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  • How to make $350 in 6 hours. Is it worth it?

    How to make $350 in 6 hours. Is it worth it?

    How an offer for free tickets turned into a lot more work than anticipated and how we dealt with all the issues in order to make it home the same day. Lots of tips for what to do if you end up with delayed flights, being transferred between airlines or stuck on the standby list.

    Free tickets! Earn $350 in 4 hours!

    On our way home from our Bourbon Trail weekend, at checkin, the computer asked us if we were willing to take a later flight in exchange for compensation. I said no to the computer (who’s going to accept that offer without knowing the details?), and then went up to the gate agent and said we’d be willing to volunteer if they could get us home the same night. She said she could and rebooked us on a US Airways flight to Charlotte and then on to Denver getting home 4 hours later than planned. For $350/each. $87/hour! Another vacation flight paid for!

    And then … the flight is delayed due to mechanical issues

    The US Airways flight to Charlotte was delayed due to a mechanical issue. They said by at least 30 minutes. At that point it seemed likely we’d miss our connecting flight as we only had an hour layover.

    Always call immediately

    I checked our options, called US Airways and asked if they could confirm us on the later flight to Denver from Charlotte. She said she could not, it was completely booked. She also could not put us on the waitlist – they would have to do that at the airport. I asked what she would do, and she said talk to a customer service representative. I said “not the gate agent?”, and she said no, customer service. There was a long line at the gate, so I went looking for customer service.

    Look for customer service

    An American Airlines representative informed me that there was no customer service desk, as Louisville International Airport (with no international flights) is not a big enough airport for one. He told me a month from now, when the US Airways-American Airlines computers are merged, he could help me. He said the best person to talk to would be someone at the ticket counter but he didn’t recommend leaving the secure area.

    Maximize your opportunities to get help: stand in line and call

    So I got back in line at the gate. I was in that line for 50 minutes and I never did get to the front. I called US Airways back. This time I was told there was a 20 minute hold. Turned into 40 minutes. During which time the gate agent informed us that the mechanics had still not shown up. So getting to Charlotte that evening was looking highly unlikely. After 40 minutes on hold on the phone, an agent answered and I asked if she could book us on the 7:40pm United flight to Chicago and on from there. She put me on hold for over 10 minutes.

    Check directly with the other airlines if you want to be on their flights

    Frank walked up at this point to see if he could stand in line for a bit and let me sit. I sent him off to find the gate for the United flight to Chicago to ask if they could get us on. The US Airways agent on the phone came back and told me that she could rebook me for the morning flight through Charlotte getting into Denver Monday at 1:20pm. I said what about the Chicago flight and she said there are no seats. At this point, I get a call from Frank. I ask the US Airways agent to hold. (Putting her on hold was pretty satisfying after being on hold for almost an hour.) Frank says United can get us to Chicago but only one of us can go on to Denver that night. I say take it and start running (literally) for the United gate. (It’s 7:20 at this point. The flight is supposed to leave at 7:40.)

    Airlines never communicate very well with each other

    I switch back to US Airways tell the agent that United can get us to Chicago, can she get us to Denver? She says we can’t get to Chicago. I say we can get to Chicago. United can get us there. Can you get us from Chicago to Denver? We repeat that conversation a couple of times. She says no seats from Chicago to Denver. I say, yes, but do you have flights? I ask 3 times. She finally starts listing flights.

    Tickets caught in limbo land between airlines

    Some of my most frustrating moments have been getting airlines to talk to each other.

    When I arrive at the United gate, the agent (the same one we’d worked with to get the US Airways tickets) tells me that US Airways has to transfer the ticket back to them. Or US Airways can just book the two empty seats. The US Airways agent insists she can’t, that it’s not her ticket. I finally hand the phone to the United agent. The United agent gives up explaining it too and hands it back to me. I tell the US Airways agent that I really need her to transfer the ticket and she transfers me to United!

