Arthur Frommer's Blog, page 21
June 26, 2012
Arthur's Blog: In the Battle for Visitors to Ireland, BMIT Has Lowered the One-Week Air-and-Land Cost to $749
If you can't commit to Ireland on or before June 29 (the deadline for booking Sceptre Tours' $899 bargain package combining trans-Atlantic air, hotels for seven nights, and a one-week car rental), you're still not out of luck. Brian Moore International -- another longtime specialist in packages to the Emerald Isle -- is offering a weeklong fly/drive program to Ireland this autumn and winter for as little as $749. For that sum, you receive round-trip air between New York and Dublin and a rental car (manual transmission) for one week. Although, this time, hotel accommodations are not included, many visitors to Ireland will prefer spending around $50 a night per person for bed-and-breakfast in Irish guesthouses located up and down all the main roads of that country.
You end up spending around the same as you'd pay to Sceptre Tours, and you don't need to meet Sceptre's June 29 deadline.
Brian Moore's $749 price (which sometimes dips to as low as $709 and $729, and sometimes climbs to as much as $779) is offered on scattered dates starting October 28 and continuing through the end of February. It's a complicated pricing structure, for which you'll need to consult the company's booking charts). But by being reasonably flexible in your dates of departure, you can go to Ireland for an exciting week of motoring to all the major sightseeing attractions, and for far less money than to England or anywhere else in Europe. This is a major travel opportunity.
Add-on prices from other U.S. cities? Brian Moore (www.bmit.com; tel. 800/982-2299) lists them from no fewer than 40 U.S. locations, and they are all quite moderate.
Brian Moore has been operating trans-Atlantic for more than 30 years, and is currently a subsidiary of the giant TUI corporation, one of the largest travel companies around.
Arthur's Blog: In the Battle for Visitors to Ireland, Brian Moore International Has Lowered the One Week, Air-and-Land, Cost to $749
If you can't commit to Ireland on or before June 29 (the deadline for booking Sceptre Tours' $899 bargain package combining trans-Atlantic air, hotels for seven nights, and a one-week car rental), you're still not out of luck. Brian Moore International -- another longtime specialist in packages to the Emerald Isle -- is offering a weeklong fly/drive program to Ireland this autumn and winter for as little as $749. For that sum, you receive round-trip air between New York and Dublin and a rental car (manual transmission) for one week. Although, this time, hotel accommodations are not included, many visitors to Ireland will prefer spending around $50 a night per person for bed-and-breakfast in Irish guesthouses located up and down all the main roads of that country.
You end up spending around the same as you'd pay to Sceptre Tours, and you don't need to meet Sceptre's June 29 deadline.
Brian Moore's $749 price (which sometimes dips to as low as $709 and $729, and sometimes climbs to as much as $779) is offered on scattered dates starting October 28 and continuing through the end of February. It's a complicated pricing structure, for which you'll need to consult the company's booking charts). But by being reasonably flexible in your dates of departure, you can go to Ireland for an exciting week of motoring to all the major sightseeing attractions, and for far less money than to England or anywhere else in Europe. This is a major travel opportunity.
Add-on prices from other U.S. cities? Brian Moore (www.bmit.com; tel. 800/982-2299) lists them from no fewer than 40 U.S. locations, and they are all quite moderate.
Brian Moore has been operating trans-Atlantic for more than 30 years, and is currently a subsidiary of the giant TUI corporation, one of the largest travel companies around.
June 25, 2012
Arthur's Blog: The Long-Established Sceptre Tours Deserves Applause for its Fall $899 Ireland Package
For departures from October 1 to December 15, Sceptre (www.sceptretours.com; tel. 800/221-0924) will fly you (included in the package price) round-trip to Dublin, and then provide you with seven (7) nights of accommodations in good hotels: one night in Newpark Hotel Kilkenny, two nights in Blarney Castle Resort in Cork, two nights in the Absolute Hotel in Limerick, and two nights in the Ballsbridge Hotel in Dublin, as well as with a one-week car rental in a manual shift auto. Although you'll receive breakfast on one day in Kilkenny, no other meals are provided (but you can buy an optional package for $99 that provides you with full Irish breakfast for every morning of your seven-night stay, as well as with a whole raft of escorted sightseeing tours and admission charges for attractions in Ireland).
