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Archive for July 3rd, 2012

Ed Perkins on Travel: Priceline offers a new opaque hotel-booking option Jul 03

Priceline — the originator of opaque buying — has added a third option for buying discounted hotel accommodations. In addition to the original “name your own price” system and the clear listings, you now have the additional choice of an “Express” deal: You see the price, but you don’t know the name of the hotel until you make a nonrefundable purchase.

This, of course, is the opaque pricing model that Hotwire has been using since its inception, and the approach that Travelocity has added in its “top secret” hotels.

But Priceline has added some features that the others do not offer — at least not yet:

  • Although the name of the hotel remains concealed, Priceline shows a complete list of amenities and important guest policies at each hotel — availability of a pool, Wi-Fi, a fitness center, a restaurant, “free” breakfast, “free” parking, whether the facility is pet-friendly, and such.

  • Some Priceline Express hotel listings also give you a bedding option, such as one large queen or king bed or two twins or queens.

    Over the years, I’ve been a big booster of arranging hotel accommodations through opaque sites. You get to select a general range on the price/quality ladder — typically some number of “stars” assigned by the site — and, in a big city, you can specify one or more neighborhoods where you want to stay.

    I’ve generally stuck to the upper range of hotel stars, at 3-1/2 or better, and I’ve never

    been disappointed in the hotel. I’ve also found that the agencies’ star ratings are reasonably accurate and not inflated: When I’ve selected a 4-star hotel, it’s always turned out to be a unit of a well-known upscale chain. Working between the opaque and open lists, I’ve sometimes even been able to identify specific, supposedly opaque, hotel names before committing.

    The biggest obstacle to opaque buying I’ve encountered has been the inability to specify the type of bed arrangement, and the default selection was almost always one double, queen, or king. Most of the time I was able to arrange what I preferred at check-in, but a few times we had to accept less than what we wanted. Now, however, Priceline’s latest option offers a choice, at least at some hotels.

    The ability to determine, in advance, the availability of no-charge Wi-Fi, parking, breakfast, and some of the other amenities is also a big advantage. Of course, unless you’re a high-ranking member of a hotel chain’s loyalty program, your opaque buy generally nets you the lowest-category room each individual hotel has to offer. But modern hotels these days seldom have any really bad rooms, so that has not been a problem.

    I’ve also found opaque buying to be a good way to arrange rental cars. Usually, as long as I can specify the general size range, I don’t care which rental company actually provides the car. The biggest drawback to opaque car rentals is that you typically have to forego the rental company’s membership-based express pickup and car choice system.

    On the other hand, I’m not big on using opaque buying for air tickets. To me, schedule is too important in choice of itinerary to leave to the luck of the draw. And as far as I can tell, many other travelers agree with me: The main action on the opaque sites seems to be in hotels and rental cars.

    For now, Priceline’s new “Express” option puts it ahead of prime competitors Hotwire and Travelocity. I wouldn’t be surprised, however, to see them play “me, too” fairly quickly: Real advantages don’t tend to last long in this business.

    Presumably, Priceline’s “name your own price” rates are and will remain lower than even the Express deals, and you can often determine a good bid price from Biddingfortravel.com and Biddingtraveler.com. But if you don’t want to guess the price but still want to pay bottom dollar, the new Priceline system, along with Hotwire and Travelocity, should work for you quite well.

    Contact Ed Perkins at eperkins@mind.net.

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    Travel the world for free? A new book shows you how Jul 03

    Michael Wigge endeavored to travel the world without any money, driven only by the necessities to eat, get to the next destination and find a place to sleep. In “How to Travel the World for Free,” he discusses his amazing, arduous and life-affirming experience. Here’s an excerpt.

    Chapter 12: My life as a Peruvian (Peru to Bolivia)

    The tourists laugh at my rather foolish outfit: Before my departure, Stefan had lent me a traditional poncho and a woolen cap with earmuffs and pompoms, but now it looks like the only Peruvians wearing this attire are the ones you would find in European pedestrian zones.

    I am lucky and get a grace period on the first day of the trekking tour. The porters halve the normal carry load for me from 80 pounds to 40 pounds. However, this weight is not carried as it would (or should) be in a normal backpack, but is instead made of plastic bags tied up together with ropes that are then carried as a makeshift backpack. While the porters run in the front at high speed, on the first day I am allowed to walk with the rest of the group at the normal European pace. We cover almost 12 miles and climb from 8,500 feet to the height of 111,800 feet.

