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Rhys’ travel highlights of 2023

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I didn’t think I’d beat 2022’s bumper year of travel but here we are at the end of 2023 and I’ve travelled (slightly) further and to more (I think) destinations. I’ve certainly spent more time in hotels!

Even more impressive is the fact that I squeezed it all into 11 months, after deciding to spend December in the UK. Sometimes it’s good to spend time in one place – by the end of November, at the end of a long run of trips, I was quite glad to turn my back on the airport. (Albeit not before doing a quick sightseeing tour of the new No1 Lounge at Luton – article to follow.)

In numbers, I spent just over 332 hours flying – about 40 hours more than in 2022 – traversing 141,000 miles. I’ve also stayed at 42 hotels – an increase of about 16%. You can see more of my flight stats on My FlightRadar24.

Of my 64 flights, a small majority were business (31) – whilst 28 were in economy, primarily short haul. I had two in First (British Airways) and three in Premium Economy (including United Airlines, reviewed here and Air Transat, reviewed here.)

Out of Africa

My first long haul trip of the year was with Ethiopian Airlines, now the largest airline in Africa. The timing couldn’t have been better, with the airline celebrating 50 years of flying to the UK, comemorated by a lovely event in Syon Park.

After trying the new fifth freedom Manchester-Geneva route with Ethiopian in 2022 it was good to experience the full long haul service they offer down to Addis Ababa before connecting onwards to Zanzibar. It was a particular treat to try the Ethiopian specialities that are available on board.

Lounging around

This year I’ve made it to a few lounges outside our core network. In February, I was invited to see the new ‘Extime’ concept that Aeroport de Paris is rolling out at Charles de Gaulle.

It’s a very impressive upgrade with improvements to all parts of the passenger experience, including luxury shopping, the gate areas and lounges. In fact, some of the gate areas are now so pleasant I think I’d sometimes prefer them to the lounge.

I returned to Charles de Gaulle later in the year for the opening of the new Star Alliance Lounge in Terminal 1. This is another impressive and world-class facility that has been thoughtfully designed. It is a major upgrade to the Star Alliance experience from Paris.

For a look at how independent airport lounges can be world-class facilities, look no further than the Vienna Lounge in (you guessed it) Vienna. This airport-run facility blew me away and softened the pain of my four hour flight delay.

The cream of the crop, however, was undoubtedly my visit to Cathay Pacific’s The Pier First Class Lounge. In my review I called it ‘the best lounge I’ve ever visited’ and I stand by that. Tranquil and luxurious, this is what all airlines should be aiming for. It’s now one of the few lounges to offer free spa treatments, too.

Homes away from home

This year I’ve spent more time at hotels than ever, spending 62 nights away from home. Early on in the year I did a number of staycations, reviewing six hotels in London including four from Hilton’s Curio Collection. (Only one is left, which I hope to do next year ….)

The highlight was undoubtedly Hotel Cafe Royal with its large, Asian-inspired suites and impressive spa right under Piccadilly Circus. Hotel Cafe Royal is part of The Set Collection and a member of Global Hotel Alliance.

My favourite hotels this year were not in London but, as you might expect, abroad.

The Conrad Riviera Maya, just north of Tulum, was an unexpected surprise. The brand new resort is nestled into the jungle but what blew me away was the polished service and excellent food – not always guaranteed on this stretch of the coast.

Closer to home, Six Senses Rome – one of the brand’s first city hotels – offered a unique aesthetic in the heart of the ancient city, image above.

Meanwhile, The Ritz-Carlton Shanghai Pudong offered spectacular views and undoubtedly one of the best outdoor viewing terraces in the world.

Two of my top hotel stays were in Indonesia. The new St Regis Jakarta, which re-opened following a full refurbishment from its previous life as a Four Seasons – is absolutely stunning with impeccable service.

On the other hand Mandapa, a Ritz-Carlton Reserve, offered the same excellent service but from a completely different setting perched above a meandering river.

From sea plane to super jumbo

I managed to tick off a bucket-list item this year, with a trip to the Maldives to celebrate the launch of Virgin Atlantic’s direct flights.

For pure novelty value, it’s hard to beat the inter-island sea plane experience offered by Trans Maldivian Airways, the largest sea plane operator in the world. I had to duck when standing inside but what a thrill to take off and land from the ocean itself, particularly when your captain is bare foot!

In contrast, my flight on Etihad’s behemoth A380 was the complete opposite. Smooth, quiet and totally gigantic, I still love flying the A380 wherever I can and it was a pleasure to be on board Etihad’s first A380 service since before the pandemic. I was blown away by the crew and food which were top notch.

