Sunday, July 10, 2011
Low Bridge (Everybody Down)
From: Nordic Visitor
Date: Sat, Jul 10, 2011
Subject: Your upcoming trip to Iceland
You have probably seen that our volcanoes have been popular news items lately, but we can report that there are no volcanic eruptions happening at the moment.
However, we do want to update you about damage to Iceland’s major highway, the Ring Road (Route 1), in rural South Iceland. In the early hours of Saturday, July 9th a flood from the nearby Mýrdalsjökull glacier washed away a bridge in the sparsely-populated Múlakvísl area.
We are happy to report that nobody was harmed. It is important to note that the Iceland Civil Protection Department has a good handle on natural events like these and is proficient in protecting the health and safety of the public.
At this time, the Icelandic Meteorological Office is unable to confirm if sub-glacial volcanic activity caused the flooding, but they do not believe this is a sign of any imminent volcanic eruption. Also, there are no other indications of further flooding. Scientists will continue to monitor the situation closely.
Meanwhile, the Iceland Road Administration is evaluating the damage and has begun preparations for repairs. According to the latest reports, bridge repairs may take roughly two weeks so even if your itinerary takes you across the affected area it is unlikely that your holiday plans will be impacted.
There is already a detour open to 4WD vehicles and it is estimated that the detour will soon be able to accommodate all vehicle types.
As this situation may change, we will send you another update after the weekend with the latest status of the repairs and details about the detour.
You may be wondering what this means for your planned holiday around Iceland, so we have taken steps to assure minimal travel disruptions for our customers. See details below.
Saturday, July 9, 2011
Money For Something
Comprehensive article about how/when/why to exchange your money abroad. We would definitely recommend calling your credit card/ATM company to make sure they won't turn your card off when you buy something in Iceland, leaving you cold and poor.
------------------------------------------
Exchanging Your Money Abroad: 10 Simple Tips
One question I see a lot in the user forums here on Fodors.com is how best to get foreign currency when traveling abroad. When I first started traveling abroad, there were two basic choices: take and exchange cash or take and exchange traveler's checks. I usually did the latter. How times have changed. Now, anyone younger than 25 might look at me with a raised eyebrow if I mentioned a traveler's check. But the question still persists. With bank fees rising every year and exchange rates seemingly in constant flux, what's the best way to change your money? There are many threads on this subject in our user forums. Here are some simple rules to follow.
Ten Simple Rules for Exchanging Your Money
1. ATMs are still the best choice for day-to-day funds.
Although some banks have high fees to use foreign ATMs, not to mention adding on high foreign-transaction fees (Bank of America, for example, charges $5 per withdrawal plus 3% premium on top of each withdrawal at a non-partner ATM), the ATM is still almost always the cheapest option for changing your money. And if your bank has international ATMs or partner banks abroad, you can sometimes save a little on your cash withdrawals; that's true even at BOA, which charges just 1% at member banks and no other fees. Capitol One Bank charges nothing for a foreign ATM withdrawal, while other banks such as Chase charge 3% on top of every withdrawal as well as a $3 fee. It pays to shop around for a bank if you travel a lot internationally.
2. "No-fee" bureau de change are usually the most expensive places to change money.
When you see a sign that offers "no-fee" currency exchange, be sure to check the rates. You'll notice that they are almost always significantly worse than what you'd get if you had simply taken money out of an ATM. It's a good idea to keep up to date on the latest Interbank rates (the rates banks pay for foreign currency) to find out if you are getting a good deal. A web site like www.xe.com can give you those rates, which change daily. At best, you normally pay between 4% and 9% of the total amount you are exchanging to change money into a foreign currency, and this cost is usually built into the bad exchange rate. You pay again to change your euros or pounds back into dollars, so think carefully how much cash you actually need on a day to day basis.
3. If you need a lot of cash, ask your bank to raise your daily withdrawal limit.
Say you are renting an apartment for a week in Rome or Paris and you need a lot of euros at once to pay the landlord, your bank may be able to raise your daily withdrawal limit temporarily to allow you to withdraw much more money than you would normally be allowed to take out. ATMs may have smaller withdrawal limits, but you can make multiple withdrawals from the same ATM or from several ATMs in that case. If you can't get enough cash to pay for a week in advance, perhaps your landlord will allow you to pay in several installments throughout your stay. If you have a traveling companion, you can both withdraw cash to make the initial payment.
