Saturday, February 11, 2012

Third Party Commissions

Third party commissions are essential for travel agencies to plan for. The additional commissions can really add up.

For example, an agent use to make quite a bit more for a cruise than they do now. With all the taxes and fees that are part of the price, and is not including in the commission percentage, plus the airfare that use to be part of the cruise package with commissions, it just does not pay like it use to.

What do you do? Sell optional tours from a third party company, like Shoretrips and Port Promotions. They pay commissions that you would not get with a cruise line. If customers are sure they want a particular shore excursion, take the time and book it for them and make extra money. Or book them a hotel before or after the cruise.

This also applies for extra side trips when a client is taking a tour. There are many additions travel agents can add on. Maybe even airport transfers or a limousine can be added for more commission.

This not only helps the travel agent's bottom line, but is also beneficial to the customer. It saves them the time to book it on their own, and can often save them money, which both brings return business.

If a travel agent is organized with phone numbers and website information is handy, then it should not take much time to add these beneficial extras for the customer and the agent.

What extras, as travel agents do you book for customers? Do the extra commissions add up?


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New DOT Rules-The Effect on Travel Agents

The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) has implemented new and upgraded rules to help consumers with airline issues. These include rules for protecting airfares for consumers, rules for delayed flight at the gate and on the tarmac, and lost and misplaced luggage rules.

These have been necessary changes waiting to be made. They went into effect on or before January 26, 2012. For travel agents, this means that airfares quoted must include all taxes and fees, including one way airfares. Links to the airline information must be provided for clients on the e-ticket confirmation to access free and paid baggage information, and plenty more.

When advertising airfares, travel agents must post from what city the airfare is from, plus a segment stating that flights from other cities may be higher.

These changes and others may have to be noted on ticket confirmations, and may include adjustments to agent training, including what they need to quote to the customer, and what needs to be put in writing. Some changes may need to be added to computer programming so the proper information is shown in the computer programs for the customer.

Once again, travel agents are called on to help the consumer understand new laws, and pass on significant information. This time, travel agents can be held responsible if they do not update and inform clients correctly.

Agents, what do you think about the new rules, and what changes will you need to make in the office to handle these?


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Refunding a nonrefundable

"$150 to retain the value of a $300 ticket I had to cancel," complains a reader "Is a complete rip-off." I agree. What started as a reasonable policy -- charging $25 to allow you to retain the value of a nonrefundable ticket you had to cancel -- has morphed into still another gouge. The big lines now typically charge $150 to retain the value of a canceled domestic ticket and up to $250 for an international ticket. You still don't get your money back; you just get to use what value is left after the fee toward a future ticket. Clearly, those fees bear no relation to an airline's costs; they're punitive and so high as to make a mockery of the "reusability" claim. My reader went on to ask, "Why can't you pay a small fee up front to guarantee reusability?" The answer might surprise you: You can, but the fee is truly "small" on only one airline.

Southwest is unique in that it assesses no charge to exchange a ticket -- an advantage it is pushing in the marketplace. Other big airlines routinely offer travel insurance from a leading independent travel insurance company on an opt-out basis when you buy a ticket online:

-- Alaska, American, Continental, Delta, JetBlue, United, and US Airways use Access America.

-- Hawaiian, Frontier, and Virgin America use Travel Guard.

Both sets of policies are about the same. What you buy is a bundled travel insurance policy that includes conventional trip-cancellation insurance (TCI). As a side benefit, these policies also include trip-interruption, emergency medical and medical evacuation, and some delay/baggage coverages. And you get your money back, not just a credit. But TCI in conventional bundled packages has several downsides:

-- Conventional TCI pays only if you cancel for a "covered" reason or in the event of a "named peril." Those reasons normally include accident or sickness afflicting you, a travel companion, or non-traveling close relatives, as well as many (but not all) unforeseen problems in your destination area.

-- Conventional TCI does not cover you if you cancel because of changed personal or business plans.

