Points High Trip – A to Z in pictures

Posted by Caleb | August 9, 2016

I am not a photographer, heck I just went on a trip around the world without even carrying a camera.  However, as I get more connected to digital devices and social networks, my initial reaction to seeing something cool on this trip was to take a picture.  This felt a bit weird to me, even more awkward to have to come up with a new pose for every picture.  Thus from the beginning I tried to take pictures of letters in the different areas we found ourselves in.  My aunt makes these crazy cool framed words made from pictures of letters, thus my idea was to do something similar with the alphabet.  Below is an A to Z set of photos, taken almost primarily with an iPhone 4.  Some of them work, some of them require a bit of imagination, all of them are heavy on the iPhoto edits…

How to travel to Copenhagen on a budget

Posted by Beth | January 20, 2016

Copenhagen is one of the most expensive cities in the world for tourists, but we found it’s still possible to stay on a tight travel budget. Here our are tips for how to best plan ahead, where to eat for cheap and free museums and sights to visit.

  • Use public transportation or walk. The city is quite walkable, but the subway and trains are also fairly easy to navigate and will be cheaper than a cab, especially to/from the airport.  Keep in mind if you are an American, you credit card is will need to have a PIN number set beforehand in order to work at the subway ticket kiosks.  This is common throughout Europe.
  • Visit the free museums and tourist sites. Our favorites were the National Museum and National Gallery, which are always free. Check online or with your concierge to see which museums are free on certain days of the week or month. All of the palaces are free to walk around outside and take photos. For great views of the city you can access the tower in Christianborg Palace for free, though it was closed while we were there. The Round Tower is also only a few dollars. Many of the city’s iconic sights are free to see if you can resist the urge to go in to the touristy restaurants nearby. Nyhavn, Stroget (Europe’s longest pedestrian shopping street), Torvehallerne Market, and the Little Mermaid statue are all good recommendations.
  • Save money on food. Eating out will be one of your biggest expenses in Copenhagen, and budget meals are hard to come by. Eating out at lunch is typically cheaper than dinner, and many places offer all-you-can-eat buffets that will fill you up. We didn’t get a chance to try any of these, but Samos and Dalle Valle come highly recommended and are for sure still offering these buffets. Hot dogs are extremely popular in Copenhagen and can be a good option if you’re in a hurry or pinching pennies. We had some pretty good ones from 7-Eleven actually! A few of our favorite meals were L’Appetit (wraps) and Magasasa Chinese. Other budget recommendations we didn’t get to try were Green Mango Thai, Banana Joe’s Burgers, Tria Deli and Rita’s Smørrebrød.
  • Buy booze from grocery stores or visit bars during happy hour. There’s supposedly a great nightlife scene in Copenhagen (there are even “morning bars” open when the clubs close at 5 or 6 a.m.), but since that’s not our thing it worked out well for us to find cheaper drinks in the late afternoon. We loved Heidi’s German Bierbar and went on a Friday when the whole menu was 50% off from 4 p.m. until 10 p.m. That’s the only one we got to try, but from our research we learned Kassen also has two-for-one drinks on Fridays from 2p.m. to 10 p.m, and Malbeck Wine Bar also has happy hour everyday form 4p.m. to 6 p.m. Or you could head to student areas Nørrebro or Vesterbro for cheaper drinks. Grocery stores usually have a good selection of wine and beer, but note that they often close early. On New Year’s Eve they closed at 3 p.m. so we were left buying our bubbly at 7-Eleven. We drank it with an epic view of the fireworks from our hotel room.
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  • Use points for lodging. Even hostels are expensive here so it’s a great city to burn hotel points. We stayed at two different Radissons, the Radisson Blu Royal and Radisson Blu Scandanavia. The Royal was a slightly better location, but the Scandanavia had a free breakfast, which was another big money saver.
  • Splurge on what matters most to you. We went on New Year’s Eve so we were prepared to spend a bit more to celebrate. We ended up without our baggage for three days, including NYE, so going somewhere fancy was out of the question. Instead we went to the world-famous Tivoli amusement park, right across the street from our hotel. Their Christmas Market was still set up and it was a winter wonderland. We didn’t ride any rides or play arcade-style games, but enjoyed just walking around taking it all in, watching their early fireworks show, and sampling glogg (hot wine) and Irish coffees. We also spent a little more to go out to the Carlsburg Brewery because we’d read it was well worth it. In our opinion it actually wasn’t worth the time and expense, but they boast the world’s biggest beer bottle collection, which was cool.
  • Take a day-trip to Malmo, Sweden. Malmo is slightly cheaper than Copenhagen, and of course you can see another country this way so it’s worth it. The train only takes half an hour or so and it’s an adorable town to wander around and find some tucked-away café.