    Try hanging up and calling back if the agent can’t help you

    I hang up on the United answering machine and call US Airways back. This time there’s no hold. The United agent tells me to ask them to uncheck me from the flight and the US Airways guy that answers this time is able to do that.

    Sometimes status helps. And sometimes people are really nice.

    Meantime, the United agent, using my gold/million miler status has gotten an ok to let us board the flight without boarding passes. She tells us to get on the plane and she’ll take care of things. For the record, I think she is behind most of the things that went our way that evening. I would love to thank her!

    Always ask at least twice. The average human can’t say no 7 times in a row.

    She has on the flight to Chicago, and we have confirmed seats on the 5am flight to Denver. She says when we get to Chicago, we should have customer service put us on the standby list of the 10pm flight to Denver. I ask her if she can put us on the standby list. She says to do it in Chicago. I say please. She says ok, she’ll do it.

    The missing bourbon!

    Frank asks about our luggage. (He’s really just concerned about our bourbon!) She says she’ll walk over to US Airways and have them send it to Denver. I write down the claim numbers of our two bags and we get on the flight – emergency row seats, together!

    Where will the baggage go?

    Frank says we should check the baggage claim in Chicago to see if they send our bags there. I say, if they make this flight (which seems impossible as I ran to the gate and they don’t really know we are on it), they are tagged for Denver. But no way are we getting it until 1:20pm tomorrow when the US Airways flight gets in. Frank worries about his bourbon. I think there’s a possibility the bags will be transferred back to United and then they might make the direct morning flight that gets in at 10:20am. Frank says baggage that’s late usually gets delivered to the house, so we won’t have to go back to the airport to get it. We decide to check on our baggage in Chicago.

    Think out your options ahead, know what you want.

    We discuss our options and decide if there’s a good chance we can make the 10pm flight, we’ll wait at the Chicago airport to see. If there’s little chance, we’ll ask for a comped hotel room and go out to dinner.

    Did someone lie to us?

    At the United Club in Chicago, the customer service agent tells us that our bags are in Denver! They had flown on our original flight. She gives us the number for the locker or holding tank they are in.

    I was shocked. Not only had the United gate agent gone down to describe our bags so that they could pull them off, but the US Airways gate agent had called down to verify that they were at his gate. Had the person that verified they were there just flat out lied about it?

    The agent in Chicago confirmed that we were on the waitlist for the Chicago to Denver evening flight and that we were number 1 and 2 on the list. (Yeah, Louisville gate agent!) She gave us about a 50/50 chance of getting on. They were oversold and everyone was checked in but several flights were late so people might not make it.

    Super confident sounding people are not always experts

    We got on the Chicago to Denver flight that evening. We got the last two seats on the airplane and they closed the door right behind us.

    When we got to Denver, we went to collect our bags and we were told they were not in Denver and had never been in Denver! They had been scanned in Louisville for our original flight but had not been scanned off in Denver nor had they been scanned any where else. We filled out a missing baggage claim with United and she assured us that as soon as US Airways scanned them, she would see them and we’d be updated via email. For the record, I got an email every 6 hours for the next 24 hours, all of which said they had no update.

    Always check with all possible people that might help, especially if they work for different airlines

    We then walked down to US Airways to ask about our bags. She said they’d been scanned in Charlotte and would be on the first flight to Denver in the morning and she’d walk them over to United to send to us. (So I assume had we not gone through all of our extra efforts, we too would have ended up in Charlotte for the night.)

    When I called the next day, they said the bags would be in the Denver airport at 6pm Monday and brought to us that evening.

    At 10:30pm, they confirmed the bags were out with a driver (and even sent me his name and picture.) I opted to have them leave them on the front porch and not ring the door bell.

    Unfortunately, I forgot to notify our dog of the plan and he went nuts at 1:30am and once I woke up enough, I knew immediately that our bourbon was home!

    Was it worth it?

    Was it all worth it? I definitely thought it was worth it when I thought we’d get $350 for arriving a few hours late. And along the way we could read a book and chat. Was the $350 we got for arriving 6 hours late worth all the hassle we went through?

