Book a three night stay at a Preferred Hotel Group participating hotel through March 31, 2010 and get the third night free at over 180 properties globally.

Terms and Conditions:

Must book rate online at IPrefer.com.

  • Rate code MKT3YR.

  • Confirmation will not reflect free night. (Ric’s note: This is the promotion terms, yet every hotel I checked stated the discount was calculated into the rate shown when making a booking.)

  • Rate is adjusted to reflect 33% discount for total three-night stay package value.

  • Must book and stay by March 31, 2010.

  • Valid for three-night stays only.

  • My check of rates at several hotels showed the 3rd night free rate was the lowest rate I could find.

  • I Prefer participating hotels for 3rd night free.

Brown Hotel, Lexington, Kentucky (hotel website link)

Luxury King 500 square feet. = $146.73/night Jan 24-27, 2010 $529.38 after tax

A 30-day advance purchase rate is $175 per night for this same stay with a total cost of $631.40.

3rd night free rate saves about $100 or 16% on the total rate. The rate is a savings, but not the 33% savings you might expect.

This I Prefer promotion is typical of free night rate offers where the special offer daily rate is significantly higher than the otherwise lowest available rate.

 

Alchymist Grand Hotel & Spa, Prague, Czech Republic (hotel website link)

Feb 14-17 512.55EUR Junior Suite 3 nights (includes breakfast) with Stay Two Nights, Get Third Free.

Special Offers through hotel’s own website has a Winter 2010 Early Bird Offer of 570EUR for three nights or 680EUR for four nights. In this case the I Prefer member 3rd night free offer is the best deal for a 3-night stay, but the Winter Early Bird hotel special offer rate is a better deal for a 4-night stay.

Alchymist Grand Hotel & Spa, Prague, Czech Republic (Feb 2007)

Alchymist Grand Hotel & Spa, Prague, Czech Republic (Feb 2007)

 

 

Brown Palace Hotel & Spa in Denver (not participating in 3rd night free)

Not all hotels are participating in this offer. For example, I was just in the historic Brown Palace Hotel in Denver yesterday. This hotel is a fine example of a historic atrium design similar to the original 1875 Palace Hotel in San Francisco.  The original Palace Hotel in San Francisco was destroyed in the San Francisco earthquake of 1906 and rebuilt in a different design. This makes the 1892 Brown Palace Hotel in Denver the oldest atrium design hotel in the USA.

The Brown Palace Hotel & Spa is a member of Preferred Hotels & Resorts. The hotel has AAA 4-Diamond Hotel recognition, and is the only 2010 Forbes Four Star hotel winner in Denver. This hotel is not participating in the third night free I Prefer promotion, but for the next week hotel rates are as low as $139 per night during the slow holiday season.

historic atrium of Brown Palace Hotel & Spa, Denver

historic atrium of Brown Palace Hotel & Spa, Denver

Friends & Family rates are a common topic of discussion in 2009. These rates are something that I don’t recall being offered to the general public in the past. This year these rates have been offered repeatedly and discussed on FlyerTalk threads by InterContinental Hotels Group (Holiday Inn, InterContinental, Staybridge Suites, Candlewood Suites, HI Express); Fairmont Hotels; Starwood Hotels, Carlson Hotels, and other chains.  Basically, you’ve got friends in the hotel industry you may not know, but they are willing to help you score a cheaper room. Times are hard for the hotel industry and they are offering a friendly discount to loyalty travelers.

The main caveat is these rates generally do not earn loyalty credit, although SPG does currently have a deal for some Starwood Arizona hotels where the Friends & Family rate earns loyalty credit.

One of the big advantages of Friends & Family rates is the ability to get a suite at a good discount or simply a cheap room at a specific hotel for about the same price as Priceline bidding for an undisclosed hotel in many locations.

Enjoy a Friends & Family rate, courtesy of Steve Sickel, Senior VP of Marketing for the 4,300 properties of InterContinental Hotels Group. Since February 2009, IHG has offered the Friends & Family rate and Steve Sickel can be your friend too. 

Here is Steve Sickel’s Friends & Family page that has been used by members of FlyerTalk for most of the past year. This page was introduced on BoardingArea.com by Randy Petersen of WebFlyer last March with an original booking deadline of May 31, however, this deadline has been repeatedly extended and just recently the December 31, 2009 deadline was removed. Bookings can be made up to one year ahead of your stay.

Friends & Family rates are here now, but will likely go away sometime in 2010 as the hotel economy improves. Loyalty membership will continue to provide benefits you can use to your hotel stay advantage, possibly for even better value than you get with the low Friends & Family hotel rates. You may find that you like IHG hotels and the Priority Club and/or Ambassador Club programs enough to prefer paying regular room rates and earn points and miles with your stays. I do, but I always like the option of a cheap room.

Sample Friends & Family rate savings for Tuesday, January 5, 2010:

InterContinental Hotel San Francisco

(Friends & Family provides about 33% discount off Best Available Rate compared to only 5% AAA discount (AAA rates earn loyalty points and credit) or 15% discount using Entertainment membership rate (no loyalty points or credit earned).

