Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Rob’s travel highlights and lowlights of 2017

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

There is just one article today as we gently ease back into things.   What impressed me on my travels during 2017?  And what didn’t?

What I realised when I looked back over the last year of articles is that I haven’t done much which was radically new.  When travelling with my young children, I tend to be risk averse by visiting cities and even hotels that I already know.  By letting Anika do most of the ‘official’ reviews – everything below I paid for, either with cash or points – I missed out on a few unexpected highlights in places such as Ljubljana.  However, of the stuff I did do:

There are some very good unbranded family hotels in Europe

I think I did around 80 nights in hotels this year.  I only wrote about a fraction of them because I don’t write about run-of-the-mill hotels and generally keep our family trips off the site.

That said, I continue to be impressed by two family-focussed hotels we returned to this year.  Both are ski properties in winter and walking properties in summer.  Near Salzburg you have Elmauhof and near Innsbruck Cavallino Bianco (photo below).  We spent an enjoyable week in each this year for the 2nd year running and are off to Elmauhof again in February.

There is nothing like this in the UK, especially Cavallino Bianco.  The village of Ortisei, where Cavallino Bianco sits, is also astoundingly pleasant.

cavallino-bianco

I took the family down to Asia for the first time

With my youngest now six, I felt it was time to show them a bit of ‘proper’ Asia.  A week in Sentosa, Singapore two years ago doesn’t count.

This was meant to be a trip to Japan but the lack of Avios seats over Easter meant a more complex Hong Kong – Tokyo – Beijing route, with a bullet train to Kyoto thrown in.  The regional Asia flights were Avios redemptions on JAL which worked well.

The InterContinental Hong Kong (reviewed here) still has some of the best views in the world although the building work on either side is a bit of a disaster to be honest.  Both the Conrad in Tokyo (review) and the Waldorf-Astoria in Beijing (review) were well worth the visit although my Hilton Diamond status didn’t get us any ‘wow’ upgrades.  The stand-out, by far, was The Ritz-Carlton in Kyoto.

We were exceptionally lucky that our Japan trip coincided with the peak cherry blossom period.  It was never part of our plan and, if it had been, we would have booked for a few weeks earlier because it was surprisingly late this year.

Virgin Atlantic stuffs me

Last year I flew Virgin Atlantic for the first time in too long on a new Boeing 787My review of Upper Class on the new 787 fleet is here.

I decided to give them another go this year coming home from New York.  Little did I know that Virgin had moved me, without telling me, from a Boeing 787 to one of the old A330 aircraft leaving a couple of hours later.  Here is my unhappy review.  It seems that this is now common practice on redemption tickets as cash customers in Upper Class actively avoid the A330 aircraft which have yet to be refurbished.  After flying it, I can’t blame them.

My request to Virgin for an explanation of why reward customers were being moved to inferior aircraft did not get a reply, except for an apology that I didn’t receive an email informing me of the move.

Ritz Carlton Kyoto

Hotel revelations of the year

As I mentioned above, The Ritz-Carlton in Kyoto (above) is a real return to form for the brand.  It operates in an almost theatrical way.

The upgraded tent we received at The Ritz-Carlton desert resort in Ras Al Khaimah (review) was superb.  It was easily one of the five best rooms / tents I have ever had.  I can’t give a final verdict on the rest of the resort because it had still not fully reopened as a Ritz-Carlton when we were there.

I was also intrigued by the Family Hotel Amarin in Rovinj, Croatia, where we spent three nights.  I didn’t review this, but it has a lot going for it if you have young kids.  My only gripe was the seating in the dining area which was more like an office canteen than a five star hotel – although the all-inclusive food was very good.  British Airways now flies to Pula in Summer which is a short taxi ride away.

Less glamorously, the Hilton in Bournemouth (reviewed here) was surprisingly accomplished.  My Diamond status finally paid off here with a suite upgrade and access to their decent lounge.

I didn’t review my night at the Hilton Brighton when I was there for a conference.  It was better than expected despite warnings from friends and the hotel has some impressive Victorian features.  It is utterly different to the Bournemouth hotel in almost every way, which shows the real problem for branded hotels in trying to define exactly what the brand stands for.