4. Never take a cash advance on your credit card except in a dire emergency.
If you take cash from a foreign ATM, you will pay a fee; you'll be charged a percentage on top of your withdrawal as a foreign-transaction charge; and you will start to pay very high interest (sometimes up to double the regular interest rate you are charged on your credit card) the moment the cash reaches your hands. It's a pretty bad deal. Avoid it at all costs unless you have no other choice. Bank of America has pretty egregious fees, as posters in our forums have found.
5. Use credit cards for large purchases.
Most credit cards charge a foreign-transaction fee of between 1% and 3% whenever you buy something abroad, but this is still the safest and often the cheapest way to make a large purchase. You'll almost always come out ahead on the conversion since credit cards add their fee on top of the Interbank rate. So you are almost always getting the best possible rate of exchange even though you are paying a fee. (And some banks, like Capital One, still do not charge anything extra for foreign purchases beyond the 1% that Visa and Mastercard charge; some credit unions also have very low fees, though membership in credit unions is usually limited.) Other banks, including Citibank, really gouge consumers by charge a 3% foreign-transaction fee even if the purchase is made in U.S. dollars.
6. Avoid dynamic currency conversion.
If you are ever given the opportunity to charge your purchase abroad in U.S. dollars, decline. In fact, you should insist that you be charged in the local currency. So-called dynamic currency conversion not only offers lousy exchange rates, but it also includes hidden fees, and your own credit card will charge you its own foreign-transaction fee on top of the cost of the purchase. In effect, you will be paying double the fees and getting a bad exchange to boot. You might pay a 10% premium for a purchase. Here is one discussion of the process from our forums. Just remember, you are always charged a foreign-transaction fee by your credit card company (if it charges such fees) whether your purchase is made in dollars or foreign currency.
7. Don't make purchases with your debit card abroad.
It's very simple. Use your debit/ATM card to make cash withdrawals. Don't use it to make purchases. If something goes awry, your account will be debited immediately for the purchase; even if you return something for a refund, your account may not be credited for several days (perhaps for more than a week if the purchase is made abroad). If a sales clerk makes a mistake, it could take several days for an erroneous charge to be credited back to your account. With a credit card, you might never notice that a particular charge has appeared and disappeared because it will never show up on your statement. But it's different with a bank account. The money actually disappears and may not come back for several days even if it's an error or even if a transaction is cancelled. You might need that cash in the meantime.
8. The Chip-and-PIN situation in Europe.
Most European countries now offer credit and debit cards with a computer chip that requires a PIN to activate and make a purchase. This is especially common in automated ticket machines in Europe, even on European toll roads. If your credit or debit card doesn't have a chip and PIN (hardly any U.S. credit or debit cards do), then you may not be able to buy a ticket from a machine with your card. Although both Visa and Mastercard promise U.S. cardholders that their cards are usable anywhere in the world where they should be accepted with just a signature, you may still have some occasional problems in Europe using your card. Posters in our user forums have discussed this issue here. The subject was also covered earlier this year on SmarterTravel.com.
9. Traveler's Checks are a good fallback in an emergency.
Although the predominance of ATMs has made some people feel that the simple traveler's check is a relic of a bygone era, it can still be a godsend in an emergency. It's true that few places in the world still accept traveler's checks as payment. Normally, you must change them in a bank and will be charged a hefty fee for the privilege (though in some destinations like Mexico, it can be difficult to find a bank that will exchange your traveler's checks). But if you can buy your traveler's checks without paying a fee, they are a good fallback as an emergency stash of cash. And if you have American Express checks, they can still be cashed in an Amex office abroad. While these aren't as prevalent as they once were, they are still found all over Europe and in many other countries.
10. A Ben Franklin is also a great emergency reserve.
A crisp, new US$100 bill is also a good fallback as an emergency reserve of cash. While I would not travel abroad with a big stack of cash, having a single $100 bill somewhere separate from your other travel money is a great idea. Even if you lose substantially on the currency exchange, it's a currency that's accepted worldwide.
------------------------------------------
Friday, July 8, 2011
Iceland Express Yourself
We've only been neglecting the blog because we are officially too busy planning the wedding to have time to say anything about it, but it seemed worth passing along this hot Icelandic gossip for those of you who still haven’t booked air travel (even though, to my knowledge, that list actually only includes one person). But friend/guest/favorite human Emily passed along the following, which I’m passing along as well:
I've been watching the Reykjavik-NYC plane tickets like a miserly hawk, and Iceland Express just dropped their prices like $70. Hopefully because it's a great sale and not because they're in the middle of a PR nightmare I didn't hear about yet. So if anyone else hasn't bought their tickets to/from your wedding, they should probably do it now.
