Your calls always answered within 5 rings.
Excellent service and recommendations to ensure we got the best from our holiday - liked the courtesy call a week before travel to ensure all was in hand.
Excellent service - thank you
First rate service
Very reliable service
Ray Taylor was very helpful and responsive.
DialAFlight arrangements great. Hotel OK. Accommodation great. Lounge resort fab. Individual staff lovely. Poor restaurant booking service
Generally everything was OK but better information about the car hire pick up would have been good. We went to the car hire desks at the airport only to find that Centauro was offsite and used a shuttle bus.
I always use DialAFlight as they are very professional and offer a good service.
Superb as ever
All was well thanks to Annabelle
Keep up the exceptional service
Julie was brilliant - friendly, super efficient, did what she said she would. Great service all round
Yet again a very enjoyable experience, perfectly planned by DialAFlight. Many thanks to Kitty for doing all the hard work so we could enjoy our holiday
Very smooth booking and staff were very helpful. Everything was organised. Will definitely book again
Everything was OK except the room was like a prison cell - very small window and not enough light
Very professional and knowledgeable customer service
Mason is very helpful. We always use him.
Fraser was brilliant! We will always go to him to book our holidays. His patient and kindly manner, his attention to detail and his understanding of what we wanted and our expectations were met!
Car hire was awkward. Although directions were OK it was not evident where we needed to be to get the car.
All good - as always.
"Spot on" was my comment
Turkey was excellent - I had a very nice time. The hotel was nice and the food and staff very friendly
Great holiday, great hotel location, perfect flights, thank you to Lauren Canning!
Michelles careful attention was appreciated in every detail to make sure everything ran smoothly.
First time using ITA and would use again. Only one issue that you should be aware of relating to the hotel transfer. We believe they cancelled the coach pick up at 1pm so we were left waiting for an additional 90 minutes. The Hotel did not confirm this but that is our feeling and we heard others had a similar experience. Might be easier to get a cab for an extra 20 euros.
As usual, Oliver Orr did a fantastic job of sorting my booking to Ibiza
Helen was ace - sorted out the travel arrangements quickly and efficiently
Bloody marvelous outfit!
This is the first time I’ve used DialAFlight and the experience was excellent. Special thanks to Kennedy who arranged our booking. Excellent communication, clear instructions, friendly and would certainly use again. I tend to book online myself but Kennedy and DialAFlight have made me think differently
Flights went smoothly. Hotels were excellent and in good locations.
The former president of Argentina, Mauricio Macri, is likely to be heading to his favourite spot in the Lake District for his annual holiday. But his visit will not involve fell walking, munching on Kendal Mint Cake, or even dodging rain showers.
He spends his holidays in the Argentine Lake District in northern Patagonia, a two-hour flight south-west of the capital Buenos Aires. While the area is well known to his fellow countrymen, it's less so to international visitors. But with its stunning scenery of iridescent lakes, soaring mountains and thick forests, not to mention an increasingly generous exchange rate, this will inevitably change. Queen Maxima of the Netherlands is a big fan of the region too, but then she was born in Argentina, so she may be a little biased.
Visitors fly into San Carlos de Bariloche, a winter gateway for some of the best skiing in South America. But in January, the height of the southern summer when temperatures are regularly up into the 80s, people come to hike, bike and fly-fish.
Pick up a hire car and drive north for 90 minutes on Ruta 40 - Argentina's answer to Route 66 - which runs for more than 3,100 miles from the desolate pampas of Patagonia to the border with Bolivia.
The upmarket holiday town of Villa La Angostura makes a great base. Shrouded by woods and bordered by Lake Nahuel Huapi, with angular, wooden houses away from its main street, it wouldn't look out of place in the Swiss Alps.
This is the southern starting point for the Ruta de los Siete Lagos, or Road of the Seven Lakes, a stunning 62-mile drive to San Martin de los Andes. It takes a lot longer to complete this route than you might imagine due to the numerous diversions for photo stops of the rippling hills and mountains of the Andes that provide the border with Chile.
Want to take your hire car into the neighbouring country? It's possible if you confirm this at pick-up. Expect to pay a surcharge of about £30.
But who wants to be stuck behind a wheel the whole time? Like the wide open spaces of New Zealand or the Canadian Rockies, the point of being here is to get back to nature: to step out, fill your lungs and enjoy the great outdoors under skies that seem to go on for ever.
There are plenty of biking and hiking routes here, and one of the most scenic follows an hour-long boat ride from Villa La Angostura, put-put-putting along at a gentle pace and feeling the wind in your hair up on deck.
Disembark at the Arrayanes national park for a gentle seven mile walk back along the Quetrihue peninsula. It is said that the forest in the cartoon Bambi was based on this area after a visit by Walt Disney himself.
You'll share the well-maintained path with just a few others and although the trail isn't that undulating, you can stop regularly for water, chocolate, photos or just to listen to birdsong and soak it all in. There's a thick canopy of beech trees here, as well as colourful fuchsias, outcrops of bamboo and blankets of Chilean myrtle.
Hike from the town itself to look out over Lake Correntoso and to a 165ft-high waterfall, Cascada Inacayal. On another day you could drive for about 30 minutes to Lake Espejo Chico, turn off down a dirt track to a secret beach (actually it's signposted but not many people follow it), then enjoy a picnic of sandwiches bought in town and Quilmes beers that you can keep cool in the water.
There's a certain fragility to the landscape here that's hard to put your finger on, until you realise that about 25 miles due west lies the 7,335ft volcano Puyehue-Cordon Caulle, which last erupted 18 years ago, blanketing Villa La Angostura in a thick covering of ash. Luckily, she was silent on our visit.
Villa La Angostura is a pleasant town with a frontier feeling and the happiest, most tail-waggy packs of stray dogs you'll come across.
With the pound currently worth about 70 pesos, eating out is a steal and petrol is the equivalent of 60p a litre.
A year ago, the exchange rate was around 45 pesos, and even then things were a bargain.
Argentina is known for some of the most succulent steaks on the planet, and a meal of bife de chorizo or lomo (sirloin or fillet), plus some delicious pasty-like empanadas and an excellent bottle of malbec, will set you back about £35 for two.
On the main street, there are plenty of coffee shops, restaurants and bars. For souvenirs, take home sturdy leather belts, alfajores (biscuits) and jars of dulce de leche (caramel sauce), which Argentinians love almost as much as maté, a kind of bitter tea. They consume maté from a gourd with a metal straw, and constantly top up with flasks of hot water.
While this particular Lake District might be lacking in Beatrix Potter tea towels and gingerbread, it does certainly hold its own on another front. Almost half the immigrants to Argentina came from Italy, so gelato here is on a par with anything you'll find in Venice or Rome, especially if you're a fan of rich, unctuous chocolate flavours.
Just don't expect to see Kendal Mint Cake flavour on the menu any time soon.
First published in the Mail on Sunday - November 2019
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