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Sunday, May 11, 2008; Page P01
Trapped in a loveless marriage with the gasoline engine and way down on an ever-lengthening list of pressing concerns, from paying the mortgage to buying a gallon of milk, the summer vacation as we know it is in serious trouble.
A new survey by AOL Travel and Zogby International says that 57 percent of the citizenry plans to spend less money on summer trips this year than last, that a third of them plan on staying with family or friends while on holiday this summer and that just 10 percent intend to visit Europe.
And so, looking for a cure for this new kind of summer doldrums, we threw ourselves on the mercy of the bargain travel experts. What, we demanded to know, will become of us if the summer vacation disappears? What will the school kids in May have left to daydream about? What will become of that perennial first essay topic in the fall?
Sure, it was a little over the top, but, hey, we got answers.
Where to Go Now
"Maybe you should stay home this summer."
Wait, what? Tim Leffel, author of "Make Your Travel Dollars Worth a Fortune," not to mention "The World's Cheapest Destinations," just told us to stay home? Come on, Tim, we go to you for hope-mongering and you give us that?
"Or maybe this is a good time to discover what is in your home state and home region."
Okay, better. If you're determined to travel farther afield, he said, warming to the task, "south of the equator there are bargains." Not only will it be winter in such places as Peru and Argentina when it's summer here, but there will be fewer South American tourists, especially as their kids will be in school when ours are out. Given those factors and the dollar's relative strength on the continent, Leffel said, "I'm amazed that so many people still go to Europe."
Speaking of Europe, even if you're unfazed by the euro's ferocity, you'll still want to consider skipping that continent's hot spots, targeting rural France instead of Paris, the Bohemian-Moravian Highlands instead of Prague, and the countries of Bulgaria, Turkey and Romania instead of Spain, Germany and Britain. By the way, in Western Europe, Portugal is the most economical destination, Leffel said, although only in a relative sense. (For more ideas, visit Leffel's Web site at http:/
For tips on U.S. destinations, we were intrigued by a new AAA survey, or maybe intrigued and disheartened is a more accurate way of putting it. According to the study, Honolulu is the highest-priced vacation destination, "where the average published prices for meals and lodging for two adults total $673 a day." Rounding out AAA's top five list of offenders? New York City, Miami, San Diego and Las Vegas.
"Actually, we're finding that Las Vegas is unseasonably cheap," said Anne Banas of SmarterTravel.com ( http:/
How to Fly There Now
Wherever you decide to head this summer, chances are good you'll be confronted with the thorniest of travel questions today: to fly or not to fly.


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