Author Archives: Gomanson

Hotel Review – Timberlake Lodge, Grand Rapids MN

(This is a data recovered post, originally published on July 2nd, 2015.)

For work I end up spending a few weeks every year in Grand Rapids, MN.  I have stayed in all of the go-to hotels in town, and one has recently stood out as a clear favorite: the Timberlake Lodge.

I have stayed twice at the Timberlake Lodge and both times I’ve found it to be exceptionally clean and well up-kept.  It also has the best pool, breakfast area, and decor of any hotel in town.  The in-house restaurant, the 17th Street Grill, is excellent.

ROOMS

For both of my stays at Timberlake Lodge I reserved an Executive King room, which is their basic room.  The standard summer week night price is around $120.  The room has everything a business traveler (or vacationing couple) could ask for: microwave, refrigerator, writing desk, additional chairs, and a large (~40″) tv.  The bathroom features granite countertops, fairly nice soaps/shampoo/lotion, and an amazing walk-in tile shower with dual shower heads and 4 body blasters.  The best part about the guest rooms, for me, was how spotlessly clean they are.  I was unable to find a single greasy fingerprint or loose hair anywhere in the room.  Room service even squeegees the glass shower doors every day!

The only complaint I have about the guest room is that there was a gap large enough to see through at the bottom of the door to the hallway.  There was also a visible gap along the bottom of the door.  For such a well built and new seeming place, I would have expected the door to seal better.
timberlake-desk timberlake-kitchenette timberlake-bathroom timberlake-shower

AMENITIES

The Timberlake Lodge boasts a pool area with a 98′ water slide, hot tub, kiddie pool with frog slide, and plenty of seating.  The pool has an adults only hour at night.  There is also an exercise room which I never visited so I can’t comment on it.  The hotel has conference and meeting rooms which, again, I didn’t use so I will simply mention.  The lobby is very inviting, with soft music playing, automatic sliding doors, and several seating areas.  There is wi-fi throughout the property, which had a tendency to disconnect every 15-30 minutes but otherwise worked fine.

I was always rushing out the door in the mornings, so I never had a chance to actually sit down and eat the included breakfast.  I did grab a few food items to go, and it was all good.  However, Americinn wins in the to-go food department, as they have paper plates and some packaged food choices.  At Timberlake Lodge I had to hastily make some toast and carry it out on a napkin.  From what I saw, smelled, and heard, the full breakfast was very good.  There were always a few hot choices every morning, be it biscuits and gravy, sausages, or scrambled eggs.

RESTAURANT

timberlake-sashimi

Sesame seared tuna on spinach with wasabi aoili and a ginger dressing

The in-house bar and restaurant is called 17th Street Grill.  I’ve never eaten at the restaurant itself, but I have ordered room service from there on two occasions.  Both times they screwed up my order, but both times I received the correct order minutes later.  The first time this happened I received a Philly chicken sandwich platter instead of the Greek salad I had ordered.  The server let me keep the sandwich and thanks to the mini-fridge, I had nice leftovers the day after!  The menu selection seems more sophisticated than what you would expect to find in northern Minnesota.  They have a new menu now and I’m disappointed that the beer cheese soup is absent.  It was without a doubt the best I have ever had!

SCORING

Welcome to my personal hotel scoring system.  The top score is 5, for a total possible score of 0-50.  For a definition of each scoring category click here.

4  Breakfast
5  Room Decor
5  Cleanliness
5  Condition
5  Public Areas
5  Shower Water Pressure/Hardness
5  Pool
3  Mattress
4  Pillows
4  Room Amenities
45 / 50  Total Score – Very Good!

ADDITIONAL THOUGHTS

The problem with the door is more than made up for by the room cleanliness and the convenience of the automatic sliding doors into the lobby.  It’s also very convenient having room service as an option.

The Timberlake Lodge provides unexpected luxury in the heart of the commercial area of Grand Rapids, MN.  Compared to nearby hotels, the extra $30 you’ll pay to stay here is well worth it in my opinion.

