Spa Supply Solutions
Spa Supply Solutions
Spa Supply Solutions
 
EMPLOYERS: POST A JOB
Free ezines & magazines
Jobs News Video Training Products Magazines Spa Business spa-kit Handbook What's on Advertise Subscribe
Catalogue gallery
More catalogues
Diary dates
Powered by leisurediary.com
28-30 Apr 2024
Radisson Blu Hotel, Glasgow,
08-08 May 2024
Hotel Melià , Milano , Italy
10-12 May 2024
China Import & Export Fair Complex, Guangzhou, China
13-16 May 2024
Conrad Chia Laguna Sardinia , Italy
14 May 2024
JPMorgan Chase Headquarters, New York City, United States
18-22 May 2024
The Ravenala Attitude Hotel, Mauritius
23-24 May 2024
Large Hall of the Chamber of Commerce (Erbprinzenpalais), Wiesbaden, Germany
30-30 May 2024
Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris, France
Magic mushrooms, transformative travel, wellness kitchens: GWS releases ‘Eight Wellness Trends for 2018’
By Jane Kitchen 25 Jan 2018
Destinations like Six Senses Bhutan, where guests journey across five lodges, are an example of 'transformative travel', along with experiences like performance, music and art Credit: Six Senses
Experts from the Global Wellness Summit have identified eight future directions in wellness in a new report, ‘Eight Wellness Trends for 2018’.

The report is based on the insight of the more than 600 delegates from more than 40 countries who attended the Global Wellness Summit in October, as well as the perspectives of economists, medical and wellness professionals, academics, and leaders across all sectors of the wellness industry.

“No other trends report is based on the perspectives of so many wellness experts,” said Susie Ellis, GWS chair CEO. “And every one of this year’s trends pushes the health and wellness envelope in unexpected ways.”

The eight trends highlighted in the report are:

1. Mushrooms Emerge from Underground
The GWS suggests that in 2018, more people will explore the unique medicine that mushrooms provide to our brains and bodies.

“Thanks to a surge in rather mind-blowing medical evidence, demonstrating that they reset the brain and shake the ‘snow globe’ on rigid neural patterns, magic mushrooms will emerge from the underground, and could prove better than existing treatments for anxiety, depression and addiction,” the report said.

The GWS also pointed to studies such as tech investor Peter Thiel’s US$20m 2018 European psilocybin trial, as well as to legalisation movements for magic mushrooms in several US states and a trend of microdosing psilocybin as a brain booster.

“This magic mushroom moment bears resemblance to early days in the cannabis wellness trend,” the report said. “Think how lightning-fast attitudes and laws changed there.”

The GWS is also looking at evidence many “regular” mushrooms are magical for health, particularly as stress and inflammation fighters.

“Playing a starring role in Asia’s centuries-old food-as-medicine philosophy, now the functional mushroom trend is becoming a global reality,” the report said. “We’ll see mushrooms – especially “adaptogenic” varietals like reishi, cordyceps, chaga – get infused in everything imaginable: powders, lattes, cocoas, chocolate, broths, oils and teas. And with many mushrooms boasting unique skin-boosting powers, mushroom-infused products will keep invading the beauty aisles.”

2. A New Era of Transformative Wellness Travel
The GWS points to ‘transformational travel’ as the 2018 buzzword, described as “travel that challenges people on a deeply personal level, creating emotion through the powerful medium of storytelling."

“We predict more wellness destinations will use the power of wellness circuits and epic storylines to create a ‘necklace’ of linked wellness experiences rather than the disconnected ‘beads’ of programming, amenities, and itineraries,” the report said.

Destinations like Six Senses Bhutan, where guests journey across five lodges, or Iceland’s Red Mountain Resort, where spa-goers follow the saga of an ancient Icelandic hero are examples of this kind of travel.

“Spa experiences will be reimagined as active, long, nature-roaming journeys – a circuit of hiking, meditation, treatments, and more,” the report said. “More performance, music and art – ‘story’ immersion – will get served up with wellness. The future for wellness travel will be engaging people’s emotions as much as evidence-based healing.”

