Travel Trends

Travel Trends :: Quickie Teeth Whitening

travel trend :: quick smile brighteningTime-intensive teeth whitening systems are old news, but recently I've noticed a movement towards simple, quick, touch-up style whitening---the perfect solution to maintaining your pearly whites while sipping pinot noir in Napa or cafe negro grande in Caracas.

Got 10 seconds? Or even 2 minutes? The new breed of mini teeth whitening aids can be easily placed in your carry-on luggage, tote or clutch for on-the-go smile brightening. As such, these travel-friendly smile brighteners will be making an appearance in my luggage soon. What about yours?

Wipe it Enjoy that night out with friends, then slip into the toilette and wipe off the red wine stains to reveal your sparkling smile. Cost: between $7 - $12 for 20 Wine Wipes.

Stick it The Cosmetic Cop has come out with her own breath-freshening, teeth touch-up stick that only takes 2-minutes to use. Cost: between $15 - $22 for Paula's Choice Brighten Up.

Brush it Go Smile, a legacy teeth whitening brand, has created a teeth whitening maintenance travel kit. Simply use this toothpaste to clean teeth and maintain your pearly whites. Cost: from $12 for Go Smile Jet Set Travel Kit.

Travel Trends :: Checkpoint-Friendly Carry-Ons

checkpoint-friendly carry-onsRecently I've seen a lot of hoopla about checkpoint-friendly carry-ons {think dual-compartment lap top bag or briefcase, just a little bigger}. What's ironic about the trend is that people have been leaping across latitudes with laptops for years. Furthermore, people have had to separately scan their computers from the rest of their luggage for awhile too, so your guess is as good as mine why there's been a resurgence in a carry-ons with an external lap top pocket as a travel must---aside from most airlines now charging for checked baggage, unless you're travelling Air Canada, West Jet or Jet Blue.

Security-Friendly Carry-Ons Briggs and Riley If you want a well-made, timeless piece of luggage with a lifetime guarantee, turn to Briggs and Riley. Their luggage is on the top end of the luggage price spectrum, but there's something to be said for quality over quantity. Case in point, their 20" upright includes a SpeedThru™ removable laptop case, as well as storage areas for files, clothing and toiletries. Cost: $449

International Traveller International Traveller makes a lot of different suitcases, but their most ingenius line is the lightweight IT-Ø-2. With their ultra-light carry-on suitcase weighing less than 6 lbs {which gives you an extra 20lbs of packing weight by most airlines' carry-on standards), this spacious and lightweight bag has two external pockets for items like travel docs and a laptop. Cost: $339.99 {4-piece set}.

Longchamp If you're looking for style, try Longchamp's Veau Foulonne brown leather, 2-wheel upright. With a big front pocket for a lap top and toiletries storage, this bag is also functional. I'm a fan. Cost: Approx. $600 - $800

Here's to your items flying quickly and seamlessly through security!

Peeping Tom

avoid hotel room peephole tomsAbout 5 months ago, we posted about a hotel in the US offering peephole security curtains to what seemed like paranoid guests. Fast forward to present day and we're seeing more Peeping Tom hysteria over hotel room peepholes. Does the hysteria have some grounding based on this man's {1-min} video showcasing a tampered peephole in his hotel room?

Peeping Problems Based on the above video and responses to the video, it appears there are two ways your hotel room could be creepily viewed via the peephole: 1) the peephole isn't secure and can be quietly removed creating a hole in your door; 2) through a reverse peephole viewer. What? Yep. Gizmodo posted about it a few years ago. The little gadget can reverse the convex lens designed to view out, not in.

Solving the Peeping Problem 1. Bring a post-it note to place over the door. 2. Tape over the peephole. 3. Use toilet paper or tissues to block the peephole.* 4. If you want to get really serious, buy an actual peephole cover (from $6.99) *Using toilet paper is efficient and easy. I just tried it during my stay at the Luxe Hotel Sunset Blvd last night and it worked like a charm.

Although the chances of hotel room peeping are virtually nill, taking precautions by locking the door with all the locks, being mindful of open windows on low floors, and now, covering your peephole are good safety practices. Maybe we should have added a peephole curtain to this week's 2010 Christmas Gift Guide for Travelers?

[photo by kalleboo]

Travel Trends :: 2011 Predictions

2011 travel predictionsWhat travel trends do you think will push ahead in 2011? Will you take advantage or get left on the runway?

Around this time last year, we published a similar trend piece for 2010, and I'm happy to say that most---if not all---our travel predictions came true.

Three times a month {on Thursdays} we feature travel trends. Based on this monthly feature and our industry participation and observations, here are our 2011 predictions so you can take advantage and stay ahead of the travel curve.

2011 Travel Trend Predictions Lotsa Loonies Continued high Canadian Dollar will influence Canadians' travels to the US and abroad. Practical Application - Jumping the 49th parallel is back to being an at-par experience: with destinations that are easy on the pocketbook and easy on the eyes.

