Spill your secrets about Buenos Aires

By Budget Travel
October 3, 2012

It's time for another Question of the Week:

Travel is one of those things that you'd get really good at if you did them all the time. Unfortunately, few people get to do it all the time—including the staff of Budget Travel. So we're pooling our knowledge: We ask you a question, you share your advice, and then we spotlight the most helpful tips in a future magazine issue. This week's question is:

"I’m going to Buenos Aires in February. I already know where I'm staying, but I need recommendations for restaurants and shopping. I’m also visiting the Mendoza wine region for a few nights and would love suggestions on which vineyards to visit, plus ideas for any other important sites in the area." —Marilyn Holstein, Managing Editor

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Schmap: A neat trip planning tool

Schmap.com offers free travel guides to more than 200 places in the U.S., Europe, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Schmap mashes up local listings with zoomable city maps. Restaurants, museums, and stores are marked with icons. You can bookmark favorite attractions for printing out later. The website makes it easy to find what you want. Click on a city name, such as Miami, then click on your interest, such as "top attractions," and then scroll through a list of attractions matched with photos and descriptions written by professionals (such as the writers of WCities guidebooks) and amateurs. The company says that more than 50 million Schmap Guides have been downloaded in the past couple of years. I found that the guides are great for planning out a day's itinerary, especially because of a tool that lets you measure the footsteps between two destinations. But I found the guides to be weak on trustworthy recommendations about what to see. Schmap.com also offers free software you can download to your PC to build your own custom guide for sharing or printing. Unlike the travel guides described above, I found the tool for creating custom maps wasn't as easy or speedy to use as other services, such as Trip It, which we've blogged about previously. People who upload images to the photo-sharing website Flickr and who add descriptive tags to their photos may receive an email in their in-box, inviting them to contribute their photo to a Schmap map. You won't get paid for the privilege, but you'll be able to feel satisfaction that your photo of a hotel room, restaurant, or attraction will help other people plan a better vacation. Editors from Schmap troll Flickr for photos they like, so you never know... EARLIER Photo-sharing website Flickr has got some new tricks.

Rule 240 is a traveler's myth

The distinguished travel writer Joe Brancatelli makes himself no friends among many writers, frequent fliers, and industry officials with his recent article "Urban Travel Myths" for Portfolio.com. Joe says the biggest travel myth is something called rule 240. The story goes that if your flight is canceled, you can say to a gate agent something along the lines of, "I think rule 240 means I should receive some compensation", and the agent will hand you a voucher for a free meal, free hotel stay, or a seat on the next flight out—on any airline. Rule 240 is supposed to apply to delays and cancellations that are "involuntary," such as mechanical delays—and not to storms, labor strikes, and acts of God. In fact, there is a whole body of oft-quoted news articles to the effect that, if your flight is canceled, you should negotiate other flights or compensation by mentioning "Rule 240" to an agent. Most prominently, TV journalist Peter Greenberg has made this case in a report on his website, where he writes that there is a Rule 240 and that it promises the following: In the event of any flight irregularity (delay, cancellation, mechanical failure) for any reason whatsoever except weather, the airline must endorse your ticket over to the next available flight. Not just THEIR next available flight, which may not leave until next Thursday, but THE next available flight. A recent Google search turned up similar advice all over the Internet, such as in an WJLA-TV report, a blog post at The Consumerist, an article on Aviation.com, and an item in the e-newsletter DailyCandy. It feels right, too—the airlines ought to have a rule detailing how they will treat their customers when flights are canceled. But does rule 240 exist in practice? Not really... Today, airlines are deregulated, and each one spells out what their cancellation and rebooking policies are on their websites, usually under the terms "contracts" or "conditions" of "carriage." You'll seldom find it under "rule 240," but Delta , United , and Northwest** do indeed use the term "rule 240" to spell out their involuntary delay and cancellation policies. But no other airlines use the term rule 240. (If you don't believe me, you can check yourself. I've posted a list the website pages on airline sites with the cancellation policies, below.) And few gate agents with any airline will know what "rule 240" is supposed to mean. So how was the notion of rule 240 born? It happened more than 30 years ago, when airlines were regulated. Even then, it wasn't a true federal rule. Instead, as the New York Times explained a while ago, "Rule 240 referred to the section of the airline tariff that explained the airlines’ individual policies on what they would do for passengers during a delay or cancellation. In the regulated era, most airlines agreed to transfer a traveler of a canceled flight to another airline provided it could get the traveler to his or her destination sooner." Ultimately, saying "rule 240" won't matter to most gate agents. But being polite will. The best strategy when your flight is canceled is to to ask an agent what the airline's policy is, explain your situation, and ask politely to be re-booked on the next flight out of the airport to your destination. In general, in the case of long, involuntary flight delays, these are the main airline policies: Alaska, American, Continental, Northwest, United, and US Airways have general policies that say that if they can't rebook delayed passengers on a seat on one of their own flights within a "reasonable amount of time," they will fly the passenger out on the next flight offered by a rival airline. The catch? These airlines only cooperate with select partner airlines. If they don't have an agreement with the other airline offering a flight on your route, you're out of luck. AirTran, JetBlue, Frontier, Midwest and other small airlines generally have the following policy: Each one pledges only to rebook delayed passengers on another of its own flights. Southwest also follows this guideline. UPDATE 1/28/2008: On first posting, I failed to include Northwest in this list, for reasons I explain in a comment below. Thanks to reader George Hobica of AirfareWatchdog.com for catching the error. Here's a list of airline policies on involuntary delays and cancellations of flights. (In some cases, you may need to download free Adobe Acrobat software to be able to read these contracts.) AirTran Contract of Carriage Alaska Airlines Policy American Airlines Conditions of Carriage Continental Airlines Contract of Carriage Delta Airlines Contract of Carriage (subject to change soon, due to possible merger) Frontier Airlines Contract Hawaiian Airlines Contract JetBlue Airways Contract of Carriage Midwest Airlines Contract Northwest Airlines Contract Southwest Airlines Customer Service Agreement Spirit Airlines Contract of Carriage United Airlines Contract of Carriage US Airways Conditions of Contract Virgin America's Cancellation Rules (For more Virgin America policies, call 877-359-8474.)