Thursday, November 28, 2024

Booking Through Agencies versus Direct Booking

 


It was already 7 pm and heavily snowing when our airplane landed.  Living 200 kilometers away from Halifax, I had booked a room next to the airport.  The regular bus to our town left the airport only once a day - in the morning at 11 am.  To call friends to pick me up was not in my mind, at least I did not want to ask them on this snow day to drive 400 kilometers round trip.


It took about half an hour until the hotel shuttle bus arrived to pick up a group of seven travelers. However, the shuttle drove to a huge parking area where all others had their cars parked. One couple did not find their car and the driver patiently cruised around and around until these folks recognized their vehicle under a snow cover.  Finally, almost two hours after landing, I checked in and got a room twenty meters from the reception. 


Thin walls allowed me to be entertained beyond midnight by listening to arriving guests or phone calls from the receptionist… The short night ended at 4 am when calls by the receptionist (this time another one) woke me up.  

I tried without success to continue sleeping.  At 6 am I got up, walked over to their desk, and asked for the manager. He would arrive around 9 am I was told.  “OK, then, when and where is breakfast?”  “Sorry, but due to the pandemic, we cannot offer breakfast”.  “What? Where can I get a cup of coffee and something to eat?”  “The next place is a coffee shop at the airport”.  At least I could catch the shuttle bus to be driven to and from the airport back to the hotel.


There I opened my laptop to use the time until the manager would arrive.  But no luck, the Internet did not work.  I packed my suitcase and got ready for departure, hoping that the Internet at the airport would work.  In the meantime, the manager (or his junior assistant) arrived at his office, and I complained about my not-so-clean room, about the missing breakfast (which was included in the hotel fee), and about the loud noise that kept me from sleeping.  I demanded a discount.  The manager told me that he could only talk about it if I would have booked directly at their hotel (chain) - but not when booked through a third party.  I would have to go through Booking, Priceline, Expedia, or wherever I paid for my hotel room.  I was furious, but couldn’t do anything other than to write a one-star review for this hotel on Google.  And I swore myself to never, ever book through an agency for flights, trains, rental cars, or hotel rooms.





As I am almost a full-time traveler, my resolutions, however, melted in the sun… 

In Spring I traveled near Algonquin Park and in the late afternoon, I discovered an attractive hotel in a small town.  I went in and inquired at the reception about a room and its price.  A bit shocked about the answer, I gambled and offered a lower price “which I had seen on the Internet”.  


The receptionist explained to me that I would have to order it online to get a price like this. “So, you mean I can pull out my laptop and order it online in front of you and get a lower price?  Even though the agencies deduct you another 15-20%?  Why don’t you just give me a lower price?” “No, that’s not possible” she explained, “due to directions she got from her manager”. 


“OK, then please give me your password, and I’ll order online”.  “No password needed, you can go directly to the Internet.”  So I sat down and checked the agency's hotel prices.  To my surprise, it was only ten dollars lower.  But at the same time, I saw a bed & breakfast with lots of favorable reviews - and I booked a room there - without an agency.  Thanks to the friendly but firm receptionist (or her managers) - they lost a potential customer…


Weeks later I prepared for another trip to Europe and to avoid traveling in trains or busses during the pandemic, I booked a rental car.  Despite having paid in full for three weeks before through the agencies' website, I was forced to leave a deposit of 2,000 euros.  When I returned the car I demanded my credit card payment back.  No, they cannot give me the credit as I had booked with an agency.  But I had given my credit card for the deposit in person at the Salzburg, Austria, rental company, and I wanted my deposit back from them!  They assured me I would have the credit returned within 3 days by the agency. 




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Four months later I still did not have the money back on my credit card, despite dozens of emails, calls, and even a registered letter.  I was bounced forth and back from the rental place to the agent and vice versa.  I then went to the Internet and Social Media and posted the case to several consumer sites, to the Salzburg tourism office, and the city of Salzburg, as well as to authorities in Munich where the agency is located.  I even sent the case to several daily papers in both cities.  I am not sure who or what influenced the agency or the rental office, but finally, five months after the incident, I got my money back.

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On another occasion, during a busy, long travel weekend, I even drove from hotel to hotel in person, but every room in the area was booked.  Until my laptop showed me a hotel through Booking.com where one room was available.  I drove to the place and when checking in, I showed them my loyalty membership card for their hotel chain. To my dismay, I learned that loyalty cards are not recognized once a guest books through Expedia, Priceline, or Booking.com and I could not get any points.  Most hotel brand loyalty rewards programs don’t offer points on stays booked through third-party sites, I learned through my research.  On top of this, when I checked the hotel’s website, I saw that a direct booking with the hotel would have saved me sixteen dollars.