    Around five in the evening, I reach the first bivouac shelter with the group and help the porters set up the tents for the tourists and to prepare the dinner. The porters have two gas cookers in a small shelter, and for the next two hours, my task is to peel the peas. The evening then becomes a nightmare: while the group can at least sleep protected from the extremely cold temperature in tents, I spend the night with the three other porters in the shelter and only a blue plastic sheet to separate my sleeping bag from the extremely cold, extremedly hard ground. Lying near me is Gomerciendo, the cook for the group. I ask him how he endures this. Gomerciendo explains to me that he sleeps only rarely in beds. While he is snoring away, I remain awake during most of the night; it’s noisy, cold, the ground is hard, and the high altitude at 11,000 feet makes me toss and turn all night.

    At four in the morning,  Gomerciendo’s alarm clock rings. We have exactly one hour to prepare the breakfast for the group. I sit impassively, shivering in the corner. At six o’clock, the group starts for the second leg of the trip; they have six hours time to reach the afternoon stop over the 15,000 feet high Abra-Salkantay pass. The porters have to make it in three hours’ time, hence, we have to walk twice as fast, basically running. The reason for this lack of time is that in the morning we took 90 minutes to dismantle the tents, wash the utensils and load the horses that morning, and the porters must arrive at the next stop 90 minutes before the group does so that we have time to prepare and have lunch ready by the time everyone else arrives.

    It quickly becomes clear to me that the decision to go along with the group as a porter and as worker was, and is, insane. I can hardly keep up the pace, although I am carrying only half the weight that Gomerciendo, Yuri and Nico have on their backs. After nearly half an hour, I manage to remain standing but pant and bend forward in order to breathe in gulps of air. Yuri asks me to pull myself up and to keep up pace because we are under enormous time pressure; after all, the tourists would like to have their lunch on time. I continue to follow the three porters and the three horses, but physically I am just not able to make it. I am dizzy and my legs feel like rubber.

    A short while later I am far behind them. Yuri is up ahead of me me, as the path goes up the mountain in a serpentine trail. He calls out again and again: “Amigo, vienes. No tenemos tiempo! Rápido!” Translated, that is: “Come, my friend, we have no time to lose! Hurry” But it doesn’t help me; the air is too thin and I am not trained. I lie down on the path and breathe in and out deeply. Shortly thereafter, Yuri, Gomerciendo and Nico come down with the horses and look at me hopelessly. Gomerciendo laughs, because he has never seen such an incapable porter in his entire life, but Yuri is annoyed and asks me to stand up. He anxiously explains to me that we need to be at the next camp before the tourists in order to prepare the lunch. If the food is not ready, there will be complaints to the agency, and it might cost them their jobs. I realize that I have behaved carelessly as a porter.

    Two evenings ago I had boasted to the boss of the agency (who, by the way, is called Fidel Castro) that I was a thousand-meter runner and that the 50 miles would not be a problem. Now I was a burden on the tour. Due to their care of duty, the porters cannot leave me behind, but also cannot continue to wait for me. I promise them to keep up with the pace, if we could buckle up my weight on one of the horses. The three porters consult among themselves and reach the decision that about 20 more pounds from by baggage could fit on the horses, any more than this would be unbearable for them, too. So now I carry only twenty pounds up the mountain pass, but because of the height it feels like 80 pounds.

    Even after this lightened load, I am not able to match the speed of the porters and quickly fall behind. I drag myself through a breathtaking landscape with its snow-covered mountain peaks and glaciers that go up to a height of 20,000 feet, but all this makes no difference to me because I am totally knocked-out and overwhelmed. I come across a wooden hut selling chocolate bars and beverages to the trekking enthusiasts. I hear a German couple trying to decide between a Twix or Snickers, and between a large or a small Coke. I am completely envious and can only drag myself frustratingly past them. Oh, the things I would do now for just a two-liter bottle of Coke and a chocolate bar!

    It becomes really cold after 13,000 feet, although we are sweating from the strenuous climb. I can no longer see Yuri and the others. Every step seems like a kick in the teeth; the pain penetrates my entire body. After breaking for the second stretch of the day, Yuri tells me that he earns 50 dollars for a five-day trip. I am speechless that the tourists have to pay so little for such an effort on his behalf

    Adapted from “How to Travel the World for Free” by Michael Wigge. Copyright © 2012 by Michael Wigge. Excerpted by permission of www.michaelwigge.com. All rights reserved. © 2012 MSNBC Interactive

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    Travel Insurance Comparison Site Squaremouth Adds Products from American … Jul 03

    /PRNewswire-iReach/ – Travel insurance comparison site Squaremouth.com announces the addition of American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. to its list of travel insurance providers. American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. is the second addition for Squaremouth this year, bringing its total to 18 providers with over 250 insurance policies.

