‘dog’ Tagged Posts

Pet Hotels South Lake Tahoe

pet hotels south lake tahoe ...

 

pet hotels south lake tahoe

Pet Hotels London

 

pet hotels london
London Cat Sitting

Hotels in London to do pets allowed?

Some do, others do not

Dog Friendly Hotels California Dogs

 

dog friendly hotels california dogs
Carmel-by-the-Sea, Most Pet-Friendly City

Great vacation spot where you can take the dog.?

I like to always know dogs a great place to make our vacation, we take can. We discovered Caramel, California. The city makes a great effort to be dog friendly. Many of the hotels are friendly, and so are some of the most popular Restaurants. Most stores allow dogs and have treats for them. There is a big ocean beach that is open http://www.carmelcalifornia.com/ for dogs to run free. (See a dog Dandie day in Caramel) Have you any large dog friendly vacation spots and why?

A place on the east coast http://www.barkwells.com/ is set in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Large area, the whole place is completely fenced, have doggie doors huts fenced in yard, Pond for the dogs in question, swim, etc. .. good:)

Dog Friendly Hotels Mississippi

 

dog friendly hotels mississippi
New Orleans French Quarter: Hotel Monteleone – Guest Reviews

As you can search for Cheap Hotels in New York

You finally have the vacation you deserve after slaving on a desk for half a decade lost. They saw fit to reward yourself with a trip to the Big Apple, New York, New York, come here … you have prepared the brochures, the traveler's checks in your handbag and You wear to keep your best Gucci shades you from the glare of the sun. But you have not forgotten anything? How .. may know, what will New York hotel you stay?

Touring New York would certainly be something like a paradise with all the tourist spots to boast of, but certainly at first glance, New York would make the prices You raise your eyebrows, and possibly the exorbitance of it to swallow. But remember, everything comes with a price and rent or living room is usually the hardest to overcome, when it comes to New York. The choice of a hotel stay in New York then, it is imperative that you ask yourself to determine the following questions as, what place is ideal, can.

1) What part of New York you are planning to stay?

New York can be divided into several districts and these districts usually determine the range of hotel fees you're going to encounter. Do you want to be your hotel located in Manhattan, where most New York attractions can be found? If you want, but to stay in a funky district opener then the hotels in Soho and Greenwich and the likes are probably what you are looking for.

2) How much can you afford?

Now that we got a specific place in mind, the next step is to do, count our available dollars. Hotels in New York range from the exorbitant the wonderfully cheap. Of course, the Properties depend somewhat on the price.

3) Who are you with?

If you bring children, then not all hotels in New York, of course, can open their Doors to welcome you cordially. With children in tow, we can provide hotels like the Doubletree Guest Suites and the Hilton Time Square, hotels, famous for both reliable, efficient service and warm. And then there are the pets. If you get the guy around your Dalmatian or Siamese with you wherever you go then the lists of prospective hotels in New York that you would travel to further narrow. For travelers, accompanied by their furry friends, check hotels like the Hotel employs 70 Park Avenue Hotel and Carlyle, which itself offers dog-walking services just in case you are touring to New York City.

4) What features / Services do you need?

If you are on any kind of business trip, then definitely you'd prefer a hotel with Internet access. If you plan to Host collect a kind-you will also still interested, check out hotels and see what works best for the event you have in mind. Also, not all hotels in New York Olympic size pool, a spa and fitness levels are centers, so you have to pull all these things into consideration as you try on the best place to stay in New York taken. If and when you find a hotel to stay in New York then we leave you with just one more tip: Be wary of pickpockets, have fun and do not forget take a picture of the Empire State Building!

About the Author

To read up on facts about Florida and facts about Texas, visit the US States Facts site.

Dog Friendly Hotels Lincoln

 

dog friendly hotels lincoln
White House Inn Bangor – The Lincoln Bedroom – Hotels In Maine

New York Without Luggage, Reservations Or Fresh Socks

New York is an impossible place – an overbuilt island with a nasty climate, horrendous traffic and . . .magic. What’s not to love? Our day trip to Manhattan was typical John and Laura – last minute. It was post Christmas and very cold after a snowstorm. The sky was bright blue and the wind was piercing as we stood at the bus stop in John’s New Jersey hometown – Kearny. I, weak and pathetic after years of mild L.A. weather, huddled in a nearby store while John, the native, stood in the cold without gloves or scarf. He deigned to wear a hat, at least. I had in my pocket $40, an American Express card and a lipstick. Oh yes, and a one use camera. Little did I know we wouldn’t be back in Kearny for almost two days.

