Vulture tourists, you’re in luck

March 12th, 2010

Did you cash in? Last year at this time, well-mannered travelers with spare dollars in their wallets could pick and choose from some incredible recession-fueled deals.

In an effort to lure guests, hotels were offering everything from complimentary upgrades and extra nights to free meals, theater tickets, massages, car washes and gas tank fill-ups. Restaurants were rolling out elaborate Happy Hours, theme parks were selling single-day tickets that could be used for admission year-round, and giving away free tickets for volunteering.

I worried about being a “vulture tourist” by taking advantage of some of these deals that were just too good to pass up. “Don’t worry,” said David Bojanic, a professor of marketing and tourism at the University of Texas at San Antonio. “You’re not taking advantage of them. It’s a buyer’s market.” Besides, he added, “when times are good, prices will quickly go back up.”

While some parts of the economy are getting back on track, Erik Torkells of Tripadvisor said the travel industry has a ways to go. “We’re still a long way from where we were three years ago. There are absolutely still travel deals to be found.”

Last year’s travel deals kept getting better and better, but you may need to do a bit of hunting this time around.

Airfares not so up in the air
Unless you stay close to home, a big part of your vacation budget will still be spent on airfare. In the past year, airlines have made route and capacity cuts that make it harder to get a great fare. While international fares are “stubbornly high,” said Airfarewatchdog.com’s George Hobica, alert travelers may still find deals for domestic travel.

“With winter almost over, this is the first time in memory that the airlines didn’t have panicky —as in $300 round-trip, with tax or so — dead-of-winter sales to Europe.” Domestically, Hobica added, “we are still seeing panicky fare reductions. These are unadvertised ‘strategic’ sales that last only a few hours.”

In other words: pay attention.

Hotels still a great deal
Travelers are still in luck when it comes to hotel prices. According to a report released earlier this month by Hotels.com, hotel rates fell by 13 percent in Europe in 2009, 14 percent in the U.S., and by even more in Asia and Latin America. “We keep using the word ‘unprecedented.’ But most room rates are down to where they were back in 2004,” said Hotels.com’s Nigel Pocklington.

Pocklington sees the rate decline slowing and stabilizing, but said many hotels — especially four and five-star luxury hotels — are continuing to cut rates, while others are adding value by including extra nights, free breakfasts, upgrades and other complimentary amenities.

Last year was the first year a handful of hotel properties in Beverly Hills, Calif., offered a collective deal. This year that deal is back: in addition to free breakfast and a complimentary extra night, the dozen hotels offering “Breakfast in Beverly Hills” are throwing in a free day on rental car reservations. And in Las Vegas, where the average room rate now hovers at just $80 a night, free show tickets, meal vouchers and waivers on property resort fees are often included in the package.

Suzanne Rowan Kelleher of the family travel Web site, WeJustGotBack.com, said she senses stabilization. “We’re not seeing nearly as many blowout deals as we saw last year, when rooms could often be snagged for 40 to 50 percent off regular rates. Now a great deal is when you can snag 25 percent savings or more,” she said.

Yet some hotels no longer need to cut prices. Sasa Nikolic, a spokesperson for the Sagamore Hotel in Miami, Fla., said the hotel last year felt “forced” to offer an in-season third-night-free promotion because both occupancy and revenues were way down. This year is a different story. “No specials are needed; and in fact many weekends we have the two-night minimum stay.”

Some attractions and theme parks still wooing you
In an effort to convince travelers to spend a weekend away from home, some cities with pricey reputations last year created free and low-cost online and print promotions. Those pitches continue in 2010. For example, while New York City is focusing on marketing itself as a classic, iconic destination, the city’s revamped tourist site, NYCgo.com, now has prominent sections listing discount offers at theaters, restaurants and hotels, and attractions and museums with free admission.

Furthermore, many Six Flags theme parks are once again offering significant discounts for purchasing single-day tickets online and offering reduced prices on season passes, which are good for admission at all the Six Flags parks around the country. And starting March 12, SmartDestinations.com is dropping prices on sightseeing passes for Boston, San Francisco and Seattle, while adding extra attractions to passes for several other cities.

Dining deals
The menu is mixed when it comes to restaurants. Since 2001, Miami restaurants have hosted the successful summer “Miami Spice” program, featuring prix fixe lunches and dinners. But for a month last year, 30 restaurants offered the same deal during the first-ever winter program. “This winter, restaurants in town didn’t feel they needed to repeat that offer,” said Jennifer Haz of the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau. “It seems as if the economy has gotten better.”

However, Boston restaurants are still feeling the crunch. In the upcoming Winter Restaurant Week (March 14-19, and 21-26), more than 200 restaurants will participate. Like last year, many of the venues offering the three-course, prix fixe meals will be honoring the promotion on Saturday nights, which are traditionally blacked out — and this year the meal deals come with discounts on theater tickets and parking spots downtown.

