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The days of the all-inclusive airline ticket are
gone.
In fact, as any traveler knows, lately carriers have added
extra fees to offset rising fuel costs, charging for
everything
from checking baggage and in-flight drinks and food ($7
for a sandwich on United!) to booking international
frequent-flier
award tickets (Delta recently added a $50 fee). And by the
time you read this, the list has undoubtedly already gotten
longer.
A recent report by the Business Travel Coalition, a
Pennsylvania-based
corporate advocacy group, warned that if oil
prices continue to increase, almost all major airlines could
default on debts by the end of this year or in early
2009.
The International Air Transport Association estimates that
rising fuel prices will cost the airline industry $176 billion
this year alone. While I'm of the opinion that carriers
should just raise fares instead of hiding behind that
once-complimentary
can of soda, I acknowledge that they're in a tough position.
The problem: higher ticket prices may make travelers more
reluctant to fly, or they may choose another
carrier.
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I still recall my road warrior days. It
seemed like
every other week, I was hopping on a plane for Orlando or
Vancouver or Palm Springs or Washington or Chicago or
Toronto.
It
might not be Rome, Paris, and Monte Carlo, but Washington,
Toronto and Orlando are pretty classy places. I went to
crucial meetings. I was an important person. I was a frequent
flyer.
However,
after a while, all the towns begin to look the same. One
airport hotel looks amazingly like another. Surely the taxi
driver in Washington and the taxi in Orlando were twins
separated at birth. I was yearning to just stay put. I had
had enough of hotels and restaurants
Traveling sounds glamorous until
you have to do it over and over and over. Especially when
you have a family, you want to spend some time at home between
the episodes of jet lag. Comfort becomes a much bigger deal,
and you want every place to feel like home.
You just can't do that in a hotel.
Not in a Marriott. Not in a Sheraton. Not in a
Hilton.
I
wish I knew then about two other options.
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No trip to French-speaking
Canada is complete without a visit to romantic Québec
City. There's a definite European sensibility here and
you'll feel farther from home then you are, walking down
cobblestone streets and stopping in small shops selling
everything from pastries and artisanal cheese to antiques
and art. For 2008, the city has invited the world to help
celebrate its 400th anniversary, and it's sure to be the
biggest party north of Montreal.
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In This Issue
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News from Our Office
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Your
updates go here. You can change this every month or
leave this information static. Your updates go here.
You can change this every month or leave this
information
static. Your updates go here. You can change this
every month or leave this information static.
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TIP: FLY ON A HOLIDAY
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Just
as the most expensive fares tend to be the days or
weekends at either side of a holiday, some of the
least expensive are on the holiday itself, especially
Christmas and Thanksgiving.
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TIP: Fill the rental a few miles from the airport
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Gas stations nearest airports and
car-rental agencies often charge the highest rates.
You can save dollars on a full tank of gas by filling
up well away from the airport. But make sure you're
not so far away that you'll have less than a full
tank of gas when you return your vehicle.
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