miércoles, 12 de diciembre de 2012

Caviar and Turkey to be tasted only on board

Airlines awarded for game play on these dates to its customers with details and special menus.


The Christmas spirit also takes over airlines. Passengers flying in first class and business can enjoy menus and some details specially designed for these dates. Thus, in long haul flights in first class and business from Germany, Lufthansa crew offers traditional Turkey roast, served with red cabbage and roast potatoes. In addition, chef Johanna Maier has created a pre-Navidad menus, which are completed with cookies of Christmas and a liquor.

First, duo of ham and meat cured venison, along with Terrine of venison with pear and cranberry chutney; Glazed Chicken breast filled with honey, Rosemary, mashed potatoes, cabbage, red cabbage and caramelised chestnuts, second and, for dessert, marzipan and Mandarin sorbet. This is the menu of Swiss first class customers. The intercontinental business, offered the company of first trilogy of salmon; Glazed Chicken breast filled with honey, Rosemary, mashed potatoes, cabbage, red cabbage and caramelised chestnuts, second, and cream of Tangerine with a hot dessert wine jelly.

A tub of Alverta Royal Eggxiting of Petrossian caviar is the appetizer of Air France for passengers who fly from Paris at the Premiere class, who also tasted the menus of Jacques Le Divellec with two of his recipes: fillet of turbot with clams and fish with seafood sauce verbena.

Chocolates and Christmas sweets, as well as digs are details that Air Europe has with its clients on these dates. To which must be added the twelve grapes of luck that you can eat those traveling the day 31. All this served in tableware signed by Agatha Ruiz de la Prada.

Lufthansa:
A those travelling in first and business Class on flights of long-haul from Germany, the company offers traditional Turkey roast, served with red cabbage and roast potatoes. In addition, Lufthansa will distribute chocolate bars, bags of cookies and Christmas pates.





Air France:
December until January, on flights departing from Paris in class La première, customers can enjoy a single tub of Petrossian Caviar Alverta Royal Eggxiting. This month, they can also enjoy the fillet of turbot with clams and verbena of fish with seafood, prepared by Jacques Le Divellec sauce.


Air Europa:
Spanish company offers during the Christmas in business class a Bonbon or offer sweet along with the standard stipulated service in flight. on 24 December, both business class and tourist, a chocolate and champagne, as well as on December 31, when in addition, customers may eat the grapes of luck.
 



Swiss:
Swiss adapts its menu for these dates. Thus, in Swiss First, passengers will enjoy a first compound by duo of ham and meat cured venison, along with Terrine of venison with pear and cranberry chutney; Glazed Chicken breast filled with honey, Rosemary, mashed potatoes, cabbage, red cabbage and caramelised chestnuts, second, and dessert, marzipan and Mandarin sorbet.

jueves, 6 de diciembre de 2012

Locate Luggage Lost In Flight

What is Luggage Locator?

Visiting the baggage carousel can be the most stressful part of a long flight. Locating a piece ofluggage, or multiple pieces, from among the hundreds of other bags can get confusing. Aluggage locator can help track down luggage with a remote control that activates a flashing alarm. Variations are available for locating several bags, and some even initiate spoken responses to cut through the confusion.
Luggage Locator
Luggage Locator provides a location and monitoring service of your luggage.
A Luggage Locator is a tracking device that comes in two distinct pieces. One is a small button that fits on a key chain and looks like the locking and unlocking fob that comes with some automobiles. The second piece is larger, about the size of a small paperback book, also made of hard plastic with one or up to a series of lights embedded. Some brands differ in design, but both pieces typically also feature a strap made from nylon or plastic coated steel wire for attaching to bags.

Luggage Locator
The Luggage Locator device.
This wireless device operates much like a garage door opener because of its reliance on close-range radio signals. The small part of the luggage locator is called the transmitter and, like a garage door remote in a car, emits a signal when its button is pressed. The larger piece of theluggage locator is called the receiver, and it functions like the garage door opener itself, except that instead of opening a door when a button is pressed, its lights turn on and a sound is emitted. Most transmitters and receivers have a range of 60 feet (18.2 m), and their lights and sounds function for approximately four seconds.