“We had to come up with these types of deals to make it as affordable as possible,” said Stacy Shreffler from the Greater Boston Convention and Visitors Bureau. “Everyone is looking for value.”

And in Seattle, where a new Restaurant Week promotion (actually lasting two weeks) will join the more established month-long “Dine Around Seattle” program, the owners of the Tidbit Bistro vow to keep their special money-saving option on the menu — offering customers a 10 percent discount if they pay their bill in cash.

“It started back in November,” co-owner John van Deinse said. “We wanted to give people a little more money to spend at the holidays. Now, even though business is down, it’s a way we can give a little something back to new and repeat customers who make a point to come here.” Commercial Loan Workout.


Throwing exit-row seats into the ‘for sale’ bin

March 11th, 2010

Consider the exit-row seat, that prize catch of the frequent-flying business traveler because it offers extra legroom.

Getting first dibs on exit-row seats in coach cabins has long been one of the top perks for passengers in elite-status programs, which typically allow members to reserve those seats, if available, when they make online reservations. Without extra charge.

Lately, though, those three words — without extra charge — seem to rankle the airlines, as they take services that used to be part of the basic fare and slap extra fees on them. In the third quarter of 2009, the top 10 domestic airlines raised an extra $1.95 billion from fees for things like checking bags and allowing passengers to change reservations, the Bureau of Transportation Statistics has reported.

Consider the exit-row seat, that prize catch of the frequent-flying business traveler because it offers extra legroom.

Getting first dibs on exit-row seats in coach cabins has long been one of the top perks for passengers in elite-status programs, which typically allow members to reserve those seats, if available, when they make online reservations. Without extra charge.

Lately, though, those three words — without extra charge — seem to rankle the airlines, as they take services that used to be part of the basic fare and slap extra fees on them. In the third quarter of 2009, the top 10 domestic airlines raised an extra $1.95 billion from fees for things like checking bags and allowing passengers to change reservations, the Bureau of Transportation Statistics has reported.

Evacuation is the sole purpose of the exit rows, which abut emergency doors. So in selling exit-row seats to all comers, airlines may raise concerns about who, exactly, is sitting in those seats — and whether they are able to perform the specified emergency duties, chief among them that they have “sufficient mobility, strength or dexterity” to open the emergency door and help with the evacuation.

The Federal Aviation Administration has, somewhat clumsily, been tightening up various cabin safety procedures. I say sometimes clumsily because of the situation where some airlines were overreacting to vaguely worded FAA safety directives and forbidding passengers to put anything in seatback pockets. The agency subsequently explained that it meant only unreasonably bulky objects.

Exit rows are a more serious matter. Exit-row seats have usually been occupied by frequent fliers who often booked them in advance, free, as perks. “The presumption has been loosely that elite fliers at least had the experience to know what the drill is in an emergency, which is basically that you have to be prepared to get that door popped open,” said Joe Brancatelli, who publishes the subscription business-travel Web site Joesentme.com.

Fourteen months ago, when US Airways Flight 1549 ditched in the Hudson River with no serious injuries to those onboard, exit-row emergency procedures suddenly became more than an abstraction to airlines and to regulators.

The issue may have legal ramifications, too. An airline is responsible for determining that anyone occupying an exit row be able to understand and perform emergencies procedures. But there is also a legal school of thought that passengers may be held liable for damages if they accept an exit-row seat and subsequently are unable or unprepared to perform the duties. These duties are briefly summarized on in-seat cards, but laid out in four pages of detail in FAA regulations.

As airlines toss the exit rows into the for-sale bin, these questions could become more urgent. As usual, it’s going to be up to the overburdened flight attendant to decide who does or does not meet the criteria.

No matter how that prize seat with extra legroom was obtained, “If someone is unable to perform the duties of sitting in an exit row, they will be reseated” and will get a refund if they paid a fee for the extra legroom, said Ms. King at Continental. Commercial Loan Workout.


World’s coolest hot springs

March 10th, 2010

I’m not sure if it was the water’s otherworldly milky blue or the enormous plumes of cumulous-cloud steam that made me hesitant to take a dip in Iceland’s Blue Lagoon. Something about the scene—swimsuited bodies of all shapes, sizes, and ages bobbing blissfully while sipping blue liquid from plastic martini glasses—screamed Cocoon. And yet, as I lowered myself into the seductive brine, which is actually runoff from a geothermal power plant, I felt stress melt away.

From the icy tundra of Alaska to the arid desert of the Atacama, our molten-to-the-core planet is laced with underground plumbing that regularly springs a surface leak. And visiting these hot springs can be a therapeutic addition to any vacation.

