How you should travel this December: Driving vs. Flying – The cost breakdown
Travelling this December? Discover the surprising cost-effectiveness of driving versus flying in South Africa.
Welcome to BizNews Travel – sit back, relax, and enjoy armchair journeys with travel editor Marika Sboros to well-known and lesser-known spots across the globe with us. Here we present stories, blogs, impressions, news, views and perspectives on places to broaden your mind, ignite bodily passions, titillate your taste buds, and inspire you to get up and go. After all, as Saint Augustine said, ‘The World is a book, and those who do not travel, read only a page’. Contributions, travel highlights, lowlights and feedback always appreciated.
Travelling this December? Discover the surprising cost-effectiveness of driving versus flying in South Africa.
The impending demise of Comair (unless a late-stage miracle investor intervenes) is a long, winding story of multiple crises.
The declaration by Comair to go into business rescue two years ago, and the subsequent shock announcement of its liquidation, leaves employees without safety plan.
Not only has Comair’s business rescue practitioners’ liquidation application left passengers in the lurch, it has also left over a thousand employees facing unemployment.
Ryanair has confirmed it asked travellers with SA passports to complete a quiz in Afrikaans before being allowed to board their planes.
South African passengers travelling to and from the UK are fuming after Ryanair made them answer a questionnaire in Afrikaans to prove their nationality.
BizNews journalist Linda van Tilburg spoke to the CEO of SATSA, David Frost, and Tourism and Hospitality Adviser Gillian Saunders to discuss the petition against South Africa’s placement on the UK’s red list.
Angus Whitley endured the world’s newest longest flight, a 16,200 kilometre (10,100 mile), nonstop ultra-marathon from New York to Sydney.
This is despite assurances from President Ramaphosa in his ‘stimulus’ plan that child travel regulations would be removed for international travellers.
Dominique Herman travels to Seville, a place she says is so enchanting that even a jail cell there elicits brilliance.