Thursday, September 30, 2010

Puerto Vallarta promotion


Some $2.8 million will be invested in campaigns promoting Puerto Vallarta, the tourism authority in that port city announced. These will be a joint effort with the Mexico Tourism Board, tour operators and airlines participating. Goal is to show the wide variety of activities available, everything from golf and deep-sea fishing to fine dining after a visit to local art galleries. Added to this is a revised Internet web page, www.visitpuertovallarta.com.

More flights to Puerto Vallarta are in the works, too. US Airways in increasing frequencies from its hub at in Charlotte, while Frontier in December will start flying in from St. Louis and from Kansas City. Alaska Airlines, which now flies in from Seattle, San Francisco and Los Angeles, plans to start service from San Diego as well.


--
Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Image a problem


About 90 percent of the members of the Hospitality Industry Confederation maintain that the image of Mexico as a violent country has hurt their business. Many look forward to a poor winter season, although it will not be as bad as 2009, according to a survey published on Wednesday.

On Tuesday, Tourism Minister Gloria Guevara told the Senate Committee on Tourism that efforts are under way to improve Mexico’s image. She added that efforts are under way to attract more visitors from Brazil, Russia, India and China with visas becoming easier to obtain. More than 80 percent of international visitors now come from the United States and Canada, but violence is worse in Brazil, Russia and India.


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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

President promises better image


Speaking at ceremonies observing World Tourism Day, President Felipe Calderon once again pledged to find a public relations firm that will correct Mexico’s battered image abroad. Gang wars have given the impression that Mexico is dangerous for tourists, which, as the president pointed out, is not so.

During the event, it was expected that a national agreement in favor of tourism would be announced. Much to the surprise of many, it was not.


--
Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Monday, September 27, 2010

We’ll be back


The first International Tourism Fair of the Americas closed after a four-day run on Sunday, with organizers promising to make it an annual event. According to official figures, 50 countries and 30 Mexican states (out of 32) participated. Attendance figures have yet to be published. Notably absent was the federal tourism minister, Gloria Guevara. This was due to politics. The Mexico City government, which sponsored the event, does not recognize Felipe Calderon as President of the Republic, saying that his election was fraudulent. Guevara works for Calderon.

The Tourism Fair was notable because of various presentations. Among others, the director of the UN’s World Tourism Organization condemned warnings by some governments that travel to other countries can be dangerous while a leading hotelier urged Mexico to concentrate more on quality, less on quantity.

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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Friday, September 24, 2010

Not a good time to travel to Mexico

My advice? Stay away from Mexico travel. The drug wars are revving up, property values for homes built for American and Canadian retirees have plummeted by as much as 50 percent and the government doesn’t appear to be making any inroads in its battle against the drug cartels.
Though the Mexican government likes to point out that no tourists have been killed of the 28,000 drug-related deaths since 2006, do you want to take the chance at being the first? I don’t think so.
It’s a shame because Mexico has a plethora of great resorts, an incredible history from the Aztecs to the Mayans, fabulous beaches and friendly people.
But until the government can get a handle on the drug cartels, a trip to almost anywhere in Mexico or purchasing a retirement home these days isn’t worth the risk.
This blog has had almost daily reports on Mexico from journalist Jimm Budd direct from Mexico City. His reports are archived and available to anyone visiting this blog. Many of the problems facing Mexico tourism today, Jimm reported on weeks and months ago.

Property values tumble


The values in this case are those of retirement homes built for aging Americans and Canadians. At a recent convention of the Mexican Association of Real Estate Professionals, it was reported that violence associated with a campaign to crush organized crime is scaring away customers. The death toll for the past five years is said to exceed 28,000. Almost all have been mobsters or authorities sent in to arrest them.

In any event, property values in San Miguel de Allende is said to be down by 40 percent while in Puerto Peñasco (Rocky Point) the drop is said to be about 50 percent. In Los Cabos, speakers declared, condominium apartments now are almost impossible to sell.


