A Hybrid for a Day

By Sean O'Neill
March 6, 2009
A hybrid for a day
Renting a hybrid is not impossible, as long as you know how to hone your search.

Hybrid sales are surging these days, but renting one is still frustratingly difficult, mainly because of scarcity. Enterprise, the country's largest rental-car agency, owns 7,000 of the green rides—far more than its rivals—but that's still a skimpy 1 percent of its fleet. Here's how to increase your chances of scoring one:

Surf high and low
Kayak has the most extensive hybrid listings of all the travel booking and aggregator sites (it checks six rental agencies), but you will see the vehicles under "car options" only if there's one available at the location you specify. You can also search directly on the rental-agency sites, but you need to know where to look: Avis, for example, lists hybrids as "specialty cars"; Hertz groups them under its "green collection."

Hold agencies to their word
Hertz, Avis, and Budget say they guarantee hybrid reservations—but that guarantee goes out the window if the stock isn't there. If the car you want doesn't materialize as promised, try one of these tacks: Ask the desk agent to rent you another vehicle temporarily and to deliver the hybrid to you as soon as it's available. Or, request a coupon for a future rental as compensation. Agents won't give them out unbidden.

Drive one off the lot
No luck with the agencies? Go to a Toyota dealership instead. About 75 percent of the company's 1,200 outfits nationwide rent their cars, but not all of them have hybrids, so you'll have to call ahead to make sure there's one available at your destination. (Dealerships that participate in the program are listed at toyota.com/rental.) The hybrid rentals start at around $50 a day, which is similar to what the major agencies charge in certain cities. A bonus: Some dealers even have a free shuttle service to pick you up at the airport.

Green savings
Keep your speed in check on the highway: Driving fast burns more fuel and causes greater emissions. In a typical family sedan, every 10 miles per hour you drive above 60 costs you an extra 54¢ per gallon at the pump.

Plan Your Next Getaway
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The Ecolodge Authority

*Top pick! A green star goes to the guidebook that our judges find most useful. THE PANELISTS Jessica Root Blogs for the websites treehugger.com and planetgreen.com. She lives in Brooklyn. Avital Binshtock A resident of San Francisco, edits the Sierra Club's magazine and its Green Life blog. Katharine Wroth An editor for the eco-site grist.org. She telecommutes from her home outside Boston. THE BOOKS Fodor's Green Travel ($22) Jessica Root: * The guide is a breeze to navigate and full of amazing photos. Plus, it has two things I love: a price key organizing hotels by "budget," "moderate," and "blow out," and an estimate of the amount of emissions it takes to fly to each one from New York. Avital Binshtock: Some properties put more of a focus on social responsibility (hiring locals) than on environmental concerns—a bit secondary for a book purporting to list eco-hotels exclusively. Still, it does include some fantastic far-out spots, such as a yoga retreat in a Sri Lankan village. Katharine Wroth: * The editors did their homework, with nice how-to-save details throughout. For instance, at the Bloomfield House in England, guests get a 10 percent discount if they arrive by bus or by train. It's the closest any of the three comes to being a bona fide travel guide. Green Places to Stay ($22) Jessica Root: Certain travel tips are stale: Minimize waste by reusing plastic bags! And the writing is far from smart—describing a hotel called Anna's House in Northern Ireland, the author gushes that "creative energy streams into their green crusade." Why pollute with mixed metaphors? Avital Binshtock: This little caveat on page 46 made it difficult for me to take any of the reviews seriously: "Owners pay to appear in this guide." And then on the next page: "We make no claims to pure objectivity." I'm glad they differentiated between pure objectivity and the not-so-genuine kind. Katharine Wroth: Dirt-cheap hostels and luxury lodges are listed cheek by jowl, which can make it frustrating to find a place in your price range. But my biggest complaint is the lack of listings for the U.S.—the closest the book gets to our mainland is the Virgin Islands! The Eco-Travel Guide ($30) Jessica Root: Best reserved for a Sunday morning when you have time to wade through the incredible amount of information. And they didn't edit for topicality, either. I have beef with the section on clothing and gear; a few items, like soccer balls and salad servers, were completely unrelated to travel. Avital Binshtock: * The content is well researched and highly original, with interesting nuggets on new, affordable forms of transportation, such as micro scooters and solar-powered trains. Overall, it deftly walks a fine line; it's dense with detail, yet never boring. Katharine Wroth: A bulky book that reads like an academic tome, with advice that borders on the unhelpful. It says, for example, that meeting people online is a good substitute for traveling. Thanks! Another problem: The section on green products comes across like an extended advertorial.

