AirTran adds food on flights servicing Bloomington

Feb 22, 2009 (The Pantagraph – McClatchy-Tribune Information Services via COMTEX) — CILL | Quote | Chart | News | PowerRating — Never fear the next time you’re hungry on an AirTran flight. The airline that serves Central Illinois Regional Airport announced plans last week to offer Sky Bites, an in-flight food sales service, on the entire fleet beginning in mid-March. The service began immediately on 60 flights.

Sky Bites offers a la carte items for $1 to $4 or combo packages from $4 to $6 in price. Snacks, cookies, crackers, almonds, cheese, vegetables, raisins and more will be sold. The combo meals include a snack and a beverage.

Pay with credit or debit cards.

South off the border
Read more »

AirTran adds food on flights servicing Bloomington

Feb 22, 2009 (The Pantagraph – McClatchy-Tribune Information Services via COMTEX) — CILL | Quote | Chart | News | PowerRating — Never fear the next time you’re hungry on an AirTran flight. The airline that serves Central Illinois Regional Airport announced plans last week to offer Sky Bites, an in-flight food sales service, on the entire fleet beginning in mid-March. The service began immediately on 60 flights.

Sky Bites offers a la carte items for $1 to $4 or combo packages from $4 to $6 in price. Snacks, cookies, crackers, almonds, cheese, vegetables, raisins and more will be sold. The combo meals include a snack and a beverage.

Pay with credit or debit cards.

South off the border
Read more »

NYC wants to be Vegas-like marriage destination

By Edith Honan

NEW YORK — New York City has issued an open challenge to Las Vegas, seeking to become a premier destination for people to get married in what officials hope will boost tourism during uncertain economic times.

The new Manhattan Marriage Bureau opened to the public this week following a $12.3-million renovation, and the 2,230-square metre space has won enthusiastic reviews from newlyweds.

“We’re taking Las Vegas on,” said First Deputy City Clerk Michael McSweeney. “The city hopes to advance New York not just as a tourist destination, but as a marriage destination.”

But will it be enough to unseat Las Vegas — known for quick weddings presided over by Elvis impersonators — as the U.S. wedding destination capital?

In 2007, New York City issued about 66,000 marriage licenses, including more than 21,000 licenses in the borough of Manhattan, city records show. Clark County, Nevada, which includes Las Vegas, issued 108,963 licenses in 2007, a spokeswoman at the city’s tourism office said.
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Basic strategies to save money on travel costs

By Ed Perkins

By now you’ve probably seen dozens of tips about how to save money on travel. Given the lousy economy, that’s an appropriate focus this year. I know of only three basic strategies to keeping travel costs down:

1. Shop wisely. This one is a no-brainer: If you shop wisely, you may not have to make any other compromises. Fortunately, you can find plenty of guidance. Start with the many free Web sites, bulletins and e-letters about available deals as they arise. These sources keep you informed about current promotions quickly enough to take advantage of short purchase windows. Use online tools that help you decide when to buy, such as Hotwire’s TripStarter ( www.hotwire.com/tripstarter), FareCompare (deals.farecompare.com) and DealBase ( www.dealbase.com). Consider opaque buying through Hotwire or Priceline – if you’re sure you won’t change your plans.

2. Go down market. If you’ve decided where and when to go, stay in two-star rather than three-star hotels, for example, or stay in a vacation rental rather than a resort; eat in neighborhood or ethnic cafes rather than restaurants on everyone’s “best” lists; use public transportation rather than taxis.

3. Lower your sights. If nothing else works, you’ll have to make serious compromises with what you really want to do. Examples: Head somewhere closer than you’d hoped; stay fewer days at your destination; stay in the countryside instead of big cities; travel during low or shoulder season; fly on low-fare midweek days; golf at public courses instead of Pebble Beach or Pinehurst. Although all of those techniques work, they involve serious compromises. For example, Scottsdale, Ariz., may be cheaper in August than in February, but it’s a very different product in August, and flying midweek may be cheaper than escaping Friday afternoon, but you could lose several days of vacation time.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/02/13/TRNO15R3P3.DTL

Cancun and the Riviera Maya or Cabo and the Mexican Riviera?

