Your calls always answered within 5 rings.
Superb as always - thank you so much Lloyd
It would have been good if it had flagged up on the Jaaneman Riad’s details that they serve dinner if pre-ordered. Especially for people arriving early evening. The Riad was excellent and the staff were extremely friendly and helpful. Would highly recommend it. Thank you Ewan and Lee
Thanks for your support Jed. Rwand Air were very trying
The staff onboard Titan were polite, helpful and went the extra mile. Also thank you to Mason and his wonderful team
Great as always
Pete is always brilliant
Doug, you're simply the best. All went to plan.
I've used your company several times and will continue to do so. Although not the cheapest you offer excellent service with superb communications especially, when through no fault of yours, things went a bit wrong with the airline.
Only downside of the trip was BA. Punctual smooth flights but on board was very poor; they offered us roast chicken for breakfast and quickly ran out of fruit. DialAFlight support was great.
Matthew is always brilliant. We have recommended him to so many. We feel absolutely supported on our travels and wonder why anyone makes their own bookings when they could benefit from the support given by DialAFlight
I have used your service many times and have even recommended you to other travellers during my trip
Great planning and attention to detail. Thanks again Billy
The car hire inclusion was seamless - definitely do it again and many thanks for your help and efficiency.
I will be back for further bookings
The holiday was perfect in every way and the service from you was superb. FYI flying economy class with British Airways was poor and I would never fly with BA again.
Ethan was great - very helpful.
We will definitely use the company again
Although we booked ourselves into Rosenhof Boutique Hotel Oudtshoorn South Africa and Lemoenfontein Game Lodge Beaufort West South Africa they were both very good and we would recommend these places.
We’ll do it again.
Perfect holiday arrangements. Everything went like clockwork. Jeff who we deal with was very helpful
Excellent as always.
Your personal service and problem solving was superb throughout, particularly when RwandAir kept changing their flight times at very short notice. Sorting out the mistake that RwandAir made in splitting our bookings from Lusaka to Kigali on the return flight was gold dust - I wouldn't have known what to do. Thank you very much.
Marshall was excellent, as always. I will definitely be booking with him again in the future.
Julie is top of the pops.
Warn customers about immigration time in Marrakech - 2.5 hours queuing. They may be able to book priority
Marrakech airport has horrendous passport control queues. It took 3 hrs to get through so our transfer taxi had left. It was over 2 hrs when leaving the country. Clients should be warned of the delays, as should taxis waiting for clients.
As usual great service Kirsty
Emirates flights are a bit long to get to South Africa via Dubai, but very clean, comfortable and reliably on time! TIP 1: I booked a "Low Fat Meal" and got served long before anyone else, which gave me more time to cover my eyes and sleep during the flight! TIP 2: I booked aisle seat on the inner seating so as to have just 1 person disturb my sleep during the flight. Luck had it that I have nobody seated next to me on any of the 4 flights!
It would have been helpful to get more information about the trek. We received some great info by Altezza - but only upon arrival.
Fantastic holiday only gripe is there was no transfer from hotel to airport arranged on way back
A heady mix of contradictions is going on here in the Cayman Islands. Offshore diving and offshore banking. Dazzling sunsets and financial assets. Delicious shellfish and dubious shell companies.
Tucked in the westernmost corner of the Caribbean, I wonder what the Caymans, one of the world's most notorious tax havens, offers civilians like me as I ruefully pay £30 for a ten-minute taxi ride and almost as much for a glass of wine.
It's expensive, but it's rapidly gaining status beyond the financial world as a 'place to be' - attracting the fashionable and famous like bees to a tax-free honeypot. Bella Hadid, the U.S. model with more than 57 million Instagram followers, chose to ring in the New Year here.
And just last week her friend, fellow supermodel Emily Ratajkowski, who has a mere 30 million followers, was spotted here canoodling with American comedian Eric Andre.
But where exactly on Grand Cayman, the largest of the three-island archipelago, had these beautiful people chosen to holiday for their winter-sun escape?
The buttercup-yellow towels in their holiday snaps are a dead giveaway.
They were at Palm Heights, the stylish all-suite boutique hotel which my mother and I - mere mortals - are calling home for the week.
It's situated on Seven Mile Beach, a crescent of coral-white sand which is widely regarded as one of the best beaches in the Caribbean. The hotel's aesthetic is that of a 1970s socialite's house party, complete with a white baby grand piano, palmtree-lined pool and chic Cinzano bar.
Everything is underscored by the disco sounds of Chic and Earth, Wind & Fire.
Thankfully, though, Palm Heights offers Stateside glamour and Caribbean calm in equal measure. Non-celebrity guests include solitudinous artists, solo travellers and affluent Upper East Side types whose children are so well-raised that they quietly read novels on the beach instead of bickering.
We quickly settle into the millionaire lifestyle; our mornings are spent on the private beach, shrouded by parasols in that yellow, and snorkelling among striped yellow fish which are so in keeping with the hotel's look, I wonder if they were commissioned by the designer.