Other flight reviews this year include:

Give me a shout if you work at an airline and would like some coverage next year.

Sustainably sexy

Arguably my most important trip of the year, however, was Virgin Atlantic’s Flight100. With the support of the Department for Transport, Rolls Royce, Boeing and many more partners, Virgin Atlantic operated the world’s first transatlantic flight with 100% sustainable aviation fuel on a large commercial jet.`

Not only did it prove that the fuel (which was derived from waste cooking oils) worked, it also highlighted the industry’s oft-overlooked work to decarbonise and exerted pressure on the Government to increase the volume of production with further industrial support.

Ironically, though, it felt just like any other flight on board.

Conclusion

Looking back at my writing this past year I’m proud of the breadth of our coverage. There’s so much I haven’t included in this article, including interviews with airline CEOs, going behind-the-scenes at an airplane scrap yard and an in-depth look at how Lufthansa will be the first airline to have personally heated and cooled seats.

I’m already looking forward to 2024. After a ~6 week break from travel, I’ll be heading to Amsterdam and Bogota – the latter to review Iberia’s new A350 business class cabin.

To read Rob’s highlights and lowlights from 2023, including many which were never reviewed on the site because they were family trips, click here.

Comments (58)

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  • Novice says:

    Well done Rhys. Was good to read the reviews and get some inspiration for 2024.

  • BJ says:

    Persoally I ‘ d prefer you cut the flight and hotel reviews by 99% unless they actually generate hard cash for HfP in which case I’m resigned and get it. I’m not saying that you cannot write good reviews, indeed the one you did on the flight to Oz in economy on the cheap deal you paid yourself was great! It’s just that, without exception, I like all the other stuff you write much better and find it far more interesting and useful. Flight and hotel reviews are ten-a-penny across most blogs, and no blog can add anything useful go the hundreds to thousands of hotel reviews by paying guests on multiple sites across the web. HfP has a hard-earned reputation and is a stand-out blog; you have and will continue to play your part in that but I think on balance, the proportion of flight and hotel reviews at the expense of all the other IMO better stuff is dragging HfP back into the pack. Unless these reviews are actually directly paying the bills then please leave them to the lesser blogs and focus on your core strengths of analysis, reaction, and reader-engagement that underpins all the other stuff you do so well. One analytical article reacting to changes in the industry or one reference article such as the best seat to select on a particular plane is IMO worth 10+ ten-a-penny flight or hotel reviews.

    • Rhys says:

      There is only so much to analyse! We can’t write three articles a day on analysis!

      • BJ says:

        There’s loads of news you could cover, loads of promotions, endless stuff that could be added to your reference collection of articles. I’m just expressing my view on the value of all those reviews. There was a time on HfP when there was much less of them and I think HfP was better for it. Some will agree with me, many will not but this is my opinion. If you don’t lije it please don’t take it personally, you cannot please everybody all the time, it’s impossible. I wasn’t being negative, I gave credit where I thought it was due which is essentially everywhere except these reviews.

        • Rob says:

          I think you need to separate oneworld / SkyTeam flight reviews and ‘big brand’ hotel reviews – all clearly relevant to earning / burning Avios, Virgin Points and hotel points – from the rest.

          (These also have SEO value because anyone looking for such a review is a potential long term reader.)

          Of ‘the rest’ we refuse far more than we accept (I turned down an all expenses paid Miami trip last week) and are usually only done because there is some angle, ie it is high profile. I’d put the United Airlines and Etihad series this year in that category.

          We are almost never – for eg – going to review random unbranded four / five stars hotels outside the UK, and we are offered a lot of these, unless they are part of a review trip.

          There are, clearly, a couple of things we each accept during the year purely because they seem cool and we want to do it, even if not wholly relevant. That’s a perk of the job though 🙂 and hopefully readers find it cool too.

          • BJ says:

            Thanks @Rob for sharing some of the logic. You will also have the benefit of page view data informing the success and nature of such reviews too. Given that they persist I am presuming this data is at least satisfactofy, maybe much better. None of this changes my own views but as I stated it’s impossible to please all of the people all of the time. FWiw, despite these views HfP has been my primary source of travel and loyalty news for over a decade now and I do not see that changing so I hope you and Rhys will take that as a compliment for your efforts. I guess Rhys sees a lot more as cool and enjoys perks a lot too – perfectly understandable, I would have too at his age given the same opportunities.

      • Novice says:

        I agree with Rhys. Admittedly, I don’t try hotels just cause of the reviews or anything but it is still good to read for inspiration.

