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Exhausting, Frustrating layovers?? Not anymore my friends!

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Exhausting, Frustrating layovers?? Not anymore my friends!

1 Comment 10 November 2011

Last week I took a look at some awesome comfort options mid-flight and it got me thinking, that’s all well and good, but what about in the terminal, the bane of many traveler’s existence…and this is what happened!

It’s no secret among travelers that one of the few downsides of seeing what our incredible planet has to offer, is waiting at the airport, any airport, for a connecting or delayed flight.  I’ve ‘slept’ (hard with one eye open!) on my backpack in the departure lounges of my fair share, including amongst others Arlanda Stockholm, Suvarnabhumi Bangkok, Ataturk Istanbul, O.R Tambo Jo’Burg and of course, Mascot Sydney. They all blend into one blurry memory of discomfort, frustration and fear that when I woke from my disjointed slumber, I would do so devoid of my backpack, passport and all valuables! The most recent of these was a few years ago now, how times have changed. I want to show you, for those who haven’t seen them yet, what I consider a godsend, and I cannot wait to try them out next time! I’ve only chosen 3, but these innovative and affordable solutions are popping up all over the planet.

Let’s start with Munich Airport and their NapCab’s. Located beyond the security checkpoint up on Level 5, the Napcab is the dearest of my three options, and perhaps this is based on location as the offerings whilst clean and comfortable are minimal. Perhaps less truly IS more in this case. Designed by students of Munich’s renowned University of Science and Technology, they’re about 2.5m x 1.4m, contain a bed (the largest of the three, granted), small desk and free Wi-Fi access. For those not there to ‘work’ or just after some ‘me time’, there is also a music system and a selection of impressive LED light ‘moods’ available designed to allow personalization to some extent. Regarding cleanliness, of linen in particular (one of my phobias!!!), rest assured that the automatic linen changing is state of the art and from the hundreds of reviews I have read, it’s totally acceptable. We’ll see! You’re looking at 15 euro an hour and there’s no pre-booking. You simply find a vacant one, swipe the plastic fantastic and enter your own little serene world for a bit. I love it…the concept and the delivery.

'Napcap' Munich. So worth it!

Next let’s head to Delhi and check out the super impressive SAMS SNOOZE AT MY SPACE. Interesting name, interesting offering! With a comfy if not massive bed, desk for your lap top, Wi-Fi, flat screen TV, DVD player, charging sockets for cell phones etc. they are perfectly located in the international departure area for your convenience. Believe it or not there are also facilities to shower and freshen up. These CAN be booked in advance and seem to offer a more rounded experience. Some points from travelers who have experienced SAMS to be aware of. They are not totally soundproof which might be somewhat annoying, and are a little more cramped than our other 2 examples (might be because there’s so much more in them!). A huge factor is that you cannot enter SAMS without a boarding pass. What does that mean? Well as we all know, gates seldom open earlier that 4 hours prior to flight time (usually 3), thus by the time you get to SAMS, you’re looking at a maximum of 3 hours in which to enjoy the service. This is the only downside to me as it becomes more a place for a nap, or brief relax than somewhere to have a good long sleep.

That said, for around USD9 per hour, I’d do it every day of the week, even if just for a single hour. Who wouldn’t?

It ain't perfect, but SAMS SNOOZE is value & fun in any language!

My favourite and final mention of the day goes to Yotel, at London’s Heathrow Airport. If there’s ANYWHERE you want to escape the rat-race within the confines of an airport…it’s Heathrow. Agree? Heathrow’s Yotel sits inside Terminal 4 in the ‘landside’ or publicly accessible area. If you’re going via Heathrow to your destination, you will need a UK entry visa to utilize Yotel, but that’s easy. This is the closest to a ‘mini-hotel’ of the lot. Totally soundproof. Bathroom facilities available, bed, Wi-Fi, flat screen complete with free movies, desk, hanging space, the works. You can even order a snack 24/7 delivered to your door! Awesome!

From all reports, the service at Yotel set it apart from the rest. Service, space, location, inclusions and availability ALL receive  a massive ‘tick’ according to every review I have read.