We took the excellent DeCamp Buslines bus over, warm and comfy. I watched the gritty landscape pass by, crumbling and winter-cracked overpasses, plenty of graffiti, salt-beaten cars. This is not a romantic way to get to NYC but a warm one. My dad the Scottish immigrant actually arrived via ocean liner and his first sight of America was of the Statue of Liberty. He even passed through immigration at Ellis Island. Now that’s an arrival in New York. We got off at the grungy Port Authority where a taste of the winter wind had even John admitting he needed a scarf. He bought a post Christmas bargain for $6. One thing you can do and want to do in New York is walk and we were soon warm enough as we marched out into the late morning and headed to the Metropolitan Museum. The place was thronged with families off school and work, plenty of art students and a well-organized staff. I was finally warm and very reluctant to get into the long coat check line and surrender my security blanket, but the line moved fast and we soon had our coat tags and dove into the crowds. John knows his modern art and we visited a lot of his favorites after an elegant snack in the café. The American Express card got its first of many uses there. We then traded off putting up with exhibits for each other. I examined the vintage baseball card collection for him and he joined me for the costume exhibit, focusing on the Duke and Duchess of Windsor’s elaborate clothing. God those two could really dress – but then again maybe that was all they really had to do. . .

A couple of hours in a museum was plenty for us so out into the air we went. It was warmer at last. I hadn’t been to New York since a lone high school trip many years before, so I had to see some of what I had seen before just to compare notes with myself. Central Park was easy since it borders on the Met. Yep, still a big beautiful park. In winter kids were sliding down the modest hills and dogs romped – well they were dogs whose owners lived on the park so maybe they sashayed. The Plaza Hotel was also on the list of places to revisit. The lobby was as lavish as I remembered but it seemed smaller. Do all things shrink year by year? Or are they so big in your memory the present can never match the past?

Before the Grand was dinner – we decided to walk around and look for a likely place. John has no trouble asking local-looking people where they like to eat and they were happy to help. What’s this rumor about bitter New Yorkers? Of course I was introduced as the visitor from L.A. so they had all the more reason to be sure I got something besides sprouts, tofu and sunflower seeds. We stopped in for raw oysters and champagne at a small but packed restaurant. It got to be around 9 and we figured we had a shot at getting into Balthazar without a reservation. Sure enough, we only had to wait about 45 minutes at the bar, pacing ourselves on the drinking by this point, believe you me. Dinner was quite wonderful, though I let myself get talked out of a local fish – cod – and talked into Chilean sea bass, which is unavoidable in L.A. restaurants The waiter had obviously spent his childhood pushing cod around his plate and pretending he’d finished it. John’s ravioli was phenomenal and led to him to keep perfecting his pasta and ravioli from scratch.

We rolled to the Grand with no bags to check in – I didn’t even have a purse. I don’t lug purses around as they are a drag to carry and a magnet for muggers. We stopped at a bodega and bought a toothbrush, toothpaste and contact lens solution for me – $9, not a bargain but who cared? We then hit the hotel and noted the hopping scene at the bar – and walked right past it. We fell into bed and slept blissfully – though by morning’s light we discovered the room was tiny. Didn’t this used to be an old SRO hotel? They certainly didn’t increase the room size when it was converted to a profit center. John pointed out the view from our window and what it was missing – the World Trade Center. Solemn moment.

We got a late check out and debated what to do. Well, eating was going to happen, but first some great walking and a truly wonderful cup of coffee at a place we ducked into. Don’t ask me the name. New York is teeming with picturesque side streets with tiny cafes, shops, galleries and what not. We ended up at Veselka around 2 p.m. This is a classic Eastern European restaurant at 10th and 2nd Avenue. I got stuffed cabbage and borscht and even went for dessert. We read the NY Times at our window table and watched the world go by. But the break was over. One of the people we were to meet at last returned a cell call. Okay, I admit it, we turned the phone off for hours so as to be unreachable. I mean, ahem, conserve the battery. We arranged to meet him in midtown and walked all the way (40 blocks or so, but John the native assured me they were the short blocks, not the crosstown blocks). The walk took us across the strange diagonal which Broadway becomes and I started to get a feel for the geography of the city, something that’s hard to do in a cab, bus or car. We met my friend for drinks at another “guys’ bar” with an after work crowd culled from Wall Street. John had a White Russian that seemed to be made with maple syrup. More of a beer and scotch place I guess.

Then it was time for a hellish run to the Port Authority, both needing to find a bathroom and desperate to catch the bus in time to make it back to Jersey and a long-arranged night with the family at the Scots-American social club. Back in Jersey, Manhattan was a vision across the water again. John’s brother-in-law Joey kept the wine and beer going as it was his night to tend bar, but after the night before we kept it light. I persuaded my native hosts to go back to Manhattan the next day, this time to hit the Natural History Museum. We drove over with John’s Pop at the wheel of his car, nice enough to drive to a city he hates. He used to have a sidewalk stand in the Village, where John sold his original paintings as well. He reminisced about those days, and the really old days, when he met John’s mom at a Catholic dance in 1949 and by age 18 was married.

