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Talk about Travel (April eight)

Nicole Arthur

Hi all, and welcome to Talk About Travel, the springtime edition. In this week’s segment, we celebrated the nearby tour, exploring West Virginia caves, rediscovering the District using water, and following trails in the course of the Mid-Atlantic region. What’s your preferred regional getaway? Tell us wherein and why beneath. (We promise no longer to rush there at once.) The most compelling solution is a copy of Bosket Rasmussen’s “The Story of Virginia: Highlights from the Virginia Museum of History and Culture.” On in your questions!

Q: What Ex-pats want

In a few weeks, I could be going to visit an ex-pat relative who retired to Mexico. She requested that I bring some bottles of an over-the-counter drugstore product for earwax that she could not get there. It reminded me of a request some years ago from the American ex-pat owner of a B&B in Dakar, Senegal, wherein I had a reservation. She requested that I carry her a few Tastycake cupcakes and Lawry’s Seasoned Salt. What might you omit the maximum in case you move to distant places?

Q: Wire transfers?

I these days booked a hotel room on a travel website online that became defined as “no credit card required to ebook, unfastened cancellation.” A few hours later, I received an e-mail from the motel requesting an immediate 50% deposit through cord switch. That regarded a touch shady, and I canceled. Question: Is this a usual practice? If I send money via twine switch and need to cancel, what are the percentages of having my cash lower back? Is a place that does not take credit playing cards inherently questionable?

A: Christopher Elliott

That becomes the proper name. Very few hotels require you to pay with the aid of a cord switch. If you have a problem with a twine transfer, you will not be covered as you’ll be if you paid through a credit scorecard. And sure, a place that most effectively takes cord transfers is questionable.

Q: Travel search websites?

It appears that some journey sites are operated with the aid of a handful of figure organizations. It kind of defeats the factor of finding if more than one website you examine is all the usage of the corresponding database. Have you ever prepared a manual to which journey websites are just clones of others?

Deborah Williams
Snowboarder, foodie, ukulelist, vintage furniture lover and identity designer. Making at the intersection of minimalism and mathematics to create strong, lasting and remarkable design. I work with Fortune 500 companies and startups. Award-winning beer geek. Twitter fan. Social media scholar. Incurable travel advocate. Alcohol expert.