Archives: 2008   November

Three Cheap Travel Tips

by Ada Denis

Cheap travel means you get to go more often, go on longer trips or just save some of your money for other things. Fortunately, it doesn’t mean low-quality travel. If you find a way to get a cheaper plane ticket, for example, you might be flying on the same plane as with the more expensive tickets.

Of course sometimes you can save money by traveling differently, and that’s okay too. Why pay an extra $40 for a hotel if you like the idea of staying in a hostel with visitors from around the world? Why rent a car in countries where good bus and train systems make for cheaper and more interesting trips?

Essentially you can travel cheap in two ways. First, you can find cheaper ways to get the same thing. The other, perhaps more powerful way, is to alter your expectations and plans to create a more interesting trip that is also inexpensive. The tips that follow will help you do both.

1. See if you can book two flights cheaper than one

My wife and I are thinking about going to Ecuador this year (2007). Checking for our approximate dates, I found that it would cost $950 each round trip from Colorado Springs, or $1,900 total. Then I checked from Colorado Springs to Miami. It would be $215 round trip. From Miami to Guayaquil, Ecuador costs $350 round trip. That makes it just $565 to Ecuador, or $1,130 total – a savings of $770.

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Posted in travel on Nov 29th, 2008, 4:10 am by Lauren Thompson   

No Tricks Fluff or Gimmicks with Golf Beginners Guide

by Golf Fan

Want to learn the game of golf? How about a 272 Page Golfing Guide for Beginner Golfers. Be sure to get started with Golf the Right Way. Golf Beginners Guide

Several qualified golf teaching professionals have put together the most comprehensive Golfing Guide available today for Beginner Golfers. This learning guide will help Beginner Golfers play their best Golf – with no fluff or hype but all the needed facts and knowledge – for less than a lesson from a reputable golf teacher.

This publication walks you through everything you ever need to know about Golf. From the total basics to the advanced tips and techniques that will give you the confidence to play Golf as it should be.

It doesn’t matter if you are a senior golfer playing more now that you have retired or a brand new enthusiast looking to establish a strong golf foundation, the ‘Golf Beginner Guide’ will help you improve. There are no tricks, fluff or gimmicks, only solid information that will improve your physical and mental golfing skills as well as your general knowledge about golf.

You’ve probably seen this, there are a million products out there promising to make you a better golfer. Reality is, you can buy all the special clubs and fancy balls you can afford (or even ones that you can’t) and still never improve as a golfer. The focus of the ‘Golf Beginner Guide’ is making you a better golfer by teaching you about all aspects of the game.

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Posted in travel on Nov 29th, 2008, 4:08 am by Golf Fan   

Kulula

by Susan Renolds

Kulula Air, the recently re-branded kulula.com, is a highly popular low-fare domestic air travel provider in South Africa thanks, in part, to its edgy and humorous marketing message.

In business since 2001, Kulula is owned by Conair Limited. It was named the best domestic airline by the Airport Company of South Africa in 2003 and operates a fleet of Boeing 737s with the following routes: Johannesburg to:

Cape Town Durbs George PE Lusaka Harare Windhoek Ndola Cape Town to: Johannesburg Durbs PE Lanseria Durbs to: Johannesburg Cape Town PE George to Johannesburg PE to: Johannesburg Cape Town Durbs Lusaka to Johannesburg Harare to Johannesburg Windhoek to Johannesburg Lanseria to Cape Town Ndola to Johannesburg.

Travelers receive seat assignments at check-in.

Kulula began by offering flights between Johannesburg and Cape Town. Over the next few years, its route map incorporated destinations in Durban and Port Elizabeth while its number of flights in operation increased. International destinations now include, Blomfontein, Windhoek, Harare, Ndlola, Lusaka and Mauritius.

Recently, South African online shoppers bought some 55,000 airline tickets for R27 million as part of Kulula’s ‘garage sale.” Kulula’s mega-website (kulula.com is the country’s largest online retailer, handling more than R1.6 billion annually) processed up to 150 flight quotes per second during the shopping frenzy’s peak hours. Nearly 145,000 visitors viewed more than one million web pages, shopping for travel specials from October 2008 through January 2009.

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Posted in travel on Nov 29th, 2008, 3:56 am by Susan Renolds   

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