Travelers' Intercom

During a visit to Zihuatanejo, Mexico, in January-February 2017, my husband and I used the services of Ketavi Tours (Ixtapa-Zihuatanejo, Mexico; phone +52 [755] 55 9 30 23, ketavi.com) for airport transfers and a scenic tour to several of the beaches north of Zihuatanejo, including Playa Linda and Troncones.The owner of Ketavi, Ulises Solano, was very responsive and wonderful to work with. I had emailed him our flight details about two months before our trip, and he greeted us inside the...

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Two family members and I had a long layover scheduled in Beijing, China, on Nov. 28, 2016, and we wanted to pack in about eight hours of local travel in the city. I tried arranging transportation with several companies, but their rates and availability were all over the place.Three months before our trip, while searching the Internet, I discovered Ms. Mary Ma at Tour Beijing (2001-1-1 Nanxiaojie, Guangqumen, Dongcheng District, Beijing, PRC; phone +86 10 67160201 [ext. 1020], www.tour-...

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Now that most US airlines’ point programs have switched to the amount paid for tickets instead of miles flown, I wondered how someone could verify that the points are accurate when earning miles through partner airlines.I completed a 2-month journey in 2016 that consisted of 12 flights aboard five airlines, but I paid only one fare to the booking agent. I had two economy flights on United Airlines, three premium-economy flights on Lufthansa, one flight on LOT Polish Airlines (all three...

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I cannot agree more with Rick Steves’ advice (Nov. ’16, pg. 53) regarding how to avoid waiting in line at various attractions throughout the world.In advance of a tour in Italy more than two years ago, I purchased my ticket for the Uffizi Gallery (Piazzale degli Uffizi, 6, Firenze; www.uffizi.org) in Florence, Italy, through the Internet.The cost of admission was fairly expensive, something like $28 plus a $7 fee that appeared separately on my credit card. However, the additional...

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A publication that covers truly offbeat railways, focusing on historic places and equipment, is the British bimonthly magazine Locomotives International (Wiltshire, England; phone +44 1275 845 012, www.mainline andmaritime.co.uk/pages/welcome-to-locomotives-international).The magazine’s section “Travel the World by Rail” shows, in chronological order, the most complete selection I’ve seen of various rail trips being offered, worldwide, by (mostly) British travel...

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In his article on Nova Scotia, Stephen Addison mentions Waterfront Park in Wolfville, Nova Scotia, as a good place to observe the tides in the Bay of Fundy (Dec. ’16, pg. 6).For those with an interest in unusual natural phenomena, the Bay of Fundy has the world’s highest tidal range, over 52 feet (although Ungava Bay in northern Québec claims a higher mean tidal range), but what might be more interesting are the tidal bores seen on most of the rivers draining into the...

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The airlines have continued to decrease the value of their mileage programs by requiring more points for rewards, changing the way points are earned and making it more difficult to use points to book flights on desirable days.I believe that, instead of booking flights with miles by using an airline-rewards card, you are better off using a no-annual-fee credit card that gives 2% to 3% cash back on purchases. By using cash to purchase the tickets, you can get the flight times you want without...

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The item “Horseback Archery, Tokyo” (Feb. ’17, pg. 4) mentioned the Yabusame festival in Asakusa, which is a district in Tokyo’s Taitō ward. During a visit to Japan, we visited Sensō-ji, an ancient Buddhist temple in Asakusa. Although we’ve visited the temple often, that 2014 visit provided us a new treat.

As we walked from the metro station toward Senso¯-ji, we stopped to look at the Chingō-do hall, dedicated to the tanuki, a pot-bellied raccoon dog...

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