Showing posts with label national parks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label national parks. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Travel Auction and the Other China

Stay at the Four Seasons Resort on Lana''i
Pick your place and your price at the annual Society of American Travel Writers' Travel Auction and you may take home a great vacation in 2017.

Between now and Dec. 4, here are some of the goodies up for bids.

10-day Amazon River Cruise in Peru for two aboard the Amazon Star.

 Four-day/3-night inclusive vacation for two adults in a deluxe category room at the adults-only Sandals Resort located in Jamaica, Antigua, St. Lucia, Barbados, The Bahamas or Grenada.

Two-night all-inclusive stay for two in an Ambassador Suite at the Grand Velas Los Cabos, opening in December on Mexico's Baja Peninsula.

 Five nights accommodation for two in the Marcliffee Hotel and Spa, Aberdeen, Scotland's only 5-star hotel. plus a round of golf for two at Trump International Links, Royal Aberdeen, Cruden Bay and Murcar.

Three or four days Maine Windjammer cruise.

Much more including luggage, travel books, dinners, City Passes and getaways to St. Augustine, Branson, Nashville, Charleston, Toronto, Fort Myers Beach, Alabama's coast, Jekyll Island, Dollywood, Maine, Asheville and Hawaii to name drop a few.

The auction is open to the public; check it out by going to satw.org and clicking on "View Online Auction."

 
Another China 

Typical tour of China: Beijing, The Great Wall, the terra cotta warriers in Xi'an, the Three Gorges and Shanghai.

My recent China itinerary: Whenzhou; Wencheng County; ancient villages of Furong,  Yantou and  Cangpo;  and in Sichuan Province, ChengDu, two National Parks in Jiuzhaigou Valley and Huanglong, a UNESCO site in the Tibetan plateau and the Giant Panda Breeding Research Base.

The large, manufacturing city of Whenzou is not a tourist center but they welcome them, especially Westerners.

See the real martial arts in Whenzhou.
The cuisine is superb, the hotels excellent (I recommend the Shangri-La) there are interesting things to see.

Try on costumes at the Kun Qu Opera House.
Try the Arts and Crafts Research Institute, a martial arts school, the Kun Qu Opera House to Jiangxin Islet in the middle of the city's Ou River with its pagodas, temples and shaded paths and ponds.

Ming dynasty era Linkeng Village.
Day trips will take you to Ming and Tang era villages, the World Geological Park at Yandang Mountain,and Tongling Mountain.

Urbane, colorful and sophisticated, ChengDu, a city of more than 14 million, is the Shanghai of Southwest China.

Something red that dangles? Try Jiangli Road.
I highly recommend you add it to your China itinerary.  Most Western tourists come to see the nearby Giant Panda Breeding Research Base, but the city is well worth an extra few days.

Become part of a sculpture on Kuanzai Alley.
Fanciful skyscrapers blend with the ancient market and entertainment centers of Kuanzai "wide" Alley and Jiangli "old" Road.

Not to be missed is an evening at the Shufengyayun Opera Teahouse.

The Giant Pandas are endlessly entertaining and the park is beautiful, well worth a day or more visit. If you can watch one of these two-toned butterballs without grinning, consider yourself dead.

Adventurous travelers will love the National Parks of Jiuzhai Valley and Huanglong. Between the nine Tibetan Villages, thousands of lakes, forests, waterfalls and hiking trails, there is much to do and see for those who can handle the altitude (2,000 to 8,000 feet unless you are scaling a mountain) and physical demands (lots of steps).

 It is a major vacation spot for the Chinese but you will see few Westerners.

Oh, you can ride a yak, too.



Tuesday, June 12, 2012

10 Tips for Booking a Nattional Park Lodge Room at the Minute

Old Faithful at Yellowstone National Park.
Concessioner Xanterra Parks & Resorts operates seven lodges in Grand Canyon National Park, nine lodges in Yellowstone National Park, Zion Lodge in Zion National Park, two lodges in Crater Lake National Park and two lodges in Death Valley National Park. The company also operates Grand Canyon Railway and Grand Canyon Railway Hotel in Williams, Ariz., 65 miles from the entrance to the Grand Canyon.