All local taxes and service charges, as well as all government air fees and taxes, are included. And you can extend your stay (as well as your use of the car) for extra nights, for $75 per such night. Airfare surcharges from cities other than New York? It's typical of this remarkable package that you pay only $43 more from Chicago, and equally gentle additions from numerous other cities (Atlanta, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., etc.). And there are gentle surcharges (sometimes as little as $11 and $22) for weekend departures.
Please note: You can book at the lowest price by simply using the website; if you must speak with a live person, you'll pay $25 extra.
Few countries have suffered more than Ireland from the current European economic crisis. That means, as you'll probably agree, that we'll be seeing many more of these ultra-cheap air-and-land packages to Ireland as we approach the late fall and winter months. But for a starter, this one is pretty special, and I'm proud to bring it to your attention. Erin go bragh! as they say.
June 22, 2012
Arthur's Blog: We'll Be Discussing the Vast New Addition of Cars Land to Disneyland on Sunday's Travel Show
Those hopes were quickly squashed. Though California Adventure was mildly interesting, it failed to boost attendance to the extent that Disney had planned. So Disney turned to another idea: the use of Disney's Cars franchise to provide the theme for an expansion of California Adventures. Though Disney Pixar's Cars movie wasn't as initially successful financially as the studio's previous releases (think Toy Story; Monsters, Inc.; and Finding Nemo), the subsequent sale of Cars toys, apparel and licensed items was encouraging.
So Disney transformed the 12-acre parking lot of California Adventure into a vast new expansion of that park's appeal -- increasing the square footage of Disneyland by as much as 20%. It opened earlier this month, and it has been a colossal hit. People brought sleeping bags to spend the night outside the new park on the day before its opening, so they could be first in line at 5 a.m.
Travel writer Jason Cochran has visited the new Cars Land theme park, and his interview on the subject will start near the top of the first hour of this Sunday's Travel Show (noon to 2 p.m. E.S.T., streamed live on wor710.com and preserved in a podcast (click on "The Travel Show" on the list of programs appearing at the very bottom of the main menu). Jason has an extraordinary facility for being able to discuss the broader travel consequences of a popular event in travel and to provide insight into travel trends.
I spoke with Jason yesterday, a day after the recording of his interview, and was impressed with the remarkable gamble (more than a billion dollars) that Disney has risked to expand its California theme park. According to Jason, not simply the theme park but the surrounding community of Anaheim has now been greatly expanded and improved to make a much more enjoyable stay out of a visit there.
So I hope you'll tune in. Jason's interview will start at 1:06 p.m. E.S.T. on Sunday, and he'll also be describing the various rides and exhibits that make an intriguing, car-focused, highway-focused, attraction out of Disney's new Cars Land. In the meantime, if you'll google the words Cars Land on your computer, you'll be able to see several videos of the individual attractions that make up Cars Land.
Never let it be said that Frommers.com is only interested in profound travel subjects and not in the popular entertainment that draws so many people into the world of travel.
June 21, 2012
Arthur's Blog: My Personal Selection of the 12 Best Bargain Vacations for July
Because I had the assistance of the entire staff of the magazine, I was able fairly easily to collect 40 brand-new and worldwide bargains in every monthly issue. Today, doing this blog all my myself, I'm going to repeat that earlier triumph -- but only by listing 12 of them. Maybe in subsequent appearances of this blog, we'll get back to choosing 40!
Here, to avoid exhaustion, are merely 12 candidates that come to mind, all but one of them for departures in July, the remaining bargain being an especially remarkable winter trip.
