Wednesday 31 December 2008

Don't give up the important things in life

Just about every industry expert is predicting a tough year for vacation companies in 2009, but who wants to listen to them?
Yes, times are going to be harder, but that is no reason to give up your hard-earned break - especially when you can spread the cost by vacationing as a family or with friends at one of our great vacation rental properties on Anna Maria Island.
By going in a group you immediately cut the costs, not only of travel, but the provisions you purchase, the cost of rental vehicles, and gas to name but a few. But if you come as a family you will also get to spend some quality time together in a real home from home. And isn't it about time you did that?
For more information and to find out about some of our excellent online discounts for 09, check out www.annamaria.com and get planning that dream vacation.
After all, there are few better places to forget all about the worries of the world than Anna Maria Island...

Monday 29 December 2008

Come on in, the water's lovely

When you live in Florida it's easy to forget how the rest of the world lives. Not for them the year-round sunshine, warm seas, sandy beaches and glorious sunsets. Some people actually have to put up with snow!
Perhaps that is why so many visitors flock to our beautiful part of the world every winter for the vacation of their dreams. Anna Maria Island is just the best place to see out the really cold months experienced in the north and remind yourself that the best things in life are free: a stroll along a quiet beach, dipping your toes into a warm sea, watching the sun go down on another perfect day.
And you can do all these things on Anna Maria Island.
Traditionally, the snow birds start to arrive in January, many from Canada as the winter weather starts to get out of hand. And even though the loonie has taken a hit on the global exchanges (but let's face it, which currency hasn't?), they are still expected to travel in numbers.
Sean Shannon, managing director for Expedia Canada, certainly thinks so. "We're starting to see prices and deals that we haven't seen in a couple years, despite the dollar," he says . "It's simply supply and demand."
So come on down to Anna Maria Island, where we can supply all you demand all year round.

Visit annamaria.com for the best in Florida vacation rentals

Wednesday 24 December 2008

Winter weather still affects Florida

We might not get lots of snow and ice, but the wintry conditions being felt across the rest of the country are having their effect on us nonetheless.
According to a report in the Miami Herald, hundreds of travelers trying to get in and out of Florida are being held up because of weather delays elsewhere. The report reads:

South Florida was feeling the effects of blizzard-like conditions in other parts of the country that stranded travelers and left some roadways near impassable.
Piles of snow and plunging temperatures meant major delays for planeloads of passengers in and out of South Florida - heralding the start of the Christmas holiday season.
Even cruise lines were not immune from the impact.
''We've seen a higher number of people showing up at cruise terminals late and missing the ship altogether, because they have been delayed by the weather,'' said Jennifer de la Cruz, spokeswoman for Miami-based Carnival Cruise Lines.

The weather was blamed for at least 11 deaths over the weekend, including a collision between a car and a tractor-trailer near New Carlisle, Ind., that killed four Marines based near Detroit.
In New Hampshire, the deep snow added to the misery for nearly 11,000 customers still in the dark from an ice storm more than a week earlier.
Across northern Indiana, nearly 50,000 customers remain without power because of an ice storm last week.
In Marysville, Wash., north of Seattle, heavy snow collapsed part of the roof Monday at a factory. No one was injured.
The 14.5-inch snowfall Sunday in Portland, Maine, surpassed the old record for Dec. 21 of 12.4 inches, set in 1933.
In Portland, Ore., a total of 11 to 13 inches was the biggest snowfall since January 1980. Depending on how much more fell Monday as the snow trailed off, the storm could rank as one of the city's 10 worst on record.

Motorists hitting the roadways were expected to inch over some slippery terrain in their holiday travels.
AAA predicts that more than 52.4 million travelers nationwide will travel by auto during the holiday season, down 1.2 percent from last year.
In Florida, 2.5 million auto travelers are expected this year, an increase of 0.2 percent from last year, said Gregg Laskoski, spokesman for AAA Auto Club South.


So, if you're going anywhere over the holiday period the message is clear and simple: take care.

