“Secret” Hotel Rates

Have you seen those Priceline commercials starring William Shatner? You might find them obnoxious, but I enjoy their cheesiness and the gusto with which Shatner plays his part. However, I’d never actually tried to get a hotel room through Priceline or similar sites until now.

To finalize the details for our upcoming cruise to the Bahamas, I needed a room in the Fort Lauderdale area for the night before we sail. My normal approach is to check Southwest.com and some of the aggregator sites like Hotels.com or Travelocity. After much comparison of rates, maps, reviews, amenities, and more, I make a choice. Vacations are somewhat rare and special to me, so I like to invest some extra time to help ensure that we’re happy with the accommodations.

I started with that approach for this hotel stay, but then I decided to get a little crazy and try the “secret” hotel approach. Priceline, Hotwire, Travelocity’s Top Secret, and probably other sites let you get unusually good deals on hotels under one condition: they keep the hotel’s identity a secret until after you commit. You can search for a minimum star level and general location, but that’s about it. For a devoted researcher like me, it’s a bit scary to pay for a hotel in advance (nonrefundable, of course) without knowing exactly where I’m going. But it’s also exciting, like unwrapping a present.

I bid at Priceline, envisioning Shatner trying to convince me to bid lower, lower, lower! Apparently, I bid “too low” ($40 for a three-star hotel in Hollywood, FL), because I got rejected. So instead I paid $39 plus tax for a three-star “Top Secret Hotel” on Travelocity. Once I paid, it revealed my hotel – a Ramada that I’d been considering already. Through traditional channels, I would have paid $56 plus tax for the room. By rolling the dice a bit, I saved over $17. Not bad!

Have you ever tried the “secret” route for a hotel, car, airfare, or other travel detail? How did it go?

Haiku Tuesday 6 – Autumn

In honor of the upcoming first day of autumn, which is probably my favorite season, I’m making it this week’s haiku theme.

Yellow, red, and gold
Walking, grilling in cool air
Favorite time to run

Your turn.

We Broke Free!

Saturday morning, Jenny and I joined some good friends at our first mud run, the Jailbreak. As first-timers, we weren’t exactly sure what to expect except mud, obstacles, some running, and more mud. As a non-runner, Jenny was a little apprehensive, but she stepped up and gave it a try.

We met Lacy, my best friend from high school, his wife Amie, and our friends Jon and Amber for the 9:00 wave, first of the day. The location was DFW Adventure Park in Roanoke, which is normally used for outdoor paintball, ATV riding, and other extreme events. Each wave had 300 runners of varying speeds and ages. To fit the jailbreak theme, Jon and Amber dressed up as a ball and chain, with Amber as the ball and a chain tying her to her husband (see pics below!).

Lacy and I ran together, running most of the way and catching up. We rarely see each other anymore, so it was great to hang out for a while. Jon and Amber were slowed a bit by their attachment. Jenny and Amie stuck together by choice rather than chain and actually ran a lot more than Jenny had planned. I don’t think she realized how much her stamina and strength have improved over the months she’s spent in the gym, and I’m proud of how well she did.

The run itself was quite interesting and prettier than I expected, with much of the course going through a quiet forest and a cool, refreshing river that we waded through (my favorite part, right in the middle of the course after we were nice and warm). The obstacles weren’t as difficult as I expected. We kept a comfortable pace rather than blasting through at full speed, which would have been impossible due to the MUD. The shallow, slippery mud simply threw off your footing and made you worry about spraining an ankle. The thick, sticky mud nearly sucked your shoes off and buried them forever. Jenny and I both nearly got stuck in a few places. We both chose not to take home our nasty shoes or socks. You’ll understand once you see the pictures. After the race, a fire hose provided a welcome chance to clean off the mud before we enjoyed a free beer and some tasty barbecue.

Although I still plan to do most of my racing in a mud-free environment, the Jailbreak was a fun change of pace and a chance to hang out with good friends while benefiting a worthy cause. Jenny actually wants to do another mud run next year, so I’ll look into our options. Maybe you can join us!

Here are some pictures:

Jailbreak 2010 Pics

Wind Turbines for the Home

My eco-friendly mother-in-law sent me a very interesting article about residential wind turbines. One company, Urban Green Energy, even makes turbines you can mount on your roof. Here in Dallas, the average wind speed is about 10-11mph, so they would work. When they’re turning, your home uses the power they create. If you aren’t using all the generated power at the time, you can store it in a special battery or sell it back to the power company. Nice, eh?

Unfortunately, at current energy prices, the payback period for us would be prohibitively long. We pay about 11.5 cents/kWh, and the mid-level Urban Green Energy turbine (about $4900 after the tax credit) would generate about 1000kWh per year, saving us $115 annually. So I doubt we’ll install them anytime soon. But if the turbine prices come down and energy prices go up, we’ll certainly keep this solution in mind.

Haiku Tuesday 4 – Romance

Today’s haiku topic is romance, suggested by my wife. =)

Smile, a laugh, a look
Warm hand on a chilly day
Makes the trip worthwhile

Your turn. (please keep it PG-13 or lower – no pornohaiku!)