Starwood Hotel Stays

SPG Hotels

Starwood Hotels in which I’ve stayed over the last year.

The Starwood Preferred Guest® Credit Card from American Express has been good to me over the course of the last year.  I’ve had over 10 stays in various SPG properties across the world.  Four hotels across the US and four more hotel in Europe have helped me to feel like royalty.

S. San Francisco Four Points (Category 2: 3000-4000 Starpoints)

nice hotel

Four Points By Sheraton South San Francisco

A quick weekend trip late last summer to San Francisco was a great way to see the city by the Bay.  With a direct flight from my hometown to the Oakland airport, this was a no brainer.

My wife had never seen this unique city, so it was imperative that we explore the city.  We wrote up a list of Eight Great Things to do in SF.  I’d recommend them to anyone who hasn’t visited.

You also need to be sure that you take a ride on the historic cable cars because there is nothing like riding in one of them.

This hotel was really affordable on points, but not so great on location.  It is located in South SF, which is far from the action.  It would be fine if you had a rental car, but trying to take the local transportation ate up a lot of our time.

  • Stayed 3 nights.
  • Value: $450

Salt Lake Sheraton (Category 3: 7000 Starpoints)

sleep number

Max enjoying the soft bet at the Salt Lake Sheraton

Depressingly this hotel changed from a category 2 hotel to a category 3 early this year.  Fortunately I stayed there five times before it changed.   Their park and fly is the most generous in the Salt Lake City area.  Their 24 hour shuttle to the airport adds more value to staying there.  The outdoor pool is a bummer for winter stays, but great for hot summer days.

Max really loved the soft pillows and the king sized bed.  McDonald’s is right next door for an affordable breakfast next door.

  • Total Stays: 5
  • Value: $550

Dallas Texas Element Hotel

Airport Hotel Dallas

Dallas Element Hotel

Element hotels are very unique.  They all have suites with kitchens, living areas, and have a very modern feel.  I wish they were more abundant across the world because they’re a great place to stay.  Their continental breakfast in the morning was five stars as it came with fresh fruit, waffles, and all the other normal breakfast stuff.

The shuttle picked us up from the DFW airport and dropped us back off in the morning, which made it stress free.  It was located right next to a shopping mall with quite a few restaurants, so having dinner was easy.

  • Total Stays: 1
  • Total Value: $120

North Charleston, SC Aloft Hotel

North Charleston Hotel

Aloft Charleston Hotel

Talk about modern feel, this place feels like the future.  It could be the setting for a Back to the Future 17.  Although I’d never decorate my house with these decorations, it is a fun place to stay for a night or two.  After a work trip to North Carolina, we zipped down the coast to see Myrtle Beach, and Charleston.

You won’t regret the time that you spend in this romantic city.  Make sure you bring along the love of your life, because the charm in this place will drive your love even deeper.  Although the breakfast wasn’t included, it was pretty reasonable.  The outlets are super close and will provide great shopping for the night before or the day following your stay.

  • Total Stays: 2
  • Value: $220

Four Points Dornbirn, Austria-Category 2 Starwood Hotel

hotel spa

Four Points by Sheraton in Dornbirn, Austria – The Spa

I’ve already raved about this place in a previous post. The spa alone will be worth the night in the hotel.  Located right on the border with Switzerland and Germany, Dornbirn is a great way to experience the Alpine Europe life.  Take a trip to Lake Constance and enjoy the historic downtown.  You’re not too far from the mountains so you can do some hiking as well.

The spa is for adults only, so if you have kids with you, tell them to hang out in the room, because they won’t let you in the spa unless you’re over 18.  Enjoy this place and make sure you don’t make the mistake that I did and only stay one night.  Call this place home!

  • Total Stays:1
  • Value: $125

Four Points Bolzano, Italy-Category 2 Starwood Hotel

sudtirol hotel

Four Points by Sheraton in Bolzano, Italy (Photo Courtesy of their website)

Although this place is located in a bit of an industrial area, you won’t feel like it when you are swimming in their pool that is on the top floor.  Spend some time in the steam room or sauna on the top floor as well.

Just down the road is a huge grocery store that is within walking distance, so it makes for a great snack stop or a cheap breakfast.  On the way here you  need to stop at the Reifenstein Castle to explore the best preserved medieval castle in Europe.