Wedding Anniversary Trip – The Final Clue

(This is a data recovered post, originally published on July 1st, 2015.)
(Original post had comments. See bottom of post.)

Tonight Nicoleen and everyone else will find out where we’re going for our 10th anniversary trip next week.  We started with 12 possible locations and with the help of ValueTactics readers and facebook fans, Nicoleen has it narrowed down to two possibilities:

Europe or Japan

Here is the updated list of possible locations:

  • Africa
  • Antarctica
  • Australia
  • Asia (continental)
  • Caribbean
  • Europe
  • Hawaii
  • India
  • Japan
  • Mexico
  • Middle East
  • South America

For the final clue, you’ll have to know something about my wife.  She’s not known for having an adventurous culinary appetite.  Of course she’ll have to stretch her palate wherever we travel, but I’ve been married to her for 10 years . . . I’m not going to risk planning a vacation without ensuring there’s some food she’ll like where we are going.

Final Clue: Determine which one you think Nicoleen would rather eat for dinner, and you’ll have the answer.
choice-germany
choice-japan
Below this post is a comment field where you can enter your guess! (No registration needed)

Wedding Anniversary Trip – Clues #9 & 10

(This is a data recovered post, originally published on June 29th, 2015.)
(Original post had comments. See bottom of post.)

8 days til departure and down to 4 possibilities!  Let’s narrow it down to the final 2 with these next clues…

Here is the updated list of possible locations:

  • Africa
  • Antarctica
  • Australia
  • Asia (continental)
  • Caribbean
  • Europe
  • Hawaii
  • India
  • Japan
  • Mexico
  • Middle East
  • South America

For this round we’re going back to the movie theme:

Clue # 9: We’re not going to fall victim to the most famous classic blunder.

Clue # 10: Our destination’s bobsled team can train without getting on a plane.

Below this post is a comment field where you can enter your ideas and help Nicoleen solve the riddles! (No registration needed)

The following comments were left on the original post:

 

Wedding Anniversary Trip – Clues #7 & 8

(This is a data recovered post, originally published on June 23rd, 2015.)
(Original post had comments. See bottom of post.)

We’re down to 6 possible destinations!  Use clues 7 and 8 to rule out another two from the list.

Here is the updated list of possible locations:

  • Africa
  • Antarctica
  • Australia
  • Asia (continental)
  • Caribbean
  • Europe
  • Hawaii
  • India
  • Japan
  • Mexico
  • Middle East
  • South America

Help Nicoleen eliminate two more destinations from the list:

Clue # 7: We’ll enjoy some lovely sunsets on this vacation, but we won’t be near the building from which you can see two in the same day.

Clue # 8: Nicoleen and I have both been to this destination, but I’ve never flown there, and I’m going to continue that record.

Below this post is a comment field where you can enter your ideas and help Nicoleen solve the riddles! (No registration needed)

The following comments were left on the original post:

4 thoughts on “Wedding Anniversary Trip – Clues #7 & 8”

Weekly Review (June 22, 2015)

(This is a data recovered post, originally published on June 22nd, 2015.)

I just finished tallying our monthly credit card stats tonight.  I got my bonus from my Chase IHG card, which helped the hotel points category quite a bit.  Two new Menards flyers started over the weekend but neither had any free-with-rebate items.  Are they slowing down the rebate program?  I cashed in 8750 My SA Rewards points on Tuesday and got the $25 free gas coupon.  My total free gas for the week was $30.25.

As I said, here’s the June report on our points and miles:

  • redeemed no points or miles
  • earned 321 airline miles
  • earned 70,926 hotel points
  • earned 2,773 Chase Ultimate Rewards
  • earned 2,345 “other” points (Wells Fargo Rewards, Barclay Arrival Miles, Citi Cash)
  • avoided $118.03 in interest charges

I can also now announce the Flea Market profits.  I made $201.81 on Menards stuff alone, and an additional $35.36 on giant soccer balls (I’m seller GreatWhiteNorth), plus $11.63 on miscellaneous stuff I was selling.  The full review of the event is still in process.

