The Rabbit Hill Inn in Lower Waterford, Vermont, right over the New Hampshire border, is one those rare destinations with hundreds of reviews and not one that doesn’t give the place outstanding ratings. Mobil has given it Four Diamonds, and Rabbit Hill belongs to the cluster of "Select Registry" inns. OK, so what? Well, so plenty. The bucolic setting (compete with white-steepled church across the… Continue
Added by Kaleel Sakakeeny on May 17, 2010 at 8:42pm —
No Comments
A few heads were scratched at AOL Travel’s recent story about bed bugs. We weren’t scratching from the bugs, but from curiosity: Why would author Libby Zay do a piece on the nasty critters?
A comment from a reader actually suggested she needed “to get a life.”
Well, the reality is that the bed bugs infest places that are part of travel, like motels. hotels, planes,… Continue
Added by Kaleel Sakakeeny on May 6, 2010 at 4:38pm —
No Comments
The question everyone is afraid to ask: So how safe is this airline? For better or worse, there is no real answer. The Virginia-based Flight Safety Foundation which prides itself on being independent and impartial, candidly admits that since there are so few U.S. airplane fatalities, there really is no recognized way to determine which airline is safer than another. The statistical… Continue
Added by Kaleel Sakakeeny on May 5, 2010 at 4:48pm —
No Comments
Innkeepers Meet the Social Web: Will They Ever Be The Same
Brian and Leslie Mulcahy work very hard for their accolades and consistently outstanding reviews by always being there for their guests. "It’s not easy,” say the innkeepers of the quintessential New England inn, Rabbit Hill Inn, in the Currier and Ives town of Lower Waterford, Vermont. But Leslie is reading Groundswell ("winning in a world transformed by social… Continue
Added by Kaleel Sakakeeny on May 2, 2010 at 10:00am —
No Comments
From time to time I need some help in keeping up with the twists and turns of travel, so I thought of a few travel "heroes" I'd like to have
drink with and talk travel.
I’d first set a date with Travel Weekly's Editor in-Chief, Arnie Weissmann, a terrific writer whose editorials always leave me wanting more.
TW is the travel industry’s publication of record, and Arnie’s one of…
Can you imagine the travel industry, limping along in this sclerotic economy, not catering to the needs of an important travel niche market: Single Parents? This travel cohort feels like second class citizens. They’re not swingers. Not looking for wild parties. They want quality vacations that let them connect with other single
parents, and they want attention paid to them and their kids.
They want the travel…
People travel for many reason. They travel to see the ocean, to meet people or to shop… and now they’re shopping for a new nose or bigger breasts all while seeing the sights. Medical tourism is the latest trend in the search for the perfect body or a money saving medical procedure like replacing a hip or getting your teeth straight. Or for costly medical procedures for the uninsured and… Continue
What’s the Difference Between a Kid and a Carry-on Bag?
Judging by the new round of airline fees, probably not much!
Southwest Airlines opted not to charge for carry-ons (other airlines opted out too), but then announced it was doubling the fees it charges unaccompanied kids to fly.
There has always been a fee for “UM’s aka/Unaccompanied Minors, as they’re called in the biz, but Southwest’s jump from $25.00 to… Continue
No sooner do we do a piece on Travel Insurance, and a volcano blows, stranding thousands of people and ruining hundreds of vacations.
But don't worry, you read our post, bought insurance and you're covered.
Well, it seems that your claim could be denied, depending on whom you bought the insurance from and whether the company views the disaster as "weather related," usually covered, or "natural disaster,"… Continue
Added by Kaleel Sakakeeny on April 20, 2010 at 7:13pm —
No Comments
After the Revolution: Nicaragua Opens its Doors to Curious Travelers
By Kaleel Sakakeeny
In a ramshackle yet proud artisan studio in the dusty town of San Juan de Oriente, a young boy about 15 casts pots using his feet for power on an old throw wheel. The wheel hums, the clay spins and the pottery that evolves is astonishingly intricate yet elegantly simple.
His younger sister tends to a new littler of seven puppies, and his even younger brother… Continue
Added by Kaleel Sakakeeny on April 16, 2010 at 11:00am —
No Comments
Most Americans are not anti-kids, just some mean-spirited, presumably well-heeled ones who fly first class.
As part of a thread on kids and families flying first class, one guy (maybe a woman) said:
“ If I paid money for first class, I WILL GET FIRST CLASS. I don't want any ROTTEN CHILDREN anywhere near me…Or breathing MY FIRST CLASS AIR, THAT I PAID FOR.” (sic)
Jaws dropped (and pants too) a couple of years ago when German Travel agency OssiUrlaub.de said it would start taking bookings for a nudist day trip from an eastern German town to a popular Baltic Sea resort.
Apparently the 55 passengers will remain clothed until they board, undress during the flight, then dress before disembarking.
The crew remains clothed throughout the flight for, well obvious reasons, I… Continue
Added by Kaleel Sakakeeny on April 11, 2010 at 1:30pm —
No Comments