Filed under: Travel News, World travel
Dinner in the Sky Las Vegas
Las Vegas is home to some of the world's craziest themed hotels and brightest lights, but if you thought the thrills and spills of visiting couldn't get any more exciting then think again.
Forget bungee jumping from the Stratosphere or racing your motor around the Las Vegas Motor Speedway, now you can take your adrenaline addiction to new heights and dine at a table suspended 180 feet in the air.
A steel tower with a pair of lifts raises two dinner tables high above the
Las Vegas skyline. Chefs prepare food in the centre of the table for the 22 guests that are strapped in around it.
Would you brave the
Dinner in the Sky? One diner experienced it and said: "My husband thought it would be romantic to take me to dinner overlooking Vegas at a height of over 150 feet.
"What he didn't know is that I would completely freak out and be terrified when I saw what we were going to do ... So here I was terrified in the beginning and once we got going I realised it really wasn't going to be bad at all. In fact, I really enjoyed myself."
Dinner in the Sky opens officially in late summer and will cost from $290 (£185) per person including a three-course meal with wine and a souvenir photo.
We only have one question...what do you do if you need to go to toilet?
- Dinner in the Sky, worldwide
<p>
Not one for people with vertigo, this mobile restaurant dangles from a giant crane some 50 metres in the sky. Chefs, waiter and an entertainer serve up traditional fare from the middle of a 22-seater table. With ever-changing views - locations vary from castles to vineyards and historical sights – this is one restaurant that always boasts sky-high bills.<br />
<a href="http://www.dinnerinthesky.com/">www.dinnerinthesky.com</a></p>
- Underwater Dining, Maldives
<p>
Fish is always on the menu at the Ithaa underwater restaurant. Situated five metres below sea level, you'll get up close to giant moray eels and stingrays while sipping champagne cocktails and tucking into delicious Maldavian and western fusion cuisine. For more about Conrad Maldives Rangali Island, visit<br />
<a href="http://www.hiltonworldresorts.com/Resorts/Maldives/dining_entertainment/ithaa.html#Maldives+dining_entertainment+ithaa++">hiltonworldresorts.com/</a></p>
- Cabbages and Condoms in Thailand
<p>
Safe sex is on the menu at C&C's five restaurants. Proceeds from the restaurants and gift shops help to fund population control and aids awareness. Safe sex pamphlets sit alongside menus offering Thai set meals and snacks. Needless to say, your bill comes with a complimentary condom. Visit<br />
<a href="http://www.cabbagesandcondoms.com/">cabbagesandcondoms.com</a></p>
- High Spirits at Vows, Tokyo
<p>
Vodka and vows are the order of the day at this bar cum restaurant. Set up by monks from the Shingon sect of Buddhism, you are likely to receive spiritual advice as well a heady cocktail from the monk serving behind the bar. There is also the occasional guest lecture. Visit<br />
<a href="http://www.r-two.jp/shopinfo.asp?shopid=1010">r-two.jp</a></p>
- Restaurant Just for Two, Italy
<p>
With only one table, you are guaranteed to receive the waiter's undivided attention at Solo Per due (Just for Two). Situated in Vacone, it is reputed to be the smallest and most romantic restaurant in the world. The seasonal menu changes daily and the restaurant is set in lush grounds alongside the remains of a Roman villa. Visit<a href="http://www.soloperdue.com/"> soloperdue.com</a></p>
- In the Clink, Surrey
<p>
This is one jail that people are clammering to get into. Britain's first commercial restaurant within a prison offers ex-offenders within and outside Highdown Prison in Surrey to gain catering experience and national qualifications. Once through the prison gates and security checks, guests are served in a restaurant where everything from the furniture to the food has been made by inmates.<br />
<a href="http://www.theclinkonline.com/">www.theclinkonline.com</a></p>
- Carnivore, Nairobi, Kenya
<p>
This animal-themed restaurant is one mighty meat feast. Camel, ostrich and crocodile the most exotic meats served nowadays following a ban on eating game animals. Huge haunches of meat plus the sausages, ribs, and kidneys are roasted on long Masai swords in a giant charcoal pit – and the feeding frenzy continues until you tell them to stop. Visit<a href="http://www.tamarind.co.ke/"> tamarind.co.ke</a></p>
- Philsophy and Pastries, Paris
<p>
Join the cappuccino community and discuss the meaning of life at a Philo café. Le Café des Phares in Paris, a favourite haunt of extistentialist Jean Paul Sartre, is where it all started. Since then, philo cafes have sprung up all over the world. Join in the debate in English on the first Wednesday of the month at <a href="http://www.cafedeflore.com" target="_blank">Café de Flore</a>, 7pm.</p>
- Naked Dining in Japan
<p>
A weird supper club from Japan – where else? –the Nyotaimori dining experience involves eating sushi off a naked hostess's body. Guests registering in advance are emailed the location and time 24 hours beforehand, along with the rules and dress code. The champagne reception, 10 course meal will set you back around £250. Visit<a href="http://flash-sushi.com/"> flash-sushi.com/</a><a href="http://flash-sushi.com/ " target="_blank"> </a></p>
<p>
Now check out the <a href="http://travel.aol.co.uk/2011/02/28/ten-of-the-worlds-weirdest-hotels/" target="_blank">whackiest hotels in the world!</a></p>
- Modern Toilet Restaurant, Taiwan
<p>
With outlets all over Asia, this toilet-themed restaurant is no flush in the pan! Customers sit on individual toilets eating curries, hot pots and ice cream sundaes from mini toilet dishes. Even the tables are covered washbasins. This is definitely a restaurant that has every modern convenience.<a href="http://www.moderntoilet.com/tw"> moderntoilet.com/tw</a></p>
<p>
Now check out the <a href="http://travel.aol.co.uk/2011/02/28/ten-of-the-worlds-weirdest-hotels/" target="_blank">weirdest, whackiest hotels in the world!</a></p>