Conventional TCI, in a bundle, isn't cheap. For example, to refund a $400 nonrefundable ticket, the insurance would cost around $35 (based on a quote from the Delta website for a four-day domestic trip). Optional policies for frequent-flyer award trips provide the same medical and delay coverages, but the TCI and interruption figures are much lower -- enough to cover a mileage redeposit fee but too low to cover the cost of buying a return ticket if you can't get an award seat.

Allegiant -- an airline I frequently criticize for its fee policies -- actually offers the best deal. "Trip Flex" allows you unlimited date, schedule, and itinerary changes with no fees. The cost is $11.50 for a flight or flight/car package, $37 for a flight/hotel package. You don't get a cash refund, but you get to retain the ticket value. And there are no "covered reasons" limitations.

Rather than accept the airline's deals, you have two other options:

-- You can buy "cancel for any reason" TCI through an independent travel insurance agency starting at around $45 for my test $400 trip (prices vary by age and trip duration). Clearly, this is the surest way to protect your ticket "investment." You can change your plans without worrying about having to fuss with an insurance company bean counter about the reason for your cancellation. But, even for a middle-age person, the cost is pretty stiff: more than 10 percent of the ticket value, and higher for a senior.

-- Depending on your age and itinerary, buying a third-party conventional bundled policy with TCI from an independent agency can often duplicate the coverage and beat the price of an airline site's policy, but probably not by much. You have to compare each trip.

Why don't other lines copy Allegiant? Probably because they're afraid they'd sell far fewer of their very expensive refundable tickets. So for now, if you're likely to want to cancel, buying a cancel-for-any-reason TCI policy is probably a better bet than risking those huge cancellation fees.

(Send e-mail to Ed Perkins at eperkins(at)mind.net. Perkins' new book for small business and independent professionals, "Business Travel When It's Your Money," is now available through www.mybusinesstravel.com or www.amazon.com)


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Hollywood finds romance in travel

Love is always lovelier some place other than home. Well, at least in the celluloid universe.

Traveling by boat, train or even bus can lead to romantic entanglements in the movies, as does visiting uber-romantic locales such as Rome, Paris and Venice. Of course, these romances may not last, or they may even end tragically — just think of poor Jack and Rose in "Titanic" — but it doesn't matter. Movie audiences crave these idealistic, sexy trysts.

Here's a look at some of the best films in the romantic travel genre:

All aboard!

Trains are great locations for love and romance. And we're not just talking Alfred Hitchcock's 1959 classic"North by Northwest."

In 1932, hearts beat a little faster with Josef von Sternberg's lush romance "Shanghai Express," set in 1931 during the Chinese Civil War. The film was one of the more successful collaborations between Von Sternberg and his muse, Marlene Dietrich. She's in fine form as the mysterious woman of ill repute Shanghai Lily — "It took more than one man to change my name to Shanghai Lily" — who boards the Shanghai Express only to discover her former lover is also a passenger. The two rekindle their romance in the midst of the war and intrigue.

Even more erotic is Cary Grant's encounter with Eva Marie Saint on a train in Hitch's sophisticated and funny romantic thriller "North by Northwest." Hitchcock enjoyed trains in such films as 1938's "The Lady Vanishes" and 1951's"Strangers on a Train." In "North by Northwest," Grant's Roger Thornhill meets the sultry and mysterious blond Eve Kendall on the 20th Century Limited from New York to Chicago. Their dialogue over lunch is priceless:

Eve: "I tipped the steward $5 to seat you here if you should come in."

Roger: "Is that a proposition?"

Eve: "I never discuss love on an empty stomach."

Roger: "You've already eaten."

Eve Kendall: "But you haven't."

The final frame of the two on the train chugging to their honeymoon is about as Freudian as the censors allowed at the time.

One doesn't think of "Out of Africa" as a train movie, but it is on a train that Karen Blixen (Meryl Streep) meets the love of her life, the dashing Denys Finch Hatton (Robert Redford) while traveling to meet her boorish husband (Klaus Maria Brandauer) at his Kenyan coffee plantation. The sexiest scene in the epic romance, directed by Sydney Pollack, is when Denys washes Karen's hair by the river while lions roar in the background.

Ship ahoy!

