Your calls always answered within 5 rings.
Been using the company for many years now. Excellent customer service
As usual your assistance was excellent.
Superb service....10/10
DialAFlight is not to blame for the poor service by airlines, the service given by the employees of DialAFlight are excellent. Keep up the good work guys
I was grateful Stevi kept in touch and all went smoothly
Everything worked according to plan. It was good to know that if I had a problem you were at the end of a phone to help,
Thanks Warren. CX the best airline bar none and I have experienced many airlines after 30 years in the industry plus long haul through Warren!
Toby, my liaison, kept us very well informed every step of way and makes us feel he works exclusively for us.
I would like to book another trip to Australia next February. I will phone in the next month to see the best day and date to go...
Just keep doing what you're doing, people are great as is the service! 100%
Thank you Joe and the team
Best ever to deal with. Excellent. We will use this company for ever!
Smooth trip as always
Everything was perfect. Thank you Raphael.
Brilliant, helpful staff. Will definitely use this company again.
Excellent and friendly service from Jenson Palmer.
Everything went according to plan. It is good to have someone very professional on your side. I would have no hesitation in recommending this company and its lovely staff to anyone looking to book a flight or holiday.
Everyone I had contact with dealt with my queries in a respectful and helpful manner.
As usual Jordan everything was great. Thank you
Nothing is ever too much trouble for you lot.
Nicholas was amazing - sorted out everything for me. Really helpful.
Fab advice and communication
Usual excellent service from Lucas Moore. I was concerned about a couple of issues for my return flight - I emailed Lucas and the issues were resolved within one hour. Excellent service considering I was 12,000 miles away.
As always Alan delivered - excellent help and advice.
Raphael answered my questions immediately whilst I was travelling for 10 weeks. We had the best time
Everything was perfect!
Friendly, helpful and efficient as usual
Thank you Jordan
AAA+ service from Declan and the team. DialAFlight have been my go to agent for over 15 years and always deliver a fantastic service.
Brilliant use of our budget - inspired recommendation to go economy and return business class and great choice of hotel in our stopover city. Have already told lots of people about the great service!
Vietnam is tricky to pin down. It's colourful but austere; hard-working but playful. And it's impossible to ignore the war that has left an indelible mark, culturally and historically.
This long, slim country of incredible natural beauty has a coastline groaning with inviting sandy stretches and tropical islands off the south-west and southern tip.
'War tourism' is part of the experience, and Americans make up the greatest proportion of Western visitors. But the country has been rebuilt, the trees replanted and the Vietnamese look to the future, not the past. It has one of south-east Asia's fastest-growing economies and has set its sights on officially becoming a developed nation during the course of 2020. The atmosphere is vibrant and the welcome is smiling.
In the capital Hanoi, where my trip begins, the foggy city is brightened by sprays of peach blossom and kumquat trees.
There's plenty to see – and not nearly enough time to take it all in. Walking solemnly past Ho Chi Minh's body in a glass box guarded by four uniformed men is strange. Visiting the Hanoi Hilton prison, where communists and then GIs were interned, is horrifying.
The late Senator John McCain's jumpsuit, kit and parachute are on show. He was shot down flying a Skyhawk in 1967 and imprisoned in Vietnam until 1973.
There are pictures of GIs eating Thanksgiving dinner, playing pool or cards, smiling. A former PoW, who was held here for nearly six years, told me these photographs were set-ups. This was no holiday camp.
But for many years McCain, who died in 2018, had made a habit of returning to Vietnam and staying in the same room at the Metropole Hotel. On one of my visits a few years ago, I even saw him in the hotel bar.
This wonderful colonial hotel, with its prettily lit outdoor pool, is in the heart of the old city just a short walk from his former prison.
Hanoi is the place to try street food – and it's cheap. The '36 streets and 36 wares' in the Old Quarter, which dates from the 11th century, brim with markets and delicious-smelling brews.
Pop-up food stalls line the pavements. People sit on tiny stools eating from bowls.
We travel further south, to Hue and Hoi An on the central coast. In Hue, you can see the remnants of Vietnam's past when emperors ruled and grand palaces such as the former Imperial Citadel – a Unesco World Heritage Site – and mausoleums were built in their honour. The Tu Duc and Khai Dinh tombs from the Nguyen dynasty are ornate, elaborate and dripping in gold.
At the Tu Duc tomb, there's a large stone tablet with the lament of the emperor, who had 150 concubines yet never managed to produce an heir.
Hoi An is relaxed and bars are filled with gap-yearers. This is the place to have a suit whipped up.
Then it was on to Ho Chi Minh City, still commonly known as Saigon. This sophisticated city is home to millions of scooters that navigate the streets like dancing ants.
There's more war tourism here – from the harrowing War Remnants museum, which focuses on the grisly effects of Agent Orange and the Cu Chi tunnels outside the city.
The prospect of crawling on my hands and knees in the dark puts me off going inside. Just being at the entrance to this extraordinary network system, 124 miles in length, used by the Viet Cong during the war, gives me the shivers.
Back in town you can wander hassle-free, day or night. The market is hot, sticky and heady. In the surrounding streets, you can have a pedicure for a few pounds.
But Saigon also does high-end pampering beautifully. The Park Hyatt has city glamour. The wonderful swimming pool, three floors up and surrounded by trees, is long enough to do decent laps.
If you want to feel the sand between your perfectly manicured toes, Saigon is any easy jumping-off point for islands off the South and South-West coast such as Con Dao and Phu Quoc.
At Con Dao the Six Senses resort is perched discreetly on a mile-long beach. Con Dao was once a prison island, set up by the French in 1861, and you can still visit the great, eerie buildings in the main town.
You can walk, run, swim, cycle, do all manner of water sports and even learn how to cook the fragrant Vietnamese delicacies we've been enjoying.
Relaxation is the theme. By the end of the week, I feel well-nourished in mind and body – and more than ready to sing the praises of this captivating country.
First published in the Daily Mail - January 2020
More articles below...
Not quite what you're looking for?
We can easily customise an offer to suit your exact requirements