At the other end of the scale, I had dinner – but didn’t stay – at one of the Marriott / Ikea jointly run MOXY hotels this year.  It looked good and I liked the vibe although apparently the rooms are very small.  If I had to stay in one for some reason I’d be happy to do so.

And, despite everywhere else he went this year, my 6-year old was most excited by the – very good – 3-star Park Inn in Southend on Sea which I reviewed here.  From our balcony he could see the sea and the pier and the funfair.  If you’re 6, it doesn’t get much better than that.

Hotel frustration of the year

Four Seasons Hampshire wins my ‘most chaotic hotel stay of the year’ award.  Not only was the hotel without a dining room for most of the year due to rebuilding work, but it was also without a chef for a Bank Holiday weekend when we were there.

This led to hour-long waits for tepid food served in the hotel ballroom, which has all of the character of a Debenhams in-store cafe.  To give the hotel credit, they refunded my entire bill – room, food, activities – when I complained.  Given the queue of people complaining at check-out, I wasn’t the only one.  I told the story in this article.

PS.  The new FS Hampshire restaurant is now open and in theory everything is now operating as normal.

First Class experience of the year

I had my second trip in Etihad’s A380 First Class Apartment this year.  It is clearly an amazing product with a ludicrous amount of personal space.  My review is here.

Something about it just doesn’t work for me, however.  I’m not sure what – I think I just don’t like being shut away in my little private room for seven hours.

Lufthansa remains the pinnacle of First Class flying for me, perhaps surprisingly.  Lufthansa First Class is a standard ‘open’ seat with no real privacy at all.  Returning to it after three years, it was a pleasure to experience the great food (image above) – Lufthansa is one of the biggest caviar buyers in the world, apparently – and attentive staff.  My review of that flight is here.

I was a little underwhelmed on my return to the Lufthansa First Class Terminal in Frankfurt as I wrote here.  The real highlights are the food – which didn’t work for me this time – and the limo ride to the plane, which was a letdown as I ended up in a minibus and the aircraft was about as near to the terminal as it was possible to get!

I also had a perfectly acceptable time in Emirates A380 First Class this year as I reviewed here.  Whilst I didn’t write about it, we also flew Emirates A380 business class again this year which retains its high standards.

I finally got to try a private jet

Jetsmarter invited me to try their private jet shuttle service between Luton and Switzerland.  This was, oddly, a private invitation and nothing to do with running this site.

It was a novel experience, and I also got to visit the Signature Flight Support lounge in Luton, see here.  The highlight was chatting to my fellow passengers, both successful men in their own fields.  The rest of the private jet experience (DIY food and drink, no proper loo) I was less bothered about as I wrote.

Party of the year

Ours!  Having been terrified in 2016 that no-one would come – and I was relieved when the tickets sold out in eight hours – we were shocked when the tickets for the 2017 Christmas Party sold out in literally five seconds.

Thank you to those who came along, to Qatar Airways for being our headline sponsor and to everyone else who donated raffle prizes and goody bag items.

We will do it differently in 2018 so more of you can come.

And we won some prizes ….

I should also mention that we won three gongs at the 2017 Business Travel Journalism Awards, including the top award for ‘Editor of the Year’.

To be honest, I was happier for Anika who won ‘Best Newcomer to Business Travel Journalism’ because it will help her career.  My career is beyond redemption at this point ….

We also won ‘Best Digital Strategy’ so I got to take two of the heavy perspex awards home.  Which, after a week, my wife hid away in a cupboard on the flimsy grounds that she thought the kids might start throwing them at each other and end up knocking someone out ….

BA status benefit of the year

If you have kids, the most underrated benefit of a BA Gold card is the ability to book Gold Priority Rewards during peak school holiday weeks.  This lets you book any seat, any flight on Avios as long as you pay double the normal price.  In February you will be paying £500 per person for a flight to a ski resort (Saturday out, Saturday back) during half term – or just 18,000 Avios if you force open Gold Priority Reward seats.  Which is what we did, for the second year running.

