Approved for the Chase Sapphire Reserve? You gotta be kitten me! This card is “purr-fect” for the frequent traveler! That’s why this little guy is feline so good about it! Hopefully Chase won’t “claw” back any points earned from “meownufactured spending”!
Pointbreaks, Shmointbreaks
IHG just performed its regular ritual of getting our hopes up and then letting us down with its list of Pointbreaks hotels. There are three kinds of Pointsbreak hotels:
- The North Bumblefuck Holiday Inn Express, located 50 miles from any place you’d want to visit.
- The Candlewood Suites located near the office park 15 miles from your home.
- A really nice hotel in a country that you will not visit any time soon.
Masaya Volcano National Park, Nicaragua
I wrote in January of how I pulled together a trip for my family of six to Nicaragua over Christmas and New Year’s using points and miles. I haven’t posted anything else about that trip, so better late than never… I’ll start with one of my favorite places in Nicaragua, the Masaya Volcano National Park. It’s located maybe 30-45 minutes down the main highway from the capital city of Managua, and here’s a fun fact: it is the only volcano in the Western Hemisphere where you can drive to the rim. It’s got to be one of the most convenient volcanoes in the world.
It’s active in a smoky sort of way, though there hasn’t been a big eruption in a while. Here’s a picture taken from the parking lot:
Not bad, eh? That steam you see rising from the crater is sulfur dioxide. It doesn’t smell very good but the view makes up for that.
Speaking of views, there are some hiking trails that let you climb up and get a better look at things. Between my family and my in-laws, we had ten kids with us ranging in age from 2 to 14, but fortunately the hike isn’t too strenuous (though there are some trails that we didn’t take that let you go a little further).
One you get to the top you can see a long distance. Due to limitations of my camera and/or my photography skills the picture doesn’t come close to doing the view justice, but if you look in the left center of the picture you can (barely) make out the triangular outline of the Momotombito Volcano, which was active during our visit. We could actually see it smoking from our hotel, though it wasn’t active on this particular day:
It’s probably about 30-40 miles away from the Masaya Volcano. On the west coast of Nicaragua, you’re never out of sight of a volcano.
Here’s a picture from near the crater looking up the hiking trail:
And here’s a view looking back down the trail:
…and some of the crew walking back down:
And that was the trip, I don’t think we spent more than an hour and a half there what with all the kids. There is also a cave there that you can go into with a guide. I went there several years ago and it was fun–we were surrounded by bats flying all around us. Wikipedia says you can see lava if you hike far enough into the cave, but I can’t vouch for that. Perhaps we didn’t go far enough in?
If you’re into nature, Nicaragua’s got quite a bit of that. It’s also reasonably safe–I’ve had more than one conversation where I carefully explained that you most likely will not die if you go there (that’s San Pedro Sula, Honduras).
The best time of the year to visit is when we were there: December and January. It’s after the rainy season when everything is green but before the hot season kicks in. Temperatures are usually in the mid to upper 80s, there’s often a breeze, and the humidity is not too bad. I don’t see too many of the sights down there these days since our visits mostly involve seeing my wife’s family, but there’s plenty of scenery there for folks who want to get off the beaten path a bit.
The TravelBloggerBuzz of the Mommy Blog world
In Dia’s post today she linked to a great takedown of another blog genre, the mommy blog. I found the takedown to be quite amusing since it sounded a bit like the world of points & miles / credit card / travel blogs, but worse. A sample:
…Your shit is boring. Nobody cares about your shampoo you bought at Walmart and how you’re so thankful the company decided to work with you. Nobody cares about anything you are saying because you aren’t telling an engaging story. You are not giving your readers anything they haven’t already heard. You are not being helpful, and you are not being interesting… Tell me something I haven’t heard before, that someone hasn’t said before. From a different perspective, or making a new point at the end at least if I have to suffer through a cliche story about your faceless, nameless kid.
You’re writing in an inauthentic voice about an unoriginal subject, worse if sprinkled with horrible grammar and spelling, and you are contributing nothing to the world but static noise.
Speaking of which, I can’t believe it’s been almost a year since Chase Sapphire Preferred week! But back to the rant:
… You are willing to do backflips for basically any company that will throw a big enough bone in your direction. Oh, but let me guess, you’re a lifestyle blogger? I blog about our life, so really I can cover a variety of topics and brands. No. I used to say that shit too. What you’re really saying is that you have no direction… Stop selling your soul for peanuts. You have no credibility left when you do this over and over.
…On the note of being manipulated by brands, have you ever seen a negative review on a mommy blog? Ever? And if you did, have you ever seen one that still said “This post was sponsored by XYZ brand, and opinions are all my own” at the top?
Fuck no. Because every single blogger is terrified to tell the truth.
One thing I like about my blog as it currently stands is that I make almost $0 from my regular readers and $0 from corporate sponsors. It’s quite liberating. I can write whatever I want and piss off whomever I want. I don’t even have anything particularly scathing to say most of the time–George is already filling that market niche just fine–but I love the freeom.
I can take a couple of months off from blogging, as I just did, without having to worry about maintaining a steady stream of crap to keep people in the habit of reading my blog. I’ve got a few hundred regular readers, and I love you guys, but you don’t make me any money. But that’s okay because making money from you isn’t a goal of mine (no tears for me, I make a bit of money from search traffic, and I’m happy with that). Not that it’s bad to want to make money from your regular readers, it’s just that it limits one’s freedom as a blogger, and that’s no fun, and one of the reasons I started a blog was to have some fun.
But let’s get back to that rant:
In the last week, I unfollowed over 2200 uninteresting people on social media, and I’m not finished. Someone asked me “But what if they all unfollow you?!” And my response? #byefelicia I’m not interested in having fake friends in real life, and I’m certainly not interested in having fake followers that I don’t even like, on the internet.
This is a reference to one of the shady sides of social media: artificially inflating your followers. You can buy thousands of Twitter/Facebook/etc “followers” from various sites to make yourself look more popular, because nobody wants to go to a restaurant if they don’t see other people there, right? There are many bloggers in our niche who have gone this route.
Another way is to follow thousands of other Twitter accounts en masse. A certain percentage of them will follow you and just like that you’ve gained some followers. A lot of Twitter accounts who follow me have never seen a single tweet of mine, they only followed hoping I (plus the other hundred they followed that day) would follow back. If you see a Twitter account following 14,000 accounts but with only 7,000 followers, that’s what’s going on.
Anyway, it’s a long rant but a pretty good read if you’re into rants, and the original has already been taken down, so go check it out now in Google cache if you’re curious.
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