Using hotel agencies, you will lose not only your points from hotel chains 

but also all discounts for seniors, AARP, military, and membership points 

from the AAA (US) or CAA (Canada).


Enough is enough!  I am done with these agencies and will avoid any of them, and book hotel rooms, rental cars, flights, etc. directly - even if I pay a couple of dollars more.  Some of the hotels are fed up with agencies and try to lure customers back with price-matching and other perks, such as a free breakfast.  Other places are not so smart and lose not only money by paying agency fees but also by losing some customers who avoid places where customer service is bounced back to the booking agency. 


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The travel website Frommer’s stated in an article: “To get the best deal, you should always surf the Web for the best hotel price, right?  Well, no, not anymore.  Hotels are increasingly trying to sweeten the pot if you agree to book a room directly with them.  To get the best deal, you should always surf the Web for the best hotel price, right?  Well, no, not anymore.  Hotels are increasingly trying to sweeten the pot and are fighting back with special rate discounts—so long as guests book directly with the hotel.”


“Hyatt Hotels Hilton Worldwide, Marriott International, InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG), which includes Holiday Inn, Kimpton, Hotel Indigo began offering "Your Rate by IHG Rewards Club" discounts for its loyalty members as well.  Hyatt, Hilton, and Marriott also have similar 'Best Rate Guarantee' policies in place.”


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Read more about direct booking vs booking agencies:
https://thepointsguy.com/news/why-no-hotel-points-ota

"Hotels were shelling out more for commissions, on top of reimbursing affiliated loyalty programs for points accrued by members during stays, causing a noticeable hit to profit earnings.  Recognizing the need to minimize overhead expenses, hotels took various steps to control how customers make reservations.  In addition to gradually cutting OTA commissions, hotels rolled out exclusive member rates and status perks to entice travelers to book directly. There were entire marketing campaigns launched around direct bookings. Likewise, hotel programs largely stopped awarding points for OTA bookings. After all, points aren’t free, but they’re often cheaper to award than paying an OTA a large commission. As a result of all of this, you’re still usually unable to earn hotel points when you book a hotel through an OTA."

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Book Flights ONLY Directly!

After staying away from Booking.com  and similar agencies for a couple of years, I fell into their trap again. 

I booked a flight with ITA (formerly Alitalia) from Palermo, Sicily to Vienna at the online booking agency.  The flight was split in two: first to Rome Fiumicino and from there to Vienna. I stopped in my tracks and only after I read their guarantee that they would help their customers should anything go wrong with these two flights I clicked on the order button.


Sure enough: The first flight, even though early in the morning, had a delay, and running through the huge airport, I did not reach the counter to get into the next flight to Vienna. The “hotline” of Booking.com didn’t answer my calls, the airline refused to help me, and I had no other choice than to book a new ticket from a travel agency at the airport for more than 450 Euros. However, I could not get a flight until the next afternoon, and the only one I could purchase was one to Budapest in Hungary, and then I purchased a bus ticket for another 50 Euros to Vienna. All this trouble because I had an important meeting in Austria. I came 15 minutes late to Vienna, but it worked out!


Contacting Booking.com after this horrible Journey and reminding them about their warranty, didn’t help, they refused and said I would have to contact the airline.  ITA refused too and stated that one and a half hours flight delay doesn’t allow for a refund, a hotel room, or any other compensation. 


Facit: 

When the reservation relationship is between the guest and the hotel, car rental companies, or airline, it's clean and easy because there are only two parties involved: the customer and the business.  When a third party (booking site) gets involved, this is when things can get messy. 


Read more:


https://www.triptease.com/blog/8-reasons-why-direct-bookings-matter-for-hotels/

https://www.usatoday.com/story/travel/roadwarriorvoices/2015/06/03/why-you-should-book-your-stay-directly-with-the-hotel/83307734/


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Monday, November 25, 2024

Leavenworth, Bavarian City in the Cascade Mountains

 



Years ago, I drove well after dark from Idaho towards Seattle, WA, when I felt 
like seeing a fata morgana: A Bavarian village in the middle of nowhere - or better 
said the Cascade mountains. Hotels, guesthouses, churches, beer halls, and homes were 
brightly lit and the main road was decorated with lots of Christmas Trees. 

Skiers arrived back from night skiing and mountain slopes were well-lit. It felt like being in an Alpine village, but sorry to be not able to stay as I had to find my booked hotel in Seattle.
I promised myself to return to this place as soon as I would come back to this area one day - 
which was just last month.