    Malmo was VERY quiet on New Year's Day, but we found it to be very charming nonetheless.

    Malmo was VERY quiet on New Year’s Day, but we found it to be very charming nonetheless.

We were in Copenhagen for four days and four nights and only spent $337.39, far below our overall trip budget of $50/person/day. In fact this was our cheapest country yet! The benefit is there are tons of free things to do, so if you’re wise about where you stay and eat, Copenhagen really can be an affordable tourist destination.

Travel Budget Review:

Airline miles redeemed: 40,000 American Airlines Miles

Hotel points redeemed: 94,000 Club Carlson points

Flexible points redeemed: 3,222 Arrival points

Total out-of-pocket expense: $337.39

Daily Average: $42.17 per person

 

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Our travel nightmare: two missed connections and 72 hours without luggage

Posted by Beth | January 2, 2016

*Posting out of order for a real-time update from Copenhagen. Back to finishing up South America posts tomorrow.*

Both of us are pretty seasoned travelers and have been fortunate in the past never to run in to many problems with air travel. Of course some delays, a missed flight here or there (usually accompanied with meal vouchers or being put up overnight in a nearby hotel), or a bag arriving a few hours late, but nothing major. On our way to Europe from the US on December 29, our luck ran out and we had a whammy of a travel day(s). Because of multiple unrelated mechanical delays we ended up missing not one but two different flights on our itinerary, spending an extra 13 hours in airports and to top it off, our bags did not arrive until three days later, causing quite the inconvenience being in Copenhagen in the dead of winter without any of our warm clothes.

Original Flight Itinerary: MCI>ORD>MIA>DUS>CPH

As you can see from the flight path above, we started off with a doozy of a long travel day anyway. After going back to Kansas for Christmas, our next stop on our RTW adventure was supposed to be in Africa. It was only 10,000 extra miles to fly to Europe en route to Africa so we decided on a whim to head to Copenhagen for New Year’s.

The fireworks alone were well worth the trip!

The fireworks alone were well worth the trip!

Booking off-peak awards, we were able to redeem 40,000 American Airline miles (for two people) and only had to pay $35.80 out of pocket for the taxes and fees.

Our travel day appeared doomed from the start, when we arrived at the KC Airport to hundreds and hundreds of people in line at the airline counter because of multiple flight cancellations due to inclement weather the past few days. But luckily we were able to join a much shorter line because of priority access (thanks to AA credit cards) and breezed through security. We waited and waited at the gate and though the plane was sitting only a few feet away we boarded well over an hour late due to problems with the jet bridge. Once we arrived in Chicago another plane was at our gate so we sat around for quite some time waiting to deboard. We finally got off a few minutes before our next flight to Miami was supposed to take off, but even after an impressive sprint through the terminal we were too late.

We made our way to the Admirals Club, where a friendly agent helped to rebook us on a different flight. The good news was we would have one less flight, flying to London and then Copenhagen, but the bad news was we had over nine extra hours to kill in the airport, and we had to fly on an American plane instead of with partner Air Berlin as planned. We have lounge access thanks to the Citi Prestige card, and it definitely paid off in this case, helping to get us rebooked fairly easily without standing in long customer service lines and giving us somewhere a little more relaxing to spend our long day in the airport. We even received a few premium drink vouchers and $24 to spend on food.

New Flight Itinerary: ORD>LHR>CPH

Our flight to London was supposed to depart at 7 p.m. but because of more mechanical issues, ended up leaving over two hours late. The most frustrating part of the delay was they were not accurately updating departure times, so instead of just chilling in the lounge for a few more hours we had to stand (ok, pace) near the gate. Once we caved and walked back to lounge they made an announcement a few minutes later that the flight was now boarding, so we packed up and left again, only to wait for almost another hour at the gate again. Once onboard, we had one final delay thanks to a vent not working. When we arrived in London, there were more difficulties with our gate, so it took an extra half hour to get moved to a new gate. Those thirty minutes ended up being the difference maker in missing our next connection to Copenhagen, so we were rebooked on a different British Airways flight two hours later. Again thanks to Priority Pass we were able to visit the Aspire Lounge for some snacks.

Up to this point we were still in fairly high spirits. Despite a few frustrating delays, things were going as smoothly as possible all things considered, and we were still on pace to arrive in Copenhagen the same day (though a 4:30 p.m. arrival vs. 8:30 a.m. is essentially losing a full day of exploring). We finally arrived in Copenhagen after 30 hours of travel, but our bags did not.

