Video: Joshua Tree Timelapse

Located in California‘s high desert, Joshua Tree is one of those places that epitomizes the term “starkly beautiful.” With harsh landscapes that are nevertheless filled with life, it is a destination that offers a peaceful solitude unlike any other that I have experienced in my travels. But to truly experience its full majesty visitors need to wait until after sunset. On a clear night the skies will reveal a billion stars overhead and make you feel humbled at their staggering luminescence. That feeling is captured oh so well in this short time-lapse video that was recently shot in Joshua Tree. It begins with ominous looking clouds that soon give way to a brilliant display of the heavens above. It is a remarkable reminder of just how beautiful our world can truly be if we just remember to take time to look at it every once in awhile.


JOSHUA TREE JOURNEY 3: STORM from Sunchaser Pictures on Vimeo.

Photo Of The Day: Alice Lake Beach

This Photo of the Day is titled “Alice Lake Beach” and comes from Gadling Flickr pool member James Wheeler. The image was taken in Canada’s Brackendale, British Columbia, using a Nikon D5000.

James tells us: “Alice lake is probably one of the most popular camp sites in British Columbia. It is hard to get a site on summer weekends without getting up there early or reserving weeks in advance. I took this photo in the spring when the water was still too cold to swim so there were not as many people out.”

To get the image we see here, James used a Tokina 12-24mm f/4 lens with a Nikon Polarizing Filter, along with a Sirui T-2005X Tripod with K-10x Tripod Head, then processed the image with Adobe Lightroom, Adobe Photoshop and Topaz Adjust.

Upload your best shots to the Gadling Group Pool on Flickr. Several times a week we choose our favorite images from the pool as a Photo of the Day.

Tips for getting featured: include the camera you used along with any other equipment or processing software that might help other photographers know more about your image.

[Photo Credit: Flickr user James Wheeler]

Travel Insurance Advice Not Always Sound With Cruise Vacations

Travel insurance for a cruise vacation is one of those things that experts say we need but is viewed by many travelers as an extra, optional expense. Many try to get the minimum coverage for as cheap as possible. After all, odds are staggeringly against needing to use it. But like most insurance, it seems expensive until we need it. Then? Instant bargain. I found that out first-hand not long ago, spending a nice pile of cash on a simple thumb-crushing injury on board Princess Cruises Grand Princess.

Travel experts seem to agree about two things when it comes to travel insurance: Get it and don’t buy it through the cruise line.

“Get it” is universally sound advice. Travel agents typically receive calls from those who did not buy travel insurance but need to cancel their cruise just before sailing for a variety of reasons. They are usually always out of luck and lose most of what they paid.

“Don’t buy it from the cruise line” is advice of a more self-serving nature. Third-party insurance programs are big money makers for travel agencies, commonly earning a commission of 20% or more of the cost of that third-party program.

But that advice of not buying travel insurance through the cruise line has another, not mentioned, element that sometimes surprises travelers.

Secondary Benefits-
When it comes to the medical coverage part, travel insurance commonly provides secondary benefits, tapped only after a traveler’s primary health insurance has denied a claim or been exhausted. That means for the travel insurance company to pay, a claim must be made with the primary insurance carrier first. Then, whatever they don’t pay, should be covered by the third-party insurance. It is a bit of a hassle but in the end the traveler gets reimbursed.

Reimbursement-
It’s that “reimbursed” part that catches travelers off guard. They assume that since they have travel insurance, if something goes wrong, they are covered … as in the travel insurance pays the service provider, if they even think that far ahead. Most don’t. In reality, that’s often not the case.

Covered Reasons-
First, the claim must be for a covered reason, usually some medical event that happens while on vacation. In my case, we were in rough seas on the Grand Princess with the ship listing a bit from side to side. My thumb just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time, caught between a metal doorframe and a metal door. Of the door, doorframe and my thumb, guess which one was out of place when the door shut? It happens.

How It Works-
Off I went to the ship’s medical center, a facility fully equipped to handle my injury, much like the emergency room at a major hospital. I was treated immediately, given discharge instructions and pain medication, then sent on my way.

I travel quite a bit and have an annual travel insurance plan from a major insurer just in case something like this would happen. In the end, I suffered no financial loss and was reimbursed for all expenses associated with the injury.

But I had to pay for the medical center services before leaving the ship, then get reimbursed. Had I bought the cruise line insurance, I would have paid nothing. Ever.

What If I Can’t Pay?
So what if I was on a cruise, had maxed out my credit cards and had no other sources to tap for up-front payment at the medical center? Do I walk the plank? Wash dishes?

Probably not, but its a good idea to call the travel insurance company, either the company that administers the cruise line insurance or the third-party insurance company and ask one very important question:

“If I buy your insurance, have an injury on my cruise and get treated on the ship, do I have to pay for those services before I get off the ship?”

Knowing the answer can eliminate a rather unpleasant surprise later.



[Photo Credit: Flickr user Manachar Bandicoot]

Air New Zealand Reveals Hobbit Themed Airplane


“The Hobbit” opens in theaters this winter, and Air New Zealand is taking full advantage of the event to jump on the publicity train. Or publicity airplane, rather, as the carrier just revealed its newest Hobbit-themed Boeing 777, replete with garish external artwork rivaled only by ANZ CEO Ryan Fyfe’s collar buttons.

It’s actually a pretty great looking airplane (so is your shirt Mr. Fyfe, I tease), though I wish that the cabins had also been upgraded. We could call economy “The Shire” moving forth while first class could go as, say, Mordor. “One does not simply walk into Mordor without a flight attendant barring the aisleway.”

Bloggers v. The Community In The Great Mileage War

There’s a lively discussion going on among feisty members of the MilesBuzz! forum on Flyertalk about a blogger’s role in the mileage and airfare deal community.

At issue is a group of bloggers who have been scouring the forums at sites such as theirs, identifying the best deals and then publishing the information in their blogs. Built for a wider audience, the blogs bring enormous traffic, often leading to a change in terms or cancellation of the deals.

Think of it like a trampoline. If two or three people discover the trampoline and take a jump, everyone has a good time. But if the entire town is invited, the trampoline breaks.

As an example, a recent loophole discovered by members of the forum found that prepaid spending cards could be loaded for no fee with a credit card, meaning one could charge two thousand dollars to a prepaid card, earn reward points and then pay off everything with no fee. The result was a way to effectively earn points for free, something that any budget traveler would swoon for.

Once the blog community caught wind of the deal, however, the financial companies got wise and changed their terms. Members of Flyertalk were enraged.

Further inflaming the situation is the income that many of the bloggers are earning from their sites. A blogger can poach a deal from Flyertalk, several community members pointed out, earn thousands of hits to their site and then burden the reader with dozens of potentially profitable credit card ads. Each credit card application processed from a referral link could score the blogger up to $200. Need an example? Count the credit card ads here. With a popup blocker enabled, I still count 20. Another blogger meticulously shows that with credit card offers he can make about $4000/month in extra income.

On the other side of the coin, bloggers point out that they do a service to the masses by distilling complex info into a simple, easy to read format. But are they putting their pocket books in front of the community?

It’s a grey area. On one hand it seems that the credit card companies have so much influence over the bloggers that they’ll post anything that they think will drive traffic. But on the other hand, public data is public data, and if they want to do the work to build the articles then traffic should dictate success. Whether they can do it with class is up to each blogger respectively. My guess is that when the axe man (ie FTC) comes calling all dues will be paid.

[Flickr image: sfbaywalk]