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It's seldom
that the Sethis go for a holiday without taking their daughter along.
But
the 19-year-old girl was busy with her examinations when Rajesh Sethi
spotted the advertisement in a newspaper: for as little as Rs 24,500,
SriLankan Airlines would take a couple to the Emerald Isle on economy
class; four nights and five days stay (breakfast included) at a five-star
hotel in Colombo or Bentota; no hidden costs, no add-ons, nothing.
"The price was simply unbelievable," says the 47-year-old businessman
still exulting though it has been a week since he returned. "When
such an offer comes your way, I feel you can afford to take a few days
off from work to relax and get away from it all." This from a man
whom wife Madhu describes as "a workaholic who never takes more than
a week off from work". She herself would rather have visited a foreign
country "where there is a bigger difference between our culture and
theirs ... but he was so keen". What clinched it finally was the
price factor.
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Goa
50% Off
Faced with a 30 per cent drop in tourists, God's Own Country
is targeting foreign backpackers and domestic tourists with a range
of packages.
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It may be the season of loss. Not just in human lives. The world's largest
economies are in recession. The sounds of employees being fired by corporates
reverberate as much as the bombs being dropped on Afghanistan. This should
not be the time for leisurely cruises along Australia's Gold Coast. Or
for that matter babewatching on a Thai beach. Yet in an unusual turn of
events it is the doom that is giving leisure and pleasure seekers an unprecedented
bonanza in travel deals.
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Kerala
God's price
Faced with a 30 per cent drop in tourists, God's Own Country
is targeting foreign backpackers and domestic tourists with a range
of packages.
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"Unbelievable", "too good to resist", "incredible
offer" ... these cliches are now a reality across the country as
tourists are finding out. Airlines, hotels and tour operators, still reeling
under the impact of September 11, are trying to convert adversity into
opportunity and are resorting to desperate measures-slashing prices and
offering fantastic travel packages in an effort to fill up empty airline
seats and vacant hotel rooms. They know why. Through winter and right
up to March, over 2.5 million foreign tourists-at least a third of them
Americans-traditionally flock to India. But post 9/11 the tidings are
gloomy. The Tour International Association, the apex body of the US travel
industry, has forecast an 11 per cent drop in business travel and a 9
per cent drop in leisure travel by Americans after the WTC attacks.
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Australia
30% off
Go bargain hunting Down Under. Your chance to see the Sydney
Opera House and the Gold Coast at a discount. Tour operators are
offering holidays in Australia at almost two-thirds of what they
cost this season last year.
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The aftershocks are already being felt in India. October witnessed a
steep 28.8 per cent fall in foreign tourist arrivals and November offered
little consolation with a 25.5 per cent drop. Suddenly the industry is
discovering that India has a domestic traveller who could more than make
up for the substantial drop in videshi arrivals. "Events outside
have not affected domestic tourism which has been growing at an average
of 15 to 20 per cent in the past few years. This is the market that holds
the key to tourism in India this year and the industry would do well to
focus on this segment and work out packages," says M.P. Bezbaruah,
who retired as Union tourism secretary recently.
The industry, it seems, is already heeding his words. And the Indian
traveller has never had it so good. Star hotels and heritage resorts,
which exclusively targeted foreign tourists, have changed tune and are
going all out to woo desi tourists travelling within India. Discounts
and special packages are being doled out to spur demand. And big tour
operators like Thomas Cook, SOTC and Cox and Kings, hotel chains like
the Taj and Oberoi Groups and airlines like Jet Airways and Air Sahara
as well as smaller players across the country are suddenly waking up to
the potential of tapping the Indian traveller. It would be difficult to
resist such tempting offers:
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Premola Ghose & Urmila Dongre, Off to Sri
Lanka
"We've never gone on such a
cheap trip in all our lives."
Ghose, programme officer at India
International Centre, Delhi, is a self-confessed workaholic. But
Rs 24,500 for two (economy class tickets on SriLankan Airlines and
5-star hotel stay) was too tempting. So it was off to Colombo with
her good friend Dongre, a photographer.