    “We strive to continuously add top-rated travel insurance providers to our database,” says Squaremouth CEO Chris Harvey. “American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. brings a recognizable name with a proven track record of excellent customer service.”

    Four products will be available on the comparison site: Gold, Platinum, Global Travel Shield Classic and Global Travel Shield Deluxe.

    All American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. products offered on the Squaremouth.com web site include benefits such as emergency medical coverage up to $100,000, medical evacuation coverage up to $1 million and pre-existing medical condition coverage. Pre-existing medical condition coverage is available to travelers who purchase insurance within 14 days of their initial trip deposit date.

    Additional benefits include trip cancellation and trip interruption coverage. Covered reasons for trip cancellation include sickness, injury and death. American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. products also include cancellation coverage for terrorism, financial default, employment layoff and hurricane and weather.

    “American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. offers outstanding products that have unique benefits for our customers,” says Harvey. “Just as important, Squaremouth travelers will experience excellent customer service backed by the American Express brand.”

    As a Squaremouth insurance provider, the American Express Travel Related Service Company, Inc.’s products offered on Squaremouth.com will be subject to Squaremouth’s Zero Complaint Policy. In the event a customer is dissatisfied with a provider, Squaremouth can mediate on a customer’s behalf and may remove any provider who does not resolve an issue to Squaremouth’s satisfaction.

    “Squaremouth reviews all the insurance providers on our site,” explains Squaremouth Marketing Jessica Bell “This allows our customers to focus on buying the best policy at the cheapest price without the need to research the integrity of the individual providers.”

    American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. underwriter, AMEX Assurance Company, carries a rating of “Excellent” by AM Best.

    About Squaremouth Squaremouth is America’s fastest growing travel insurance comparison site, helping customers instantly quote, compare and buy policies from every major carrier. Squaremouth has web sites in the US and UK, and an extensive network of partner sites worldwide. The company is headquartered in St. Petersburg, FL., with offices in Fort Wayne, IN. Visit Squaremouth.com.

    About our Zero Complaint Guarantee The cornerstone of our commitment to customers is Squaremouth’s guarantee to remove any company from our website if there is a customer complaint that cannot be resolved to our satisfaction. Squaremouth offers the broadest selection of insurance with an emphasis on quality and follow-up care in companies featured. We also factor in independent evaluation from the insurance industry watchdog AM Best.

    Squaremouth offers products from the following travel insurance carriers: Air Ambulance Card,  CSA Travel Protection, Global Alert Admin, Global Rescue, Global Underwriters, HCC, HTH Worldwide, IMG,  ITravelInsured, Medex, Medjet Assist, MH Ross, On Call International, Seven Corners, Travel Guard, Travel Insurance Services, Travel Insured, Travelers Liberty, Travelex, TravelSafe, Trawick International and USA Assist.

    About American Express American Express is a global services company, providing customers with access to products, insights and experiences that enrich lives and build business success. Learn more at americanexpress.com and connect with us on facebook.com/americanexpress, foursquare.com/americanexpress, linkedin.com/companies/american-express, twitter.com/americanexpress, and youtube.com/americanexpress.

    Media Contact: Chris Harvey Squaremouth, 727-490-5801, charvey@squaremouth.com News distributed by PR Newswire iReach: https://ireach.prnewswire.com

    SOURCE Squaremouth

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    Texas judge finds JetBlue pilot insane, not guilty Jul 03

    A Texas judge on Tuesday found a JetBlue pilot insane and not guilty of interfering with a flight after his bizarre behavior forced an emergency landing in March.

    Clayton Osbon, 49, had been charged with interference with a flight crew and could have faced up to 20 years in prison.

    Court documents show U.S. District Judge Mary Lou Robinson in Amarillo, Texas, received a report from a psychological examination that concluded, “at the time of the commission of the offense, the defendant appeared to suffer from a severe mental disease or defect that impaired his ability to appreciate the nature, quality, or wrongfulness of his behavior.”

    All parties, including the prosecutors, agreed to the report.

