April 10, 2015

“Rental Cars That Don’t Suck” Tries to Make Their Referral Program Not Suck.

Silvercar offers a great rental car experience - nice cars, inclusive pricing, good service -- and they have lucrative referral bonuses. The program was pretty clunky though, so they've revamped it. Here's how Silvercar works and how you can benefit.


Continue reading “Rental Cars That Don’t Suck” Tries to Make Their Referral Program Not Suck....






from View from the Wing http://viewfromthewing.boardingarea.com/2015/04/10/rental-cars-that-dont-suck-tries-to-make-their-referral-program-not-suck/

7 truths about living in Norway

"Bottom line: our social liberalism only runs skin deep -- only as far as it is comfortable for us."



from Matador Network » Matador Network http://matadornetwork.com/abroad/7-uncomfortable-truths-living-norway/

Hey travelers, what’s wrong with telling a little white lie?





from Elliott http://elliott.org/is-this-right/hey-travelers-whats-wrong-with-telling-a-little-white-lie/

Thinking about conversion channels for former hotel guests

Hoteliers spend a lot of time and money marketing their properties to new visitors. But an often-overlooked way to gain future business ...



from Tnooz http://www.tnooz.com/article/conversion-channels-former-guests/#utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=thinking-about-conversion-channels-for-former-hotel-guests

Photos: Explore the Everglades






from CNN.com - Travel http://www.cnn.com/2015/04/09/travel/gallery/the-wonder-list-everglades/index.html

Photos: Wonder in the Alps

The season finale of "The Wonder List" highlights the beauty of the French Alps.





from CNN.com - Travel http://www.cnn.com/2015/04/09/travel/gallery/the-wonder-list-alps/index.html

Today’s Daily Getaways: Buy Hyatt Gold Passport Points For Cheap

As I first posted about several weeks ago, Daily Getaways is back earlier than normal this year, and is a great opportunity to purchase hotel points at a discount. It’s sponsored by the US Travel Association, and every weekday for five weeks they’re offering discounted travel packages.


The promotion kicked off March 23, with several opportunities so far to purchase points packages from hotel chains:


-- Purchase IHG Rewards Club points for ~0.58-0.6 cents each

-- Purchase Club Carlson points for ~0.45 cents each

-- Purchase Hilton HHonors points for ~0.5 cents each

-- Purchase Best Western Rewards points for ~0.55 cents each

-- Purchase Choice Privileges points for ~0.4 cents each


Well, today is possibly the most anticipated day of Daily Getaways, as Hyatt Gold Passport points are going on sale at a discount at 1PM ET today.


The post Today’s Daily Getaways: Buy Hyatt Gold Passport Points For Cheap appeared first on One Mile at a Time.






from One Mile at a Time http://onemileatatime.boardingarea.com/2015/04/10/todays-daily-getaways-buy-hyatt-gold-passport-points-for-cheap/

10 signs you were raised in Serbia

At one point you were a millionaire... hell, let's even say a billionaire.



from Matador Network » Matador Network http://matadornetwork.com/life/10-signs-born-raised-serbia/

IHG Launching Auctions for Once in a Lifetime Experiences (With Some Great Values to Start)

IHG Rewards Club -- the hotel loyalty program for Intercontinental, Holiday Inn, Crowne Plaza, and related brands -- is introducing an auction for experiences redemption site next month.


Poking around at their beta offering it looks like there will be some cool offerings to start, and these types of projects usually wind up offering great deals at the outset. Those don't last more than a few months or a year before they become overrun with members who bid up the winning prices, and the offerings themselves usually become stale.


But for now you'll want to pay close attention and come away with some steals..!


Continue reading IHG Launching Auctions for Once in a Lifetime Experiences (With Some Great Values to Start)...






from View from the Wing http://viewfromthewing.boardingarea.com/2015/04/10/ihg-launching-auctions-for-once-in-a-lifetime-experiences-with-some-great-values-to-start/

Silvercar Referral Program Improved

Silvercar is the innovative company that actually makes renting cars fun.


As I’ve explained in the past, they have only one kind of car, an Audi A4, and it comes with a bunch of cool features. This includes free GPS, wifi, satellite radio, fair toll tracking, and a fair fuel plan.


I shared my experience with renting from Silvercar at LAX a couple of months back.


One of the other cool things about Silvercar is that they've long offered a referral program, much like Uber, whereby both the person referring and the person being referred get a bonus after the first qualifying rental.


