Continuing our three-part comparison between
what an Internet booking enthusiast can achieve
and what might be offered if a trip was booked
instead through a specialist travel agent. Once
again, our intrepid subscriber, Jorge Moré (hometown)
established what he wanted, then planned
his own trip. Jennie Collister, the owner of Reef
and Rainforest, based on Jorge's criteria, made her
recommendations, selecting a different destination
than Jorge.
The Caribbean: Jorge's Trip
The third challenge: picking a Caribbean dive
destination for the first week of May that Moré, a
big-critter lover, would enjoy, as well as Jeannette,
his nondiving spouse, who would accompany him.
He chose Cozumel, which he hasn't been to for a
few years. "There are lots of options for us both, and
great restaurants in town. I may see something biggish,
but the attraction is the drift diving."
Moré chose the Aldora Villa because the couple
stayed there last time and loved it. He selected the
least expensive accommodation, the Courtyard
Norte or Courtyard Sur, at $95 a night, for six
nights. (Hmm, Jorge, we might suggest an upgrade
to the Alexander Suite, at $110 a night, so that
Jeannette has a little more space to relax while
you're out diving.)
Searching for airfares on Google took time,
because Moré was surprised by the cost of the
flights and the inconvenient transits. "Aeromexico
has cheaper flights, around $350, but these go via
Mexico City, with a change of planes," he says. "Plus,
the travel times are longer, like 10 hours outbound
and eight hours inbound." Moré stuck with his
preferred airline, United, but the outbound flight
leaves Chicago at 5 a.m., and the inbound flight has
a nearly six-hour layover in Houston and doesn't
return to Chicago until 12:15 a.m. Still, at $617 per
person --$1234 total -- he thought it the best deal.
Moré loved diving with Aldora Divers last time
("we dived with steel 120 tanks, so dive time was
always around 90 minutes"), and he would book
their $93 two-tank morning dives. Adding nitrox at
$10 a tank, the bill would be $565.
For food, Moré says he and Jeannette would have
simple breakfasts in their hotel room, and do a picnic
a picnic lunch between dives, so he estimates
$15 a day, per person, for those two meals. Dinner
is what they'll spring for, he says. "The restaurants
in Cozumel can be very good, especially if you walk
a little ways from the waterfront. In particular, Kinta
and La Cocay are first-rate. The fish of the day at
La Cocay is $15.50, the chocolate torte, the most
expensive dessert is $5.50, and a glass of wine is
$4.50." He estimates $30 per person for dinner, $5
for tip. At $50 per day per person, that's $600 for
the week.
Moré didn't research surface-interval activities
because he doesn't intend to do any. "I am happy
just reading and relaxing during the day. I prefer to
go into town in the evening." As for Jeannette, what
would she do? "She would be reading, going into
town, and walking the beach," Moré says. "Are there
any good beaches in Cozumel?" (We didn't get to
ask Jeannette what she thought about her husband's
picks.)
Other extras: $100 tip for the dive masters ($20
a day), $100 for airport parking in Chicago, $100
for airport/hotel transfers and other miscellaneous
expenses. Add that to air, diving, hotel and food,
and Moré estimated a trip total of $3,269 for the
couple. (If they upgrade to the Alexander Suite, it
would be $3,350.)
The Caribbean: Jenny's Trip
When Collister discovered Moré s wife
would go, she picked the Ports of Call Resort in
Providenciales, Turks & Caicos. "He'll likely see
sharks, and Dive Provo is an excellent dive operation.
Ports of Call is good value for Turks & Caicos,
a pretty expensive destination. It is close to a great grocery store that has a salad bar and lots of prepared
healthy options, and a great French bakery
a block in the other direction. Since he will be out
diving in the morning, his wife can walk to the
store, pick up lunch things, and they can spend the
afternoon together. Grace Bay is one of the most
beautiful beaches in the Caribbean, and it's across
the street and down a path past another resort."
Jeannette can also benefit from Ports of Call's swimming
pool and bar, fitness center, kayaks and floating
chairs for the beach, and the next-door shopping
center with shops and restaurants.
May 1 is the start of Ports of Call's summer rates
(26 percent off for seven nights), so one week,
double occupancy, in a garden-view room with a
king bed and continental breakfast (but no airport
transfers) costs $1,254. Dive Provo's shop is on site at
Ports of Call, and five days of two-tank boat diving
for Moré will cost $638, with nitrox fills an additional
$100.
Collister found economy-class Delta flights from
Chicago to Provo via Atlanta with decent departure
and arrival times -- a 12:45 flight on May 1 lands in
Provo at 7:40 p.m., and the 5 p.m. flight back on
May 7 lands in Chicago until 10:48 p.m. Airfare for
the couple is $910.
Collister says Turks & Caicos has some of the
Caribbean's best restaurants, with excellent wine
lists. Two top ones near Ports of Call are Caicos
Café and Coco Bistro, but they're pricey -- an appetizer,
entrée, dessert and a glass of wine at Coco
Bistro averages $76, plus tip. Moré will have to up
his food budget, to at least $80 per person, so $960
for six full days.
Add $300 for tips, airport parking, transfers,
and miscellaneous expenses, and Moré's Turks &
Caicos trip totals $4,062, about $700 more than his
Cozumel trip.
The Caribbean Trip: The Verdict
Moré found Collister's trip attractive. "My wife
would like the resort, and it's great that it has a
grocery store, restaurants, and nice facilities nearby.
If Grace Beach is as nice as she says, this would be
a real winner, and my wife would prefer this trip
to Cozumel. My preference would not be as strong
since it would depend on the diving [which would
be new to him; it's solid reef diving, and not drift
diving like Cozumel, but he'd most like see many
more sharks]. The cost for Turks & Caicos is higher,
but this is a trip that is mostly for Jeannette, so the
higher cost is OK." So score this one for the travel
agent.
It's interesting that Moré picked the less-complicated
Caribbean trip to book, because what
Collister put together for him is easy for anyone to
find and book online. But as we mentioned in Part
I of the story, a good travel agent knows the places
she or he is booking. It's their role to match the
product with your needs, especially when you don't
know that much about a place, or what your needs
exactly are yet. And, when the trips get tricky --
flight changes with airport overnights, visa requirements,
getting to and from the destination once
there -- a travel agent may really pay off.
Moré said researching each of his two trips took
him two to three hours online. "I didn't realize it
took so much time. I have more respect for how the
pros do this now."
-- Vanessa Richardson