3. Reframing the First 1,000 Days
Preconception and paternity will enter the health equation, the GWS said.

“We have not recognized that the health and lifestyle choices of both parents during the preconception period – including emotional wellness – can impact their child’s health for a lifetime,” the report said. “This new trend challenges us to look before the traditional 1,000 days of pregnancy and early childhood, and puts sharp focus on the role of epigenetics, the study of how gene expression changes with environmental and lifestyle factors, and that can be inherited. It also examines the father’s role in creating a supportive and healthy environment during pregnancy and after birth.”

The GWS also suggests that wellness treatments and techniques – such as yoga, massage, and mindfulness – will be the first choice to treat babies and children suffering from injury, sleeplessness or pain.

4. The Wellness Kitchen
With more people today wanting to eat healthy, organic food, a new model of “Wellness Kitchen” will store and showcase fresh fruits and vegetables as opposed to processed foods, and new designs and technology will celebrate uncluttered, well-ventilated spaces that are as encouraging of socialising as they are of preparing healthy food, the GWS said.

In this new model, refrigerators will be reimagined to properly store and transparently display fresh fruits and vegetables, and kitchens will have space for gardens and sprouting. Noisy appliances will be a thing of the past. Composting delivery systems and particulate and oxygen sensors will be standard features. And there will be more emphasis on healthy building materials. Because just like the food it contains, the Wellness Kitchen doesn’t merely feed – it nourishes.

5. Getting our “Clean Air Act” Together
As the gravity of toxic air becomes clearer – and disagreements over standards get left on the table by governments – the GWS suggests that we will see people owning their own “clean air acts.”

This can mean filling homes and offices with plants, donning chic air pollution masks, actively monitoring indoor air quality using new sensors and apps, investing in devices that purify the air, adopting pollution-fighting beauty regimes, embracing salt therapy and breathwork training, or choosing “lung-cleansing” travel destinations.

“Significantly, this trend will put more pressure on businesses and governments to take action against the ultra-fine particulates that are dirtying our air,” the report said.

The Spa Handbook also identified personal pollution sensors as one of its 2017-2018 Spa Foresight Trends.

6. Extreme Wellness
Hacking our way to better brains, bodies and overall wellbeing is on the rise, with a surge in brain-optimising nootropics and even private brain optimisation clubs, the report said.

“An age of hyper-personalised, deep-view health and wellness, thanks to tests combining DNA, epigenetic and microbiome testing is on the horizon,” the report said. “In the name of physical and mental wellness, humans are re-wiring themselves to achieve the once impossible.”

The Spa Handbook also identified nootropics as one of its 2017-2018 Spa Foresight Trends.

7. Wellness Meets Happiness
The wellness world needs to put a greater focus on happiness generally – and on driving social connection and technology disconnection specifically, the GWS said.

It pointed to a rise in happiness science, with The World Happiness Report introduced at the UN and the Gallup-Sharecare Well-being Index, which take a global pulse on people’s happiness, as well as mounting evidence that smartphones and social media are creating a rise in depression, anxiety, suicide, addiction and extreme body issues.

“With loneliness as big a killer as smoking, governments will take action, like the UK recently appointing a Minister of Loneliness,” the report said. “In the wellness space, a massive trend is new co-working, co-living and social spaces laser-focused on building well communities in our age of digital isolation and remote work.”

The GWS also suggested that 2018 will be a watershed backlash year against big tech, with more Silicon Valley engineers speaking out – and more medical evidence coming to light – about the effects that 24/7 digital/social media connection has on our brains and happiness.

“In wellness travel, off-the-grid and no WiFi destinations focused on contemplative community and nature will be the most sought after, and explicitly happiness-focused (or joy-for-joy’s sake) wellness approaches will rise.”

The report also suggested that eating for happiness – with menus packed with serotonin-boosting foods like tuna, salmon, nuts, seeds, bananas, green tea, dark chocolate, spinach, blueberries and blackberries – and “happy fitness” that returns exercise to childlike play, laughter yoga and smile asana, will also be on the rise.

8. A New Feminist Wellness
From a surge in women-only, wellness-infused clubs and co-working spaces – to a storm of FemTech “solving” for women’s bodies, the GWS sees a new feminist wellness on the horizon.