There’s a convenient online booking engine, allowing you to lock in your ‘pod’ for a minimum of 4 hours right up to 24 hours. Starting rate for a Premium room is GBP46 for the 4 hours. Bargain!

Yotel Heathrow screams FUN!...oh, and perhaps a little shut-eye!

I have researched and read countless reviews on all three of these options and one thing is clear. You need to manage your expectations. Yes, they are super convenient, comfortable and a massive relief for the weary traveler (we’ve all been there right?). But they’re not the Ritz, the Waldorf or any other 5 star hotel. These innovations have simply made layovers more bearable, and for mine, they’ve done this in a very impressive manner. If you want perfection, jump in a cab, head to the CBD, book into an established hotel with turndown, full room service and a corner spa…oh then before you have a chance to actually get any sleep, it’s time to head back to the airport for your next flight a couple of hundred dollars poorer.

I can’t wait to try one! For me it will part of my overall travel experience, and compared to the alternative, it’s complete luxury (and depending on who you’re traveling with could be a whole bunch of fun!!). Some people always want more no matter what. That’s cool. But I’m tipping those of you who love travel the way I do, who thrive on new and varied experiences, and who have stayed in so many hotels that novelty offers it’s own unique attraction these days, will love it.

Who HAS experienced any of these brilliant innovations, or an equivalent elsewhere? What can you tell me about YOUR experience? I cannot wait to get into one of these things!!! In the meantime though I would love to hear your take on it.

Till next week travelers!!

Ten Tips for Turkey – Gallipoli Anzac Trip here we come!

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Ten Tips for Turkey – Gallipoli Anzac Trip here we come!

No Comments 09 November 2011

With plans in place for the Sportsnet 2012 Gallipoli tour for ANZAC Day, I realise that we’re only 5 months away. After the 2011 trip, there is a LOT to look forward to with our new and improved experience. You’ll have to pop along to see them for yourself, but I can tell you…it’s a trip to remember. Here’s a snapshot of MY experience when our group together with one of Essendons’ favourite sons Jason Johnson made the pilgrimage Easter 2011. Whether you come with Sportsnet or not, I hope there’s something here that excites you to make the journey yourself!

Arrival in Ataturk airport is full on!

Tip 1. As tempting as it is to head straight to the passport control lines after a long flight, DON’T! Just past these lines there’s a counter with little signage but massive importance. The visa counter. USD30 per person for your entry visa and it’s just a rubber stamp. I took 6 passports to the counter, they just counted the passports, charged my credit card and waved me on. Job done. Once we lined up in the passport line it was like the red sea parting as the other Aussies realised they too needed a visa thus had to relinquish their place in line.

Istanbul, the 3rd most populated city in Europe (behind London and Moscow) smacks you right between the eyes with insane traffic, a mind boggling contrast of old and new, and some of the most friendly people on the planet. Our drive to the hotel from the airport included more frantic grabs for the ‘panic’ bars than usual but we made it and our little crew hit the hay pretty early after the long flight. Oh, a couple of beers of course…which is another story! 6 rounds, same drinks, same bar tender, same bar….TOTALLY different prices! All cheap mind you, the currency conversion is fantastic!

Day 1 was a highlight! Anyone thinking of joining us in 2012?

Aya Sofya - mind blowing!

Tip 2. Bring some super comfy walking shoes ‘cos you do not want to miss any of the sights today. I’m more about what appeals to my eye than history. More about the ‘what’ than the ‘when or why’. That said, the Blue Mosque, Aya Sofya, Royal Palace and Grand Bazaar are so much more impressive when you DO indeed know the history. The sheer size and precision involved in constructing this icons is a demonstration of workmanship that in my opinion should be a part of every building course on the planet. The rich and turbulent history that accompanies each and every point of our walking tour left me feeling enriched, a little smarter and certainly more humble. Win, win…..win.

Tip 3. Before you depart, buy a whole bunch of Nescafe instant cappuccino sachets. Ask at your local pub if you can hang out in their cool-room, then go about getting the taste buds used to the flavor of the powdered coffee combination! That oughtta do it. Trust me, unless you are prepared to do the Turkish coffee thing (Jason was up for 2 days after he had one!) this is what you’re going to have to get used to. I think by the time is was minus 2 degrees at Anzac Cove we truly thought it was the best coffee on earth!

