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- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!wupost!travel!paul.graveline
- From: paul.graveline@travel.com (Paul Graveline)
- Newsgroups: rec.travel
- Subject: CARIBBEAN TRAVEL ROUNDUP8
- Message-ID: <10108.89.uupcb@travel.com>
- Date: 31 Dec 92 01:03:00 GMT
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Travel Online / St. Louis Online - St. Louis, MO
- Reply-To: paul.graveline@travel.com (Paul Graveline)
- Lines: 97
-
- (continued)
- the return trip.
-
- Would I stay at Club Cozumel Caribe? Yeah, if they gave me a VERY
- good deal. Probably a choice on the south end of town would work
- better for divers. For sure, the food would be better and probably a
- darn sight cheaper, and the time to the dive sites would be cut in
- half.
-
- Guadeloupe, Club Med Caravelle by Gary Moore
- --------------------------------------------
-
- The choice of Caravelle for my first Club Med experience was the
- result of a more favorable discount on the American Airlines
- frequent flyer package. Because of the nature of my airline ticket I
- decided to overnight in Gosier, a small town about half way between
- the airport and CM. A phone call to the French Tourist Board brought
- a directory of lodging at all the French islands. I opted for Hotel
- Callinago, where a single was $48US. Nice room, not fancy but
- adequate, air-conditioned, clean, very comfortable. I got settled in
- about 5:30...took a stroll along the hotel beach (where the Arawak
- and Salako...also PLM Azur Hotels, I think, are also located). I
- asked about dinner and was told the poolside restaurant would open
- about 7 p.m. So I showed up, was seated and enjoyed an entree of
- local smoked fish (cold plate) with a salad and a glass of wine.
- Meals are extended and typically last a couple of hours. But I had
- not gotten much sleep the night before and was just as happy to
- retire early. The meal was 125FF or about $25. (Food tends to be
- expensive in the restaurants. That's why the magnificent spreads at
- CM are so much to be appreciated. To duplicate what is available at
- the typical CM lunch or dinner would probably cost somewhere around
- $50 a meal, if such a meal were even available.)
-
- As a side bar, the CM literature speaks of the taxi ride to/from Le
- Raizet (l'aeroport) as $60. Everyone I spoke with on this trip had
- paid $40. Even with my split trip on arrival via Gosier, the total
- only came to $48. However, it is always a good idea to resolve it in
- advance. One of the taxis I took was metered, the other was not. The
- totals came out the same. So perhaps the metered taxis set the fare.
-
-
- I was traveling alone this trip and am always alert to shopping
- possibilities for those back at home. Little in the Gosier shops
- around the hotels was especially attractive and it was always very
- expensive. How about 300FF ($60) for a knit shirt (a nice shirt to
- be sure, but still a lot of money). I passed and found the CM gift
- shop had better values. Cost was about the same but quality was
- higher.
-
- Regarding the local currency: For convenience of dealing with taxis,
- etc., upon arrival (when banks may not be near or open), I got about
- $300 in French Francs. I watched the exchange rate in the Wall
- Street Journal and picked a time when I thought the rate had
- bottomed out. Then called the bank (give them about a week) to
- arrange for pickup at the local branch. Like securities, there is
- the "bid" (sell) or "asked" (buy) rate. The rate quoted in financial
- press is about in the middle. Typically, there is about 10 percent
- between the buy/ sell rate, which is the bank's charge for making
- the exchange.
-
- If you don't have Francs available, be prepared to be taken
- advantage of...either by your hotel or the shop where you want to
- use greenbacks. I exchanged dollars with the Bank of America at
- about 5 francs to the dollar. At the hotel it was only 4.6. However,
- if you take too many francs, you will either have to spend them
- while away or bring them back home and take the reverse charge from
- the bank upon exchange from francs. (You can spend them at CM, but
- they will not change to dollars.) In most cases, this is not a
- problem, anyway, since you could use them in settlement of your
- account.
-
- Bar tabs ("bead bills") in the neighborhood of $200-$300 for a week
- at CM have been rumored. I didn't want to spend this kind of money
- at a place which is supposed not to require much money once you get
- there. However, one of life's simple pleasures for me is sitting on
- the beach, with a balmy sun overhead, and contemplating life's
- mysteries, meanwhile sipping a tall, cool one. So I decided to take
- my own...in the form of several bottles of champagne (California
- vintage, what else). However, the ready availability of wine at
- lunch and dinner cut into my appetite considerably. I even wound up
- bringing a couple of bottles back home. (Which was a real waste, as
- I stop and think about it...all that great Caravelle beach,
- ambiance...and champagne going to waste.)
-
- Part of the reason for my restraint, of course, was because I was
- spending so much time on (and off) the sailboards. There was a very
- competent windsurfing instructor (Mark, from Redondo Beach, CA., no
- less) who was one of the better ones I have seen. His tips helped me
- to get better a lot quicker than in other lessons I have taken. Then
- there were kayaks and the Lazer class sailboats. Not to speak of the
- snorkeling which I never got around to.
-
- I must also put in a word for the circus. I'm your average, 57-year
- old less-than-muscled male who needs all the help he can get when it
- comes to feats of daring-do. But these GO's on the circus staff were
- (continued)
-
-