Pleasant Holidays and the Sheraton Maui are offering reduced room rates in Garden View and Ocean View accommodations at the Sheraton Maui for all new bookings traveling November 28 through May 31, 2003. Partial Ocean View accommodations at the special rate will also be available for booking through May starting January 1, 2003.
Additional benefits are a fifth night free and daily buffet breakfast for all.
Blackout dates during holidays periods are November 23 –28, December 24 – January 7, and April 8-18, 2003.
Five-night, land-only holidays start at $749 per person, double occupancy, reflecting a savings of $550 per room. Included in Pleasant’s travel package are accommodations, daily Dollar Rent A Car, fresh flower lei greeting, all hotel and car rental taxes, and more.
The deluxe Sheraton Maui is nestled against historic Black Rock along a beautiful stretch of Kaanapali Beach. The resort’s 23 oceanfront acres reflect a true Hawaiian ambiance, featuring tropically landscaped grounds, lanais with breathtaking views, a meandering lagoon-like swimming pool, and a nightly Cliff-Dive ceremony. During the winter holidays, the resort area of Kaanapali, like nearby Lahaina town, is transformed into a magical winter wonderland, island-style.
More: gohawaii.about.com
Related Travel Information
Explore Holidays has made its mark on the Australian travel landscape with the launch of its first-ever comprehensive domestic travel program.
The move follows the roll-out last month of a wide-ranging spread of new Asia product offering Bali , China , Hong Kong and Macau , Malaysia and Singapore as well as a combined Thailand , Vietnam and Cambodia brochure
Explore Holidays has prefaced the release of the new domestic program with the release of a four-page flyer offering a range of ‘Bargain Breaks' specials in several popular holiday destinations.
These include the Whitsunday Islands, Tropical North Queensland, Tasmania, central
Emirates Holidays, the tour operating arm of Emirates Airline and one of the largest wholesale tour operators in the Middle East, declared a revenue of Dhs 355 million (US$97 million) for the financial year ended 31st March 2004 - an increase of 23 per cent over the previous year.
Around 100,000 tourists travelled with Emirates Holidays over the past twelve months, with the top destinations proving to be the U.A.E, Malaysia, Thailand, the United Kingdom, Egypt, Mauritius, the Maldives, Singapore, Lebanon and India. The six destinations growing fastest in popularity were Singapore, Australia, Switzerland, Austria, Hong Kong and New Zealand.
The past
Hawaii's hotels were the fullest -- and the most profitable -- in the nation during the first quarter, with more than 84 percent of the rooms occupied.
Hawaii hotels earned an average of $138 per room a night during the quarter, leading all U.S. cities, according to a report released yesterday by Hospitality Advisors LLC.
Spring-break travelers and conventioneers boosted travel to Hawaii in March. Occupancy and average room rates rose on all islands, but luxury and upscale properties led the pack and helped push overall statewide occupancy to a 5.1 percentage point gain, according to Hospitality Advisors.
The increases were in keeping
A 35-year-old male will appear in bail court this morning.
Just before 2 a.m. this morning City Police attended in the parking lot of the Police Services Building in regards to male and female having a verbal argument.
It is alleged that the couple was in a vehicle when they started to argue which resulted in the female pulling into the police station.
No physical assault took place but a query of the male revealed that he was on a release document with a curfew of 11 p.m. and also with conditions not to consume alcohol.
The male was subsequently
TENS of thousands of Chinese tourists are travelling to Germany to drive powerful cars at up to 150mph on the autobahns, despite fears by road safety groups that the trend will end in disaster.
Steering a BMW, Mercedes or Audi at high speeds on Germany’s motorways is the new highlight of specially tailored holidays for wealthy Chinese.
Tour operators insist that they teach their clients the finer points of western motoring etiquette before letting them loose on the estimated 5,000 out of 7,500 miles of autobahns that do not have speed limits.
The tourists are given booklets that explain the