Tips for finding the cheapest flights (Q&A with Andoni Arandia)

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Have you ever wondered what’s the best way to search for cheap flights? We’ve asked Andoni Arandia who loves flying and keeps track of every single flight (over 270) he has taken so far.

What’s your recommendation to buy cheap flights?

Being a budget traveler translates into being flexible with travel plans and going a step further when planning the trip.

As far as the flexibility is concerned, longer layovers and alternative airports may provide the best travel deal. Low cost carriers have found the operational taxes to be lower in smaller airports, usually located further from the main tourist spots and translate this saving to the seats’ prices. Travelers can choose to fly to an alternative airport such as Reus or Girona for Barcelona, Stansted for London, Prestwick for Glasgow, Bergamo for Milan or Beauvais for Paris.

As for the planning, the travelers must scan all fares from low cost airlines and even make up connections that may result in a cheaper travel option than a non-stop flight. As an example, the Amsterdam – Madrid route is operated by four carriers, one of them the low cost airline EasyJet, but the cheapest way to get there might be connecting in London Stansted.

Where do you search for cheap flights (travel portals, flight ticket search engines, airline web pages) and why?

Where to search the lowest fares depends on the route to be flown. Intra-european low cost routes and fares are best captured in skyscanner.net. For those passengers that cannot afford to fly to alternate airports and are restricted in terms of schedule, I always suggest kayak. Kayak’s US website (kayak.com) has different deals to their French (kayak.fr) website or their British website (kayak.co.uk), so I suggest checking them all; however the best deals are usually in the US site (kayak.com).

As a traveller who always is connected to the internet, which applications do you recommend to buy airline tickets and keep track of your flights on the go?

As an iPhone user, the do-not-miss applications for me are Kayak, XE Currency and AroundMe.

Kayak has a feature to display trips, called Kayak Trips. All your trips can be managed there, no matter whether they have been book on Kayak or not. Flight itineraries, hotel stays and car reservations are arranged by trip and can be navigated through conveniently.

XE Currency is the easiest currency convertor in the market and AroundMe allows travelers to search for bars, restaurants, hotels, hospitals and other venues around them.

Thanks Andoni for sharing with us your tips.  For those interested in keeping up with what Andoni’s up to, you can have a look to his blog.

Basque Country Traditions — Dining Out at a Sagardotegia (Cider House)

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If you should decide to visit the Basque Country between January and May, one of the truest experiences you could live is dinner at a sagardotegia. That’s what folks around here call the local cider houses. Fact is, if you combine the Basque word “sagarra” (apple) with the word “ardoa” (wine) and “tegi” (place) you’ll get a clue of what the topic for this post is.

Cider houses are firmly rooted all around the outskirts of San Sebastian, scattered as they are in neighboring villages such as Astigarraga, Hernani and Urnieta. Inside refurbished farm houses, some more than others, (all, however, preserving an exquisite ancient charm), one can savor a simple, mouth-watering menu. As a starter, there’s pork sausage awash in cider, cod omelette or, its equally succulent alternative, cod with peppers. Second up, is a Basque-size T-bone steak. Desserts include cheese with quince and locally produced biscuits. All of the above, of course, are accompanied by all the cider you can drink, served straight from huge, wooden cider barrels. A warning based on first-hand experience: never underestimate the elixir-like qualities of this beverage.

The tradition of dining out at sagardotegias dates back to the days when customers, restaurants and dining clubs would get together to sample the season’s vintage before it was bottled up. Naturally, everyone would bring along their home-prepared afternoon snacks to share with all those present. The custom of eating while standing and from the same plate originated here. Also born here was a prevailing spirit of conviviality that persists to this day — groups of friends mixing it up, talking animatedly, singing and laughing around the barrels, which surround the eating area or are strategically situated off to the side in adjoining annexes. Everyone awaits the “txotx” or the cry of the cider house’s proprietor announcing refills.

Photo by adriagarcia

Without a doubt, cider houses are one of the Basque Country’s most enduring and beloved cultural traditions.