Leo McCarey wrote and directed the 1939 romantic drama "Love Affair" with Charles Boyer and Irene Dunne as two passengers on a cruise liner who meet, fall in love and agree to reunite six months later at the Empire State Building. Although the film earned six Academy Award nominations, it's nearly forgotten today. It is McCarey's nearly frame-by-frame remake, 1957's "An Affair to Remember," with Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr, that touched the hearts of moviegoers. Grant and Kerr are beautiful together and exude such chemistry, it is hard not to burst into tears when these lovers are finally reunited. In 2005, the American Film Institute named it the fifth-greatest movie love story of all time.

It happened on a bus

A cramped, bumpy bus doesn't sound like the recipe for romance, but that's exactly what happens in the 1934 comedy classic "It Happened One Night."Claudette Colbert plays a runaway heiress who thinks traveling by bus will be the safest way to travel from Miami to New York. Clark Gable is a down-on-his-luck reporter who recognizes her at the bus station and decides to go along for the ride. Initially, they lock horns, but love will find a way. There are many indelible sexy scenes in the film, including when Gable begins to strip down in the motel room they are sharing and their efforts to attract a hitchhiker.

Location, location, location

Can't find love in the U.S.A.? Head to Rome, Venice or Paris, where — at least in movies — one will always find love and romance.

Audrey Hepburn became an overnight sensation in William Wyler's 1953 romance "Roman Holiday" as a bored princess who decides to slip away incognito while in Rome. She also finds love with American newspaper reporter Gregory Peck, who first befriends the princess because he thinks she will make a great story but then becomes smitten with her. Though it doesn't end happily ever after, there's no doubt that many female members of the audience traveled to the Eternal City to find their own Gregory Peck.

The other Hepburn — Katharine — earned an Oscar nomination for 1955's "Summertime," David Lean's sumptuous romantic drama set in Venice based on Arthur Laurents' play "The Time of the Cuckoo." Hepburn plays Jane Hudson, a middle-aged single secretary who goes to the Italian city for her first vacation abroad and ends up falling in love for the first time with a handsome Italian named Renato (Rossano Brazzi). She is completely head over heels when she learns he is married with children. Sigh.

Though Woody Allen has long been considered the quintessential New York director, his recent movies have been set in London, Barcelona, Spain and Paris. The City of Light has given the 76-year-old filmmaker the biggest hit of his long career with 2011's acclaimed "Midnight in Paris." Owen Wilson plays a screenwriter and Rachel McAdams is his fiancee who have two vastly different experiences when they travel to Paris. He wants to stay in Paris to finish his first novel; she wants to live in Malibu. His life changes one midnight while roaming the city when he is invited to join the passengers in an antique car that pulls up next to him. Soon, he is swept up in the romance of Paris of the 1920s.

Bright lights, big Tokyo

Bill Murray gives a funny and heartfelt performance in 2003's quirky "Lost in Translation." Murray's Bob Harris is in Tokyo to do a whiskey commercial for which he'll earn $2 million. Though he's been long married, Bob is having marital issues and is alone at a swank hotel in Tokyo. But he's not alone for long when he meets Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson), who finds most of her days and even nights free at the same hotel because her husband (Giovanni Ribisi), a celebrity photographer, is on assignment in Tokyo. Though these two never develop a romantic relationship on screen, they do fall in love as they talk and talk and traverse the unusual neon-lighted metropolis. And get the hankie ready for that open-ended final scene.

Food and Bardem

Elizabeth Gilbert's memoir "Eat, Pray, Love" has a huge following. But the 2010 film based on her memoir doesn't exactly come together. What does work are the exotic locales and Javier Bardem in a romantic role. Julia Roberts plays Gilbert, a recent divorcee who decides to go on a journey of self-discovery. She eats up a storm in Italy, learns the power of prayer and the beauty of elephants in India and finds love with a hunk (Bardem) in Bali.

susan.king@latimes.com


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Travel updates for 2012

Think of what follows as a travel tapas buffet — tidbits that just might whet your appetite for more. Here are a dozen pieces of information for the 2012 traveler.

1. You will know how much you'll pay to check your bags when you're flying. The Department of Transportation this month denied requests to delay implementation of this rule, so as of last week, you will know what you'll pay if you decide to check a bag or another piece of luggage. This, of course, applies to the majority of us who aren't flying in first or business class, aren't elite frequent fliers or haven't paid with a credit card that gives us free baggage check.

