off that rate.

One of the best current midweek deals is at the Equinox Resort in Manchester Village, Vt. Through May 22, their Cloud 999 special costs $999 and includes three nights of lodging for two people, plus a $999 credit toward spa treatments. (This package is only valid for Sunday through Tuesday arrivals.)

There are some tradeoffs with these off-peak specials, like less appealing weather outside the temperature-controlled treatment rooms, or sometimes eerily empty grounds.

For instance, I stayed at the Ojai Valley Inn and Resort on the Thursday after Labor Day last September and did not encounter another soul while using the steam room, Jacuzzi and lounge before my massage. At first I felt giddy having the whole place to myself, but by the next morning at the pool, my friend and I were a bit bored by the sparse selection of people to watch. (Yet we only paid $274 for the night, versus the typical weekend rate starting at $400.)

Rather than letting rooms remain empty and appointment calendars half-full, some spas are running last-minute specials, usually promoted online or via e-mail newsletters. For instance, the Red Mountain Spa in St. George, Utah, publishes Last Minute Hot Deals on its Web site, highlighting dates these deals are available during the coming month.

A recent offer included lodging, meals, guided hikes, fitness and nutrition classes and use of the resort facilities for $269 a person per night (with a two-night minimum). Most of the March and April dates that qualified for this offer were weekdays, but Easter weekend was also an option.

Spas are even posting deals on-site to fill empty time slots, rather than letting staff they are already paying for the day sit idle.

The Norwich Inn in Connecticut, have what they call ‘blackboard specials, and we’re going to see a lot more of those.

As it turns out, these deals are actually printed on a sheet of paper that is displayed at the spa’s reception desk, not written on a blackboard, and they’re usually only available Tuesday through Thursday, since the spa is typically booked on weekends.

The goal is to entice guests who have already booked one treatment to add an extra service for a discounted price, 10 to 35 percent off the regular rate.

“It helps us be able to book our therapists when it’s quiet, and secondly, it allows the guests themselves to try something they may not have normally tried,” said Betty Loiacono, the spa’s director. “And that turns into a win-win situation for everyone.”

Although Ms. Loiacono mentioned the industry’s traditional aversion to the word “discount,” she described herself as a big believer in revenue management, and is even looking into buying software that would allow the spa to charge different prices for treatments based on the time of day.

“With any business, you’re going to have peak times and slower times,” she said. “And if it’s tied to the economy, you need to recognize that as well.”

MORE INFORMATION

If your tastes run toward pampering spa surroundings, but your budget doesn’t, there are other ways to economize besides taking time off midweek to snare an off-peak discount.

One option is to visit a hotel or resort’s fancy spa just for the day.

“At most resort and hotel spas, even with just the cost of one treatment you can stay in the spa and relaxation area pretty much the whole day,” said Julie Sinclair, editor in chief of Spa magazine. “You book the treatment for 2 o’clock and you show up at 10.”

I used that strategy to visit the spa at the Breakers Hotel and Resort in Palm Beach, FL., in March. If you book at least a 50-minute treatment, you can also use the outdoor lap pool and Jacuzzi (both of which overlook the beach), join a yoga class in the courtyard, and use the steam room and sauna.

The indoor facilities were disappointing: a steam room that resembled the one at my gym and a surprisingly grim relaxation area with curtains that blocked the ocean view. I also had to ask to use the outdoor pool area, which was the only justification for paying $195 for a 50-minute massage (itself rather mediocre). But that price also included valet parking, normally $30, and the chance to wander the grounds of the historic hotel.

At the Sheraton Wild Horse Pass Resort & Spa in Chandler, AZ., you do not even have to book a treatment to use the spa’s pools, Jacuzzis, steam rooms, saunas and fitness center; hotel guests can buy a day pass for $20 ($35 for nonguests).

Another tip is to ask for a discount if you are traveling with a group, even if it is just a few friends.

