Options

Trip Cancellation - No Contingency Plans + Free Tickets for the Grand Palais in Paris

We flew to Prague last week and, in meeting the rep in the morning before the welcome dinner she said that the trip would probably be cancelled due to low water levels. By the next morning the trip was cancelled. This is because the boat could not get to us for the start in Regensburg. I always thought Tauck had contingency plans. In this case, - Romantic Capitals: Prague to Paris - they did not. There were only 57 of us for this trip that would accommodate 130 people. This was really disappointing and there were a fair amount of first (and probably last) timers to Tauck. In talking with one of the guides, I think she would have been really great and that we would have enjoyed this trip..

For those of us who had booked our own flights, we were on our own to make new flight arrangements. Everyone was on their own to figure out what to do - fly home, if staying in Europe, we needed to book hotels, trains, planes, etc.

Weather - during this heat wave it felt much hotter due to the cobblestones, stone buildings in Prague sucking up the heat. We came in a day early and with jet lag the next morning we walked to the Charles Bridge at 5:30AM. It was a great decision - no crowds. The one day we had on this tour, people left in the morning for a 3 hour walking tour but had to cut it short because of the heat - and the Charles Bridge was overrun with tourists. I think just a few people went on the afternoon tour (I also heard it was cancelled). We didn't go as we went to hear Aida at the opera house and it started early. Another woman on our tour also had tickets and so we shared a cab.

Free tickets - because they couldn't tell us if our Tauck insurance would cover us if we stayed in Europe, we came home. I have two tickets to the Matisse exhibit in Paris for July 1 with entry between 10am and 10:30. If anyone is going to be in Paris then I will be glad to send you our tickets. Also, if anyone is interested I have two nights - July 2nd and 3rd - at a luxurious hotel in Antwerp. I didn't get cancellation on it but the hotel has kindly said that I could have someone take my place.

Comments

  • Options

    This sounds terrible. How could Tauck be so unprepared?! A 14 day trip cancelled near the start and no guidance on the next step? I assume they are giving a refund of some sort even if there was no trip insurance?

    FYI you posted this in the wrong section.It is under Switzerland.

  • Options
    edited 4:56PM

    Wow, that's terrible to let 57 people come all the way to Prague and then dump them. While the Tauck insurance may cover them, most third party trip insurance excludes cancellation by the tour company. Trip insurance only covers things on the guest end, such as sickness, death, etc.

    Tauck better step up and provide reimbursement to all the guests, even those without Tauck insurance (since Tauck cancelled). [Added note: AI search says that when a tour company cancels a trip, they are legally obligated to provide a refund. Of course, that doesn't cover airfare if you made that on your own, because the airline didn't cancel.]

    I hope you'll let us know what Tauck does for the guests. The thing that would really irk me is that they didn't cancel a few days earlier. People might have the same financial loss (airline tickets), but you wouldn't have had to go through the jet lag and the loss of a couple of days of your life.

    [Added note: We used to hear about how well Tauck treated the guests. Ever since the leadership went outside the family, we haven't heard those stories and now hear stories about how poorly they treat the guests. A real problem is how the compensation for the leadership is determined. If it's just on profit, the leadership will do whatever it takes to maximize profit, no matter how that affects the guests. Since the family has ownership they're more interested in maximizing the value of the company than maximizing their bonus.

    When setting up incentive plans, the maxim was always, "be careful what you ask for because that's what you're going to get." An example of that was when teachers could be fired if their students did poorly on standardized tests. So the teachers cheated in various ways. Another example was Wells Fargo who put such pressure on their employees that the only way they could succeed was to open fake accounts.]

  • Options
    edited 2:53PM

    so sorry to hear this...something has gone terribly wrong! I would urge you to fight this, incl. with airlines. Persistence often pays off. Have been wondering how heat wave is affecting Tauck (didn't realize it has already moved east), but never expected this treatment! Good luck & please keep us posted.