  • Total Stays: 1
  • Value: $130

Sheraton Padova, Italy-Category 3 Sheraton Hotel

Hotel by venice

Sheraton Padova

This is a great springboard to Venice.  I stayed here for two nights in my way to Venice. We had rented a car and it was a little tough finding the entrance to the hotel, but is right off the freeway.

Their customer service is excellent. I emailed them two times before arriving and they answered all of my questions. They also answered questions about Venice and Padova. Their shuttle to downtown Padova was really convenient.

The rooms were great but the AC was turned off and it got a little hot.

Parking was 6€ per day and there wasn’t anywhere near to eat breakfast besides the hotel. The room had a small fridge where you could put a few things.

  • Total Stays: 2
  • Value: $300

Four Points Milan City Center-Category 4

hotel milano

Four Points by Sheraton Milan City Center

Staying in the downtown area is always going to burn more points than staying in the fringes of town.  This was an area where it would be worth paying for a bit of my hotel.  We only stayed here one night because we wanted to enjoy some time in the Lake Lugano area as well.  The location of this place is great.

You’re within walking distance of the major landmarks of the city if you have the time to take a stroll.  You’ll never regret visiting the Duomo or the Galleria.  Just make sure you bring your credit cards (without foreign transaction fees) because this place is the mecca of fashion.

They provided us with free umbrellas on the day that it was raining, which was super convenient.  Half of this place has been renovated, and the other half hasn’t.  Ask for a newer room unless you need more space.  You’ll want to use the cash & points option here because it isn’t worth 10,000 Starpoints.

  • Total Stays: 1
  • Value: $100

Use the Starwood Hotel Chain

You’ll never go back to the Super 8 or the Motel 6 again.  There is nothing like living like a king.  This is the only way to do it without being independently wealthy.  Over the last year I’ve conservatively saved $2000 by staying in the Starwood Hotel chain.  All of my points have come from the below mentioned credit card.

If you’re not ready to give up the stiff sheets at the Super 8, or the stain on the mattress at the Motel 6, just keep on paying the cheap Howard Johnson rate.  When you’re ready to stay in a luxurious chain without breaking the bank, get the card below.  [Disclosure:  We receive a commission when you sign up for this card through our link.  We would really appreciate your support so we can continue to provide you $$$ saving tips.]

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Who are the WorldWanderlusting Bloggers? Part I: Brad & Family

For months and months, my wife Nicole has insisted that I ought to spend more time on the blog familiarizing our audience with who we are. As she usually is, she was right. Sheldon’s post on our Facebook page about the paint in his daughter’s room garnered some 38 likes and a dozen comments – far more than posts which contain instructions to obtain thousands of dollars in free travel – a quandary which I may never fully understand.  Apparently, people like people… well, so be it.

You who follow WorldWanderlusting diligently still know very little of us.  You know we come from parents who taught us frugality.  You know we live in the frozen tundra of Idaho Falls.  You know we have an insatiable wanderlust.  But we don’t often share details that might allow for a deeper connection and understanding of who we are and why we do what we do.

About Brad

Brad ChristensenI’m the oldest of four boys – all explorers, boundary-testers, and hellraisers, as my mom will attest.  We had and still have a tight-knit family, bound by a touchy-feely kind of love and a shared zeal for life. My travel adventures as a child were limited – lots of roadtrips to Salt Lake City, the obligatory pilgrimage to Disneyland and a brief visit to Tijuana – the only memory of which consists of me using my allowance to buy some gumballs that tasted of brown sugar and dirt.

I grew up working construction for my dad, delivering newspapers, and waiting tables.  I bought atomic fireballs for a nickel and sold them at school for a quarter.  Any interest I had in sports was foregone to work to earn money that I never spent. I always loved being outside – hiking, camping, and rock-climbing. I had a subscription to Outside magazine – something that aroused an early interest in scuba diving and traveling.

I went on a mission for the LDS church to the northern part of Spain, spending most of my time in the Basque Country and learning the Basque language in addition to Spanish.  I got a degree from Boise State University in Communications and worked as an aide to Idaho Governor Dirk Kempthorne before returning to Idaho Falls and starting a career in the Investment Advisory business.  I’m still very political, serving on the Ammon City Council, and taking on other obligations that I have more passion than I have time for.