ThereArePlaces announced today the launch of the 2009 edition of its online travel guide to the best places to visit in Mexico, a county that is widely considered one of the leading travel destinations in the world.  The Mexico Guide is focused on describing the leading destinations along the country’s Caribbean and Pacific coasts.  It provides details for visiting  Mexico’s Caribbean coast including  detailed coverage of Cancun, Chichen Itza, Cozumel, the Riviera Maya and the Mayan ruins of Tulum and Coba.  On the Pacific coast, the coverage is focused on the breathtaking Mexican Riviera, including, Ensenada, Cabo San Lucas, Mazatlan, Puerto Vallarta, Ixtapa – Zihuatanejo and Acapulco. The lavishly illustrated guide includes detailed, purpose-built maps to help explore Mexico’s coasts.

“Vacationing along Mexico’s shorelines is an increasingly popular choice with travelers from around the world,” said Mike Dobson, President of ThereArePlaces.  “The coastal areas of Mexico feature great weather, fantastic beaches, good diving, almost unlimited water sports, game fishing, interesting sightseeing and lodging to suit the needs of those looking for luxury or an eco-friendly approach to vacationing.”

About ThereArePlaces

ThereArePlaces  is a fast growing website that offers two distinctive sections: Vacation Destination Guides and a section on travel advice called “Things Travelers Need To Know.”  The Destination Guide section covers top destinations in forty of the world’s most popular countries for vacation travel. As put by the Company president Mike Dobson, “Our commitment is to provide travel advice that might help you take the journey of a lifetime.”

ThereArePlaces is a property of TeleMapics, LLC, a business focused on Geospatial Information, including travel, tourism, and other location based services (www.TeleMapics.com).

http://www.transworldnews.com/NewsStory.aspx?id=76263&cat=1

Travelers can get more break for their buck this spring

By Bob Kur

UNDATED – The best getaway this spring break may be the ability to get away with a deal.

While consumers are cutting back on their spending, hotels and airlines have been cutting back their prices, hoping to to stimulate what is otherwise known as a slow travel season. The deals that are usually reserved for January through March are being extended as late as May.

Travel agents and farewatchers say the best deals won’t be the typical spring break destinations, such as Cancun or Miami Beach. Agents say Europe would be a good choice, since the economy has hit international flights harder and the dollar is stronger than it was a few months ago.

Another good way to save money on travel is to let search engines such as TravelZoo.com or AirfareWatchdog.com bring the deals to you.

If you are a student, sites, such as STATravel.com and StudentUniverse.com negotiate discounts with airlines for students. All that is needed is a valid school-issued e-mail address.

http://www.wtop.com/?nid=25&sid=1597436

Canada: An insider’s guide to road, rail and cruise holidays

By Paul Wade

From coast to coast

Since the “Last Spike” completed the transcontinental railway in November 1885, travelling by train has been the favourite way to see Canada. Thanks to panoramic windows and dome cars, the big country rolls by while you sit back and relax. Page & Moy’s Trans-Canadian Railroad Adventure (0870 833 4012; www.pageandmoy.com) starts in Toronto, takes in Jasper and Banff, then continues to Vancouver aboard the Rocky Mountaineer train. This 15-day escorted tour includes some meals, excursions in Toronto and Vancouver, a side trip to Niagara Falls and more, from £2,199.

* Canada: introduction and basics
* Wildlife and activity holidays
* City breaks and resorts

For the budget conscious, Travelsphere (0870 240 2426; www.travelsphere.co.uk) has a 17-day Across Canada escorted trip that also begins with Toronto and Niagara Falls, but goes on to Montréal and Québec City, followed by Calgary and the Rockies, Vancouver and Victoria. From £1,699, including internal transport and city sightseeing.
Fly-drives

With English as the common language and miles of well-maintained and open highways, go-as-you-please, fly-drive holidays are a pleasure – as long as you resist the temptation to cover too much ground. In the east, towns and attractions are closer together, with plenty to see along the way.
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Package holidays prove hot at Tui Travel

By Roger Blitz

Demand from UK holidaymakers for package holidays, coupled with capacity cuts, is helping Tui Travel meet its margin targets in spite of pressure on discretionary spending.

Holiday bookings are expected to be flat, Tui said in an interim management statement , and the trading environment was challenging. But it said: “We are achieving our load factor and margin targets due to our ongoing management of capacity, and we expect this to continue through the summer season.”

The group, formed last year via the merger of Tui and First Choice, said it was well positioned to meet expectations for the year.

UK average selling prices for the summer 2009 season grew 11 per cent over the past 10 weeks, against a fall in sales of 10 per cent, well ahead of cost inflation of about 6 per cent.