  • Options

    If this is to become standard practice, then it seems like riverboat tours in the summer (when there is always a risk of low water levels) will become a risky venture.

    When I did the Berlin, Danube, and Krakow tour (2018) the riverboat couldn't make it to Regensburg due to water levels. For us, Tauck put us up in a hotel in the general area, then bussed us to the activities (Kelheim, Danube Gorge) we missed. We picked up the riverboat the next day. Tauck refunded us for missing one night on the riverboat. The rest of the tour went as planned.

    In this case, what I thought was a reasonable solution was provided.

    the Moores - So sorry that no work around could be put in place for your tour.

  • Options

    I had a Tauck spring river cruise interrupted due to high water on the Rhine. Mother Nature wins every time, no matter the season. At least we were able to bus it to Basel. Tauck did their best and we were reimbursed.

  • Options

    Although I would be disappointed, I would try to understand Tauck’s dilemma. Yes they have contingency plans but it is possible there simply aren’t enough “free” ships to handle all the affected tours. It is also summertime with families taking river cruises and hotels are busy.

    There is always more than one side to a story and there could be other extenuating circumstances that Tauck is having to deal with. Given that, using such excoriating words as “dumped” is disingenuous in my opinion and does not accurately reflect Tauck’s brand. Again, my opinion.

  • Options

    New management, new Tauck.

  • Options

    Let me chime here. We had booked the return Eastbound version of this tour scheduled for June 28 departure starting in Paris. When the unfortunate situation that the moores experienced happened, I received a phone call from Tauck on the 23rd (ET) saying our trip was cancelled with the same reason the moores were given. They offered a full refund or full credit to another Tauck trip even though we had no Tauck insurance. We applied some of the refund to another existing booking and the balance was refunded to our credit card that day. Air travel was booked by me and the airline gave me an eCredit however I put in a claim with my travel insurer to see if I can get a refund on that (fingers crossed).

    The point being that Tauck can be proactive when they know what the situation is for upcoming tours. If they knew the water was going to be a problem before the Westbound tour was to begin they would have cancelled that one too. I'm guessing they could have taken the risk and let my Eastbound tour ex-Paris go ahead as planned thinking that maybe the boat would have cleared the water to Regenberg and then just make a beeline to Trier to board our tour. But, it appears to be conservative based on the information they have, or don't have, access to and cancelled the Eastbound tour as well. Tauck does the best they can in a timely manner based on available information.

    I hope the moores don't sour on Tauck travel based on this unfortunate experience. The unexpected happens on tours and in my experience the few times that they have happened Tauck has handled them very well.

  • Options

    I just talked with AON. The rep said that with cancellation you do get 100% back. However, while everyone started the trip on June 19th and was told the next morning that the trip was cancelled, Tauck has told AON that the trip was not cancelled but "interrupted". This means that AON will only cover up to $10,000 per person for the trip. They also will only cover up to $1000 for changing your flight. We each paid nearly $1800 for booking a flight from Prague to Amsterdam and for the change of dates on our Amsterdam to home flight. We will be losing a fair amount of money.

    Because of all of this I have asked Tauck for a discount on a future trip. I was told that there would be no discounts given.

    I've been on 13 (not counting June 19th) Tauck trips, all overseas. Other than a few hiccups, I've enjoyed them. Soured on Tauck, you ask? I'm not at all happy. It would have been really nice, with Tauck knowing water levels were going down and that there was a heat wave, to offer us the chance of cancelling. I would then get 100% back on the trip, not have had to pay $3500 for us to get new flights to go home, and could have changed my Delta flight to one this Fall. Buying expensive tickets to fly to Prague for a couple of days hurts.

    I do understand that things can be out our our/Tauck's control. I just wish I hadn't believed that Tauck always had a plan and could work around things.

Leave a Comment

BoldItalicStrikethroughOrdered listUnordered list
Emoji
Image
Align leftAlign centerAlign rightToggle HTML viewToggle full pageToggle lights
Drop image/file