(Since airfare is usually included in the prices I cite, I will be assuming use of a west coast gateway city for trips to Asia, and Miami for a trip to the Caribbean or Central America. In each case, a slight add-on will result in the total cost from your own particular departure city).
Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic
$753 per person throughout July (Monday departures) for seven nights of all-inclusive arrangements at the Cofresi Palm Beach Resort & Spa in Puerto Plata in the Dominican Republic, including round-trip airfare (and all government fees and taxes) from Miami. For the most cost-conscious traveler, here's an unusually cheap vacation near Puerto Plata on the north coast of the Dominican Republic, at a 468-room beachside resort. Package includes round-trip air from Miami, all government fees and taxes, airport-to-hotel transfers, and seven nights of accommodations with three meals daily and unlimited drinks. Go to www.cheapcaribbean.com or phone 800/915-2322.
Costa Rica $839 per person for a six-night July vacation in Costa Rica, including round-trip air (and fuel surcharge) from Miami, hotel accommodations throughout with breakfast daily, and 7-days' rental of an SUV mini with unlimited mileage. This is from Gate 1 Travel (www.gate1travel.com; tel. 800/682-3333), departing Miami on July 3, 5, 10, 12, 17, 19, 24, 26 and 31. You receive hotel accommodations for 2 nights in San Jose, 2 nights near the Arenal Volcano, and 2 nights in the Monteverde-area rain forest, always with breakfast daily, as well as a "Suzuki Jim" SUV for the week, with unlimited mileage. Because round-trip airfare between Miami and Costa Rica is included, Gate 1's top price of $839 for the entire package is an unprecedented bargain -- but government fees and taxes, as well as car rental fees, are not included.$1,095 per person for escorted tours in July: On twice-a-week departures in July (specifically, July 1, 6, 8, 13, 15, 20, 22, 27 and 29), the long-established Caravan Tours will take you by escorted motorcoach on a 10-night tour of every important sight of Costa Rica, for a total of $1,095, including quality accommodations, all three meals daily, daily escorted sightseeing and entrance fees. Airfare to Costa Rica, for which you make your own arrangements, is not included. Go to Caravan.com or phone 800/CARAVAN.$1,139 for "The Best of Costa Rica," independently, on daily departures throughout July (but not including airfare), consisting of 9 nights in four different and distinctive locations of Costa Rica. As operated by the well-known G Adventures, this comprehensive tour of Costa Rica -- operated daily throughout July -- takes you to four outstanding locations of Costa Rica, in each of which you receive guided touring. You spend one night in the capital city of San Jose at the start of your visit (and one other night at the end), are then taken to Tortuguero on the Caribbean coast (a two-night stay there, viewing its canals and rain forest), go then to LaFortuna at the base of the Arenal Volcano and its area (two nights), and are then taken to Guanacaste and its superb beaches on Costa Rica's Pacific coast (a full three nights there), before returning to San Jose for a final night (altogether you have received nine hotel nights, nine breakfasts, two lunches and two dinners; budget $95 to $125 for the other meals). Price is $1,139 for each of two persons traveling together, $1,579 per single. Book at www.gadventures.com or by phoning 800/800-4100.
Riviera Maya, Mexico
$899 per person for a week in July on the Riviera Maya, at the 480-room Viva Wyndham Maya resort near Puerto Morales, on Mexico's Caribbean coast. The price includes round-trip air from Miami (and all government fees and taxes), and seven nights of all-inclusive arrangements at the Viva Wyndham Maya resort, with its four restaurants and four bars. The remarkable rate, for a resort of such quality, is only $899 per person on Saturday departures throughout July. Tour operator is Bookit (www.bookit.com; tel. 888/301-9981).