And have a very happy, peaceful and safe Christmas!

Monday 22 December 2008

Tourists still taking flight

Check out this story from The News-Press, for all those who were thinking that fewer and fewer folks are going on vacation because of the expense.

'Procrastinators are in luck this year when it comes to holiday air fares — especially in Southwest Florida, travel experts say.
This season’s low prices popped up in a hurry as the price of oil crashed this fall, said Rick Seaney, chief executive of the travel Web site FareCompare.com.
“I can’t even remember a crazier fall and winter,” Seaney said. Airlines are trying to loosen the pocketbooks of people frozen in fear by this year’s financial turmoil.
“This is really, really good for air travel consumers,” Seaney said. “The airlines are trying to get ’em off the fence. They traded an oil crisis for a global economic crisis.”
Nowhere is that more true than Southwest Florida, Seaney said, noting that a typical flight from New York City to Southwest Florida International Airport would have cost $400 to $600 in October but is now in the $250 to $350 range.
Carol Obermeier, the Lee County Port Authority’s director of aviation market development, said the season’s off to a strong start at Southwest International.
“For the next two or three weeks out the bookings look really solid,” Obermeier said. But the situation is so volatile it’s hard to make predictions much past that. Typically, Obermeier said, business at the airport slows in January.
“Christmas is over, everyone’s back in school,” she said. Then, as the winter tourist season kicks into gear in February, the number of flights and passengers will go back up.
The airlines aren’t dialing back their service here as they are in most Florida markets, Obermeier said. In the week ending Dec. 12, there were 210,874 seats on 1,627 flights compared to 190,000 seats on 1,472 flights in the same week last year, she said
“Compared to December 2007, we’re looking to be up in flights 10 percent and in seats by 3 percent,” Obermeier said. “We’re the only one up in capacity and seats.”
For example, Fort Lauderdale is down 9 percent and Tampa is down 11.5 percent in flights, Obermeier said. That’s a marker of the confidence the airlines have in this area’s growth potential, she said. “Carriers look at those numbers: Who’s coming here, where are they coming from? So they make that decision” on how many flights to have.
Kinda makes you think, no?

What are you waiting for? Visit annamaria.com for the best in vacation rental properties in Anna Maria Island, Fl

Thursday 18 December 2008

Panthers prowling back

This story from the Naples Daily News makes interesting reading. Watch out for a big cat near you!"A plan setting benchmarks to take the Florida panther off the endangered species list is set to be announced.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has taken years to finalize the plan, which changed little since the agency unveiled a draft plan in January 2006.
The big cat has been staging a precarious comeback from a toehold in Southwest Florida, but the plan envisions taking decades, if ever, to declare the panther back from the brink.
Scientists credit a program that transplanted eight female Texas cougars into the panther population with replenishing the gene pool and boosting the number of panthers from fewer than 30 in the 1970s to between 100 and 120 panthers today.
Despite the progress, the panther continues to face an uphill climb to recovery because of threats from increasing human population and development in panther habitat, the recovery plan says.
“Working with our partners and the public is critical if we are to continue making strides toward recovering the Florida panther,” Fish and Wildlife Service regional director Sam Hamilton said in a statement Wednesday.
The plan sticks to an earlier goal of having three “viable, self-sustaining” populations of panthers totaling 720 animals — a goal that will require reintroducing the panther across the southeastern United States.
New to the final plan is an interim goal of having at least 80 panthers in each of two unspecified reintroduction areas and not losing any ground in Florida. The next step is to translate the 230-page recovery plan into more panthers in the wild, environmental advocates said."
Go Panthers! And if you ever make your way across the Manatee, Cortez or Longboat bridge don't forget to look up annamaria.com for the best in vacation rentals. Perfect homes for those with a big pride.