The band prepping for a LONG night!

There were so many awesome components of our trip, it’s hard to pick any out. But day 2 was one that’s importance and significance we didn’t appreciate until it was done. 2 days before Anzac Day, we visited all the memorial sites, cemeteries and monuments. Why was this important? NOBODY else did it! At an empty Anzac Cove we heard the Australian Naval Band rehearse, and just stared across the water towards Imbros trying to contemplate what must have gone through the minds of our Anzac heroes.

Being there early. Eerie AND awesome!

At Lone Pine, Chunuk Bair and the trenches we were literally alone to soak up the emotion and history. I tell you, the wind whistling through the trenches and up the hill to Lone Pine as we were educated on the respective histories provided at least as many goose bumps as the Dawn Service itself. It was a privilege to be there in our small group and as I said, nobody else had the foresight to do this. Do yourself a favour and get down there early, you will not be disappointed.

Tip 4. Take a good book…or a footy. The day BEFORE the service, you will be milling about in a car-park with well over 100 coaches all waiting the opening of the road to Anzac Cove. We were there for almost 3 hours chatting to other Aussies and just hanging out. But once the road was open, it was helter-skelter! Every man for himself! You hit the road, go through 1 checkpoint, then line up for another checkpoint, receive your ‘gift-bag’ and without running (strictly forbidden) try and find the best vantage point on the lawn or grandstand.

Tip 5. Go for the grass. You will be here for well over 12 hours. To not be able to lay down overnight ‘cos you thought a seat was ‘a good idea at the time’ would be a rookie error.

Pre-sunset. All smiles enjoying the build-up.

There’s NO BOOZE allowed, which is brilliant! (though there’s always a couple of knuckle-heads with a distinct lack of respect who turn up pissed. Idiots!) Anyway, the catering is good and plentiful with more kebabs than you could point a bayonet at. It’s a carnival atmosphere early and right up till sunset and we had a great time meeting people from all over the place including heaps of expat Aussies now based in Europe looking for their ‘Ocka Fix’. Man did they get it.

Tip 6. Take layers! We were in t-shirts at 5pm but by midnight it was literally sub zero. Thankfully in 2012 Sportsnet will provide awesome sleeping bags and beanies, but on our first time we were caught a little unawares! To the Turkish dude with the big smile who robbed us blind for the ‘last’ two sleeping bags (I saw the car full later you bugger!) JJ and I WILL find you in 2012 haha! Well done and more fool us. IT. WAS. SO. COLD! 10,000 people, shoulder to shoulder on the ground, literally, and you still froze.

Talk about intimate! Loved it!

Tip 7. Check your requirement for personal space at the door. Props to the organisers though. Every ½ hour or so there was either a video, story, poem or song to help pass the time. For me, this was the most emotional part. Hearing the letters from these kids to their loved ones, often knowing they were about to go to their deaths??? Goosebumps the size of golf balls.  As dawn broke, it was like 10,000 meerkat popping their heads up. Next thing you know, the 2011 Anzac Cove Dawn Service was done.

Tip 8. Manage your expectations. A Dawn Service is a Dawn Service. Be it your local RSL, Shrine of Remembrance or Anzac Cove, the same things are said, in the same order, for the same amount of time. It’s the LEAD-UP that makes the Cove different. The chance to stand where our Diggers stood. To look from the beach up the hill toward Lone Pine and think what it would’ve been like with literally hundreds of machine guns aimed at you and your mates. To try the impossible, to empathize. And to feel the unique patriotism experienced ONLY when Aussies are en masse abroad.

Once the service was done, Lone Pine too, we faced the final challenge. Waiting for the coach back to the hotel. With around 1,000 others, all running on max 3 hours sleep, we waited. And waited. The ‘system’ seemed to be…whatever order they’re parked in, they arrived. We were standing for an hour, dead tired but exhilarated. The jubilation was extreme when our bus number was called and we got out of there…

Tip 9. Expect to hear the result of the Essendon v Collingwood game at Lone Pine. It’s impossible to escape it with that many Aussies about. We will again watch the game back at the hotel, but by then it’s all a matter of perspective and trust me, knowing the result does not diminish the fun and excitement…or the thirst! (Jason Johnson lead the charge on that front.)

