Wednesday, February 27, 2013

A Brilliant Airfare Tip From Rick Seaney of FareCompare

This appeared yesterday in USAToday and it's such a pearl, I had to direct your attention to it.

In short, Seaney notes that airfares can rise when you buy more than one at a time. Why? Because reservations that include multiple seats will always have the same price. If the airline is releasing, say, 2 seats at a lower price, and you're booking 5, you'll only get the higher price for all your seats.

His method of searching for group fares involves first looking for the number of fares in your group (say 5), getting a price and then clicking away. DON'T BUY at this stage. You then do another search for just one ticket, and if it comes out at a lower price, you add passengers until the price jumps up again. Then you buy some of the seats at the lower rate and some at the higher. Overall, your group saves. Pretty nifty eh? According to Seaney, it also works with groups as small as two.

To read Rick's original piece, click on the link above.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Low Cost, High Speed Rail Debuts in France

In Europe, as here in the US, it's not at all odd to find airfares that are significantly more affordable than train fares on the same route. Its an odd quirk since, obviously, airplanes should be far costlier to run than trains.

Well, in France, at least, that situation is about to change. A new rail line, called (cutely enough) Ouigo is being launched on April 1 by France's national railroad monopoly SNCF and it will be charging just 10 euros for routes that normally run 60 to 80 euros. Que des économies! And that price isn't for the old, clunker engines, it's for high speed rail lines, some 62 in all across the country. The 10 euro price will hold until 400,000 seats are sold, and then rates will rise a bit. Children traveling with adults pay 5 euros on any route. A number of seats will also go for less than 25 euros, still a bargain.

There are some drawbacks to the service, foremost among them being that the rail-line doesn't go into the center of many cities, using suburban stops instead. For example, it doesn't serve Paris. Instead, would-be riders will have to trek out to the nearest Ouigo station, which is Marne-le-Valle. But that may not be a problem for everyone as it is next to French Disneyland, and a quick 30-minute RER ride from central Paris. For Lyon, passengers will be dropped at the airport station.

Drip-pricing also erases some of the sheen from this new rail line. There will be charges for extra luggage (as on many airlines you'll be allowed one suitcase and one handbag free) and for the use of electrical outlets onboard. 

A final bummer: no cafe car. That allows the rail line to add extra seats, and give these sorts of discounts. 

For complete info and to book (do it quickly as this will sell out), go to www.ouigo.com/fr.


Monday, February 25, 2013

Frontier Breaks with Expedia

In yet another salvo in the ongoing war between air carriers and third party booking engines, Frontier Airlines announced today that it would no longer accept bookings through Expedia. Apparently, contract negotiations broke down, leading Frontier to go its own way.

Will it last? Well, when American Airlines decided it would no longer sell through Orbitz in 2010, that online travel agency retaliated and, due to a judge's order, American fares returned to the Orbitz site in 2011.

This is all part of a larger strategy, on the part of Frontier, to cut out the middle man (and his fees). In fall of 2012, the airline announced that only passengers who booked directly on the Frontier website would be allowed to choose their seats in advance (the airline also attached ugly, additional fees to change fees and other services, for those who didn't book direct). This latest move can be seen, I think, as the next move on the chess board.

Who's hurt in all this? Expedia, obviously (Frontier fares will still appear on Orbitz, Priceline and Travelocity). But  the consumer is also a loser here, as it will be more difficult for potential flyers to suss out what the costs should be on the routes Frontier flies.

Friday, February 22, 2013

Freebie Friday: Near Free Stays at Red Roof Inns

Everybody stays at the Red Roof Inn
And yes, this one is a long-shot.

But IF you're turning 40 this year, and IF you'll be traveling on your birthday, Red Roof Inns will allow you to stay at one of their many properties for just $19.73 per night.

That's because Red Roof Inns is itself celebrating its 40th year.

