johnalison
Well-known member
I think we should be grateful to shan for airing such a useful, and obviously painful, subject.
Thanks for repeating what I have already said, several times. So helpful.Sorry, that is simply not so. It is irrelevant that the booking was through an agent with an operator who used a boat owned by a third party. Irrelevant how much you paid, either in absolute terms or in comparison with other providers. That is quite normal in this business (I used to own a charter boat in Greece which was mostly used by the company that managed it for me but often if it was free it would be let out to another operator who had a booking).
What governs your booking is the contract and from what you say the other party fulfilled their side of the contract by having the boat available. You were not able to take it up because of circumstances beyond your control (and theirs). So why should they refund you? They have offered a discount as a goodwill measure.
"Don't forget your insurance when booking a charter holiday" might be a more appropriate thread title.
Hope you have luck with your claim on your insurance.
Precisely.I believe the OP is no longer canvassing advice from the forum. Rather she's sharing very sound advice based on her unfortunate experience. Basically she's saying people would be better off chartering with a company who own their own boats. That way, if something goes wrong, you get to deal with the organ grinder and not the monkeys.
It's not irrelevant - when you are negotiating with 3 separate parties for a pragmatic outcome.That may be true if the failure was on the part of the provider - but it was not. It is irrelevant who owns the boat from a contract point of view and the provider has already offered a significant goodwill gesture.
As I understand it, you can get insurance which covers a trip itinerary.Thank you.
The only insurance I have would be under my Credit card but as the charter boat was available, and the flights were not part of the whole package, it's irrelevant (charter and flights booked separately). Insurance would argue that the contract was fulfilled. Essentially, I was relying on the Charter company to behave reasonably. Never make an assumption.
Hopefully, people will learn from my experience.
Thank you. Useful information for most people. I used to have all purpose travel insurance through Virgin... but as I spend more than 3 months out of most territories, it became impossible to renew.As I understand it, you can get insurance which covers a trip itinerary.
A friend used to organise dive trips, she could put together a club package and insure against the whole thing not happening. flights hotel dive charter all covered. Obviously the premium reflects the potentially for paying out the whole cost, but people pay that when it's 'the trip of a lifetime'.
Also some people might have an annual 'all purpose' travel policy, a mate of mine used to travel a lot for business and cover for some private excursions was 'kind of included'.
In the old days, there were serious benefits buying flights via Amex. No idea if that still applies.
If only one person benefits from my lesson, it will be worth it.I think we should be grateful to shan for airing such a useful, and obviously painful, subject.
Presumably you've had a nice life as a permanent employee where money magically appears out of the ether every month. In the real world with smaller companies your refund is somebody else wages. When you've taken days off sick when you weren't really sick or self inflected did you show goodwill and subsequently volunteer those days as holidays?If only one person benefits from my lesson, it will be worth it.
This where I think you are maybe naive. The fact that the company might own the boats does not mean that they will necessarily become more accommodating in their goodwill offer, As I tried to explain very few of the charter operators actually own their own boats - some do and may be more flexible if they have more control over their schedules.Deal with a company who owns their boats. At least you will be dealing with one party as opposed to a pyramid of sloping soldiers.
I wasn't criticising them for rabidly sticking to the terms of their contract in the face of a customer telling them they couldn't attend because their father had died 12,000 miles away.Thanks for explaining - exactly the point I was making. before criticising somebody in public it helps to have the full story - although you still do not say what was in the contract about cancellations once the full amount has been paid.
Once you have signed a contract it is unfair to criticise unless the other party has not fulfilled their part.
I hope @shan doesn't read your post the way I did - nasty, rude and condescending.Presumably you've had a nice life as a permanent employee where money magically appears out of the ether every month. In the real world with smaller companies your refund is somebody else wages. When you've taken days off sick when you weren't really sick or self inflected did you show goodwill and subsequently volunteer those days as holidays?
Isn't this exactly what @shan Is saying. Book with a company who own their own boats and you have a better chance of being afforded flexibility. So, in what way is she being naive?This where I think you are maybe naive. The fact that the company might own the boats does not mean that they will necessarily become more accommodating in their goodwill offer, As I tried to explain very few of the charter operators actually own their own boats - some do and may be more flexible if they have more control over their schedules.
They would have had repeat customer service from me - now, they won't. I have used Helm several times before, now, never again. I'm planning to charter in Thailand again, guess who I won't be using? Both Sail Aegean and Helm will not see another penny from me. Factor that into your equation.Presumably you've had a nice life as a permanent employee where money magically appears out of the ether every month. In the real world with smaller companies your refund is somebody else wages. When you've taken days off sick when you weren't really sick or self inflected did you show goodwill and subsequently volunteer those days as holidays?
I’m not convinced the charter company did behave unreasonably. If I’ve understood it correctly, then boat was available for charter but you were either unable to get there or chose not to go. I can’t see how you would have been any better off dealing direct with the charter Co? I think the lesson here is that insurance (probably <£100 for a single trip) is probably a very wise purchase.Thank you.
The only insurance I have would be under my Credit card but as the charter boat was available, and the flights were not part of the whole package, it's irrelevant (charter and flights booked separately). Insurance would argue that the contract was fulfilled. Essentially, I was relying on the Charter company to behave reasonably. Never make an assumption.
Hopefully, people will learn from my experience.
I’m guessing from the name that sail Aegean don’t operate in Thailand so are not missing a penny. The reality is that charter companies are busy so probably won’t be any worse off if you never use them again as someone else will book anyway. They probably hope it’s someone who doesn’t expect the company to sort out their bad luck and lack of foresite by having travel insurance - indeed id be surprised if Helm didn’t have an insurance tick box during the booking process (I’ve never used them but many others have an option that is not great value for money). Whilst being out the country for long periods may preclude annual cover, it wouldn’t normally preclude single trip cover.. I'm planning to charter in Thailand again, guess who I won't be using? Both Sail Aegean and Helm will not see another penny from me. Factor that into your equation.
No, there was no insurance tick box and yes, Helm operates in Thailand. Sail Aegean won't lose a penny from that charter but they won't gain a penny from any future charters I take in the Sporades.I’m guessing from the name that sail Aegean don’t operate in Thailand so are not missing a penny. The reality is that charter companies are busy so probably won’t be any worse off if you never use them again as someone else will book anyway. They probably hope it’s someone who doesn’t expect the company to sort out their bad luck and lack of foresite by having travel insurance - indeed id be surprised if Helm didn’t have an insurance tick box during the booking process (I’ve never used them but many others have an option that is not great value for money). Whilst being out the country for long periods may preclude annual cover, it wouldn’t normally preclude single trip cover.