    Last month, Judge Robinson declared Osbon fit to stand trial, saying he was “not now suffering from a mental disease or defect” that would make it impossible for him to assist in his own defense.

    Osbon had been examined by a government-appointed psychologist who did not address whether he was sane at the time of the March 27 incident.

    Witnesses said Osbon had to be wrestled to the floor of the plane that was heading from New York to Las Vegas after he began sprinting down the aisle, yelling that “Things don’t matter,” and talking about Afghanistan, Iraq and al-Qaida.

    Before being locked out of the flight deck by the first officer, the FBI said Osbon had tried to interfere with the plane’s controls and began rambling, saying, “We’re not going to Vegas,” and warning the first officer that “We’re going to have to take a leap of faith.”

    Judge Robinson ordered that Osbon be taken to a prison in Fort Worth, Texas, for a mental examination, then returned to court for an August 6 hearing, where his fate will be up to the judge.

    Under federal law, people found not guilty by reason of insanity can be incarcerated until they can establish that they are entitled to be released.

    Several passengers on board the flight have filed suit against JetBlue for gross negligence, saying the airline should have known that he was unfit for duty as a pilot.

    (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012.

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    Here’s a tip: Vacation travel? Study up on tipping customs so you don’t overpay Jul 03

    Taking a cab to the airport? Checking in luggage with the skycap? Dining at a brasserie in Belgium? Booking a guided tour of the Australian Outback? All are scenarios which, depending on local customs, may call for leaving a tip.

    Knowing to add a gratuity to the check at a restaurant or kick in a few extra dollars for the cabbie tends to come by a combination of osmosis and experience.

    Travel guides from Fodor’s, Lonely Planet or Frommer’s typically offer advice on tipping customs. Although it may be useful, ultimately there’s no unquestioned Ministry of Tipping or tome from on high with the last word on the practice.

    And if you venture overseas, common U.S. tipping rules often don’t apply.

    “The tipping culture is not as widespread abroad,” says Arabella Bowen, executive editorial director at Fodor’s, a division of Random House Inc.

    Studying up on local tipping customs before you hit the road and as soon as you arrive at your destination can help ensure you tip like a pro and don’t overpay.

    Here’s how to navigate 10 travel and leisure tipping scenarios:

    ___

    1. YOU’RE UNSURE

    The best way to find out if you need to leave a tip? Ask customer service at the hotel where you’re staying, friends or local residents who you meet, suggests Robert Reid, U.S. travel editor for Lonely Planet.

    “But at the same time, don’t tip unless you have to,” he says.

    Posting the question on a travel website or online forum also can yield good information.

    ___

    2. RESTAURANTS

    In the U.S., it’s not unusual that restaurant patrons in big cities like New York and Los Angeles leave a 20 percent tip above the sales tax. In smaller cities, the expectation remains for tips to be around 15 percent.

    In some countries, such as, France and Japan, tipping isn’t expected, but service charges may be automatically added to your bill.

    In France, eateries and bars include a 15 percent service fee. In Spain and Italy it’s expected that customers leave about 5 percent extra in smaller eateries and 10 percent in more upmarket venues.

    A service charge is also usually included in Moscow. But if the check doesn’t include the charge, add 10 percent.

    ___

    3. WHETHER TO PAY A ‘SUGGESTED’ TIP

    Sometimes restaurants, bars and other leisure establishments will include a suggested tip on the bill. But there’s no need to feel locked in to paying the suggested gratuity.

    “If it says ‘suggested tip’ and it’s not included in the total, you are absolutely free not to pay it,” Fodor’s Bowen says.

    ___

    4. HITTING THE PUBS IN EUROPE?

    Americans ordering beverages in nightclubs and bars tend to tip at least $1 a drink. Outside the U.S., it’s often not expected. That includes bars in Europe, except in certain circumstances.

    In Ireland, for example, tipping is not expected at the bar. But if you get table service, or have a round of drinks, it’s customary to tip a euro for the whole round.

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    Travel Q&A: Cruise is off, but airfare wasn’t refunded Jul 03

    Q We were scheduled on a March 18 southern Caribbean cruise with Princess Cruises. Princess canceled the cruise March 15 because of a mechanical failure. Although we were given a refund for the cruise, Princess would not refund the cost of the airfare, booked separately, to San Juan, Puerto Rico. I was told that they would refund only the airline change fee. I find this unacceptable. Can anything be done?

    A Airlines and cruise lines? There’s a headache waiting to happen.