For full details, click here. The deal is good through the end of the year.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

More Sequester Travel Casualties

I've discussed before in this blog how the shenanigans in Congress could damage our national parks. (Brief bit of advice: if the sequester happens and you're planning a spring National Park vacation, double check the NPS.gov website to make sure the park you were planning to visit will be open on your dates; many will have to curtail their schedules).

But the damage to tourism could go well beyond our park system. As USAToday is pointing out, air travel could become a hellish mess is cuts are instituted, because of the drastic slashing in personnel that will be required. I'm talking both TSA employees and air traffic controllers. If you thought delays at the airport were bad now, wait until April. Unless the Congress gets its act together (unlikely, they're on recess!) and fixes this mess before the sequesters automatic cuts go through.

If you think, like I do, that budgeting should be done in a sensible fashion, a manner in which services that affect safety--like air traffic control and food safety inspections--should be excused from the discussions, writer your representative today and let them know now is not the time for a vacation. They need to do the people's business and get this sequester off the table.

If they don't, well...you should know who to curse out next time your plane is delayed for 3 hours because of lack of staff.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Delta and Starwood Create a Loyalty Partnership

Recently, we had Brian Kelly (aka The Points Guy) on our radio show to talk about Loyalty Programs. Though what he said was complex, it can be boiled down to one phrase: "Don't just rely on airline trips to accumulate miles." Instead, Kelly makes a big play for using the right credit cards and accumulating loyalty points at hotels. You can read his advice at the website linked to above.

A Westin Resort Lobby in Greece
Dovetailing this advice, is the recent announcement that Delta has Partnered with Starwood Hotels (which comprises the brands Westin, Sheraton, Aloft, W and Meridien). Starting March 1, those who stay in a Sheraton will earn points on Delta (above and beyond the points they earn by flying). And conversely, booking a ticket on Delta will earn "Gold Tier" members of Starwood's loyalty program points for every dollar spent on Delta. That's significant: its dollars not miles that earn points towards free hotel stays.

Only time will tell how well the program works out for consumers. But for users of each brand it seems like a no-brainer to give the new system a try.


Tuesday, February 19, 2013

UK The Cheap Way: 19GBP Private Hotel Rooms This Spring

A map of England using county flags (by Paul Callan)
Traveling to the UK this spring? You could snag a 19 GBP bed. And you WON'T be staying in a hostel.

That's right, a private room with private bath for just 19GBP. In London, you'll pay just 25 GBP for the privilege.

So how are these rooms? Well, they're available from Travelodge from March 22 through May 17. The chain has put some 50,000 rooms on sale. I've stayed in Travelodges in the past and have found them to be more than adequate. By which I mean clean, with comfortable beds, decent showers and nice people at the front desk. They're not the most stylish of places, but heck, at these prices do you want style, too?

To get the deal--and move quickly as it will sell out--head to www.travelodge.co.uk.

Cheers!

Friday, February 15, 2013

Freebie Friday: Would You Pay Extra To Sit In A Kid-Free Zone on the Plane?

That's the question raised by the debut last week of Air AsiaX (the long-haul arm of Air Asia) new "Quiet Zone". The first 7 rows of its economy class are strictly for those over the age of 12. For some reason, that translates to "quiet" in the minds of airline execs and some passengers. (Ha! Wait until a drunken passenger or a chatty Kathy books one of those seats. But I digress...).

For the privilege of sitting in the youngster-free area, passengers pay an additional $11 to $35 (the variance has to do with the amount of leg room offered.)

Now, I can see how booking the first three or four rows of this section might make sense to particularly sensitive travelers. But in the seventh row? Well, you're just as likely to have a kid kicking the back of your chair as you are in the cheap seats.

It'll be interesting to see if this experiment works out for the airline.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

A Valentine's Day Round-Up of News

Which must start with news of consummation. Yes, US Airways and American Airlines are officially one as of Valentine's Day. Their boards announced today that they'd come to an agreement.

