07-29-2015, 10:34 PM | #1 |
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How to travel/fly on the cheap?
Any ideas?
I've just given up trying to get my group of friends to do random trips with me, so I'm going to just do it alone I guess. Suggestions? The cheaper I can fly and stay (think short trips 1-3 days max) the more I can do it! |
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07-29-2015, 10:42 PM | #2 |
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Do you have any small budget airlines that fly out of smaller airports? Like Allegiant Air?
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07-29-2015, 10:45 PM | #3 |
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Credit card points. Have them sign up for rewards cards like Sapphire or SW card, hit the minimum spent to get the bonus 50k points.
Also stay at Air BnB places. I havnt paid for a trip in a long time(besides food and activities). Went to Cabo, OC twice, Portland, Banff Canada, Denver and literally just booked DC tonight all off points.
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07-29-2015, 10:46 PM | #4 | |
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My opinion: Chase Southwest Visa and Chase Sapphire....the points systems are second to none. Both give you sig. points just for signing up. There are "basic" ways to save: leave mid week, fly into larger airports: LAX, ATL, DAL,etc... That's all I know. I have used points the last few years because of these credit cards...GL. |
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07-29-2015, 10:58 PM | #6 | ||
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07-29-2015, 11:01 PM | #7 |
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07-29-2015, 11:05 PM | #8 | |
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J/K but they fly out of Sanford, FL and random places on specific days into short runway, out of the way airport...not Delta into DFW or ATL. Roll that dice, baby! |
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07-29-2015, 11:07 PM | #9 | ||
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07-30-2015, 12:28 AM | #10 |
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Dude perfect time to visit Tara and do a drunk interview eh? I would stick to one airline to "max" it out, sign up for a travel credit cards, pick flights most likely to get bumped to get concessions, and check out websites that cater to this kind of stuff. Some people live to "game" the system. I'd jump on that bandwagon and reap the benefits.
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07-30-2015, 01:59 AM | #11 | |
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All the best.
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07-30-2015, 03:03 AM | #12 |
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Forgot something: do the "posh" stuff when you are traveling with other folks. Do the "anti-posh" stuff when you are alone. Take advantage of off seasons or the "cusps" of seasons.
For example, if you like skiing, now's a great time to go to Argentina and stay for a week. Go to Gstaad or Vail for a weekend in the winter, but otherwise, do your skiing in the Summer. This is an especially good tactic if you don't demand, say, the world's most challenging black trails or off-piste skiing, and the places you can go have favorable exchange rates. The other thing I forgot: learn new languages. You only have to be good enough to have simple chit chats. That will allow you to do things off the "tourist" trail, and what's not on that trail is very often sensibly priced. All the best.
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07-30-2015, 04:11 AM | #13 |
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07-30-2015, 11:42 PM | #17 | |
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All the best, and have fun and safe trips.
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07-31-2015, 01:03 AM | #18 | |
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You can find them on sites like this one for Bangkok, which is where the room above is: http://ajaxsearch.partners.agoda.com...k=635739379784 . To give you an idea of just how far your money can go when you avail yourself of exchange rates.....This is what the suites I and my expat team members stay in most often in Shenzhen, PRC (Oriental Ginza). The view is from the 21st floor and the mountains in the background are Hong Kong. The rack rate for this room is I guess ~$110/night for what they call an Executive Suite with a bay view. (We stay in the hotel regularly for business, so we have a negotiated rate that includes things like breakfast and dinner, dry cleaning, and so on.) Here are some lobby pics. Breakfast buffet offered every morning. Trust me, you've never seen as many different types of food any typical Western posh hotel buffet. They offer both typical Western and Asian breakfast fare. Lobby area for receiving one's visitors. The hotel gym The hotel pool The VIP Lounge The hotel also has a bar, hair salon and spa. The hair salon is very good, but very pricey, costing about the same as a Hair Cuttery. I get my hair cut at a neighborhood place for $7, and even that's considered "a little high" by Chinese standards. No matter what you pay for a haircut, you'll also get a head/temple and shoulders massage, along with an really excellent shampoo, cut and blow dry. Now what I've pictured above is in the PRC. You can expect about the same sorts of pricing and accommodations in most parts of Southern Asia provided you stick with local places. Shenzhen also has places like the Ritz Carlton and they are priced exactly as you'd expect them to be anywhere. They are not any more plush than are the equivalent Chinese (or other "native") brands of hotel such as the ones I've pictured above. Tokyo and other large Japanese cities are a different matter when it comes to wanting typical Western luxury and not wanting to pay typical Western prices for it. In Tokyo, I stay at the New Otani. I once got to the hotel and ordered room service because I was too tired to go out for dinner. I ordered a chicken salad sandwich and cream of corn soup. It was in fact the tastiest chicken salad sandwich I've ever had before or since. No kidding, and until then I didn't really think chicken salad could actually be all that different no matter what one does. I was wrong. The crust was removed, it had grapes and uber thin slices of cucumber, and the sandwich was quartered. The soup too was sublime, as sublime as cream of corn can be. The price: $77! I kid you not! On another occasion, I went to the McDonald's right outside of my hotel. Quarter pounder with cheese, fries, dessert, and a drink: $20! I have since then (2006) never been to a Mickey D's or ordered room service in Tokyo. All the best.
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07-31-2015, 02:07 PM | #19 | |
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He will NOT fly Allegiant under any circumstances. Too many scary insider stories. He and others are familiar with their cost cutting ways in the maintenance cycle, and the fact they buy planes from other carriers who have deemed the planes to be "used up" and at the end of their duty cycle. Bimmette, just because you have flown on them with no issue so far, is not an indicator of anything. I bet the last few thousand car trips you've taken, you haven't crashed into anything hard enough where you needed your seatbelt. You probably could have not worn your seatbelt for all those trips with no problem. Does that mean, based on that pattern, that you will not wear your seatbelt from today onwards? Allegiant is cheaper, you get what you pay for. You think they can afford to sell you a cheaper ticket because the executives are all happy to get paid way less, or because they have found "shortcuts" on an operational level? Something to consider. Dead serious here.
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08-02-2015, 01:39 PM | #20 | |
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Some other metrics and observations (The same issues appear in multiple reports, but tiny bits of "new informaion" appears in each article):
I suspect that most travelers, and especially those seeking budget prices, face similar constraints as I do. I suspect too that they manage them much as I do, taking the flight that best fits their other requirements (price, schedule, etc.). It's one thing to know of an airline's "issues," but it's another thing altogether to often and consistently be positioned to act in accordance with what concerns one re: those "issues." All the best.
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08-03-2015, 11:25 AM | #21 |
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