Mining of gold and other metals in the nearby Blewett Pass area and the Red Mountain Mining District held promise in the early twentieth century but eventually declined. Lumbering in the area of Lake Wenatchee provided more reliable employment.




Logs were floated down the Wenatchee River to a sawmill the Lamb-Davis
Lumber Company from Iowa, built at Leavenworth in 1904. T
he town was incorporated in 1906.




         The temporary boom resulting from mining, the railroad, fruit, and lumbering boosted                               Leavenworth’s population to 5,500, larger than Wenatchee at the time. 
                Along with the boom came the usual excesses -- saloons, gambling, and brothels.




During the early 1960s two men from Seattle who lived nearby, inspired the residents to revive Leavenworth as a tourist-themed town. The alpine setting suggested the perfect motif:
a Bavarian Village




Theodore H. “Ted” Price and Robert F. “Bob” Rodgers had jobs that took them through Leavenworth regularly.  They loved the river and the mountains and often returned to vacation in the area.  Bob had been stationed in Bavaria after World War II and loved that mountainous state in southern Germany that had once been an independent kingdom. 






After several years of heroic volunteerism and financial sacrifice by longtime residents and crucial outsiders alike, it became successful beyond their imagination, developing into Washington’s second most popular tourist destination, after Seattle.




Even a Starbucks has the Bavarian motto and paintings on its front wall.
The Fall Leaf Festival, Oktoberfest, the Village Lighting Festival, the Bavarian Ice Fest, 
             Mai-Fest, yodeling and accordion festivals, wine tastings, the Reindeer Farm, the 
                Nutcracker Museum and other events bring throngs of tourists to Leavenworth. 





Leavenworths´ location, a comfortable two-hour drive from Seattle, is an advantage. 
Even more compelling is its unsurpassed mountain scenery. 

Leavenworth is also a popular destination for hiking, camping, and rafting.
On the Wenatchee River, Waterfront Park is a habitat for ospreys and eagles. 
The village is a gateway to nearby ski areas and wineries.



Leavenworth had become a theme town based on Bavarian heritage.
Alpine-style buildings with restaurants serving German beer and food line Front Street.



Although a few Leavenworth residents could claim German descent,
it had to be based on something else: the beautiful alpine setting, so similar to that of 
Bavarian towns such as Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Mittenwald, and Oberammergau.




On March 21, 1968, Leavenworth was one of 11 cities to receive an ¨All-American City Award¨ from Look Magazine and the National Municipal League.  According to the Leavenworth Echo, Leavenworth “was honored for pulling itself out of a 
serious economic slump”.




Read more about Leavenworth and visit soon!
Christmas is a beautiful time there!


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Saturday, November 16, 2024

Southern Tyrol, Italy, in all its Fall Glory

 

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No other vacation was ever more relaxing than my visits to South Tyrol in late fall: Soaking up the sun before the approaching winter, hiking through colorful forests and vineyards, and enjoying the view of the beautiful surrounding mountains. In one sentence: Experiencing the golden autumn in this breathtaking landscape in Northern Italy is a special gift for me.

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This year, from late October to mid-November the sky over South Tyrol was Azur-blue and the sun was shining all day long. After the “Toerggelen” tourists left at the end of October, it became easier to get a table at the many fantastic restaurants, dotting the area. "Toerggelen" means drinking (enormous amounts) of grape most (cider) and young wine.  Törggelen refers to the "Torggl" (Latin torquere, to turn), i.e. the wooden wine press in the farmers’ cellars.  It is one of the favorite traditions in South Tyrol and extremely popular with tourists. 

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My daily delight is the wonderful dishes that are served in this former Austrian province: home-made dumplings (filled with spinach, cheese, or ham), fresh mushrooms, ravioli, venison, lamb, ducks, and BBQ-roasted chestnuts. Some of these restaurants (Hof as they are called here) are five, six, or even seven hundred years old and for many generations in the families.
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From Bolzano southwards, almost to Trento, lies the “Weinstrasse”, the South-Tyrol Wine Road, inviting hikers, bikers, and slow strollers to savor the beautiful landscape, the picturesque villages, and the hospitality of the locals. More than 800+ acres of vineyards encircle Bolzano, besides around the same amount of apple orchards.
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For years, I have been renting a room with a large balcony in a cozy, hidden guesthouse on top of the Kurtasch town. The owner, a now 80-year-old lady created a beautiful garden with palm trees, lemon bushes, and thousands of roses and other flowers that are still blooming in November. Most of the people in the area speak very well German, and many additionally Italian. 