Surprise tube experience of the year

Coming home from World Travel Market in November, I found myself standing next to British Airways CEO Alex Cruz.  We had a good chat for 20 minutes or so about life as he sees it and life as I see it.  In terms of BA cost cutting, you can’t argue that he wasn’t walking the talk with his £3.30 tube ticket.

I genuinely liked him and now I’ve met him, I have a better idea of where he is coming from (and, in terms of tube travel at least, where he is going).

Travel lesson of the year

I will leave this one to my wife, who ran up a £1,400 Vodafone bill on her company iPhone whilst watching online videos in our hotel in Dubai over half term.  The hotel wi-fi was spotty and it seems to have dropped out at a very bad time …..

Missing in action

The ‘pointless cause of extra work in the HfP office’ award goes to Hilton Honors, who decided to drop an ‘H’ from the previous Hilton HHonors branding.  Much retyping ensued.

Anyone wondering where the missing capital ‘H’ had gone soon found the answer.  Le Club Accorhotels became Le Club AccorHotels.  More retyping ….

The Langley hotel Iver

What is coming in 2018?

We will hopefully be bringing you reviews of SWISS First Class, Royal Jordanian Business Class and – for no particular reason other than I have some Jumeirah Sirius points to burn – the OTT Burj Al Arab hotel in Dubai in the next few weeks.  SWISS First already has a black mark against it because they expect me to pay for seat selection – even BA doesn’t try to charge First Class passengers.

We have had early stage discussions with some Star Alliance carriers about doing a series of reviews, following Anika’s ANA business class piece this year, but let’s see where that ends up.

With the Qantas Terminal 3 and Plaza Premium Terminal 5 lounges now open, I’m not expecting any major new London airport lounge openings this year.

Interesting hotel openings in the UK include a Hotel Indigo in Leicester Square from IHG and Hilton’s first Canopy hotel in the UK (Aldgate).  I am also intrigued by The Langley, pictured above, a country house hotel which will be operated by Starwood’s The Luxury Collection.  It looks like it will be the most impressive UK ‘country house’ property which can be booked with points.

There is also a better than average chance that the site gets its first facelift for five years ……

Tomorrow Anika will give you her own impressions from a busy year of reviewing, and normal service resumes with our usual mix of news and articles.

Thank you for your continued support.

Comments (121)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Chris Cannon says:

    Great article from the site I read religiously First thing in the morning every day! O/T but on BAs A380 configuration, in CW, top deck or lower deck? Which one better for couples? It’s a night flight back from US so will want to sleep. Thanks. Chris

    • Genghis says:

      Top front cabin. Smaller and therefore quieter and has the large toilets so you can easily change into your PJs. We’ve got 53AB back from JNB – Direct aisle access but a bit noisier next to galley but I wear noise cancelling headphones even when sleeping.

  • Anna says:

    This was the year I started collecting avios seriously by moving most of my spending to Amex and churning. I currently have a balance of 280k spread across BA and avios.com, plus RFS to France and CW to the US and Caribbean in the school holidays. We also found out that by moving our Caribbean trip to the summer we can fly CW on redemptions and pay a similar amount for our holiday as a trip to the Med would cost due to outrageous price hikes outside of school term times. Planning to do this for the next few years until we can be more flexible with travel dates. I’ve also started paying for hotels with Tesco vouchers. Thanks Rob and Anika!

  • Stu N says:

    Twin highlights
    – Alaska. Redemption in British Airways First to Seattle and then Delta sale fare in F to Anchorage. Just stunning – really want to go back. Also went to Portland, Dundee Hills and Bend, Oregon on that trip which were great.
    – Total Solar Eclipse which we saw from near Bend in Central Oregon. I am not eloquent enough to describe that so will leave it at “wow”.