Eco, Kinda Remember the days when we put bricks in our toilets to conserve water and thought that was a big eco deal? Then an Inconvenient Truth came along and green living hit popular culture again. Since then, everyone from hotels to restaurants have adopted green initiatives and even sub-committees to do their part. But here's the challenge: popular culture appreciates and expects basic green procedures, yet it isn't likely they'll change their hotel loyalty or pay more for it. Ten years from now they will. Practical Application - Green is important and something travelers expect, but don't want to pay more for.

Buyers Market With the advent of multiple ways to make a web-enabled travel booking, the US economic slowdown still present and social media changing the way people communicate, many travelers think it's their market to tinker with and dominate. In other words, they feel it's a buyers travel market. Practical Application - Travel seekers are more selective and price-conscious, yet the tipping point beyond these two search parameters is service and personal connection through social media and face-to-face communication.

Fiercer and Smarter Even though decade-old online travel agencies like Expedia, Travelocity, Priceline and Hotwire are still going strong, travel start-ups boasting new and improved ways of booking travel are constantly flooding the market and taking away share from the vintage travel giants. Regardless of the hook, at the core, all online travel agencies are doing the same thing, they might just go about it differently. To compete, they'll have to be fiercer and smarter. For example, some travel start-ups that have entered popular culture with a bang this year are: TripAlertz, OffandAway, Jetsetter and Kayak Explore offering travel in the form of groupon-like buying, auctions, private sales and visual flight search to only name a few. Practical Application - The online travel booking pie is now divided into miniscule pieces versus visible chunks. Customers will choose the pieces they know best, are the easiest and most competitively priced. If a travel fad site happens to accomplish all three goals in an interesting and/or fun way, the results will be delicious!

Package Me Hotels will offer more packages and included features to lure people away from outside booking channels where part of the revenue is lost, and into direct channels where profit is kept. Practical Application - Perceived value will continue to drive travel choices. Costumers appreciate extras like free wifi, included parking, breakfast, etc... and will book with the hotel direct if they see the value. As hotels know, more direct bookings means more profit and opportunities to create loyalty.

App Attack I remember Apple ads in 2009 singing the praises of the 65,000 apps on the market, but 2010's been the breakout year for apps entering popular culture with an astounding 300,000+ apps in the app store as of October. I predict that 2011 will be the year a) boomers embrace apps, and b) apps will become a greater part of the buying cycle for travel bookings. Practical Application - Current apps will get better, adding more useful features to convert information into action and new apps will come out vastly expanding capabilities.

Fee Festival Airlines will start charging for seat assignments, child-free sections and who knows what else. Irish carrier RyanAir now charges for toilet use. Practical Application - Read-up on all the fees associated with a good fare before you book.

[photo by Ryan Wick]

Travel Trends :: Tiki

Tiki-lounge travel[trip style = staycation]

If you can't travel, just tiki! Slap on some self-tanner, slip on a dress (or some bermudas and an aloha shirt for men) and get down to your nearest tiki lounge! From their inception, tiki bars were known for their escapism, mystery and exotic allure, so if you need a dose of the tropics, why not fake a vacation at a tiki lounge?

Ever since I can remember, I've been obsessed with tiki-ing. There's something about the Polynesian-meets-50's-inspired decor I can't get enough of. Then there's the little drinks with umbrellas and the pupus... All in all, tiki lounging makes me feel like I'm sitting in an over-water, glass-bottomed, open-air hideaway in French Polynesia, far, far away from the ordinary, and right now, far away from winter and cold.

Favorite Tikies Vancouver - {Waldorf} Tiki Bar waldorf tiki bar vancouver The newly restored and opened Waldorf Hotel has successfully brought back to life a modernist, iconic, gem, without losing sight of its 50's tiki-glam. One of the most incredible features of this new hot-spot is the virtually untouched Tiki Bar! With the exception of some tasteful restorations and a retrofitted vintage analogue audiophile sound system, you get to sip mai tais and singapore slings in the same setting as the gents and dames from the 1950s.

San Francisco - {Fairmont} The Tonga Room & Hurricane Bar tonga room fairmont sf After a $1 million restoration, the grand-daddy of tikis, The Tonga Room & Hurricane Bar at the Fairmont San Francisco, is still a draw for locals and tourists alike. Anchored by the hotel's vintage, tiled, 1929-built indoor poollagoon, this tiki room has seen many a day. Here are some beyond-fabulous features that are sure to transport you to tropic-town: dining under a thatched roof, hourly monsoon rain storms, a floating bandstand and a happy hour featuring a Pan-Asian buffet and exotic bevs. Don't miss this swanky outpost of South Seas high-style. If I lived in SF, I'd be a regular.

PS - Happy Thanksgiving to our friends down South!

[photos: 1+ 2 kris krug (waldorf), 3 Pargon (Fairmont)]