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So Much to See and Do


When you read the name Alto Adige, it means South Tyrol and the Bolzano area in Italian. No matter how the weather turns out - rain or shine (mostly shine as South Tyrol has an average of 300+ sun-shine days per year), there is so much to do, one just cannot get bored, even during a 6-8 weeks vacation. From Skiing in the mountains in Winter, paragliding or cycling in Spring, to hiking in summer until the end of fall. The Mediterranean climate lets millions of apple trees bloom in early April - just like the cherry blooms in Japan. 

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During summer and into late fall, farmers offer their (bio) products in markets and farm stands. Dozens of cable cars bring visitors up to the mountains in case they don’t hike up (like me).  Several mountain pass roads allow you to drive up to the summits where almost always nice restaurants or coffee shops with lovely mountain views invite tourists and locals to relax on mountain tops.

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Follow the footsteps of Empress Elisabeth “Sissy” who resided in the spa town of Meran/Merano
In the hay bath, a South Tyrolean mountain pine bath, or mineral water baths, people have been finding relaxation and relief from physical ailments for centuries. A great idea for cooler or non-sunny days!  

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Explore the cultural side in the many museums in South Tyrol. From a 5,000-year-old glacier mummy named Ötzi to the largest secular fresco cycle from the Middle Ages at Schloss Runkelstein castle in Bolzano/Bozen. From imposing castles and palaces on the Alto Adige Wine Road to hip architecture and contemporary masterpieces by star architects on the Kronplatz.  From the Alpine Romanesque Road in the Vinschgau valley to the Nature Park, visitor centers throughout the region. South Tyrol is rich in ancient, innovative, unique, and contrasting cultural treasures to discover.


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Visit Italy's Most Beautiful Villages: 

Kastelruth - Castelrotto, Neumarkt - Egna, Glurns - Glorenza, Klausen - Chiusa, Sterzing - Vipiteno are by far some of the most beautiful towns in Italy. You can reach all these towns by bus. Should you visit by car, extend your trips into the mountains and lakes around Bolzano, the gateway to the Dolomites.  Seiser Alm, Lago di Carrezo-Karer See, Ritten pyramids, the Rose Garden mountains, Ortler (3,905 m high), Canazei, Wolkenstein, and Corvara, and even a road trip to Cortina d’Ampezzo and the Nature Park “Drei Zinnen” with the magnificent mountain peaks … These tours are all showing the fascinating landscapes of South Tyrol. No matter in which direction you drive or take a bus, stunning views are galore.


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Reinhold Messner’s Six Mountain Museums in the Mountains of South Tyrol


These six museums by the famous mountaineer are on my bucket list to visit one day:


The MMM Corones was designed by star architect Zaha Hadid. It can be visited at the peak of the 2,265-meter-high Kronplatz near Bruneck.


The Ripa MMM museum at Brunico Castle is dedicated to the mountain peoples of the world. It aims to connect the mountain peoples of all over the world and to invite an exchange between the cultures. 


The area of King Ortler - there is no more appropriate place for a museum dedicated to the topic "ice". It is completely underground, and visitors get a wonderful view of the eternal ice and the glaciers in an exhibition area.


"The Museum in the Clouds", as the MMM Dolomites at Monte Rite, is also called, is dedicated to the magic of the "pale mountains". It is located on the 2,181 m high Monte Rite, between Pieve di Cadore and Cortina d'Ampezzo.


Mask collections from five continents, an adventure library, a gallery with images of the Sacred Mountains of the World and a Tibetika collection, are just a few of the sights in the MMM Juval, the museum of Reinhold Messner, which is located in the medieval castle of Yuval.


The heart of the entire museum projects, the MMM Firmian, is located at Castle Sigmundskron near Bolzano and introduces you to the history and art of mountaineering. 


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Visit the Castles 


In Bolzano, Castle Mareccio - Schloss Maretsch is an impressive sight. Surrounded by beautiful vineyards and framed by the mountains, it offers a stunning backdrop. The well-preserved walls and towers give a real sense of the history of the place. The peaceful setting and scenic views make it a lovely spot for a walk around the ground. The interior of the castle is for private use or public events reserved.

Half an hour from the city is the Sigmundskron Castle which houses the legendary climber’s Reinhold Messner Mountain Museum. The museum explores the relationship between man and mountain. 

Climb up to the ancient ruins of Schloss Rafenstein to take in the view of Bolzano and the surrounding mountains. 

Castel Roncolo - Schloss Runkelstein is accessible from the Talvera Promenade in the city center or the line 12 shuttle bus from Waltherplatz. An abundance of frescos graces its walls providing a view into medieval life.