China $899 for six nights in Beijing, including round-trip airfare and all taxes and fees from San Francisco, and accommodations with full breakfast daily at a fine Beijing hotel. I'm leaping ahead to the upcoming winter to disclose a remarkable bargain. At a time when $899 won't buy even the shortest six-hour flight to London, tour operator China Spree "Timeless Beijing" package will not only fly you there round-trip from San Francisco (including all taxes and fees) but put you up for six nights (with full buffet breakfast daily, and three lunches) at a fine Beijing hotel (the four-star Traders Hotel by Shangri-La), providing you also with round-trip airport-to-hotel transfers, and three days of escorted sightseeing (leaving the remainder of time for your own wanderings). Departure dates: November 18, 21 and 25, December 2, January 6, 13, 20 and 27. To book, go to www.chinaspree.com and click China Tours, then Winter Specials. China Spree's toll-free phone number is 855/556-6868.$2,199 to $2,299 for four Chinese cities in eight nights, throughout July, including round-trip air from San Francisco to Beijing and Shanghai (and all government fees and taxes), hotel accommodations with three meals daily (except on one "free day" in Shanghai), and daily escorted sightseeing including all entrance fees, for departures throughout July. Though the published price is a higher $2,399 and $2,499, passengers receive a $200 discount by making their final payment by check rather than credit card; deposits can always be made by credit card). China Focus Travel's prices (www.chinafocustravel.com; tel. 800/868-7244) have risen considerably from before, but are still a remarkable value that places you for two nights in Shanghai, three nights in Tai' An (to which you're brought by "bullet train" from Shanghai, a 430-mile trip accomplished by train in three hours), and three nights in Beijing; you also visit a fourth city -- Suzhou (the so-called "Venice of the Orient") -- but do not spend overnight there.
Cruising the Mediterranean In July you can find daily rates ranging from $48 to $94 a day on several Mediterranean cruises. Go to VacationsToGo.com, click on "Mediterranean," then on 7-night and 9-to-11-night cruises, and you'll discover that cruise prices for those European waters have sharply fallen because of inadequate demand. Mediterranean cruise rates in summer and early fall are among the great bargains of travel, and are particularly attractive on sailings of 12 nights' duration, when on numerous dates prices are as low as $48 and $52 a night on ships of Norwegian Cruise Line ($579 and $629 for the entire 12-day cruise); as low as $74 and $94 a night on Royal Caribbean ($899 for 12 nights and $839 for 9 nights); and as low as $77 a night on MSC Cruises ($849 for an 11-night cruise). The bargains are even more numerous on 7-night cruises aboard Royal Caribbean for as little as $549 ($78 a night); and so on. Note, of course, that you'll need to pay at least $1,300 (including taxes, fees and fuel surcharge) for a round-trip trans-Atlantic flight to the port of embarkation.
Ocho Rios, Jamaica
$949 for a week in July at the giant Sunset Jamaica Grande in Ocho Rios, including round-trip airfare from Miami and all meals and drinks. The resort is the giant, 730-room Sunset Jamaica Grande in Ocho Rios, Jamaica, with its six restaurants and 8 bars, and the stay is for seven nights of all-inclusive arrangements (room, all three meals daily, unlimited drinks and beverages). Departures are on most weekdays throughout July, and air transportation is round-trip from Miami. The tour operator: Bookit.com, tel. 888/292-6703.
Las Vegas, Nevada
$99 to $119 per suite per night at Vegas' elegant Vdara Hotel, on 21 out of 31 July dates. Provided your stay is for mid-week dates (Sunday through Thursday), you'll find that July rates at the deluxe hotel properties of Las Vegas are now available at substantial discounts. Go to the booking charts of the 1,400-unit, all-suite Vdara Hotel on the Strip (arguably, one of the best hotels in Las Vegas) -- www.vdara.com or www.mgmresorts.com -- and you'll note at least 21 dates in July when such remarkable accommodations are renting for as little as $99 to $119 per suite per night. Vegas' luxury hotels do poorly in July (it's hot then), but the opportunity to enjoy a deluxe suite for as little as $109 a night per suite in July will overcome the city's other deficiencies.
