{"id":721,"date":"2012-02-21T11:54:44","date_gmt":"2012-02-21T16:54:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dougandruth.com\/blog\/?p=721"},"modified":"2012-02-21T12:33:31","modified_gmt":"2012-02-21T17:33:31","slug":"selecting-a-hotel-in-hawaii-a-study-of-tiki-torches","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/localhost\/blog\/selecting-a-hotel-in-hawaii-a-study-of-tiki-torches\/","title":{"rendered":"Selecting a Hotel in Hawaii: A Study of Tiki Torches"},"content":{"rendered":"

Hotels<\/h2>\n

We stayed in three hotels while vacationing on the Hawaiian Islands. We picked them by surfing the Internet. Nothing novel about that. All hotels have web sites – some very good – and they have very good descriptions of services and amenities. Personally, we are just as comfortable researching hotels with a computer as we are using a travel agent. Maybe more comfortable.<\/p>\n

If hotels advertise with such accuracy, what more do you need?<\/p>\n

While we found that hotels are very good about disclosing their superlatives, they were less than forthcoming about their shortcomings. This is not shocking. No hotel is going to tell you the lush gardens exist only near the lobby or that the concierge recommends only vegan restaurants.<\/p>\n

This gets to an important point: What are Ruth and Doug looking for in a hotel? We like consistency and availability. Specifics are not important because we don’t know what we want until we want it. We’re on vacation. It’s all new, different, and intentionally hedonistic.<\/p>\n

Ideally, there would be a fresh Mai Tai within reach at all times. At the pool: Mai Tai. Waiting for the valet: Mai Tai. In the shower: Mai Tai.<\/p>\n

But that’s a fantasy. Here are some real questions that came up on our Hawaiian vacation:<\/p>\n