I’m very social and fun-loving, and spend the better part of my days with a wide smile. I love to have meaningful conversations and make new friends.

About Nicole

Nicole Poulsen ChristensenNicole is also the oldest in her family – a family that was hardly strangers to travel, or better-said, moving.  She was born in Louisiana and lived there, Utah, and Germany before she was six years old and settled in Rhode Island.  She went to a different school for almost every year of elementary, and as I’m sure you’ve already surmised, her father was in the military.

When she was 16, her family moved again, this time to Idaho, where Nicole says she finally felt “at home.” She played basketball and ran hurdles in track – athleticism which she now manifests in volleyball skills that shock and awe people who swear she plays like she’s 8 inches taller than she is. She went to Boise State for a time before becoming distracted by a certain boy who she married and generously put through school.

Today she is a consummate mother, loving, teaching, and caring for our four adorable children. She pours over parenting books, and then actually puts the knowledge into action, raising our kids in exactly the way I’ve always hoped for and never personally mustered. She’s as good at being a friend and a wife as she is at being a mother. She’s empathetic, patient, and wicked-smart.  Honest and forthright, she’s exactly the kind of person everyone wants to be with.  I barely deserve her.  It’s only through careful and calculated cunning that I’ve managed to keep her.

How We Met

As a freshly-returned missionary, I saw the social dance class at Boise State as the perfect opportunity to meet hot girls.  As a girl with a boyfriend who was reluctant to dance, she saw it as an opportunity to learn how to dance.  I know it’s cliche, but from the first time I set eyes on her, I knew I would love her for every moment of the rest of my life. It did, however, take some convincing to get her to see it my way.

I lined up directly across from her on enough occasions for her to clearly see that my interest in her was unabashedly beyond that of a dance relationship, and her eyes lingering on my fixed gaze, hinted that such a thing might be possible.

After four months of fending off my subtle advances, her defenses finally conceded and I willfully raided with a plan of attack that would impress even Napoleon. I insisted that she spend an hour with me – a date at a science museum that allowed us both to understand just how much we enjoyed being with each other. When she reeled in the confusion of being caught between two courtiers, I sent her with a sealed envelope, the contents of which were the lyrics of a carefully-chosen song which perfectly expressed my emotions: To Make You Feel My Love, by Bob Dylan.

Two verses into the song she knew, as I knew, that we were meant for one another, and here we are, 12 years later, ever more in love than we were that day. (If you’re a borderline stalker and you’d like even more detail on this story, you can read it all on my relationship blog, www.DailyCharmer.com)

About Our Family

Family CrazyOur first child was born in October of 2004.  The night he was born I tried to get Westley to watch the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Monday Night Football.  Unfortunately, he wasn’t all that interested. He’s eight now, and still takes little interest in football, but he’s got a mind for all things science, and more personality than most adults.  He is friendly and outgoing, smart like a criminal, and gets more love notes from girls now than I did when I was twice his age.

As luck would have it, Wes got a brother two years later when Miles came along.  Miles has had a button nose since the first day we met him, something I worried about at first, but now contributes to the kind of cuteness that stops everyone dead in their tracks.  He’s loving and obedient, charming like a gentleman, and he’ll play catch until my arm’s ready to fall off.

As if by design, God saw fit to add some girls to our family.  Arabelle came five years ago. She is spunky and beautiful enough to get away with it.  She got her dad’s blonde hair and blue eyes and her mom’s fierce sense of independence.  She is a ball of fire that will warm you and sometimes even burn you.  She’s full of life and as fun-loving as they come.  She never met a butterfly, unicorn, or flower that she didn’t love.

Belle needed a partner in crime, and she wound up with a senior partner.  Claire is more often known by her nickname, Clairezilla.  She’s double the work of all our other kids put together. She too, can get away with it, though, because there’s not much cuter on God’s green earth.

Why We Do What We Do

Mark Twain wrote, “Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness.”
St. Augustine wrote, “The world is a book, and those who don’t travel read only one page.”    Muhammad wrote, “Tell not how educated you are. Tell how much you’ve traveled.”

PanamaWe love to read books.  We love to meet people.  We love to understand cultures.  It doesn’t scare us to find that people are different from us, in fact, it intrigues us, and we feel like it makes us better people.  I want my kids to know that there’s more to the world than what they can experience here where we live.

