The Dovecote


I’m enjoying the great hospitality of my old friend Tom and wife Diane here in their cozy house in Concord, just around the river bend from the Old North Bridge. It’s called “The Dovecote” and was Louisa’s model for one of the sister’s houses in “Little Women”.

Benjamin Hosmer, a minuteman at the first battle of the American Revolution, lived in this house in 1775. The Alcotts were here some 50 years later. Louisa Alcott’s first poem was written here. Among the greatest thinkers of their time, Emerson, Thoreau, and Bronson Alcott very likely met on occasion here to discuss their progressive vision of the new American experience and ideas about social life, nature, and philosophy called the “trancendental movement”

Taxation within celebrations is Tyranny?!


Due to the Patriots Day holiday, residents of Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont and the District of Columbia will have until Tuesday, April 18.

Is this fair?  I think NOT!    I say everyone is entitled to an EQUAL right to procrastinate until the last dang minute and this denies me, a citizen of Oregon, an equal right to the good people of Mass.

I think it was New England patriot Patrick Henry who said "Give me more time to file my taxes or give me a deduction"

The shot heard ’round the world


Concord and Lexington argue over which town can claim the first shot of the American Revolution. Lexington is where some shots first took place as the British moved out of Boston to look for guns hidden in Concord, but Concord's North Bridge is where the more organized and successful resistance to the British gathered early on April 19th, 1775. Several colonian "Minutemen" and British soldiers were killed in this skirmish.

Tomorrow they will reenact that historic battle.

"The Shot Heard Round the World" is a line from Ralph Waldo Emerson's "Concord Hymn" about the battle at the North Bridge, a song / poem he wrote in 1827 to commemorate the event.

By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
Their flag to April's breeze unfurled;
Here once the embattled farmers stood;
And fired the shot heard round the world.
The foe long since in silence slept;
Alike the conqueror silent sleeps,
And Time the ruined bridge has swept
Down the dark stream that seaward creeps.
On this green bank, by this soft stream,
We place with joy a votive stone,
That memory may their deeds redeem,
When, like our sires, our sons are gone.
O Thou who made those heroes dare
To die, and leave their children free, —
Bid Time and Nature gently spare
The shaft we raised to them and Thee.


Inside Hartwell Tavern on the "Battle Road" from Lexington to Concord.   Hard Cider was the drink of choice here in the 1770s and one can only imagine the conversations as local farmers plotted … the American Revolution.

Hartwell Tavern

MinuteMan National Historical Park – Patriot Days!


Hanging out here in lovely Concord, MA with my most excellent old Pal Tom and his wife Diane. They live just down the street from Minuteman NHP where in many ways the Revolutionary War began.

This weekend and Monday the town celebrates "Patriot Days" with historical reenactments all over the area. Here at Hartwell Tavern on the Battle road Minutemen fought with retreating British troops.

MinuteMen

HUZZAH!

Travel Tip – Hotel and Airline prices


Over at WebmasterWorld a member was suggesting that contacting hotels directly leads to the lowest price for a room. Not true. There's no magic bullet site online for cheap rates, you need to surf around and may often find a "consolidator" that is cheaper than the hotel itself. Hotels.com, Travelocity, and Expedia are major consolidators and there are hundreds of smaller ones. In Europe, for example, Venere may find you a cheap room.

Example: Last week I used a small flight consolidator called cheapseats.com to book Delta to Boston and paid about $100 less than the cheapest fare Delta had online at the same time.

This situation is common in travel because pricing is very market driven and surprisingly inconsistent both for flights and hotels.

As a travel publishing guy I know how some of the deals are cut and it's a very sloppy and counter-intuitive process where some consolidators will force properties to sell them blocks of rooms far below rack rate in exchange for a guarantee of selling those rooms. Hotels.com is notoriously unpopular as the top consolidator because they tend to squeeze great deals from properties in exchange for guaranteed volume and lots of bookings. Good for consumer, somewhat hard on profit margin for the properties.