Peter Long, chief executive, said: “The booking cycle is where we anticipated it would be.”

Bookings for all-inclusive holidays were up 20 per cent on last year, while Turkey and Egypt were among medium-haul destinations in demand as holidaymakers looked to avoid eurozone countries because of sterling’s weakness. Mr Long added that Britain’s cold snap had prompted holidaymakers to turn their attention to summer holiday plans, with online traffic markedly up at the start of this week.

UK capacity has been cut 17 per cent and there was scope for further reductions. Mr Long said Tui could take another 2 to 3 per cent of capacity out of the market. “I don’t believe demand is going to fall to the extent that more than 20 per cent of our customers are not going to go away,” he said.” I do not think we are struggling to fill holidays.” A similar pattern emerges in other countries. Germany and the northern region have seen capacity cuts of between 14 and 16 per cent, on a sales decline of 11 to 12 per cent.

Tui said its UK consumer research showed that 87 per cent intended to take an overseas holiday this summer, the same percentage as last year, with 94 per cent of those planning a package deal.

Tui shares rose 18p to 242½p.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/b6c17468-f3f0-11dd-9c4b-0000779fd2ac.html

2 Marshall women on flight to Las Vegas that had problems with fumes

By Eric Crump

At least two Marshall women were on a Southwest Airlines flight to Las Vegas Thursday, Feb. 5, when fumes entered the cabin, causing discomfort and forcing the crew to activate oxygen masks, according to Las Vegas media reports. Flight 756 landed safely, but six people, including members of the crew, were taken to hospitals for treatment, according to a Las Vegas television station report. Of the 116 passengers aboard, two — Sharon Mills and Donna Zahn — were from Marshall. Mills and Zahn were both interviewed by Fox television in Las Vegas after the ordeal was over. About 20 minutes before the plane landed passengers began noticing a strange odor that made breathing difficult. A Las Vegas police official said the odor was caused by an electrical problem.

http://www.marshallnews.com/story/1499923.html

Las Vegas is one long happy hour

By Chris Erskine

I love martinis. I average about two a year, usually here in Las Vegas, where they are known to spawn. A cold glass of beer is a splendid sight, and a glass of Chardonnay has a lovely sort of moon glow. But a martini comes with that great stiletto heel.

And after the first sip of my very first martini, I become disoriented and hopelessly lost. We’d arrived in Vegas at 5 p.m., Posh and I, and by 6 we are sitting in a cocktail lounge at the MGM Grand, me sipping a vodka martini, her one of those cosmos, pink as a baby’s butt.

“Where to next?” I say.

“We just got here,” Posh says.

“We have to keep our fluids up,” I say.

“We do?”

“Follow me,” I say, and head off in the completely wrong direction.

For me, Las Vegas is one long sobriety test. Can I get through the revolving door alive? Can I keep from losing a foot on the escalator? I swear, if Vegas were a cruise ship, I would’ve fallen overboard years ago.

“This way,” I say.

“No, I think it’s this way,” Posh says.

She’s absolutely right. My wife is younger than me and has better eyes. In fact, she has magnificent eyes. And a Cheshire smile. Wait . . . that’s not Posh. That’s someone else’s Posh. Poshhhhhhhhhh!!!

“I’m over here,” she says.

OK, that’s it, I’m switching to beer — a far superior lubricant anyway. Vodka is for losers, the hooch behind most failed Eastern Bloc regimes. Beer is better. In the right light, a glass of beer looks like the Lombardi Trophy.

Fifteen minutes later, we’re sitting in an Irish pub in New York New York, which is like heaping falsehood upon falsehood. There is nothing Irish about this pub. There is nothing New York about the desert.

What to make of Vegas. The place both fascinates and repulses me. I like the audacity of it all, and the energy too. I can skip that whole high-roller shtick — the big cover charges, the limos and the bottle service. Go with it if you like; it’s just “not my bag,” as Sammy would say.

But for people-watching, good food and a little fun, Vegas is fine by me.

“Are you 21?” I ask Posh as we head into a casino.

“Yes, finally,” she says.

“Good,” I say. “Because you look so young.”

In fact, we’re celebrating what she tells me is her 21st birthday. To mark the milestone, I’ve scheduled spa visits and romantic dinners. We might see a show, though many of the good shows are dark and I refuse to take her — the mother of four redheads — to see Carrot Top. It’s the very thing we’re fleeing.

http://www.latimes.com/features/home/la-hm-erskine7-2009feb07,0,3593039.column