2. You won't immediately know how much your total airline ticket will cost when you book online — at least not yet. (You will see more realistic totals in advertising, however.) The DOT has put some rules into effect that benefit consumers, notably the tarmac rule that keeps you from having to wait eons without food, drink or restrooms (emergency landings and snowstorms notwithstanding). Now the DOT is working on getting you the total cost of your ticket as you are booking it. That means taxes and fees, the cost of the seat with extra legroom, the cost of your bag (see above) and so on are included. The implementation of this total-visibility rule probably won't occur before 2013, if indeed it occurs at all. From the perspective of the airlines and third-party online travel agencies — the Expedias and Travelocities of the world — the idea of accounting for every contingency in online ticket booking is staggering. Or, said another way, the new DOT rule could be the full employment act for programmers.

3. You'll probably be paying more for airline tickets. That's not a big surprise; although oil prices teased us last fall by dipping to $80 a barrel, they're hovering around $100. The worse news: Those who fly from LAX might take it on the chin because competition, which keeps prices down, is limited. At least, that's the thinking of Joe Brancatelli, whose "Joe Sent Me" newsletter is a travel must-read. "Everyone [the airlines] wants LAX to be a hub," he said. "They can't all be hubbed here." Then too, as business travel continues to recover, the leisure traveler may pay the price. Here's what the Global Business Travel Assn. told me in an email at the close of 2011: "Based on the GBTA Business Travel Quarterly Outlook, we've seen in 2011 more business travelers hit the road and next year we expect to see a maintained level of demand. For those traveling for leisure, this continued demand means that all travel planned during peak travel times, such as weekdays, may see some higher prices for their tickets...." Sigh. But....

4. Credit card companies will continue to court your business with terrific flier-mile offers. 2011 may be remembered as the year British Airways seduced us with the promise of 100,000 flier miles for signing up for a Visa card (and you had to spend a little too). The BA website (www.britishairways.com) was recently offering 50,000 miles for a card sign-up — still not bad. You may recall, though, that BA whacks you with a big fuel surcharge on a so-called free ticket, so you might be better off spending your miles on one of its partners in the oneworld alliance (American is one) that don't charge those kind of fees. What's the best way to find these dandy offers? John Di Scala, better known as JohnnyJet.com, likes TravelHacking.org, which offers a 14-day trial for $1. Before you play the credit card game, remember that some card companies may charge you a membership fee and as much as 3% on foreign transactions. You can comparison shop at http://www.creditcards.com.

5. If you're a get-in-the-car-and-hit-the-road kind of traveler — and 80% to 90% of California vacationers do go by car, the Auto Club of Southern California says — you won't be immune from those aforementioned fuel-price increases, and you'll probably pay more for a roof over your head (see next item). Gasoline may top $5 a gallon by Memorial Day, GasBuddy.com has said. But Jeff Spring of the Auto Club noted that if the economy improves, the price increases may not affect the number of people who travel. They'll grin and bear it or trim the length of their trip. American citizens, though, may have more company from abroad wherever they go: President Obama, hoping to increase travel to the U.S., recently issued an order asking for improvements in the visa process that would help foreign visitors with entry and asked for the creation of a task force that would promote the U.S.

6. You'll pay more for hotels in some places, and Southern California will be one of them. In Los Angeles County, you'll fork over about $5 a night more for a room, up to an average of $132, and in San Francisco, the average rate will increase by about $10 to $136. That's the prediction of Bruce Baltin, a senior vice president for PKF Consulting. Rates in other cities— Atlanta, Chicago and some in Florida — will decrease, making those places a good bet for bargain hunters. And Vegas? Well, roll the dice. As it continues to battle back from the economic downturns, you'll see good prices, Baltin said, usually midweek and on slow weekends, if there is such a thing in Sin City.