Happy almost wedding!!
Saturday, June 18, 2011
Meanwhile, on the surface of the moon...
DAYS REMAINING: 62
Here are two interesting perspectives on the Ring Road around the entire island: the scary and the even more scary.
(For anyone still interested in a post-wedding road trip, you can check out the tour we're taking or just plan your own road trip, as some have decided to do.)
(Thanks to Meesh for the links!)
Here are two interesting perspectives on the Ring Road around the entire island: the scary and the even more scary.
(For anyone still interested in a post-wedding road trip, you can check out the tour we're taking or just plan your own road trip, as some have decided to do.)
(Thanks to Meesh for the links!)
Saturday, June 11, 2011
Fairy Tale 2: Rise of the Fairies
DAYS REMAINING: 69
It is now 69 days until our wedding and, at the moment, there remains a distinctive lack of helpful elves and task-aware dwarves planning it for us while Eric and I have been spending twelve hours a day at work. Luckily, I have one more week at my current job before a luxurious two-week break, during which time I have a “to do” list consisting of exactly one item: PLAN THE ENTIRE WEDDING. Within that one item lies about a billion terrifying details.
Back when we sent out our invitations (what seems like 100 years ago), we kept falling back on a reassuring stump speech that went something like, “At least we got one huge thing out of the way. Think about all of the people who haven’t even started planning ANYTHING at this point in the process!” But as the months have peeled montage-style off of the calendar, we have run out of excuses, and are getting perilously close to running out of time. And so this morning, we returned to the only actual place we can get anything done – our old friends at Fairytale Affairs – for the next stage of the planning. Because any great Icelandic event must run first through Massapequa Park. You think the 10th Century Norse explorers who discovered the place didn’t first stop at All-American? You’re wrong.
First a reminder about this business: Fairytale Affairs is a stone’s throw from my mom’s house on Long Island, smack in the middle of a town not know for its stark liberalism or cultural acceptance. My mom had worked with Tracey on invitations for events such as my grandmother’s birthday party, and approached her with skepticism many months back to make sure “it would be okay” for the store to take on the lightning rod issue of printing wedding invitations that had TWO BOYS’ NAMES ON THEM. Tracey laughed that idea right off because she is a nice person and a hell of a pro as a businessperson, and has since added our gorgeous invitations to her stable of samples she shows her other clients. Yay, Fairytale Affairs! You should all support local businesses who know what side their bread is buttered on, is all I’m saying.
For today’s excitement, programs for the wedding ceremony. We wanted a simple design with the straightforward information of the ceremony (if only we know exactly what those details were going to be!), and that is exactly what we designed. We briefly thought about not doing programs for the ceremony, but, y’know, people are coming all this way, why not give them a little keepsake they can leave in their hotel rooms or tuck in a mail sorter when they get home and then throw away when they move to New Jersey? And we’re having it bound together with a ribbon! You fly to Iceland, you get a ribbon. It’s just polite party hosting is all.
So now we were on a roll. Tracey is definitely not an upseller in the standard “let me help get you guys into this 1987 Datsun that runs just like new” way, but once the programs were done, the three of us collective started poking around for what other visual elements were going to help tie the look of the day together. And right then, the words “Well, I guess that’s it, then…” collectively vanished from our vocabulary. Place cards! Monogrammed napkins! (Yes, really.) Specially-designed gift bags for our welcome packages! (Yes. Really.)
In the end, the best part of the day was starting to get really excited about the plans for the wedding again. Which is good. Because now that we crossed one thing off of our list, all we have to take care of is shuttleinformationfromairporttoguestswelcomepackageathotelfinalheadcountforrehearsaldinnerchoosemenusendinvitestorehearsaldinnerarrangeshuttletoandfromrehearsaldinnerfromhotelgetalllegalpaperworktogethercheckinwithBryndiswriteceremonychoosesongsbuysuitsfinalizeheadcountseatingchartflowerstablecenterpiececakeaskaboutsoundsystemforipodfigureoutfavorspoolpaymentarrange shuttletofrompool. Oh, and figuring out day care for the cats while we’re out of town for three weeks.
And that’s it!
It is now 69 days until our wedding and, at the moment, there remains a distinctive lack of helpful elves and task-aware dwarves planning it for us while Eric and I have been spending twelve hours a day at work. Luckily, I have one more week at my current job before a luxurious two-week break, during which time I have a “to do” list consisting of exactly one item: PLAN THE ENTIRE WEDDING. Within that one item lies about a billion terrifying details.
