Royal Plaza Hotel (Walt Disney World) 2-Night Deal via Groupon

I occasionally go through the large selection of Groupon Getaways to see if there is anything of value. Most times, I find something pretty valuable, in my opinion, yet we are not in a position to always take advantage of the promotion. As I woke up this morning, all groggy, I decided to log into my Groupon page and see what was available, and I was surprised to see an offer for the Royal Plaza at Walt Disney World.

Groupon 2-24-12 Royal Plaza

For $239, up to four guests can reserve a Deluxe room for two nights. Here are some specifics on the offer:

  • Must book by 5/28/12
  • Must travel by 5/30/12
  • Not valid 3/2-3/3, 3/9-3/10, or 4/1-4/8
  • Limit 2 per visit
  • 3 day cancellation notice by 4PM prior to arrival required or fee up to Groupon price applies
  • Subject to availability
  • Must be 21 or older to check in
  • Credit card required at booking
  • Must have valid ID
  • Valid only for deluxe room
  • Not valid with reward points
  • 12.5% occupancy tax not included

We stayed at the Royal Plaza for our honeymoon back in 2008, and absolutely loved it! One of the specific things we love about the hotels surrounding the Royal Plaza is they are located on Disney property, and have their own independent shuttles that guest can use to get around the Walt Disney World complex. The transportation meant shorter lines, and I like to think faster service since there were less people and hotels that they needed to stop at going to and from the parks.

So I absolutely can recommend the Royal Plaza based on past experience. The question is, will this offer save people money?

Historically, when ever I have searched for the best offers at the Royal Plaza, it has been using the Mousesavers discount, which offers 40% off rack rates. I randomly selected days valid through this offer for four guests in a Deluxe room, and the rooms were $141/night. The Groupon rate works out to under $120/night. Keep in mind these rates do not include taxes and the $8/night resort fee. For reference, the rack rate for the same periods are $209/night. However, compared to staying in a Disney owned resort, there can be substantial savings for a family when all you are doing is sleeping in the room.

If you are headed to Walt Disney World, and looking for accommodations over the dates of this offer, consider staying at the Royal Plaza as the deal is worthy of your time.

1972 Walt Disney World Parking Tickets

I need to give my wife credit for what I believe are some of our most interesting articles and ideas. Recently, she reminded me that my grandparents have bags of tickets, brochures, old postcards, and all kinds of invaluable travel documents that they acquired from all of their travels. I always knew my grandma held onto everything from traveling, but it was not until my wife mentioned I should gather the documents, start scanning them, and researching them to find out their story, did I really start appreciating that my grandma held on to this stuff all these years.

My grandma showed up with bag #1 with various different Disney World tickets and documents, as well as various other cool travel documents. I will slowly be scanning them in and trying to document some more of the history behind the pieces. I think I have found some very interesting pieces of history. Several of the items I believe to be so rare, I have not been able to find very much, if any information on. If anyone has any additional history behind some of the items, please feel free to share.

To start off, we have two 1972 parking tickets from Walt Disney World. What I find most amazing was that my grandparents decided to head down to Florida for Disney World the year after it opened, and to top it off, they took along my mom and her two sisters. My grandma reminded me that the vehicles did not have air conditioning back then, and they traveled with the windows down because of the heat. My grandparents fondly remembered my mom and her sisters hanging their feet out the windows waiving at passer-byres. I now know where I get the desire to travel with my kids everywhere, as my grandparents always took their three daughters, and my parents always took my sister and I everywhere. So I now consider it a family tradition and upbringing.

1972 Walt Disney World Parking Pass Front

1972 Walt Disney World Parking Pass Front

Ticket prices for parking in 1972 were $0.50 with $0.48 going to Disney and $0.02 in State tax. Can you imagine paying only $0.50 to park when it now will cost you $14 in 2012? Believe it or not, tickets to the Magic Kingdom were only $3.75 in 1972. What we all would do for such affordable admission prices now.

In 1972, you also only had the Magic Kingdom as Epcot, Hollywood Studios, and the Animal Kingdom were yet to be constructed. Think of it this way though, 40 years from now, we will be looking back at 2012 prices and wishing we could pay them.

1972 Walt Disney World Parking Pass Rear

1972 Walt Disney World Parking Pass Rear

What I like about the rear of the tickets is that they had a map of the Magic Kingdom parking sections, and one could write where they parked for easy finding your vehicle at the end of the day. An interesting fact is that the sections remained classic character names up until late 2011, when they were switched over to a Hero’s and Villain’s arrangement. The transformation is suppose to provide helpful visual clues to guests (somehow the previous ones must not have worked well after almost 40 years) as well as help divide the parking lots into two distinct sections with corresponding trams.