King Bed Deluxe $134.33, (BAR = $199; AAA rate = $189.05; Entertainment Card = $169.15)

1 King Bed Executive $147.83 (BAR = $219; AAA rate = $208.05; Entertainment Card =$186.15)

1King Club IC $174.83 (BAR= $259; AAA rate = $246.05; Entertainment Card = $220.15)

King Junior Suite $161.33 (BAR $239; AAA rate = $227.05; Entertainment Card =$203.15)

King One Bedroom Suite $506.25 (BAR $750; AAA rate = $712.50; Entertainment Card = $637.50)

King Bay Suite $675 (BAR $1,000; AAA rate = $950; Entertainment Card = $850)

Luxury Bay View Suites of InterContinental San Francisco

Luxury Bay View Suites of InterContinental San Francisco

Ramada has a “Happy Holidays” limited time offer of 50% off room rates for bookings made through December 28, 2009 for hotel stays through March 31, 2010 in the US, Canada, Caribbean and Latin America.

50% off rate is based on Best Available Rate (BAR) for participating hotels and valid for unlimited stays during the promotion period.

Ramada is a Wyndham Rewards hotel loyalty program brand.  This special offer rate does not qualify for Wyndham Rewards points or miles.

Bookings can only be made through this Ramada special offer webpage.

Ramada has around 900 hotels globally ranking this hotel brand at 13th largest in the world for 2009.

 

Ramada Sample 50% Off Rates:

The rate was only available at 2 of 6 hotels I checked in my local area for January 5, 2010. Salinas at $29.50 and Santa Cruz at $30 per night is quite a bargain. Priceline won’t even get you near the low rate of $33 after tax. The rate is even cancellable up to 4pm January 5th.

Ramada Hotels are frequently simple midscale roadside lodging, yet some properties are actually resort properties in highly desirable locations. Ramada Beach Resort, Hollywood, Florida is a historic beach front hotel built in 1925 and refurbished recently. The hotel is just 15 minutes from Fort Lauderdale Airport. The Happy Holidays rate for this hotel for a 4-night stay March 9-13 starts at $77 per night for a double bed room. A Queen Suite is just $112 per night. Three of seven hotels in the Fort Lauderdale area offered the 50% off rate.

I even found some bargain rates for New Year’s Eve in the Silicon Valley.

 

This offer does not include all Ramada hotels in many locations, but where the offer is found the rate is generally an unbeatable value.

Loyalty Traveler Promotion Rating = 4 keys

Great rate value where found, but no loyalty points or miles and limited availability in many locations.

Hilton’s January Sale offers 50% off weekends throughout  2010 for participating hotels in Europe, Middle East, Africa, and Asia. The Americas are excluded from this offer.

 

220 destinations in UK, Europe, Middle East, Africa, and Asia/Pacific are participating in this offer. The offer is active now for hotels I checked, although the promotion terms state the offer is available for booking beginning December 26. Bookings for stays throughout 2010 must be made by January 31, 2010. The January Sale promotion terms state the rate is valid only for weekends, yet most hotels I checked had the rate offer for any day of the week.

 

There are some excellent rates, however, these rates are fully prepaid and nonrefundable, so buyer beware (or get trip insurance).

 

Web link: www.hilton.com/sale

 

January Sale Offer includes:

  • Breakfast for two (until 11am)

  • Late checkout until 6pm

  • Kids stay and eat free

January Sale Terms & Conditions

 

  • Full nonrefundable payment required.

  • Offer is subject to maximum 3 consecutive nights stay and is valid on weekends.

  • Weekends are Friday, Sat, and Sun or such other days as defined by local market. For example some Middle East hotels define weekend as Thu, Fri, and Sat.

  • Not valid on bookings for more than four rooms.

  • 2nd room for children at half-price is not applicable with this offer.

  • “If there is any inconsistency between these offer details and the Booking terms and conditions, these offer details shall prevail.”

 

Sample Hotel Rate Savings

 

Reports on FlyerTalk regarding the Hilton Berlin January Sale rates indicate this hotel was available for suites and reservations any night of the week two days ago, then the offer had less availability yesterday with suites no longer offered and the January Sale rate limited to weekends.

 

 

Hilton Bora Bora Nui Resort (January 8-11, 2010)

 

King Overwater Villa January Sale rate is $511.35/night.

The advance purchase Bed and Breakfast rate for this room category is $920.44/night. The January Sale is a significant discount.

 

Tue April 13-Sat April 17

January Sale King Overwater Villa is $560.03/night

Early Saver 30% discount rate is the next lowest rate shown and also includes breakfast at $780.04/night for this room type.

 

The Terms & Conditions for the January Sale state the offer is only valid weekends and for a maximum of three nights, yet the website is showing the January Sale rate for all days of the week and for stays longer than three nights in almost all the hotel searches I conducted with about 10 properties.

 

The terms and conditions for the January Sale also state:

 

“If there is any inconsistency between these offer details and the Booking terms and conditions, these offer details shall prevail.”

 

Take your chances and try for a longer stay than 3 nights and midweek stays if you book soon.

 

 

Hilton Amsterdam

 

Hilton Amsterdam at 109.50EUR is the lowest price I recall ever seeing for this hotel in the past 10 years.

 

January Sale room rates: Fri Jan 8- Sun Jan 11

  • $268.18 for Hilton Amsterdam Junior suite

  • $157.03 for twin Deluxe

  • $171.37 for King Deluxe Plus

Advance Purchase rate with no breakfast is

  • $242.36 for Twin Deluxe

  • $271.04 for King Deluxe Plus

  • BAR rate for Junior Suite is $507.67

There is heated activity on the hotel loyalty front in these holiday weeks. Hilton, Marriott, Starwood, and IHG have announced 2010 promotions. Hyatt still has the best promotion of 2009 and you can take advantage of this offer through the month of January.