Born-Again Bags

Vy & Elle Nicola Freegard and Robin Janson let nothing go to waste: The designers craft about 30 styles of bags from old vinyl billboards and have the remains made into floor tiles. vyandelle.com, computer pouch $41. (view photo) Alchemy Goods After hunting unsuccessfully for a stylish waterproof pack years ago, Seattle cyclist Eli Reich decided to make his own using a material he knew well: bike tire inner tubes. alchemygoods.com, haversack $98. (view photo) Friends-International Artists at this Cambodian collective create bags from comics they clip from newspapers pitched at the French Embassy in Phnom Penh—a French lesson and a fashion statement in one. globalgoodspartners.org, messenger bag $48. (view photo) Worn Again Old Virgin Atlantic coach-class upholstery is given new life by this British design firm—the fabric is stripped, dry-cleaned, and then repurposed as limited-edition bags. wornagain.co.uk, Lydia purse $94. (view photo) Demano Vinyl exhibition banners from Barcelona are turned into chic totes by a trio of eco-conscious Colombian designers. Customize your own by choosing from among 50 signs. demano.net, Marbella bag $90. (view photo) Terracycle (Best buy!) The New Jersey recycling firm salvages more than 42 million Capri Sun pouches from schools and factories each year and then stitches them together to produce reusable sacks. target.com, shopping bag $10. (view photo) Green savings If each passenger carried a suitcase that was five pounds lighter, every aircraft in the sky would save 18,000 gallons of fuel annually. Leaving that extra weight behind could also help you skirt the $25 checked-bag fee.

25 Unbelievable Vacation Deals

LAS VEGAS Stay at the Palace Station Hotel and Casino this week for $12.50/night through the Luxury for Less Sale on Hotels.com. Book a room at the 5-star Trump International Hotel and Casino for $89/night through the property's Suite Escape package. (You get a $50 spa credit, too!) Get roundtrip airfare from Denver to Vegas plus two nights at the Imperial Palace Hotel for $168 on Cheaptickets.com. FLORIDA Suites at Miami's Riviera South Beach hotel are $99/night from now through September—but they're going fast, so book ASAP. At Orbitz.com, you can find a room at the Regal Sun Resort in Orlando for $69/night. The site also offers a vacation package with roundtrip airfare from Fort Worth and two nights at the hotel for $275/person. NEW YORK Hilton Hotels is running a "New York on Sale" promotion with rates starting at $159/night for some of its properties, including the Millenium Hilton and the Waldorf Astoria. Rooms at New York's Pod Hotel start at $69/night all month long. A package including airfare from New York City to Niagara Falls, plus two nights at the Days Inn-Fallsview, starts at $194 at Lastminute.com. HAWAII Northwest Airlines is offering a vacation package that includes five nights at the Royal Kona Resort in Hawaii, plus roundtrip airfare from Seattle to Kona, for only $687. CHICAGO On Expedia.com, you can find a package including roundtrip flights between New York and Chicago and three nights at an aloft Hotel for $336. CARIBBEAN AND MEXICO The NH Real Arena Punta Cana, a 5-star all-inclusive resort, is now offering rooms for $67/night on Cheapcaribbean.com. Book a package with roundtrip airfare and it'll cost you $599/person for four nights. Roundtrip airfare from various points in the U.S. and four nights at the Villa del Palmar Flamingos Beach Resort and Spa in Mexico is being offered starting at $488 per person at Travelocity.com. Get four nights at the Wyndham Rio Mar Beach Resort and Spa in Puerto Rico, plus roundtrip airfare from Miami, for $449 at Cheapcaribbean.com. Plus, save $100 with the promo code PR100. EUROPE An Ireland Fly and Drive vacation package starts at $349 at Go-today.com, including roundtrip airfare from various points in the U.S. and a seven-day car rental. Virgin Airlines also has a Fly and Drive package in the UK that includes roundtrip airfare from the U.S. and a seven-day car rental, starting at $489. Fly roundtrip between Madrid and New York and get four nights at the Hotel Silken Puerta America in Madrid on Expedia.com for just $528. FLIGHTS Fly roundtrip between Portland, Ore., and Honolulu on Hawaiian Airlines for $298. Regent Seven Seas Cruises is offering free airfare for certain cruises starting in May. HOTELS Best Western's Countdown to Savings promotion, which started this week, features deals in hotels from Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, to Las Vegas, starting at $43/night. CRUISES Take a seven-night Western Caribbean cruise from Miami to Mexico, Honduras and Belize on Norwegian Cruise Line for $449. The deal is available at Orbitz.com. Or for $209, take a three-night cruise on Royal Caribbean from Port Canaveral, Fla., to the Bahamas and back, also available on Orbitz.com. Even lower! Cruise to the Bahamas from Miami for three nights for $119 on Norwegian Cruise Lines. Book on Expedia.com. At Cruisedeals.com, you can find a four-day cruise from San Diego to Vancouver on Holland America for just $195. Also at Cruisedeals.com, there's an eight-night Western Caribbean Cruise on Carnival, sailing roundtrip from Ft. Lauderdale to Mexico, Costa Rica, and Panama for $599. Take off from Seattle on a 4-night Pacific Coast cruise to Victoria, British Columbia and Nanaimo, British Columbia for just $369 per person. Book at Travelocity.com. * Prices valid as of March 6, 2009. Prices are subject to change. Think you can do us one better? Post amazing deals you've found on our blog.