Baggage delayed 72 hours:

At the Copenhagen airport we had to go to the SAS baggage service office, which  manages baggage for almost every other airline at this airport. Though our award flights were booked with American Airlines, our last flight was with British Airways so they were apparently responsible for locating our luggage. The SAS employee was nice and sneakily gave us some Star Alliance overnight kits since British Airways didn’t have any left.

Over the next three days we continually attempted to track our bags online, but it always read “Tracing continues. Check back later.” We were able to check where they were last seen by AA on their website, and learned that our bags went to Miami, but AA told us via Twitter that the bags were no longer in Miami and we had to take it up with BA.

We managed to keep pretty positive attitudes for the first about two and half days and didn’t let it stop us from enjoying New Year’s Eve in Copenhagen and taking a New Year’s Day side trip to Malmo, Sweden. The biggest issue was that Copenhagen in the winter is cold and Caleb’s coat and my hat/scarf/gloves were in our checked bags. Today was the coldest, windiest day yet and after wearing basically the same clothes for five days straight we I was on the verge of a travel meltdown, convincing myself we were never going to see our bags again. But when we walked in to our hotel room at the Radisson Blu a few hours ago, we were shocked and relieved to find our bags waiting.

We have never been so happy to see a couple of backpacks as we were today!

We have never been so happy to see a couple of backpacks as we were today!

Expense Reimbursement:

We were told at the airport that British Airways would reimburse us for any essential items we needed to purchase, such as toiletries and warmer clothes. We searched online and reached out via Twitter but could not get any confirmation on what that included, amounts, etc. The first night Caleb went out to buy contact solution and the following morning we stopped at H&M to pick up some extra outerwear and a change of clothes. I suppose that’s the reason they won’t give you an amount, because if they had told me $500 or $100/day or any set number I would have gone on a little shopping spree. But because we didn’t want to get stuck covering the expenses ourselves if not reimbursed and we basically only needed warm clothes for eight days we tried to be really frugal. Probably overly frugal, as we really didn’t get enough to be warm and we weren’t able to do much for NYE in our athletic shoes and yoga pants. The whole thing would have been a lot easier if we had known where our bags where, but the unknown of when were going to get them back made it a lot more stressful.

Because it was an award flight, my understanding is that any protection or reimbursements provided by our credit card company does not apply, since the entire cost of the ticket must be paid with that card (we used Barclaycard Arrival). British Airways told us that American Airlines would be covering the expenses, so I’m sure it will not be an easy process going back and forth trying to get reimbursed. We’ll update this post or write a new post on how that all goes down.

The last updates from American Airlines showed our bags in Miami. When they finally arrived they had been tagged through Dusseldorf by Air Berlin, so our bags followed our original route even though we did not.

The last updates from American Airlines showed our bags in Miami. When they finally arrived they had been tagged through Dusseldorf by Air Berlin, so our bags followed our original route even though we did not.

Lessons Learned:

  • Pack light! Carry on whenever possible. If I could pack all over again I would downsize even more into a smaller backpack that could be carried on. Nothing worse then just getting our bags back today and knowing we have to check them on another flight tomorrow.
  • Make sure anything you really need right away at your destination or anything that’s irreplaceable is in your carry on. Sure it’s a pain to keep your coat on your lap during the flight but it’s way worse to be cold for three straight days. We were starting to worry about what we’d do without malaria medicine when we arrive in Africa next week, so in the future I’ll be packing all prescriptions in my carry on.
  • You really need very little to live on. During this trip we have few material possessions with us—only what we can fit in our packs. But then having to go without those few things for the past few days opened our eyes even further that all we really need is one change of clothes, good walking shoes and a toothbrush. Pro tip—bring dry fit underwear you can wash in the sink that will dry overnight. At times it was actually quite freeing to not have to worry about what to wear or taking time to do my hair and makeup or having to carry our bags around.
  • You can’t control your circumstances, but you can control how you handle it. Admittedly by husband is MUCH better at this than me and once again I’m reminded at how lucky I am to have such a calm, cool and collected travel partner. He didn’t even flinch when I managed to lose one of our only warm pieces—his scarf—somewhere between the hotel lobby and our room during check-in. We’ve still had a great time in Copenhagen despite the major inconvenience of not having any of our belongings, and though for a split second I had “Is this worth it?” thoughts, my fun-loving husband reminds me that it is indeed.

    This guy. Lost luggage can't get him down.

    This guy. Lost luggage can’t get him down.