I’ll never forget the moment I uncovered the fact that in other languages, not only do people use different words to express themselves, but they also express themselves differently.  It meant something to me that has stayed with me. It meant that our understanding is relative to our knowledge, and our knowledge is relative to our experience.  It provoked me to seek out some experience.

Travel can be many things; it can be adventure, exploration, education, but ultimately it’s all experience – experience that makes life richer.  That’s why we’re traveling.  It’s the same reason we take the time to painstakingly document the process – to inspire you to join us.  We love wanderlusting.  For us it’s not something passive, its something possessive.  It grips us and we grip it back. Not only do we pass it along, we foist it on others.  We beg people to join us in giving ourselves experiences and we hope that in the end we’ll all have richer lives for it.

How to Wanderlust


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Use Twitter for Travel Customer Service

Who hasn’t called a “Customer Service” line only to wait for 20 mins on hold?  Finally when the attendant answers the phone, usually their English isn’t perfect and they are hard to understand because of their accent.  You then proceed to explain the issue that you’re having.  The employee then reads back to you from a script that basically says you’re screwed.  Frustrated, angry, and disappointed you hang up the phone.

You haven’t progressed anywhere.  In fact, you’ve digressed.  Now instead of being frustrated with the fact that the reason for your call, it has been compounded with a terrible customer service experience.

My generation has grown up without “Customer Service.”  We’re used to waiting for a 20 minute phone call to fix a small issue.  I understand that companies have to cut costs, and can’t be spending hours on the phone with someone who complains that their airplane bathroom was stinky.  (They all are, buddy).  It feels like you’re just a number and they really don’t care.

If you’re like me and feel like something should be done, let me tell you that I’ve got the secret.  Listen Up.

USE TWITTER

Two weeks ago my brother and I ran into a dilemma.  We had booked a flight to Buffalo so we could attend a travel blog conference called TBEX.  Not wanting to be away from our families too long, we booked the flight right around the conference and didn’t have much wiggle room.

Almost instantly we regretted our decision. (taking a short trip without add ins)  We were going to be right close to Palmyra, NY, Niagara Falls, and so many other cool things in the area.  We knew that changing our flights would cost $150 each, and that wasn’t worth it to us.

Fortunately, Delta sent us an email one day announcing that our flights had changed.  It put us in Buffalo, NY about 30 minutes later than we had initially expected, and late for a meeting we had arranged that night.  This was our moment.  Brad called me with excitement explaining that this was going to be our chance.  What did we do?

Called Delta’s reservation line.  Guess what we got?  A machine.  After navigating the press 5, then 3, then 9, then 5, then wait for the prompt and press 7.  Finally we had arrived to the spot where you actually get in line.  The prompt then said, “Your call will be answered in the order in which it was received.  Your wait time will be approximately 15 minutes.”  Ouch.  We decided that the 15 minutes would be worth the wait.

Finally someone, with a thick Indian accent, answered the phone.  We explained the scenario to the CR rep, who then tells us, “I am bery(sic) sorry, but we cant change your flight unless we move you more than 90 minutes.  You must pay $150 dollar change fee to change flight.”

Feeling defeated, and realizing that we weren’t going to change the flights, Brad hopped on Twitter and posted this:

Customer Service

Our Tweet to Delta

The tweet was very soft in nature, but still explained our disappointment.  Almost instantly (not even close to 15 minutes) did we get this response from @DeltaAssist.

Customer Service Twitter

Delta’s Response to Brad’s Tweet

Isn’t it nice to not spend 5 minutes looking up the phone number?  How about not navigating the ridiculous virtual assistant who doesn’t seem to understand the word “REPRESENTATIVE” after you’ve said it two or three times.  I’m almost sure that they train those systems to not understand that word.  Then we saved ourselves 20 minutes on the phone too.

We promptly responded to them by giving them our confirmation number for the flight and explaining our situation.  About 30 minutes later I received an email from Delta with a new itinerary showing our flight leaving the previous day.  Victory.  Victory.  In celebration we thanked them for their great response:

Twitter Customer Service

Always thank them for their help

We hadn’t even spent 5 minutes doing this and it was much more successful than the phone call that took 25.  If you’re looking to simplify your life and get some real customer service, hang up the phone.  Sign up for a Twitter account.  Even if you only use it to do this it’ll be worth its time.