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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Thursday, September 23, 2010

VivaAerobus in Mexico City


Monterrey-based low-fare carrier VivaAerobus is scheduled to start operations in Mexico City on Oct. 4, flying to Villhermosa, Tuxtla Gutierrez, Oaxaca, Puerto Vallarta and Mazatlan as well as Monterrey. These routes had been covered by now grounded and bankrupt Mexicana Airlines.

Another low-fare airline, Volaris, is now flying from Mexico City toLos Cabos, La Paz, Mérida and Chihuahua, also filling a gap that had been left by vanished Mexicana.


--
Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Cancun going green


In preparation for the World Ecology Congress to be held in Cancun in December, the resort area has launched a program that would eliminate 50 percent of all emissions by 2013. Among the proposals: switch to only fluorescent light bulbs, turn off computers when not in use, separate trash into organic and non-organic containers and encourage tourists to use public transportation.


--
Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

More routes for foreign airlines


Airlines from the United States are expected to win authorization to take over international routes abandoned by bankrupt Mexicana. For the moment, Mexican airlines are frozen out following a ruling by the U.S. Federal Aviation Authority that prohibits them from replacing Mexicana until the Mexican Government improves its airline safety inspection systems.

Domestic routes are another matter. With great fanfare, Aeroméxico announced the initiation of flights to Tuxtla Gutierrez, capital of Chiapas. Then one of its jets landed at a military rather than the civilian field. The plane was surrounded by armored vehicles and the crew marched off for a brief interrogation. After about an hour, the aircraft was permitted to fly off.

--
Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Monday, September 20, 2010

Ad campaign wins prize


The new campaign, “Mexico, a place you should get to know” (my translation of México: un lugar que creías conocer) has won the Travel Weekly Gold Megellan award, and not because the publication receives a big chunk of the advertising budget. Most of the money goes toward television.

“This demonstrates that our advertising is paying off,” said Rodolfo López Negrete, deputy director general of the Tourism Board, known in Mexico as the National Tourism Promotion Council. He noted that travel to Mexico from the United States and Canada in August was nearly 66 percent greater than in 2009.


--
Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Boston’s Freedom Trail Tour extended throughout winter

The Freedom Trail Foundation announced that it is offering its most popular Walk Into History tour of the Freedom Trail throughout the winter beginning Dec 1. Costumed guides will lead the 90-minute tours from the Boston Visitor Information Center at noon daily from the Visitor Information Center on Boston Common. Tours cost $13 for adults, $7 children and $11 for students and seniors and can be purchased online at TheFreedomTrail.org (10 percent off), at the Visitor Information Center on Boston Common or at Bostix Booth, Faneuil Hall. All tickets include a $1 donation to the Freedom Trail Preservation Fund. Some fees may apply for on-location purchases.

“Last year, the winter months were very popular times for visitors to walk on the Freedom Trail," said Mimi LaCamera, president of the Freedom Trail Foundation. "The sites are open and we found an enthusiastic audience who wanted to experience the American Revolution in the seasons when 18th century patriots were struggling to resist British law. Visitors and residents want to revisit those days when people just like them were challenged with almost insurmountable problems. Trouble was everywhere, and somehow they managed to figure out the solutions. It took hard work and was dangerous, but they did it. It’s back to the future in today’s economic climate, too, for we have taken the economy into consideration this year. Freedom Trail tours are affordable fun for residents, families and visitors.”

Other events and specialty tours offered by the Freedom Trail Foundation between November and March are:

HISTORIC HOLIDAY STROLL — The Historic Holiday Stroll is offered Thursday through Sunday from November through January and begins at the Faneuil Hall Bostix Booth at 3:30 p.m. The cost is $29 for adults and $19 for children and includes a 90-minute tour and refreshments at the Omni Parker House. Led by a costumed tour guide dressed in 19th century Dickensian garb, visitors learn how holiday traditions evolved in Boston and experience highlights of the American Revolution. The tour ends with visitors warming their bones with hot chocolate, tea, or wine and Boston Crème Pie at the historic Omni Parker House Hotel.