New blog developments

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One of our main goals for the year 2010 is to transform our blog into a communications and conversation forum for all of you travellers who’ve been following us. In order to achieve this, it’s necessary to veer off in a completely different direction.

As you’ll see, the first step we’ve taken is to substantially redesign the blog.  We’ve retired forever the previous template (too industrial, we felt), looking to replace it with a more attractive space, more in sync with the rest of the platform.

What do you think?

Our second step will be a noticeable change in the content we share with you and a regular update of same. Our aim is to never limit ourselves to mere project novelties and initiatives, but to convert the trourist blog into a genuine travel blog. Some of our ideas include interviewing travellers and commenting on what it means to trot the globe, little nuggets of information that will help you develop a ”feel” for specific destinations and opinions regarding news that affects travellers.

Lastly, what we most aspire to receiving are those ideas which interest you most.

Hey, we have a Traveller Pack winner!

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Happy New Year to one and all! From the trourist team to you, we hope that you’ve enjoyed some super-fun holidays with your buds and loved ones and have kicked off 2010 with the biggest of smiles.

We don’t know if you’ve been fortunate enough to hit the road during this Xmas period. At trourist, we’ve pretty much stayed at home here in San Sebastián, but managed to travel far and wide through the diverse, cool experiences many of you shared with us in our first real experience contest.

It’s been a fulfilling and fun trip. Maria Agirre turned us on to a very special bar in Berlin. Bryan brought us to one of the most important summits in the Orizaba region of Mexico. Ibon Sotil shared with us a strange ritual practiced along the Ganges river bank. Sabine Gabrielle had us sleeping by a waterfall in Thailand. Carmen Andres showed us the real-feel of an Irish brewery. Isabel Fernandez introduced us to a quite charming eatery in Tangiers. David Domingo invited us to catch forty winks by the sea in Stockholm. Lastly, Sandra infused us with the magical splendor one can breathe in Buenos Aires’ most emblematic library.

However, the experience that earned the highest number of points from the jury was the one submitted by Mariel Perez:

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Congrats, Mariel! Enjoy to the max 100€ from HostelWorld and Ryanair that we’re passing on to you. We hope you’ll jot down all those real and special experiences you encounter in your Moleskine and share them with us when you get back from your trip.

Voting results can be checked out in this GoogleDocs document.

This Christmas it’s our turn to drop off the goodies

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Hey! We wanna give away a goodies-filled travel pack this Christmas!!!

This is our first Christmas together, so it’s only natural that we at trourist want to celebrate the holidays with you. In the spirit of Yuletide giving, some lucky person out there is going to win a travel-pack complete with a Moleskine agenda containing vouchers from HostelWorld and Ryanair worth 100 euros each, usable on your very next get-away.

To have a chance at winning this cool holiday gift, all you have to do is write a first-person account of your best trourist experience. The fortunate winner will be chosen from all the experiences submitted. Submission of experiences begins today and has a cut-off deadline date of midnight (24:00) Christmas Eve, 2009.

One word of advice, travellers: forget any notion of sharing stories about typical tourist traps. We want trourist
experiences, genuine experiences lived by you during your recent travels or accounts of radical things to do right in your own backyard, places that mere tourists could ever find on their own.

The contest winner will be chosen by the following passionate travellers:

Erica Johansson, Travel Blissful.
Cate Dowman, The Caffeinated Traveller.
Katja Hentschel, Travelettes.
Ryan Gargiulo, Pause The Moment.

Thanks, everybody and remember: Keep travelling real!!

Travel philosophy behind trourist (Slideshare presentation)

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The way we communicate our message might vary, sometimes we’ve benefit from video, others we have used text and now we have decided to do a presentation. BUT, our message, our principles and our travel philosophy ALWAYS keeps the same: Live the destinations instead of visiting them.