    The reader probably is not going to get a full refund of her nearly $1,400 worth of airfare, which she did not book through Princess. (Booking independently often seems the wisest course because you have control of that cost — unless something like this happens.) If she wants to use those tickets within the airline’s prescribed time limit, Princess will pay the change fee.

    Here’s what happened, a Princess rep told me in an email: “In order to make the full repairs to the ship, we canceled the next two voyages, scheduled to depart March 18 and March 25. The ship returned to service for the scheduled April 1 cruise. Passengers booked on these sailings received a full refund as well as a 25 percent credit toward a future cruise.”

    If you didn’t book your airfare through Princess? “Princess then offered to cover any air change fees assessed by the airline.”

    The reader’s window of opportunity to take this cruise was exactly the window

    for which she booked the ticket. She wrote to Princess, “Although we were told that we would be given a 25 percent discount on a future cruise, we were quoted $100 more per person (after the 25 percent discount was deducted) for the identical cruise and cabin category for the April 1 sailing. This amounts to a $312 per person increase in the original price.”

    Besides the increase in price, a quick scan of Princess’ future similar sailings shows that most depart from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., or New York, which means that the reader will pay, in essence, $1,400 for tickets. If she were to reconsider and take a Nov. 10 sailing, the airfare recently to Fort Lauderdale from Orange County totaled about $800 for two. (That cruise would be cheaper than the April 1 one, but keep in mind that Nov. 10 is still hurricane season, when prices tend to be lower.) She might have airfare credit left over, but again, the clock is ticking, and her schedule may not allow use of that.

    Bottom line: The reader is probably not going to come out ahead on this one. Princess has done the right thing by offering refunds, discounts and change fees. From a business perspective, I can understand why it won’t assume responsibility for airfare it didn’t book. From a customer relations standpoint, I can’t wrap my head around it, especially when the reader noted that her hotel in San Juan, a Sheraton that was booked with a nonrefundable rate, refunded her money.

    There’s always small claims court, of course. Al Anolik, a Bay Area travel attorney who also presides over small claims court hearings, often suggests this and does so in this case, citing negligence in maintaining the ship and in offering an acceptable replacement cruise.

    Today’s column comes from Catharine Hamm of the Los Angeles Times.

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    Paper maps: Amid GPS boom, nostalgia finds a place Jul 03

    COLUMBUS, Ohio — Used to be, Dad would stuff a half-dozen maps in the glove box before setting out with the family on a road trip to see the waterfalls at Yosemite or the granite faces of Mount Rushmore. Colorful maps bearing the logos of the oil companies that printed them — names like Texaco, Gulf, Esso — once brimmed from displays at filling stations, free for the taking.

    But of the more than 35 million Americans expected to travel by car this Fourth of July, a good chunk will probably reach for technology before they’re tempted to unfold — and in a tradition that used to bind Americans as tightly as a highway cloverleaf, try to refold — a paper road map.

    Websites like MapQuest and Google (GOOG) Maps simplified trip planning. Affordable GPS devices and built-in navigation on smartphones downright transformed it — and transportation agencies around the country are noticing, printing fewer maps to cut department costs or just acknowledging that public demand is down.

    The drop in sales began around 2003, when affordable GPS units became the go-to Christmas present, said Pat Carrier, former owner of a travel bookstore in Cambridge, Mass.

    “Suddenly, everyone was buying a Garmin or a TomTom,” he said. “That’s the year I thought, ‘Oh, it’s finally happened.’”

    Transportation departments around the country are in the middle of reprioritizing their spending amid times of falling revenue, and paper maps could be on the chopping block, said Bob Cullen, spokesman for the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials.

    “Just based on the current climate, there have been some cuts,” he said. “I would expect map printing to be one area that’s been targeted.”

    In late June, at the annual exposition of the Road Map Collectors Association in Dublin, Ohio, collector Terry Palmer was selling some of his beloved maps. The 65-year-old from Dallas, Texas, wore a T-shirt with intricate route lines of the United States on his chest, back and arms.

    “The GPS of course now being so available, a lot of new cars are coming out with built-in GPS. People are utilizing those, and they don’t want a road map,” he said. “A lot of the younger generation, they’re used to having their phone, and they don’t need a road map to figure out where to go.”

    In Georgia, officials are printing about 1.6 million maps to cover a two-year period — less than half of what they were printing a decade ago. In Pennsylvania, where officials say public demand has gone down, about 750,000 maps are being printed — way down from more than 3 million in 2000.