Earth’s mineral-rich tonic begins as rain that seeps miles underground, gathering concentrations of everything from sulphate (which is why many springs smell like rotten eggs) to magnesium. The water is heated for hundreds or even thousands of years before percolating to the surface via rock fissures at temperatures ranging from 90°F to 212°F (that’s boiling, folks).

But be warned: since our bodies can withstand only about 108°F without scalding, the vast majority of unsupervised hot springs are not suitable for swimming (20 people have died and dozens more have been injured in mishaps in Yellowstone National Park alone).

World’s coolest hot springs

Lucky for us, wellness enthusiasts and entrepreneurs have spent years taming many of our planet’s hot-water faucets and turning them into destination spas with thermal pools regulated at the ideal temperature—generally from 98°F to 104°F.

Popular spots include Banff Upper Hot Springs in Canada’s Alberta province and Calistoga Hot Springs in California’s Napa Valley; others have tongue-twister names such as Pamukkale in Turkey, where you can soak atop millennia-old Greek and Roman ruins.

There is even an official name, balneology, to describe the therapeutic use of thermal baths. While the medicinal magic of “taking the waters”—touted in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as a cure-all—no longer holds water, a hot springs dip is often advised for people with sore muscles, rheumatism, and arthritis, says Melissa Taylor, assistant marketing coordinator for Canadian Rockies Hot Springs, which include Banff Upper Hot Springs. “Naturopaths also suggest that soaking in hot mineral water is a good way to detoxify the body,” she adds.

Bottom line: an hour or two in a thermal pool—especially one surrounded by natural beauty and clean air—is just about the greenest way to relax and recharge, courtesy of our blue planet. Commercial Loan Workout.


Buckle up: The world’s craziest roads

March 9th, 2010

Just past Dracula’s castle, deep within Romania’s Carpathian Mountains, the Transfagarasan Highway is a 55-mile stretch of roadway so scenic and wickedly winding that it rendered Jeremy Clarkson  glib host of the BBC’s popular automotive show “Top Gear” practically speechless. That ‘s no small feat, since for more than 20 years, Clarkson has made it his business to bomb around the world’s most breathtaking roads.

Surveying the twisted tarmac zigzagging below its summit from the cockpit of his Aston Martin DBS, he chuckled with pure delight, exclaiming to the camera, “That’s the most amazing road I’ve ever seen!” If he’d had a tail, it surely would have been wagging.

This serpentine motorway is just one of many mind-bogglingly crazy roads around the globe. And these exciting — albeit potentially perilous — paths offer travelers a refreshing diversion in an era of monotonous interstates and traffic-controlling roundabouts.

From the seemingly insurmountable Alps to the craggy coastline of the Amalfi, the steep hills of New Zealand to the arctic expanses of northern Canada, dramatic geography has left us with some of the world’s more brilliantly engineered pieces of pavement.

Or not so brilliantly engineered. Take, for instance, Bolivia’s ill-conceived Yungas Road, a rickety route connecting the high-altitude capital of La Paz with the low-elevation rainforest town of Coroico. This dangerous pass poses such a harrowing journey (largely unpaved, single lane, no guardrails, 2,000-foot drops) that it claims an estimated 200 drivers  lives annually, rightfully earning it the nickname El Camino de la Muerte (“The Road of Death”).

Back in Romania, the  Transfagarasan ’s own bloody history began with its creation. Built in the 1970s under President Nicolae Ceauescu as a means to mobilize armed forces in the event of a Soviet invasion, this roadway —connecting the remote regions of Transylvania and Wallachia in an endless series of bends, tunnels, and viaducts  exists at the cost of six thousand tons of dynamite and 40 road workers’ lives. Dracula might have approved, but to this day locals bitterly refer to the highway as Ceauşescu’s Folly.

Given those figures, Bolivian bus tours and Transylvanian road trips might not top your to-do list. But the next time you’re zoning out in cruise control or find yourself verbally engaging the Garmin GPS’s female navigator just to stay awake, think of the demanding, dangerous, and downright crazy roads ahead. Then thank your lucky stars for the carpool lane. Commercial Loan Workout.


Edward Steichen fashion photo exhibit hits Florida

March 8th, 2010

Images of actresses and models in fashion’s finest clothing, many of them looking straight into the camera under dramatic lighting: This is the Edward Steichen of the early 20th century.

Steichen, one of the world’s most influential photographers, is the subject of an exhibit that has come to the U.S. after starting out in Europe. “Edward Steichen: In High Fashion, the Conde Nast years, 1923-1937,” started last week at the Museum of Art Fort Lauderdale and runs through April 11.

More than 200 of Steichen’s celebrity and fashion photos from his years as chief photographer for “Vogue” and “Vanity Fair” magazines are on display. The magazines were published by Conde Nast.

