The Real Truth About Airfare Deals?

July 16, 2015: According to the American Association of Retired People (AARP) the best time to book a domestic flight is 47 days before take off… this is based on information from CheapAir.com which analyzed 5 million potential fares. And the best day to book is Tuesday before 3 pm Eastern Standard Time.

For the best deal to Europe they say book 276 days before planned departure – really? The Travel Curmudgeon disagrees – experience says that the more in advance one books the higher the fare – makes sense, planning that far in advance airlines can charge what ever they can get!
The TC’s advice – be vigilant and check fares often – a typical airfare changes more than 70 times – have a price in mind (based on your own research) and book when that price gets close. AARP needs to be more vigilant in their own research!!!

11745492_960626603959146_6566511527969555111_n

I left my heart- and wallet- in San Francisco!!!

July 10, 2015: IT’S OFFICIAL: San Francisco now has the highest nightly hotel room rates and has the distinction of being one of the highest priced—if not the highest—places to book a hotel room in the world!

According to my friends at Bloomberg, SF hotel rates jumped a whooping 88% in the last year to $397 a night. The city now ranks ahead of Geneva and Milan—with Chicago and Miami tied for second place here in the US!

Of the top 24 world cities included in the rating, Osaka and Lagos tied for last place—most likely in visitor traffic too?

The increase in SF rates are being driven by the regions technology boom, soaring job market and lack of hotel construction—construction in and about the city is booming but for high priced office and residential space. Most offices under construction are usually more than 50% leased before the buildings even open.

If you’re looking for a 5 star hotel, Geneva ranks highest with rates more that $600 a night. On the low end for 5 star hotel lodging, Moscow, Manama and Bahrain come in at the bottom with luxury rates starting at $228 a night.

The Curmudgeon’s advice when visiting SFO: stay elsewhere in the Bay Area and pick up BART, one of the high speed ferries, or Cal Train—save your money for the fun and not the bed!!!

11057383_959669574054849_2267816324983261410_n

Viva Cuba!!!

VIVA CUBA!!!

Looks like Americans will soon be able to travel “legally” to our nearby neighbor Cuba—just 90 miles south of Miami.

Creative American travelers for years have been able to travel to Cuba—via intermediate stops in Mexico, Grand Cayman, Jamaica, Canada and other international locations. A simple official-looking loose extra page is added into your passport and off you go. A couple of US carriers, JetBlue Airwaysfor instance, have been taking US travelers to Cuba for years—their hook is they are offering an “educational tour or experience” and that qualifies for a travel exemption. Now other travel entities like U.S. Carriers, cruise ships, hotel chains and tour operators are lined up once the approval is granted.

But beware if you expect any type of luxury or special services—the hospitality is there from the residents, but not so with the services available. Travel as an explorer and you’ll be fine. If expectations are higher, than stay home and book a suite at the Four Seasons.

11540901_956809401007533_7232334190756794213_n

United Does it Again — Computer Glitch Shuts Down Flights!!

July 8, 2015: Congratulations to our pals at United Airlines for once again shutting down the entire airline with a so called “computer glitch” at their reservations and operations center.

This is the second time this year that United has not only stranded passengers at key airport hubs around the country but also rolled over the problem to include flight and crew scheduling. Even though the problem has been solved, the recovery period will take several hours if not the entire day to bring the system back to normal operations and get passengers, planes and crews moving again. One wonders if this is truly a software glitch for software problem—and if human error somewhere along the bumpy way might be the real culprit?

11667262_956810991007374_1275759416127839799_n

Needing to Rent a Boat — Or a Yacht?

July 7, 2015: GetMyBoat is a new app that will help you secure a boat rental —claims to be the world’s largest “pier-to-pier” boat rental agency. The San Francisco based firm boasts they have the worlds largest platform for boat rentals — 30,000 boats for rent in over 3,000 locations in 135 countries! There are other apps like Cruzin and Boat Bound — and for the adventurous weekend yachtsman try GetMyBoat. More than 22 million Americans own boats with an average use of 22 days a year — so plenty of available inventory. Make sure you have boaters’ insurance and full coverage from the owner and rental agency. Stand aside Airbnb — here comes GetMyBoat sailing your way!!!

11539642_955816781106795_5802593196364556638_n

Travel Curmudgeon Congratulates the US Justice Department?

July 6, 2015: Finally — US airline passengers are “mad enough” at airline pricing and have at long last convinced the Justice Department to look into airline pricing.

And to also look at “add on fees” for services like checked baggage, assigned seats and on Spirit Airlines just about everything except use of the bathrooms — well so far they haven’t charged for that! Net profits for US air carriers in 2014 exceeded $12 billion dollars—with American AirlinesDelta, United and low cost Southwest Airlines (sorry not any more low cost—maybe low class?) controlling 80 % of the US market! Delta, American, and United charged combined baggage fees in excess of $2 billion in 2014. US air carriers offer over 2 million seats per day for sale — with a very few —if you can move fast enough — available for frequent flyer use. But fees on free flights cannot add up to over $1000 on an international ticket. At some “hub” airports one airline can control over 80% of all terminal gates.

I guess you could call the current airline pricing structure “pricing to a captive” market?

11666216_955872017767938_8749286064360569584_n

Please give that passenger his peanuts!

June 27, 2015: From USA TODAY Story:

“Now in the running for worst air traveler of the year: That would be Jeremiah Thede, 42, of Berkeley, Calif., who authorities say got out of his seat 15 minutes into his Saturday flight from Rome to Chicago — despite the “Fasten Seat Belt” sign being lit — and demanded nuts for a snack. Then he allegedly stood up and demanded more. From there things spiraled into a debacle that cost United Airlines an estimated $550,000.”

Read the USA Today story here

Baggage Carousel at SFO

June 26, 2015: This is American Airlines Baggage Carousel One at SFO on a recent weekend evening—nearly one hour after my flight arrived from DFW—so where’s my bag? Shameful now that most of the world’s airlines charge for checking your luggage—logging over a million dollars in extra revenue last year for this necessary convenience—they can’t deliver in a timely manner!!
Alaska Airlines being the only carrier that says they will deliver your bag in 20 minutes or less—If not they’ll compensate you with extra miles or small credit to use for a future flight – thank you Alaska – and American, how about using some of that extra revenue to add baggage staff?

11143255_951220831566390_3121902392312593087_n