This is one trip that will live in my memory forever. It was something that was on my bucket list but not high. I can safely say however that it SHOULD indeed be on everyone’s ‘must do’ list. It is life changing and Turkey with a group, well, it’s nothing short of inspiring, hilarious, eye-opening, humbling and stunning. A final tip?

Tip 10. If you want to do it with like-minded people, with an AFL flavour and loads of laughs, get on board. I’ll be there again with Sportsnet, as will JJ and we cannot wait to see you there. You know where to find us!

See you right here in 2012. I assure you it's a life changing experience!

HAVE KIDS…DID TRAVEL – an update.

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HAVE KIDS…DID TRAVEL – an update.

1 Comment 04 November 2011

So a couple of months ago I blogged on the concerns AND excitement that both my beautiful partner Jody and I had when considering traveling overseas with our perfect new daughter Grace. As it turned out, it happened MUCH sooner than anticipated! I was required to go to Malaysian MotoGP with Sportsnet clients and as I’d made a deal with Jody that I would NOT travel again in 2011, the only solution was…take the family. Awesome! This is how it all panned out.

First port of call – Australian Passport office. Express passports for a tiny person are pretty easy to organize. Hardest thing? Getting Grace to STOP smiling for the camera. I swear 3 months old and she’s the smileiest little thing on the planet! Anyway, $213 and 48 hours later Grace Mary Byrt was officially able to travel overseas. Woohoo! That was the easy bit.

Next the gravity of what we were facing started to hit home. The challenges;

-       What to pack

-       An 8 hour flight each way (Oh my god!)

-       Her little ears at the track

-       A ‘winter-baby’ facing 34 degree heat with 90% humidity

-       Feeding overseas with unknown water quality

-       Bedding in the hotel

Let’s start with the packing. In the past it’s been a suitcase for Jodes, a suitcase for me. This trip. A HUGE suitcase for Grace, nappy bag, stroller, a tiny little one with all our clothes, a hairdryer and minimal toiletries. Still hit 38kg somehow.

To the airport for our 3am departure. Lesson 1. BE EARLY! Check-in is so much easier when there in heaps of time. Airline staff are in a better frame of mind as they’ve not had to deal with idiots yet, and you have time to ensure the bassinet seat is booked and your ‘bulkhead’ seats are locked in. Lesson 2. When they ask ‘Would you like to take the stroller through to the gate?’ – say “YES!”. We made the mistake, as Grace was in her Baby Bjorn of thinking we’d be OK but after 2.5 hours of waiting for the flight, we were knackered and Jody’s back was struggling. Rookie mistake.

Emirates bassinet. A perfect fit!

Next…the dreaded flight. Being new parents, you’re amongst the first to board. As you’re getting settled though, watch the faces of those who are allocated the seats near you. A combination of fear, frustration, apprehension and disapproval lay behind the ‘smiles’ cast your way. Fair to say, we too were worried as to how Grace would perform on the flight, but put on a brave face. Turns out we needn’t have worried. We’re among the lucky ones. Grace stirred on taxi just in time for Jody to jam a bottle down her neck. Take-off…perfect. She woke for a bit, had a look around then thought “Nothing exciting is going to happen in here…” so proceeded to go back to sleep in the comfy looking, and very convenient bassinet. Great job Emirates!

Same in reverse for landing. Gracie fed on descent meaning her ears were fine, as the little ones cannot self-equalise. Naturally my chest was puffed out a little further as we prepared to disembark. A combination of pride, relief, joy and ‘up yours’ behind MY smile cast THEIR way!

A 45min transfer to the hotel and already the heat was becoming a factor. Grace simply is not used to it. Oh oh. We checked into our stunning villa over the water and cranked the air-con to Arctic. We didn’t pack a travel cot as the hotel ensured us that they had one. Well…it WAS a cot strictly speaking. But the mattress looked more like Malaysia’s Tama Abu Mountain Range than the flat firm mattress we’re used to. SIDS would have passed out had they seen this! It was kinda like the poor man’s memory foam…wherever she lay, Grace’s little body print stayed there!