“One of the great things about Steichen when you go through the show, it’s as if all the women in those images were all born in those clothes,” said one of the curators, William Ewing, director of the Musee de l’Elysee in Lausanne, Switzerland. “Today nobody looks at a Kate Moss picture and believes she lives in those clothes. There is no credibility to the contemporary fashion photograph. Perhaps that’s the aim.”

Steichen’s goal was to make clothes appear appropriate and attainable, Ewing said.

“The other thing that was amazing about him is that he never repeated himself,” Ewing said. “His signature is that he suppressed his signature … Steichen was much more modern in the sense that he effaced himself.”

Many of the black-and-white photographs are of celebrities of the day including Gary Cooper, Adele and Fred Astaire, Katherine Hepburn, Greta Garbo and Amelia Earhart. There were politicians, like Winston Churchill, and even poets, like William Butler Yeats, who posed with his hair askew. French writer Colette is included. Gloria Swanson is depicted with a black veil over her face and actress Joan Crawford is in dress by Elsa Schiaparelli. The photographs are categorized by years.

All the photographs in the fashion exhibit are original vintage prints, meaning they were made when the negatives were made. Most came from the Conde Nast archives.

The show originally accompanied a Steichen retrospective that toured Europe from 2007 to 2008. The fashion exhibit has since traveled throughout Europe and will go to the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Mo., in May.

Ewing, along with museum colleague Nathalie Herschdorfer, Todd Brandow at the Foundation for the Exhibition of Photography, and Carol Squiers, a curator at the International Center for Photography in New York, put together the fashion exhibit.

Steichen, who was born in Luxembourg and came to the U.S. with his parents when he was an infant, had become a successful painter and photographer by the time he was offered the position as chief photographer for Conde Nast’s two magazines. He worked there 15 years, until 1937.

At age 66, he became director of photography for the Museum of Modern Art in New York, where he put on the famous “The Family of Man,” show in 1955 and more than 40 other exhibitions. He died in 1973.

“He is one the most important figures in fashion photography,” Squiers said. “He really starts to work with the models in terms of trying to portray the modern woman, someone who is forthright.” That approach, she said, has influenced contemporary photographers as well.

Squiers said Steichen’s work shows aspects of others artists of his time.

“There is a soft monumentality of Rodin that he brings into his pictures but also the great understanding of abstract form that Brancusi brings,” she said.

Ewing said he sees the exhibit as two separate archives: fashion and celebrity portraiture.

For the Fort Lauderdale exhibit, designer Ivonne de la Vega has created a gown valued at $20,000, which will be raffled off.

“He revolutionized fashion photography and pioneered a new visual language of glamour, profoundly shaping the look of celebrity and fashion to this day,” said Irvin Lippman, executive director at the Museum of Art Fort Lauderdale. Commercial Loan Workout.


City of Angels

March 6th, 2010

Los Angeles has a stunning and recognizable skyline and is a great spot to see Hollywood’s A-listers, but is also known for sprawl and smog. L.A. is home to nearly 10 million people, according to the U.S. Census Bureau (2008 figures).

Plenty of dreamers head to Los Angeles to make it big. If you go, the trick is not to get lost in the sprawl.

The East Pavilion at the Getty Center is pictured in L.A. “The J. Paul Getty Museum seeks to further knowledge of the visual arts and to nurture critical seeing by collecting, preserving, exhibiting and interpreting works of art of the highest quality,” according to The Getty’s Web site.

Venice Beach has the boardwalk, Muscle Beach, volleyball courts, a bike trail and many other attractions that have been luring people for decades. “Venice has always been known as a hangout for the creative and the artistic,” boasts.

If you’re a nut about pumping iron, you’ll want to one very specific part of Venice Beach. “Muscle Beach is a special area where fanatic bodybuilders pump iron in a public show of strength,” according to L.A.’s Department of Recreation & Parks. This photo shows Larry Pollock striking a pose in the finals of the annual Venice Classic bodybuilding competition at Venice Beach back in 2003.

Two women walk past businesses that cater to high-end luxury item consumers along Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills. “The famed shopping street is known throughout the world as the epicenter of luxury fashion,” claims Rodeo Drive’s official Web site.

Looking for stars in L.A.? You need not look beyond The Griffith Observatory. OK, maybe these aren’t the stars you had in mind, but the observatory overlooks Los Angeles from atop the Hollywood Hills.

Sleeping Beauty Castle at Disneyland is the centerpiece of Fantasyland, and one of the most recognizable structures in the world.

Disneyland has delivered smiles and thrills since it opened in 1955, and its success has spawned parks across the globe.