    Officials in Oklahoma and Ohio also say map printing is down, and Washington state discontinued them altogether by 2009 because of budget shortfalls.

    But in other states, printing has remained steady because maps remain popular at visiting centers. In Missouri, officials say they’re printing about 1.5 million maps for a two- to three-year period, consistent with printing from a decade ago. Officials in Connecticut, Mississippi and Nebraska also say printing has remained the same.

    It’s unclear why some states are affected more than others. Some speculate certain regions affect how people travel there. In Delaware, for example, officials attributed a jump in printing of about 100,000 maps to people visiting beach areas and renewed real-estate interest.

    There’s a universal theme to paper road maps, especially for baby boomers traveling after retirement, said Kevin Nursick, spokesman for Connecticut’s transportation department. Paper maps, he said, offer an experience that dead batteries and unreliable service connections cannot.

    “Simpler times are something everyone yearns for. And maybe looking at a map takes you back,” he said. “The technology is neat, but on a personal level, there’s a sense of nostalgia when you look at the paper map. A lot of people are yearning for simpler times.”

    At the collectors’ association exposition, a carpeted ballroom at an Embassy Suites hotel outside Columbus featured old road maps for sale, and gave collectors a glimpse into an era of romanticized advertising — brightly colored paper maps promising the sunny beaches of Florida, the mountains of Montana and Chicago’s famous skyline.

    Free roadside maps boomed between the 1920s and 1970s, when oil companies worked with a handful of publishers. As major highways were being built, those maps became synonymous with the possibilities of the open road.

    Dick Bloom, a founding member of the group, has been collecting maps since he was 10. The retired airline pilot from Danville, Ky., said there used to be an element of surprise in road trips.

    “The paper map was all you had back then,” Bloom, 74, said from his merchandise table. “It was the only way to get around. It was a lot more of an adventure back then. Life was much more of an adventure.”

    Transportation agencies aren’t the only ones printing paper road maps. Companies like AAA and Rand McNally have been in the business for decades and are just as synonymous with trip planning.

    Members of AAA, whose services are fully integrated online and include a TripTik mobile app, requested more than 14 million paper guides in 2010, spokeswoman Heather Hunter said. The number of paper maps AAA prints has declined, but she wouldn’t go into detail.

    Rand McNally is known for its road atlases but also offers an interactive travel website and GPS devices; it declined to comment on how many maps it’s printing these days.

    Carrier, now a consultant in the mapping and travel publishing industry, said the additional services from traditional mapping companies show the incredible potential in the industry.

    “There’s no question in the U.S. that traditional road maps are diminished,” he said. “But there are other areas of the map industry that are thriving and even growing.”

    Charlie Regan, who runs the maps division for National Geographic, said the company has sold more paper map products in the past three years than it has ever sold since launching the division in 1915. He attributed it to customers learning to appreciate good map data — and also noted that sales of international maps have remained consistent, and that sales of recreational hiking maps are on the rise.

    “It’s almost like a golden age in mapping. More people than ever before in history are using maps every day,” he said. “For me, that’s fantastic, and it’s an opportunity.”

    What most people agree on is that paper road maps will not go away quietly, like pay phones and phone books. Chris Turner, a collector from Jeffersonville, Ind., shook his head at the notion of paper maps becoming obsolete.

    “With a GPS or other mapping system that you might use, you feel like you’re beholden to the GPS lady. You know? ‘Turn left here. Recalculating.’ Well, with a map, you can trace your route and you can decide for yourself still where you want to go.

    “And if you want to vary from the GPS lady, so be it,” he said. “But you’re armed with that knowledge from that map to do that.”

    Head here

    The old days: Colorful road maps bearing the logos of the oil companies that printed them — names like Texaco, Gulf, Esso — once brimmed from displays at filling stations, free for the taking.
    These days: Websites like MapQuest and Google Maps simplified trip planning. Affordable GPS devices and built-in navigation on smartphones downright transformed it.
    Falllout: Transportation agencies around the country are noticing, printing fewer maps to cut department costs or just acknowledging that public demand is down.

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    Vacations To Steam All Couch Potatoes Jul 03

    The specific culprit is the Travel Channel, which has chosen this moment, when an estimated four zillion Americans are on vacation but not doing anything very exciting, to roll out new shows that depict vacationers having the kind of fun that is generally preceded by a warning about heart problems or pregnancy.