Back when we sent out our invitations (what seems like 100 years ago), we kept falling back on a reassuring stump speech that went something like, “At least we got one huge thing out of the way. Think about all of the people who haven’t even started planning ANYTHING at this point in the process!” But as the months have peeled montage-style off of the calendar, we have run out of excuses, and are getting perilously close to running out of time. And so this morning, we returned to the only actual place we can get anything done – our old friends at Fairytale Affairs – for the next stage of the planning. Because any great Icelandic event must run first through Massapequa Park. You think the 10th Century Norse explorers who discovered the place didn’t first stop at All-American? You’re wrong.
First a reminder about this business: Fairytale Affairs is a stone’s throw from my mom’s house on Long Island, smack in the middle of a town not know for its stark liberalism or cultural acceptance. My mom had worked with Tracey on invitations for events such as my grandmother’s birthday party, and approached her with skepticism many months back to make sure “it would be okay” for the store to take on the lightning rod issue of printing wedding invitations that had TWO BOYS’ NAMES ON THEM. Tracey laughed that idea right off because she is a nice person and a hell of a pro as a businessperson, and has since added our gorgeous invitations to her stable of samples she shows her other clients. Yay, Fairytale Affairs! You should all support local businesses who know what side their bread is buttered on, is all I’m saying.
For today’s excitement, programs for the wedding ceremony. We wanted a simple design with the straightforward information of the ceremony (if only we know exactly what those details were going to be!), and that is exactly what we designed. We briefly thought about not doing programs for the ceremony, but, y’know, people are coming all this way, why not give them a little keepsake they can leave in their hotel rooms or tuck in a mail sorter when they get home and then throw away when they move to New Jersey? And we’re having it bound together with a ribbon! You fly to Iceland, you get a ribbon. It’s just polite party hosting is all.
So now we were on a roll. Tracey is definitely not an upseller in the standard “let me help get you guys into this 1987 Datsun that runs just like new” way, but once the programs were done, the three of us collective started poking around for what other visual elements were going to help tie the look of the day together. And right then, the words “Well, I guess that’s it, then…” collectively vanished from our vocabulary. Place cards! Monogrammed napkins! (Yes, really.) Specially-designed gift bags for our welcome packages! (Yes. Really.)
In the end, the best part of the day was starting to get really excited about the plans for the wedding again. Which is good. Because now that we crossed one thing off of our list, all we have to take care of is shuttleinformationfromairporttoguestswelcomepackageathotelfinalheadcountforrehearsaldinnerchoosemenusendinvitestorehearsaldinnerarrangeshuttletoandfromrehearsaldinnerfromhotelgetalllegalpaperworktogethercheckinwithBryndiswriteceremonychoosesongsbuysuitsfinalizeheadcountseatingchartflowerstablecenterpiececakeaskaboutsoundsystemforipodfigureoutfavorspoolpaymentarrange shuttletofrompool. Oh, and figuring out day care for the cats while we’re out of town for three weeks.
And that’s it!
Wednesday, May 11, 2011
The Ring Didn't Mean A Thing
DAYS REMAINING: 101
When Eric and I got engaged, I bought two titanium rings and proposed to him at the restaurant where we celebrated our anniversary every year in LA. I wanted it to be a complete surprise so I guessed at Eric’s ring size, going for the average men’s size of 9. It turned out to be way too big, so I exchanged it for a size smaller, convinced that getting a new ring without getting his finger sized this time was a totally great idea. Size 8? Not even close. So because his ring still falls off every time he swings his hand or walks or thinks small thoughts, I decided that for our actual wedding rings we would do it right. We would go to a real store, talk to a real human, and get our actual ring sizes. And if you’re going to do it right, you should do it as right as you can. So we took ourselves to Tiffany.
We’re not actually getting our rings at Tiffany. But it was fun to waltz right in there, tell the nice lady at the counter that we were getting married in August, and have her show us to a table where she sized our fingers with this thing…
…showed us their collection of hilariously expensive gold bands, and sent us on our way.
(Eric’s ring size is 6.5.)
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
More Budget Accommodation!
DAYS REMAINING: 102
Further to our entry about non-hotel lodgings we wanted to add one more from Tracie:
Further to our entry about non-hotel lodgings we wanted to add one more from Tracie:
Hi guys! So we've finally settled our lodging situation and are actually staying here.
It's located about midway between the Grand and the city center, which seemed to make sense. I hope Anna forgives me. Anyway, come over! We'll cook you dinner.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)





