Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread makes me feel very, very poor.
I wonder how people justify the price of these hotels and wonder how much time people actually spend there awake.
We travel a lot but stay in Marriotts. We spend our vacation money on dining and activities. Others spend on the hotel.
To each their own....
No we have money for dining, activities AND hotel.
There is a sliding scale of money. I have more than you, but someone else has more than me. Envy is ugly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread makes me feel very, very poor.
I wonder how people justify the price of these hotels and wonder how much time people actually spend there awake.
We travel a lot but stay in Marriotts. We spend our vacation money on dining and activities. Others spend on the hotel.
To each their own....
Anonymous wrote:The Amangiri in southern Utah, right on the Arizona border and near Lake Powell. Unbelievable place, so woven into the nature of the desert.
Little Dix Bay, BVIs - love, love, love
Burj Al Arab
FS Bora Bora
FS Istanbul
Park Hyatt Buenos Aires

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread makes me feel very, very poor.
I wonder how people justify the price of these hotels and wonder how much time people actually spend there awake.
We travel a lot but stay in Marriotts. We spend our vacation money on dining and activities. Others spend on the hotel.
To each their own....
It's been mentioned a couple of times by others, but just to note that I've stayed in a lot of these hotels -- on business. A lot of these people are on expense accounts. These hotels are nice, but I've also learned that most of them are really not worth spending my own money on. For example, I've stayed at the Scottsdale Princess that several have mentioned, and I don't even really remember it, other than it seemed like your generic nice hotel. I pay for location if it's my own money. Sometimes it's 5 star, and sometimes it's not. My "best" experiences were at amazing places -- the Hotel Hana Maui (a long time ago, I think it's changed hands and gone downhill since), for example. We stayed at an amazing "glamping" place in Montana that cost as much as a five star hotel.
It's really sad to me that Acapulco has become so dangerous. The Princess there used to be amazing. Every room had its own private swimming pool, came with its own pink jeep, and the staff were ninjas. You never saw them. There was a niche in the wall of your room where they'd put hot coffee and pastries in the morning (from the outside, you accessed it from a door on the inside). They'd come float hibiscus in your pool every morning. The view was amazing. Real old-world glamour.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread makes me feel very, very poor.
I wonder how people justify the price of these hotels and wonder how much time people actually spend there awake.
We travel a lot but stay in Marriotts. We spend our vacation money on dining and activities. Others spend on the hotel.
To each their own....
Anonymous wrote:Four seasons Maui
Kona Village - destroyed by tsunami ;-(
Westin St. John - not as luxury but an amazing location
Liberty in Boston (its an old jail)
Mena House in Giza
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Delano in Miami
pretty awesome hotel and pool bar
Not so much, anymore