AFRICAN-AMERICAN PATRIOTS TOUR —At 1 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays during February, the Freedom Trail Foundation is celebrating Black History Month with the popular African-American Patriots guided tour, taking visitors through historic events of the American Revolution and the contributions of African-Americans who played a significant role in the shaping of America.

Tales of intrigue and bravery, poetry and defiance by black Bostonians will unfold during this critically acclaimed 90-minute walking tour of the Freedom Trail. Led by a costumed guide, visitors view history through the eyes of revolutionaries such as Attucks, Phillis Wheatley, Prince Hall, Peter Salem and others. Tickets $13 adults, $7 children, $11 seniors and students.

About the Freedom Trail
The Freedom Trail is made up of 16 distinct, original historic sites related to the establishment of the country. It is a repository of some of the country's most valuable historic and cultural artifacts. The Freedom Trail Foundation is charged to market the Trail and help restore and raise public awareness of these sites of exceptional cultural and historic significance. Established in 1958, the Freedom Trail is a national icon and draws domestic and international visitors, resulting in nearly $1 billion in spending annually. The Freedom Trail was designated as a Millennium Trail in 2000 by First Lady Hilary Clinton. It attracts more than three million visitors, residents of Massachusetts, and school children each year. The Freedom Trial Foundation and Freedom Trail sites offer educational programs for teachers and students.

Visit
TheFreedomTrail.org for additional event and exhibit programming.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Travel show in Mexico City


The first of what is supposed to be an annual event, the International Tourism Fair, opens in Mexico City a week from today. Unlike the Tianguis Turistico, which focuses on Mexican attractions, the Mexico City fair plans to take in the world, hoping to rival similar events held in London, Berlin and Madrid. Organizers say that some 5,000 people will be involved in this event. An attendance of 30,000 is predicted.

--
Jimm Budd
Reporting from mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Lassen a trip worth taking

By Stan Wawer

Drakesbad Guest Ranch is in a remote area of a remote national park. That’s the bad news. The good news is that Drakesbad Guest Ranch is in a remote area of remote Lassen Volcanic National Park. It is a 10-to-11-hour drive from the Los Angeles area, with the last three miles to Drakesbad over a really bumpy gravel road.

Lassen Volcanic National Park is California’s answer to Yellowstone with its hydrothermal features. Lassen Peak is the culprit in this park’s history. It formed 27,000 years ago as a volcanic vent and is one of the world’s largest plug dome volcanoes, rising 2,000 feet to an elevation of 10,457 feet. Lassen last popped its cork in 1914, two years before it was declared our eighth national park.

The park is at the southern end of the Cascade Range — a chain of active volcanoes stretching north to Mount Garibaldi in British Columbia. Great lava pinnacles, tall mountains created by lava flows, jagged craters and steaming vents highlight the western part of the park. The eastern part of the park is a lava plateau over a mile above sea level. Here you can find shield volcanoes and cinder cones and a forest of pine and fir.

The southeastern edge of the park at Warner Valley has an abundance of great hiking trails that lead to hydrothermal areas — Boiling Springs Lake, Devils Kitchen and Terminal Geyser. The area is forested, with a glacial valley and gorgeous meadows.

The park has dozens of mountain lakes, eight developed campgrounds and more than 150 miles of hiking trails. During my three-day stay at Drakesbad Guest Ranch, I hiked to Boiling Springs Lake and Devils Kitchen. On my hike to Boiling Springs, I came upon two young bucks grazing among the tall timber. They paid me no mind as I strolled within 10 yards of them. My hike to Devils Kitchen (about 3 miles roundtrip from Drakesbad) was a little more strenuous as I climbed to more than 6,000 feet.

Drakesbad Guest Ranch is snuggled into one of Warner Valley’s gorgeous meadows. Ed and Billie Fiebiger have managed the place for 20 years. The guest ranch opens the first Thursday in June and closes Columbus Day, Oct. 12. Billie is from Switzerland and Ed from Munich, Germany. The ranch is rustic but clean and serves three excellent meals a day. The California Parks Company has been Lassen Volcanic National Park concessionaire for 32 years.