Hyatt Gold Passport “The Next Big Thing” promotion is incredible with combined promotion benefits for both points and miles. Oct. 1 2009 – Jan 31, 2010.

Hyatt Gold Passport promotion registration link.

1.       Earn a free night after every two stays. Loyalty Traveler Sep. 17

2.       Earn double elite stay credit. (Diamond membership in 13 stays or Platinum in 3 stays.)

3.       Earn 2,500 airline miles after every two nights until Dec 31, 2009. Loyalty Traveler Oct. 5

4.       Earn Hyatt Gold Passport G bonus with most hotel stays. Loyalty Traveler Nov 9

 

Starwood Preferred Guest up to 4x points

January 5 – April 15, 2010.

Registration required between January 5 and March 31, 2010.

SPG Promotion Link

 

Double base points (1 or 2 night stay) = 4 points/$1

Triple base points (3 night stay) = 6 points/$1

Quadruple base points (4 nights or more) = 8 points per $1

This promotion is combinable with other promotions. Elite bonuses are additional.

Loyalty Traveler Dec 18

 

 

Hilton HHonors free night after 4 stays or 10 nights

January 7 – March 31, 2010

 

Posted on FlyerTalk by HamptonInsider this promising HHonors promotion for a free night valid across the Hilton system after 4 stays or 10 nights. The promotion details are not released yet, so at this point the rumor is just a seemingly reputable insider pre-release on FlyerTalk. There will likely be some restrictions on hotel reward nights redemption and perhaps some hotel exclusions, but overall this may be a sign of a new style of promotion activity from Hilton HHonors.

 

The points increases in 2010 categories is not so bad a change if the HHonors program makes it easier to earn free nights with promotions like the current 25,000 points after 4 stays and what looks to be a free night offer coming in January.

The leisure traveler may find HHonors a lifestyle deal with their two-pronged approach to rewarding loyalty membership. HHonors may see a return of the HHonors points traveler who can earn some lucrative bonuses on hotel stays. Combine the points budget traveler with the big fish spender putting $40,000 on the HHonors co-branded credit card for complimentary HHonors Diamond elite annual membership.  The Diamond lifestyler from both ends of the economic spectrum can find good value with HHonors. Value gives a traveler reason to put more effort into a Hilton hotel choice.

 

Marriott Rewards

MegaBonus 25,000 to 60,000 points depending on offer and nights stayed.

Feb 1- April 30, 2010.

Members are receiving new Marriott Rewards 2010 Megabonus offers. Marriott targets members with different offers.

 

Marriott Rewards PointSavers Plus 10% discount or 15% discount for Gold and Platinum elite members.

There are still three weeks to book a discounted discount hotel nights reward with the special PointSavers offer through January 15, 2010.

Update January 5, 2010: My personal MegaBonus offer is a free night (category 1-4 hotel) after two stays. Limit of one free night may be earned and free night to be redeemed by August 31, 2010. This offer is essentially a 20,000 points value if used for a Category 4 night. I have no elite status with Marriott Rewards.

IHG Priority Club Rewards

1,000 bonus points per night or 200 bonus miles up to maximum 20,000 points or 4,000 miles (20 nights).

Priority Club Rewards Registration Link

20,000 points is a rather weak offer from IHG considering this is only 50% of the points needed for one free night at a top tier InterContinental Hotel costing 40,000 points. The points-hungry tactic with IHG is to play the promotion registration game with Priority Club Rewards. A member can average 5,000 to 8,000 points per night for stays in IHG brand hotels.

Skeptical?

Read this FlyerTalk thread.

Starwood Preferred Guest sent out a “Happy Holidays from SPG” email Friday, December 18. I received a copy. The email reflects on the past 12 months with the $6 billion dollar Sheraton makeover, opening of W Hotels in Barcelona, Spain and Santiago, Chile, and the growth of aloft and element brands.

The next two paragraphs caught my attention.

We also continued to enhance many aspects of our program based on your feedback, including offering rewarding promotions such as Night After Night and Free Weekends, to help you make the most of your travel.

 

We’ll continue to stay focused on what matters to you in 2010. In fact, we’re pleased to announce that peak season Starpoints® pricing will be eliminated again for next year. This is the first of many efforts to celebrate the start of a new decade.”

 

The letter is signed by Frits van Paasschen, President and CEO Starwood Hotels and Chris Holdren, Senipr Vice President Starwood Preferred Guest.

 

Starwood Hotels at the high end categories of 5, 6, and 7 has had peak season rates for several years and suspended the peak season surcharge for 2009. Now we have another year with award redemption rates set at one level for high category SPG Starwood Hotels.

No Peak Season Award Night Rates in 2010

SPG Category 5 Hotel     12,000  points        Peak Season 16,000      

SPG Category 6 Hotel     20,000  points        Peak Season 25,000           

SPG Category 7 Hotel     30,000   points       Peak Season 35,000    

SPG eliminated peak season rates for 2009 at all but three Italian resorts. The email received by many SPG members, including me, states 2010 will be another year without peak season rates. I did not locate any additional details on the SPG website.