7. If you're applying for a new passport with your certified birth certificate, it will need to say who your parents are. This new rule, which crept under my radar, has been in effect since April. Here's what http://www.travel.state.gov says: "The U.S. Department of State will require the full names of the applicant's parent(s) to be listed on all certified birth certificates to be considered as primary evidence of U.S. citizenship for all passport applicants, regardless of age. Certified birth certificates missing this information will not be acceptable as evidence of citizenship." If you don't have that information, you'll have to have some combination of secondary evidence, which includes "hospital birth certificates, baptismal certificates, medical and school records, certificates of circumcision, other documentary evidence created shortly after birth but generally not more than 5 years after birth, and/or affidavits of persons having personal knowledge of the facts of the birth."

8. If you love the Transportation Security Administration at the airport — and, judging by a poll last fall by the U.S. Travel Assn., many of you do not — you'll love them at other points of transit. Besides airports, the Visible Intermodal Prevention and Response, or VIPR, team patrols subways, trains and cruise ship ports. This isn't a new group, said Nico Melendez, a TSA representative: "We have used TSA teams in each of those locations [mentioned above] for several years now." The 25 VIPR teams have run more than 9,300 checkpoints and other ops in the last year, according to a recent L.A. Times story. A team named for a deadly snake may not give you warm fuzzies, but remember, the vast majority of people who die of snakebites are in Southeast Asia, not at Amtrak.

9. If you're planning to slake your thirst at a pub in London during the July 27-Aug. 12 Olympics (or any time), you'd better hurry. The ale houses are said to be ailing. A group called CAMRA (Campaign for Real Ale), a 40-year-old organization that identifies itself as campaigning for consumer rights, estimates pubs in Britain are closing at a rate of two a day, thanks to high taxes, bureaucracy and the economy. And Time magazine reported in December that British breweries took it in the Adam's apple when the beer concession at Olympic venues was given to ... Heineken. Ouch. If you want a taste of real ale, you'll have to hie yourself to a real British pub.

10. If you are going to London for the Games, you will pay dearly for that ale and everything else — but you would anyway. London ranks as one of the most expensive cities for visitors. The State Department's per diem — the guideline on how much you should spend a day, according to the normally stingy federal government — clocks in at $499 — $319 a night for a hotel and $180 for meals and incidental expenses. The Games often mean higher prices, even though London Mayor Boris Johnson has asked hoteliers to restrain themselves. So what do rates look like for Games times? If I were booking Feb. 10-12 at the Radisson Edwardian Bloomsbury Street Hotel (chosen at random), I'd pay $208 a night, a nonrefundable rate for a superior room. If I checked in July 26 and departed July 31, I'd pay $1,007 a night. The Financial Times said the mayor had criticized hoteliers for raising prices, calling them "short-sighted Arthur Daleys" (a character on a British TV series who's a con man). Apparently the Daleys were not listening.

11. The new heartthrob in aviation may be the Dreamliner 787. The raked tips of its wings are just the beginning, its designers say; passengers will get a smoother, quieter ride, thanks to the use of composite materials and a host of other design features. The long-awaited aircraft made its commercial debut in October on an All Nippon Airways flight from Tokyo to Hong Kong. For passengers, the pluses are the "autodimming" windows (say so long to plastic shades), bigger windows and cabins that are pressurized at 6,000 feet instead of 8,000, which means you may feel less sluggish because you are getting more oxygen. Boeing has more than 800 orders for the new aircraft, which can carry as many as 290 passengers. United/Continental, which has 50 on order, is aiming to introduce them by the second half of this year.

12. It might be time to fall out of love a little with online booking. Maybe the world's aura needs fluffing or maybe it's the run-up to the Maya prediction of the end of the world as we know it on Dec. 21, but a Lemony Snicket series of unfortunate events has caused havoc and worse for travelers. The recent wreck of the cruise ship Costa Concordia, the Arab Spring and the earthquake and tsunami in Japan in March were among the shocking events that plagued the world, never mind the dozen weather disasters that cost the U.S. a billion dollars in 2011, the Hartford Courant reported. So if you're planning a complicated vacation, you will need an ally, and that's usually a travel agent or someone who can pull some strings if you're in a jam. Booking a ticket toWashington, D.C.? I can do that myself. Going on a tour of the Middle East or on a world cruise? I'd call a travel agent who wants to be my new BFF.

catharine.hamm@latimes.com


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Visiting Hotel Chocolat

For those travelers who love chocolate, they should consider visiting the Hotel Chocolat in St. Lucia.