Peru
$2,039 for Lima, Cuzco, and Machu Picchu in July, including round-trip airfare from Miami. The long-established Gate 1 Travel (referenced above for the first Costa Rica trip) is currently offering this air-included tour to Peru for the reasonable rate set forth above, which includes round-trip air between Miami and Lima, air between Lima and Cuzco, a hotel for three nights in Lima and 3 nights in Cuzco, with daily breakfast, an escorted city tour of Lima, and a full-day escorted tour to the ancient Inca site of Machu Picchu by "backpacker train." Date of departure: July 9. Visit Gate 1's website for further details.
And Don't Forget About Alternate Accommodations
Spacious apartments are available in major touristic cities for less than you'd spend for a hotel room. Provided only that your stay is for at least a week, you will find that housekeeping apartments are currently available in major international cities for less than the cost of an equivalent hotel, and in a more spacious setting equipped with a kitchen for making occasional meals. Numerous local real estate brokers supply such accommodations (look them up in search engines), and six major websites are today felt to provide reliable and cost-saving apartments in all major cities:
Wimdu.comAirbnb.comHomeaway.comVRBO.comEVRentals.comRentalo.com
The continuing rise of international airfares now requires that cost-conscious travelers offset that transportation cost with less expensive apartment accommodations whose value is enhanced by the opportunity to prepare some of your own meals. Apartment accommodations are often a major travel bargain.
June 20, 2012
Arthur's Blog: United Airlines Raises Baggage Fees to $100, Vegas Hotels Get Cheaper Still and Much, Much More
Suites at the super-deluxe Vdara Hotel in Las Vegas have now been reduced even further in price, to $99 per night per suite, on seven different dates in July, to $109 per night on four July dates, and to $119 per suite on ten July dates. Provided you go to Sin City during that torrid month, you and your traveling companion will stay at the posh Vdara for a total of $99 to $119 a night on 21 out of 31 days, a Vegas record for a hotel of such quality.
Exchange your dollars into foreign currency at an overseas bank or airport kiosk, and you sometimes pay as much as 15% of the transaction for the privilege to do so. Use your credit card to pay for foreign bills and the cost is almost always a uniform and much more reasonable 3% (or $5 for using an ATM machine). That's the helpful reminder that travel columnist Ed Perkins recently gave us. The single reliable method for avoiding those charges (apart from using an exotic credit card of the sort that few of us carry)? Obtain a Capital One credit card, which charges no percentage fee at all.
And as long as we're talking about good samaritans: let it be remembered that Southwest charges nothing for checking aboard two suitcases on any Southwest flight; while JetBlue charges nothing for checking aboard the first suitcase. Southwest is also operating its usual summer sale for persons who book their tickets prior to June 26, for flights occurring between July 9 and November 14. But its sales prices are nowhere near the bargain levels it used to charge for such flights. They do offer a cost advantage, though.
An outfit called AFPRelaxNews recently listed what it considers to be the next, upcoming, popular destinations: Panama City, Uganda, Lebanon, Vietnam, Argentina, Albania, Sri Lanka, and Sudan. I agree about Panama City and Vietnam.
My daughter Pauline has recently disclosed in her blog that JetBlue and Virgin Atlantic have agreed to waive the surcharge for "premium economy" seats if that's what's needed to allow families to sit together without paying ruinous penalties for their children.
Looking for a good-but-cheap suitcase? Hardly anyone thinks of going to Ikea for such a purchase, and yet the luggage on display there seems of good quality and yet priced at a quarter of what you normally encounter in a luggage store or luggage department.