We tried for close to 25 minutes to find parking near the museum and actually succeeded. Pop and I were on the lookout for a spot while John napped, still catching up on sleep after another night back on the lumpy mattress. He woke up just in time to find a spot for us, claiming we needed his expertise. Okay, but who drove up and down ten square blocks until we found an undiscovered street? Now I was feeling the real New York. Scour the place for parking or pay the astounding rate of $24 for 2 hours. Pleased with our find, we trudged to the museum where a huge line meant we could not possibly get in. What to do?

How about a trip to Hoboken? But first I felt I had to see Ground Zero. It was a crisp December Saturday as we edged through typically hellish traffic down to the tip of Manhattan. Everyone had warned me that it was just a big hole in the ground surrounded by a chain link fence. We couldn’t park or get much closer but circled a little. I could see the fence was decorated – and perhaps still is – with tattered mementoes of the dead. Pictures, ribbons, poems, posters. A faded picture of a young woman stays in my mind. She is smiling in a stiff pose; maybe it’s some kind of studio shot. I glimpsed hawkers selling shirts, flags and buttons – the post Christmas vacation crowd had a festive feel but I didn’t get close enough to feel the other vibe I knew was there. The sad one. And the angry one.

So it was back through the Lincoln Tunnel to Jersey. We toured Hoboken, where both John’s parents were born. We drove past Sinatra’s birthplace, very well marked and easy to find within the two square miles which is Hoboken. We then prepared to double or maybe even triple park, per tradition, outside Biggie’s Clams. It was a 1940’s social club/illegal gambling joint that served food so good it had become mostly a restaurant by the ’50’s. I had raw clams on the half shell and was very content. East coast seafood is cold water seafood, somehow brinier and crisper than the Gulf seafood where I grew up. Maybe there is an argument for cold climates after all.

We were soon back at Pop’s, greeted by his cat Duke, standoffish as ever. The guys had managed to find a New York Times for me after three tries at local Kearny newsstands. They watched football and I read the paper. We drank hot tea and ate cake and it was hard to imagine that the high rises of New York were so close to this cozy middle class street. There was more eating that night. Italian food, of course. Huge portions for your average “gavone” – Italian for what I had become on the trip -someone who eats everything in sight. But, New York in the winter is made for eating…when in Rome.

Laura Glendinning is a travel writer, and Vice President of LinkParis.com.

About the Author

Laura Glendinning is the Vice President of Sales for LinkParis.com

Pet Hotels Iowa

 

pet hotels iowa
3/8 – Steve Dahl &Garry Meier – August 15, 1983 – WLS FM 95

Blair Hotels Choice Privileges rewards program offers great deals on travel to the Easy Saver

Visit the beautiful town of Blair, Nebraska has never better or cheaper. The Econo Lodge hotel located close to the famous Missouri River and offers easysaver opportunities for travelers looking for a great holiday destination.

The picturesque town of Blair, NE, is near the border of Nebraska and Iowa. Near the historic Lincoln Highway Blair, Nebraska is home to, some 7,500 inhabitants and is the largest city in Washington County.

href = "http://www.econolodge.com/hotel-blair-nebraska-NE072"> Blairrewards find tourists easy access to many local attractions including state parks, the River Wilds Golf Club, and Dana College. The Econo Lodge is within walking distance is, several restaurants and cocktail lounges, this value will be added benefits for the Blair Rewards Program.

Visiting Dana College as a perspective for higher education has never been simpler. With Blairrewards easysaver and accommodation, a visit to the beautiful campus, while a preference for the city of Blair. It is a wonderful opportunity to visit, such a pleasant campus.

With access to play basketball, a baseball and a pool, has the leisure easysaver places where children can play and enjoy this beautiful country, while the adults can play and putting in the fresh air. The Blairrewards The hotel is pet-friendly accommodations, complimentary coffee, free continental breakfast and a seasonal outdoor pool.

For the business traveler, allows the Blair Rewards program access to wireless high-speed Internet free access in all rooms and access to fax and copier services. It is a great Opportunity to spend some time.

The Blairrewards are a easysaver for any traveler. The rooms are comfortably furnished with refrigerator, coffee maker, Iron and ironing board and hair dryer. During the winter months, the Econo Lodge hotel cold weather hook-up.

With ample parking for cars, trucks and buses, make the friendly staff and affordable rooms of the Blair-Rewards program absolutely fabulous. The comfort of the accommodation combined with the possibility of making easysaver Blair, Nebraska Destination, which will surely remember not only the fact but also a rewarding experience to be.