The report said: “2017 was a year of attacks on, and fighting back, by women: The US presidential administration threatening women’s rights, the 5-million-strong global Women’s March, Harvey Weinstein, MeToo, the exposure of the Silicon Valley boys club. #Resist and #thefutureisfemale became global movements, and ‘feminism’ was rightly named the word of the year. Of course, the reality is that the woman-dominated wellness world has been steadily solving for women’s bodies and lives for years, creating, in effect, a supplemental, woman-focused healthcare system. With this confluence of forces, we predict new intersections between women’s empowerment, feminism and wellness in 2018.”

This will include more women-only clubs, co-working spaces, and collectives: where women work, network, empower each other, unwind and learn – with wellness on tap, as well as more wellness travel aimed at women’s empowerment, from all-women’s adventure travel to “painmoons” – wellness retreats providing women emotional healing after divorce, breakups, grief, anger and loss of sexual happiness.

“This fourth wave of feminism is galvanising this rush of for-women, by-women wellness,” the report said. “But no matter the future political climate, this trend comes down to one fact: the sheer growth in women’s spending power, because economists agree – the global economic future is female.”

The Spa Handbook also identified menopause as one of its 2017-2018 Spa Foresight Trends.

To read the GWS' full report, click here.


News
1 to 12 of 8705 news stories
27 Apr 2024
The Bannatyne Group says it has officially bounced back from the pandemic, with both turnover and profits restored to pre-2020 levels in 2023, according to its year-end results. Owned by former BBC Dragon’s Den investor, ... More
25 Apr 2024
Kerzner International has signed deals to operate two new Siro recovery hotels in Mexico and Saudi Arabia, following the launch of the inaugural Siro property in Dubai this February. Designed to offer guests a holistic ... More
24 Apr 2024
The US spa industry is continuing its upward trajectory, achieving an unprecedented milestone with a record-breaking revenue of US$21.3 billion in 2023, surpassing the previous high of US$20.1 billion in 2022. This data stems from ... More
24 Apr 2024
Short-term incentives to exercise, such as using daily reminders, rewards or games, can lead to sustained increases in activity, according to new research. Researchers found that even a simple daily reminder encouraged people to move ... More
24 Apr 2024
Spa and wellness veteran Shannon Malave has been named spa director at iconic US spa destination Mohonk Mountain House. Based in New York’s verdant Hudson Valley and founded in 1869, Mohonk is a historic Victorian ... More
23 Apr 2024
Six Senses Kyoto opens its doors today, marking the eco-luxury hotel and spa operator’s entry into Japan and a new addition to its urban collection. Situated in the historic Higashiyama district, the 81-key hotel is ... More
23 Apr 2024
The UAE’s first-ever Dior Spa has officially launched at The Lana, Dubai – the Dorchester Collection’s debut property in the Middle East. Bathed in natural daylight on the hotel’s 29th floor, Dior Spa The Lana ... More
22 Apr 2024
The Sacred River Spa at Four Seasons Resort Bali at Sayan will reopen later this year with an all-new design plus enhanced treatments and experiences inspired by its river valley home. Nestled amid rich tropical ... More
18 Apr 2024
The Global Wellness Institute (GWI) has released new data on the US’ wellness economy, valuing it at US$1.8 trillion. According to the organisation's recent report – called The Global Wellness Economy: United States – the ... More
19 Apr 2024
UK sauna enthusiasts will converge at Galgorm Resort in Northern Ireland next week for the highly anticipated second annual UK Aufguss Championships. Hosted from 22-24, the event will see competitors from across the UK showcasing ... More
17 Apr 2024
Remedy Place, a US-based social wellness club brand, is poised for steady expansion in the coming years, with plans to open two new clubs annually moving forward Remedy Place is the brainchild of Dr Jonathan ... More
16 Apr 2024
Swiss longevity brand Clinique La Prairie (CLP) has inked a deal with Montara Hospitality Group to operate a resort at Tri Vananda – a purpose-built wellness community in Phuket, Thailand. Tri Vananda, envisioned as a ... More
     
International SPA Association - iSPA
Spa Life International
Company Profile
Phytomer
Phytomer remains an independent family business led by the founder’s son, Antoine Gédouin. We [more]
 