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  • What’s the deal with Uber?

    What’s the deal with Uber?

    Uber is the new taxi. Uber is to taxis what Airbnb is to hotels. People driving their own cars pick up passengers and give them rides.

    My friends in San Francisco are always “ubering it”. We’ll wrap up the evening and they’ll “call an uber”. The biggest advantage to me has always seemed that you can just call a car to you, using an app on your phone, much easier than you can find a taxi . And once you’ve called an Uber, you can track where it is and when it’s going to arrive.

    In preparation for our trip to the Kentucky Bourbon trail, I wanted to try out Uber. We are staying at an Airbnb in a neighborhood and I don’t think taxis will be easy to find.

    I decided San Francisco would be the place to try it out. I was there on a business trip and everyone I know in San Francisco seems to use Uber.

    I went to the Uber website and signed up for an account. I figured it would be easier to enter my profile information and my credit card number on my computer than on my phone.

    I installed the app on my phone. I tried getting an estimate for what a ride to the airport would cost and it told me to check out the website for an idea of what rides in San Francisco cost, so I gave up on that.

    Then I had a few minutes of anxiety when I realized I had a whole bunch of questions.

    • Do you sit in the front seat or the back seat of an uber? (Either but most people sit in the back.)
    • What’s the difference between UberPool, UberX, UberXL, Uber Black, SUV and Lux? (That’s in order of cheapest to most expensive. UberPool is a carpooling option, UberX is like a taxi ride in someone’s personal car, UberXL is a bigger car, Uber Black is like a car service – fancier car, etc.)
    • How do you know how much it will cost in advance? (No idea.)

    Then I checked out of my hotel and went to the street.  When I opened the app, I saw a map and you can see all the little Uber cars driving around near you.

    Uber screenshot

    I confirmed my pickup location. This turned out to be the only (very slightly) tricky part. Uber knows where you are from your phone’s GPS and puts a pin on the map. My pin showed me in the middle of Union Square instead of in front of my hotel door, so I had to move the pin to an approximation of where I thought I was. (All the while I’m eyeing the line of taxis in the street in front of me, but I thought, no, I’m trying this out before we go to Kentucky.)

    After I confirmed my pickup location, it asked me where I wanted to go.

    It then told me at least 3 times that there was a surge in price due to high demand. I even had to type in the surge amount (1.6x) to confirm that I still wanted to use Uber.

    I received a picture of the car, the car model name and license plate number as well as a picture of my driver and I could watch my car drive up on the map.

    When the car showed up, everything matched, and the driver confirmed my name too.

    Once I got in the car, it was very much like a taxi. My driver turned out to be a sushi chef who gives rides on Uber on his day off for more cash.

    When I got out of the car at the airport, I immediately got a notice in the Uber app of how much my ride had cost. I still don’t know how they calculated the price but it seemed comparable to what I’ve paid cabs in the past for that same ride, even with the surge pricing.

    All in all, it was a good experience. To me the key was the great app. I’ve often wished cab companies I’ve dealt with had a decent app.

    If you decide to try Uber for the first time, you can use the code uberstormyinvite for a free $20 ride. If you do so, I will also get a free $20 ride the next time I use Uber.

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  • The secret to getting lots of travel miles

    The secret to getting lots of travel miles

    Everyone assumes that I get lots of airline and hotel points from traveling. I don’t get them from traveling. I get most of my points from credit cards.

    There are two ways to get travel points from credit cards.

    1. Sign up bonuses. Most cards offer a sign up bonus. Sometimes they offer an amazing sign up bonus. A couple of years ago British Airways offered 100,000 Avios points for signing up for their card and spending a few thousand dollars. I flew 3 of us to the British Virgin Islands on those points. Actually, I flew 3 of us down and 2 of us back. I debated just staying there but ended up buying a one way ticket back. Most offers aren’t that good but almost all travel cards offer some sort of initial bonus.
    2. Earning points for spending money. All cards offer points for dollars spent, so you can earn points over time. I like earning Starwood points with my American Express Starwood card. We stayed at the W in the French Quarter every April for years on the points from that card. (We now use Airbnb’s.)