The post Silvercar Referral Program Improved appeared first on One Mile at a Time.






from One Mile at a Time http://onemileatatime.boardingarea.com/2015/04/10/silvercar-referral-program-improved/

14 reasons to NOT travel to Portugal

A valley, a river, some vineyards, green hills… you don’t see the appeal.



from Matador Network » Matador Network http://matadornetwork.com/trips/14-reasons-never-travel-portugal/

Þingvellir in Þingvallavegur, Iceland

Þingvellir


The Althingi, the Icelandic parliament known as the oldest in the world, meets in a downtown Reykjavik stronghold today. But one must trek 45 desolate kilometers east to see where Vikings first laid down the law - and where there’s something sinister in the water.


Nordic settlers brought much more to Iceland in the 8th and 9th centuries than the horn-based tankards and helmets favored in airport gift shops today. Democratic ideals motivated many to flee shortages and strife in Europe. In 930, a general assembly formed to help establish order among the growing population. Though Norwegians ruled Iceland starting in 1262 and Danes took over in the 14th century (disbanding the Althingi from 1800-1845), the assembly saw the island through to its independence in the 20th century.


The first Althingi gathered in the well-situated Thingvellir rift valley. Conveniently enough, the land had been surrendered for public use by a disgraced property owner who murdered his servant nearby.


Thingvellir became Iceland’s first national park in 1928 and a World Heritage Site in 2004. Geologic wonders heighten the cultural history in one of the two places on Earth (along with Africa’s Great Rift Valley) where the North American and Eurasian plates are visibly drifting apart. It’s a placid view belying constant tectonic and volcanic upheaval.


The park entrance offers a vista of Thingvallavatn, Iceland’s largest lake, before a descent toward the ancient parliamentary site along the massive Almannagja rock wall that marks an eastern boundary of the North American plate. You might sense some ill portent as you trek across this literal scar in the earth, especially if you’re there in the winter. You wouldn’t be wrong. Dignitaries and prisoners alike have been taking this walk for centuries.


It’s a straight shot from the entrance down to the preserved edge of the ancient parliamentary site and its Logberg (Law Rock) and Logretta (legislative assembly). To see where sentences were carried out, stop along the way at the footbridge. You might have been inclined to admire the gurgling water below anyway. But from 1602 to 1750, this was the last thing at least 18 women saw before being executed here at the Drekkingarhylur (Drowning Pool).


This dark era began with Iceland’s Reformation and the Great Edict of 1564’s harsh penalties for moral offenses. By this time, the Althingi mostly served as a court under the Danish crown. Even though enforcement moved from religious to secular authorities over the next century, these leaders also believed that blood was the only way to cleanse a society’s deep sins. Of course, it offered an easy deterrent and vivid spectacle as well.


Thieves, the lowest of criminals, were usually beheaded. Women convicted of incest and other fornication were drowned, and their male counterparts were beheaded. Others received the same for committing infanticide to conceal a child’s birth. Those brought in for witchcraft and magic were burned at the stake.


Add 30 beheadings, 15 hangings, and nine burnings to the 18 drownings, and you have the 72 known executions at Thingvellir during this period. Lenient interventions by the Danish king helped end the bloodshed, and the Great Edict’s penalties were officially and drastically softened in 1838.


Drekkingarhylur is just one of the less approachable landmarks that lies near the park’s geologic and cultural gems. One can imagine a popular tour of Galgaklettar (Scaffold Cliff), Hoggstokkseyri (Execution Block Spit), Brennugja (Stake Gorge) and Kagaholmi (Whipping Islet). Thingvellir officials don’t seem likely to offer one soon, though.


Perhaps you can plot your own. At the least, any visitor might keep a cold truth in mind - where Icelandic democracy was born, many met the opposite fate.




















from Atlas Obscura http://atlasobscura.com.feedsportal.com/c/35387/f/665719/s/4546e086/sc/27/l/0L0Satlasobscura0N0Cplaces0Cthingvellir/story01.htm

Personal Journeys: On a Gay Cruise, Just One of the Guys

A cruise that conjures up the thumpa-thumpa club scene does more than you’d think: it creates a worry-free space where being gay is the norm.

















from NYT > Travel http://rss.nytimes.com/c/34625/f/642561/s/45468df0/sc/14/l/0L0Snytimes0N0C20A150C0A40C120Ctravel0C12gay0Ecruise0Bhtml0Dpartner0Frss0Gemc0Frss/story01.htm

Literary Louisiana

A return home to soak up the places that left a mark on a handful of dazzling writers, including Walker Percy, Kate Chopin and Tennessee Williams.

















from NYT > Travel http://rss.nytimes.com/c/34625/f/642561/s/45468dee/sc/14/l/0L0Snytimes0N0C20A150C0A40C120Ctravel0C12Cover0ELiterary0ELouisiana0Bhtml0Dpartner0Frss0Gemc0Frss/story01.htm

How to piss off a Greek

Don’t get drunk and then boast on Facebook that you threw up next to the Parthenon



from Matador Network » Matador Network http://matadornetwork.com/life/how-to-piss-off-a-greek/