MORE PROFILES
Featured Supplier
Spa and wellness industry to reunite at Forum HOTel&SPA 2024
The 16th edition of the esteemed international spa and hospitality industry event, Forum HOTel&SPA, is rapidly approaching, promising an immersive experience for attendees. ... more
Lemi
Product news
Elemis’ first standalone store to open in London’s Covent Garden
Elemis’ first standalone store to open in London’s Covent Garden
Myndstream teases new breathwork series in collaboration with Grammy Award winner Peter Kater
Myndstream teases new breathwork series in collaboration with Grammy Award winner Peter Kater
Full Balance reveals all-natural reflexology board
Full Balance reveals all-natural reflexology board
Scottish spa industry to gather at first-ever Spa Life Scotland event
Scottish spa industry to gather at first-ever Spa Life Scotland event
We Work Well organises annual pre-ISPA charity hike in Scottsdale
We Work Well organises annual pre-ISPA charity hike in Scottsdale
MyEquilibria combines art and outdoor exercise
MyEquilibria combines art and outdoor exercise
Directory

 
JOBS
NEWS
VIDEO
TRAINING
PRODUCTS
MAGAZINE
 
SPA BUSINESS
SPA-KIT.NET
SPA BUSINESS HANDBOOK
SUBSCRIBE
ADVERTISE
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS
CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2024



Spa Supply Solutions
Spa Supply Solutions
Spa Supply Solutions
Spa Supply Solutions
Jobs    News   Products   Magazine
NEWS
Magic mushrooms, transformative travel, wellness kitchens: GWS releases ‘Eight Wellness Trends for 2018’
POSTED 25 Jan 2018 . BY Jane Kitchen
Destinations like Six Senses Bhutan, where guests journey across five lodges, are an example of 'transformative travel', along with experiences like performance, music and art Credit: Six Senses
Experts from the Global Wellness Summit have identified eight future directions in wellness in a new report, ‘Eight Wellness Trends for 2018’.

The report is based on the insight of the more than 600 delegates from more than 40 countries who attended the Global Wellness Summit in October, as well as the perspectives of economists, medical and wellness professionals, academics, and leaders across all sectors of the wellness industry.

“No other trends report is based on the perspectives of so many wellness experts,” said Susie Ellis, GWS chair CEO. “And every one of this year’s trends pushes the health and wellness envelope in unexpected ways.”

The eight trends highlighted in the report are:

1. Mushrooms Emerge from Underground
The GWS suggests that in 2018, more people will explore the unique medicine that mushrooms provide to our brains and bodies.

“Thanks to a surge in rather mind-blowing medical evidence, demonstrating that they reset the brain and shake the ‘snow globe’ on rigid neural patterns, magic mushrooms will emerge from the underground, and could prove better than existing treatments for anxiety, depression and addiction,” the report said.

The GWS also pointed to studies such as tech investor Peter Thiel’s US$20m 2018 European psilocybin trial, as well as to legalisation movements for magic mushrooms in several US states and a trend of microdosing psilocybin as a brain booster.

“This magic mushroom moment bears resemblance to early days in the cannabis wellness trend,” the report said. “Think how lightning-fast attitudes and laws changed there.”

The GWS is also looking at evidence many “regular” mushrooms are magical for health, particularly as stress and inflammation fighters.

“Playing a starring role in Asia’s centuries-old food-as-medicine philosophy, now the functional mushroom trend is becoming a global reality,” the report said. “We’ll see mushrooms – especially “adaptogenic” varietals like reishi, cordyceps, chaga – get infused in everything imaginable: powders, lattes, cocoas, chocolate, broths, oils and teas. And with many mushrooms boasting unique skin-boosting powers, mushroom-infused products will keep invading the beauty aisles.”

2. A New Era of Transformative Wellness Travel
The GWS points to ‘transformational travel’ as the 2018 buzzword, described as “travel that challenges people on a deeply personal level, creating emotion through the powerful medium of storytelling."

“We predict more wellness destinations will use the power of wellness circuits and epic storylines to create a ‘necklace’ of linked wellness experiences rather than the disconnected ‘beads’ of programming, amenities, and itineraries,” the report said.

Destinations like Six Senses Bhutan, where guests journey across five lodges, or Iceland’s Red Mountain Resort, where spa-goers follow the saga of an ancient Icelandic hero are examples of this kind of travel.

