Saving Money – Of course we watch for discounts and promotion and automatically apply the best available offer to your reservation but we also help you avoid up-sells and options you won't use. We Are Fee-Free - We book directly through Disney and we never charge a service fee so you never pay any extra to use our services when you book your trip through us. You can have all the benefits Disney offers PLUS all the services we offer. You can also purchase planning services through us if you've booked on your own or through another travel agency. No pressure, no obligation.
Sink into the elegant Wine Lounge while tasting some of their award winning wines. The outside terrace is the perfect place to be in summer and offers majestic views over the vineyards towards the beautiful mountains of Stellenbosch. TRP Tip: The Coastal Cuvee Sauvignon Blanc is another summer hit. Tel: +27 (0)21 885 8160 To familiarize yourself with the Franschhoek Valley Wine Route, please download the wine map below: Franschhoek Food Wine Route (204. 42 KB)
Many of the hotels are located in the French Quarter, where most of the ghost stories and paranormal activity in the city stems from. 1. Hotel Monteleone New Orleans Hotel Monteleone New Orleans, a 15-story Beaux-Arts-style boutique hotel, is one of the French Quarters' most famous landmarks. It is one of the last family-owned and operated hotels in New Orleans, with more than five-generations of its namesake family maintaining the property. The hotel was built in 1886 and has become one of the most haunted hotels in New Orleans, known for its apparitions and paranormal activity. Guests and staff have shared stories of spotting children roaming the halls and staff members going about their duties. The hotel's restaurant door opens almost every evening and then closes despite it being locked and there's an elevator that always stops on the wrong floor. One of its most notorious ghosts resides on the fourteenth floor. Maurice Begere, a mischievous young boy who passed away from yellow fever in the 1890s still haunts the room where he died.