So there you have it, classic 1972 WDW parking tickets. While it may seem trivial and worthless, I find it charming that my grandparents held onto these tickets for 40 years. In addition, I feel they tell their own history of the park, that from my research, I have not been able to find anywhere else on the internet.

If you have some old travel tickets, brochures, or anything else that you feel is interesting, please feel free to send me a high quality scan as well as any history you may have, and we will get it posted. Thanks! Save Money, Travel More.

$5 Earned Us Another Trip to Hawaii

Update 2/22/12: I finally have an explanation for the random miles. Late last week I received a phone call from Continental about the tickets for my in-laws that was discussed below. They were attempting to re-ticket and were not seeing any miles in the account. What happened was when I called and had the tickets switched back to their original flights, Continental refunded me the original 40,000 miles for each ticket. When the agent re-booked the flights, she changed the class of service and now the ticketing system was looking for 60,000 miles each for the same tickets. Fortunately, I moved all the miles over to United, and they did not take the additional miles.

For some reason, the whole re-ticketing process takes over a week to complete, where I thought it was all immediate. The agent that originally re-booked the flights basically really messed up the order, and in the end, I transferred 40,000 miles back into each of our Continental accounts, which was used to re-book the same tickets we had prior. We were also issued a refund for the $5 in taxes we were accessed.

The whole time the tickets showed up fine in our accounts as a future reservation, so there was nothing to be alarmed about other than some random extra miles sitting in our accounts.

So the lesson to be learned here is that when redeeming miles, and making changes to your account, airlines might have screwy policies about refunding the miles and re-booking taking the miles again. What customers need to be aware of is to not “use” the additional miles that show back up in your account, as it could jeopardize tickets one already has booked. There are lots of “what ifs” related to how our transaction transpired, that I do not want to evaluate all the scenarios. I am fortunate I did not have any miles in the accounts and was able to talk the agent through the process over the phone rather than seeing even more miles taken from our accounts and than having to argue to get them back.

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What a screwy day last week that started with surprise, anxiousness to see what would happened, followed by frustration and then surprise. It all started after I received an email from Continental that my in-law’s flights for Hawaii had been revised. At first glance, I did not think anything of the change as it is typical for times to get moved around prior to departure. But what happened over the proceeding hours was what really surprises me.

My in-laws were supposed to leave Hawaii, have a quick refuel and 45 minutes later be on their way to Cleveland. The change from Continental caused them to have an overnight in LAX, and not leaving for Cleveland until the following morning. They ultimately arrived in Cleveland 8 hours later than originally planned. So I called up the Continental ticketing center see what I could get accomplished. At a minimum, I was hoping to get my in-laws a night in the hotel so they would not be sleeping at the airport. An even better scenario would have been if they would have compensated us something for the major change. So I rolled the dice, and called up Continental.

After finally getting through to an agent, I mentioned to the woman that my in-law’s flights had been revised. Without even saying anything, she put me on hold and said she could get them back onto their original flights, but now there was a plane change. So I went along with the plan of switching them back to their original itinerary, and was unsure why the “computer” switched them in the first place.

Then the agent told me I owed another $2.50/ticket in taxes. So even though I did not switch the flights, and they are back on the same exact flights, I need to now pay more in taxes? I questioned the agent, and she said there was nothing she could do about taxes. I agree but I did not make the change. So I asked for miles or something to compensate me for my time and extra taxes I had to pay. Unfortunately, that was shot down too.

So as I went on with my day, I pondered in the back of my mind how wrong the scenario played out. Continental switched around their flights, and to put them back onto the same flights cost us more in taxes. At the same time though, I was only talking about $5 total in taxes on flights that cost us nothing. The point though is Continental’s change cost me more out of pocket. That is wrong in my opinion.

I considered sending a short note to Continental to discuss the situation; however, after logging into both my wife and my accounts, I noticed 40,000+ miles sitting in each of our accounts. What was this? I knew we had almost no miles in each of our Continental accounts because I had already moved them all over to United previously. So I began going back through previous transactions to see what was up with our accounts.

111213 Continental Reward Redeposit

For some reason back in December 2011, Continental re-deposited 40,000 miles back into each of our accounts. I have no idea why there are these elusive miles in our accounts, as it does not correlate with any account activity. The only thing I could possibly think of is maybe it was a day I called up Continental to play around with dates with our flights for Hawaii, and somehow in the process, the agent credited us back all these miles even though we never made a flight change at that time. However, even this scenario does not match up because we have 3 seats reserved (or 120,000 miles) and were only credited with 80,000 miles.

Regardless, I have no idea what happened, and in the end, a $5 tax dispute was not worth my time and effort when we each had an extra 40,000 miles sitting in each of our accounts (or more seats back to Hawaii at a later date!). Maybe the good karma of sending my in-laws to Hawaii is paying us back in its own little way. 🙂