At some time in the future SPG and other major hotel loyalty programs will certainly make negative changes resulting in members’ points losing value. Hilton made their decision to implement a major devaluation of points for 2010 with the addition of a new high end category and realignment of hotels within these categories.

This elimination of peak season rates is a move by Starwood Preferred Guest to maintain the value of points in their hotel loyalty program. With this one positive aspect of redeeming points for free hotel nights, SPG has made an initial simple gesture of good relationship management with their frequent guests for another year.               

Let’s hope we see some great promotions and not too much upward movement of hotels within the SPG free night categories when hotels are shuffled in early 2010.

$49 for the Sheraton Fisherman’s Wharf last Monday was too good a deal to pass up. The 49ers winning Monday Night Football December 14 was icing on the cake. We have been sugar free too many years with the 49ers.

 

The main criticism I have of the Sheraton Fisherman’s Wharf 49ers football gameday $49 promotional rate is the hotel did not let guests on the low rate check in before 3pm.  Candlestick Park is 6.5 miles from Fisherman’s Wharf and heavy traffic for games at rush hour. I thought the hotel could have done better to accommodate the large number of guests who genuinely planned to go to the football stadium for the game.

Considering I did not need to travel to Candlestick Park, the after 3pm check-in was not a nuisance for me. I received 1,647 Starpoints ($46 value@$28/1,000 points) for the hotel stay and 2010 stay credit with my SPG Platinum member promotion and complimentary buffet breakfast. This was my first stay at the hotel where I was not in a 4th floor, top floor room. The only real difference in the rooms is the top floor rooms have had couches and the third floor room had only a cushion chair and a floor unit heater.

Sheraton Fisherman's Wharf San Francisco

Sheraton Fisherman's Wharf San Francisco

 

 

Recently I criticized Oyster.com hotel reviews of San Francisco for comments reviewers made on hotels in the Convention Center district, Union Square, and Financial District as not being in places where locals go. I made the comment that Fisherman’s Wharf hotels are also not in neighborhoods where locals hang out.

View south from Fisherman's Wharf to Financial District

View south from Fisherman's Wharf to Financial District

 

 

The waterfront in the Fisherman’s Wharf area has loads of restaurants, souvenir shops, and tourist traps. The hotels are on the adjacent three blocks away from the water. And to the south are neighborhoods all the way through North Beach, Coit Tower, and Chinatown to the Financial District and Nob Hill. There are loads of locals in the restaurants and cafes south towards the city once you walk away from the piers on the waterfront  and the hotels of Fisherman’s Wharf.

This year I have stayed a few times at Fisherman’s Wharf hotels and I have always found street parking for free. The hotels in this part of town have pros and cons. The number one benefit is the low price during weekdays in the off-season for tourists. The central business district and Moscone convention center hotels in downtown San Francisco are 1.5 to 2.0 miles south of the Wharf and generally run higher rates for Sunday through Thursday nights. Much of the year it is possible to get a hotel room for half the price at Fisherman’s Wharf compared to hotels in the same chain in the San Francisco central business district.

Major brand hotels at Fisherman’s Wharf include Marriott, Hyatt, Hilton, Holiday Inn and Holiday Inn Express, Radisson, and a Sheraton. Kimpton has the Argonaut in a great location and the Fairmont Ghiradelli Residences are on the same block.

Holiday Inn Express Fisherman's Wharf

Holiday Inn Express Fisherman's Wharf

 

 

Advantages of Fisherman’s Wharf Hotels

1.       Low room rates in off-season and generally lower Sunday through Thursday nights compared to the central business district hotels.

2.       While hotel parking is expensive and over $40 per night at some locations like the Sheraton, there are several street blocks around the Sheraton Hotel that are unmetered areas where a car can be parked without restriction except for 2am-6am street cleaning on either Monday, Wednesday, Friday on one side of the street and Tuesday or Thursday on the other side of the street. It is a possible to find a parking space on North Point or Bay Streets good from Thursday morning through Monday evening without paying meters, if you are lucky.

3.       Safeway and Trader Joe’s supermarkets are in the neighborhood. The downtown hotels have few major supermarket locations. Most food is higher priced corner store groceries or what you can find at a Walgreen’s Drugstores which are as prevalent as Starbucks in the central business district.

The Fisherman’s Wharf hotels are all low height buildings of just three of four floors and generally limited views for city vistas in contrast to the downtown skyscraper hotels of Marriott Marquis (39 floors), Hilton (46 floors), Westin Market Street, InterContinental San Francisco, Grand Hyatt, and the Mark Hopkins and Fairmont Tower on Nob Hill with exceptional views.

Powell Street at Nob Hill, top of 36 floor Grand Hyatt in background

Powell Street at Nob Hill, top of 36 floor Grand Hyatt in background

 

 

Walking across San Francisco between the major downtown hotels like the W Hotel, Marriott Marquis, San Francisco Hilton, and InterContinental San Francisco South of Market to Fisherman’s Wharf to the north is only a 45 minute walk. From the Hilton Financial District, Le Meridien, Mandarin Oriental, or hotels on Nob Hill like the Ritz-Carlton, Renaissance Stanford Court, InterContinental Mark Hopkins, or Fairmont the walk is just around 30 minutes.