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# SOTC, the outbound group travel division of Kuoni Travels, slashed
the price of its 11-day holiday trip to South Africa from Rs 1,04,286
last year to Rs 76,752. And if that was not attractive enough, it threw
in two nights free in Dubai, along with visas.
# Cox & Kings has laid out the works for its Goa New Year Bonanza:
three nights and four days at Rs 11,690 per person on a twin-sharing basis,
including return airfare to Mumbai, accommodation, all buffet meals, transfers,
sightseeing and add-ons like a boat cruise. A saving of almost 50 per
cent compared to last year.
# Smaller players are equally aggressive. The Mumbai based Shree Raj
Travel and Tours is throwing a whirlwind tour of all the key cities in
Australia for Rs 39,999 per person, including air fare-down by Rs 10,000
from last year.
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Domestic
Discounts |
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With foreigners deserting India, local tourists
are now king
Less than half. That is what you pay for a holiday
in Rajasthan compared to last year. A three-city, seven-day
tour costs Rs 30,000 per person and includes five-star
stay, airfare ex Delhi, breakfast and dinner.
Jaipur
Rs 21,000
(Six nights, seven days +all meals)
Manali hotels are giving discounts of up to 70 per cent.
One unique package: Rs 7,500 for four nights, five days
for two persons, all meals and unlimited drinks.
Shimla
Rs 3,300
(2 nights, 3 days+meals for couple)
Goa
Rs 7,550 (3 nights+airfare ex Mumbai)
Last year, the Bogmalo Beach Resort in Goa offered three
nights and four days for Rs 30,000 per couple. This
year, the package is available for Rs 11,690 per person,
and includes a return air fare ex Mumbai.
Puri
Rs 9,999 (2 days, 3 nights+meals)
Hotels in Orissa are offering discounts of up to 50
per cent this year. At Hotel Seahawk in Puri, room tariffs
have come down to Rs 300 from around Rs 500 last year.
Kerala
Rs 15,950 (4 nights, 5 days+return airfare ex Mumbai)
Tourists from Mumbai pay almost Rs 2,000 less now than
what they paid last year for stay in five-star hotels.
The tariff cuts are more drastic in budget hotels and
resorts.
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# Not to be outdone, major airlines have tied up with hotels for special
packages this holiday season. Jet Airways' Jet Escapes includes a three-day,
four-night stay at the Renaissance, Goa, which comes at Rs 13,000 per
person on a twin-sharing basis and includes return air tickets ex Mumbai.
The offers are so tempting that some can't seem to have enough. Mumbai-based
Gaurav Dhingra, 22, part-time student, sometime worker, has been having
a blast of late. He had recently gone to Goa on an "absolutely stunning"
package from Air Sahara priced at Rs 6,500 per person, which included
to and fro airfare as well as a three-night and four-day stay at the Whispering
Palms, a four-star hotel. Then, Poonam Malhotra, 22, a veejay stylist
with MTV, and a close friend of Dhingra, heard from her mom about a fabulous
offer to Sri Lanka.
Before long, the two of them and six other friends had ganged up to
go on the Lankan tour. They left for Colombo on December 6, each having
paid Rs 13,800 for a package that includes to and fro air travel from
Mumbai to Colombo by SriLankan Airlines, a four-night, five-day stay in
a hotel and sightseeing. In Colombo, they will be put up at the five-star
Taj Samudra and at Bentota they will stay at the Taj Exotica. Says Malhotra:
"We would not have tried to go to Sri Lanka if the rates weren't
so reasonable. We still have money left to go to Goa for New Year's."
This year, the industry is targeting Indians travelling abroad with never-before
deals. Last year, 3.62 million Indians travelled overseas on business
and leisure and the industry estimates the numbers to go up by at least
10 per cent this year. With attractive packages, tour operators are trying
to convince the desi tourist that his best holiday can come cheap. Bangalore-based
marketing consultant Archana Muthappa, who struck gold with a Rs 7,800
Dubai package, which includes two way air fare and a night's stay in a
star hotel, says, "It's unbelievable the kind of discounts going
around but you have to keeps going from one travel agent to the other
for the best deals."
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