Destinations Archive
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April 16, 2008
- Gone Fishing - Visit Us at Kayak.com
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Wondering where the TravelPost.com Insider went? Come visit us at the Kayak.com blog, where we’re serving up travel advice, deals and other tidbits every week.
posted in Destinations, About TravelPost. permalink
April 8, 2008
- What Joe Sharkey, Chinese Visas and Pets Have in Common
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….Nothing, except they all made our list of travel news items for the day:
In the New York Times, Joe Sharkey laments the return of the Saturday night stay rule, designed to discourage business travelers from booking the lowest airfares.
At the same time a hated old rule may be coming back, a well-loved new airline has launched its latest new route. Virgin America began flights between Seattle-Tac and Los Angeles International today.
Moving on from planes flying high in the sky, we land on news of a visa crack down in China. Chinese authorities have reportedly begun limiting visas in Hong Kong, which is popular entry point for travelers to the vast nation. The changes are reportedly in response to security concerns expected to come with the influx of tourists visiting the country before, during and after the Olympics.
Back in the States, we learned that the FAA has responded to increased criticism and scrutiny of its airline safety inspection practices by reassigning (but not firing) its top inspection official to a pencil-pushing administrative position instead.
And that’s not the only travel-related spring cleaning that’s going on today. Gizmodo highlights an airplane cabin for sale on eBay. Wondering what one would do with an intact airplane cabin? The seller has plenty of creative, if not practical, ideas.
If you’re looking for more creative ideas, you’ll find plenty among the 2008 Webby Award nominees, which were announced today. We weren’t surprised to see our parent company, Kayak.com, on the list.
And speaking of awards, here are some for all the four-legged travelers in the house: Animal Fair magazine has announced its 2008 Cesar Five Dog Bone Awards for best pet-friendly companies. Continental won out among airlines, while Austin’s The Driskill Hotel prevailed in the hotel category. The Fairmont Scottsdale Princess scored highest in the resort category.
posted in Air Travel, Destinations, China, Business Travel. permalink
April 7, 2008
- Today in Travel: Airlines’ World of Hurt
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What’s the biggest travel news of the day? Well, for airlines, things are still looking pretty bleak. Joining Aloha Airlines and ATA, Skybus shuttered its doors over the weekend, and British Airways is still trying to paw its way out of the Heathrow Terminal 5 mess that’s made its shiny new building the hub of what is quite possibly the biggest travel debacle thus far in 2008. Continental has decided to join the fray of airlines charging $25 for coach passengers to check a second piece of luggage.
While some airlines are busy charging travelers more, some are having sales. JetBlue’s spring sale is going on now and keeps popping up on just about every travel newsletter I’ve gotten today - and I get a lot of travel deals newsletters. Speaking of JetBlue, I had been wondering about the exact cost of JetBlue’s new extra legroom offering ever since I learned of the new program, and now we have the answer. The New York Times reported yesterday that the airline is pricing its roomier seats (38″ of pitch) at $10 extra for flights under 600 miles, $15 for those between 600 and 1,500 miles and $20 for flights over 1,500 miles.
Extra legroom isn’t the only new perk to be offered to airline passengers. Today, the EU announced that it will allow aircraft operating in the region to offer in-flight mobile phone services. Get ready for some in-flight altercations to go along with that. Like star-crossed lovers that just can’t call it quits, Delta and Northwest are reportedly back in merger talks.
Meanwhile, Kiplinger’s has added a new Business Travel section to its online offerings. A quick perusal revealed some decent articles, nothing earth-shattering yet, but we’ll keep checking back.
And with that, we’re off to dig through more RSS feeds, blogs and travel news sources. Back tomorrow with more of the latest travel news.
posted in Air Travel, Destinations, News, Techie Travel, Blogs, Business Travel, Europe - All Countries. permalink
April 3, 2008
- Murakami Debuts at Brooklyn Museum
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This weekend, a retrospective exploring the work of Japanese artist Takashi Murakami opens at the Brooklyn Museum. Anime, manga and pop-culture fans will no doubt turn out in droves to see Murakami’s iconic works, which include murals, sculptures and a host of giant, action figure-esque characters (check out Hiropon, a little lady with enormous, milk-spurting breasts). One unusual aspect of the show is a full-size Luis Vuitton store contained within the museum, an artistic extension of Murakami’s collaboration with the company and its creative force Marc Jacobs. This is one of those rare exhibits that holds equal appeal for fashion addicts, art lovers, anime fans and pop-culture aficionados. Runs through July 13, 2008.