“Advance bookings for national park lodges are strong this summer, so the key to successfully reserving a room in a park at the last minute is to be both flexible and persistent,” said Dave Hartvigsen, vice president of sales and marketing for Xanterra. "With a little bit of flexibility and some good luck, last-minute travelers can still book rooms at national park lodges.”

Hartvigsen's tips for planning a last-minute national park vacation.

1. Do your homework. Familiarize yourself with web sites and bookmark reservations pages.  Visit Xanterra's web site at www.xanterra.com for general information on the parks operated by Xanterra as well as lodging descriptions, rates and availability. Another good source of information on national parks is the National Park Service website at www.nps.gov.

2. Check room availability and book rooms online. Rooms can be booked online at www.YellowstoneNationalParkLodges.com, www.grandcanyonlodges.com, www.zionlodge.com, , www.craterlakelodges.com and www.furnacecreekresort.com (Death Valley).  Booking online is usually the quickest way to book a lodge room.

3. Be flexible with travel dates. Lodges can be booked up to 13 months in advance of a travel date. Because many people do make their plans far in advance, they will occasionally have to change or cancel existing reservations because of schedule conflicts or for other reasons. Travelers who are flexible with their travel dates stand the best chance of getting a room on short notice.

4. Be flexible with lodge choices. Grand Canyon’s El Tovar and Yellowstone’s Old Faithful Inn are often travelers’ first choice of lodging, so the rooms in those two historic hotels are typically the first to sell out in those parks. More than 70 percent of the lodge rooms at the Grand Canyon are located off-rim in Maswik and Yavapai lodges, however, and both are comfortable locations that are barely a 10-minute walk from the canyon rim. Yellowstone has lodges situated in a variety of locations throughout the park. No matter where in a park travelers stay they can always experience the famous grand dames of the parks by visiting the lobbies or enjoying a meal in their dining rooms.

5. Be strategic. International tour operators reserve blocks of rooms up to two years in advance in anticipation of selling these rooms as part of tour packages to the United States. If all the rooms are not sold, operators must release them for resale 30 days out. Want to travel on July 30? Book first thing on the morning of June 30.

6. Be persistent. Rooms open up - and are often very quickly re-booked - every day. The quickest way to check availability is by going to the web site and following the link for reservations. Bookmark the web site and check it frequently to see if rooms have become available.

7. Travel when families don’t. There is often more room availability during the first two weeks of June, the last two weeks of August or the first two weeks of September. Families with schoolchildren are either winding down after the end of school or gearing up for the beginning of school, so those periods -- although still considered peak season -- are a little slower than the rest of the summer.

8. Just show up. Travelers who arrive between noon and 6 p.m. often find last-minute rooms available. Once in a park, the front desk at any lodge can check availability for all rooms within the park.

9. Make dining and activity reservations too. If you are successful booking a room, take a moment to also reserve activities and make dinner reservations. Dining rooms do fill, so if you want a meal in one of the lodges, plan ahead. Popular activities like the Old West Cookout at Yellowstone's Roosevelt Lodge fill up fast too. Phone numbers for meal and activity reservations can be easily found on all Xanterra web sites.

10. Book a package. Yellowstone offers a variety of packages including multi-day “Adventure” and “Lodging & Learning” packages that include accommodations, some meals and a variety of park experiences. Grand Canyon Railway also features packages that include train travel and accommodations.

Read about Yellowstone and Grand Canyon experiences at my other blog, Travel on the Level: 
travelonthelevel.blogspot.com/.../nature-rules-at-yellowstone-national...
Travel on the Level: blogspot.com/2011/11/grand-canyon.html
travelonthelevel.blogspot.com/.../railroading-into-grand-canyon.html
travelonthelevel.blogspot.com/2011/10/grand-canyon.html