Is it time to boycott cash tips to get Tauck to join the modern era?

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  • I too, put the tip money in an envelope before we leave home. It stays in the hotel safe with my passport, extra credit cards and cash. I carry only one credit card, a copy of my passport and daily cash. When we move from one place to another, these valuables are left on the locked bus. Having had my credit card hacked several times, I am very reluctant to use it exclusively. We have also bailed-out fellow travelers with cash. (As an aside, this is a worse case situation. A month ago, friends were on a tour in Europe, and her husband died on the bus. The amount of cold cash - not a credit card- that was required was unbelievable. The travel insurance will reimburse not front the costs. And she still has not received his remains. Obviously, nobody can be prepared for this.)

  • Again, this topic. I'm totally in favor of Tauck rolling in their suggested tip amounts into the cost of the tour. As previously noted, the tipping suggestion is not for all Tauck trips. Specifically, river cruises and family tours have the tips included so there is a lack of consistency across Tauck. Include those amounts in ALL tours, please. That would eliminate the (legitimate) concern of carrying a lot of cash for no other purpose. Then tipping would be optional for extraordinary service, as it should be. Everywhere...but that's beyond the scope of this thread.

  • Lovestotravel, I feel for your friends. My father died unexpectedly on vacation 30 years ago. My parents never had credit cards nor a bank account, just a British Building Society account, a common thing in the UK. My mother would certainly have not had much cash with her then, so the insurance then must have paid up. In fact, it was the insurance company who called to tell me, at that point, I didn’t even know where my mother was…no cell phones then and we had only just gotten an answer phone which we actually won in a raffle a couple of weeks before, no one else we knew had one. His remains took about ten distressing and heartbreaking days to be returned to us. Plus a death certificate in Spanish caused us problems back then.
    I assume there is an investigation into the death, that can take a very very long time. In our case, my father had a heart attack, he was taken to hospital and died the next day, so cause of death was determined. Maybe reach out to your friend’s local state representative to see if they might help speed things up for them. Best wishes.

  • This is clearly a personal choice—no right or wrong. This is as bad as the “don’t wear a sports coat” mantra—yet another personal choice that really shouldn’t be so objectionable. With respect, aren’t there far more important concerns in this world? That’s rhetorical and not meant to start another “debate,” but go ahead…..

  • Here's my rhetorical answer - I'm simply trying to change Tauck's inconvenient tipping mechanism, not the world.

  • Here's my rhetorical answer - I'm simply trying to change Tauck's inconvenient tipping mechanism, not the world.

    This!!

  • Great companies learn to adapt to modern ideas and tech. And are open to suggestions from long time clients. Dinosaurs die out.

  • BKMD and British,

    I understood that BKMD was advocating alternatives to cash tipping, not the practice of tipping itself. What I was responding to was the title of BKMD's post: > Is it time to boycott cash tips to get Tauck to join the modern era?

    To boycott is, by definition, to refuse to do business or have social relations with some person, company, or nation as a protest. To boycott cash tips would be to refuse to give cash tips as a form of protest. Since no other method currently exists in most cases, this means not giving a tip.

    I understand now that this was apparently not the intention. Be careful using the word boycott in future.

  • I didn’t read it that way, I thought it meant boycott cash for another method of payment.

  • And since it's Trivia Tuesday - if you take the Ireland tour you'll learn where the term boycott came from. It originates from a historical event in Ireland involving Captain Charles Cunningham Boycott, a land agent who was ostracized by local communities for his eviction practices.

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