Saturday, December 30, 2017

2018 Hot Travel Destinations, Part 1

If my wife said to me tomorrow, “honey, let’s just go back to Tuscany, and stay at Bill & John’s for a week,” I’d be perfectly cool with that. Annemarie and I have spent our travel lives together going to different places in Europe, which is wonderful, but there’s something to be said for picking a spot and returning to it over and over.

Let’s start with the obvious fact that it’s arrogant to think you know a place just because you spent a few days there. I’ve been to Florence three times; I barely know anything about it. I could go back every summer for the rest of my life and still find interesting things to see and do. And not because it’s Florence. You could say the same about, oh, Lugano. The fact is, unmoored from the urgency to see and do, you find your own likes and dislikes. Fodors likes this place? I don’t. TripAdvisor tells me this place is middling? Nerts to crowdsourcing, my tastes are refined. Take your time, don’t rush, do what you want. Including lounging in the sun for a few hours.

You also get to see your place evolve. That restaurant closed? Such a shame, I liked their pizza. But look, that place is new, let’s try it out. The old stuff stays the same, that’s how the tourist industry works, but everything around it is constantly changing. It makes every trip its own thing.

Lastly, and probably most important: when you go back to the same place, invariably you get to know some of the locals. It probably starts with hotel staff and shop-keepers – if I went back to Mitteltal, Germany, I’d wager the convenience store owner would recognize me as the German-speaking American who purchases unhealthy quantities of wine. And we’d chat about this and that. Eventually, we’d connect with some locals while standing in line at the bakery, or perhaps our kids would make a friend in the playground. Locals notice and take interest when the same folks show up repeatedly. Everyone thinks their hometown is special, and they'd be delighted with outside confirmation.

Point is: I may be driven by St. Augustine’s dictum on ‘the world is a book, don’t just read one page,’ but it’s not the only choice when it comes to travel. If you find a happy place, make it yours for 2018 and beyond.

Monday, November 20, 2017

Travel Dad is Back

BhamTravelDad is back! And in the planning stage for our next great family trip. Let's see....2014 was Italy; 2016 was Germany; can you guess 2018? Ok, we thought of England, it's still on the list, but the boys need to spend some time in France. France proper, that is, Alsace is it's own thing. Paris, Loire, Brittany, in two weeks in June. It's on.

What? Isn’t that a bit early?  In one of my 2016 posts on selecting destinations, I argued that the best strategy was to narrow the field down to 3-4 choices, and then monitor the air travel costs to see if you can get a good cheap flight to any of those. The reasoning being that the air spend is often the biggest budget line item, and has the most variability. 

Example: if you looked up a typical flight from Atlanta to Paris, you’ll probably find $1,200 as a median offering. But, if you catch it at just the right time? $600. Quick math says for a family of six, that’s a $3,600 savings. Go ahead and compare that to the next highest item, lodging. Family of six will cost $150/room/night, typically, needing two hotel rooms. So, on a 10 day trip, your hotel budget will be $3,000, meaning you can save more in smart air shopping than in your entire hotel budget. This is why I’ve always prioritized the air part of the trip.

OK, that means that I’m shopping this much too early. Your best discounts for air usually happen three to four months out, seldom more.  Airlines don’t even post fares more than 330 days out. So. What gives?

AirBnB, that’s what – it’s helped change the landscape. Even at popular locations, hotel inventory at good spots stays open at 6 months out. And cost variation is generally +/-20%. But that’s hotels. If you find the right house/apartment rental, you can save 50% over a hotel stay, and get a really nice place. But the best rentals get booked way early – often by families making recurring vacations to the same place. And in this case, a good vacation home can make a tremendous difference on both the cost and the experience. It’s enough of a difference that this time, I’m going to find the place first, and then trust that a reasonably decent flight will appear within the parameters of my booking on the rental place.

Needless to say, I’ll let you know how this works out. Stay tuned.