Each luggage locator operates on the same radio wavelength, but a remote control will activate only its mate. The locators are each given an individual code. This assures that another bag with a luggage locator will not accidentally flash and beep when the button is pressed.

With the product rising in popularity, some brands have branched out and made additions that can help travelers even more. Many travelers don't fly with only one bag, and members of a family often have several bags each. Some luggage locators offer multiple receivers for a single transmitter so that multiple bags will notify the owner with only one push of a button. Another innovation is personalization that allows users to record their own voice saying whatever they want, so that when the button is pressed, they see lights and hear their own message.

If you want to know more, just LugLoc: https://www.facebook.com/LugLoc

lunes, 3 de diciembre de 2012

Buenos Aires: South American "Paris" with Bikinis!

Buenos Aires: South American "Paris" with Bikinis!
Buenos Aires: South American "Paris" with Bikinis!
It is becoming increasingly popular for New Yorker’s to take their year-end bonuses or real-estate winnings and buy a second home in Buenos Aires. Dominic LoTempio, 31-year-old former vice-president of bond sales with Belgian banking conglomerate KBC, is such a person and has relocated completely to a small town 30 minutes north of Buenos Aires. His new life, including a modern 2-bedroom apartment with garden, infinity pool and a man-made lake for canoeing costs just $1,400 a month. Down the road is a field where he takes off and lands his paraglider from Bliss.“I came to live life as a rich guy,” he says, and whilst he has enough to be a small-time millionaire in New York, LoTempio lives life as if a multi-millionaire in the Argentine paradise he has created for himself. In fact, he has done exactly what many suggested but didn’t have the nerve to do. Working in bond sales, every financial crisis the world over would bring stress and comments like “I could move to Thailand, convert my dollars to baht, live like a millionaire, and never have to work again”. Nobody would ever act on this though, trapped by their work or domestic situations.

As he prepared to quit, Argentina crashed and he could see himself there more than in other economically struggling countries, with Argentina being more cosmopolitan. The 6am wake ups were changed for late nights, and 60+ hour weeks exchanged for no work, spending power and Argentine women.

Since Argentina’s economic collapse in 2001, the city and surrounding countryside has become an expat haven. Argentina’s relaxed immigration laws has allowed many to settle on 90 day visas without issue, meaning the exact number of immigrants of this kind is difficult to establish. However, the number of Americans registered with the embassy between 2004 and 2005 leapt by nearly 13%.

Other popular cities of this kind, that offer relatively inexpensive living are places like Mexico City, Rio de Janeiro and Bangkok. However, generally these countries are ruled out due to rising prices (Mexico and Brazil), the culture difference is too much (Thailand), or the inequality of wealth brings risks to rich Americans (Brazil). With this in mind, Buenos Aires offers a cosmopolitan culture with low prices, great weather, even better food and the chance for a new start.

LoTempio is reminded of New York’s neighbourhoods by Buenos Aires’ barrios, the shops and boutiques of the Recoleta barrio are similar to those of Fifth Avenue, the trendy residential area full of fantastic restaurants is called Palermo Soho, and Barrio Norte reminds him of the Upper West Side.

Another fantastic place to settle is Uruguay’s beautiful Punta del Este. Sun, sea and good surf is on offer here, along with the same benefits mentioned above of life in B.A. Life in B.A for LoTempio is good – he may complain about one-ply toilet paper, slow service in restaurants, an abundance of strikes and the lack of luxury goods on offer in the city, but money will buy you about 10 times the space in a trendy neighbourhood in Buenos Aires. This, plus a fantastic meat meal and bottle of wine for $40 in one of the best restaurants in Buenos Aires; what more do you need?