My wife and I stayed in the lodge. There is no key to the room. There is a chain and hook lock on the inside for the nights.

Ed came to the U.S. in 1960, became a citizen and was drafted into the Army in 1961. He worked for the ski patrol in the area before he and Billie began managing Drakesbad.

Drakesbad got its name from Edward R. Drake, a fur trapper, guide and lumberjack who arrived in the area around 1875.

“Drake originally purchased 100 acres and eventually expanded it to 400 acres,” Ed Fiebiger said. “The land was in the areas now called Drakesbad and Devils Kitchen. His land holdings included hot springs and other thermal features associated with the Mt. Lassen volcano.”

According to Ed, Drake had arthritis and the hot springs helped. However, he sold the 400 acres for about $6,000 to Alex Sifford in 1900. The Siffords lived and worked Hot Springs Valley as a popular hunting and vacation resort for 60 years. In 1908 they renamed the valley Drakesbad (Drake’s bath) in honor of former owner.

“The park service purchased Drakesbad from the Sifford family in 1958,” said Ed, who knows everything about the area and the national park. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.

Drakesbad Guest Ranch features kerosene lamps. It was electrified in the 1990s, but none of the cabins and the lodge has plug-ins. Leave the hair dryers and computers at home. Drakesbad has no Wi-Fi, television or cell phone reception. It is a DEAD ZONE, which makes it unique.

Every day when my wife and I sat in the lodge’s public room, teenagers were seated at a table playing games instead of texting, tweeting or playing video games. Outside there is sand volleyball, badminton, horseshoes, hiking, horseback riding ($30 an hour) or swimming in the pool warmed by the hot springs. In the evening, kids sat around the outdoor fire pit and roasted marshmallows. Every Wednesday, Ed barbecues steaks, brats, hot dogs and hamburgers, serving them with baked beans, corn on the cob, baked potato and coleslaw.

“Success for us is repeat business,” Ed said. “Our goal is to provide excellent customer service. We get a nice mix of cultures here, which is nice.”

A lot of true hikers come through Drakesbad and swim, shower and eat. The showers are about a hundred yards from the lodge.

Every evening before dinner, my wife and I sat on the log swings, reading and sipping a glass of wine while enjoying the solitude, the view of the meadow and the forest and watching a couple of marmots foraging around the lodge area. Lassen National Park and Drakesbad Guest Ranch are little-known California treasures and worth the 600-mile drive from the San Gabriel Valley.

“Lassen is a geological wonder,” Ed said. “I don’t know why people don’t flock in to see this place.

“I think the name volcanic scares some people off,” he added, “and there is a lack of accommodations inside the park.”

New cabins in Lassen Volcanic National Park are coming to Manzanita Lake in June 2011. Reservations will be available online in January at www.lassenrecreation.com.

If you go

Airlines and AMTRAK serve Redding, Chico and Reno with car rentals available. Private plans land at Chester. Driving time is about 10 to 11 hours from the Los Angeles Area. The park is about a half-hour out of Chester. Call (530) 595-4444 or go to www.nps.gov/lavo.

Where to stay

Drakesbad Guest Ranch. Open the first Thursday in June until Columbus Day, Oct. 12. Drakesbad has a variety of daily and weekly rates for the lodge, cabin bedrooms, bungalows and a duplex. Tax and gratuity are not included in the quoted rates. All meals are included. Gratuities are given at the end of your stay. The ranch is on the honor system. If you purchase a beer, wine, soft drinks, water, sweatshirt, T-shirt, cap, candy, toiletries, etch, you put your name on a pad, the item purchased, the price and your room or cabin number. It will be included in your final bill. For reservations, call (866) 999-0914. For more information, go to www.drakesbad.com.

(All information is accurate at the time of publication but prices, dates and other details are all subject to change. Confirm all information before making any travel arrangements.)