Visitors raft through realistic looking hot springs and geysers on the ”Grizzly River Rapids” ride at Disney’s California Adventure theme park in Anaheim, Calif. The 55-acre park next to Disneyland is based on California themes, and opened to the public in 2001.

A Cownose Ray glides past as divers feed tropical fish in the Tropical Pacific Gallery at the Aquarium of the Pacific. The Aquarium features a shark lagoon and three main viewing galleries where visitors can learn about ocean issues and conservation.

A simulated “Jaws” shark attack is just one of the attractions that draws in visitors to Universal Studios Hollywood. Park rides include Revenge of the Mummy, Shrek 4-D, Jurassic Park, The Blues Brother, The Simpsons, and more.

The Hollywood Sign was refurbished in 2005. The sign is one of the better-known landmarks in America, and sits atop Mount Lee in the Santa Monica Mountains.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is best known for the Oscars, an annual telecast set to run for the 82nd time. “More than 6,000 of the most accomplished men and women working in cinema” make up the Academy’s membership, according to oscars.

The Galleria Studio Hollywood sells merchandise along the Walk of Fame, where Hollywood’s icons are immortalized.

Stars have left their hand and foot prints in concrete for more than eight decades at the original Graumans Chinese Theatre forecourt.

Dodger Stadium, opened in 1962, has seen more than 125 million fans come through its gates. Baseball fans can purchase a famed Dodger Dog and a beer, soak up some sun, take in a breathtaking view of downtown L.A., look for celebrities — oh, and watch America’s favorite pasttime.

The Museum of Contemporary Art houses more than 500 pieces of art created by more than 200 artists. MOCA was founded in 1979 and “is the only museum in Los Angeles devoted exclusively to contemporary art,” its Web site says. Commercial Loan Workout.


Cruise travelers tell of deadly waves off Spain

March 5th, 2010

The Mediterranean was heaving as the 68-year-old Italian stood in the cruise ship lounge. A moment later a monstrous wave shattered the windows and sent shards into her head, leaving her bleeding on the floor and calling out for her husband.

Torrents of water gushed into the Louis Majesty, pouring through several floors of the ship.

“I thought I would end up in the sea, drowned,” said Anna Lita, who had a black eye and bandages on her head and hand Thursday.

The three waves that struck the Cypriot-owned ship Wednesday claimed two lives off the coast of northeast Spain. The vessel was carrying 1,350 passengers and 580 crew members, from a total of 27 countries.

Lita’s husband Carlo, 69, who had been beside her on a sofa, was thrown in the air and ended up with five stitches in the head and a leg injury.

Another Italian, Giovanni Zanoni, said that after the waves blew out the windows of the lounge, the ceiling caved in and pandemonium broke out.

“People were screaming, panicking. They were grabbing life vests,” Zanoni said. He said he saw one huge shard of glass hit a man in the face, killing him. It took a while to find the body because he was under the wreckage of the ceiling, Zanoni said.

The ship’s owner and operator, Louis Cruise Lines, said the vessel was struck Wednesday by three “abnormally high” waves more than 33 feet (10 meters) high that broke glass windshields in the forward section on deck five, which is one of 10 used by passengers. Two people died and 14 were slightly hurt, the company said.

Large waves are not rare in the Mediterranean, but ones that size occur only once or twice a year, said Marta de Alfonso, an oceanographer with the Spanish government.

This accident happened in an area of the Mediterranean called the Gulf of Leon, which is known for big waves when storms hit.

The ship was on a 12-day cruise from the ports of Genoa and Marseilles in the western Mediterranean, calling at Tangiers, Casablanca, Tenerife, Lanzarote, Cadiz, Cartagena, Barcelona and had been due to return to Genoa on Thursday.

Passengers said the weather was terrible as they left Cartagena in eastern Spain Wednesday, and the captain announced he was skipping a planned stop in Barcelona and heading straight for Italy.

“I remember when the wave hit,” Lita said. “It broke all the windows and I was rolling and rolling and did not stop calling out for my husband.”

Amateur video footage taken by a passenger and aired on Spanish television showed a huge, foamy wave hitting what appeared to be the lounge area, sending water gushing in and people scurrying for safety.

“Suddenly we saw a wave that went up above our level, and I said to my husband, ‘tonight we will not have to wash the windows,’” said Claudine Armand of France, who was in her cabin at that point. “Right then we heard we heard a loud noise, and it was the wave that hit us.”

“When we came out of the room we saw the wave had flooded everything,” she told Associated Press Television News.

Pierre Languillon, also of France, said damage was extensive and he saw many people with superficial injuries.

“They called for doctors, as many doctors as there were. Luckily nothing happened to us, but I think we averted a catastrophe.”

Louis Cruise Lines spokesman Michael Maratheftis said 14 passengers who suffered only minor injuries were taken to hospital as a precaution.