Next are boozy-woozy lunches fuelled by Pacific oysters, yellow-tail sashimi and chilled Pouilly-Fuisse wine, while afternoons are spent soaking in the giant freestanding stone bath on our rooftop, where I roll around in the tub like the olive in my martini glass.
Then it's time to don cocktail dresses and endure the hardship of the evening meal, when handsome men in white dinner jackets serve red snapper, theatrically butterflied and stuffed table-side, amid a sunset which creates our own Turner painting.
One evening, we drag ourselves away from the hotel and head for a bay at North Side, one of just a handful of places on Earth where it's possible to see bioluminescent phytoplankton - microscopic organisms which, at night, glow neon against inky water.
A chemical defence mechanism means any movement on the cell walls of these micro-algae causes them to light up - just once for the night, before recharging during the day.
As the boat hurtles through the water, swooshes of effervescence follow. It's spectacular sight. Above, I can see the Plough bright amid other constellations. Around me, the waterline is flanked by dazzling multi-million-pound mansions (one has a two-storey aquarium). And below is the parallel universe of underwater stars.
On the seabed there are faint pulses of dull light, like distant lightning through clouds in a tropical thunder storm. I'm told that these pulsating globules are benign jellyfish, while the darting brighter flashes of light spotted drum fish.
Back at Palm Heights, swaddled in a fluffy robe, it's time for a glass of champagne while learning how the Cayman Islands became the registered home of some of the world's biggest billionaires.
Local legend of the Wreck of the Ten Sail goes that, in the 18th century, ten British merchant ships dashed on the reefs surrounding the island. Caymanians came to their rescue and, as a reward, King George III bestowed 'tax free' status on the Cayman Islands.
The truth is more prosaic: when the first Barclays bank popped up here in the 1950s, this British Overseas Territory brought in new laws to capitalise on the lack of taxation and the growth of global banking.
It was thanks to these laws that the offshore tax industry flourished over the decades, allowing companies to register here via complex structures that allow them to shave off hefty portions of their tax bills.
British Overseas Territories (BOTs), which are self-governing, are the last vestiges of the British Empire. Like the other BOTs - such as Bermuda, the Falklands and Gibraltar - Cayman counts King Charles as head of state and his portrait will greet you at the airport. Despite other British touches, such as driving on the left-hand side, a nice botanic garden named after Queen Elizabeth II and the late Queen's head on their banknotes, Britons are a rare sight here. They're missing out.
One the biggest draws for holidaymakers are the shipwrecks and rocky reefs. Away from the glitz and glamour of Seven Mile Beach, an entire diving industry has evolved on the north and east of the island.
Divers roam the wreck of the USS Kittiwake, the 250ft U.S. Navy submarine rescue vessel sunk in 2011, and scour coral-encrusted sea walls a mile deep.
The biggest sights are spotted eagle rays, turtles, bright green octopuses and even hammerhead, tiger and reef sharks.
One day, we visit Cayman's grande dame, the Ritz-Carlton, for afternoon tea at the Silver Palm lounge, where gentlemen eschew after-dinner brandies for 12-year-aged Tortuga rum.
After nibbling on jerk chicken vol-au-vents and mango vanilla scones, we pass a jewellery store whose manager encourages me to try on a duty-free, diamond-encrusted emerald necklace worth £190,000.
I feel like an Oscar-winning actress as I parade around in the heavy pendant - but nearly give the manager a heart attack when I pretend to run out of the shop still wearing it.
A holiday here is not for the light-of-pocket. There's no income tax, no sales tax, no corporation tax and no capital gains tax. Instead, the Caymanian government makes money from import duties - which can be as steep as 27 per cent.
It may lack the atmosphere of some Caribbean islands: rhythm, colour, witty slang, extroversion.
But it's one of the safest places in the Greater Antilles and a deeply conservative country, with 700 churches - roughly one for every hundred people.
I wander into the capital, George Town, to explore this 'global financial district' where 100,000 companies are registered.
It should probably be renamed Ghost Town; I don't see a single banker, but instead encounter derelict bungalows with broken windows.
A local puts it bluntly. 'There's "The Cayman Islands" and there's "Cayman"', referring to the two different worlds inhabited by the rich white people on Seven Mile and the Caymanians everywhere else.
More Seven Mile luxury development is under way: a Hilton sprung up last year, the five-star Grand Hyatt is opening some time in 2023 and the Mandarin Oriental is under construction.
By the final night I'm fully immersed in the Cayman Islands lifestyle - mingling with tie-loosened financiers, drinking flaming rum cocktails and chuffing on Cohiba Behike Cuban cigars.
But then it's time to fly home. In economy class.
Back to the real world.
First published in the Daily Mail - February 2023
More articles below...
Not quite what you're looking for?
We can easily customise an offer to suit your exact requirements