Moral of the Story

Becky, who works at my office, (not the office for WW, but the boring one that takes up most of my day ;)) has a relative who works for Delta.  When we explained the situation to her relative the response was, “Oh yeah.  They watch Twitter like a momma bear.”

Although customer service has almost completely been eradicated from the planet, there is one small corner where you can still find it, and it’s on Twitter.

I can guarantee that you’ll get farther faster by using Twitter than almost anything else when it comes to the travel scene.  All the major hotel chains and airlines have hired Twitter specialists who maintain their image on this important outlet of Social Media.

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Cruise Credit Card

Cruise Port

Brad and Nicole at the St Kitts Cruise port

So many people have asked us if there’s a way to get miles or points that will pay for a cruise.  There are some cruise credit cards out there, but none that I could get excited about until now.

Cruising is the ultimate blend of luxury, travel, entertaining, dining, and adventure. If that weren’t enough, it’s also an incredible value. My favorite way to tempt myself is to see what cruises are really cheap on the VacationstoGo 90 day ticker.

Here are some of my favorites from the list I created.  I narrowed down the list to only cruises under $500 that are at least 7 days. These prices are for interior cabins and don’t include taxes, so it will likely run you a little more per person than what is posted here.  Even still, these are some shocking low prices.

90 day ticker

When you consider that the price of your cruise includes your lodging, food, entertainment, and transportation, you realize that in many cases, life is cheaper aboard a cruiseship – add to that the fact that you get reimbursed for most or all of it… You’re wanderlusting, aren’t you?

Making a Cheap Cruise a Free Cruise

You may be hesitant to take the “free-way” to travel.  You see these posts about miles, points, transfers and categories and it’s all just too confusing to you.  It seems like more work than it’s worth.  For the record, it’s not.  It’s actually remarkably easy, but I can sympathize and I’m excited to tell you about an offer that is extremely simple.

Barclaycard just came out with a new card, the Arrival World Mastercard, and while it still involves a point system, it’s one that you’ll understand with ease.  They require you to spend $1000 within the first 3 months of having the card. (We always recommend using these credit cards only to make purchases you would otherwise make and to pay off the balances on time and in full). That way you’re using the credit card not as credit, but as a currency that gives you an incredible benefit.

Once you do that, you’ll get 40k bonus points which you can use to have $400 in travel expenses reimbursed. You also get 2 points for every dollar spent, so the $1000 you spend will also get you 200 more points, for a total of $420 in reimbursement.

They sweeten the pot even more because when you redeem those points for cash reimbursement on travel expenses, they give you 10% of your points back, so you instantly have another 4200 points which you could use to get $42 more in travel expenses reimbursed.

You can see why I think this is the best cruise credit card there is out there.  Some of the others that are available don’t offer near the benefits and the flexibility of this one.

You can see how this could become addicting.  Here are a few more tips to making this free cruise happen for you.

  • Apply for yourself and for your spouse separately.  Why share a bonus when you can each have one?
  • Jonathan Mares with Vacationstogo.com has been very helpful to me when booking cruises.  You can call him at 1-800-338-4962 ext. 7289 or email: jmares@vacationstogo.com
  • You can get some of the best deals on cruises that you book within a month of sailing.  They’re anxious to get them filled and it’s that much less time you have to spend waiting.
  • Check out our Free Travel Credit Cards page for ideas on how to get your airfare free as well.
  • Also read our posts entitled Doesn’t it Hurt My Credit? and Before You Apply.

Cruise Credit Card

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Embera Indian Tribe

Every young boy remembers the time at elementary school when his friend showed up during library time and showed him a picture of some topless native Americans from the most recent National Geographic.  It brought a whole new meaning to a weekly trip to the library.

National Geographic

My Family with the Embera Indian Tribe

Even though those days are long past, I’ve always wanted to visit a native tribe like those pictured in the National Geographic magazines.  (Not because I could see some topless native American, I’ve matured since those days) The idea that tribes still live as hunters and gatherers in remote parts of the world like Papua New Guinea or the Amazonian rainforest has long intrigued me.

