Anonymous wrote:I didn’t hate it, but San Antonio was pretty dull to me. The Riverwalk is pretty and takes about an hour and there is the Alamo, but not much else. I am glad my trip there was for work and not on my own dime.
Anonymous wrote:Lake como. Tourist trap. Unbelievably busy. Super expensive
Anonymous wrote:I hated Paris. It was crowded, dirty, and I didn’t enjoy the food.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lake como. Tourist trap. Unbelievably busy. Super expensive
Ugh hate to hear it. We’re debating spending a night or two en route from Switzerland to Austria but I’ve heard this a lot lately.
Go to the smaller lakes. You can do day trips to Como.
Anonymous wrote:I am never setting foot in the Orlando area again. It's like Yogi Berra said: "Nobody goes there anymore. It's too crowded."
Anonymous wrote:Miami Beach. Awful. Spent $12k that was a total mistake. What a waste.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think I've hated anywhere, but I wouldn't return to Bali.
Same about Bali. Glad I went but see no reason to recommend it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lake como. Tourist trap. Unbelievably busy. Super expensive
Ugh hate to hear it. We’re debating spending a night or two en route from Switzerland to Austria but I’ve heard this a lot lately.
Anonymous wrote:Lake como. Tourist trap. Unbelievably busy. Super expensive
Anonymous wrote:I don't think I've hated anywhere, but I wouldn't return to Bali.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Disney
Isle of palms (what were we thinking??)
India
The coliseum
The safari (way too much money and a terrible experience (
Tell us more about the safari… did you go mid-range (which is still thousands and thousands vs $20K+, so it’s all relative). What country?
I’m not the pp. I loved the safari I went on in Kenya and Tanzania, and it was very budget-friendly. The lodges were fine. Our guide was excellent. The people in our group of 8 were wonderful. Then I met up with a friend at a very nice lodge in Kenya (from which most people were headed out on an expensive safari) for 2 nights and I was miserable. Other guests were crazy rude—got in fights with each other. There was a group of Chinese tourists, and Australian and German tourists used racial epithets. Every person working there was constantly trying to upsell us on every single thing. And for the money this place cost, nothing was really that nice. It was miserable. I’d hired one of the drivers from my first, cheap safari to pick me up from this place and take me to the airport and I’ve never been so happy to see anyone. So, it’s not all about money you spend.
Weird. Sounds janky. Never heard of upselling at a reputable luxury lodge and I’ve been to multiple Botswana, Rwanda, and South Africa luxury lodges (Londolozi, Wilderness, Great Plains, etc).
It’s absolutely the norm, but it’s subtly done usually and if you aren’t money conscious you might not even notice it’s happening. Sometimes it’s via texts or emails you receive right before your stay notifying you of experiences or things that, wow luckily, have become available. At restaurants, it might be a special tasting you hadn’t asked about. Transportation options you hadn’t known about. Spa treatments that are similar to but better than the one you requested. But it’s not like the ladies in your salon upselling you—it’s gentle. Luxury lodgings of all types around the world are upselling every minute.
Idk how I could be upsold at Londolozi or Singita. Every single thing (including all activities, multiple course meals, top shelf liquor and reserve wines) was included in the $2500-3000+ per person / per night rate except the spa which was never promoted to us. Even the minibar in our room with top shelf alcohol was included and technically “endless.”