The cable car can take you directly from Union Square to Fisherman’s Wharf, but the long lines at Powell Street and Market during busy tourist season may require 30 minutes of waiting in line and chances are you will be crowded on the car with dozens of tourists. The one-way fare of $5 adds up quickly, particularly for a family. Transportation Passports are a good buy for multi-day unlimited public transit on buses, streetcars, and cable cars. BART subway requires separate fares.  Passports are available at Walgreen’s Drugstores, an ubiquitous retailer in the central business district of San Francisco which sells most of the items a tourist may want with the exception of alcohol.

Most hotels around Market Street will recommend traveling to the Fisherman’s Wharf area by the cable car or the F Trolley. The historical trolley cars run from the Castro District down Market to the Embarcadero waterfront and around the piers to Pier 39 and Fisherman’s Wharf.

F-line service on historic streetcars between Castro District and Fisherman's Wharf

F-line service on historic streetcars between Castro District and Fisherman's Wharf

 

 

Walking out the Sheraton Fisherman’s Wharf I planned to eat at Kennedy’s Irish Pub and Indian Restaurant at 1040 Columbus Avenue and pull down a $2 Guinness or two during the 5-7pm happy hour.

Turned out I was 10 minutes too early for the 5pm Happy Hour Guinness. Planning to kill 10 or 15 minutes I strolled up the street taking photos.

Coit Tower San Francisco

Coit Tower San Francisco

 

 

I soon found myself passing Saints Peter and Paul Church into North Beach. Baseball great Joe Dimaggio was married here to his first wife and had photos taken at the Church with his bride Marilyn Monroe.

Saint Peter and Paul Church, North Beach, San Francisco

Saint Peter and Paul Church, North Beach, San Francisco

 

 

Across Washington Square from the church is Joe Dimaggio’s Restaurant.

I wondered how long it actually takes to walk between Sheraton Fisherman’s Wharf Hotel and Le Meridien Hotel at the Embarcadero for people who are visiting the city. The answer is about 30 minutes at a steady, but not fast pace.  This is the same for the time to walk from Fisherman’s Wharf to Nob Hill (Fairmont Hotel, Renaissance Stanford Court, Ritz-Carlton, and the InterContinental Mark Hopkins. The walk is long, but actually less strenuous from the Wharf than walking the much shorter three blocks on a severely steep grade from Union Square up Nob Hill.

San Francisco North Beach neighborhood

San Francisco North Beach neighborhood

View of San Francisco Financial District from North Beach
View of San Francisco Financial District from North Beach

 

 

After the 30 minute walk from Fisherman’s Wharf to Le Meridien I had warmed up nicely from the low 50s temp on a December evening just after dark. A stroll through Le Meridian for a quick lobby check, and 333 Bar was happening with a sizeable business crowd vibe and a 60-40 mix of women to men.

Even the Library Room off the lobby was more quietly filled with business suit attired women. In a sign of the times there are no longer books in the Le Meridien lobby library; replaced by two large wall mounted flat-screen TVs.

Le Meridien Hotel was not my destination. Unite Here Local 2 has Le Meridien San Francisco on their boycott list. I just try to keep track of lobby changes and I was looking for holiday decorations. The number of people in the lobby socializing was more than I ever experienced as a guest and kind of distracted me from checking out the holiday decorations. Nothing too over-the-top festive jumped out at me.

 

I bypassed 150 restaurants between the Wharf and Embarcadero to go to a place I know. Fuzio Universal Pasta sounds like a nice Italian restaurant, but I’ve never had pasta there. The bar runs a 3 to 7pm happy hour with $3 appetizers. Crab Cakes and lettuce wraps for $6 rather than the regular menu price of $17 is a good dining deal. Fuzio has a selection of eight or so beers at $3 per pint – Peroni, Stella, and several California microbrews.

Fuzio Bistro, Embarcadero Complex across street from Le Meridien Hotel, San Francisco

Fuzio Bistro, Embarcadero Complex across street from Le Meridien Hotel, San Francisco

 

 

I recommend Fuzio because I have enjoyed the appetizers and beer for a couple of years at the Embarcadero location and I like the ambience of this café bar. This is a good place to know if you are staying at the Hyatt Regency or Le Meridien hotels, located on either end of the Embarcadero pedestrian walkway complex, and you want a good beer and munchies at a value price on Monday thru Friday happy hours.

 

 

 

The real find of my evening was Café Prague across the street and down Merchant Street alley from Le Meridien. Krusovice light and dark, Pilsner Urquel, and  Czechvar on tap. The beer was $3.50 at Happy Hour for a pint from any of four brews.

This pub was cozy, relaxing global chillage environment, and not at all what I expected when I wandered in to watch the 49ers game. The half-dozen patrons were all low key guys, financial looking types, and the women all seemed to be employees, on and off duty, since they freely moved from in front of the bar to behind the bar throughout my time there. The guys watched the game on mute, both TV and voices for the most part, and the women talked in a blend of Czech and English. Low key Czech rock music played over the stereo. This place had extraordinary vibe and I felt like I had been transported back to Prague for an hour.

 

Occasionally I have a list of hotel related news items I find interesting, yet never get around to writing an article on the topic. I call these pieces Elevator Talk. The idea is you can discuss this item during the time of an elevator ride.

Got Points? Get Stuff!