So what will the $11 billion dollar deal mean to travelers? I posted about that topic earlier this week, but other travel experts have also weighed in on such topics on what will happen with miles, how the integration of the two will affect customer service and whether or not ticket prices will go up (most agree with me that they will). To read a nice summary of a lot of other articles on this topic, click here.

Carnival Triumph Still At Sea
No reports on whether those on shore can smell the arriving vessel yet. Oy, what a fiasco. My heart goes out to all the folks trapped on that boat. See my article from earlier in the week on the ramifications of this disaster for cruise pricing. And if you're scheduled on the Triumph for a cruise before mid-April, contact your travel agent as the line has cancelled all of the ship's voyages until then.

Have you ever had a "vacationship"?
I discussed that very topic with the delightful Andrea Syrtash and turned our talk into an article that the Toronto Star is featuring today. It goes into the safety issues involved with meeting someone on the road, the best destinations to find an, er, vacation playmate (and which places to avoid) and why vacations can make your dating life better even if you don't meeting someone on the road. Click here to read the piece.

Improve Your Sex Life: Take a Vacation!
Or so says the US Tour Operators Association. Um, well, what would you expect them to say? But they've backed up this assertion with a study on traveler's love lives. Click here for more on that.   


Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Flying Down to Rio..For Less

Carnival's over, and believers have replaced the fun with ashy foreheads and Lenten self-sacrifice. But heck, it's ALWAYS fun to be in Rio, even when the biggest party of the year has just ended.

That's why I was so intrigued to see the headline from The Flight Deal that it had found round-trips from a number of gateways to Brazil's capital of fun for around $600. That's a darn good fare for a flight this long. Apparently it holds for fares through June.

For full information, click on the link above.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Will the Carnival Triumph's Problems Affect Overall Cruise Pricing Going Forward?

My friend, Carolyn Spencer Brown, cruise expert extraordinaire and Editor in Chief of Cruise Critic, has a theory as to why cruises have exploded in popularity this past decade. She points out that if you look at cruise ads, you rarely see the water. Instead, you're introduced to a resort that has everything you could want on a vacation. There's little, if any, reference to maritime pleasures, the lure of the ocean or anything else to remind would-be vacationers that they'll be afloat.

Pretty easy to see why: anything that floats can potentially sink. Or get jostled around. So the cruise industry has been very savvy about uncoupling the image of cruising from the vicissitudes of life at sea.

This type of marketing works until disaster strikes. Both the Costa Concordia tragedy and this week's Carnival Triumph fiasco (the ship had a fire in the engine room, is hobbled and powerless and is being slowly pulled back to port) make people think twice about cruise vacations, especially those who've never cruised before. How could they not, when USA Today is running the headline: Odor on Disabled Ship 'So Bad People Are Getting Sick'. This disaster comes close on the heels of a fatal accident aboard a Thomson Cruise in which 5 crew members were killed.

This is a long build-up to the answer to the question I posed in the headline and the answer is: undoubtedly.

The cruise lines had been making noise about incrementally raising the base prices of cruises in 2013. But if bookings drop precipitously--and history shows us that they will after a well-publicized incident like the one aboard the Carnival Triumph--I very much doubt we'll see higher prices overall in 2013 than we did in 2012.

So what's should the vacationer who's still interested in cruising do? Monitor the prices and wait a bit.
 It will take a few weeks for the sellers to register that a booking drop has occurred and start the discounting process.

In fact, it's always a good idea to wait, unless you have very specific cruise needs (say 10 cabins all on one hallway for a family reunion). Right now is "Wave Season", the time of year that the industry attempts to get consumers to book by throwing a few gimmes their way (free cabin upgrades are common). Truth is: the discounts and gimmes are usually better later on, in the 2 months leading up to the cruise itself. You rarely gain anything (except, perhaps, peace of mind) by booking months and months in advance.

