SNAP GUIDE

Honolulu: Sleep

All hotels are in Waikiki. Rooms have air-conditioning, private baths, and TVs.

Aqua Kuhio Village
2463 Kuhio Ave., 866/406-2782 or 808/791-7171, aquaresorts.com
A very recently renovated "condotel" three and a half blocks from the beach. Some rooms have partial ocean views. Sister property Aqua Bamboo (2425 Kuhio Ave., 866/406-2782 or 808/922-7777) is just down the street. Doubles (at either property) from $99.

ResortQuest Coconut Plaza Hotel
450 Lewers St., 800/922-7866 or 808/923-8828, resortquesthawaii.com
Most rooms at this boutique hotel have balconies, and all but the standard doubles have kitchenettes. Light sleepers should ask for a mountain view facing away from Ala Wai Boulevard. There's a small pool with a sundeck; the beach is four blocks away. Doubles from $79 (book on the hotel's website).

The Breakers
250 Beach Walk, 800/426-0494 or 808/923-3181, breakers-hawaii.com
A perfectly preserved 1950s relic half a block from the beach. Some rooms have Japanese-style-sliding shoji screens that hide tiny kitchens and spacious closets. The back lanais of a few face the Urasenke Tea House, providing a view of traditional tea ceremonies. There's a small pool. Doubles from $99.

Hawaiiana Hotel
260 Beach Walk, 800/367-5122 or 808/923-3811, hawaiianahotelatwaikiki.com
Another vintage hotel, slightly larger than its neighbor The Breakers. A social clientele hangs around the two small pools, which are surrounded by lava-rock walls and tropical plants. Rooms are nothing special, but all have kitchenettes. Doubles from $105.

Queen Kapiolani Hotel
150 Kapahulu Ave., 800/367-2317 or 808/922-4671, queenkapiolani.com
The 315 rooms have standard hotel decor; there's a big pool, plus a restaurant and lounge. The cheapest rates ($72) go three months in advance. Spring for a deluxe ocean-view room (from $105)-they're bigger, and the best ones have views of both Waikiki Beach and Diamond Head. A special room-and-rental-car package can be as low as $79 a day.

Royal Grove Hotel
151 Uluniu Ave., 808/923-7691, royalgrovehotel.com
This hot-pink hotel is Honolulu's best budget bet. Rooms are vast and sunny, with kitchenettes and full-size fridges. The setting feels like something out of Beach Blanket Bingo, with a small courtyard pool and surfboards hanging in the lobby. Doubles from $45 without A/C; from $62 with A/C.

SPLURGE ResortQuest Waikiki Beach Hotel
2570 Kalakaua Ave., 800/877-7666, resortquesthawaii.com
Rooms in the main tower have bright aloha prints and lanais overlooking Kuhio Beach, which is across the street. Breakfast is included-borrow a cooler and chairs and eat it picnic-style on the beach. On the second floor, Tiki's Grill & Bar offers live Hawaiian music daily in the mornings. Doubles from $141 (if you book on the hotel's website).

SPLURGE Waikiki Parc Hotel
2233 Helumoa Rd., 800/422-0450 or 808/921-7272, waikikiparc.com
The best reasons to stay here: location and service. It's 100 yards from the beach-many rooms have spectacular views-and across the street from Honolulu's premier hotel, the Halekulani. They're owned by the same folks, so the operation is flawless. Rooms have the spare, retro vibe common in Waikiki; what makes them memorable are the floor-to-ceiling shuttered windows. Eighth-floor pool and small exercise room. Doubles from $160, including breakfast.

GEARING UP
The ubiquitous ABC Stores may have everything Waikiki visitors need, but venture downtown for the best deals. Foodland (Ala Moana Center, 1450 Ala Moana Blvd., 808/949-5044) is the most accessible alternative to the priced-for-tourists Food Pantry grocery store in Waikiki. Wal-Mart, across from Ala Moana Shopping Center, is the place to go for goggles, flippers, boogie boards, beach towels, and coolers (700 Keeaumoku St., 808/955-8441). Keep in mind: Nothing is cheap in Hawaii; prices will be considerably higher on than the mainland. True bargain hunters can stock up upon arrival at Costco, halfway between the airport and Waikiki, just off the N. Nimitz Highway (525 Alakawa St., 808/526-6103, membership required).