Many other deals are designed for just two people, like the package offered by the Cal-a-Vie spa in Vista, CA., where the second person gets half off the normal weekly rate of $7,395 during certain weeks. (O.K., so that’s not exactly cheap, but even wealthy spa-goers like to save.)

There are also a handful of spas that frequently show up on lists of affordable retreats, like the Oaks at Ojai in Ojai, CA.; the Red Mountain Spa in St. George, Utah; the New Age Health Spa in Neversink, N.Y.; Ten Thousand Waves in Santa Fe, N.M.; and Rancho La Puerta in Tecate, Mexico, which claims it was “the world’s first destination spa.”

For that price, you generally get a lower staff-to-guest ratio and less luxurious accommodations, which aren’t necessarily as important for this type of vacation.

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If you’d like to spoil yourself with deep-tissue massages, cleansing facials and unique body treatments, look to Spavelous to find the best day spa deals in your area or vacation destinations. Look for special spa pricing, or value discounts with many spas.


The Chopra Center for Wellbeing Named Top U.S. Destination Spa in Condé Nast Traveler’s Annual Awards

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The Chopra Center for Wellbeing Wins High Ranking in Condé Nast Traveler’s Annual Readers’ Poll. The California-based holistic spa founded by Deepak Chopra, M.D. & David Simon, M.D. is selected as a premiere wellness spa, offering treatments and programs that fuse the Eastern healing arts with the latest advances in modern therapeutic medicine.

As a preeminent wellness center, we are honored to be recognized by Condé Nast Traveler as one of the top U.S. spas

Condé Nast Traveler magazine has announced the winners of its annual Destination Spa Readers Poll Awards, with The Chopra Center for Wellbeing earning the distinction of being one of the eight best destination spas in the United States.

Founded by acclaimed holistic physicians Deepak Chopra, M.D. and David Simon, M.D., The Chopra Center earned high marks from Condé Nast readers for its beautiful setting, authentic Ayurvedic spa treatments, and its wide variety of programs in mind-body medicine, stress management, emotional healing, meditation, yoga, and Ayurveda - India’s 5,000-year-old healing system.

One of the Center’s most popular programs is Perfect Health, featuring Dr. Simon. The week-long program includes daily customized Ayurvedic massage treatments, the detoxification therapy known as Panchakarma, and a mind-body medical consultation with a Chopra Center physician (MD). Guests at Perfect Health also receive instruction in Primordial Sound Meditation and classes in yoga, conscious communication, Ayurvedic medicine, nutrition, and other practical tools for restoring balance and health.

“As a preeminent wellness center, we are honored to be recognized by Condé Nast Traveler as one of the top U.S. spas,” said a Chopra Center representative. The list also includes Lake Austin Spa Resort, Canyon Ranch, and Miraval. “Our mission has been to raise the state of wellbeing in the world, and our weekly Perfect Health program touches thousands each year in a profound way. It is gratifying that those who visit the Chopra Center are experiencing the fruits of our intention and weighing in with their votes.”

Detroit Michigan - The MGM Grand - Casinos and Spas in the Motor City

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Detroits new casinos: The MGM Grand

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Most people don’t think of Detroit when they think of a tourist destination. The city has suffered considerably in the last century – much of the population has moved into the outlying suburbs, crime has surged and empty buildings dot its cold, Michigan skyline.


The last several years have brought significant effort to revitalize the downtown area, however. Led by reconstruction of the Tigers’ and Lions’ stadiums, several pockets in the inner city are once again starting to flourish. Events like the Detroit Electronic Music Festival (DEMF) are perennial favorites among visitors while Hockeytown and The Old Shillelagh keep drinkers out late at night.


In addition to the new entertainment percolating in the city, several casinos have invested heavily in the downtown area, with two, the MGM Grand and the Motor City just finishing construction on two new huge, luxury casinos and hotels.

Beginning with the MGM, these articles will highlight the new properties, their features and impacts on downtown Detroit.