The hotel sits off the beach, so anyone looking for a beach vacation may not appreciate the hotel setting amongst the cocoa plantation. Guests can walk out and pick fresh fruit fruit from the trees amongst the plantation, including guava and papaya, or watch harvesting of the cocoa beans, and processing.

Imagine having cocoa and chocolate surrounding you on vacation. There are cocoa butter massages at the spa, chocolate to eat and cocoa demonstrations around the plantation. It is a chocolate lover's paradise, for sure.

Rooms at the resort are "pods". The resort is limited to guests 12 and older, so the resort is geared toward adults. The "pods" include a unique open air shower as well.

Even for those who love the beach, the resort is a short drive to the beach. There is also so much more to do in and around the resort. Guests can go diving, hiking, deep sea fishing, sailing, or walk through the rainforest. I think guests will have plenty to do staying at the Hotel Chocolat.

The resort is located one hour from the Hewanorra International Airport. Travel agents can arrange transportation from the airport. I would definitely consider this as a unique vacation destination.


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Friday, February 10, 2012

Indy tips for Super Bowl visitors

OK, you somehow scored Super Bowl tix. Congrats. Shouldn’t everyone’s uncle be a regional fleet manager for Ford?

Whatever the blessing, you’re headed to Indianapolis. The Indy City. Kurt Vonnegut country. Note that the bars stay open till 3 a.m.

Where to start? Off the plane (about a 15-minute ride to downtown), I’d head to St. Elmo Steak House?(127 S. Illinois St.), where the horseradishy shrimp cocktails will light your inner fireplace. St. Elmo is a big, family owned place, and it’s sure to be buzzing this week.

Looking for some celeb sightings? Try the bar at the Conrad Hotel – technically, Capital Grille. This place is a fine hangout all by itself.

The city's hub is a gracious old war memorial at Monument Circle, where special heating has been added along the streets and sidewalks to keep Super Bowl visitors happy. What Michigan Avenue is to Chicago, Monument Circle is to Indianapolis – an overlighted postcard shot.

A worthy pit stop at Monument Circle is the bar at the Columbia Club, a brassy, old hotel/club that sits on the circle like a 10-story period piece.

A sure party point will be Meridian Street, which will be tented to keep out the clammy Indiana cold. Check out the Slippery Noodle?-- once a bordello and now a popular blues club, located at 372 S. Meredian St. Lots of live music planned through Super Bowl weekend.

If you’re looking for something a little slicker, try Sensu?(225 S. Meridian), which features a popular restaurant (second floor) and a full nightclub underneath (first floor). Sensu is bound to draw lots of famous faces during Super Bowl week.

Six miles north of downtown, Broad Ripple -- a neighborhood, not a drink -- gets a lot of notices for its mix of restaurants and a thriving bar scene. But locals also like Massachusetts Avenue, a five-minute cab ride from downtown.

“Mass. Ave.” offers an interesting stretch of clubs and restaurants -- a little bohemian, a little slice of life.

One of the oldest dives around is the Chatterbox, which features jazz on its tiny stage. It's a long, narrow place with a vintage cash register and some of the best music in town.

Up the street, you'll find the sprawling Rathskeller, a totally different kind of place but a hugely popular nightspot as well, with German food, live music and a roadhouse vibe. The clientele spans all ages, and you'll feel very welcome. Try the Spaten Optimator, on tap.

By the way, the best burger I ever had was at the Weber Grill?restaurant in downtown Indy, marked by the red kettle that Weber made famous. It’s at 10 N. Illinois St., or just follow the smell of the charcoal, the only way they cook.

Long-range forecasts call for highs in the 30s and 40s, with about a 30% chance of rain toward the end of the week. But since bars stay open till 3 a.m., you may not even notice.

Meanwhile, here are a couple of?Super Bowl-related activities?going on?this week. You probably couldn’t miss them, but just in case:

--NFL Experience in Indiana Convention Center.