Simply stumbling on a tribe like this was unlikely, and flying to Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea isn’t a cheap endeavor.  For a long time I had accepted that we probably wouldn’t be seeing any native tribes like I had always wanted.  It felt depressing.

Embera Indian Tribe

Then, as we were researching our trip to Panama, we stumbled across the Embera Village Tours company that offered guided tours of the Embera Puru village deep within the Chagres National Park.  Our excitement grew as we discovered that the prices to visit the tribe were rather reasonable.

Although there are other companies that can take you to visit the Embera Puru, this is going to be your best option.  Anne, who is the guide is married to a tribe member, which makes the experience so much more legit.  She understands the culture and can help explain anything in perfect English.

Getting to the Embera Puru Tribe

You’ll meet with Anne at your hotel in either Colon or Panama city and they’ll pick you up. The drive will take a bit, but you can enjoy the scenery. Finally you’ll arrive at a boat dock where two of the Embera Tribe members will be there to load you in the boat.   Oh yeah, you heard that right.  It’s a tree that they’ve carved out and made a boat.  “This is my kind of National Geographic moment” was my first thought.

The ride is smooth like an old Cadillac even though you’d assume it would be rough as you ride up the Chagres river toward the tribe.  It’s about a 45 min ride, so settle into your seat and enjoy the scenery.  Soon you’ll be greeted by the tribe members.  You’ll probably experience a warm welcome like this:

Embera Indian Tribe Crafts

The Embera Tribe creates some amazing homemade crafts.  They take items that you would see as useless, and create some of the most ornate baskets and carvings that you can imagine.

Their products are priced at $1 per day of work.  So a basket that takes them 21 days is priced at $21.  Can you imagine making $1 per day for hard work?

The men do the carving of seeds, and wood, while the women spend their time weaving baskets, bowls, masks, and so much more.  You’ll have a hard time not wanting to purchase one of everything, especially because you’ll know who made it for you.  Each of the families proudly displays their products, and happily explains the meaning behind each image.

I know.  I know.  You’re worried about them begging to buy their products.  Don’t worry.  The people are very friendly and don’t hassle you to buy their products.  It will make you want to buy more and more.

Embera Indian Lunch

Embera Plate

Banana Leaf Bowl

Lunch is included with the tour, and is rather tasty.  They will fry you up some patacones, which are fried plantains and are rather typical food for a Panamanian.  They also cooked up some tilapia that was absolutely delicious.  They left all the bones in it, so make sure you don’ try eating them.

It’s amazing thinking about them fishing for their food everyday and working on little gardens to provide the food they need.

 

Embera Indian Home

You’ll learn on the trip that the Embera homes are built up on stilts.  This is done to stay away from animals, snakes, bugs, and gives them extra room for error in case the river were to flood.

Indian Home

They have a log leaning up against the front porch that has been notched out for your feet and feels like a ladder.  I found it interesting to learn that they can simply roll the log to the other side which takes away the steps and says to anyone that they aren’t welcome at the moment.  Sounds kinda like a No Soliciting sign….

Anselmo the Medicine Man

Medicine Man

Anselmo, the Village Medicine Man

Part of the village tour includes a trip with the village medicine man, Anselmo into the jungle.  His knowledge of plants would shock any Pfizer agronomic engineer.  He was pulling all kinds of plants and explaining how they can be used for the benefit of humans.  He hands everyone a leaf and requests that everyone chew the leaf.  After about three or four chews my mouth begins to numb and I couldn’t feel my tongue anymore.

Maybe if he were to leave the tribe he would get a job at Pfizer, or Merck, but more than likely he’s happy where he’s at.

Why to Visit the Embera Indian Tribe

Native American

Cute Embera Indian Girl

We’ve become more addicted to our innovations these days.  It is tough to disconnect from the hustle and bustle of the world.  These people can show you how their simple lives can be enticing.

The time that you spend with the tribe will speed by.  Anne will be telling you that you’ve got 30 minutes and you’ll know that it won’t be enough.  We longed for more time with the tribe.  

The smiles on the faces of the children will make you smile.  To see them so happy without the latest iPad, or the largest home is something to admire.

I’m still happy in the life that I live, and my wife wouldn’t ever go topless. This experience will give you greater appreciation for the blessings that you enjoy.