Arrangements have been made to fly all passengers home Thursday and the ship will carry on with its normal schedule later this month after repairs are completed, he told the AP from Cyprus. By the end of the day most will have left the ship.

Maratheftis said the two dead passengers — a German and an Italian — suffered fatal injuries from the glass shards and ripped-out window frames and furniture.

“It was three waves, one after the other. The damage was done by the second and the third waves. We are talking about waves that exceeded 10 meters in height. This was unforeseen and unpredicted because the weather was not really that bad,” Maratheftis said.

De Alfonso said there was in fact a big storm in the area at the time and the waves might have been stirred up by fierce winds. Waves often come in threes, she said.

Another passenger, Jean Claude Fery, of Marseille, said he was in his cabin looking out the porthole at tremendously turbulent seas. “I have never seen waves so big. It was unbelievable.”

A Louis Cruise Lines statement said the waves smashed windows in a public area on deck 5 on the forward part of the vessel.

Louis Cruise Lines’ Web site says the ship is 680 feet (207 meters) long, and features 10 passenger decks and 732 staterooms along with various bars, pools, restaurants and shops. Commercial Loan Workout.


Mexico’s spring break king rebounds

March 3rd, 2010

Mexico’s spring break king — Cancun — is rebounding quickly from last year’s triple blow to its tourism industry caused by the country’s swine flu epidemic, drug violence and a global economic crisis.

Those worries couldn’t compete this year against Mexico’s cheap airfare from the United States and phenomenal package deals that include the popular all-you-can-drink enticements.

February saw 85 percent of its 28,000 rooms filled, a sign of Cancun’s speedy recovery from 2009, when 1 million fewer visitors came than in a typical year. The relatively high occupancy seen in February is expected to go even higher in March when more universities are on spring break.

“We’re back to normal levels after having seen tourism practically paralyzed last year,” said Quintana Roo state assistant tourism secretary Dario Flota.

At the sprawling, palm-tree packed Oasis Hotel, a popular spot with spring breakers, visitors from the U.S. Midwest and Canada looking to shake the chill from a usually brutal winter dotted the beach where some took photos with monkeys while others danced to music pumped out from gigantic speakers.

Emma Duranti, a 20-year-old science major at Queens University in Kingston, Canada, decided to come to Cancun after comparing it to Jamaica and finding a better deal. Duranti said she paid $1,040 for a seven-day, all-inclusive trip.

“I was expecting a good party but it went above and beyond,” said Duranti while sunbathing with two other friends on the beach of the Oasis Hotel. “There is always a party on the beach and you can party all day and party all night!”

Tourism officials say they expect about 25,000 spring breakers to descend this season on Cancun’s newly rebuilt beaches and turquoise blue ocean, compared to the 20,000 spring breakers who visited last year. That’s in addition to tourists of all ages who visit throughout the year. And not only is Cancun drawing them back. Destinations across the country are seeing tourists return, despite a U.S. travel alert warning Americans to stay away from some parts, mostly in the northern border states, because of drug violence.

Lonely Planet’s U.S. staff’s top-10 list for 2010 put Mexico as the No. 4 destination for the new year, declaring that “H1N1 is so 2009″ and that Mexico is “still a good bargain, easy to get to for most Americans” — giving a much-needed endorsement for Mexico’s third largest source of foreign income.

Tourism all but came to a halt in April 2009 when fear over the swine flu epidemic virtually paralyzed Mexico, forcing the closure of schools, restaurants and archaeological sites and restricted air travel to Mexico from some countries. Mexico’s revenue from foreign tourism dropped 15 percent to $11.3 billion from $13.3 billion in 2008, according to the Tourism Department.

The world has since learned that swine flu is treatable if detected in time, vaccines are available, and death rates have dropped in Mexico and elsewhere.

Mexico has had a tougher time fighting off its bad image from drug violence, which has left more than 15,000 people dead since President Felipe Calderon declared his war on cartels in 2006.

To counter the bad news, the Pacific coast resort of Acapulco in drug-plagued Guerrero state paid MTV $200,000 for the network to host its spring party there this year. The city expects to draw between 7,000 to 10,000 spring breakers despite the resort’s sporadic drug killings and gun battles, one of which took place near an historic tourist hotel last year.

Some U.S. universities last year warned students headed for Mexico of a surge in drug-related violence south of the border prompting some to cancel already paid for spring break trips.

Mexican government officials have gone on the offensive and made clear every chance they get that the violence is concentrated in a handful of states, most along the Mexico-U.S. border, like Durango, Coahuila and Chihuahua, and in the Pacific coast state of Michoacan — all far from the country’s popular beach resorts.