The MGM Grand Detroit – an introduction

A sister casino to the MGM in Las Vegas, Detroit’s new luxury casino was completed in the fourth quarter of 2007. It’s creators have designed the property with Las Vegas in mind – central to the entire experience is the 250,000 square foot gaming floor, around which are sprinkled several eating and drinking venues, from the posh Best-of-Detroit rated Saltwater restaurant to the sultry Ignite lounge just above the gaming floor.


Gadling will cover the main aspects of the casino in four categories: Gaming, Dining, Nightlife and Hotel.

The MGM Grand Detroit — Gaming

Ninety table games and a lifetime of slots cover the circular gaming floor centered around a raised bar and lounge area. Standard blackjack and craps tables are laid out in pockets around the floor in a pleasant, warm atmosphere. Visiting on a Thursday evening, the minimum bet on most tables was about fifteen dollars.


A high stakes room is set off the main floor, where high-rollers can play the standard games at higher dollar increments. Local celebrities like Richard Hamilton are apparently often seen here, although none were around when Gadling visited.


Additionally a poker room with eight tables lies above the casino floor next to Ignite lounge.

The MGM Grand Detroit – Dining


Several dining options circumferentially ring the gaming floor hosting a variety of budgets and experiences.

Least expensive and most accessible is the Breeze (pictured) dining center, which is a dining-hall-esque combination of several stations serving up American, Asian and Italian cuisines. Visitors can quickly review, order and pay for selections then meet in the center of the section to dine together. This section is fairly small, perhaps because it is the least expensive (and therefore least profitable) dining location. A meal will cost approximately ten dollars.

A larger and more upscale version of the Breeze is the Palette Dining Studio, which is basically a Las Vegas style all you can eat high-end buffet. Selections cover a wider spectrum from the Breeze, with the addition of seafood and lighter fare. The Palette is laid out in a more comfortable, relaxing atmosphere, than its smaller cousin with sensible decoration and a sprawling floor-plan. Visitors here are more likely interested in enjoying and taking time through their buffet meal rather than immediately returning to the gaming floor. The Palette is also more expensive, with meals in the twenty five dollar range.


Wolfgang Puck Grille is the celebrity chef’s take on the typical “bar and grill”. Dark, wooden décor and furniture lit by warm ambient lighting makes the restaurant a cozy escape from the bustling casino floor not steps away. A large, mostly open kitchen lines the back of the section, where you can see the chef and his workers buzzing along at their jobs and apparently Mr. Puck himself stops in for a bite every now and then. Fare is standard bar and grill food, with an average entree costing between twenty and thirty dollars.


At the higher end of dining experiences, Bourbon Steak is Michael Mina’s standard steakhouse with a twist. While one can order the classic prime rib or steak off the menu, small adventures like duck fat fries and truffle macaroni and cheese woo the diner with a little bit of off the beaten path adventure. Bourbon Steak is roughly divided from the bar in front to the main dining room in back. Between the two sections, large glass walls storing the restaurant’s extensive wine selection form a maze of corridors, in the center of which is an exclusive private dining room for VIPs. Entrees at Bourbon Steak start around twenty dollars a plate, with select cuts of meat costing significantly more, depending on the market value.

Similarly, Saltwater is Mina’s high-end seafood establishment at the MGM Detroit. The restaurant is designed in soft flowing waves of blue and glass, setting the diner at ease as she decides between entrees such as Lobster Pot Pie, Caviar Parfait, Tartare of Ahi Tuna and Mussel Soufflé. Arguably the most expensive restaurant on the premises, Saltwater plates range from twenty five dollars to well over fifty.

The MGM Grand Detroit – Nightlife

After a hard day of gaming and indulging at Bourbon Steak, many choose to unwind at one of the MGM’s five drinking stations.