If, at the last minute, the consolidator has a lot of rooms left they may sell them at rates far below what the hotel will charge if you call them. You especially see this in places like Vegas and big cities with Hotels.com. During a November Vegas trip I got the Hilton through (Travelocity I think) for about $55 which I think was under their own website rate, though during a March trip I found the best price for Oriental Palace at their own site – a fantastic $65 nightly for a nice room in the middle of the strip plus some buffets.

All that said I think the hotels are getting smarter and some provide a low price guarantee at their own websites, so you are certainly right that you should check the hotel site as well as other places.

Google are you becoming an Ads hole?


Google's claims about keeping organic listings separate from advertising are ringing increasingly hollow. I actually think they have every right to do exactly what they appear to be doing now – mixing ads and organic listings – they just should not mislead people about this, claiming that they don't do it!

Here's a search for "dallas to SFO". The results page sports not one but TWO entire ad blocks in the white, formerly "organic listings only" section. On my 15" laptop screen about 65% of the results page shows advertising.

Amr at Yahoo pointed out recently that Google could have trouble keeping up earnings since the advertising was now very well optimized. But how about just adding a LOT more ads?

Web Results 110 of about 3,290,000 for dallas to sfo. (0.14 seconds)
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Sponsored Links

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Flight To Dallas
http://www.ORBITZ.com Find Special Low Fares on ORBITZ. Book Flights, Hotels, Cars & More!


Departing: Returning:
Search: Expedia Hotwire Orbitz Priceline Travelocity

Product search results for dallas to sfo
Dallas Cowboys Visor – $12.95 – Sports Fan Outlet
Dallas Cowboys Logo Cap – $15.95 – Sports Fan Outlet
Motels Hotels Restaurants and Bars by Hornbeck, James S – $80.00 – Bibliophile Bookbase

 

Google Wifis San Francisco….sung to the tune of “I left my router…in San…Fran…CISCO”


It's brilliant for Google to offer free internet to any metro area, and maybe even rurally though that gets more complex logistically. Google doesn't need ISP fees, they to keep up market share and ad clicks. Even a linked logo to Google will probably create enough ad clicks to justify the cost here and certainly if you include brand awareness it's worth the money for them.
A drop in Google's bucket of cash to consolidate the position as search leader.

Where the HECK are Yahoo and MSN when all these cool initiatives spring up?

Thanks CheapSeats!


Is started with a frustrating 45 minute session at cheapseats.com where they kept saying my itinerary choice, presented to me 30 seconds before was NOT available.   I ran through this process 3 times but then dutifully followed their instructions and the guy got me the same price and flights.  I don't expect perfection, just consistency with the advertised price and they delivered on it.    The price at $426 from MEDFORD to BOSTON was about $150 less than Delta's own site so I'm happy.

Since I publish a lot of travel information and also run several affiliation deals with TravelNOW, ONETIME, Hotels.com, and many others, people always ask me how to get the best airline and hotel prices.  

The answer is simple but disappointing – you generally need to surf around a LOT and hope to bump into the place that happens to have the best deal of the moment.  

For Airline tix I usually begin with Orbitz (use the matrix feature with 3 days "before and after" for a nice price "map".  Also check OneTime.com to get a good baseline on prices, then move to the airlines themselves to see if they are better.   If the price is good I'll go ahead and book but if it seems too high (as did 500+ for this Boston Trip), I keep on surfing to Travelocity, Expedia, CheapTickets.   This was my first try with Cheapseats and I'll use them again for sure since they came through for me today.  THANKS Cheapseats

Generally the BEST way to save money on airline tix is to have a VERY flexible schedule and be able/willing to fly from major airport to major airport.   Rural areas like mine tend to have fewer good deals than metro areas.

Y2K preparation …. saves Oregon Family!


I live just a town away from the Stivers family who recently spent 17 days in an RV stuck up in the mountains about an hour from here.   This area is easy to traverse in the summer but has often caused people problems this time of year.

The Stivers family survived just fine thanks to … Y2K rations!

Hey, who am I to say all that Y2K hype and prep was a big waste?

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