One final thought: I must give some kudos to Carnival. They've done the right thing by offering all the inconvenienced passengers their full money back, plus money they spent on the cruise (for everything but the casino and spa, apparently). Usually they just offer a discount off the next sailing. Carnival is offering that on top of the full refund, which is quite a classy move.

Let's hope the poor passengers and crew aboard the Triumph get home soon, safe and sound.


Monday, February 11, 2013

What Will the US Airways/American Merger Mean to You?

Appropriately enough, American and US Air have until Valentine's Day to decide whether they'll be wed. On April 15, the agreement between the two carrier allowing them to share information, during merger talks, expires.

Sure it can be extended (and who doesn't like more foreplay?), but it seems clear that the two will soon be one. Which would leave the United States with four super-carriers operating 80% of the flights around the United States.

Remember "too big to fail" in the banking world? Meet its skyborn equivalent.

Merger fatigue has set in among the pundits, and most are saying that this latest consolidation will have little to no effect on consumers.

Um, really?

Sure prices haven't skyrocketed since the last merger. But there's been a steady creep upward. And many more changes are on the horizon.

Significant changes, actually. American and Frontier both have introduced "bundling" schemes which tie all sorts of extras (luggage fees, priority boarding, cancellation fee waivers, etc.) to the base cost . Click on my links for details on how those programs will befuddle the consumer and hogtie such flight search engines as Kayak and Momondo. In short, it's going to be very, very difficult in the near future to compare one flight to the next, since each will be customized based on your past flying history. The ultimate result? When the ability to compare flight prices evaporates (and it may soon) and consumers are given even fewer options of airlines, I have no doubt the cost of flying will surge upward in 2013.

And let's not forget about the corrallary airline fees, which just keep morphing and increasing. According to a recent study, 36 airline fees were increased in 2006 and another 16 redefined. While there seems to be less of a direct causation between the mergers and that trend, well, who the heck knows.

Remember: less choice is...well, LESS CHOICE!

Finally, did you hear that Pope Benedict will become the first Pope to resign since 1415? I blame Delta Airlines.

Friday, February 8, 2013

The Show Must Go On! An Invitation to the Boston Globe Travel Show Tomorrow

That's right! It hasn't been cancelled, though the opening will be delayed. And I'm typing this blog on the train to Boston, so I'll be doing my speeches come blizzard or Noreaster!

BUT there has been one significant change: instead of starting at 10am tomorrow, the show is now scheduled to start at noon and run until 8pm. Frankly, I don't know when I'll be doing my two speeches (I believe one is now at 4pm and the other at 2pm, but I'll have to double check that). What I do know is it'll be warm and cozy inside Boston's World Trade Convention Center and the focus will be on places you can go to escape the chilly blasts of winter. Plus my speech (and the speeches of my fellow travel experts) may turn into an intimate seminar, so if you've ever wanted to get lots of personal advice about your travels, well, this will be the show to go to. I'm HOPING we get good attendance, but frankly, it seems unlikely. So if you show up, we'll be thrilled to see you!

For more information on the show, please click here.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Triple Play! Rome, Florence and Venice from $1399 Including Air from the USA

Pretty darn good, dontcha think?

The deal comes through the aptly named Go Today and it holds for the month of March, when days will be temperate (a blessing in Rome, a city that will broil you alive in summer) and the tourist crowds manageable. Travel later (select dates in April, May, August, September and October) and the price hits a still-reasonable-for-Italy $1599.

What do you get for your money? A heckuva lot actually. The package includes airfare from New York City (into Rome and out of Venice; other areas are available for a slight increase in cost), train travel between the cities in question, four nights hotel in Rome, three nights in Florence and two in Venice, breakfasts and all air taxes. You're on your own when it comes to meals and sightseeing, but frankly, that's a plus in Italy. It means you'll get to explore some of the lesser known sites and eat in the terrific, tiny Mom-and-Pop joints.

For complete details, click on the link above.