Tuesday 16 December 2008

Crist (on a bike)

If you think the travel industry is in dire straits, at least we have Governor Charlie Crist.
Gov. Crist, like anyone else in his position, is entitled to go on trade missions to drum up new business for Florida. But to judge from the costs he racked up and the size of his retinue on the trip to Europe, Mr Crist seems to have lost his sense of proportion.
The trip was supposed to cost $255,000, a hefty sum by most measures but apparently within the expected range for gubernatorial jaunts of this sort. No doubt the dollar's weakness in Europe this summer increased costs. But by $170,000? That's a lot of business development.
The South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported that Crist's trade trip far eclipsed the original estimated price tag of $255,000. The newspaper found that among the governor's entourage were nine bodyguards. Crist stayed in hotel suites in London, Paris, Rome and St. Petersburg that ran as high as $2,179 a night, and he traveled first-class air at a cost of $8,000, round trip. Oh, lest we forget, there was a $1,300 tab for hotel room service and minibar expenses.
And then there is the question of Carole Rome, Crist's then fiance. Rome tagged along on the trip but was listed on the travel list as a "delegate" representing her New York company. That company is a wholesaler of Halloween costumes.
Crist's staff has defended the trip, saying it was largely funded by Enterprise Florida, the public-private partnership that promotes economic development in the state. Enterprise Florida officials say the junket enabled Florida companies to make $5.5 million in sales and laid the groundwork for another $96 million in business and 2,245 new high-tech jobs.
Even if that's true, overspending on an official trip and going first class and maybe beyond is either a sign of cluelessness or crassness on Crist's part. Especially at at time when so many of his constituents are worrying about having a job or, worse, a home.
Florida leads the nation in jobs lost. Florida is being hit harder by the mortgage crisis than any state but California.
The latest forecast by state economists shows the state facing a potential $6 billion revenue shortfall for the coming year, on top of $6 billion in cuts last year.
And as of now, neither the governor nor the Legislature has a plan to keep our schools and our social services adequately funded.
Crist should quit trying to defend a trip that was filled with unjustifiable extravagances and was shamefully over budget. That's hardly a message a man who calls himself "the people's governor" should be sending.
Times are tough, and in Florida, they are worse than most places. The governor should act like it when conducting his own affairs and the public's affairs, and not just when it comes time to cut the budgets for public services.

Sunday 7 December 2008

Florida still a big draw

This from CBS News.

ORLANDO -- Central Florida's theme parks and attractions have played host to more than 100 international travel agents this week as part of a big push to bring in more visitors from abroad.
News 13 caught up with the visitors as they made through way through Universal Orlando Resort.
Nearly all the agents News 13 spoke with said they were having a great time in Central Florida, and felt extremely welcome, something they did not feel a few years ago.
"After 9/11, there was this possible misconception that Americans didn't want a lot of tourists to come over," said Iain Fleming, a travel agent from the United Kingdom.
The Orange County Convention and Visitors Bureau brought over the travel agents, saying international travel is becoming increasingly important.
The number of international travelers coming into Orlando International Airport was up 10 per cent in October.

Check out the video that accompanies this news piece here

Any positive news for the Florida tourism industry is good, we say. So come on all you Brits, you're more than welcome...

Thursday 4 December 2008

Great White visitors in Florida

Hello there travel bugs!
And that goes double for all our Canadian friends. It seems more and more of them are making the trip to Florida for vacations and conferences - and they are most welcome as far as we are concerned.
A report in the Orlando Sentinel quotes a new report from the federal government which shows that Canadian travel to Florida climbed 18 percent in 2007.
It says: 'Just under 2.8 million Canadians visited Florida during the year, according to the US Commerce Department. That made Florida the No. 2 destination for travelers from the Great White North, behind only New York state. Florida ranked ahead of New York in total number of nights spent by Canadian visitors.
'Altogether, Florida drew 14 per cent of all Canadian traffic to the US but 33 per cent of the total number of visitor nights spent in the US by Canadians. Not surprisingly, the vast majority (86 per cent) of Canadian travel to Florida was for either vacations or conventions.'
As Florida gears up for high season, we say keep em comin!

If you want to stay somewhere really special, check out the vacation rental properties at annamaria.com