Most accessible is U-Me-Drink at the center of the casino floor, where you can continue to gamble with digital games embedded into the bar surface. Surrounding the bar in tiers, several lounge areas sprawl outward from the core and into the casino floor. At the perimeter of the bar, large slabs of composite material silently slide around from the ceiling; combined with a low wall around the bar they are meant to partially enclose U-Me-Drink away from the gaming floor while still allowing one to watch over the gaming in earnest. This is a great place to get to get a martini, take a break from feeding the slot machines and relax on one of the plush couches circling the bar.

At the periphery of the casino floor is Agua , a Latin inspired bar featuring a shimmering, multi tiled, adaptable ceiling that moves with the volume of the crowd. Shotgun microphones run around the perimeter of the bar and as revelers shout in their direction, the ceiling flows to register the noise. This can quickly turn the entire bar into a shouting match as everyone stares at the ceiling in delight. Waitresses in skimpy blue uniforms strut around the bar serving beer, cocktails or one of 20 different tequilas or 35 different rums.

At the other end of the casino, Int Ice hosts a piano-bar style atmosphere centered around a grand bar and floral arrangement. Live acts are scheduled daily starting at 8PM. When Gadling stopped by the MGM for a visit, one of the local owners was camped out at the end of the bar enjoying himself.

Across from the poker room was Gadling’s favorite bar on the entire property, Ignite . The interior is designed to symbolize the contrast between fire and ice and most adornments have something to do with either of the two categories. On entry, a bar covered with a sheet of ice greets every visitor, while against the back wall a bank of natural-gas lamps is routinely extinguished as icy water flows from the ceiling. Rows of linear natural-gas lamps are integrated into several of the walls, acting as much of the ambient lighting as well as atmosphere. At the edge of the bar facing the street are a series of large, circular, rotating couches that can easily fit two or three visitors as they stare out into the cold streets of Detroit.

Additionally, Ignite is host to specially blended Makers Mark Whiskey, exclusively made for the MGM Casino. On the way out, make sure to watch your feet as you get on the elevator as projected flames follow your footsteps around.

Finally, the nightclub V is on the main floor just off the casino. V caters to more of a drinking and dancing crowd with hired dancers stalking the floors and plenty of space to get it on. At the back of the bar is a private VIP room with bar, where celebrities like your favorite bloggers at Gadling can escape their fawning fans on the dance floor.

The MGM Grand Detroit – Hotel

One of the MGM’s main attractive points is the superior quality of its new hotel. The luxury property is host to four hundred guest rooms, including nine luxury suites and fifty six corner suites at the top of the building.

Each room is tastefully decorated with Wenge furniture, 42″ flat screen televisions and high-tech “concierge” telephones, where visitors can go as far as checking in for their flights with the advanced interface. Oversize bathrooms taking up almost 25% of each guest rooms feature walk in showers with double shower heads and 15″ plasma televisions integrated. Deluxe beds are outfitted with double-sided Serta pillow-top mattresses with more luxurious sheets, comforters and more pillows than you can shake a stick at.

The real jaw-dropping aspect section of the hotel, however, is the spa. Twenty thousand feet of the property are dedicated to the Immerse Spa, where visitors can retire do after a long day of gaming. In addition to the standard spa treatment with six bungalows, a salon, exercise facility and vanity areas, Immerse features a giant infinity pool on its bottom floor, tastefully surrounded with natural materials on the walls, giving the feeling of true integration with nature. Not something you would expect in the center of the casino.

Around the perimeter of the pool are small rotating couch-bungalows that are partially covered for privacy. Visitors can thus easily lounge around poolside and escape the hubub of the casino in complete tranquility, a truly admirable feat from a design perspective.

Rooms at the hotel run around 200$/night, while a small additional spa fee is required for guest

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Colonial Williamsburg - Spa Treatments by the Century

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Colonial Williamsburg offers new-age spa treatments


Williamsburg, VA — The challenge was to take the essentially modern construct of a spa and integrate it into the fabric of one of the country’s premier historical destinations.