Hotelmarketing.com says hotel loyalty program members are spending 14% to 23% more points on merchandise redeemed with points this shopping season over last year through Hilton HHonors, InterContinental Hotels Group Priority Club Rewards, and Marriott Rewards.

Oyster.com suffering from East Coast algae bloom?

I love shellfish. Dungeness crab season is here this month in Monterey, CA and I have been ingesting my fair share of crustaceans as a local coastal resident. East Coast shellfish is on the “Do not Eat” hazard warning list at the moment. Apparently, red flag signals have also been raised by gawker.com for the hotel review site Oyster.com when it comes to financing the hungry molluscs on staff.  

Oyster.com provides a fairly comprehensive collection of hotel photos for properties in the limited locations the site has covered since launching in June 2009.   Los Angeles, San Francisco, Las Vegas, Miami, New York, and Boston are the US cities covered. Beach resorts of Hawaii, Dominican Republic, and Jamaica are other locations. A typical hotel review will include about 200 hotel photos taken by the reviewer and a write-up of hotels and best hotel lists in categories like Best Luxury, Best Business, Best Family hotel.

Apparently paying journalists to stay in a bunch of hotels in an expensive city with a nice camera and write an opinion of a hotel along with taking hundreds of photos posted on a website with no advertising revenue is not sustainable in an expanding business. A large portion of the company’s staff has been eliminated.

I have empathy with their troubles since I basically run a one man Oyster-style operation. My expenses are kept in check by not having a DSLR Nikon camera for my hotel passages.

 

Palace Hotel San Francisco Free 3-night Stay in the Presidential Suite Room 888

The Palace Hotel celebrated its 100 year birthday on December 15 with a key to the Presidential Suite attached to a bouquet of helium balloons allowed to drift away over the city. Find the golden key and you will receive a three night stay in the Presidential Suite, Room 888. This same stunt accompanied the opening of the rebuilt Palace Hotel on December 15, 2009, 42 months after the great San Francisco earthquake destroyed the 1875 property in the firestorm. San Francisco Chronicle story.

 

The Palace Hotel San Francisco, Room 888-Presidential Suite

The Palace Hotel San Francisco, Room 888-Presidential Suite

 

 

 

 

Hyatt is just in time for 2010 World Cup

Hyatt Regency Oubaai Golf Resort & Spa opened in Herold’s Bay, George, South Africa. The resort features South Africa’s first Ernie Els designed golf course. The hotel location is on the Garden Route, an upscale beach resort location on the Western Cape between Cape Town and Port Elizabeth.

Hyatt Regency Oubaai website link

 

Hilton Sneak peek at the Q1 2010 promotion for free nights (Best HHonors promo in a long time)

HamptonInsider on FlyerTalk says HHonors will offer a free hotel night after every 4 stays or 10 nights from January 5through March 31, 2010. Free night is said to include all high category hotels. No further details yet.

HHonors has also just signed up with Virgin America as an airline partner. Earn 250 Elevate points per hotel stay or 50 Elevate points for Hampton Inn or Homewood Suites.

 

Marriott Rewards Insiders

Marriott Rewards has a social community forum Marriott Rewards Insiders. I find the site contains favorable user generated content. Along with Priority Club Connect,  I think these hotel social forums offer some valuable insight and tips on the hotel loyalty programs and hotel properties for members. Interacting with other members is more valuable to me than reading packaged content primarily from hotel staffers and SPG members selected by thelobby.com to be a core group of experts.

This is not a hotel industry article. You may want to avoid reading this piece due to its disturbing content on child abuse and sex tourism. This may not be the most appropriate way to promote Passports with Purpose fundraising efforts to build a school in Cambodia, but the sex tourism trade in Cambodia is something that I have been aware of for the past 16 years. You should be aware too.

Some travelers visit places like Cambodia, Costa Rica, Thailand, and Eastern Europe and have a great time sightseeing, hanging out with locals, and enjoying beaches, restaurants, and pubs. Other travelers are looking for a cheap prostitute vacation.

I’ve met sex tourists, mostly while staying at upscale hotels in places like Bangkok, Singapore, the Virgin Islands, and Guatemala. I have heard some stories in my travels I wish I hadn’t been told.

Passports with Purpose is working to build a school to educate children in rural Cambodia. My travels have never taken me to Cambodia, however, my background as a certified California public school teacher has taken me into dozens of schools around the USA and some schools in other parts of the world. Education doesn’t eliminate poverty, but at least it gives a person more tools to fight poverty. Education allows a person to envision the possibility of better life choices.

In 1993, I was working on my Masters in Labor Studies at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. One of my research projects focused on child labor issues outside the U.S.A. My studies of international child labor laws evolved into case studies of working and living conditions for children in Cairo, Egypt working in the cotton dye trade; children in Bangladesh working in the textile trade, and children in Cambodia working in the sex trade.

It is still widely reported that one-third of prostitutes in Cambodia are girls under the age of 18.

Passports with Purpose

Passports with Purpose is raising money for a school in rural Cambodia. The potential for an educated girl to bring lifelong revenue to the family is a way to circumvent a girl living in an impoverished rural area of Cambodia being indentured to a sex trafficker. Education is a proactive alternative for children and families who are struggling with poverty.

Sex tourism is a dark side of global travel and when it involves children it touches evil. The issue is too often an unspoken evil. I am reluctant to bring it up since it is unpleasant and not a side of tourism or the hotel industry most people want to read or hear about when looking for travel information.