    Lowlights
    – bit of an issue with return flight from Seattle, still “in correspondence” on that one.
    – Colombia Gorge Hotel, on OR-WA border who “had no record” of our River View room and we ended up in what could only be described as an “Interstate View” room with the I-80 running about 50m from our window. Took two discussions with manager to get the difference between rooms refunded and another complaint at reception to get any discount, and the “resort fee” that wasn’t even mentioned in confirmation email removed. I was grumpy enough when pushing my point, having barely slept. Very, very poor, especially for the US.
    – the free “BA holiday” on my first Tier Points run, did EDI-LHR-DUB return for <£300 and 160TPs to visit a mate. Unfortunately DUB-LHR was 90 mins late, due to high winds at Heathrow and I had a 1h 45 connection onto last flight to EDI. To BA's credit the overnight was sorted easily and I got rebooked on an early flight the next day but was disappointed not to get home.

  • Stuart says:

    I’m not sure virgin always do target redemptions. On a redemption flight with my partner to NY there was a last minute plane switch with a plane brought from Manchester.
    Suddenly c32 passengers were downgraded/ offboarded. My partner and I both with no status were 2 of the 12 lucky enough to still fly UC.
    And due to the delay we still both got the EU compensation.

  • Adrian says:

    Thanks again for everything Rob and the regs.
    Highlights for me are all firsts for me and my wife. A trip to HKG and BKK, a fellow traveller at the air port described it beautifully as “an assault on your senses” it was a great trip. The best was a trip to NZ, fell in love with Queenstown and the Hilton on the lake was the perfect location. QR ranged from good to excellent, with the Q suites to CDG being the best 6 hours we’ve ever spent on a plane.
    Lows include BA being a third rate company both in terms of customer service and product, QR’s Q suites were better than our BA F (52J 747).
    2018 will mean more flights on QR and AA to the USA, BA will get the required 4 flights and that’s it. Singapore next (QR sale willing), happy new year.

  • Tom says:

    Not long back from NYC, out in business, and back in F, all due to the help from Rob, Anika and the community on this site. Stayed at a Sheraton where we got a room upgrade to the top floors due to card benefits, bottle of fizz in the room and a 4pm check out, all thanks to the help from Rob, Anika et al!

    After wondering what these small BA avios were that I had (and often used to knock minor amounts off our flights as I knew no better) I stumbled across this website while doing a bit of random googling.

    In the 11 months that I’ve been reading the articles and helpful comments from the friendly and knowledgeable community, our “stash” has gone to 190k avios, which is amazing considering that so far we have redeemed 40k for the F upgrade, cashed in 55k for reward flights to Mykonos for our summer holiday and have just booked two fights to Florence for 30k plus £70!

    So thank you to Rob and Anika, to the community, and to all those who have helped and been patient with my rookie questions this year!

    • Polly says:

      Bet you are glad you spent those avios on the J to F ug from NYC to Lon. We also felt it was avios well spent!

  • Laineyling says:

    Thanks to this site we had a great 2017 for travel, although we are likely to slow down 2018 as have a baby due in Feb.

    We managed:
    – great value qatar flight from b’ham to Phuket with a stopover in doha in Feb (took my parents, and generated 60k avios+enough tier points to almost get to silver BA)
    – March work trip to NY/Atlanta flying BA with their double avios promo and Birthday offer stacking to earn ~25k avios, stayed at Hilton for the trip and generated 100k Hilton points due to another promo (useful for later in the year)
    – Paris Park Hyatt redemption in late March
    – Rome in May at Waldorf Astoria redeeming visa certificates (husband and I attached is together). Caught in BA IT meltdown so BA provided compensation and extended silver status. As we were originally flying back Sunday of the bank holiday had minimal impact and we effectively got a free holiday (we even made money!) Given we didn’t pay for the hotel.
    – Sept Beijing in first with 241 redemption, stayed at Waldorf Astoria, and Aman summer palace, great perks at the aman from booking with Emyr (as recommended by HfP)
    – Oct/nov 241 open jaw CW to Chennai (onward flight to Sri Lanka)/return from Maldives. Amazing Hilton Conrad redemption inspired by triprep. Had used existing points from earlier in the year and head bought points during the 100% bonus offer. Had gold Hilton status through Amex plat which was very useful during stay. Would love to return, perhaps in 2-3 years.
    – Nov organized and funded mum and sister to go first out to Tok and back in CW using avios and a 241 (I got a BA amex for my mum and put all my spend on it to generate a voucher in her name), for my mum and sister a real one off experience

