Why use a travel agent?


One of the questions I receive from people when they find out I am a travel agent is “Why?  I thought travel agents died off years ago!”  I promise you, we am not extinct, I am 32 years young, alive and well (At least I hope so!).

There are 2 reasons why you should use a travel agent as opposed to booking with one of the online “Big Online Travel Companies”  The first reason is that you are walking away from free money. Travel agents (especially in my agency) almost always give cash rewards above and beyond what the suppliers are offering as part of various promotions. These cash rewards can be in the form of Credit Gift Cards or Spa credits for hotels/resorts. In the case of cruise bookings, you can receive onboard credit, free travel insurance, cash rebates, etc. With the exception of airfare the prices an agency offers you is going to be on par with what you can find on the big online travel sites, and with the incentives we will offer you a better value.

The second reason to book with a travel agent is that if and when something goes wrong, you have a person who you can talk to, a person who can correct the issues to make sure you have a worry free trip. We know who to call to get our customers taken care of.

Next time you are booking a vacation, don’t over look an independant travel agency, you might be walking away from money on the table! In this economy, who wants to walk away from free money?

Posted by Michael Schad, President of Seaward Travels in Orlando Florida.

www.seawardtravels.com

Part 2 of the 50 Essential Experiences..The Travel Bucketlist


Posted by Peter Roberts
October 12, 2010
Dog Mushing on a Sunlit Glacier Peter makes a friend.

 As the door opened, I could see that our welcoming committee consisted of 90 excited dogs.When Royal Princess pulled into Skagway, the morning was young enough that a mist still clung to the edges of the harbor.  With each successive hour, the trails of fog gave way to rays of sun and by afternoon the sky shown clear – a perfect day for a helicopter “flight seeing” tour and an encounter with some speedy pooches.

I’d been working aboard the ship for the season in my capacity as cruise director, but hadn’t yet had the opportunity to experience one of the state’s singular sports – dog mushing.   An animal lover all my life and big fan of the outdoors, I was intrigued to interact with Alaska’s most unique athletes and see their remote summer camp high up on a glacier.  I was thrilled that we were finally on our way.  Our bus ride to the airport doubled as a safety orientation, and on arrival we were fitted with life vests and moon boots and placed in helicopter groups.

Nestled into the chopper, no sooner had I placed the headset over my ears than we soared upward.  I watched as the Alaska gold rush town shrank away from us, along with the rest of civilization. 

With nothing in my line of sight but crystal blue sky, I had a moment to reflect on my good fortune.  I was, after all, en route – by helicopter – to an experience most people wouldn’t even know to dream about – except perhaps just after the annual Iditarod race, when the results of this grueling 1,150-mile race from Anchorage to Nome form only a momentary blip on the media landscape.

Ahead, the rugged terrain gave way to ice fields, which gave way to mountains, then majestic valleys, and finally to massive glaciers.  We soared across them all, snapping photos by the dozen along the way. Some 20 minutes into the flight, we rounded a corner that put Denver Glacier into view.  Moving closer, small dots that flecked the glacier came to form tents and kennels in neat rows.

Peter Roberts, Dog Musher Sailing across the snow in Skagway.

The blades of our helicopter quit their chop, chop, as we settled onto the ice.  As the door opened, I could see that our welcoming committee consisted of 90 excited dogs, barking and jumping on and off their kennels.  Though I never imagined I’d need sunglasses in a place with such excessive snowfall, the fine weather and sunshine resulted in a searing glare off the white ice.  Got shades?  Check.

After a brief orientation, we met our mushers and were introduced to each member of our team of 10 Alaskan huskies.  The dogs practically danced with excitement to meet us.  For them, this was a summer holiday, a period of relative relaxation before their training started for the Iditarod.  They didn’t look as I had expected: a uniform collection of well-groomed steeds like I had seen in a movie.  These were different than the dogs I’d had as pets – they were working dogs, bred to race.  No characteristic was an accident; it was chosen, cultivated.  Speed.  Intelligence.  Strength.  Endurance.  A hybrid of so many breeds, including the native Inuit dog.  Once acquainted, I sat in the sled, which triggered the dogs to pull on their harnesses. The musher jumped on the back, released the anchor and away we sped across the ice. The pace was breakneck.  Some 10 minutes later, we stopped to admire the vista. Then it was my turn to have a go at driving the team, and with the help of my musher we were off again, with the dogs hardly registering that they now had a novice in command.  The sun’s glare was intense, but the snow field glistened and bits of ice flew up as our sled’s runners cut across the glacier.

Peter Roberts' view from the sled View from the sled.

I felt very at one with nature, as if I had gone back in time.  Now I knew firsthand how the early Alaskan settlers traveled.  We could have been at the North Pole, it seemed so remote and apart from the everyday world.  I’ve ridden in many forms of transportation in my journeys, but never had I traveled with such a sense of place.  This WAS Alaska.

And just when I thought it couldn’t get any better, we returned to camp for some puppy play time.  Holding the latest litter of future sled dogs in our arms, feeling their soft fur and little wet tongues, was the perfect end to our time on the glacier.  The helicopters fired up, and soon we were heading back to Skagway.  I sat back as the images of the day played back like a movie in my mind.  Was that really me on that sled?

I’d been in Alaska all season, but never had I felt so connected to the Great Land.  It was a magical way to finish up my time there, and also the perfect way to get a really unique Christmas card picture!

Peter's christmas card photo Peter’s perfect Christmas card photo.