The rest of the week went great. A HUGE find was the Milton Tablets that sterilize water, and everything in it. This was essential for Grace’s bottles. We just filled the basin in our 2nd bathroom (told you the room was awesome!), dropped in 3 of these magic tablets and threw the bottles in. 15 mins later -  sterile! Needless to say I was very careful not to consume any Milton’s with my vodka tonics…anyway.

We took Grace everywhere. She got to chill with Colin Edwards on Friday night (48 hrs before ‘that’ accident. Get well soon Colin!). Then saw the Petronas Towers Saturday, had her first swim in the resort pool, and was all ready for the track on Sunday with these awesome ear-muffs.

Jody, baby Grace & Colin Edwards!

Get me to the track Dad! AM I SHOUTING??

She loved it...in the end!

Aside form the heat which made her a little grumpy she was perfect. AND the locals LOVED her. If I had a Malaysian Ringgit for every photo a local took of her…well, I’d have several ringgit anyway!

That’s Grace taken care of. As for mum and dad. Well, it was a great trip but we were so focused on her, that we didn’t think about how WE would be affected. We seldom ate together, didn’t eat out at night, and it wasn’t till about 9pm each night that we could sit on our balcony, look at the ocean, relax and have a few drinks and chat about something other than Grace. Before anyone says it. NO! I am not complaining. Having Jody and Grace there with me on a work trip was amazing, I loved it. But after all our worrying about Grace, would she be OK, could she travel, would the locals accept her? etc…it was harder on us than her.

It was a relief every evening to get to the balcony for a cold one...or three!

So we’re home again and things are back to our ‘new normal’. Our 3-month old angel has stamps in her passport, which is cool and we learned heaps. The biggest lessons?

Babies are super flexible and resilient, they’ll adjust. They pick up on parents’ stress, truly they do. Both Jody and I are pretty chilled out, and you can see it in Grace. Take the pram to the gate at the airport! Pack a travel cot. MILTON tablets are GOLD. Try to stick to your home routine, they’re little but they get it. Don’t expect your first trip to be romantic, but when you get a chance, jump on it (so to speak!). Be CONFIDENT! What we new parents do day to day is right. If it works here, it will work there. Trust me on that.

Thanks to those who gave advice and I feel suitably qualified now to assist anyone else concerned with their first family trip. What’s next for us? Well…I’m thinking Fiji or Bali. No work, just play. Anyone travelled to either with a little one? Tips?

Till next time. Travel safe and good luck!

The Full Melbourne Cup Experience – Better than a Box Trifecta

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The Full Melbourne Cup Experience – Better than a Box Trifecta

1 Comment 03 November 2011

Submitted by Sportsnet Roving Reporter JayLo

A highlight-moment of my Cup-day happened surprisingly early, at 6.45am in fact, when my cabbie picked me up from home… in my heels, fascinator and all. He asked me how my night was, as if I was making my way home from a Cup-Eve bender (??!!!!). Okay…. not ‘exactly’ the so-hot-right-now look I was going for, but I think he can be forgiven based on the fact I was one of the earliest-prepared women in Melbourne for the Cup. It all made a little more sense to him when we swung by to pick up my equally prepared friend Kim (who needed me to stab 6 bobby pins into her fascinator and scalp before we left… I think it gave her an unexpected & welcome mini face-lift at 7am!) – and off we went, all the way through to the Crown Palladium valet drive – to meet our fellow-frocked early-birds! Honestly we felt like we were in that commercial for Crown stepping our high heels out of the taxi, past Prada, and up the steps to the grand entrance. Ha!

Frock Watching

Roving Reporter JayLo (right) and Kim

Walking into the Crown Palladium lobby we were stunned by a sea of feathers and block-colouring… fresh foundations, wedge-heels… clutches, perfumes and champagne  – oh my! The crowd at the SportsetHolidays annual breakfast were up & about in a big way for 7.30am…. the room’s conversation hum (from the hundreds of guests) was intermittently pierced with squeals, giggles and enthused stories of Cup-days gone by. Walking the lobby was simply surreal… summing people’s smiles and outfits up as quickly as they were summing mine. We were all winning (luckily)… the ‘people watching’ on a day like Melbourne Cup at a venue like Crown Palladium is simply worlds-best.

