COMING AND GOING
COMING AND GOING
The Plane Truth
|
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
|
UPRIGHT AND LOCKED
The Plane Truth
Would an airline lie about the cause of a flight delay to avoid compensating passengers? There is a clear incentive to lie: Airlines owe you nothing if a delay is due to weather or other factors outside their control, but most promise in their contracts of carriage to provide meals and a hotel during a long delay if the fault is theirs.
When Delta canceled a recent flight and blamed weather, Frank Pimentel of Herndon was suspicious. The details: He was scheduled to fly from Atlanta to Wichita at 9:20 p.m. Just before then a storm hit Atlanta, but it quickly passed. He waited around for five hours, and at 2 a.m. his flight was canceled.
Pimentel went to a flight-tracking Web site, http:/
His guess: Delta canceled the flight because the intended crew members had "timed out," meaning that if they'd flown to Wichita after the short weather delay, they would have worked too many hours.
In fact, Pimentel's flight was canceled because his plane never made it to Atlanta that night , said Delta spokeswoman Susan Elliott. While en route to Atlanta, she said, the plane was diverted because of weather. Besides, if Pimentel's guess about the crew had been correct, she said, that still would have been a weather event .
"Weather doesn't always mean the weather where you are or the weather where you're going," Elliott said. " Any disruption anywhere can cause a ripple effect ."
Bottom line: If the first ripple on any airline is caused by weather, open your wallet, because meals and hotel are on you.
ROOM KEYS
Not His Kind of Fantasy
The Web site of the Fantasy Island resort on Roatan, Honduras, promises "the ultimate of guest comfort and luxury." But Dana Krupa of Springfield arrived to find that his room's air conditioning wasn't working , wires were dangling from the spot where the ceiling fan should have been and the locks on his door and window didn't work .
He was offered another room, but when he locked the sliding-glass door and then gave it a tug, the lock, still attached to the door, broke away from the wall attachment.
He stayed in the third room offered, although the cable TV wasn't working and a big spider dashed through the bathroom. He was also surprised to find that the all-inclusive resort charged for beer and soda . The fact that Hurricane Felix forced guests to flee after two nights made Krupa's fantasy vacation that much more nightmarish.
Rick Durmon, manager of Fantasy Island Travel Services, hinted that Krupa's expectations had been too high. "Do you know what guests paid that week? For seven nights, three meals a day and scuba diving: $609 ." (As a single occupant, Krupa paid $970.)
CoGo turned to Trip Advisor.com for insight. Some of the 103 reviews of the resort have positive things to say, but even most of those generally conclude that it was great "for the money." Others said they'd never return. The range of expectations is clear: Some visitors were enthusiastic about the monkeys on the property, for example, while others complained about monkey poop on the grounds.
CoGo's advice: If you're considering an unfamiliar property, especially a budget one, don't book until you've checked a hotel review site such as Trip Advisor or travel.yahoo.com. If headed to the Caribbean, try http:/
TRAVEL TICKER
The Proximity Hotel in Greensboro, N.C. , will be one of the two greenest hotels in America when it opens Nov. 9. Proximity ( http:/
BARGAIN OF THE WEEK
South African Airways is offering sale fares to cities in South Africa. Round-trip fare from Washington Dulles to Johannesburg, for example, is $874, including $72 taxes; fare on other airlines starts at about $1,350. Similar sale fares to Cape Town and Durban are also available. Travel Nov. 1-Dec. 12; some blackout dates apply. Book by Oct. 21. Info: 800-722-9675, www.flysaa.com.
Reporting: Cindy Loose
Help feed CoGo. Send travel news, road reports and juicy tattles to cogo@washpost.com. By mail: CoGo, Washington Post Travel Section, 1150 15th St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20071.