“Spa experiences will be reimagined as active, long, nature-roaming journeys – a circuit of hiking, meditation, treatments, and more,” the report said. “More performance, music and art – ‘story’ immersion – will get served up with wellness. The future for wellness travel will be engaging people’s emotions as much as evidence-based healing.”

3. Reframing the First 1,000 Days
Preconception and paternity will enter the health equation, the GWS said.

“We have not recognized that the health and lifestyle choices of both parents during the preconception period – including emotional wellness – can impact their child’s health for a lifetime,” the report said. “This new trend challenges us to look before the traditional 1,000 days of pregnancy and early childhood, and puts sharp focus on the role of epigenetics, the study of how gene expression changes with environmental and lifestyle factors, and that can be inherited. It also examines the father’s role in creating a supportive and healthy environment during pregnancy and after birth.”

The GWS also suggests that wellness treatments and techniques – such as yoga, massage, and mindfulness – will be the first choice to treat babies and children suffering from injury, sleeplessness or pain.

4. The Wellness Kitchen
With more people today wanting to eat healthy, organic food, a new model of “Wellness Kitchen” will store and showcase fresh fruits and vegetables as opposed to processed foods, and new designs and technology will celebrate uncluttered, well-ventilated spaces that are as encouraging of socialising as they are of preparing healthy food, the GWS said.

In this new model, refrigerators will be reimagined to properly store and transparently display fresh fruits and vegetables, and kitchens will have space for gardens and sprouting. Noisy appliances will be a thing of the past. Composting delivery systems and particulate and oxygen sensors will be standard features. And there will be more emphasis on healthy building materials. Because just like the food it contains, the Wellness Kitchen doesn’t merely feed – it nourishes.

5. Getting our “Clean Air Act” Together
As the gravity of toxic air becomes clearer – and disagreements over standards get left on the table by governments – the GWS suggests that we will see people owning their own “clean air acts.”

This can mean filling homes and offices with plants, donning chic air pollution masks, actively monitoring indoor air quality using new sensors and apps, investing in devices that purify the air, adopting pollution-fighting beauty regimes, embracing salt therapy and breathwork training, or choosing “lung-cleansing” travel destinations.

“Significantly, this trend will put more pressure on businesses and governments to take action against the ultra-fine particulates that are dirtying our air,” the report said.

The Spa Handbook also identified personal pollution sensors as one of its 2017-2018 Spa Foresight Trends.

6. Extreme Wellness
Hacking our way to better brains, bodies and overall wellbeing is on the rise, with a surge in brain-optimising nootropics and even private brain optimisation clubs, the report said.

“An age of hyper-personalised, deep-view health and wellness, thanks to tests combining DNA, epigenetic and microbiome testing is on the horizon,” the report said. “In the name of physical and mental wellness, humans are re-wiring themselves to achieve the once impossible.”

The Spa Handbook also identified nootropics as one of its 2017-2018 Spa Foresight Trends.

7. Wellness Meets Happiness
The wellness world needs to put a greater focus on happiness generally – and on driving social connection and technology disconnection specifically, the GWS said.

It pointed to a rise in happiness science, with The World Happiness Report introduced at the UN and the Gallup-Sharecare Well-being Index, which take a global pulse on people’s happiness, as well as mounting evidence that smartphones and social media are creating a rise in depression, anxiety, suicide, addiction and extreme body issues.

“With loneliness as big a killer as smoking, governments will take action, like the UK recently appointing a Minister of Loneliness,” the report said. “In the wellness space, a massive trend is new co-working, co-living and social spaces laser-focused on building well communities in our age of digital isolation and remote work.”

The GWS also suggested that 2018 will be a watershed backlash year against big tech, with more Silicon Valley engineers speaking out – and more medical evidence coming to light – about the effects that 24/7 digital/social media connection has on our brains and happiness.

“In wellness travel, off-the-grid and no WiFi destinations focused on contemplative community and nature will be the most sought after, and explicitly happiness-focused (or joy-for-joy’s sake) wellness approaches will rise.”

The report also suggested that eating for happiness – with menus packed with serotonin-boosting foods like tuna, salmon, nuts, seeds, bananas, green tea, dark chocolate, spinach, blueberries and blackberries – and “happy fitness” that returns exercise to childlike play, laughter yoga and smile asana, will also be on the rise.

