I wrote that you can receive 1150 free miles for joining Etihad Guest and reviewing a hotel. At first blush most of you are thinking, what in the world do I want to bother with Etihad Guest miles for? They’re a Citibank ThankYou points transfer partner so you may wind up using Etihad Guest at some point. But even if not, sign up for the program with this offer then review a hotel at HolidayCheck. The 150 points you earn for the review will qualify you for the 1000 mile signup bonus. That’s actually enough for some purchases from the Etihad Reward Shop. Etihad has one of the most extensive miles-for-merchandise programs of any loyalty program. And there are several choices at low points values. Get, for instance, an iPhone screen protector, music, cables, or…
Monthly Archives
Monthly Archives for February 2015.
The Best Travel Advice Tips and Tricks You Can Put to Use From the Past Month
Here’s the best travel advice, tips and tricks, the highlights of View from the Wing out of 204 posts in January. Last month I provided the best travel tips from December. Before that I collated the best travel tips from November. Here’s where you can find the very best travel posts from October, here’s the best travel posts from September, and from August. In July I offered the most useful and interesting developments from June as well in the first of the series. It turns out, surprisingly, that this feature is really popular, at least judging by the emails I get — people that don’t read the blog every day really appreciated the recap and not having to dig through all of the posts to find the most enduring ones. These are some that were…
Asiana Awards Have Disappeared From United.com. Here’s How to Find the Space.
On March 10th, there’s non-stop award availability in economy from Los Angeles to Seoul on Asiana. But searching United.com for non-stop awards I get this message: Indeed, search for award space between Seoul (Asiana’s hub) and Bangkok (Thai Airways’ hub), I am presented with options only for Thai on United’s website. But if I search for those March 10 Los Angeles – Seoul seats on the Aeroplan website (Air Canada’s Aeroplan is an American Express Membership Rewards partner and a Star Alliance member), the seats come right up. What you need to do is: Search for Asiana award space using the Aeroplan website (no miles are required in your account to search) or the ANA website. Call United to book if you want to use MileagePlus miles for the award Calling United directly, I was…
Tourists Arrested For Taking Naked Photos Inside Cambodian Temples. This is the Second Time in 10 Days It’s Happened.
Two women from Arizona were convicted, sentenced, fined and deported from Cambodia after taking naked photos of their backsides in an ancient Siem Reap temple. The Siem Reap provincial court said the sisters were each given a suspended term of six months in jail and fined 1 million riel ($315) for taking nude photos at Preah Khan temple inside the Angkor archaeological park. They will not be allowed to return to Cambodia for four years. This is, apparently, becoming a thing. It is the second incident in less than 10 days, after the authority arrested three French male tourists for taking nude photos at another temple complex of Banteay Kdey. Photos of a topless dancer at the sacred temples surfaced last month as well. You’re not even supposed to ascend to the top level of…
2 Reasons Not to Get the Chase Sapphire Preferred Card
I receive compensation for many links on this blog. You don’t have to use these links, but I am grateful to you if you do. American Express, Citibank, Chase, and other banks are advertising partners of this site. I do not write about all credit cards that are available — instead focusing on miles, points, and cash back (and currencies that can be converted into the same). Chase Sapphire Preferred Card The Chase Sapphire Preferred Card is the card I believe to be the single best personal rewards card on the market — with a great signup bonus, fast earning, valuable points, and strong benefits. I thought I’d highlight, though, two concerns that would suggest to some that it isn’t all rainbows and unicorns. Over at One Mile at a Time, Sean M. commented on…
Why Consumers Used to Win When They’d Voice Objections to Changes, and Why You Won’t Win Today.
Back in April of last year, I wrote Five Times Consumers Won Against Frequent Flyer Program Changes. In the aftermath of American’s elimination of stopovers on international awards at the international gateway city and elimination of distance-based awards, I wrote about when consumer uproar caused American to never implement an announced $5 award redemption fee. American’s $5 online award booking fee simply went quietly into that good night. There are plenty more examples of where consumer outrage has led programs to roll back unpopular changes. Here are five:
1150 Free Miles, Drastic Cuts in Thai First Class, and Lighting Money on Fire
News and notes from around the interweb: Thai Airways is getting a bailout a bailout from its military government. They’re being forced to cut unprofitable activities. Its plans include ending Moscow, Madrid, and Johannesburg service. They’re getting rid of 44 planes but will still take delivery of 20 Airbus A350s through 2019. (Mostly they’ll drop A340-600 and 747 aircraft — which have international first class.) They claim they’ll be profitable in 2016, but then they have to claim that.. to the military government.. Air travel in Thailand is up, driven not by Thai Airways but Nok and Thai AirAsia. Etihad has acquired 75% of Altalia’s MilleMiglia frequent flyer program. They’ve made a big investment in Alitalia, but one common strategy for the airline is to exercise outsized control in a carrier beyond what their initial…
If Your Plane’s Wing Catches Fire, Do This.
If you’re sitting in the window seat and flames start to appear to be coming off the wings of your Airbus A320, is the correct thing to do: Inform a flight attendant Scream Pray Take out your cell phone and start shooting video? Number 4 is of course correct. Although I would venture to add that if you’re uncertain what it means, it can’t hurt to do number 1 as well. A passenger onboard three year old airline VivaColombia flight from Bogota to Medellin took this video. (HT: Joel G.) You can join the 50,000+ people who see these deals and analysis every day — sign up to receive posts by email (just one e-mail per day) or subscribe to the RSS feed. It’s free. You can also follow me on Twitter for the latest…
Delta’s AwardChartGATE: Why the Award Chart is the Foundation of Loyalty
When I first graduated college I became a frequent flyer. I was flying for work. I was flying home to see my family. I was flying to see my college girlfriend. So I joined the programs of the airlines I’d fly, and they’d send me stuff in mail. I’d flip through it. A common feature of those mailings, along with various partner offers, was the award chart. I knew that a domestic coach ticket was 25,000 miles. Cash was tight back then, I didn’t make very much, and I used a few of those — like when my grandmother passed away when I just turned 24 and I needed to get on a plane right away. It had never even occurred to me that I could use my miles to fly to Australia and in…
There’s a Lot of Speculation About Delta Moving to 1 Cent Per Mile Value. Don’t Believe It.
Yesterday MJ On Travel captured what many are speculating, including in the comments to my post about Delta removing award charts from its website. I’m pretty sure I know what the Delta award chart of the future is going to look like. The thing is, I don’t even care. I don’t think Delta hates me or doesn’t respect me. They’re an airline, not my wife. I just think they’ve moved on. The idea many people expect is for Delta to go revenue-based on the redemption side, with one point earned equal to one cent in airfare like the Capital Ones of the world. Some are even ok with the idea. I do not see the problem with DL moving to a 1 Point = $0.01. With the revenue-based point earnings, it becomes like a variable-rate…