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Bolzano - Bozen


One of the busiest places in the city for locals and visitors alike - a feast to the senses - is the outdoor market on Piazza delle Erbe, next to the Laubengasse. These shade arcades allow for comfortable shopping during sunshine, rain, or snow.  Another place to be is the Walter Vogelweide piazza with its gothic cathedral, enjoying to sit in one of the many inviting cafes and restaurants that frame the place.  The place is also home to the largest and most beautiful Christmas markets in the middle of Europe. (Believe my opinion, I visited during my whole life all of them - from Vienna to Strassburg and from Cologne to Munich). Bolzano is the best one!  A good time to visit is from Monday to Friday. On weekends are too many people showing up.

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No matter where you go for coffee, sweets, or wine and tasty meals, you barely ever go wrong. My favored places are the Voegele restaurant and wine house, the Hopfen&Co, and the Cafe Thaler.  For sweets, I recommend the Pasticceria Caffè Lintner or the Guglielmo's Café - just to name two of the many, many wonderful coffee houses in town.  For an exceptional culinary dining experience in an art nouveau and palm setting, try the 5-star restaurant, Laurin.  


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The hotel in which the restaurant is placed reminds of the golden times when Empress Sissy stayed here. I remember a stay there many years ago I marveled at the half dozen writing desks in the hotel lobby from bygone times when hotel guests wrote postcards to their loved ones at home instead of sending selfies. 

If you would like to stay in a medieval building in the middle of Bolzano, choose the apartment hotel Cooper. I rented one, years ago, for a week, and liked it a lot. Current online reviews are second my opinion. They offer tasteful places in Meran and Obereggen too.

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Don’t miss visiting the home of Bolzano’s most famous resident in the Tyrol Museum of Archaeology: 5,300-year-old “Oetzi”.  The mummy was found by two hikers on an icy mountainside in 1991. He is the oldest intact human ever found, a world sensation. The lonely death of Ötzi the Iceman on the glacier in the Ötztal Alps over 5,300 years ago still moves people today. Who ambushed him with a bow and arrow on that fateful summer day? 


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Botanical Garden in Meran


As the weather was so beautiful in early November, I decided to finally visit Meran’s botanical garden around Trautmannsdorff Castle.  Somehow I never made it to visit in spring when millions of daffodils, tulips, and other spring bulbs come to live - even though Meran’s Botanical Garden is just thirty kilometers from Bolzano. Surprisingly, it seemed to be as colorful on this November day as it might have been in Spring. Hundreds of Chrysanthemums, Zinnias, Heide plants, and Coleus, just to name a few display their colors on the hill that is beneath the castle. 

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The gently meandering paths through the garden offer visitors the opportunity to explore plants from all over the world, across sunny terraces and past gurgling stream waters.  South Tyrol has a tradition of fruit cultivation that dates all the way back to the Middle Ages. Old local apple and pear varieties that have largely disappeared today grow in the orchards of the Gardens of Trauttmansdorff Castle.  

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At the foot of the terraces is the romantic Water Lily Pond. A dense planting of irises, daylilies, and grasses encircles brightly colored water lilies.  Lotus flowers rise up out of the water and a dense palm forest fringes the shore; in the spring, camellias and azaleas bloom amidst more than 200 palms. I could have spent a whole day in this marvelous place. Plan at least four hours!  There are also daily garden tours in German at 11.00 a.m. or in Italian at 11.15 a.m. for only €7.00.

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The Mediterranean climate and surrounding mountain landscape make the gardens a unique experience. Water, terraces, and stairs: European garden architecture at its best.  The Botanical Garden of Trauttmansdorff Castle has been declared “one of the most beautiful botanic gardens of Italy” (2005) and is also considered to be one of the most amazing gardens in Europe. Furthermore, the Gardens of Trauttmansdorff Castle received the “International Garden of the Year Award” at the “Garden Tourism Conference 2013″ in Toronto, Canada. 


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https://www.suedtirol.info/en/en/seasons/autumn/toerggelen

https://www.fronthof.com/

https://www.suedtirol.info/en/en/experiences-and-events

https://www.suedtirol.info/en/en/experiences-and-events/culture-and-attractions

https://www.suedtirol.info/en/en/experiences-and-events/culture-and-attractions/architecture

https://www.messner-mountain-museum.it/en/

https://peakvisor.com/adm/south-tyrol.html

https://throneandvine.com/discovering-bolzano/

https://www.stay-cooper.com/en/

https://www.arome.bz/en/

https://www.iceman.it/en/coldcaseoetzieng/

https://www.trauttmansdorff.it/en/The-Gardens/


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