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Travel
Tips Below
are a few travel tips from ASAWA visitors. If you need the absolute latest
scoop, though, join the ASAWA forum and visit the Travel
section. There's a wealth of information there, and you can ask specific
travel questions. Travel
Tip and comments by ASAWA visitors Paul
has some very useful advice regarding balikbayan packages and such: "I just
returned from my third trip to the PI...I discovered by accident that the
"other" local carriers, at least Cebu Pacific, but I am told the
others are doing it also, have a policy that waives over-weight charges on your
balikbayan boxes IF you show them your INTERNATIONAL boarding pass for that
exact day. It will not be good on
another day. They waived 1,400
pesos of over-weight charges for me. BUT, you have to ask for the manager and
you have to ASK for it. It is not
posted anywhere and the counter girls will not tell you about it, if they know.
I prefer to fly Cebu Pacific domestically and they have many good promotions,
IF, you ASK. They are not usually
offered, at least to a foreigner, if you DON'T ASK.
There is a 2 for 1 sale on tickets, Manila - Davao, and maybe also
Cagayan. Makes the planes very
full, so a reservation is helpful. I
usually just go straight to the Domestic Airport from Ninoy International and
catch the next Cebu Pacific to Davao, but last time had to wait standby,
"chance passenger". You
only get the two for one from certain ticket offices, not at the airport office.
Also, they have other promotions. I
went Davao to Cebu on a "buy 2 get 1 free" that was cheaper than 2
round trips. Air Philippines is having terrific promotions due to the recent
crash near Davao. I doubt
they will crash again soon. Everybody
is discounting flights to Zamboanga, for obvious reasons." Just
in from the Philippines, Dave writes, "The ROYAL PALM in Ermita is a great
place and I highly recommend it. For around P1400 a night you get a nice clean
room with hot shower, super aircon and splendid service. They also have a nice
restaurant/lounge and gaming room. Our
friends Don and Narcing contribute this: "We use a local travel agent who
gets tickets thru Pacific Air Leisure, a consolidator for Philippine Air Lines-
In Los Angeles. Prices vary from
$650 to over $1100, depending on the season.
Philippine Air Lines allows two 70lb Balikbayan boxes per passenger.
Some of the other airlines don't. If
you are going to bring 'pasalubong' you will need two boxes.
We travel light and buy our clothes there (clothes are much cheaper). If
you are going elsewhere in the Islands, like Cebu, Iloilo, Davao, you must pay
extra for the second box, UNLESS you are on PAL
(Philippine Air Lines). PAL also has the Cebu connection which is
included in the price to Manila (Airport Transfers free). If you take a smaller
aircraft, Fokker 50, for example you might have to wait a week for your luggage
to catch up with you. Lyle
in Santa Monica offers the following: "My wife, Lyn, and I use a ticketing
group for Philippine Airlines called Air Cruise Systems.
They are located on Wilshire Blvd. here in L.A. (don't have exact
address, but can get it if you want). The
phone number was 213/381-7877, but the area code might now be 323 as they are
switching numbers within the 213 area code.
Air Cruise has always been good to us.
Please note that they only ticket for Philippine Airlines. Also, for any
folks headed to Cebu and particularly those who want to spend some time on
Mactan Island (where the airport is located), I have a couple of recommendations
on hotels. Certainly, if a guy has
plenty of money to burn you can stay at the Waterfront Hotel, the new Marriott
in Cebu or the Shangri La on Mactan. Cebu
has plenty of swank hotels and resorts. However,
if you want an excellent place to stay near the airport that will not break the
bank, I recommend The Bellavista Hotel. It
is a super place with a beautiful rooftop pool and restaurant.
It is located near the foot of the new Lapu Lapu/Mactan-Mandaue Bridge on
the Mactan-side (on M.L. Quezon Street). I love the place and they treat you so
well. Best of all, you avoid most
of the other foreigners who are more inclined to stay in Cebu...I highly
recommend the Bellavista. Also, there is a relatively new Days Inn Hotel located
very near the Mactan-Cebu Airport. It
is a no frills, plain Jane kinda place, but it's new and the rooms are very
clean and up-to-date. Just what you
would find in a new Days Inn, Courtyard by Marriott, etc.
I spent one night at the Days and it was perfectly fine. Anyone wanting
to know more about Mactan-Cebu can drop me a line.
I try to stay out of Cebu proper as much as possible.
I avoid the tourist scene and tend to mingle with the locals and my
wife's family as much as possible, so I will not be able to tell you much about
the "touristy" parts of the area.
My wife's family lives within walking distance of the Mactan-Cebu
Airport, so I can provide plenty of info. about Lapu Lapu City and the
surrounding area." Iain
suggests: Hotel deals etc. -about the only service I use nowadays for hotels is
Asia Travel. The hotel deals they have cannot be beaten (from a 12 year Asian
road warrior).http://www.asiatravel.com/philippines.html.
Douglas
writes: Here is the place I used for a consolidator fare from Cleveland to Davao.
It was Cleveland to Cincinnati to Los Angeles on Delta then to Manila to Davao
on PAL. It was $1,070 round trip: http://www.saftravel.com/ Call 1-800-800-7510
at SAF Philadelphia, PA and a sk for Merle (Mer-Lee). It would have only been
$860 to Manila. Several
folks have contacted me regarding the new DialPad service at www.dialpad.com.
After signing up (free) you can make free domestic calls to anywhere in
the U.S. I've been told by a few
folks that anyone with a PC in the Philippines can use the service to call a
U.S. destination, too (though you can't call the Philippines from the States -
yet). Ranma
advises us that the current (as of June 2000) airport exit fee in Manila is 550 pesos,
or about $13. Don't arrive at the
terminal without it, or you'll be watching your own flight take off. Fiancé
Sean wrote to say that his fiancee told him that some Americans who frequent the
Clarkton Hotel in Angeles buy their tickets from http://www.aircourier.org/.
I checked out their site and didn't see any Philippine destinations, but
clearly there's no reason for anyone to make something like that up, so possibly
the courier service only posts Philippine destinations when they need something
delivered there. If you're planning
a trip to the islands, it wouldn't hurt you to call them up and see if they have
any unposted tickets available. |




