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LA Savings
are Online
The Travel Tightwad · July
26, 2002
Jeff Hatch, a retiree
from Truckee, Calif., turns to the Internet when he's looking for a bargain
on a hotel in Los Angeles. With good reason. He recently clicked on a
website called California Riviera
to find a room near the beach, and the booking service landed him a good
deal.
"They booked me a suite at Four Seasons in Newport Beach," he recalls.
"The price was so good that the desk clerk thought it was an error and
put me in standard room."
Hatch fixed the problem with a phone call and got re-upgraded.
Saving money in the City of Angels is no easy task. LA is as spread out
as it is cluttered with Internet travel sites that are marginally useful.
Finding the bookmark-quality URLs for your next visit to Southern California
can be tricky. But it's not impossible.
Here are a few of my favorites:
Things to do in Los Angeles: You've
probably heard the jokes like, "What's the difference between LA and yogurt?
At least the yogurt has culture." Totally unfair, as this website so eloquently
proves. I mean, nearly a hundred museums are listed here, including the
Getty, which, by the way is free.
And speaking of free attractions, this site maintains a list of completely
free things to do in Los Angeles.
For example, the Page Museum at La Brea's
famous tar pits is free on the first Tuesday of each month.
Johnny Jet's Los Angeles
Portal: I don't normally plug Web portals in my column, but Johnny
Jet does a terrific job producing a well-researched and comprehensive
links page for LA that I just have to mention it. What I like best about
the page is that it includes relevant information on the region's alternate
airports (Long Beach, Orange County, Ontario) and lists transportation
options, many of which are considerably cheaper than calling a cab after
you've landed. It also helps that the guy behind the site, John Discala,
lives in Southern California.
Los Angeles Convention & Visitors Bureau:
I've given up on trying to keep "official" websites out of this column
series because many of them-including Los Angeles'-simply can't be ignored.
A few clicks into the site you can find a whole section on two-for-one
specials at LA hotels. For example, the Holiday Inn-Hollywood is offering
a two-for-one through the end of the year. Some other properties have
similar specials running through the end of the summer, so check the fine
print before booking. To be sure, you'll find a lot of really useless
information on the site, too, but keep digging. It's worth it.
The LACard: Yes, it costs $39.
Yes, that's a lot of money for someone who is trying to save money. No,
it's not always worth it. But sometimes it is. For instance, get 10 percent
off when you book a tour with Heli USA
L.A. Helicopter Tours. I like the "Weekend Fly and Brunch" package,
which is priced at an already-affordable $69 per person. It includes a
champagne buffet brunch at the 94th Aero Squadron, a limousine ride from
the restaurant to the helicopter and a 20-minute flight.
Finally, as someone who lived in Southern California for four years, here's
something that you won't find online: the cheap eats, the legendary hole-in-the-wall
restaurants that serve unbelievably good, inexpensive food. They're not
online. Sure, you might find links to In-N-Out's
burger restaurants. Note: they're really worth a visit. But the true
hidden treasures that I discovered as an undergraduate just don't have
websites.
Log off. Ask the locals.
They know.
Christopher
Elliott is a travel commentator based in Key Largo, Fla. All e-mailed
questions may be edited, condensed or republished at the site's discretion.
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