General Holiday Enquiries, Hints and Tips

General Holiday Enquiries? Got General Hints & Tips? Post Them Here.
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:clap :clap :clap well said Shirley h

Being one of those effected by it I couldnt agree more

Lynn
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There is no doubt that many people are feeling the pinch.

We are retired and so our income is fixed.

The weekly shopping bill has risen although it is still very much the same items every week.

We went to Spain for a week in February and I had £150 left in euros when I came back. They are now worth £138.

Just been talking to our son who has been on holiday in San Francisco since the middle of February - he come back at the end of the month and he is in for a shock.

We notice how prices have crept up but for him it will be a big jump.

I have booked a holiday for October to Cyprus and watching the prices now they seem to be rising a fair amount over what I have paid.

If that is reflected across the board and money is short then I can see problems for the travel industry as many will not be able to afford.

I see it being a case of a roof over your head or a holiday in the sun for many.

I have a lot of sympathy for those who try to manage on a budget, yet some I know would seem to have their heads buried in the sand.

Yes the housing boom has fuelled much of peoples fun for some time but the only winners at the end are the banks.

I doubt that things will get better soon so we might see much on HT about where to go in the UK rather than abroad.

At least if that happens you won't be stuck in an airport with your luggage in another.

fwh
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Posted by Wizard:

but other cost are now less, our food bill for the 2 of us is about 25% less, not that we have not changed our shopping habits, one delivery Indian's/Chinese/Turkish/or whatever a week, meat from a Butcher and fresh SEASONAL veg from the farm shop, [all we get from the supermarket is dry goods,bread,milk, etc no ready meals]

Hi,

I'm amazed that your food bill is DOWN by 25%! :really Wherever do you shop? My food bill has defintely risen, and I've heard other people saying exactly the same.

Strawberry
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Weak pound sends eurozone holiday costs sky high

The plummeting value of the pound will lead to a steep rise in the cost of trips to the eurozone this year.

But summer holidays elsewhere in Europe and in the US should offer better value, according to the annual Post Office Holiday Costs Barometer.

Bulgaria has again emerged as the cheapest European destination, although more expensive than in 2007, followed closely by Turkey.

With a rate rise against sterling of around nine per cent for the Turkish lira - compared with 15% for the euro, Turkey currently looks best value among the mass market holiday destinations. An evening meal out for two, including wine, costs £30.14, at least 20% less than in France, Greece, Portugal or Italy.

Spain emerges as the cheapest place to holiday in the eurozone - up to 15% less for tourist staples than the most expensive destinations, France, Portugal and Italy.

Cheapest overall destinations in the Barometer were the long haul trio of Thailand, South Africa and Egypt.

At £28.58 for 10 holiday commodities, including drinks and meals out, Thailand weighed in at under a third the cost of the same items in Australia and well under half the average price of the shopping basket across the eurozone.

Rated most expensive last year, the US has now overtaken the eurozone resorts to become the seventh cheapest of 16 destinations surveyed.

The 2008 report puts the cost of a bottle of Coca-Cola in Florida at £1.60, compared with £2.94 in France, while sun cream will cost around £5 - half the price in Greece.

New entrants to the eurozone, Malta and Cyprus, have both seen price rises since they adopted the euro on January 1. However, Malta emerges from the survey as one of the cheaper destinations, second only to Spain.

But Cyprus has become one of the more expensive resort areas in the survey. Prices for the holiday items have risen by 32% since the changeover to the euro. Allowing for the nine per cent rise in the value of the euro since the beginning of the year, this suggests a price hike of 23% on the items surveyed.

The Barometer also compares the cost of car hire across the 16 destinations and found Spain to be the most expensive country at £58.87 for one day's rental. In the eurozone Italy was cheapest at £16.82 whilst motorists in Florida would pay £28.06 and in Turkey £38.75.

Helen Warburton, Post Office head of travel, said: "Holidaymakers planning trips further afield this year will get excellent value for money by travelling to long haul destinations.

"The pound is still strong against the US dollar and the new Open Skies agreement introduced this month should mean cheaper flights in the future.

"Elsewhere, sterling is up over eight per cent against the rand, making South Africa a good choice for UK tourists, and booming sales of Egyptian and Thai currency indicate that holidaymakers are already opting for trips where their pounds will stretch further."

She added: "Looking forward we believe that holidaymakers will be smarter about where they choose to go this year.

"Prices vary quite significantly within Europe so people will be looking to visit countries where a lower cost of living will offer them more for their pound, like Spain and Turkey."

With permission from Travelmole
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The question really is not how cheap it is in Bulgaria but will many people actually be able to afford a holiday?

If you have already booked then you are part way there. But how many having booked have suddenly found themselves with large rises in their mortgage and other bills.