So if you’ve ever had a hankering to visit a Native American tribe that still lives off the land, then this is a great place to have this experience.

[Disclosure: Anne offered a discounted rate for our group, but the feelings and opinions are my own]

 

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How to Stay 8 Free Nights in a Hotel Without Going to Jail

I recently redeemed 3,000 of my Starpoints for a night in the Downtown Salt Lake City Sheraton.  It was just prior to our departure to Panama, and as we prepared to board the shuttle to the airport, I made a run to the lobby restroom with my son.  As we entered the restroom, there was a loud snoring sound reflecting off the marble walls.  My son and I looked at each other, puzzled, and advanced to investigate. Extending beneath the door of a bathroom stall, we saw two dirty boots, upright, unstirring. A homeless man had escaped the winter cold, opting for the warmer, and perhaps, somehow, more comfortable, bathroom floor of the Sheraton.

We suppressed our snickers and hurriedly took care of our business.  But as we left, the thought occurred to me that we had paid no more for our room with two plush beds and pillows, than had this man paid for the stone floor and a ceramic pillow. We alerted the front desk and the poor guy was presumably hauled off to the slammer.

If he had only known that if he could qualify for the Starwood Preferred Guest® Credit Card from American Express Card, he too, could have enjoyed the luxurious 800 thread-count sheets, the 42″ plasma TV with HBO, and perhaps, even, a soak in the hot tub – not just for a night, but for 8 of them!  Now, doubtless, the homeless man probably doesn’t have the credit score to get approved, but do you?  If your credit score is at least 700, and you’re capable of making all of your payments on time and in full, it’s time for you to start taking advantage of credit card travel rewards.

In order to get the bonus points, you need to spend $5000 within the first 6 months.  There’s no annual fee for the first year, and 10,000 of them come right away, so you can get started instantly!

Here are three amazing hotels you could stay at for 8 nights… in a room, not a bathroom floor… for free… without going to jail:

Medellin, Colombia Four Points by Sheraton

Manchester, New Hampshire Four Points by Sheraton

Vancouver, British Colombia Four Points by Sheraton

If you liked these ideas, you might also want to look at our great Starwood “loops” – roadtrips you can take between some of these free Starwood Hotels.

All courtesy of the 30k bonus starpoints you’ll accrue with the Starwood Preferred Guest American Express Card. Apply now.

 

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Travel Snobbery

Disclosure: This post was written by one of our best friends, Trevor.  He loves travel more than anyone we know and has been an inspiration to us.  He’s visited 50 countries before his 29th birthday.  

In the movie “It’s a Wonderful Life”, George asks Uncle Billy what the three most exciting sounds in the world are, and after a sarcastic remark, George exclaims, “Anchor chains, plane motors and train whistles!”

My Love for Travel

When I was 15 and living in Barcelona I got a 3 week Eurail pass. What’s more exciting than a Eurail pass? When you travel like every day is Christmas morning. I recall one conversation with my travel buddies, where we literally asked each other this question in all seriousness, “So do you guys wanna wake up in Rome or Paris tomorrow?”

Friends in Paris

Trevor and Sheldon with two other friends in Paris in 2001

We opted for Paris, and then we opted for Rome, and the better part of Europe – and all of it became a part of me.

Now, later in life, I’m no longer living in Europe and don’t have the freedom a Eurail pass.  But I do have the same zeal for travel.  And luckily, I have a resource to help me see it out. I’ve been following WorldWanderlusting from day one, and almost immediately my wife and I were able to accumulate 240,000 frequent flyer miles with American Airlines.

We’ve done a lot of things the “free-way,” and recently we chose a time of year when cruises were cheap and a destination we both had wanted to visit for some time. We boarded a ‘free’ flight to Paris, where we would spend a day and then fly a no-frills puddle jumper, notorious to any seasoned European adventurer, to Milan. From Milan we caught a train to Genoa through the beautiful countryside of northwestern Italy.

The cruise left from Genoa, Italy and headed down the Italian coast into the eastern Mediterranean Sea, passing through the Aegean, the Bosporus Straight, and finally into the Black Sea. The idea alone of these places left us in a giddy, anxious reverie. There is nothing more exhilarating than the unknown, not the simple unknown, but the true, the real unknown. For me, the Black Sea was as foreign as a black hole – an exploratory adventure that evoked sentiments of extreme excitement. It’s something I’m not content to settle for on occasion, but more of an addiction I must cede to often.