Note:This story was accurate when it was published. Please be sure to confirm all rates and details directly with the companies in question before planning your trip.
 
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Shopping
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— Jennifer Beach
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Cruises
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Internet phone services like Vonage can be programmed to send transcribed voice mails to your email in-box. That way, you can check your home answering machine quickly at an Internet cafe without paying insane roaming fees on your cell. The transcriptions won't always be perfect, but you'll get the gist.

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Planning
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Scuba-diving vacations can get expensive. As I start planning a trip, I call one of the local PADI dive shops and ask the employees about accommodations nearby. They give me hotel connections I couldn't find on my own, and I often save enough to pay for my dives.

— Lyle Bennett
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Once we know where we're going, my girlfriends and I divide up the list of things we'd like to do on our trip and put someone in charge of each item on the list. Then that person does the legwork by finding directions and prices, making reservations (if necessary), and researching nearby places to stop for a snack or a meal. Our method means that no one person is doing all the planning.

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Planning
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I unpacked a pair of black slacks recently to find them covered with white fuzz. I didn't have a lint brush handy, so I used the luggage sticker from my bag--the gummy side took the lint right off.

— Joyce Barbatti
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Safety
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Our bags have been stolen twice from inside locked rental cars. Now we travel with a bicycle cable and lock. If we absolutely have to leave our suitcases in the car, I hook them together by the handles and attach the whole thing to the frame of a seat or a secure item in the trunk. Even if thieves manage to get into our car, the cable will make it very difficult for them to make off with the luggage.

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Packing
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Grab-rails and nonskid surfaces aren't common in European bathtubs and showers. I pack a few decorative rubber pads that have non-adhesive suction cups, so I can use them when needed to prevent a slip or fall, and then I take them with me to the next hotel.

— Fran Plewak
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Packing
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Batteries for cameras, laptops, cell phones, and other devices can be charged at night in your hotel room. But if you're doing a lot of driving, you might want to buy an inverter to charge them while on the road. Inverters (which plug into the car's cigarette lighter) are small, inexpensive, and can be purchased at auto-supply, variety, or electronics stores.

— Kay Euhus
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Family Travel
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Create an ID page for each of your children before you leave on a trip. In addition to vacation contact information (hotel name and phone number), include the child's name, a current photo, home address, phone, date of birth, Social Security number, passport number, hair color, eye color, height, any identifying marks, blood type, allergies, medications, doctor and insurance phone numbers and ID numbers, immunization schedule, and fingerprints (these don't change, so investing the time to have a set made is worth it). If the unspeakable happens, the ability to hand over instant, concise information to authorities may prove invaluable. Update it before every trip.

— Robin Flannery
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Hotels
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If you're traveling solo and your room has a double bed, sleep on the side farthest from the phone. It's slept on less frequently and is therefore more comfortable.

— Ruth Schnur
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Planning
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Before setting off on one of my many backpacking excursions, I head to Kinko's to rebind my guidebook. I replace the cover with a plain black or navy one. It costs about $6 and allows me to blend in much better while traveling. People see my new book as a journal, not a travel guide that labels me a tourist.

— Michelle Johnson
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Air Travel
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If you've accumulated more souvenirs on your trip than you can carry, drive your rental car up to curbside check-in, then return the vehicle and come back on the shuttle bus with only your carry-on. This only works if there's no check-in line, but can save dragging your luggage onto the shuttle bus, across parking lots, etc.

— Robyn Volkening
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Planning
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If you arrive in a foreign city after banking hours (and you can't use an ATM), convert only the money you'll need for the night. Some exchange booths offer a less favorable rate after banks close and then switch back to competitive rates when banks reopen.

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Packing
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I like to bring a Frisbee when I travel. At the hotel, it's a convenient place to collect car keys, loose change, my ChapStick, and any other small objects I normally keep in my pockets. I always know where everything is, and things won't fall off the nightstand. It's also handy to have so you can play Frisbee at a nearby park or beach.

— Margot Johnson
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Shopping
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When my husband and I visit places like India or Thailand, we pack only one extra change of clothes. When we arrive, we hit a local market and buy local attire--woven shirts, saris, sarongs, etc. Not only does this make packing easier, but we get a better cultural experience and end up with lots of wearable souvenirs!