Even having booked, you need to pay the balance and find your pocket money. With the change in the Euro and rising prices both here and abroad you need to budget on around 20 to 25% to match last years spending.

Those who have been hanging on hoping to grab a last minute bargain are not immune. Again rising mortgage costs and prices will limit how much people have.

Credit cards may help but how much more are prices going to rise this year. Might sound silly on a cold day in April but once you return from the holiday Christmas will be looming fast.

I personally have no problem paying for this years holidays - the first being given to us as a present so the second is well covered.

Next year? Well that is going to be wait and see what we can afford. The second one might not happen.

fwh
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Wherever do you shop


as i have said.. meat comes from a butcher not pre packed argon packed supermarket rubbish.. it is cheaper and better quality than the main supermarkets, our biggest savings are in the fruit and veg line, again we do the local farm shops, for fresh in season fruit and veg, NO imported sweetcorn/runner beans/potatoes/cabbage just whatever has been picked fresh that day.... this wont work if you / your kids are fussy eaters if like myself [and the way we bought up our kids] you eat whatever is on the plate then its fine..

PS not great fish eaters but again if we are near the coast at about high tide we will go and buy direct from the boat ..again whatever is the catch of the day

wizard
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We went to Spain for a week in February and I had £150 left in euros when I came back. They are now worth £138.


I thought they'd be worth more now not less!
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I thought they'd be worth more now not less!


Exactly, glad you posted, I thought it was wrong as well. I brought some home from the Algarve early in the year for my next trip @ 1.37 and thought that was a bad deal, wish I could get it now!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
It will sort itself out in the end, hopefully.

Robby :wink:
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Me too I bought 400 Euros back from the Algarve last July. Now glad I hung on to them.
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well I have about 60 euros left from last year. I'll maybe get an extra couple of pints out of it! :cheers
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One place I won't be going is cyprus. Went there 20 years ago and it was expensive then and sounds even more expensive now. how about in 1986 a fresh orange juice and a barcardi and coke, £5 unless you were willing to drink the locally produce nasty stuff it was expensive. How can the euro be good for anybody. The prices have gone up since the came in in cyprus which you can bet your bottom dollar the people working won't see any rise in the pay packet. This is what happened in spain when I was there, local people complaining in their wages they get exactle to the cent their wages euro's as with the pesata, but evrything has gone up 20%. Greece prices went up 30% and in germany they were switching markes for euro's double the price. After all the price increases the european central bank will still say inflation is 2%, they must work closely with brown because his inflation figures has nothing to do with real world prices.

I saw on teletext tourist rates 1.18 euro's to the £ quoted.

Sounds like I will have to have a holiday in thialand next year. I am hoping for plenty of bargains next july as booking are down. Who knows this year might be flooded with late deals as people cancel not being able to pay the balance on their holiday. Well my holiday is still in the balance until a miracle happens between now and the end of may. Nothing to do with the credit crunch, invested money hit by 2 large bills but I am not going the credit card route to pay for a holiday. Will just go later in the year or jan, feb somewhere hot.
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The second one might not happen


Same here. We're on target this year for both our usual city break and longer holiday, however next year we'll probably have to miss out on the city break. In part this is due to our main holiday being a more expensive one as it's our 10th wedding anniversary so we are planning something special but also I've changed jobs and our income is now reduced. (Truthfully if I didn't already have some money saved towards our 2009 holiday we would be postponing the trip as we simply couldn't afford it)

And for our main holiday in October this year we've decided to wait and see what is available in the weeks beforehand rather than booking ahead as we figure we may get more for our money. As that article says, we may end up further afield instead of Europe.
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I can see us all having to meet up for one week in Bulgaria next year. ;)
can't think of a username wrote:
Well my holiday is still in the balance until a miracle happens between now and the end of may. Nothing to do with the credit crunch, invested money hit by 2 large bills but I am not going the credit card route to pay for a holiday.


Thats a shame can't as you seemed to be so looking forward to the Hemera from your posts that I have read.
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We are very fortunate to have a small mortagage and like many have a hubby that is very hardworking . He always worries about what is round the next corner and will take all work that he is offered . sats and sundays if necessary .

but it never ever seems to make much difference because we still never have enough . Infact I would go so far as saying that when we have more money coming in we seem to get whats commonly known as "the feelgood factor" and spend more . when work slows down as it is for hubby at the moment I pull my belt in and we actually seem better off . Not that this has put me off booking 2 holidays this week :que .

Im very careful to pay off all our normal bills each month and the only debt/loan we have other than our morgage is my" holiday credit card"which Ive set my mind to clear off this year. Well the old stuff at least :roll: :roll:

so at the moment I would rather reign in the food bills /takeaways etc than not have a holiday .

lyn
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