When traveling alone, a single man out and about around the world, I have been surprised at the number of times men in hotels discuss their prostitution sexcapades around me. 

Years ago while still in my twenties traveling with my wife, before we became teachers, I was sitting by the pool at a Caribbean island hotel when two guys told me their story describing in detail how they kept a 15 year old boy locked in a room as a sex slave for two weeks in Miami. I went back to my hotel room and ranted to Kelley. I didn’t do it then, but if that scenario were to happen around me today, I would be calling the cops from my hotel room.

As a teacher I am a mandated reporter of child abuse. A sexual encounter with a child is abuse. Observation of children is a key component of classroom teaching and some of my more severely impaired behavior students turned out to be child molestation victims.

How is a child supposed to function normally around other children and adults when childhood innocence has been shattered by the age of 10?

Why am I advocating you put your money into helping build a school in Cambodia when as a certified teacher I know we need money right here in the USA to build better schools?

“Every year it is also estimated that 5 million tourists run to Far East and Thailand for sex. They bring more than 25 billion dollars worth of cash to these countries. This is nearly 10 times more than the electronics export receipt of Thailand which is highly praised.”

Source: http://www.fisek.org/atlas_evaluation.php

The government in Cambodia supports “Child Safe Tourism” with hotel staffers who participate in preventing and reporting child labor violations including sex tourism involving children. Implementation of literacy programs is a key recommendation for tackling prostitution in key tourist areas of Cambodia. Being able to read and write is a skill most prostitutes in Cambodia lack and  prerequisite to improve their livelihood options”.

 

Cambodia by the Numbers

I have been looking at numbers today. Here are some numbers from the U.S. Department of Labor on child labor in Cambodia from ten years ago. I find the numerical data along with my background in labor studies and education a compelling call for the urgency to build more rural schools in Cambodia now.

1999 Cambodia

24.1 % of children age 10-14 worked.

The percentage of girls as workers outpaced boys  by the age of 12.

65,000 children age 5-13 worked over 25 hours per week and did not attend school in a population of about 4,000,000 children.

2008 Cambodia

80% of the population in Cambodia is rural in a country population of about 14.5 million.

88% of girls and 92% of boys were in primary school in 2007. 85% of children complete primary school.

Only around one third of children were in secondary school in 2007, but this is more than double the rate of ten years ago.

Adult literacy rate has jumped dramatically over the past ten years from 63% to 76%. 86% of Cambodia’s youth are literate. Most European countries and the USA/Canada is 99%. Mexico is around 93%. Cambodia is on par with countries like Guatemala, Egypt, Jamaica, and Syria.

The number of children attending school has increased, but girls are underrepresented in schools in both urban and rural areas. One of the greatest changes in the education statistics is the closing of the literacy gap between males and females. Literate females are 20 percentage points behind males for all persons over 15, but only 7 percentage points behind males (90% literacy) at 83% literacy for 15 to 24 year olds.

By Cambodian government statistics, at least 1 in 6 children under the age of 15 is a worker and some NGO reports place this number as high as 44% of children work in Cambodia.

 

Help Build a School in Cambodia

A $10 contribution to Passports with Purpose will help build a new rural school in Cambodia in 2010.

Hyatt Gold Passport made a generous donation of 50,000 points as a raffle prize in the Passports with Purpose fundraiser running through Monday December 21. Your donation can make a difference in children’s lives and you just might win enough points to take a wonderful hotel vacation.

Sources on Cambodia Child Labor and Education

US Department of Labor – Child labor in Cambodia

UNESCO Education Statistics (2007)

UNESCO General Education Statistics

Somaly Mam Foundation is a non-profit organization to rescue, shelter, and rehabilitate women and girls from human trafficking in Southeast Asia, founded by Cambodian sexual slavery survivor Somaly Mam.

If This Isn’t Slavery, What Is?” Nicholas Kristof, New York Times (Jan 3, 2009)

 

Loyalty Traveler : Win 50,000 Hyatt Gold Passport points through Passports with Purpose raffle (Dec 1, 2009)

Starwood Preferred Guest has published its 1st quarter 2010 hotel loyalty promotion called “More Nights = More Rewards”.  The promotion title basically tells it all. Stays of one or two nights earn 2 bonus Starpoints per $1. Three night stays earn 4 bonus points per $1. Four night and longer stays earn 6 bonus points per $1. These bonus points are on top of base points and elite bonus points earned for stays.

 

My initial impression is this promotion is weak, unless you are a high spender or planning several 3+ night hotel stays during the promotional period.

 

The Offer:

 

Bonus is based on length of stay in consecutive nights at one individual hotel between January 5, 2010 and April 15, 2010.

 

1 or 2 night stays = Double Starpoints (total is 4 Starpoints/$1 for non-elites; 5 points per $1 elites)

3 night stay = Triple Starpoints (6 Starpoints non-elite; 7 Starpoints for Gold and Platinum elites)

4 or more nights = 4x Starpoints (8 Starpoints non-elite; 9 Starpoints for Gold and Platinum elites)

 

Registration is required between January 5 and March 31, 2010.

Registration link is not yet active. Promotion Information link is here.

 

850 properties are participating in this offer which means about 150 Starwood brand hotels are not participating in this offer. I looked through the Starwood hotel list, but I was unable to detect hotels missing from the list. You will need to check specifically for any hotel you are planning to visit.