Many people with whom I speak about my exploits assume I am either the lucky CEO of a crackpot start-up, or a trust fund baby. My conversations gravitate to the many hidden secrets dotting the globe, and people assume my having experienced them makes me an independently wealthy young jetsetter. This is not the case. Do I want to be rich? Sure of course, not for the traditional reasons, but because money purchases something priceless for me; travel, passage, freedom, flight, escape, wonder, adventure, gratification for my wanderlust. It fills a hole that is insatiable by any other medium. While I’m wasting away in the thirst of the desert of mundane monotony,  travel entreats me like a river of clear crystal water.

Turkey Trip

Trevor Learning How to Make a Turkish Rug

As is very common for me whenever I travel, passing through the Bosphorus Straight on our cruise, I envied the exotic residences. I longed to gaze out each morning and night at Istanbul’s peerless twilight. Water is everywhere in Istanbul – North, South, East, and West. This, along with her hills and ancient edifices, mean the sun’s rays have all the more to illuminate.

My tour guide, and now close friend, Gökhan, (gokhanalatas@yahoo.co.uk) in his very adequate English sprinkled with a delightful Turkish accent, countered my expressed desire to live where he lives, saying: “So what. I live along the Bosporus Straight. You live in the shadow of the Rocky Mountains. In my back yard there is Angora goat. In yours a cougar.” The Angora goat is a species endemic to the rocky landscape of Turkey. It produces a precious wool, known as Mohair. A basic scarf made of this only chin-grown wool, can go for up to $1500. The point Gökhan made was well taken, yet it did not appease my yearnings.

Turkey Trip

Trevor and his Wife in Istanbul

Istanbul is the gem of the empires. Turkey itself is a very special country. It is the only official Muslim country to implement secular law. Also they do not identify themselves as Arab, European, or Middle-Eastern. They are Turks. They are their own race and their own empire. This contrasts well with the more oppressive cultures and regimes in the region. Imagine walking down the streets of your favorite European city, saying and doing the same things you would do there, but then gazing down the avenue to a mammoth monolith that is one of the hundreds of incredible mosques in the city. This is Istanbul. These are my anchor chains and train whistles. It’s not that I want to hear them… it’s that I must hear them.

Travel Snob

I’m a snob. I am a travel and experience snob. I love to sit in James Bond movies and tell anyone who will listen, and a lot who will not: “Oh yeah he just crashed his motorcycle through the window of the Grand Bazaar, I’ve been there. I bought my wife some sandals like 20 feet from there. Oh yeah Macau, yeah it’s really like that, I took a boat right up to a restaurant just like Bond does here. That metro stop there, yeah I almost got mugged there, amazing pastries just up the stairs there.”

This snobbery is a more abiding and valuable form of snobbery. It’s empowering really because its so wholesome and real, not like the other varieties of monetary or entitlement snobbery. This type, in my estimation, is much more forgivable. I’d encourage you to embrace it.

You can WorldWanderlust Too

“So neglect becomes my ally.” The old man in “The Count of Monte Cristo” taught his prisoner protégé this lesson. It applies to what WorldWanderlusting does, skimming off the inefficiencies. This is an ethical practice in many fields; securities, yogurt and butter production, and any sort of commissioned sales industry. With rewards programs, it’s no different. Contractually, these people are obligated to reward you with what you have earned, regardless of how you obtained it. Some may call it bottom feeding. Hell, they may even call me a bottom feeder. And I’m okay with that because, as previously discussed, I can be a snob too. They’ll say, “you’re a bottom feeder, a cheapo, an exploiter.” I say “Maybe I am, but have you ever been to Burma? How about Laos, or Croatia? No? Well this bottom feeder has.”

Geography is power, and geography, experienced first hand, is magnified power.
Economics, warfare, diplomacy, logistics, politics, culture, language, literature, and history all have to do with time and place. Now I’m not Marty McFly so I can’t help you with time, but WorldWanderlusting can help you with place if you’ll spare the time to learn and apply the tips and tricks they share so generously.

Understanding, gathering, and using miles and points makes me a sophisticated sultan of sightseeing, which I can assure you beats being a pitiful peasant of plainness.

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