Read it and weep: for a sense of what our counter-productive, indefensible, travel embargo against Cuba is costing us in terms of vacations, get a copy of a Canadian newspaper and look at advertisements for the air-and-land packages to Cuba offered by Canadian tour companies and airlines. Sunwing of Canada is currently offering seven days of all-inclusive arrangements (room, all three meals, unlimited drinks) at a seaside, Varadero Beach resort in Cuba, including round-trip airfare there from Toronto (with all taxes and fees thrown in), for $655 per person in July, weekly departures. Americans, of course, won't be accepted on the plane.
In all the world of cruising, there is nothing like a sailing on the uniquely-intellectual, 350-passenger Minerva operated by the famed, British, 60-year-old Swan Hellenic, going in 2013 on various itineraries in Northern Europe, the Baltic, Mediterranean, Black Sea, or South Atlantic. Every departure is accompanied by celebrated scholars, authors and other academic experts in the countries visited, who provide the lectured commentaries on port excursions included in the price of the cruise. Swan Hellenic's new 2013 catalogue can be viewed at www.swanhellenic.us, and persons booking a cruise before August 31 of 2012 receive 15% off the early-booking fares.
June 19, 2012
Head Just a Mile from Ketchum to the Glamorous Sun Valley Resort for a Memorable Vacation in Summer or Winter
Everything you might ever want for a summer of hiking, fishing, hunting or mountain biking, or for winter skiing and ice skating, is available to you, directly from the resort.
Like Aspen and Vail, Sun Valley is associated with a town -- in this case, Ketchum, Idaho, just a mile-or-so away. Ketchum, with its population of nearly 3,000, is smaller than the ski towns of Vail (4,500 residents) and Aspen (6,500 residents), but fully as attractive.
The lodging and dining options in that historic town are far less expensive than those in the Sun Valley resort, and nothing in Ketchum achieves the baronial splendor of the lobbies, lounges, rooms and dining halls in Sun Valley. Walk out the main entrance of the Sun Valley Lodge and in front of you is a small lake with regal, long-necked, white swans floating open it. It is all a picture of elegance and luxury, and you are attended to by solemn, courteous staff members wearing black uniforms. Despite an atmosphere of exclusivity, visitors to Ketchum have no problem strolling the grounds and buildings of the Sun Valley Resort or using (for a daily fee) the many ski lifts that carry you up to the peaks of the several mountains that surround Sun Valley.
Now unless you're prepared to pay top dollar for your digs and meals, you'd be better off staying in Ketchum and not Sun Valley (rent a car to travel between the two). And to live even cheaper (assuming that you have a car), you might consider nearby Hailey, Idaho, a twenty-minute drive from Ketchum. Hailey is generally where many people who work for a living in Ketchum, live. Buying a house in Ketchum is a pricey business, although Ketchum's real estate values have declined considerably during the last three years of a less than buoyant economy.
I found it great fun to wander the halls outside the main lobby and lounges of the Sun Valley Lodge to look -- for over an hour -- at the photos of movie stars and other celebrities (Jackie Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, Ted Kennedy) who have stayed, skiied and caroused in Sun Valley. I spent almost the same amount of time walking through other corridors lined with photos of the nation's top professional skiers who have used the mountains and slopes of Sun Valley for their training.
How do you get to Sun Valley/Ketchum? You fly there via Salt Lake City, San Francisco or Seattle, changing planes in those hub cities to a smaller, propeller-driven aircraft flying to Sun Valley Airport (which is at Hailey, Idaho). From there, you either rent a car or take a taxi to Ketchum or Sun Valley. Or else you can drive there from other western states. There is no rail transportation to Ketchum or Sun Valley; the nearby tracks of the Union Pacific line, whose interests led to the creation of Sun Valley, were ripped up many years ago and are now a bicycle trail.
Someday you should make the trip. These parts of Idaho are an enchanting treasure of the United States and remind us of what a beautiful -- and thus far protected -- wilderness we still enjoy.