    A couple of things to keep in mind:

    1. One time deals. If you plan to travel within the United States in one year, you should know that Southwest will fly a companion for free on every flight you take if you earn 110,000 points in one year. So if you plan on traveling a lot next year with a partner, you should get the Southwest credit card (with 50,000 bonus points) and a Southwest business credit card (with 50,000 points) – start an LLC if you have to.
    2. How to find deals. I don’t get any referral fees or points from recommending credit cards and I don’t follow all the deals. If you want to find out about the latest deals, I recommend following a blog like The Points Guy or One Mile at a Time.
    3. Getting the deal again. Most credit cards will let you reapply for their initial sign up bonus every two years, so be sure to cancel any cards you aren’t using.

    Have you found any good deals or ways to get points for travel?

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  • What room am I staying in?

    What room am I staying in?

    Have you ever forgotten what hotel room you were staying in? I have. Actually, I never know what number my room is, I just remember where it is – which hall and approximately where in the hall. And if I stay at the same hotel multiple times in a row, I have no idea which one is mine. (If my key card doesn’t work, I immediately quit trying, move away from the door, pretend I’m walking down the hall and try to remember which room I’m in.)

    The now antiquated tech way to remember which room you are in is to take a picture.

    Picture of hotel room number sign
    Helpful cell phone picture of tonight’s hotel room number

    The new way is to check in with the hotel app. You never even have to stop at the front desk. You check in to your hotel room like you check into your flight. On your phone. The app lets you check in, gives you a room and can always remind you which room you are in. And you don’t even need a key – your phone unlocks the door. Starwood Hotels are the first ones to let you check in with your phone and open your door with your phone using Bluetooth.

    I wonder if you’ll be able to walk down the hall until you hear one of the doors click open?

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  • Having fun flying with little kids

    Having fun flying with little kids

    I loved airports and airplanes with my kids when they little. Now at 8 and 14 years old, they are jaded.

    But at 1.5 years old they were awesome fun. We explored airports, rode the moving sidewalks, ate fast food, and watched airplanes.

    small child in a newspaper dispenser

    And we checked out the airplane safety card. You know that one you always tell the flight attendant you’ve read when you sit in the emergency row but you’ve never really looked at? My oldest still loves the airline catalog with all the crazy gadgets that you can buy.

    small child in a business class airline seat
    What a waste! A business class seat for a one year old!

    My partner says I’m the only person who gets excited when they sit next to a baby on an airplane. I’ve let them sit on my lap to see out the window. And on a long flight to China, I helped a frantic mother with a toddler and an infant. I took the baby, who promptly fell asleep and drooled all over my shirt. The three grandmothers behind me said it wasn’t fair I got to hold him. None of us offered to chase the toddler around.

    And yes, sometimes kids get upset. And sometimes they cry. And sometimes people around you get upset. But I figure usually the parents are more upset than the kids. And the more upset the parents, the more upset the kids become.

    And to that guy in the window seat … the one that made us get up 4 times during a 2 hour flight … just as my toddler fell asleep each time. And then you dared to say that you gave him a “B”. I give you an “F”!

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  • Best day of the week to travel to avoid crowds

    Best day of the week to travel to avoid crowds

    If you are looking to avoid crowds, the best day of the week to travel is Tuesday or Wednesday.

    TSA lines are short and airplanes are as empty as they come these days.

    An empty flight doesn’t always mean a peaceful flight though. On my flight to Denver on Wednesday, the man seated across the aisle from me drank two half bottles of red wine. He then fell asleep and snored loud enough to keep even the soundest sleeping babies awake.

    My flight on Wednesday to London.

    Legs across empty airplane seats
    Empty flight to London on a Wednesday

    My flight on Tuesday back to Denver.

    Rows of empty airplane seats
    Empty flight to Denver on a Tuesday
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