    Next year have used avios for European Rfs to travel to south Spain St peak summer as attending wedding, and for cw tickets using 241 to travel to Singapore/HK. Hoping the baby is a good and quiet traveller, else maybe standing at the back of the place in economy…

    Without this site would not have known about promotions, great deals, and points optimization (open jaw tickets, gold/diamond benefits at Conrad Maldives etc).

    Thanks once again Rob, Anika, and all the active contributors.

    • Scallder says:

      Hope the future trips with the new arrival go well Laineyling. We had a new arrival in October and courtesy of shared parental leave am taking a couple of months off in the summer and spending one of those in NZ – similarly hoping our daughter is a quiet flyer but hoping the large business seats on Singapore will make the flight a bit easier. Already planning on some long haul trips for 2019 before she turns two and needs her own seat when flights suddenly become a lot more expensive (cash or points!)

  • Liz says:

    Highlights for us this year in our first full year of retirement were 2 big USA road trips – a fabulous month driving Route 66 and a 3 wk trip to Atlanta, Chattanooga, Smoky Mountains, Savannah up through the Carolinas and Outer Banks, Virginia to Washington DC – managing to stay ahead of the hurricanes. We flew to Atlanta with Virgin UC but wasn’t keen on their seating – plane was a bit tired and grubby but the food and service were good and we made use of the Clubhouse, signing up for 2 Virgin white cards before they were pulled shortly afterwards. We don’t go for high end hotels due to the nature of our holidays but we got some great value and upgrades in our many HIX’s across the USA. We also did the wee Barra trip landing on the beach which I would thoroughly recommend.

    We are looking forward to our trips in 2018. Still pinching myself at getting all pts bookings for our 6 wk trip down under. Flying our first BA F to SIN, stopping 5 days, then Business with Singapore Airlines to BNE which I am looking forward to. Managed to get the elusive return flight from SYD on to our 241. Also got all our internal Qantas flights from BNE-MEL-ASP and back again on Avios in Econ – looking forward to sleeping under the stars at Uluru! Also booked a wee 4 day trip to Iceland on Easyjet using our Nectar pts.

    It’s been an amazing year for compensation for us. Between BA domestic delayed flight, Barclaycard and Lloyds we have received £1200 in cash compensation, almost 30K avios extra pts and an extra upgrade voucher. So with that we have just booked an extra trip to Tallin and Helsinki for Sept. Plus we will be seeing more of our own country and venturing further south in our new caravan!

    Can’t wait to book up our next USA road trip in May for 2019 to do a Canyon road trip. Avios already amassed along with 600K IHG pts waiting to be burned.

    Thanks again to everyone on HfP for all their help and advice – safe travels to everyone!

    • CV3V says:

      My Barra flight is still the highlight of the year, and that takes into account a bunch of CW and F flights.

      If you plan on hiring a car in Iceland check Blue Car Rental, should be a good bit cheaper than the main companies.

      • Rob says:

        I am determined to book a Barra day trip for myself this year. I mean … £95 return from Glasgow, you can’t go wrong. You get about 3 hours on the island so if the weather holds you should be fine.

        • Genghis says:

          Or plane goes tec. We got about 1h15. Surprisingly still enough time for a quick whiz around the island and a hot smoked salmon sarnie.

        • Liz says:

          Ours was £75 each in Sept. We booked Rob’s Barra Island Tours for the 2hr whistlestop tour which was great! Fab day and some stunning photos flying in and out of the Island!

        • RussellH says:

          This thread reminds me of the year I worked in Barra, and the (probably apochryphal) story of my colleague who felt unable to use reverse gear in the car, but was not too bothered as it was comparatively easy just to drive round the island instead.

      • Liz says:

        Will take a note of the car hire – may do a one day hire to go for drive .

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.