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Frommer's Kauai - Jeanette Foster [56]

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commissions. Another important word of warning: Be careful to avoid those activities centers offering discounts as fronts for timeshare sales presentations. Using a free snorkel cruise or luau tickets as bait, they’ll suck you into a 90-minute presentation—and try to get you to buy into a Kauai timeshare in the process. Not only will they try to sell you a big white elephant you never wanted in the first place, but—since their business is timeshares, not activities—they also won’t be as interested, or as knowledgeable, about which activities might be right for you. These shady deals seem to be particularly rampant on Kauai. Just do yourself a favor and avoid them altogether.

OUTDOOR ETIQUETTE

Carry out what you carry in. Find a trash container for all your litter (including cigarette butts). Litterbugs anger the gods.

Observe kapu (taboo) and NO TRESPASSING signs. Don’t climb on ancient Hawaiian heiau (temple) walls or carry home rocks, all of which belong to the Hawaiian volcano goddess, Pele. Some say it’s just a silly superstition, but each year the national and state park services get boxes of lava rocks in the mail, sent back to Hawaii by visitors who have experienced unusually bad luck after taking forbidden souvenirs home.


11 Money-Saving Package Deals

Booking an all-inclusive travel package that includes some combination of airfare, accommodations, rental car, meals, airport and baggage transfers, and sightseeing can be the most cost-effective way to travel to Kauai.

Package tours are not the same as escorted tours. They are simply a way to buy airfare and accommodations (and sometimes extras like sightseeing tours and rental cars) at the same time. When you’re visiting Hawaii, a package can be a smart way to go. You can sometimes save so much money by buying all the pieces of your trip through a packager that your transpacific airfare ends up, in effect, being free. That’s because packages are sold in bulk to tour operators, who then resell them to the public at a cost that drastically undercuts standard rates.

Packages, however, vary widely. Some offer a better class of hotels than others. Some offer the same hotels for lower prices. With some packagers, your choice of accommodations and travel days may be limited. Which package is right for you depends entirely on what you want.

Start out by reading this guide. Do a little homework, and read up on Kauai so that you can be a smart consumer. Compare the rack rates that we’ve published to the discounted rates being offered by the packagers to see what kinds of deals they’re offering: Are you actually being offered a substantial savings, or have they just gussied up the rack rates to make their offer sound like a deal? If you’re offered a stay in a hotel we haven’t recommended, do more research to learn about it, especially if the franchise isn’t a reliable one. It’s not a deal if you end up at a dump.

Be sure to read the fine print. Make sure you know exactly what’s included in the price you’re being quoted, and what’s not. Are hotel taxes and airport transfers included, or will you have to pay extra? Before you commit to a package, make sure you know how much flexibility you have, say, if your kid gets sick or your boss suddenly asks you to adjust your vacation schedule. Some packagers require ironclad commitments, while others will go with the flow, charging only minimal fees for changes or cancellations.

The best place to start looking for a package deal is the travel section of your local Sunday newspaper. Also check the ads in the back of such national travel magazines as Arthur Frommer’s Budget Travel and Travel Holiday. Liberty Travel ( 88 8/271-1584;ww2.libertytravel.com), for instance, one of the biggest packagers in the Northeast, usually boasts a full-page ad in Sunday newspapers. American Express Travel ( 800/AXP-6898; www.americanexpress.com/travel) can also book you a well-priced Hawaiian vacation; it advertises in many Sunday newspaper travel sections.

Other reliable packagers include the airlines themselves, which often package their flights

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