Friday, August 30, 2013

Hotel Review: Hyatt Andaz West Hollywood

The Hyatt Andaz West Hollywood is a Category 4 property requiring 15K points per night.  If you are a Hyatt card holder you receive an annual certificate after paying the $75 card renewal fee for 1 free night good at any Hyatt Category 1-4 property.  This hotel qualifies for use of that certificate. While paying an annual fee to carry a credit card may seem like a waste this is where you can work that fee to your advantage because standard rooms generally rate out at $265 per night and higher, a savings of  $190 against a revenue stay.
This famous hotel know affectionately as Riot Hotel was ruled by the rock and rollers of the 60's and 70's The Doors, The Who,Led Zeppelin, Rolling Stones, just to name a few.  It's convenient Sunset Strip location puts the hotel within close proximity to the Whisky A GoGo, The Viper Room, the Rainbow Bar & Grill among other heavy hitters that define the rock era of excess.  The rooms have been updated and the famous balconies have been glassed in to provide a larger interior space or to prevent current up and coming rock star from thowing TV's off the balconies to mimick the antics of Keith Richards when he stayed at the hotel. There is no front desk, staff walk around with satchels containing iPads for checking in. You're seated on sofa throughout the lobby area offered complimentary wine, coffee, water while the staff review your stay portfolio.  Our room was on the 5th floor directly overlooking Sunset Blvd.  The view was fantastic and pure iconic Hollywood.  Inside while the bathrooms are small they are quite functional and covered floor to ceiling in marble.





Once a place where rock icons hurled tv's to the street below has now been encased in safety glass and sofas offering remarkable strip views day and night
The open concept restaurant RH (which stand for Riot House paying tribute to the hotels storied past) served a wonderful menu selection or buffet for breakfast. While not only is the kitchen open guests can see ingredients used for their meals through glass refrigerator doors.  The first morning we selected from the menu: french toast and a breakfast panini. If breakfast is not included with your room, the fee is extraordinarily pricey, approximately $50 per person. As a Diamond member, breakfast for me and up to 3 guests was included. In the evening the restaurant was often crowded with lengthy waits for a seat, many times the reason for this has to do with word on the street that a celebrity or band may be in residence at the hotel.  One evening after a long, hot day of seeing the sights we saw several dozen teenage girls on the walk directly outside the hotel as we approached the main entrance we were stopped by security and asked to state our business, I said I was a guest and was required to show my room card.  Turned out rumor had it that the boy band One Direction either was staying here or had band members staying there.  I wouldn't have known even if they were there but activity over the next few nights was heavy with paparazzi and screaming teenage girls.   





The hotel had a rooftop pool.  While one side overlooked the strip the other clearly gave view of some Hollywood Hills residences.  The parking lot was housed on the backside as well.  The nightly parking fee was $35 if parking your rental car for the duration of the stay.    




My stay overall was as expected for the area.  The room was comfortable and quiet even while I was located directly across from the elevator.  The neon lights from the strip were never a problem as room darkening drapes blocked all light.  The location was fantastic especially for a walker (so many sites, shops within walking distance), the staff friendly and the food good.  While I could appreciate the storied past, my teenager could not, although she did very much enjoy being able to walk pass the screaming teenagers envious of her stay in the hotel.  I am a die hard Hyatt fan but I will criticize/complain if a situation warrants.  I will return to this property since my teen liked Hollywood enough to ask if we could come back next year.  I do feel the property is properly rated at a Category 4 and I most likely will be using my annual free night stay here again but before we return I will make sure my child knows who Led Zeppelin is and how they basically ran this hotel in its heyday.        


Thursday, August 29, 2013

The Must Read Travel Delvaluation Post

In the wee hours of Aug 28 it was notice by someone booking an award flight that American Airlines would impose a fuel surcharges on award tickets, a few calls later and American was confirming the news with prepared statements.  Fuel surcharges are two words travel points hobbyists want to avoid. If your going to pay a fuel surcharge on an award ticket you might as well book a revenue ticket because fuel surcharges suck the life out of an award. The travel bloggers were in a tizzy for several stressful hours as the news that came out of American Airlines was all but detrimental to those who travel on points.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Anatomy of a Trip to LA - Last Installment: In Town Transportation

This is the final post in a mini series about the Anatomy of my trip to LA the other two post can be viewed here and here.  This final post details how ignoring opportunities for free points can cost you in the long run. I was flying myself and my daughter to Los Angeles thanks to my acquisition of the Southwest companion pass which for me is valid through 12/31/13.  The hotel was being paid for with my free night stay bonus given as a perk for the $75 annual renewal fee for the Chase Hyatt Visa and the remaining two nights were paid with points I acquired through various means and my use of Vanilla reloads to pay my mortgage and acquire additional Ultimate Rewards points.  The only thing remaining was transportation once we arrived at the destination.

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Kok Chang Safari Elephant Ride

 I had three main reason for coming to Thailand: first, to ride in Cathay Pacific's 1st class cabin from JFK to Hong Kong detailed here, second, to ride an elephant and third because I wish to visit all 7 continents before 60.  This post is about Rainbow, at 2 1/2 tons she was kind and gentle and loved to be scratched behind the ears.

Monday, August 26, 2013

Hotel Review:Radisson Blu Phuket

I chose this property for my stay on Phuket because I was swimming in an overabundance of Club Carlson points.  To help unburden my points cache I was looking forward to 4 nights at Radisson Blue Plaza Resort Panwa Beach.  For the most part I would agree with many of the comments posted on Trip Advisor about the property.  It is far from the beaches of Kata and Patong for which Phuket is known and the cabs are anywhere from $15 to $20 each way to go to the other side of the island.  Just as a side note, while it may not look big on a map Phuket is a very large island and that becomes apparent when you happen to be on the opposite side of it trying to get back to Cape Panwa (where the Radisson is located).  I liked the seclusion but had I the opportunity to do this over again I would have stayed 2 nights at the Radisson and 2 nights at a property near Kata beach.

Friday, August 23, 2013

Pleading my case with Chase

When I apply for fresh credit cards in order to acquire the bonus points associated with my cards of choice I usually apply for more than one on the same day, at the same time, which helps keep the hard pull inquiries down on my credit report so as not to impact the credit score more than 5 points.  Every time you apply for credit a hard inquiry is done and too many hard inquiries in a short amount of time have a negative impact on a credit score.

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Bus to Phuket

One of the most stressful parts of this trip was all the extra planning which had to occur because I decided to terminate the flight to Asia in Hong Kong rather than my final destination of Phuket.  Simply put it meant that once we deplaned in Hong Kong we were on our own to get to the point where the departing plane back to the US would be.  I previously described the plane trip from Hong Kong to Bangkok here and the private drive to Hua Hin here but we still had an 8 hour ride to get from Hua Hin to Phuket.  Our options included driving back to Bangkok and taking a plane, hiring a private driver, driving ourselves or taking a bus.  We opted to review the last two: driving or public bus.

Sunday, August 18, 2013

3 days in Hua Hin

Let me start by saying I loved Hua Hin.  Previously, I described my stay at the Hyatt Regency Hua Hin posted here which I'm sure contribuited to my likeability of my surroundings but while we didn't partaking in much activity other than beach walks and night markets I found peace and total relaxation here.  Diva and I were exhausted from the long days in the big cities and this was the perfect place to lay low.
We did venture out to the night market in town, there are several: one more tourist oriented; one geared toward the locals, we of course headed to where the locals go.  The Hyatt had a shuttle that would drop you off at the various markets then you could either take a taxi or tuk tuk (open air trucks/golf carts).  Many guide books steer travelers aways from tuk tuks but we had great luck with them and actually preferred them over taxis.

Friday, August 16, 2013

Hotel Review: Hyatt Regency Hua Hin

I was a hectic time in Bangkok and now came the time to relax.  Hua Hin has a 5 mile long beach about a 3 hour drive south of Bangkok located on the Gulf of Thailand.  It was discovered in the 1920's by King Rama VII and today houses the official royal residence of the sitting King.  Our stay here would be for 3 nights with the Hyatt Regency Hua Hin, a Category 4 property.  This 5 star 204 room hotel located on 12 beachfront acres was meticulously landscaped and private.  In one word the property was magnificent.  Upon check-in were were ushered to the Regency Club check-in desk and provided a beautiful room.  Everything here spoke of lush gardens and greenery.  Once we arrived at our room we found a great bottle of wine, a decadent chocolate cake and some local fruits as our welcoming gift.

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Bangkok as I saw it: A pictorial

I'm finishing my cities (Hong Kong and Bangkok) portion of this trip blog today. So I'm going on a  rant with this post.  These two cities are like oil and water.  Hong Kong clean, Bangkok dirty.  Hong Kong wealthy, Bangkok dirt poor.  Hong Kong rife with fascination for the Western lifestyle but not our traditions, while Bangkok is just trying to survive a Western influx of tourism.

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Damnoen Saduak Floating Market

We left Bangkok early morning.  A private driver was hired for the 3 hr trip to Hua Hin.  The city part of the vacation was over and now it was time to head to the beaches.  En route to Hua Hin we would be stopping at the famous Damnoen Saduak floating market about 2 hours outside of Bangkok.  Basically, its a bunch of canals in a jungle setting with people living densely along both sides of the narrow waterways.


Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Hotel Review:Park Plaza


There are currently three Club Carlson properties in Bangkok, the 4th a Radisson Blu is being readied for a February 2014 delivery.  The new property was within walking distance from the Park Plaza, I did cruise by the construction but, I did not see any of the other Club Carlson Bangkok properties.
Contemporary, quiet and centrally located can best describe our small hotel.


Monday, August 12, 2013

Bangkok's Royal Palace

After 12 straight hours of sleep I was ready for Bangkok or so I thought.  We did the first thing we could think to do in a third world country, find Starbucks.  Today, we were riding the metro, taking a water taxi, visiting the Royal palace, Wat Pho (largest reclining Buddha) and Chinatown with a little bit of this and that thrown in.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Trip Report : Introduction to Bangkok

Arrival in Bangkok was without issue.  Again, I had no transportation from airport to hotel set up but we decided to take a cab rather than navigate yet another metro system where we knew English would not be spoken.  We paid for a cab (about a $14 fare) to the hotel which was located in Sukhumvit, a  very well respected part of the city.  I made sure I had the driver use the meter rather than a flat rate which is how the drivers like to charge.  Being that it was early we had only a few traffic issues, Bangkok is known for horrendous traffic conditions.

Typical Bangkok intersection

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Service Report: Uber


Trip report: Uber

I wrote about the car service Uber  (read previous post here) and how to easily acquire $45 in credits to try out their service.  I put my credits to use on my recent trip to West Hollywood.  We arrived at LAX and at the last minute I decided not to rent a car.  So without any transportation I tried Uber, within 10 minutes I was sitting in a very nicely appointed current model black sedan with blacked out windows (its LA after all) enroute from LAX to West Hollywood.  The driver had bottled water ready for us, stowed our bags and we were off.  He was pleasant, sharply dressed (a suit and tie) and within an hour we pulled up to the hotel, no money was exchanged, no tip; it was inclusive for the rate.  The  ride was superb and I am so glad I had that $45 credit to use.  My out of pocket expense was $18.  Shortly after my arrival at the hotel I received an email receipt and a request to rate the driver.  It was the easiest, most unstressful airport pick up and so vey LA.

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Cathay Pacific Economy Class Review

What?  Did I just write the word "economy"?  Deciding to extend my stop over in Hong Kong meant that we had to pay for our own flight from Hong Kong to Bangkok.  There are a bevy of carriers that make the three hour flight each day and I chose Cathay because while most people pay for flights and pick a carrier based on the ticket price, I use points to determine which carrier I fly.

Playing Tourist in LA

This post comes to you from West Hollywood, CA  I'm out here for a quick trip playing tourist with my daughter.  I've been trying to keep on top of the posts and I most certainly will be providing a trip report of my stay at the Hyatt Andaz, West Hollywood in the near future.  But for now a few pics of celebrity homes will have to suffice.

Prince's house in Malibu

Matt Damon's house in Pacific Palisades

Bill Cosby's house in Pacific Palisades

Monday, August 5, 2013

Trip Report: Last Tid Bits from Hong Kong

A ride on the star ferry from Hong Kong Island to Kowloon peninsula should not be missed.  For an amount totaling less than $2HKD or .26 cents US you get a spetacular water view of the harbour.  For an extra special ride catch the ferry right before the 8pm laser light show that takes place on the promoninade, the ferry captain will stop in the middle of the harbour to allow passengers to take photos or have an extra few minutes for taking in the sights.  While I did not ride the ferry at night I did see the evening ferry stop from my post at Ozone Bar 118 floors above the harbour.

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Hong Kong: Night Market

Everywhere we went in Asia some sort of market activity was popping up.  Hong Kong proved no exception and it would be our first exposure to the market culture and a memorable one at that.  Let's be frank...call it what you will to get visitors to attend but I referred to them as "shit shops"  After our visit to Ozone (read post here)  we headed over to to the Temple Street night market.  Starting at 5pm a busy street transforms into a place where vendors hawk their wares, everything from t-shirts to jade to fruits/vegetables to any kind of street food one could imagine.  We were so excited to explore the colorful marketplace before us.

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Trip Report: Ritz Carlton Ozone Bar

Hong Kong is know for its architecture especially when it comes to skyscrapers so it would not be a complete visit without a stop to what currently ranks as one of the highest bars in the world, it occupies the 118Th floor of the ICC (International Commerce Commission ) building completed in 2010.  Ozone as it is more appropriately known is part of the Ritz Carlton properties and the views from this bar are spectacular especially if you arrive in time to watch the lights from surrounding buildings illuminate the evening sky.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Hotel Review: Hyatt Regency Sha Tin

As I mentioned in yesterday's post there are three Hyatt properties in Hong Kong.  In planning the trip several factors went into selecting what property I would chose for my stay.  Hong Kong Island and Kowloon Peninsula are very densely populated; basically they are located at the heart of Hong Kong proper, Sha Tin is out in a more relaxing mountainous setting just a 30 minute metro ride away.