I'm not ready to tell all of that travel story just yet, but I will say that my first flight was at age 16 on a student standby ticket, ORD-LGA on American Airlines.
The cost: approximately $68 one way. I paid cash, earned scooping ice cream for a few weeks the previous summer.
This was long, long ago, before the Internet made travel research so easy. I don't remember finding that fare in a guide book, so I must have learned about it word of mouth from a college student.
Now I'm a middle-aged runaway, constantly looking for airfare deals to fuel my travel fantasies.I set up alerts on Airfarewatchdog.com and Kayak, and use the flexible date features on airline sites to find the cheapest dates to fly.
This week, my urge to drop everything and run away to Los Angeles for BlogWorld Expo went unfulfilled. Even so, I learned a bit about buying airfare last minute.
Having missed a $99 one-way sale ORD-LAX on American and Virgin America, I watched as Delta maintained a $149 one-way fare until two days before my target departure date. American's fare went as high as $414 one-way for the cheapest restricted economy ticket. Then, just a day before the departure date, American dropped the outbound one-way fare to $249 when purchased as a round trip as late as an hour before flight time.
I'm not certain yet if I've discovered a pattern, but I'll be watching to see how often walk-up prices are lower than fares for tickets purchased two or three days before a flight.
What is your experience with last-minute airfares? Have you ever purchased a plane ticket for leisure travel at the last possible moment? Please share in the comments.
I don't ordinarily post unedited press releases, but this one seems worthy of attention.
And who knew there was a real place called Zug in Switzerland?
WAZZAMBA TO AWARD VALENTINE GETAWAY
Virtual World Players Can Win Real-World Romantic Vacation in Paris
Zug, Switzerland – February 8, 2010 – Wazzamba (www.wazzamba.com),
the first online virtual world to give away real-world travel prizes,
has announced a contest for a romantic trip for two to Paris in
celebration of Valentine’s Day. Potential players can log on to www.wazzamba.com and
try for the highest daily score anytime during the week of February 8 in
order to win the Paris GetAway.
Here I sit, wishing I could run off to London for a long weekend of theatre. Travel discounter lastminute.com is sponsoring a week-long special on tickets to London shows during London Theatre Week, August 24 until September 4. Prices for discounted tickets are set at just £15, £25 and £35 for some of the best shows in the West End this summer—with every £1 booking fee donated to London radio station 95.8 Capital FM's Help A London Child.
If you're lucky enough to be in London, or traveling there soon, you can take advantage of the sale for shows until October 17. Just book your tickets through lastminute.com between August 24 and September 4.
September 15, 2010, update: Although it can be a perfect transportation solution for Paris visitors, the anonymous Navigo Découverte card wasn't designed for tourists. Rather, it was created for Parisians who were unhappy with the thought of using a personal computerized card that could track their movements through the RATP system. That's one reason you won't find information about it on the English-language RATP pages.
If you'll be in Paris for a week or longer, or plan to make return visits, a 5 Euro investment in a Passe Navigo Découverte will pay off in savings as well as convenience. In any case, don't bother with the Paris Visite pass that's designed for tourists unless you work the numbers carefully and need to move through zones 1-3.
Of course, the RATP wants your tourist dollars, so there's a hard sell on the Paris Visite card on the English-language landing page of the RATP site and no link to information about the Navigo card. So how do they expect an English speaker to buy the more economical Navigo pass? They don't. But there's no law against a nonresident purchasing le passe Navigo Découverte.
Here's what I can share about Navigo card buying strategy from my January 2009 experience just as the old Carte Orange was being phased out.
None of the automated machines for recharging the Navigo card (or for buying individual Metro tickets or carnets) will accept your credit or debit card if it has only a magnetic ID strip. Only cards with a computer chip will work.
You can put coins into one of the machines to recharge a Navigo, at least theoretically, but I was never able to get this to work. Ever tried fiddling with nearly 19 Euros worth of change? Always got an error before completing the transaction.
Technically, the Carte Orange was supposed to be available until the end of January 2009, but no one I asked seemed to have a weekly pass to sell when I looked around for one. So how did I manage to get my very own Navigo card and use it successfully?
First off, I went to the tabac near my local station and bought a startup Navigo card package. The initial cost is 5 Euros plus the weekly or monthly fare you'll add to the card. In the tabac, you can pay with plastic... or even with cash.
It seems all the Metro stations have photo kiosks now. Get a sheet with 20 little headshots of yourself and put one on the ID card part of the Navigo. Then put that card somewhere else besides where you carry your sensored Navigo. You'll need that card with photo if you are asked for it to prove you've paid for your ride or if you lose the other part.
You'll have lots of leftover pics that you can use on other cards. I put one on my membership card when I became an Adherent of the Societe des Amis du Louvre.
When it's time to add another week or month to your Navigo, don't bother with the machine. If you are in the Metro, go to a guichet and ask the friendly clerk to recharge your card. Again, you can pay with plastic or cash. Alternately, go back to your local tabac and have them recharge the card. Note that not all tabacs in cafes and brasseries are equipped with terminals for recharging the Navigo. It's best to find a little specialist tabac.
Looking for more information about travel in Paris or France? Visit Uptake.com.