Travel podcast roundup

By Budget Travel
October 3, 2012

A new blog called Less Than a Shoestring recently offered a terrific roundup of free travel-themed podcasts. Podcasts are audio guides that can be downloaded onto computers and MP3 players for free.

In case you missed it,

Budget Travel recently spotlighted four exceptional podcasts on San Francisco, Spain, Kyoto, and London that aren't covered in the above-mentioned roundup. We also recently ran an article spotlighting some free podcasts for museums. (No more paying for audio-guides at museums!)

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Inspiration

Where does the Alessi man vacation?

Alessi is the hip housewares brand that features supercute designs, such as corkscrews shaped like colorful parrots. I had a theory that the employees of this Italian-owned company are pretty hip. I contacted one of them, executive vice-president Jan Vingerhoets, and asked him for his idea of a great vacation spot. Jan travels about six months a year to meet with innovative designers, marketers, and shop owners, and he has seen some of the world's coolest places. Jan's top recommendation is Heron Island, Australia. "I visited once during a 2004 trip to Australia," he says. "I wish my family could go every year!" Why Heron Island? "It must be paradise on Earth. The island is about 800 metres long and 300 metres at its widest and one-third of the island is taken by the University of Queensland, where they operate a Coral Research Station. The island has just one resort, no further buildings. You can swim straight off the beach to an endless garden of coral where the waters are literally teeming with beautifully coloured fish and marine life." Q: What makes the place you recommend different from other places you've seen? Amazing nature, especially the reef which you can enjoy by snorkeling and diving. The best part of the trip was the diving experience. It's very professionally run. And it's one of the best places to learn diving because there's no need for day trips to the Reef because you're already there. Even for the experienced diver there is lot's to see with over twenty different dive sites within 15 minutes from the resort. You can easily enjoy up to three full dives a day. You won't bump into any day-trippers, the reef experience on Heron is exclusively for guests. Q: Thoughts on lodging? There is no choice since there is just one hotel on the island, the Heron Island Resort. Rates start at $155 a night. The rooms are basic; don't expect the latest design or gadgets, but you don't need that here. The amazing sunset or the baby sharks (they are not dangerous and avoid you) at Shark Bay beach are so much better than your favourite movie or TV show .... Q: Can you recommend a restaurant on the island? The resort has 2 restaurants: the Shearwater Restaurant and the Pandanus Lounge & Baillie's Bar. Because this is a remote island, food is only brought in once a week and the menu is limited but meals are served plenty and it was hard not to find something we liked. [Read Budget Travel's coverage of Australia.] Earlier: Where does the Guinness master brewer go on vacation? Where does the chief of innovation for Lego go on vacation?

Sign up for those flight alerts

Nothing's a sure thing at an airport, except for exasperation. I recently discovered something new to be exasperated about. It turns out that the electronic boards in airport terminals, which announce flight arrivals and departures, can sometimes be misleading. My friend and I were recently departing from the Louisville airport. Our flight was canceled. But we wouldn't have known this fact if we had relied on the terminal's electronic boards, which wrongly said our flight was departing on time. Luckily, I found out about the flight cancellations via an alert to my cell phone. I had signed up for the alert when buying my ticket. And I had bought my ticket via Orbitz, after finding the fare through a Kayak search. As Orbitz promised, an alert by voice mail to my cell phone warned me that our flight was canceled. It wasn't just Louisville's terminal electronic boards that were misleading during my trip. The electronic boards at New York's LaGuardia airport also displayed wrong information, this time affecting my second flight of the evening. This flight was an onward connection out of Charlotte. The plane--like many planes this summer--was grounded on the tarmac for a couple of hours. Yet when the passengers sitting near me called their families at LaGuardia to report the delays, the families told them that the airport arrivals board was saying the flight was "on-time"--a physical impossibility.... Had my fellow passengers called their family members earlier, they might have been able to warn them that the flight was delayed and spared them a three-hour wait at the airport to greet them. So, again, be sure to sign up for those flight alerts to your cell phone, which can be sent by text- or recorded-voice message. If you buy tickets through Orbitz.com, they'll give you an option to sign up for these alerts. Some, but not all, other airline websites also offer this option. United, American, Delta, Northwest, and Continental are some of the airlines that enable passengers to sign up to receive notifications at their websites. Some websites, such as Orbitz, allow you to sign other people up to receive fare alerts to. In other words, you could add family members to the list of people receiving the alerts. One catch, though: If you're departing for a red-eye morning departure, the alert may wake you at an inopportune time to merely report that your flight is on time. In such a case, you'll be annoyed. Orbitz allows you to block out particular times--such as early mornings--when you do not want to receive messages. I hope other travel websites will adopt the same feature. In fact, I hope they go one better. Airlines and companies such as Orbitz should begin to offer text messages that contain connecting gate information for multiple-stop flights. Here's what I mean: Say you have a to connect to another plane at an airport to catch an onward flight. Most flight attendants fail to announce the relevant gate information. You're expected instead to "deplane" and then stand around an electronic board in a terminal looking for the relevant gate information, wasting precious minutes to meet tight connections. Why can't companies like Orbitz, and airline websites, send text messages with the relevant gate information? There must be a solution. Related: Readers offer 7 tips for coping with delays and cancellations. If You Thought Your Crackberry Was Addictive Before...