New Posts this Week
My First Points Redemption – Europe 2014 is my long overdue review of the trip I took last summer.  The post gives an overview of the trip and outlines the net costs after applying value tactics during the planning and execution.
Wedding Anniversary Trip Clues #5 & 6 had a mountain theme and, with the help of you readers, knocked Hawaii and South America out of the running!

Travel News
earth-11015_640Our anniversary trip is now two weeks away!!  Keep an eye out for my “clue” posts and help Nicoleen solve the mystery of where we’re going!  When you get a chance, please like ValueTactics on Facebook and follow us @ValueTactics to stay updated on all things Value Tactics!

Now you’re updated. Go employ some Value Tactics!

My First Points Redemption – Europe 2014

(This is a data recovered post, originally published on June 22nd, 2015.)
(Sorry, the jump links don’t work since recovering this page – you’ll have to scroll for now.)

Jump to section:
Trip Background Info
Planning Phase
Travel to Europe
Switzerland
Germany
Travel from Europe
Cost Summary
Cost Breakdown

Ancient and Modern History

1996

This is me wearing cotton shorts, standing next to a sign in 1996

When I was 14 years old I visited Europe for the first time.  It was a guided bus tour that went around Germany and Scandinavia. Two years later, in 1998, we hosted a German exchange student for a month. That June I stayed with his family for a month. I repeated the exchange program again in 2000. Having friends in Europe makes traveling there very affordable for a young adult, so I returned to Germany (among other countries) in 1999, 2001, 2002, and 2003. As the fairytale that is youth slowly ended, I found myself unable to reasonably return to Europe due to budgetary constraints. Fast forward to 2012, when I decided to jump into the credit card game head first. The endeavor had a dual purpose: move debt onto 0% interest cards and get some points and miles for my trouble. I didn’t have any concrete plans to use my miles and I soon half-forgot about my accumulated points/miles.

When my wife graduated from college in 2008 she cashed in a promise I had made to her years earlier, and we invested in a new car for her. In summer 2013 I graduated and thought to myself: I deserve a reward too, right? I knew it would be at least autumn before I heard back about any jobs, so I hatched a plan to return to my estranged vacation hang-out, Germany.

The Planning Phase

Historically my trip planning process has been overly involved and unnecessarily thorough. I enjoy the process. But for this trip, I had to act fast because award flights for the dates I was planning to travel were disappearing fast. I think the whole planning phase lasted about a week, from committing to the idea to booking the plane tickets.

My first step was to re-establish contact with my friends in Europe. Once I confirmed that I had a place to stay and people to see, I started shopping for award flights. My only real option at the time was United Airlines. A benefit to United’s award ticketing scheme is that you can book two one-ways for the same amount of miles as the round trip to and from the same region. One of my German friends had moved to Switzerland so an open jaw itinerary would be very convenient. Not needing to travel back to the city I flew into would save me at least half a day of train or car travel. My trip was short to begin with (7 days) so being able to fly out of a different city for the return flight was very valuable to me.

I found two economy one-way award seats, both at the saver miles level. I would fly from Minneapolis to Zürich, and then return from Frankfurt to Minneapolis.The cost was 60,000 United miles and $140.70 in fees. Not bad for a round trip flight to Europe in June!

Travel to Europe (MSP > YYZ > ZHR)

My short flight from Minneapolis to Toronto was uneventful. Although I booked through United, this flight was operated by Canada Air Jazz. The aircraft was a Bombardier CRJ-200 regional jet. The experience was what you would expect on a jet this size: short, cramped, and skimpy service (one beverage and a bag of pretzels).

My 5 hour layover at Toronto Pearson Int’l Airport was fairly comfortable considering I had no lounge access. The public seating areas feature nice leather chairs, stone tops, ample power outlets, and an iPad at every seat. The iPads can update you on your flight information, provide weather and news, and let you order from the nearest bar/cafe.
YYZ-seating
My only real complaint about the YYZ public areas was the horrendously slow and spotty wi-fi connectivity.