        If a person has never been to a luxury hotel and has never read reviews that are trusted then how would that person know if what they are getting is less than what they should be expecting in a luxury hotel or flight.

        It’s to inform people to know when something is not to the standard it should be.

        I will give you an example. Although I come from an affluent background, some of my relatives don’t due to my mum’s cousin not marrying into money 😂 but they can afford some treats once in a while. I remember once we were all staying at a 5* hotel and I was not pleased because I expect better if a hotel is going to sell themselves as a 5* you expect certain things (water everyday, change sheets everyday, no dust about, decent hygiene and food, decent service). But, my relatives who don’t stay in luxury hotels much thought it had to be the best hotel in the world because nothing could beat it.

        What I am trying to say is people don’t know what is actual luxury unless they get constantly told or they constantly experience it.

    • Alex Sm says:

      I would disagree. These articles with yet another £1299 fare to Miami or whatever might bring revenue but not interesting. Rhys’ piece about hotels or green flights are inspirational and eventually bring long-term value! ✈️

  • Jonny says:

    Did I miss the reviews of the BA First class flights?

  • daveinitalia says:

    In a surprise the Aspire lounge in NCL has opened the extension into the old BA lounge area on time (most people were expecting it not to open until early next year). Currently most of the old lounge area is now closed off for refurbishment. What’s there already feels like a massive improvement over the dreadful old lounge.

    One disappointment is you can’t exit the lounge via the old BA doors (now replaced with just a window) for easy access to BA’s usual gate 3 and the domestic pier. Some bmi lounges used to have exit only doors which got you close to the gate (one example was their domestic lounge in T1), it’s a shame this wasn’t replicated in this lounge.

    Worth a pop up to Newcastle, maybe take the train one way so you can compare station first class lounges (you can pop into the NCL LNER on arrival) and then fly BA back to London.

    • Gordon says:

      I like the lounge exit in BER it’s a 30 second walk to gates 22 for BA.

    • Rob says:

      We’ll go when it’s fully open. I’m planning a quick EDI hop in Jan to see the refurb there.

  • Richie says:

    Thanks Rhys for your writing this year, it has been really interesting and informative. I’ve particulary enjoyed the reviews of hotels in Indonisia and China, and informative articles about LH aircraft improvements i.e JAL, keep doing what you do.

  • Badger says:

    Bogota is quite the vista as you fly in. The whole city sits in a bowl amongst the mountains. I don’t know your itinerary but a short internal flight would get you to the Sofitel Santa Clara in Cartagena which is well worth a visit.

    • Novice says:

      Is Colombia 🇨🇴 safe for extensive touring?

      It is on my list but I keep putting some places off coz I don’t want to get in the middle of a sh*** out

      • Gordon says:

        When I was in the Caribbean in June, our butler recommended travelling to Colombia!. He has been as have many of his friends, he says is safe and very affordable on the ground, like Thailand was back in the day, I have Colombia on my bucket list, after some research.

        • Novice says:

          Good to know @Gordon.

          • meta says:

            It’s generally safe, but in some places it’s better to go with a guide/driver which you can hire locally very cheaply. They’ll also know where not to take you. The restaurant scene in Bogota and Medellín. You can have Michelin-star meals for £30-50pp with multiple courses and drinks included.

          • Novice says:

            Thanks @meta. I do try to always have guides etc because I’m a bit of a stress-head. Don’t like the idea of touring without any guidance but it does depend on country as some places are easier to just go exploring on your own.

            It does help that I love languages and speak 5.

      • elguiri says:

        @Novice Colombia is quite safe as long as you are conscious of your surroundings. Bogota is similar to SF, NY etc but is not as safe as it has been over the last 20 years. Cartagena is quite touristy (but still has some of it’s cultural charm). Medellin and it’s surroundings are lovely, good trips into the Encanto type scenery.
        In any of these places as long as you are sensible, don’t go around flashing jewellery, cameras or phones around, and keep to daytime you should be fine, but a guide is good if going downtown, at night, or out of the cities.

      • cin4 says:

        Of course it is and has been for over a decade.

    • elguiri says:

      The flying into Medellin is one of my favourite vistas, and a lot more natural than the metropolis that is Bogota.
      In Cartagena you do get a variety of chain hotels though – Hilton at El Laguito is another one.

  • Richie says:

    Museo Botero is good in Bogota.

    • elguiri says:

      Personally I prefer the Museo de Antioquia in Medellin for Botero, and you have all the statues along the pavements on your way to the museum as well.
      In Bogota the Museo del Oro is well worth a visit too.

  • Barry says:

    My wife’s total of flights this year is 96. As Johnny Rotten once said, “this is no fun, no fun at all”

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