--Super Bowl Village located on Georgia Street (free).


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Cruise Line Safety

Travel agents, do you think your customers feel safe if they were to take a cruise these days? Are your bookings for cruises down since the Costa Concordia disaster, and other cruise line mishaps? It is probably a little early to tell since the Concordia going aground.

The Costa Concordia tragedy appears to be human error, which of course we do not want someone with poor judgment guiding our ship, but human error will always happen, no matter what the form of transportation.

I wonder if it will affect bookings much at all. Overall cruising seems a pretty safe way to travel, when compared to flying or driving. According to the president of the American Society of Travel Agents (ASTA), cruising is overall very safe and accidents are very rare.

There are many agencies that oversee cruise line safety including The U.S. Coast Guard, the Cruise Line International Association (CLIA), and International Maritime Organization (IMO).

There are rigorous testing and training that cruise lines and their staff must go through before passengers can board the ship. The U.S. Coast Guard does safety inspections as well before new cruise ships can leave a port.

I wonder if the economy will have more to do with less cruise line passengers? The economy in Europe, the USA, and many locations around the world are in some trouble, to say the least. This could have more of an effect than passengers worried about the safety.

What are your thoughts?


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Shore things

Florida's beaches are playgrounds for tourists and residents alike, with each stretch of sand offering a unique character. It all depends on what you're looking for: peace, a party? There is a different case to be made for most of the state's natural tanning beds. Here's a guide to get you started.

East Coast

For partying: South Beach is the best known part of Miami Beach. In daylight, the cognoscenti gravitate to Lummus Park, aka Glitter Beach, along Ocean Drive from Fifth to 14th streets. Watch for jaw-dropping models in photo shoots and A-list celebs enjoying the white sand and gentle surf. At night, just cross Ocean for chic/expensive restaurants with outdoor seating — and to see and be seen. Topless sunbathing is not legal but seldom policed, and the area is gay/lesbian friendly. The park/beach includes volleyball nets and paths busy with 'bladers and joggers.

For playing: Former resident Jimmy Buffett wasn't singing about Key West in "Margaritaville," but there is plenty of attitude changing available in the self-named Conch Republic. Before heading for the beach, get a rental bike or moped and cruise the residential streets (not touristy Duval). Visit Ernest Hemingway's home (hemingwayhome.com have a drink at Capt. Tony's Saloon (once frequented by Buffett, capttonyssaloon.com and eat at the iconic Blue Heaven (blueheavenkw.com. Then head to Smathers Beach for small waves, tanning, personal watercraft — or a just a view of hard bodies.

For families: Daytona Beach might seem counterintuitive as a family destination, especially if you've seen it at spring break, but the rest of the time, it rates high in visitor surveys as a great family destination. It draws about 8 million visitors annually to 23 miles of shoreline. At low tide, the drivable beach broadens to as wide as 500 feet. At the east end of Main Street sits the 1,000-foot-long pier, great for admiring the coastline, fishing the surf or relaxing with a drink. The adjacent boardwalk offers a games-filled arcade and quick beach food.

For singles: It's been more than half a century since "Where the Boys Are" introduced America to the collegiate spring break. And Fort Lauderdale, where the novel-turned-movie was set, has tamed the party-crowd image. Emphasis on the arts and upscale shopping near the waterfront has made Lauderdale attractive to the more-mature beachgoer. Nonetheless, you can still hoist one in the landmark Elbo Room, seen in the movie. The beach has earned a coveted Blue Wave Award for the cleanliness, as determined by an environmental coalition.

For peace and quiet: The name Canaveral National Seashore (nps.gov/cana/index.htm is familiar to many only because of the neighboring Kennedy Space Center. But the seashore is a step back into Florida as it was centuries ago. The 58,000-acre park is on a barrier island that provides a habitat for 14 species of animals considered either threatened or endangered. They coexist with day-trippers who come to swim, surf, hike backcountry trails or relax along the 24-mile coastline.