 

Basically this is a promotion targeted for high spend and 3+ night frequent guest stays.

Spend $2,000 for a one-week beach vacation and you can be looking at 12,000 bonus points. Not a bad haul.

 

In comparison to the current 2009 Q4 promotion of 1,000 points per stay, to earn more than 1,000 bonus Starpoints requires your daily hotel charges to average in excess of:

 

  • 1 night stay = $500+ @ 2 bonus points per $1

  • 2 night stay = $250+ @ 2 bonus points per $1

  • 3 night stay = $84+ @ 4 bonus points per $1

  • 4 night stay = $42+ @ 6 bonus points per $1

 

This is a decent offer for persons planning longer multi-night stays. For this king of the one-night stand, this promotion has me looking elsewhere for greener pastures to graze for the winter months of 2010.

 

This promotion is combinable with other SPG promotions.

 

Perhaps there will be a replay of the 2009 Q1 “Night after Night” SPG promotion enhancement. Last winter SPG offered 500 bonus points per night and a 5,000 points bonus after 10 nights. Then, halfway through the four month promotion, SPG added an additional 500 points per night bonus. Members who stayed 10 nights during the first months of 2009 earned 1,500 bonus points per night.  

 

The “More Nights=More Rewards” rules state this 2010 first quarter promotion is combinable with other Starpoints promotions. I’m hoping to see some other good offers make this deal a little more valuable for those of us with a pattern of short in and out hotel stays.

 

Loyalty Traveler promotion rating = 2 Keys (a bonus value if you play, but not necessarily worth going out of your way.)

 

 

Deal Alert for new members of Starwood Preferred Guest:

If you have never been a member of Starwood Preferred Guest, I have the ability to refer you to the SPG program and you will receive instant Gold Elite membership through February 2011. SPG Gold membership normally requires 10 stays or 25 nights in a calendar year.

 

You will receive a promotional bonus of 1,000 points per night for stays through March 31, 2010.

 

This promotional offer requires that I submit your email address on a SPG Referral form and they will send you a new membership application by email. This offer is only valid for new members to SPG.

 

Send an email to me at ricgarridolt@gmail.com if you are interested in this referral offer.

 

Disclosure: I receive a one-time 1,000 bonus points reward if the referred member stays at least one night by March 31, 2010.

 

Related link: http://boardingarea.com/blogs/loyaltytraveler/2009/11/20/my-midas-touch-gives-new-spg-members-starwood-preferred-guest-gold-elite/

 

SPG 2010Q1 More Nights = More Rewards promotion

SPG 2010Q1 More Nights = More Rewards promotion

Barbara DeLollis published a sneak peek of HHonors 2010 category placement for a selection of Hilton Hotels properties going up, staying the same, and going down. My initial reading of her article left me confused. The numbers did not make sense to me. The confusion is apparently common among FlyerTalkers discussing her article and the HHonors hotel category changes in this thread.

The paragraph in question reads like this,

Hilton will move 547 properties (or 16% of total) into a cheaper points category, while it will move 354 others (or 10%) into a pricier category. (These changes come on top of the 20% increase in the number of points required for a free night’s stay across Hilton’s system.)”

Here is my Loyalty traveler take:

1.       The parenthetical statement, “These changes come on top of the 20% increase” is the source of confusion. That does not make any sense considering the preceding statement. There is only a 20% increase in points for a free night across the system if every hotel is bumped up a category for 2010. In other words, if a 2009 category 2 hotel becomes a category 3, category 4 goes to category 5, and so on, then there is a 20% across the system increase in points needed for a free night.

 

2.       She cites Jeff Diskin saying 547 hotels (16%) will move into a cheaper points category and 354 hotels (10%) will be in a higher category. 74% of the hotels, 2,575 hotels will remain in the same category. 

 

These are radically different numbers than the message I have been pushing regarding the changes in HHonors for 2010 based on earlier statements and lack of statements from HHonors representatives to clearly address the scope of the 2010 changes.  

The new category chart is clearly posted on the HHonors site. The chart is displayed with the 2009 HHonors hotel categories aligned in the same column as higher level 2010 categories. This graphic display of the 2010 changes, along with statements by HHonors Representative on FlyerTalk have led members and analysts to conclude Hilton HHonors planned to increase all hotels to one category level higher with the 2010 changes.

 

Jeff Diskin appears to contradict this across-the-system hotel category shift in the USA Today article with a statement that 74% of hotels will remain in the same category in 2010.

 

3.       Did social media have actionable results on the HHonors changes? Did forums like FlyerTalk, news articles, and blogs convince Hilton HHonors to rethink the 2010 hotel category changes?

 

http://hhonors1.hilton.com/en_US/hh/landing/RewardFAQ/index.do

http://hhonors1.hilton.com/en_US/hh/landing/RewardFAQ/index.do

    

HHonors is mysteriously quiet about the changes. Details on how the hotel category shift in 2010 will be implemented are still confusing after reading the USA Today article.

My advice for Mr. Diskin and HHonors.

Get the word out on FlyerTalk ASAP in a clearly worded manner if the changes are really only 10% of hotels requiring more points in 2010.

Stop the hemorrhaging of the HHonors value proposition in the minds of your frequent guests.  

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