My flight from Toronto to Zürich was on a Canada Air Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, which is one of the flagships of the new generation of commercial jetliner engineering. It is supposedly very fuel efficient and comfortable. The on-board literature made several claims about the design, including: increased cabin pressurization and humidity (was supposed to reduce jet lag), passenger-dimmable window shading, more headroom for a more open feel, and aesthetically designed lighting for a calmer atmosphere. Oh, and by the way the seats are thinner too, so they can cram more seats in economy with supposedly no loss of leg room. Well, at 6’2″ I was cramped and uncomfortable anyway. However, the other gimmicky-sounding innovations actually seemed to improve the overall experience. The pressure and humidity seemed to make me feel generally not as crappy by the time we landed, and the lights and big windows were just really cool to look at!
dreamliner
Overall I think the Dreamliner is a bit hyped, but it does live up to a decent portion of that hype.

Switzerland

The first leg of my trip was to visit an old friend. Hannes is one of my German exchange students, now living in Switzerland. I won’t give too many details about my stay there except to say that Switzerland is an exceptionally beautiful and clean country, and I would recommend it to anyone. We spent most of my first day there driving through the Alps and we even swung by the tiny country of Liechtenstein.
alps
Part of my time with Hannes was spent just over the border in Konstanz, Germany, to visit his mother and to see the city where he went to school. Konstanz is perfectly charming and I would highly recommend it to anyone near southern Germany.
konstanz

Germany

The next part of my short trip brought me back to familiar Germany. There I stayed a few days each with two old friends, both named Christian. The first Christian was my first exchange student back in high school, and it was great to see him and his family again after so many years.

wagners

Christian’s family and I at Apfelwein Wagner, enjoying traditional Frankfurt cuisine

Christian 1 lives near Frankfurt and after a few short days it was time to move on to Christian 2, who lives near Siegburg. The timing worked out so I got to his house the day of his birthday party, so it was a perfect way to see all his friends and family together in one place.

Although the trip was only 7 days, it seemed like a lot longer. I managed to fit in a lot of variety in my short time, and the fact that the main expense (airfare) was virtually free made the whole thing seem even sweeter.

Travel from Europe (FRA > YYZ > MSP)

My return itinerary once again had me stopping over in Toronto, but the long haul flight was on Lufthansa. The flight was your standard transatlantic economy seat on a Boeing 747-400: nothing to write home [or online] about. Although it was an older aircraft, the service and food were better. I have always found Lufthansa to be a step above U.S. carriers in these departments.

My layover in YYZ was shorter on the return flight, and I spent most of my time sitting in a chair, staring at the wall, wishing I were still on vacation in Europe.

The flight from Toronto to Minneapolis was a mirror image of the previous Canada Air Jazz flight, except in a slightly larger aircraft, the Bombardier CRJ-705, which has a small 1×2 business class cabin in addition to the 2×2 economy seating.

Cost Summary

Airfare: $140.70
Other transportation: $179.88
Lodging: $0.00
Food, shopping, entertainment: $555.54

Total cost for my week long vacation in Switzerland and Germany: $819.55
Savings from using value tactics: at least $1,692.50

Cost Breakdown

This is the fun part! Using the tactics outlined on this site, a week long vacation spanning three European countries, including airfare, transportation, and lodging only cost me 320.58 !!

Airfare:
The airfare cost me 60,000 United miles, which I transferred from my Chase Ultimate Rewards account, earned mainly with my Sapphire Preferred card, and $140.70 in fees. Buying both one-way tickets (MSP > ZHR and FRA > MSP) directly from the United website would have cost $6587.90 in cash! Now to be fair, I would have never done that had I not had the miles to spend. Realistically I would have bought a round trip (MSP > < FRA) and spent the additional day traveling back to Frankfurt from Zürich. But even that ticket would have cost $1733.20 and I got a better itinerary for $140.70 cash!

Ground Transportation:
I took trains from Zürich to Frankfurt and Siegburg to back to Frankfurt. The total for my train travel was $195.74. I used my Barclay Arrival Plus for these online train purchases and later redeemed 10,000 Barclay Arrival miles for a $100 credit. So that brought the rail expenses down to $95.74.

