Your calls always answered within 5 rings.
Excellent service, as always, from Robert Maclean.
Advise clients going to Santorini to arrange a transfer to and from the airport prior to travel as there are few taxis on the island.
The assistance for my wife was a success and helped us avoid having to stand for long periods. Thanks for arranging it.
Saf dealt with a couple of issues very promptly. We were delighted with the service.
Worked out completely as planned - thank you Brody and DialAFlight.
We were very pleased with the Eagles Villa Resort. A great holiday
Your agent performed excellently with quick responses
Always find working with DialAFlight simple, straightforward, courteous and price competitive. I'd never consider any other way!
All aspects of the trip catered for. No problems encountered at all. Everything ran very smoothly from the flights, the hotel bookings and the ferry transfers
We had a brilliant holiday and everything went very smoothly.T here was no problem with flights and the hotel was absolutely first class situated in a beautiful area and with comfortable rooms. The service was absolutely fantastic with brilliant staff who were only too happy to help with everything.
Chris is first class and an example of how to treat your customers. I will certainly be using DialAFlight again.
Donovan was exceptional - sorted everything with no problems
Jenson was excellent and no detail too insignificant for him to help with.
Ashley was so helpful and even when we contacted him whilst abroad to extend our holiday he made the process go smoothly for us. I really want to thank him for his excellent service.
All perfect as ever - thank you to Stacey for arranging it all.
You did much more than I had hoped. Thank you.
Great service as usual!
Good resort. Thanks
We had a lovely holiday and I recommended your company to a number of people during our trip. Oscar did a superb job and was most helpful.
Oscar as always couldn’t have been more helpful!
Whilst used to paying accommodation taxes, as I had booked for 3 rooms for 10 days, was a bit surprised to be hit with a E450 bill when I arrived. I should have done my research
Tom and the team did an excellent job.
Everything was exactly as it should have been. Well done.
The holiday was great and all the arrangements went well. I didn't realise the hotel had an app which we could have used in advance to book the restaurants as we could not get a booking for a couple of them.
One minor problem on last pick up from hotel to airport - transport provider had correct name of hotel and address, but the wrong district at the top of the document so driver went to a hotel with same name as ours 8km away.
Feel quite assured and safe when we travel with DialAFlight
Arthur continues to go above and beyond. I will never book with anyone else
Perfect hotel and holiday
As usual Vinnie did us proud
As ever - superb!
Luscious, seductive and the sun is always shining. That's the way Corfu is depicted in ITV's charming new drama, The Durrells.
What's more, the island is teeming with snakes and tortoises, and there are quaint tavernas filled with boisterous locals beneath olive groves on the edge of sparkling, cerulean seas.
But does the pristine, pre-war vision bear any relation to present-day reality?
Corfu certainly suffered some overdevelopment in the tourism boom of the Sixties, but it still offers opportunity for a host of authentic Durrell-esque experiences, and a whole lot more besides…
In the footsteps of The Durrells
In 1935, the dysfunctional Durrell family – pretentious twentysomething novelist Lawrence, gun-crazy second son Leslie, man-hungry teenager Margo and animal-loving Gerald (who grew up to be the conservationist and author of My Family And Other Animals, based on his time on the island) – upped sticks from chilly England, led by their long-suffering mother, and settled near Corfu Town.
For a similarly idyllic location, your best bet is to visit the pretty north-east corner, where The Durrells was filmed. The lovely bay of San Stefano is a perennial favourite with British holidaymakers. Or you could even stay in the apartments at the atmospheric White House in nearby Kalami, where Lawrence wrote.
Animal magic
If you're keen to catch sight of a few tortoises of the kind that fascinated young Gerald, visit in late June when they're at their most active. Hiring a motorboat is a must. You could even spot a pod of dolphins, or even a ponderous sea-turtle.
Discover Margo's bay
One of the island's prettiest spots for dropping anchor and having a swim is the tiny bay that hosts a little stone shrine to St Arsenios, just south of Agni Bay. If you search, you'll find a sea-level cave there.
It's a shimmering chamber accessed by a corridor in the rock, with a separate underwater exit for the adventurous. Climb up to the shrine, too, for a look.
Water parks for children
Corfu has several fantastic waterparks, including the mighty Aqualand near Corfu Town (two-day tickets cost £20 for children, £28 for adults, aqualand-corfu.com).
A jewel of a town
Too many people leave this isle without ever discovering Corfu Town. This jewel is a unique blend of cultures, which pay testament to the nations that have controlled it during its multifarious history.
Where else in Europe can you find a British cricket pitch, in front of a French colonnade of cafes, which gives way to crumbling Italian architecture?
Climb to the top of the Old Fort and enjoy the magnificent view over the town's ramshackle rooftops. Afterwards, visit the blackened remains of St Spyridon, Corfu's patron saint, in the church that bears his name.
But the best thing to do in Corfu Town is simply to explore the endless narrow winding streets, housing lovely little bars and shops.
Dine out in style
The finest restaurant in Corfu is the recently re-opened Venetian Well in Corfu Town, hidden among the back streets. It's pricier than most places, but worth the stretch.
And don't miss...
Try to visit Angelokastro, a Byzantine derelict castle on the west coast near Paleokastritsa.
Scan the sea below for rocks in the shape of ships; legend has it that the sea-god Poseidon punished the locals for helping his enemy Odysseus by petrifying one of their vessels.
First published in the Daily Mail - July 2016
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