That message appears to be working: Travelocity’s senior editor Genevieve Shaw Brown said bookings on Travelocity.com for spring travel to Mexico have shot up 25 percent compared to last year. Cancun is No. 5 on Travelocity’s top 10 spring break bookings list for this year, up from the No. 10 spot last year.

She said the swine flu epidemic, violence and an unhealthy economy forced Mexico to lower its prices.

“Now Mexico is reaping the benefits of cheap travel costs with the return of spring breakers who are looking for deals,” Shaw Brown said. “It’s been communicated very well that Mexico is an outstanding value.”

Those who risk it are also reaping the benefits for doing so: The federal, state and local governments have invested $80 million to rebuild Cancun’s world-renowned powdery white beaches that have been suffering from erosion.

Calderon on Tuesday was scheduled to inaugurate the recently completed project along Cancun’s 8-mile (13-kilometer) long strip that extends the beach to 85 meters (280 feet) wide. The rebuilding, which took a year to complete, is the second attempt to rebuild the sandy playground since Hurricane Wilma devastated the area in 2005. An artificial reef off was also built off the coast to help contain the sand.

Elysee Burgess, a 21-year-old nursing major from Oakland University in Rochester, Mich., had only one complaint: She has to get up from the beach every time she wants to get another drink from her hotel bar.

“The beach is great, there are some awesome parties,” Burgess said, while her friend Kristen Fleming took a picture with a monkey. “The only thing that sucks is that you can only get one drink at a time.” Home Security Systems.


World’s top snorkeling spots

March 2nd, 2010

When Joel Simon was a kid, he and his brother began snorkeling around the pilings in murky Alamitos Bay near Long Beach, Calif. “It was one of the most intriguing places I’d ever been,” he says rapturously, nearly 50 years later. “These old rusty cans lying in the muck underneath the dock were actually like treasure chests containing barnacles and octopus and all kinds of wonderful encrusting organisms.”

He’s never lost his love of snorkeling. Today he runs Sea for Yourself, leading trips that combine snorkeling with marine ecology in places far and away from Long Beach, from Florida to Fiji.

Snorkeling can be one of the best ways to see a tropical vacation spot and gain an appreciation of its wild side — the kind that doesn’t do karaoke at the hotel bar until all hours of the night. It’s an activity that’s easy to do, there are myriad colorful, memorable sights to see and it’s a solid way to stay in shape when the daily routine’s been put on hold.

As a way to see the ocean, snorkeling has plenty of advantages over scuba. For one, it’s easy. If you can swim, you can snorkel with very little training. Second, it’s cheap, with no need for heavy, expensive gear purchased, rented or — worse — lugged onto the airplane.

“It’s not equipment-intensive — just mask, fins and a snorkel and off you go,” says Debbie Manos, co-owner of Salt Cay Divers in the Turks and Caicos. The minimum amount of gear can be liberating. And in some cases — diving with whales, for example — the lack of bubbles allows you to get closer to your quarry than you can with scuba gear. “It’s so peaceful. You can float on top of all the sea creatures swimming below and not disturb them in their natural environment.”

For casual snorkelers it’s possible to pick up a $20 mask and snorkel at a local dive shop, ask around for good spots — and jump right in. On the laid-back Puerto Rican island of Culebra, for example, world-class snorkeling is a short hike away via public transport. From the mainland, hop a ferry to Dewey, then take a bus to Playa Flamenco; Carlos Rosario Beach is just 20 more minutes away — on foot. Swim just a few yards offshore, and you’re snorkeling among a wild selection of coral, sea fans and reef fish.

Similarly, Makaha Beach Park on the Hawaiian island of Oahu  is located just off the main highway. Park the car and jump into fantastic snorkeling. Of course, at nearly every popular Caribbean and Pacific vacation spot, plenty of resorts and outfitters are ready to arrange half-day or full-day outings to the offshore reefs.

Then there are the snorkeling spots for real diehards who plan entire vacations around their dives and seek out some of the world’s most pristine coral reefs, often in remote places. Just getting to Rurutu in French Polynesia is a bit of an adventure (it’s 350 miles south of Tahiti); but then you still have to take a boat to find migrating humpback whales. Likewise, Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, one of the world’s great snorkeling spots, lies 12 to 50 miles offshore. In some places it’s possible to snorkel from an island resort; in other cases you’ll have to travel by boat for your day’s swim.

But what’s perhaps most satisfying about recreational snorkeling is that its joys are the same for those who do it on vacation once every few years as for those who live in tropical locales year round.

When Tori Cullins, co-owner of Wild Side Specialty Tours on Oahu, moved to Hawaii, she missed the “warm furry critters” from the mainland. “We don’t even have squirrels,” says the. “I took to the water to satisfy the nature disconnect I was feeling. Reefs are more diverse than rainforests, and what land animal can compete with the beauty, intelligence and evolutionary success of dolphins and whales?”