You can get a massage or facial at the Spa of Colonial Williamsburg. You can get a manicure or pedicure or sit in the whirlpool. But the spa’s signature treatments, modern interpretations of healing and relaxation practices of the last five centuries, take you into a time machine. Each incorporates therapies drawn from the prevailing attitudes toward health and wellness in a specific era.

The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation

The new outdoor pool at the Spa of Colonial Williamsburg nestles into a sloping hillside overlooking a golf course.

In sum the five experiences highlight wellness traditions not only across time but also across the ethnic groups that have left their imprint on Williamsburg.

The Cleansing Hot Stones Spa Experience draws on the 17th-century Powhatan Indian practice of using sweating to eliminate aches and pains. In the modern interpretation, the body is warmed by hot stones then wrapped in herb-infused, steaming linen to encourage the release of toxins. The experience concludes with a full-body, hot-stone massage using oil containing lavender, cypress, juniper and rosemary.

Doctors in the 18th century began to make connections between cleanliness and health, theorizing that dirt on the skin prevented the body from perspiring freely, considered to be an essential natural process. Herbs and botanicals were thought to be a cure for a variety of ailments, and these were added to cleansing baths. This ritual has been adapted for the modern-day patron in the Colonial Herbal Spa Experience, consisting of a foot bath, followed by an orange-ginger body scrub, herbal body wrap and massage.

The Root and Herbal Spa Experience draws on African-American practices that used root powders to heal and strengthen, combined with the 19th-century fascination with spring waters. They thought that when the water was ingested, applied topically or used for bathing, it would cure common diseases. This treatment includes exfoliation with an herbal powder of lavender buds, rose petals and essential oils, followed by a bath, infused with sage, lavender and sea salts, and a massage.

Inspiration for the 20th- century Williamsburg Water Cures Spa Experience came from the development of technologically advanced spa equipment combined with the history of bathing rituals. This treatment consists of a full-body, dry-brush exfoliation, followed by a Vichy shower “rain” massage and a traditional milk bath to seal in the skin’s moisture.

Among the newest services are laser treatments and micro-dermabrasion. The spa offers state-of-the-art, particle-free dermabrasion along with the application of pure oxygen to the skin as part of its 21st-century Skin Rejuvenation Spa Experience.

Housed in space formerly occupied by a folk art museum, the Spa of Colonial Williamsburg opened a year ago. All proceeds go to the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, said Kate Mearns, spa director.


The red brick Georgian-Revival building is bordered by a deep green arbor that shades a brick walkway. The inside decor is a pleasing combination of Colonial and modern. The women’s locker room features candle chandeliers, pewter hooks and hardware, honey-colored wood lockers and frosted glass.


A wet lounge with rough stone walls includes a eucalyptus steam shower, whirlpool and cooling rainfall shower. A bucket of ice water holds rolled up, lavender-scented face cloths.


Clad in robe and sandals, I began in the 18th century and ended in the 21st. My treatment started with a foot bath and ended with a foot massage.


The foot bath was followed by a body scrub. Made of brown sugar, orange essence, ginger powder and coconut oil, the scrub was pleasantly exfoliating and didn’t sting the way some scrubs do because it contained no salt. My therapist, Laura, explained that oranges were prized in Colonial days because they were imported from Europe, and ginger was used in tea and medicines.


After the scrub, Laura wrapped my feet in hot towels, draped my body in towels, then placed hot cloths that had been soaking in an herbal solution atop the towels. She pulled up the sides of the thermal sheet I was lying on and wrapped me like a mummy. While the heat-infused cloths softened my skin, she massaged my scalp.


Laura left the room, and I showered and got back on the table for a massage. The lemon grass and ginger oil left my skin silky.