June 18, 2012
At Long Last, I Have Made My First Acquaintance with the State of Idaho (and Greatly Enjoyed the Experience)
For a reason I can't understand, it was not until last week that I was myself able to visit the famed Sun Valley -- or Idaho itself. My daughter Pauline and I were invited to deliver a speech on travel at the Community Library of Ketchum, the picturesque little town of 3,000 residents located only a mile from the Sun Valley resort. Ketchum's Library had been named the winner of last year's nationwide library contest for the best display of Frommer's Travel Guides, and we flew there (no small task, requiring transfer to a small propeller plane in Salt Lake City) to commemorate that feat. It was a fine introduction to another of America's most stellar sights, a heady immersion into the Far West.
Idaho is an enormous and sparsely populated place stretching for nearly 500 miles from south to north. Four fifths of the state is rugged hills and mountains, nearly all of them untouched and undeveloped, with more pure wilderness than in any state other than Alaska.
Vast areas are covered by national forests, of all things, not national parks, as you'd expect, including designated wilderness areas from which mechanical vehicles, including even bicycles, are prohibited. Around Sun Valley are only a handful of highways, very little signage, no billboards; and rumor has it that the category of "forests" rather than "parks" was chosen to permit members of Congress to go hunting there.
Whatever the reason, you are constantly surrounded by pure nature in awesome mountains and valleys to a greater extent than anywhere else you have ever been. And you experience such nature primarily by hiking to elevations where you enjoy spectacular views, but you can also go river rafting, hunting, fishing, and mountain biking (where it's permitted). Pauline, who had flown to Sun Valley a day before I went there, joined a tour guide for a hike into the Sawtooth Mountain area just north of Ketchum, and was regaled by his accounts of joining multiple search-and-rescue teams to aid various impetuous types who had hiked off-trail. In an entire day of hiking, she saw only two other people.
Ketchum is an affluent and picturesque town whose main street is intermittently lined by authentic cowboy-type buildings of the late 1800s, wonderfully preserved. It has, in addition to two impressive bookstores, a great many fashionable shops and art galleries, and several fine restaurants. Many of its residents are out-of-staters owning second or third homes in Ketchum, who come there to enjoy the air (it's like perfume), the fishing and hiking, the winter skiing (both cross-country and downhill), and the giant, well-endowed library at which we spoke. It was typical of Ketchum that champagne and hors d'oeuvres were served after our talk.
Ernest Hemingway lived here at several times of his life, and wrote a portion of For Whom the Bell Tolls in Ketchum in 1940. He also spent the last year of his life as a resident of Ketchum, committed suicide by shooting himself, and is buried in the town cemetery. Pauline and I paid a pilgrimage to his grave, which is covered with tiny bottles of gin and vodka that admirers have placed on the horizontal gravestone as a symbolic tribute to this heavy drinker.
I can't resist pointing out that in the fascinating local history room of the Community Library is a copy of a dossier compiled by J. Edgar Hoover's FBI, which had maintained surveillance of Hemingway as a potential subversive (probably because of his support of the loyalists during the Spanish Civil War). Astonishingly for a sheaf of documents fifty years old, some of its references are still redacted. Ask to see it on your own visit to Ketchum.
Another part of the history room is devoted to the creation of the Sun Valley Resort by Averell Harriman, then the main owner and chairman of the Union Pacific Railway. It was he who, after viewing the ski resorts of Austria and Switzerland, determined in the mid-1930s to create a similar attraction in the United States (partly as a means of getting winter visitors onto his railroad passing near Ketchum). He hired a heavy-skiing Austrian count to survey all the Rocky Mountain states to find an appropriate location for an elegant, large, winter resort, and it was through his efforts that Sun Valley was born.
In tomorrow's blog: my own visit to the Sun Valley Resort. (Please be assured that as a facility designed for the 1% and not the 99%, and thus far above my station in life, Sun Valley is not where I stayed; I resided happily instead in a Best Western in Ketchum. But visiting Sun Valley, Idaho, was a fun experience, about which I'll be writing tomorrow).