posted in Destinations, Museums, New York. permalink
April 2, 2008
- Wormholes on the Way
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Sweet! According to a New York scientist, teleportation and forcefields could be possible within decades. How’s that for advancement in travel? Watch out airlines, wormholes, here we come.
posted in Destinations, Unusual News, News. permalink
April 1, 2008
- Free Rooms at Citizen M Hotel
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Earlier this year, I posted about Citizen M, a cool hotel opening this summer at Amsterdam Schipol Airport. The hotel started taking reservations today. As an opening promo, the hotel is offering 100 free nights scattered throughout its reservation calendar. As I was messing around with it today, I found one available Aug. 16, 2008, and I’m sure there are others still left. I thought it was important enough to post about here and over at Kayak.com. You can check out the Kayak.com post below if you want. Either way, it’s a cool deal at a hotel I’d love to be visiting this summer. Sadly, the ‘dam is not on my itinerary. Hopefully, it will be on one of yours….
posted in Hotels, Destinations, Deals, Contests and Promos, Europe - All Countries. permalink
March 31, 2008
- Meet the World’s Dirtiest Cities
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Where are The World’s Dirtiest Cities? Forbes recently came up with a list. The 25 cities deemed the world’s dirtiest won their places on the list with disease-infested water supplies, life-threatening air pollution, plentiful raw sewage and rank public sanitation problems. Drum roll, puh-lease. The cities are:1. Baku, Azerbaijan (pictured)
2. Dhaka, Bangladesh
3. Antananarivo, Madagascar
4. Port au Prince, Haiti
5. Mexico City, Mexico
6. Addis Abada, Ethiopia
7. Mumbai, India
8. Baghdad, Iraq
9. Almaty, Kazakhstan
10. Brazzaville, Congo
11. Ndjamena, Chad
12. Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
13. Bangui, Central African Republic
14. Moscow, Russia
15. Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso
16. Bamako, Mali
17. Pointe Noire, Congo
18. Lome, Togo
19. Conakry, Guinea Republic
20. Nouakchott, Mauritania
21. Niamey, Niger
22. Luanda, Angola
23. Maputo, Mozambique
24. New Delhi, India
25. Port Harcourt, Nigeria
posted in Destinations, Miscellaneous, Top 10 Lists, Mexico, Healthy Travel, India, Southeast Asia, Africa. permalink
March 28, 2008
- Tips for Canceled Flights
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With all the canceled flights hitting travelers this week due to increased security inspections, I thought it would be a good time to highlight some past posts I’ve written about handling unexpected flight cancellations:
At the end of the day, there is no magic solution when a flight suddenly gets canceled. Whenever I’m stuck in that situation, I have a three-pronged attack:
1. First, I call the airline immediately with my re-booking request
2. While still on the phone, I hustle to the customer service/re-booking desk
3. Lastly, I embrace distraction. They won’t get you on the next flight, but a traveler should never underestimate the soothing power of some trashy magazines, a laptop, airport nachos and - let’s get real here - draaanks in the terminal’s watering hole.
posted in Air Travel, Destinations, Travel Advice, Insider Tips. permalink
March 27, 2008
- Opens Skies Means More Choices, Not Cheaper Ones
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Just so we’re all clear about this Open Skies business, you know - the agreement that goes into effect this coming Sunday, U.S. travelers may soon have more choices for traveling to and from Europe, but they shouldn’t count on those choices being any cheaper over the long run. Two stories to read, compare, ponder:And all this leads us to an important question: how much will travelers value choice when prices are roughly the same?
My hope is that the increased competition that comes with the Open Skies agreement encourages better conditions for travelers - even those better conditions have nothing to do with cheaper airfares. Like better schedules, shorter travel times or the availability of more in-flight services…
posted in Air Travel, Destinations, Business Travel, Europe - All Countries. permalink
March 24, 2008
- Where Not to Stay: Seattle’s N. Aurora Ave.
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Looking for a place to rest your head in North Seattle? We think it might be a good idea to avoid one block in particular. That would be the 12000 block of North Seattle’s N. Aurora Ave., where not one, but two motels have been shut down by the Washington State Health Department in the last week.
Inspectors reportedly first found mold and unsanitary conditions at the Orion Motel and shut it down last week. Next on the chopping block? The Seattle Motor Inn, where health inspectors apparently discovered vanities concealing buckets of “dark brown, fetid water,” mattresses with exposed wires, contaminated water in the pool and inoperable smoke detectors. Eww!
posted in Hotels, Destinations, Unusual News, News, Pacific Northwest. permalink