Very Long Weekend


Yesterday (Sept. 15) Mexico commenced the observance of the bicentennial of the outbreak of its war for independence. Official celebrations started with parades, concerts and presentations in Mexico City, capped off by the Grito or Cry for Freedom that launched the struggle 200 years ago. This was repeated by the president, governors, mayors and other officials at 11 p.m. The original was shouted out about dawn in the little Guanajuato town of Dolores, but nobody wants to get up that early. Today there will be military parades and more, including flyovers in Mexico City, meaning commercial airline flights cannot land at the Mexico City airport until the afternoon. Banks, schools and government offices will be closed on Friday. Those who could decided not to work on Monday and Tuesday, either.


--
Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Hotel Rates stay down


While hotel rates world wide show signs of creeping up, in Mexico they remain low and are not expected to recover their 2008 levels for another two or three years. “We find ourselves obliged to create new packages and increase our promotion efforts,” Roberto Zapata, CEO of Misión Hotels, told the newspaper El Finaciero.

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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Top Adventure Travel Companies


Picking an adventure travel company isn’t easy. Where do they go? What is the cost? Do they have family trips? There are a number of good adventure travel companies, but my two favorites are Austin-Lehman Adventures and Mountain Travel Sobek. They both deliver more bang for your buck.

Austin-Lehman Adventures

P.O. Box 81025

Billings, MT 59108-1025

Toll Free (800) 575-1540

Web Site: www.austinlehman.com

Austin-Lehman Adventures was voted No. 1 Adventure Travel Company by Travel + Leisure in 2009 and No. 2 in 2010. The company has a 35-year legacy and continues to add some of the best adventure destinations in the world. Dan Austin and Paul Lehman are totally immersed with the company’s day-to-day operations. There are just 12 guests on its adult trips and 18 on its family adventures.


Mountain Travel Sobek

1266 66th St., Suite 4

Emeryville, CA 94608

(510) 594-6000 or

Toll Free (888) 831-7526 (USA & Canada)

Additional International Toll Free Numbers

Fax: (510) 594-6001

Email: info@mtsobek.com

Web Site: www.mtsobek.com

In May 1991, two outstanding adventure travel companies, Mountain Travel and Sobek Expeditions, combined operations. At the time, Mountain Travel was renowned for pioneering trekking and mountaineering in remote regions around the world, while Sobek had become famous for its exploratory expeditions on previously un-run international rivers. Both had also developed a wide portfolio of related adventure trips around the world and each had earned a reputation for pioneering destinations in remote, unexplored regions around the globe.

Friday, September 10, 2010

More money for ministry


Wrote syndicated columnist Sergio Saramiento on Friday: “Remember how last year President Felipe Calderón proposed abolishing the Tourism Ministry. Now he is recommending that its budget be increased by 5.8 percent while most other dependencies would have their allowances cut in the proposed budget for 2011.”


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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Spanish investment sought


Tourism Minister Gloria Guevara this week has been in Spain seeking additional Spanish investment in the Mexican tourism industry. Meliá, Riu and Iberostar are among the chains now heavily committed to resort areas along the Riviera Maya and now in the Pacific as well. Most of their customers arrive on charter flights and stay at all-inclusive playgrounds. And these are people from all over Europe, not just Spain. While numbers are smaller compared to those from the United States, European vacationers in Mexico usually stay twice as long.


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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Administrator named for Mexicana


The Communications Ministry has designated Adolfo Christlieb administrator of bankrupt Mexicana Airlines. Christlieb, who formerly was an executive with the company, most recently has been serving as president of the Airline Chamber. His task now will be to see which debtors receive what share of Mexicana’s assets.

Mexicana was purchased a few weeks ago for the equivalent of $77. The former owners bought it from the government some 44 months ago and reportedly lost the several hundred million dollars they invested. Aeroméxico has confirmed it has no interest in buying what remains of Mexicana. Domestic airlines have moved in to operate several routes Mexicana no longer serves while Delta and Alaska are applying for others. The struggle now is to see who will get the Mexicana slots at the Mexico City airport.


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Jimm Budd
Reporting from Mexico City
Member of the Society of American Travel Writers