I also traveled a lot by car. I recorded $252.41 charged to gas stations in Europe. These charges were split among three purposes: 1) paying my share of group travel (I count this as transportation cost); 2) being a stand-up guy and filling the tanks of my hosts (this was actually in lieu of bringing any gifts for them); and 3) using my friends as human ATMs, an awesome tactic I will write a whole post about soon. In stead of tracking every cent, I am just splitting the $252.41 three ways, for an estimated car travel cost of $84.14.

Lodging:
None, $0.00. Staying with friends makes travel cheap! Besides the cost savings, you get to see the real country, not just the tourist destinations. If you have any friends in foreign lands, I highly recommend staying with them when you travel. Just be sure to be a gracious guest and to reciprocate the offer to host them any time they are traveling in your corner of the world.

Food and Shopping:
I don’t include these costs in the value break-down because they are highly variable based on your shopping habits and your cuisine choices. But for what it’s worth, I spent an estimated $555.54 on food, gifts, local entertainment, and clothes. This included a $325 pair of Lederhosen, so the food and smaller gifts were actually just over $200 for the week. Considering I would have probably eaten about $75 in food in a week at home, this is getting by pretty cheap for the value I perceived.

The following feedback was left on the original post:

One thought on “My First Points Redemption – Europe 2014”

  1. Pingback: Help a newbie out! Getting to Europe on miles 1 year out. – FlyerTalk Forums

Wedding Anniversary Trip – Clues #5 & 6

(This is a data recovered post, originally published on June 21th, 2015.)
(Original post had comments. See bottom of post.)

As some of you know, I have secretly been planning a vacation for Nicoleen to celebrate our 10 year anniversary. She knows about the trip but the destination is still a surprise. Help her figure out where we’re going!

Here is the updated list of possible locations:

  • Africa
  • Antarctica
  • Australia
  • Asia (continental)
  • Caribbean
  • Europe
  • Hawaii
  • India
  • Japan
  • Mexico
  • Middle East
  • South America

Nicoleen and I on Humboldt Peak in the Sangre De Cristo Range in Colorado in 2004

Nicoleen and I have some history together in the mountains, but these next two clues will tell you where our mountaineering lives together will not soon continue:

Clue # 5: The mountain that’s taller than Everest from top to base…is not the place.

Clue # 6: Home to several mountains not higher than Everest, but further from Earth’s gravitational core…what a bore.

Below this post is a comment field where you can enter your ideas and help Nicoleen solve the riddles! (No registration needed)

The following comments were left on the original post:

One thought on “Wedding Anniversary Trip – Clues #5 & 6”

Andi
Hawaii and South America

Weekly Review (June 16, 2015)

(This is a data recovered post, originally published on June 17th, 2015.)

It was a dinky week on the free gas front.  I somehow missed double coupon day (Tuesdays) and instead filled up on Monday and Wednesday.  Total weekly free gas was only $2.52.

Menards was a little better.  I managed to pick up $51.52 in free stuff between locking storage jars (8 each of three different sizes) and unadvertised tablet pads.
menards-06-12
Of course the big news this week was that over the weekend I set up at Wright County Swapper’s Meet and sold a bunch of stuff!  I will soon do a full review of the flea market and what it means for my eventual Menards free stuff long-term tactical analysis.
flea-market1

New Posts this Week
Limiting Myself on Free Menards Stuff is an explanation of the tactical adjustment I made regarding which Menards free stuff to leave on the shelf at the store.
Anniversary Vacation Destination Clues 1 & 2 and clues 3 & 4 are helping my bride to narrow down the list of possible destinations for our trip next month.
Latest Load of Menards Stuff is a look at the previous week’s haul.

Travel News
All my travel related thoughts are bent on preparing for our 10 year anniversary trip. Details of that trip will be revealed shortly. In the meantime, like ValueTactics on Facebook and follow us @ValueTactics so you can keep up to date!

Now you’re updated. Go employ some Value Tactics!