Trourist at Re’09 video-post

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Last week the Trourist team had the opportunity to go to Barcelona to present the company at the Re’09 event, organized by Infonomía. But apart from presenting trourist and working as part of the staff, we also had time to learn from the keynotes and the activities organized. I would like to highlight the following topics:

- Africa: Unfortunately, Africa is often out of this type of events. But it didn’t happen at the Re’09. Antonella Broglia talked to us about the opportunities for investors at this country. Her vision was reaffirmed by  Xumo Nounjio, an artist and entrepreneur from Camerun. He said “In Africa there is no need for rice; all we need are firms which respect our identity”.

- Abilities:  Eric Villalón let us know about the development of personal abilities from his own experience. I made it mine one of the ideas he talked about: “We all have abilities to do big things; we’ll only need hard work and perseverance to achieve them”.

- EmotionsXesco Espar showed us emotions aren’t static and can be controlled. “Don’t be afraid of falling down; just try not to be long time down there”.

- Trends: Economical, technological, educational and social trends also came up during the two days.

Trourist opens its doors

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Today is a very special day for all of us who’ve been working for over a year on trourist. The day for our official launch has arrived. It is time to unveil ourselves to the world!!!

For the last three months we’ve been operating on private BETA, and we wish to thank all those travelers who contributed truly helpful ideas and suggestions so that we could take trourist to the next level.

Without further ado, here are some of the main improvements you’ll now find:

- Explore the world through trourist. We’ve added a navigable map in which zeppelins will ‘fly’ you to assorted destinations on the globe where a trourist experience has taken place. On the same page, we’ve highlighted notable trends to illustrate what’s happening out there (cities with the largest number of trourists, most frequented cities, and so on).

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- Share city experiences. It’s no longer necessary to create a trip to upload an experience. This makes it much easier for you to share with your friends those experiences that make a city so special.

- Facebook connect and g-mail finder. With these two new applications, sharing trourist with your friends will be a snap and the experience of doing so a lot more fun. Besides, those experiences you create in trourist will be included in your facebook newsfeed so that even more friends can learn that a new way to travel is possible.

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Okay, we’ve informed you. The best thing now is for you to check out these new improvements for yourself.
Lastly, let us encourage you to share with your friends and other trourists the most genuine and rewarding experiences you’ve lived this summer.

We sincerely hope you enjoy trourist and find it useful.

ExperienceLess

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Eight cities. Thirty-three days. 12.500 kilometers. A motor home transformed into a zeppelin. And one goal: live those experiences hidden to anyone traveling as a tourist; plus, get to know cities with the help of others and enlist the participation of its people.To sum up, that’s been ExperienceLess, an eight-city romp full of rewarding impressions from both a personal and professional standpoint.

ExperienceLess is a spinoff of trourist.com, created for the two-fold purpose of enjoying  unique experiences among friends and underscoring our principal ideal: to live the places, rather than merely visit them. During our crusade, we’ve scampered through Paris, Amsterdam, Berlin, Prague, Budapest, Istambul and Barcelona – cities in which we often resorted to the unconventional in order to meet our objectives.

Seated in squares, parks, even a metro, we’ve held up a cardboard poster bearing the message: “Help! I’m ExperienceLess. I don’t want to visit your city, I want to live it. Thanks.” As you can readily see, our setting was not unlike that of a homeless person and the name of our project’s initiative was not pure happenstance.

Admittedly, there were people who when they saw us understood nothing. Others observed us with indifference. Generally speaking, though, we were quite pleased with the hospitality shown. People gave their time and interest so that we could walk away from their cities with more than just mute stares from historical buildings and museums.

Our backpack of experiences was filled with all kinds of goodies: home-cooked Dutch cuisine with a student in Amsterdam; a hoola-hoop class in a Berlin park, a birthday bash with a Budapest boy, smoking a water pipe atop an Istanbul rooftop, and collectively cooking a potato omelet with a couple in Barcelona, with a follow-up concert to boot. Not bad for four amigos who before the trip were ExperienceLess.

Our first 33 days as an experienceless

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