    In addition to being cruel, this is just plain bad business, because there’s nothing mainstream Americans like better than listening to, and hanging out with, people exactly like themselves. That means we don’t want shows about exotic adventures; what we want is a Staycation Channel.

    Television already has plenty of channels that encourage inactivity — all those shopping networks, for instance — but they don’t make sedentary sound sexy. The Travel Channel knows that the first step in creating a veneer of excitement is an eye-catching title. That’s why one of its new shows isn’t called merely “Places You Can Go to Cool Off,” it’s called “Xtreme Waterparks.” And another isn’t “Some Interesting Roller Coasters,” it’s “Insane Coaster Wars.”

    Both shows have their premieres on Sunday night with double episodes. Sure, a certain type of viewer is content to watch such stuff for the vicarious thrills. But another type — a newspaper scribe on a staycation budget, for instance — hears only the infuriating subliminal ridicule. “Hey, pal,” these shows seem to say, “doesn’t this look like fun? Now go mow your lawn.”

    The first episode of “Xtreme Waterparks” visits, among other spots, Beach Park in Fortaleza, Brazil, where there’s a water slide called Insano, probably because that’s what you have to be to try it. It’s 14 stories high, and the drop is about as close to straight down as physics will allow without a parachute. Some of the plunge takers in the show seem to be airborne briefly.

    It’s the kind of thing you attempt just to be able to say you did something memorable in your lifetime. “There’s a reason we love scaring ourselves,” a narrator says at the end of the premiere. “Experts say it’s a primal need to feel our hearts racing, our adrenaline pumping, and that rush of power that says he who conquers the ride may conquer it all.” Sure; absolutely. But who can afford to go to Fortaleza, Brazil?

    “Insane Coaster Wars” checks in on some of the world’s more demonic roller coasters, with each episode focusing on a particular category. The premiere is subtitled “G-Force Giants” and spotlights coasters that exhibit a particular contempt for gravity, like Afterburn at Carowinds, on the border between North and South Carolina; Apollo’s Chariot, at Busch Gardens in Virginia; and SheiKra, at Busch Gardens in Florida.

    “G-force simply means gravity force,” a helpful narration explains. “One G is the weight of your body. And two Gs is twice the weight of your body.” These coasters take riders past four Gs, as the show demonstrates by having someone ride them wearing a vest that measures such things. There are also, by the way, negative Gs, which presumably cause you to disappear, though apparently not permanently, because none of the vests come back empty.

    Less provocatively titled but even more irksome to the staycationer is another new Travel Channel series, “Trip Flip,” which had its premiere last Thursday. In it a fellow named Bert Kreischer drops in on places (Oahu and New Orleans in the first two episodes) where people are already enjoying vacations that you can only dream about.

    Then — here is the irksome part — he picks out a couple of willing volunteers and gives them an even better vacation, moving them to the best hotel around and whisking them away to go shark-swimming and eat spectacular meals while the ordinary tourists sit on the beach.

    The staycationer may be tempted to reach into his television and smack Mr. Kreischer upside the head. But the Travel Channel isn’t stopping with “Trip Flip.” Next week comes another new series, “Top Spot,” in which people are given the chance to try out three high-end hotels in places they were planning to go to anyway, to see which is best. That’s right: a pre-vacation vacation.

    Enough, already. It’s time for us staycationers to revolt. Hence the Staycation Channel. Our shows too will feature exciting, death-defying adventures. And they’ll have attention-getting titles, strongly implying that if you’re not having a staycation, you’re not having fun:

    Xtreme Hosing Homeowners try to make a backyard water slide with a garden hose and a roll of Saran wrap, starting from the peak of the roof. A companion show, “Honey, Call an Ambulance,” would follow immediately.

    Insane Coaster Wars Staycationing neighbors gather to test several brands of coasters — the kind that go under glasses of lemonade and beer — while wearing vests that measure G-force. The first one to double his body weight wins.

    Insanely Xtreme Top Shot Homeowners try to keep rabbits out of their gardens by blasting them with water-shooting rifles while riding a homemade water slide off the roof. Rabbits, which have been particularly plentiful and aggressive this year, at least where I live, then try to do the same to the homeowners.

    Chip Flip Bert Kreischer prowls neighborhoods looking for cupboards containing regular potato chips and replaces them with sour cream and onion ones. A companion show, “Call the Police; Some Guy Is in My Kitchen,” would follow immediately.

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    July 4 travel at five-year high, though vacation spending projected to be down Jul 03

    This Fourth of July holiday week will see more travelers than any other in the past five years, experts say.