June 13, 2012
Here's Another Round-up of Notable Travel Events and New Products
On a wholly different note, AirBaltic -- the flag carrier of Latvia -- last week launched a service (SeatBuddy) for seating compatible passengers next to each other. Responding to a questionnaire which they receive on booking a flight, passengers indicate the "seat mood" that they'd hope to find in their seatmates -- they indicate, for instance, whether they themselves enjoy making small talk with perfect strangers, or whether they're so business-oriented that they want to "network" with the person seated next to them (introducing them to a business opportunity), or whether they'd simply prefer to relax without speaking at all to the person next to them. The questionnaires are then run through a computer, which determines the seating chart for that flight by placing persons of similar moods next to one another. Sounds like a swell idea, doesn't it?
A Spanish travel company operating solely in Spain and called Fresco ( www.frescotours.com ) has joined the rapidly-growing list of tour operators that are junking their large motorcoaches in favor of 12-passenger vans, and thereby limiting their tour groups to a dozen persons. They go even further by designing the majority of their tours to operate solely on foot, without a vehicle at all. I'm receiving rave reviews from persons who have used them for touring areas of Spain.
Speaking of Spain, I've vehemently responding to readers who have expressed unease about traveling to Spain in view of that country's economic distress. I point out that Spain isn't at all similar to Greece in the severity of their economic problems, that Spain actually enjoyed a recent surplus in their government's annual budget, that its cities are calm (although affected by severe unemployment), and that the problem of their banks results from unwise loans to real estate speculators, somewhat similar to our own recent troubles with sub-prime mortgages. Just as we all travel peacefully within the U.S., people are traveling peacefully in Spain, and can be expected to continue to do so.
A new, travel-related website called NerdWallet (www.nerdwallet.com) compares the advantages of owning different credit cards, and might be of assistance to travelers who meticulously analyze the costs (and refunds) of those well-known plastics.
Seen the booking charts for Las Vegas' ultra-posh Vdara Hotel lately? In this relatively new hotel on the Strip, where every unit is a suite and equipped with the most luxurious amenities of any Vegas hotel, twenty-two days in July are now priced at only $109 or $119 a night per suite -- that's not per person but per suite. By simply avoiding a few weekend dates, and otherwise booking the Vdara on those nights when an astonishing $109 is charged, you'll live like royalty on a budget (but in a city that gets awfully hot in that peak-summer month).
Later this week -- on Thursday afternoon and early evening -- daughter Pauline and I will be speaking at the Library of Ketchum, Idaho, about recent important developments in travel. If readers reside in either Ketchum, adjoining Sun Valley, or other nearby towns, we'd be happy to meet and greet.
June 8, 2012
China Costs an Astonishing $899 This Coming Winter, Including Round-Trip Air
And marching along with them are the tour companies that sell air-and-land packages to China. Just this week, China Spree (tel. 855/556-6868; www.chinaspree.com ) announced that this coming winter, it will operate the single, lowest-priced travel package ever, an $899 wonder (including round-trip airfare to China from San Francisco; New York costs only $100 more) that brings you six nights in Beijing, in addition to that trans-Pacific flight. At a time when $899 wouldn't buy you a measly, six-hour round-trip to London, for heaven's sake, the Chinese travel interests are flying you, for that price, all the way to Beijing and back, placing you in a fine hotel (the four-star Traders Hotel by Shangri-La) for six nights, giving you full American breakfasts every morning, three lunches, round-trip airport-to-hotel transfers, and three days of escorted sightseeing (leaving you the remainder of time for your own wanderings). We're disclosing the winter bargain now, many months in advance, because the package will obviously sell quickly and you'd be well advised to grab it now.
Departure dates: November 18, 21 and 25, December 2, January 6, 13, 20 and 27.
The tour is called Timeless Beijing. To book, go to China Spree's website and click China Tours, then Winter Specials.
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