From the traditional territory of scrubs and massage, I headed to the high-tech world of ultrasonic dermabrasion and applied oxygen. My modern experience also began with a foot bath and lavender scrub, during which my therapist, Tina, explained the process of cleansing, exfoliating and then hydrating the skin.


Using an ultrasonic wand, Tina exfoliated my face, then worked hydrating products into my skin with the same tool. I actually saw some lightening of brown spots caused by sun damage, but Tina explained that it wouldn’t last without regular treatment.


The next step was a hydrating masque, and while it set, Tina massaged my neck, shoulders, arms and hands. Finally she applied pure oxygen and oxygenated products with the Oxy Oasis machine, whose insistent thump had a distinctly hospital overtone. Bursts of pure air alternated with the soft spray of botanical skin products.


The whole process was markedly gentler than traditional micro-dermabrasion and chemical peels, and there was no redness to my skin when I left.

With any service, patrons can use all the spa’s amenities, including an indoor pool, outdoor pool in season, whirlpool, steam room, showers and locker rooms.

Massage continues to be the most popular treatment, said Mearns. And while most clients are women, men have responded especially well to services that incorporate baths and water rituals. “The century treatments are gaining in popularity,” she said, “and as we continue to be more branded, we expect this trend to continue.”

A long-range goal, Mearns said, is for the spa, with its access to the vast records of the foundation, to become “the library for the American spa experience,” an authority on American therapies that spa owners and designers can consult.

The field is still evolving, said Sepielli, noting two areas that are becoming increasingly prominent: spirituality — which she described as “doing things that enrich your soul, mind and heart to maintain your health” — and healthy aging.

“People want to make sure their health keeps up with their lifestyle,” she said. “This is good news for the spa industry. We’re moving from the realm of luxury into wellness.”

The Spa of Colonial Williamsburg, 307 S. England St., Williamsburg. Century-inspired treatments, 1 1/2-2 hours, cost $165-$285. 1-800-688-6479,

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Mother’s Day - What Moms Want a Stress-Free Mother’s Day in ‘08

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Relaxation Tops Gift Wish List in New Harris Interactive Poll

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A CSN Stores/Harris Interactive Survey of 2,920 moms, dads, sons and daughters suggests that Mother’s Day gift givers should go beyond flowers and cards to truly delight Moms this year. Survey responses reveal that gifts offering therapeutic relaxation will be most valued, as they can help moms reduce daily stress.

Harris Interactive to survey adults 18 to 55+, asking mothers in the group what they would most want for Mother’s Day and everyone else what they intend to give. The majority of mothers wanted to be surprised with a non-traditional gift.

“Moms juggle more than ever now,” said CSN Stores’ Cyber Shopping Expert Jenn Helmore. “So giving the mom in your life a gift that pampers her should be your goal this Mother’s Day.”

Relaxation items such as massage chairs and mood-improving lamps received 37 percent of the vote from moms. The multiple-choice survey, which allowed respondents to vote more than once and add their own choices, also inquired about the popularity of garden, kitchen, travel, office and new mother/baby gifts.

A gift certificate to their favorite spa is the best gift to give mom and mom’s to be.

Beyond emphasizing relaxation, many mothers also selected gifts for the kitchen (34 percent) like a cookware set or colorful appliance; and items for the garden (29 percent) including a greenhouse or new robotic lawnmower.

 

Spa Gift Cards

As for gift givers, they appear to be listening to moms a lot this year, as their choices mirrored mothers’ preferences. Relaxation gear was most popular (32 percent), followed by kitchen (21 percent) and garden (16 percent) products.

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With Spavelous Spa Gift Cards there are no limitations on what spa services, spa products or spa packages that you may redeem it for. You may use them on discounted spa services and spa packages.

 

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Spavelous Spa Gift Cards give your gift recipient the choice of where and how they spend it. You never have to worry about a spa closing or changing ownership because Spavelous Spa Gift Cards may be redeemed at any day spa, resort spa, destination spa or salon that accepts Visa® debit cards.

 

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