    More than 42 million Americans are expected to travel 50 or more miles from home during the holiday week — a significant increase over the 40 million who took trips last year. Most will drive, but travel projections for planes, buses, trains and cruise ships also are up.

    According to AAA, the country has not seen so much travel since 2007, when the same number of people hit the road. Experts say a slowly improving economy and declining gas prices have largely driven this bump in travel.

    But traffic patterns will be a little different this year.

    With Independence Day falling smack in the middle of the week, traffic experts project most people will be traveling before or after the Fourth, because they will have more flexibility in crafting vacation plans.

    “Being in the middle of the week this year, it’s totally different,” said Florida Department of Transportation spokeswoman Marian Scorza.

    When asked what day they would depart on their vacation, 54 percent of Americans told AAA they intended to begin traveling the weekend before July 4. Most planned to leave Friday, June 29.

    That means roads and airports should be relatively clear on the holiday itself, and the congestion typically associated with holiday weekends will be spread over several days.

    “On normal three-day weekend holidays, you get out there Friday afternoon, it’s a free for all; everyone’s trucking somewhere,” said Florida Highway Patrol spokesman Sgt. Steve Gaskins. “And Monday, everybody’s coming back.”

    The wider spread of days has seemed to decrease road congestion, Gaskins said, making troopers’ jobs a little easier.

    Extra patrols have been called in, as they typically are around holidays, to watch for speeding, aggressive driving, and motorists under the influence of alcohol. Patrol planes will monitor Interstate 75 from the air.

    This is because, as usual, the vast majority of people will choose to travel by car.

    More than 35.5 million people are expected to take to the roads — setting an all-time high for the year and clocking in at a 4 percent increase over the number of people who drove last year, according to AAA.

    Sliding gas prices and relatively low car rental rates helped contribute to this trend, experts said. Florida’s gas prices remain among the lowest in the country.

    The average price of gas in the Tampa Bay area Tuesday hovered around $3.10 — almost a dime less than the state’s average and more than 20 cents cheaper than the national average of $3.33, according to AAA’s Daily Fuel Gauge Report.

    Some local gas stations flaunted prices even lower, according to news reports, including one St. Petersburg station charging $2.99 per gallon for regular fuel.

    Last year, gas prices across the country were above $3.50.

    But not everyone will be driving. More than 3.2 million people are expected to board a plane during the holiday week, a 9 percent increase over last year.

    This year marks the third consecutive year air travel has gone up, following a decade low of 1.4 million air travelers in 2009, according to AAA.

    The remaining 3.6 percent of Independence Day travelers are expected to use other means of transportation, including trains, buses and ships — a 10 percent increase over last year.

    But more travel doesn’t necessarily mean Americans will be spending more money.

    According to AAA, the average American traveler is expected to spend about $750 this week, a 7 percent decline from last year, when most American travelers spent a little more than $800.

    This means lower-cost activities such as visiting friends and family or sightseeing are expected to increase by 4 percent this year, while shopping and paying for entertainment could fall by as much as 9 percent, experts said.

    Times staff writer Michael Finch contributed to this report. Marissa Lang can be reached at mlang@tampabay.com or (727) 893-8804.

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    PennDOT’s 511PA Travel Information Website Reaches 2 Million Visits Jul 03

    /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Pennsylvania’s 511PA system, which provides free travel information including construction alerts and real-time traffic cameras, reached a milestone in June of 2 million total website visits, PennDOT Secretary Barry J. Schoch said today.

    “The 511PA system places reliable information at the fingertips of anyone traveling in Pennsylvania,” Schoch said. “Motorists travel millions of miles on Pennsylvania roadways every year, and I’m pleased to see they are taking advantage of 511PA to help avoid unnecessary delays and to better plan their trips.”

    The 511PA telephone system has received more than 1 million calls and more than 15,000 people have signed up for personalized text or email alerts.

    Launched in 2009, the 511PA service provides travel information such as active and planned construction, incident alerts and weather alerts for more than 2,900 miles of Pennsylvania highways. Average traffic speeds are also available for several interstates and other major roadways in urban areas.

    The 511PA system is accessible 24 hours per day, seven days a week at www.511PA.com or by calling 5-1-1. PennDOT asks motorists to not call 511PA while driving. Motorists should safely pull off the road before calling, or do so before leaving home.

    Media contact: Erin Waters, 717-783-8800

    SOURCE Pennsylvania Department of Transportation

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