About the Author

Joan Waters is a travel conscious writer who appreciates finding easysaver deals on traveling and vacation destinations. She writes often about ways to save money while traveling. The Blair rewards program in the city of Blair, Nebraska, is but one of the wonderful vacation destination locations that provide a great vacationing atmosphere for the budget minded individual.

Pet Hotels Cats

 

pet hotels cats
HOTEL FOR DOGS – DOG HOTEL – 5 star DOG BOARDING in Florida at Chateau Poochie

Do you know any pet friendly hotels?

We are moving across country with our three cats and I was wondering what hotels allow pets. I know motel 6 does, but are there any others? Does it cost extra for the pets?

La Quinta I’ve found to be the best one to stay with pets. Not only are they VERY affordable but they’re surprisingly nice for the price, they don’t charge a pet fee and they have a really great free breakfast – often with make-yourself Belgian waffles, eggs, bacon, etc, as well as cereal, oatmeal, muffins, fruit, juice, etc. I’ve stayed in several La Quintas around WA state and up in BC, Canada and one in Stockton, CA and everytime really loved the room. I’m also staying in one for a full week in Orlando, FL for the upcoming TICA Annual in Sep.

Note that SOME may not allow pets as they’re independently owned but most of them do. You can check at their website – http://www.lq.com/lq/index.jsp

Super 8 is another one – http://www.super8.com/Super8/control/home

I stayed at a Motel 6 this past weekend and though the room was clean and well-maintained it had a tiny bathroom and no microwave, coffee maker or breakfast like La Quinta and Super 8 provide. It also only had these open cubes to put your socks and underwear while the other hotels have dressers or armoires. So I’d definitely pick one of them over Motel 6 if you have the choice. Where I was going I didn’t so Motel 6 it was. Super 8 and La Quinta also tend to have free Wi-Fi – important if you want to – or need to – get online.

Another site to look for pet-friendly hotels is http://www.hotels.com You can specify “pets allowed” and where you’re traveling to and it’ll give you the hotels and motels that allow pets. In most cases it will show what the fee is (if any) and any restrictions (dogs under 20 lbs, for example). I always book through hotels.com because once you accumulate 10 nights you get a night for free – and it can be up to $400 for that night despite what you’ve paid per night for all the stays you’ve accumulated!

Do be sure your cats are flea-free and tidy up after you leave. The hotels could just as easily change their rules to not allow pets so do what you can to ensure they’ll continue this for pet owners. I bring a large litter box with me and a garbage bag to empty it in. Don’t leave this for housekeeping – take it with you when you leave and put it in their or another dumpster. I also pack a small dust pan and broom and tidy up the bathroom of any stray litter. Since they don’t charge more I don’t feel right leaving more work for housekeeping.

Pet Hotels Boca Raton Florida

 

pet hotels boca raton florida
TownePlace Suites by Marriott Boca Raton

Dog Friendly Hotels London

 

dog friendly hotels london
Luxurypaw.com The Mayfair Hotel & Spa, FL

Pet friendly hotels?

I am a looking for dog friendly hotel in London and Bath. Can anyone recommend one in London and one in Bath? Thanks

http://www.petfriendlyhotels.com/ http://www.k9directory.co.uk/ http://www.dogfriendlybritain.co.uk/directory.asp?ID=13 http://www.dogpeople.co . uk / http://www.bestdoghotel.co.uk/ Hope these sites help

Dog Friendly Hotels England

 

dog friendly hotels england
Days Inn Bradford Hotel

dog-friendly hotels in Bournemouth England?

as some of you may know, I live in Florida, but will come from the uk.im bournemouth.and visit Family back in my hometown I am looking for dog friendly hotels can help you there.

I am looking for me on my website, but it is in the U.S. I would keep looking, but I still want this to happen to you because you live in the U.S. now. I'm sorry ….. I thought it was outside the U.S., too. But here it is anyway: Even http://www.hsus.org/pets/pet_care/caring_for_pets_when_you_travel/animalfriendly_hotel_accommodations.html (Dog Friendly Holiday): http://www.hsus.org/pets/pet_care/renting_with_pets_the_online_resource_for_rental_managers_and_pet_owners/finding_animalfriendly_rental_housing/animal_friendly_apts.html Still looking for that area …. Okay, here goes: http://www.expedia.co.uk/Bournemouth-Dorset-Hotels-PetfriendlyHotel.0-n6053798-0-tPetfriendlyHotel.Travel-Guide-Filter-Hotels (All my ancestors are from Dorset!) And here's another for your search: http://www.iknow-dorset.co.uk/bournemouth/pet_dog_friendly/