— Alice Fraser
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Rental Cars
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I always take a digital picture of the gas gauge to prove that I returned the rental car with a full tank. Some agencies try to charge for a minimal amount of gas when they "top off" the tank (which you're not supposed to do anyway). I've used these digital photographs to get refunds for gas charges that appeared on my credit-card bill after the fact.

— Jeff Mishur
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Technology
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Making international calls back to the States can be confusing if you're using a calling card and you're dialing a number by its catchphrase, such as CALL ATT. Obviously, many countries don't have the English alphabet on the telephone keypad. My solution? I create my own small keypads on a computer, print them out, and attach them inside my wallet, to my passport, and to my calling cards.

— Peter Morris
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Planning
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If you're divorced and plan to travel out of the country with your children, check the legal requirements in advance. When I tried to take my kids to Cancun, I learned too late that Mexico requires a notarized letter of consent signed by both parents for minors traveling alone or with one parent or guardian. If the parents are divorced, a copy of the parental custody agreement is allowed instead. The airlines enforce this rule before you get on the plane.

— Marge Stratton
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Packing
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I reverse the batteries in my portable CD player before packing it in my suitcase or backpack, in case it's accidentally turned on when my bag is jostled. I came up with the idea after arriving at my destination to find that the brand-new batteries I'd put into my Walkman were dead.

— Chris Giaimo
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Planning
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When I'm planning a trip, I almost always call the hotel concierge before I arrive, and if my hotel doesn't have one, I call a hotel that does. Recently, I asked for advice on what to see since I only had four days in a new city. I told the concierge what I thought I should try to do, and she said I had too many things packed into four days. She gave me a list of hot spots to visit and places to avoid, and even recommended a florist to call on for fresh flowers. With her help, my trip was far more enjoyable than it would have been otherwise.

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Air Travel
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Ask your flight attendants for dining, lodging, shopping, and sightseeing advice. Most crews have up to the minute information gleaned from layovers, which they're more than happy to share with passengers. You can count on flight attendants to seek out budget treasures. I know—I've been married to one for more than 21 years!

— Fred Manget
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Car Rentals
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I always have problems locating my rental car in a large parking lot. Now I bring along a brightly colored bandanna and tie it to the antenna.

— Tamara Johnson
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Planning
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— Jeanette Cantwell
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Carry a Polaroid camera when traveling to developing countries. In Cambodia, several village children gathered around us, posed enthusiastically for pictures, and were fascinated by their images in our digital camera. We wanted to send them the pictures, but they were unable to tell us their address. Polaroids would have solved the problem!

— Cynda Perun
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Packing
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It's unnecessary to make a packing list for each trip. Instead, draw up a master list with everything you might need on any given trip--from ski goggles to snorkels, slippers to saline solution. Save it on your computer. Before you start packing, cross out anything you don't need for that particular trip.

— Bonnie Herbst
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Packing
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My husband and I are retired, and we take two trips abroad each year. When unpacking, I put items we use repeatedly on each trip (flashlight, alarm clock, travel-size toiletries, etc.) into a box and keep it stored near the suitcases. No more searching or trying to remember if I've got everything for the next journey—it's all in one place.

— Mary Meikle
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Family Travel
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When traveling with my kids, I bring a Ziploc bag that includes four things: Benadryl, children's ibuprofen, one of those little medicine cups, and a thermometer. This all-purpose kit will help with minor ailments, or treat a more serious flu until you can get to a doctor. Best of all, it saves Dad from driving around at 2 a.m. looking for an all-night pharmacy.

— Heather Crow
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Planning
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Before traveling overseas, look at your health insurance card. If it only shows an 800 or 888 number for precertification of hospital admissions, call that number and obtain the local number with an area code. Many 800 numbers can't be dialed from foreign countries. I learned this the hard way during an emergency hospital admission in Switzerland. The delay in reaching my carrier could have been avoided.

— Chris Carveth
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Air Travel
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The middle seat isn't always awful. On a recent trip overseas, I called too late to confirm an aisle or window seat. After explaining the plane's AB-CDEFG-HI configuration, the customer service agent urged me to take the very middle seat, E, because D and F have less foot room. (In some rows, there are metal boxes underneath the seats in front of you that house wiring for onboard electronics.) I went along with her advice somewhat skeptically, but I ended up with plenty of room. The people on either side of me weren't so lucky.

— Audrey Ting

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