For fishing: You can surf-fish along most of Florida's coastline, all of which is public. But John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park (pennekamppark.com was the nation's first underwater park. Located in Key Largo, Pennekamp is noted for bonefish, redfish and tarpon. Spearfishing in the park's 70 nautical square miles is forbidden. But rangers lead snorkeling and scuba tours, and you can even view the coral reefs from a glass-bottom boat.

West Coast

For partying: While Fort Lauderdale used to epitomize spring break, Panama City Beach has become popular for year-round merrymaking. Decades ago, MTV hyped the party scene here, which in turn increased the coastal community's popularity. Crowds now keep the 27 miles of area beaches — yes, they are clear of oil residue from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon blowout — hopping during the day and the shoreside bars throbbing at night. Also close at hand: amusement parks and top-notch golf courses.

For playing: Something to boast about after visiting St. George Island State Park: You climbed to the top of a lighthouse. It's a monthly event at the park, ranked No. 6 of all U.S. beaches in 2011 by marine ecologist Dr. Beach (drbeach.org. The park covers 1,962 acres, including 9 miles of undeveloped beaches. Besides its lighthouse and dunes, this barrier island offers coves and salt marshes, and trails thread through almost 4 miles of pines and oak forest. Canoes and kayaks can be rented, there's a catch-and-release fishing trip, plus 60 pet-friendly campsites.

For families: Clearwater Beach is a 3-mile stretch of soft white sand about 25 miles north of St. Petersburg. Beach volleyball is popular, concessionaires rent boats, captains run dolphin-watching cruises. Or you can see a real-life movie star: Winter, the dolphin whose tail was lost to fishing nets but who now has an artificial one, was featured in 2011's "Dolphin Tale." Winter lives in the Clearwater Marine Aquarium. A tradition: strolling Pier 60, especially to watch magnificent sunsets in the Gulf.

For singles: The powdery Siesta Key Beach, in the Sarasota area, is perfect for strolling, shell collecting, dolphin watching or paddling a rental kayak near them. Just off the sand, browse art galleries and studios, or scope out bars and restaurants to plan your evening. If you meet that special someone here, share a picnic at a shoreside table, or drive inland a few miles with your date to the acclaimed Ringling Museum of Art (ringling.org. And Siesta Key boasts many rental cottages in which to get cozy.

For peace and quiet: You can rent a bike, canoe or kayak to enjoy the nearly 2,000 acres of Grayton Beach State Park (floridastateparks.org/graytonbeach in the Panhandle. There's even a boat ramp into a 100-acre brackish lake, which allows for wildlife watching or fishing for both fresh- and saltwater species. But you also have a milelong beachfront to enjoy. A nature trail winds almost 5 miles through a coastal forest. In the Panhandle, Grayton Beach is halfway between Panama City Beach and Destin.

For fishing: Projecting into the Gulf from the community of Dunedin, Honeymoon Island State Park (floridastateparks.org/honeymoonisland is a sliver of land that offers superb fishing. The regular catch includes flounder, trout, redfish, snapper, whiting, sheepshead; occasionally, someone hooks a tarpon. Four miles of coastline include mangrove swamps, salt marshes and sand dunes. Watch the resident ospreys and shore birds to see where they're biting. There are also picnic pavilions, nature trails and bathhouses.

Robert N. Jenkins has spent more than half of his 43 years in Florida as a travel writer and editor. For this subjective list, he mixed his favorites with those of colleagues.

ctc-travel@tribune.com


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New Caribbean Resorts

There are many new resorts in the Caribbean to offer to clients. If clients like the feel of a new resort, then there are plenty to talk about.

There are new romantic resorts for couples, like Secrets St. James Montego Bay, for adults only, or another Secrets property, Caribbean Secrets Wild Orchid Montego Bay. There's even one named for the 007 movie, Golden Eye Hotel & Resort in Jamaica.

The Bahama Islands have a few new resorts to dazzle clients, including the new Sandals Emerald Bay.

Many clients like to try out new destinations, plus brand new fresh and clean resorts. If this sounds like your clients, then there are a lot of choices now and coming soon. Sometimes hotels and the staff are working out kinks in the system during new openings, and customers may just have to expect that, though those kinks should be worked out well in advance.

Have your clients stayed at any of the new resorts of the Caribbean? What kind of feedback did they give?


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