And on top of all that, snorkeling is a great way to get exercise on an otherwise sedentary vacation. “You are preoccupied with all the beauty of the underwater world and don’t realize how much swimming you are doing,” says Manos.

Whatever your level of commitment, a good snorkeling trip requires just four things: clear water, gentle currents, abundant aquatic life and the chance to get away from the crowds. Home Security Systems.


Hawaii returns to normal after tsunami scare

March 1st, 2010

Hawaii tourism officials hope the publicity churned up by the tsunami that struck the Aloha State Saturday afternoon won’t keep visitors from coming to the island. The state has been struggling to recover from the recession and a dramatic drop-off in tourism spending.

“There is no reason to cancel your visit,” said George Applegate, the executive director of the Big Island Visitors Bureau.

Part of Hawaii’s tourism infrastructure shut down because of the tsunami, which was triggered by the powerful 8.8-magnitude earthquake that rattled Chile early Saturday.

Hilo International Airport, on the east side of the Island of Hawaii, closed in advance of the approaching wave. The airport is primarily used by interisland airlines. Other shuttered tourist attractions included the Honolulu Zoo, the Japanese Cultural Center, the Polynesian Cultural Center, Waikiki Aquarium and Wet N Wild Hawaii Waterpark.

The port of Honolulu was also closed. Norwegian Cruise Lines’ Pride of America was scheduled to dock in Honolulu early Saturday, but remained at sea until the Port of Honolulu reopened. “While at sea, this situation does not in any way compromise the safety and security of our passengers and crew,” NCL said in a statement. “Pride of America should be alongside shortly after that and we expect that the next cruise will depart later this evening.” The cruise line expected the ship to arrive at the pier between 7 and 9 p.m.

“So far there is no damage to anything,” Applegate said moments after the first wave hit late Saturday morning. “We’ll monitor the waves for several hours.”

The tsunami may be the least of the tourism industry’s worries. The Aloha State experienced a double-digit decline in visitor spending in January, which followed a difficult 2009 for the state’s tourism industry. Visitors spent $949 million in Hawaii last month, about 13 percent less than in January 2008, according to numbers released by the state. Several well-known resorts, including the IIikai Hotel and the Hawaiiana Hotel have closed, while many other properties faced foreclosure.

Like the soft tourism industry, the effects of the tsunami are likely to be felt for a while.

“Hawaii has a history of dangerous waves,” said Michael Brein, a former Oahu resident and travel psychology expert. “Everyone who lives there has it in the back of their minds that they really have to pay attention.”

Historically, visitors have not been as aware of the potential for a deadly wave, although after the Asian tsunami in 2004, tourists have become more conscious of the hazards, according to Brein. “This time, tourists were excited and a little scared. I think everyone knows how dangerous it could be,” he said.

He and other tourism experts think the publicity from the smaller-than-expected waves won’t deter people from visiting Hawaii.

Rather, it will be a soft economy and higher airfares that will make Americans take a vacation closer to home, they say.

As the predicted wave approached Hawaii, there was a sense that this would not affect the visitors on or off the island. Tim Lussier, a student at Hawai`i Pacific University, who was waiting in Waikiki for the first wave to come ashore late Saturday morning, reported that people were calm as the streets emptied of cars. “Everything is fine,” he said, even as the tsunami bore down on the beach.

Some current visitors to the island were certain to be displaced by the wave, says longtime Honolulu resident and tourism expert Jeanne Datz Rice, who described this tsunami as a “non-event.” Hotels in low-lying areas normally evacuate guests to higher rooms. “They’re moved up three floors,” she says, adding, “In a situation like this, everyone makes new friends.”

That’s exactly what happened to Kristina Arntz’ parents, Walter and Victoria Hughes of Martinsburg, W.V. The couple, which had been in Waikiki since Feb. 1, watched the waves roll in from the roof of their condominium, which was located just two blocks away from the beach.

“They seem fine,” said Arntz, who had been in contact with them by e-mail.

At the Waikoloa Beach Marriott Resort & Spa, about 600 hotel guests were sent to the hotel’s second-floor ballroom in advance of the tsunami. They were offered sandwiches, pastries and soft drinks and played games until the danger passed, according to the hotel’s general manager, Rodney Ito. “We assured everyone that we were just following civil defense instructions,” he said moments after the waves arrived.

“We just got the ‘all-clear’ five minutes ago.”

Perhaps the biggest tsunami-related complaint had nothing to do with nature. Visitors complained about a lack of phone coverage as the waves grew closer and phone lines were jammed with calls from concerned relatives on the mainland. The Hughes couldn’t make cell phone calls earlier in the day, and calls to Hawaii were not going through because of busy circuits. Home Security Systems.