8. A New Feminist Wellness
From a surge in women-only, wellness-infused clubs and co-working spaces – to a storm of FemTech “solving” for women’s bodies, the GWS sees a new feminist wellness on the horizon.

The report said: “2017 was a year of attacks on, and fighting back, by women: The US presidential administration threatening women’s rights, the 5-million-strong global Women’s March, Harvey Weinstein, MeToo, the exposure of the Silicon Valley boys club. #Resist and #thefutureisfemale became global movements, and ‘feminism’ was rightly named the word of the year. Of course, the reality is that the woman-dominated wellness world has been steadily solving for women’s bodies and lives for years, creating, in effect, a supplemental, woman-focused healthcare system. With this confluence of forces, we predict new intersections between women’s empowerment, feminism and wellness in 2018.”

This will include more women-only clubs, co-working spaces, and collectives: where women work, network, empower each other, unwind and learn – with wellness on tap, as well as more wellness travel aimed at women’s empowerment, from all-women’s adventure travel to “painmoons” – wellness retreats providing women emotional healing after divorce, breakups, grief, anger and loss of sexual happiness.

“This fourth wave of feminism is galvanising this rush of for-women, by-women wellness,” the report said. “But no matter the future political climate, this trend comes down to one fact: the sheer growth in women’s spending power, because economists agree – the global economic future is female.”

The Spa Handbook also identified menopause as one of its 2017-2018 Spa Foresight Trends.

To read the GWS' full report, click here.
RELATED STORIES
Sornson takes on new role at GWS and GWI


Kate Sornson has been named associate manager – marketing and communications – for the Global Wellness Summit (GWS) and the Global Wellness Institute (GWI).
Technogym to host next year’s Global Wellness Summit


The Global Wellness Summit (GWS) will return to Europe in 2018, and is set to take place at the Technogym Village in Cesena, Italy, from 6-8 October 2018.
Virtual reality therapy named winner of Global Wellness Summit’s ‘Shark Tank’ award


A new virtual reality therapy to treat post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and anxiety has been named the winner of the annual Shark Tank Student Competition at the Global Wellness Summit (GWS).
Dr Richard Carmona receives GWS Social Impact Award


Dr Richard Carmona – the 17th surgeon general of the US and chief of health innovation for wellness destination Canyon Ranch – received the Global Wellness Summit’s Social Impact Award for his commitment to expand access to health and wellness to people around the world.
MORE NEWS
Bannatyne has bounced back from the pandemic
The Bannatyne Group says it has officially bounced back from the pandemic, with both turnover and profits restored to pre-2020 levels in 2023, according to its year-end results.
Kerzner to expand Siro portfolio with recovery-focused hotels in Los Cabos and Riyadh
Kerzner International has signed deals to operate two new Siro recovery hotels in Mexico and Saudi Arabia, following the launch of the inaugural Siro property in Dubai this February.
US spa industry hits record-breaking US$21.3 billion in revenue in 2023
The US spa industry is continuing its upward trajectory, achieving an unprecedented milestone with a record-breaking revenue of US$21.3 billion in 2023, surpassing the previous high of US$20.1 billion in 2022.
Immediate rewards can motivate people to exercise, finds new research
Short-term incentives for exercise, such as using daily reminders, rewards or games, can lead to sustained increases in activity according to new research.
Shannon Malave appointed spa director at Mohonk Mountain House
Spa and wellness veteran Shannon Malave has been named spa director at iconic US spa destination Mohonk Mountain House.
Six Senses unveils urban wellness retreat in Kyoto inspired by Japanese Zen culture
Six Senses Kyoto opens its doors today, marking the eco-luxury hotel and spa operator’s entry into Japan and a new addition to its urban collection.
+ More news   
 
COMPANY PROFILES
Bioline Jatò

Bioline Jatò is a family Italian company operating in the professional skincare industry since 197 [more...]
+ More profiles  
DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

28-30 Apr 2024

Spa Life Scotland

Radisson Blu Hotel, Glasgow,
08-08 May 2024

Hospitality Design Conference

Hotel Melià , Milano , Italy
+ More diary  
 


CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2024

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS