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Really Living in the Philippines

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Philippines and the Rest of Asia — 2009

December 21, 2008 By: Philly Category: Domestic, Get There, International

Sorry I wasn’t clear.  This promo is for 2009.  Full information is here.  I only recommend Cathay Pacific, I don’t sell air tickets or provide travel services, see my recommendations for travel agents here.  As a further note, Cathay Pacifc only list their flights fro  certain US cites, however Cathay Pacific is an American Airlines partner and thus you can get tickets from most US airports, not just the gateway cities on Cathay’s web site.

It’s no secret that Cathay Pacific is one of my favorite airlines for trans-Pacific destinations.  One trip on Cathay versus the bossy, cattle car service of , say, Northwest or the adequate but ultimate cheapness of China Air and you’ll see why.

Every year Cathay Pacific runs a promo with an “all Asia” pass and this year it’s got Manila included as a basic destination.

Fo about $1400 you fly to and from the US to as many as four Asian sities at no extra charge … great bargain, great airline, I highly recommend this for peopel who want to see a little more of Asia.

Basic Destinations
• Bangkok
• Busan*
• Cebu
• Denpasar (Bali)
• Fukuoka*
• Hanoi^
• Ho Chi Minh City
• Hong Kong
• Jakarta
• Kaohsiung*
• Kota Kinabalu*
• Kuala Lumpur
• Manila
• Nagoya
• Osaka
• Penang
• Phuket*
• Phnom Penh*
• Sapporo
• Seoul
• Singapore
• Surabaya
• Taipei
• Tokyo
24 Cities
Destinations Map
* Serviced by sister airline, Dragonair.
^ Serviced by joint-venture airline, Vietnam Airlines.

There’s also 37 “Add On” cities available for additional charges:

• Beijing
• Bengaluru
• Changsha*
• Chengdu*
• Chennai
• Chongqing*
• Dalian*
• Delhi
• Dhaka*
• Fuzhou*
• Guangzhou*
• Guilin*
• Hangzhou*
• Karachi
• Kathmandu
• Kunming*
• Mumbai
• Nanjing*
• Ningbo*
• Qingdao*
• Sanya*
• Shanghai
• Shenyang*
• Tianjin*
• Wuhan*
• Xiamen
• Xian*
27 Cities Add-Ons

New Airline in Town

May 18, 2008 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews, International

hawaiian_logo I was happy to see a write-up in today’s news paper that there is a new US-flag airline serving Manila.  Hawaiian Airlines, based in Honolulu is now making four flights a week between Honolulu and Manila.  Continental and Northwest are the only two other US carriers who actually come to Manila and with the pending merger between Northwest and Delta I wonder if some of Northwest’s flights aren’t in danger.

Anyway, Hawaiian is a welcome change.  They "hub" from Honolulu and serve many other US locations (mainly west coast) as well as Sydney, Australia.  As soon as someone reads this who has been a Hawaiian customer, please leave me a note, either in the "Comments" section below or via my secure, spam-free content page.

hawiian_routesOne big advantage is they are the only choice to reach actual US soil without a stop … Continental does serve Manila via Guam, which is a US protectorate, but I’m known for being a nitpicker ;-)  Northwest’s flights all stop in Japan and all the other airlines serving Manila from the US have stops or plane change sin Taiwan or Tokyo or Hong Kong or Guam.  Nothing wrong with any of those places but sometimes it’s nice just to take your seat and then step off where you want to be, rather than going through yet another get off, go through security, get back on cattle herding drill.

We wish the new guys well.

Cebu Pacific Update

April 04, 2008 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews, Domestic

Last week I had occasion to use my old favorite Cebu Pacific for a trip to Davao City from Manila and return.  I found that they are still a good airline and still pretty economical, but a few things have changed in the past few years since I used Cebu Pacific last.

Cebu Pacific has just about completed the upgrade of their entire fleet to new Airbus A319 and A320 aircraft.  This is a great move in terms of passenger comfort, safety and dispatch reliability.  Cebu Pacific did a creditable job for years with a fleet of mainly DC-9 jets but they were certainly long in the tooth and the DC-9 is a ground-loving airplane which made a lot of the smaller airports served by Cebu Pacific a bit "dicey" in my view, especially on wet runways.  The A319/320 family is one of the safest and most reliable jets in current use and they are quite quiet (ever notice how many bloggers don’t seem to know the difference between these two words? ;-))… I like them.

Cebu Pacific has gotten quite ‘economy-minded’.  Baggage limits are low … although I had no trouble bringing back oodles of fruit in bags and crates from Davao.  When I last flew Cebu Pacific they impressed me by even serving free cold drinks to passengers in the terminal waiting for the flight.  Those days are apparently gone for ever.  Not only do they even charge for soft drinks in the cabin, they fly past your seat as if they were getting paid to win a race, you have to practically trip up an attendant to even be allowed to part with your money.  A significant downgrade in my view.

Fares are like a lot of things these days, bait and switch.  I really don’t know what has happened to honesty in advertising and merchandising.  The stated price when I made our reservations was about P 500, round trip.  But tax, fuel surcharge and who knows what fees were tacked on to make the total price about P 2700 each.  This does nothing for the airline’s image.  It’s a sad sate of business affairs.  i think I’ll lease a plane or two and start an airline advertising one peso fares anywhere .. then simply tack on as much as I care to at checkout in order to make a profit.  I’ll piss off a lot of passengers by being underhanded, but I’ll make money … at least short term.  Cebu Pacific is hardly alone in this practice, but it doesn’t make it right.  be sure you know the full fare before you compare.

All-in, though, the fare, on last minute purchase is still cheap compared to buying a similar trip on a US airline.  I tried purchasing the tickets online using my US credit card.  No luck.  Called my credit card company.  Sure enough they had blocked the purchase, in the main because instead of identifying themselves as Cebu Pacific Airlines the company reports themselves to the credit card companies as Cebu Air Telephone Reservations, which truncates to Cebu Air Telephone on the credit card fraud department’s screen.  The lady who blocked the transaction did so because she thought someone was trying to charge more than 4200 worth of air phone charges when there were no tickets shown to indicate I was flying.  That’s just stupid.  credit card fraud is a problem, dealing stupidly with the credit card companies just make sit worse.

Finally got the charge to go through and after no less than three phone calls got Cebu Pacific to email out eticket information.  Not a very good example of customer service and sadly I did have to get my wife to make the last call … Cebu Pacific is just unable to deal with foreigners very effectively even though the words my wife used were identical to the words I used.  Room for a ton of improvement there if they want to do more business.

Final note … the dear old Philippine Department of Tourism really should pay some attention to the mechanics of how people have to get around in this country rather than trying to attract yet another multi-million dollar hotel venture weekly.  I’ve traveled domestically in at least 20 countries of the world and the Philippines is hands-down the most unfriendly to tourists.  As a first step, the idiotic practice of extracting cash payments from travelers at the airport for airport fees needs to be stopped.  The intelligent route is to roll these payments into the fares and make the airlines responsible for collecting and remitting.  When you travel in say the US, you pay service fees like this for each airport … but the airline collects them … it’s part of the cost of doing business.  It does not require gates, collectors, paper receipts and the ubiquitous "no change, sir" hassles.  This would remove a significant bottleneck and remove millions of pesos per year from hands that may not always remit the money into the proper government coffers.

All in all, a great trip, but like everything else you have to factor in the reality that this is the Philippines.  I live here and I like it, in general, but paradise … it is not.

Jetstar Airways Update

April 04, 2008 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews, International

I’ve written here before about Jetstar Airways, a discount carrier that flies between manila and Singapore … and from Singapore all over Asia.  I’m signed up for Jetstar’s email offer service and I just got a notice about them expanding service between Melbourne Australasia and Singapore (via Darwin).  Just for fun I ran an availability check for a round trip in May and June 2008 … total fares come up to less the AUD 350 dollars, all-in (except for a few mote dollars Philippine airport fees, I think).

This is the kind of airline who charges for all services … a can of soda or even a checked bag (the price I worked up was a carry-on only fare) … but that’s ok if you are looking for cheap fares.  This is a flight of no small distance .. nearly 4,000 miles, and in terms of what one has to pay in North America, dirt cheap.

So all you Australian readers who have been out there ’sitting on the fence’ about a trip to the Philippines?  Book now and make yourself happy!

A Few Local Airline Updates

February 10, 2008 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews, Domestic

It’s always good to be able to write about our local airlines here in the Philippines … especially when things just seem to be improving.  I learned something in some sort of Principles of Management course that said most managers make the mistake of telling their workers all their strong points and then souring the moment by throwing out a "but you could do better ‘zinger’" at the end of the conversation.  I’ve been guilty of that often myself, so let me try to bring this little update into good management standards.

Philippine Airlines logo Philippine Airlines: This is the national airline of the Philippines and is both an international and important domestic carrier.  I’m pretty sure many will have read that last month the US FAA placed PAL on it’s special ‘watch list’ of carrier who are not living up fully to FAA standards.  This mainly involved problems here in the Philippines with the ATO (Air Transportation Office) an arm of the Department of Commerce which most closely corresponds with the FAA’s role in the United States.  It caused a tremendous ’smoke and light’ show here in the government, with the president firing the head of the ATO and a whole lot of head shaking and finger pointing going on.  Not much else transpired, though.  Will the problems get fixed soon?  I wouldn’t bank on it.  But the issues don’t really have any direct safety implications and in my view, PAL is as safe to fly as ever … so don’t go canceling your tickets and postponing your trip just because of what mainly amounts to bureaucratic wrangling.  If you’re a regular reader (and if you aren’t may I ask you to subscribe, please?) you’ll know that PAL is not one of my recommended carriers anyway, especially since my last trip on them, so you really should be buying your tickets on another airlines … in my opinion.

OK, that’s all the bad stuff.  Some good news is due, and here comes some:

Pacific Pearl Airways logo Pacific Pearl Airways is the newest airline in the country, based in Subic Bay Free Port in Zambales. They are the first passenger airline to operate in Subic. Starting last December 19 regular flights from Subic to Boracay (via Kalibo), Davao, Cebu and Manila were initiated. One can fly direct from Subic to Davao using the B737-200 Advance aircraft. for reservations call or text: Manila: 02.879.3375, Globe: 0916.383.1545, Subic: 047.252.8312, Smart: 0918.524.0608.  I haven’t yet flown these guys so this is for information only, but I certainly welcome competition and it is great that someone is now serving Subic (the former US Navy base).  The airport there is well equipped and Subic is close to some great beach resort areas that are nowhere near as crowded as the better known places down south, like Boracay.  My friend Bob will no doubt be happy to see yet another airline offering direct service to Davao as well.

SEAIR homepage logoSEAIR (South East Asian Airlines) is a local carrier I haven’t written about before.  based in Cebu, they have been around a few years now and fly mainly 32 passenger turboprops to many of the Philippines smaller tourist destinations.  Again a company I haven’t used, but they have a good reputation and I’m bringing them up here now because they are yet another airlines that is now serving Clark.  I’m really happy to see all the activity there, Clark is going to be a very important hub as time goes on and it is so refreshing to see airlines taking the big step of not serving the over-crowded, tourist-hostile NAIA.  Any day you can fly somewhere and bypass NAIA is a good day for flying to me.

Cebu Pacific logo Cebu Pacific.  hardly a newcomer to this site, I’ve written often about Cebu Pacific and they are hands-down my favorite carrier in the Philippines.  Today I’m updating them because boy, have they been busy.  Just a few months ago they added quite a few new international routes and now more are opening up.  Of particular interest are direct South Korea and Hong Kong flights to Cebu and Davao.  All the more well know international carriers have their problems with serving the Philippines from their major hubs, like Hong Kong.  With these locations being served by Cebu pacific now it makes a lot of sense to book flights to Hong Kong on a transpacific carrier and then book your final Philippines destination via Cebu Pacific … possibly avoiding an overnight in dear old Manila and other travel trials and tribulations.  Recommended.

No more excuses, fly and have fun!

Cebu Pacific Update

January 03, 2008 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews, Domestic, International

Cebu Pacific Airlines Route Map If you’ve read my Airline Information page you’ll know already that Cebu Pacific is my choice for Philippine domestic flights.

They always have some sort of promo going on … sometimes as low as 1 peso fares … no joke.  But even when you have to pay full fare, it’s reasonable … cheap by US standards.  Their entire fleet has just been renewed and their cabin crews are pretty, attentive and polite.

Unlike US airlines, they don’t play all those ridiculous 7 day, 14 day and 21 day "advance purchase" games … you can walk up to the ticket counter … or visit their web site … and get the same price if you’re flying same day or 30 days from now.

The part that I feel needs updating is, Cebu Pacific is now a full-fledged international airline as well as domestic.

As this map shows (by the way, you have to visit their website and try this map live, it’s custom for every city they serve, very cool implementation of Flash)now serve Hong Kong, Seoul, Pusan (both shopping destinations and hubs for Korean Air), Taipei, excellent place to connect with China Air or Evergreen, Hong Kong, great for connecting with Cathay Pacific or … well you get the idea.

Cebu Pacific have positioned themselves to make connections outside the Philippines instead of each and every passenger having to travel into Manila or Cebu and then connect.  And my son is coming to visit next month … I’ve already booked some travel for him and my wife and I, Manila-Cebu-Return, total fare, round-trip (less tax and fees, of course) 6 PhP.  You can’t beat that with a stick!

Asian Spirit — Small Airline, Big Spirit

January 01, 2008 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews

asian_spirit_logoHere’s another airline I have had in my sidebar links for some time, but find I have never really written up.  Asian Spirit currently flies only to internal Philippines destinations … but they serve some of the best locations … places like Boracay and Baguio where people want to go.

They also are always in the lead pack in the price imagerace … they came to my attention again Saturday when I saw one of their P99 (about $2.46 USD at today’s rate) Manila to Boracay promos.

When you think about just adding $2.46 extra on top of your trans-Pacific fare to reach a destination like this one, I wonder why so many of you sit in the USA or other cold countries "pondering" if you can go or not. Paralysis by Analysis.  Read more about Boracay here.

fares to Manila are often cheaper than fares between non-popular US cities and I recommend several travel agents here whom I know personally and have used myself … they know what they are doing and they know the Philippine market.

Asian Spirit flies to more than 25 domestic locations and are also one of a very few airlines who serves Palau, east of the Philippines in Micronesia.

You can see their entire route structure here and you can book flights here.

Flying on the Tiger

December 20, 2007 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews

tiger_map No, wait, don’t misread that, Flying Tiger is a fine old freight line that has now been absorbed … another of aviation’s "fallen flags".  But Tiger Airways is a vibrant relative ‘new guy" on the airline scene.  Based in Singapore and backed by world-renown Singapore Airlines, Tiger Airways serves a huge chuck of SEA and Australia.  (Rant on: boy how I wish every airline would put a simple graphic like this on their website so people could see their area of service at a glance … Rant off).

The reason they get a write-up here is that they among several "young’ carriers who regularly serve DMIA (the former Clark AB), north of Manila, one of the up and coming places to fly into and out of the Philippines.

I did have Tiger’s website on my Blog roll but I have never written them up before … should have.  One of my online friends in the Philippines, JD from Baguio used them to fly from Clark to Macau and return and had a very satisfactory "visa trip" experience.

Laurence, one of my Australian readers also reports their service from major Australian sites to Clark is satisfactory (thanks, Laurence)

How cheap is cheap?  Well a couple sample fares I see today on their website for travel in January … after the holiday rush:

Clark-Macau-Clark: Monday departure, Thursday return, all-in air fare:125.59 USD

Clark-Singapore-Clark: Sunday departure, Friday return, all-in-air fare: 171.76 USD

Clark-Darwin-Clark: Sunday departure, Friday return, all-in-airfare: 643.83 USD

I don’t know about you, but these prices, especially to one of my favorite destinations, Macau(Hong Kong) makes me want to fly.  A good deal for sight seeing,, leaving the Philippines for visa purpose, not to mention getting to the Philippines from Australia.

A little note I feel I have to add regarding all these deep-discount carriers.  They are cheap, particularly because they don’t serve meals and drinks without you paying for them, don’t have tons of comfy pillows and dedicated ladies to keep them fluffed up for you, don’t have free booze, etc.  Don’t leap at one of these fares and then complain about the perqs along the way … it’s honest, basic transportation … there’s a reason it’s cheaper.

Airline Updates

December 18, 2007 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews

image

Hmm, was your eye drawn to the image?  thought it might be, we all love a bargain.  Look a little closer.  That price is in Singapore Dollars … about $36 USD at today’s rate.  From where you ask?  From Singapore.

So why did I feature this on my blog about traveling to, living in and working in the Philippines?  Not bimageecause of the location, but the air line doing the advertising …  Jetstar is a discount airline operating out of Manila’s "second" airport, DMIA, the former Clark AB in Pampanga, Luzon.  Part of the Qantas family of airlines, JetStar serves Singapore directly from DMIA and onward from Singapore Macau (Hong Kong’s "second" airport … 30 minutes by hydrofoil from Central, Hong Kong) as well as dozens of cities in Australia, Thailand, New Zealand, Japan and others.

Most fares aren’t quite as cheap as $36 USD but they are very economical indeed … typical round-trip from Manila-Singapore-Manila is about $168 USD, all in.

The aircraft are new, the crews are well-trained, the company is backed by one of the oldest and safest in the business, Queensland And Northern Territories Air Service (we know them today as QANTAS).

Many people reading this are those who have to leave the Philippines every year to renew tourist visas, this is certainly a great choice … hotels and entertainment in Singapore are many and varied … and for my Australian and New Zealand readers, another route to the Philippines.

Wonder How Much Paying For This Little Scheme Will Cost Us?

August 02, 2007 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews

Aug. 1, 2007, 11:36PM
2 airlines say they will plead guilty
Each paying $300 million fine and cooperating in antitrust inquiry

By ROBERT SCHMIDT and JAMES ROWLEY
Bloomberg News

British Airways and Korean Air Lines have agreed to plead guilty to criminal price fixing and will each pay $300 million in fines, the U.S. Justice Department said Wednesday.

The companies will admit illegally fixing the prices of passenger and cargo flights by increasing fuel surcharges, the government said. Both companies have agreed to cooperate with the department’s antitrust investigation into the air transportation industry, the agency said. The plea agreements are the first arising from the probe….

This sort of comes under the heading of, aha, exactly as I suspected.  My hat is off to the US Justice department and the other, un-named European agencies who cooperated in catching these crooks.  The article goes on to opine that there may be more airlines implicated … which also won’t surprise me, since I’ve long been under the impressions that airline prices just go up and down :in concert” way too often to be explained by simple free market forces.

One of the things I have seen, living in Asia all these years, is how cheap air fares can actually be.  The Philippine airlines frequently have fares that seem outrageously low compared to what other carriers charge.  Tiger Air (part of the Qantas corporate structure) also has fares that are very, very cheap compared to what “name brand” carriers charge.  Could it be these “little guys” are just giving the air travel away?  or could it be that the “majors” are systematically getting together and ripping us off.

From their guilty pleas it ow appears the “rip off” scenario is the most likely answer.

More Great Fares From Clark

December 14, 2006 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews, Phils Business

It seems like the week for low price airlines. I’ve been following this company … JetStar … for some time. From a Philippine perspective they fly Manila (Clark) to Singapore. But they do so much more. They have extensive service from Singapore to Thailand and other Asian destinations and also to all of Australia.

Prices are cheap, the fleet is new and they are owned/controlled by Qantas … arguably the best airline in the world, certainly the leader in safety per passenger mile.

More good news for the Philippines and especially those of us who live on Luzon.

The Market Expands — At Least I Hope It Does

December 12, 2006 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews, Phils Business, Travel Reviews

Finally, an affordable Business Class.

Fasten those seatbelts, because here comes a fresh approach to premium class travel. Oasis Hong Kong Airlines presents businessOasis – business class without the price sticker shock! Starting from just £470 one-way, tickets will be available from this fare, on every flight year round.

Non-stop flights at non-stop value. Simple and sweet. Check these guys out at: http://www.oasishongkong.com/gb/en/home.aspx

Too bad this new startup isn’t planning US to Hong Kong service.  Their quoted business class fare is under $1500USD which is a ball park rate to Hong Kong in cattle tourist class.  I obviously haven’t flown them yet but will keep them on the list for spouse and I’s next European jaunt.

Here’s the best part.  According to several recent news articles in the Philippines papers, they will be inaugurating Hong Kong to Clark (Manila) service before summer.  The market to Hong Kong is certainly under served and I’m always in favor of seeing more airlines using the uncrowded facilities at Clark instead of the cramped and tedious NAIA … especially since I live north of the city and can get to Clark easily.

Too soon to tell, but keep your finger on these guy’s pulse and remember you heard it here first on PhilFAQS.

 

New Hope For Air Fares

December 09, 2006 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews, Travel Reports, Travel Reviews

My blogging acquaintance, Guy Kawasaki, is one of the original pioneers of Apple Computer.  Today Guy runs a venture capital firm, which means he gambles his own (and other people’s) money on great new startup companies with modern ideas.  How much he knows about the travel business is beyond me, but when his company funds a new venture, I pay attention.

On a recent blog entry Guy mentioned www.cfares.com  The ‘c’ could stand for “cheap” or it could stand for visibility as in “seeing” fares, but however they chose the name the company’s business plan is great … and may be a big boon to us frequent Philippine air fare buyers.

I’ll pirate a little of Guy’s original post with my own comments added:

Reality Check: cFares

cfares.jpg

Garage is an investor in a discount travel company called cFares. First, here’s some background info about the travel business: A large portion of airfare expenditures flow through the GDS systems (ie: Sabre, Amadeus, and Galileo). “First generation online travel sites” such as Travelocity, Expedia, and Orbitz rely on available inventory within the GDS supply.

Newer “meta search” entrants such as Kayak and Sidestep go beyond ticket supplies in the GDS systems by also searching directly through the databases of airlines in order to get an expanded array of better prices and tickets. (Airlines do not put all their inventory in the GDS systems—they keep some for their own sites as a way of incenting consumers to come to them directly).

cFares.com also has access to the GDS systems and direct access to airline’s published inventories, but according to the company it stands apart from these other sites for three reasons:

cFares is the first and only online travel site with exclusive relationships that gives it access to the $20 billion of consolidator “net” airfares. Consolidators are travel wholesalers who commit to buy large blocks of inventory from the airlines at volume (also called “net”) discounts. They are restricted from selling directly to consumers and have historically only offered these fares to travel agents.

Now this part is really, really interesting.  I worked very closely with a consolidator in Japan.  It was really two companies, one bought the seats, in cash, from the airlines, on speculation …cash up front and a hope that they would resell at a profit.

The other half of the company was a travel agency which sold the seats.  In their main office in Tokyo there was a room with the walls covered in whiteboards, guys constantly changing the prices and seats available to different locations, and a ‘barker’ hollering at the phone agents to “push” certain destinations and alerting them of price changes.

Also, while consolidators have inventory in one system (usually paper or a local computer), they have to access the GDS systems to determine whether a specific fare is actually available. As a result of these technical and business model impediments, consolidator “net” fares have not been brought online. cFares is the first online travel service that has developed technology to allow consumers to find and book these fares—often hundreds of dollars less than found elsewhere—directly and in real time.

I always knew there was a reason I advised folks not to buy blindly from online agents, but I never knew the “why” of the latest prices not being on line on their sites.  Now you know.

cFares offers something called “dynamic rebates.” cFares’s proprietary technology allows airlines to know what is happening at the point of sale and lower their prices dynamically to win a specific customer—for example, when they have lots of empty seats on a specific flight. cFares customers get a custom-designed price in real-time and receive the savings from cFares in the form of a rebate to their credit card after they submit their flight confirmation number. cFares has a unique name-your-own-price service called cAgent.

Unlike other name-your-price services, which involve “buying blind,” cAgent provides total transparency so that consumers know the airline, itinerary, and price before they have to pay. Travelers can pick a specific flight and then set up a persistent search for a fare that they are willing to pay. cAgent will seek out that fare and can hold it for twenty-four hours before the customer has to pay. Since airfares typically fluctuate several times during the day, cAgent snags the fare on the downturn.

cFares’s business model is a combination of Costco and Walmart. Anyone can search the site to see what fares are available. People who sign up for free gold memberships can purchase any of cFares low, publicly available fares—this is comparable to the Walmart model.

However, in order to get direct access to cFares’s “net” wholesale airfares, one-of-a-kind deals, and cAgent, consumers must become Platinum members at a cost of $50/year. This is the Costco model where a membership-driven retailer brings consistently low wholesale prices directly to the consumer. With cFares this membership pays for itself in at most two trips.

Pretty interesting stuff I would say, and a darn good explanation of how things in “the business”actually work.  Head over to www.chares.com and check things out yourself … and a big tip of the hat to Guy Kawasaki for bring this to our attention.

 

Cebu Pacific — A Great Way To Go

October 12, 2006 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews, Phils News

Cebu Pacific now flies to Kuala Lumpur

By Enrico Dee on News

Selamat Datang Malaysia! The Philippines’ leading low-cost airline will commence its Manila-Kuala Lumpur flight with a promo one simply can’t just resist: fly for only 1,499 pesos, one-way (taxes excluded). This is another good news for al travelers wishing to go to the wonderful city of Kuala Lumpur.

Ticket selling date is between October 11 to 18, 2006 only. Flight date should be between November 30, 2006 to January 31, 2007.

Check out the other dirt-cheap prices of Cebu Pacific Airline’s Go Fare promo:

From Manila to Laoag vv 99 Pesos
From Cebu to Bacolod vv 99 Pesos
From Manila to any Visayan destination vv 568 Pesos
From Manila to any Mindanao destination vv 868 Pesos
From Cebu to any Mindanao destination vv 568 Pesos
From Cebu to Clark vv 568 Pesos
From Davao to Visayas vv 568 Pesos
(taxes exclusive)

To know more about the latest Cebu Pacific Promo, please click here

Cebu Pacific is my favorite airline.  I’ve used them to fly between Manila and Cebu and like the service ands like the prices.  To pass the tim eon the short flights the flight attendants hand out prizes, sell T-shirts and ball caps and play corny games … always with a big smile.  So much nicer than the ramrod-stiff schoolgirls you get on China Air or the sour-faced scolding teachers that you get on Northwest … sorry ma’am I had to make this trip, I promise not to clutter up your cabin another trip ……

Many guys and gals are in the Philippine son tourist visas and have to leave every year … Hong Kong has been one of the choices in the past, Kuala Lumpur is a great alternative destination.

So when you need a good “escape route” just hop on Cebu Pacific’s web site and buy yourself a low-price ticket.  Recommended.

An Airline That ‘Gets’ It? — Just a Dream So Far, But Interesting

September 13, 2006 By: Philly Category: Airline Reviews

Take a look and let your imagination free:

After years and years of being shoved into “Cattle Car” accommodations at the back of the boat, I really enjoyed this link from my lovely wife, the Unofficial Cook.

The years I worked for the Air Force I flew the Pacific at least 21 times, and if you’re not familiar with how the government works, you always fly tourist, even if the airline has promotions that make business class cost the same.

A few US domestic airlines have toyed with the “All Business” concept, I don’t think any have actually taken the plunge but this company, SMINTAIR, is very interesting,  Their principals have a lot of experience and the initial market, Germany to Tokyo is a big one and one unlikely to drop off.  I wish them well.