The excitement when the doors were opened to the Palladium room was almost as if the gates had just opened for the horses at the track! “…And they’re off!” What a spectacular scene. Melbourne may be known for its hole-in-the-wall alleyway breakfast cafe’s… but the grandeur of a Cup Day breakfast with 500 giddy guests is just something else. Once the our MC got started we quickly realised we were one of a very few Melbourne locals in the room…. and let me tell you, there’s something extra special about a room filled with fellow-aussies who have travelled from interstate on a journey to the nations sporting capital on the same dream… to back the winner of The Cup!

After some brilliant food and guest speakers (including Dr. Turf, racecaller extraordinaire, and Ray Selkrig, winning jockey of the Melbourne Cup 50 years ago) I was excited to hear Rob Cecconi (Sportsnet Holidays founder) launch the Sportsnet Foundation helping bring opportunities to children… keeping them on the right track, a great concept we were all happy hear about and support.

Fashions Off the Field

It wasn’t long before we started one of the highlights of the morning…. ‘Fashions Off the Field’ – a spectacular show of 15 breakfast guests in their race-day best (including me and Kim!). This was a fun-filled show hosted by the renowned fashionista Bec Maddern… I was SO nervous about walking a catwalk runway right down the middle of the Palladium room but Bec and the other contestants made it so much fun – a very tongue in cheek approach as you’ll see in the video (you might recognise my ‘blue steel’ look at the start of my walk … a guaranteed show stopper). It was brilliant to have an opportunity to win prizes including a hotel experience at Crown and a gorgeous Opal from Lightning Ridge Opal Mines… Kim was lucky enough to come second place (based on the trusty audience applause voting system). I told her it was the bobby pin face-lift id given her… so I’m pretty confident I’ll be her plus one when she claims her prize at Crown!


.

And they’re off!

Before we knew it the entire room of guests were all escorted out to the coaches and were making our way to Flemington – happy to be seated behind a gorgeous couple who had just won a trip to Fiji at the breakfast (I think they phoned every person in their address book to share the news of their big win… without even placing a bet on a single horse!). Our full bus was absolutely buzzing with excitement and why not – when we parked our coach among hundreds of others and made our way towards the Flemington gates the feeling was just surreal – welcome to history in the making. Smile, you’re on camera. I even noticed our female bus-driver doing a quick change out of her uniform and into a frock and hat for the day (no-one misses this race… for anything). Classic.

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So the excitement within the gates is just next level… bookies, hot chips, champagne, dress ups, glamazons, fashion fails – something to see in absolutely every direction. From the Navy seals to the Buck’s party (men in animal print suits, see pic)… and the dress-up jockey’s to the girls in business shirts and, well, not much else – the fashion fabs and fails were like nothing I’ve ever seen before. Jaw dropped non-stop.

Now they tell me it’s mainly about the horses but – as far as I could tell – the Melbourne Cup is about likeminded people getting together to have a good punt and a great time …. So many smiles and laughs, it’s like it’s everyone’s birthday party all at once!  The airing of the race-horn had an old-school excitement about it…. then there were a few screams and hugs throughout the day on big wins – but the main race made this a ‘day for the bookies’ with the favourite nowhere to be seen (that damn omen bet on Americain… more like Amercan’t).

Regardless of not winning thousands of dollars the day just gets better and better as the hours roll by unexpectedly quickly… a concentration of so many people having the time of their lives in one spot on the planet at one time – wow, what a sight…

My first Melbourne Cup experience of many… I can’t believe it took me 28 years to get there in the flesh but I’ll say one thing for sure… see you on the rails at Flemington in 2012!

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Welcome to the Sportsnet family! We are the experts in unique sports related travel experiences worldwide. This blog will share with you some of the hottest sporting news and tours as WE see them! We welcome you to add your comments and look forward to having you onboard as part of the conversation.

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