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!
My Montenegro guide was animated. 'You should have been here when this was part of Yugoslavia. It was a fine country and tourists loved it,' he said.
There's a word for those who share his view... 'Yugonostalgics', and they remember Josip Tito as a great leader, who ruled the country with a benevolent air and a successful PR campaign.
'I, too, remember Yugoslavia,' I told him, without elaborating.
My memories of pre-1980 Yugoslavia run more along the lines of cheap and nasty, concrete-clad, mass-market hotels aimed at Eastern Bloc tourists, unimaginative food and undrinkable wine.
There was bog-standard nightlife and exotic luxuries such as fiery slivovitz plum brandy, which gave you the mother of all hangovers; and Yugo cars for taxis, which made East Germany's Trabants seem like Ferraris.
It's very different now, as each of the former Yugoslav states strives to come up with new and inventive ways to attract tourists. Montenegro is right up there, with a curious mix of flashy super-yacht marinas and glitzy hotels, combined with good value seaside resorts.
The marina complex of Portonovi, on a 60-acre site on Boka Bay between Dubrovnik, in Croatia, and the Montenegrin coastal town of Tivat, might just be the glitziest of them all when it opens next year. Look out for luxurious apartments, available for sale and rent, as well as a yacht club, spa and a new One&Only resort hotel, the first in Europe.
At the other end of the scale, and not in a bad way, is Ribarsko Selo, a rustic fish restaurant with just a handful of guest rooms, tucked away on the Lustica Peninsula between Miriste and Zanjice beach, where a bottle of Savina white wine costs 15 Euros.
Those in the know book the restaurant's sole harbourside apartment, with its own small pool, a favourite with visiting oligarchs in need of privacy. At just €150 a night for two, it's a bargain.
But there is also much in between these extremes in Montenegro. Its 620,000 people are fiercely proud of the independence they gained following the break-up of Yugoslavia, a process which began in 1991. The following year Serbia and Montenegro became an entity, under the name the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
In 2003, it officially renamed itself Serbia and Montenegro and in 2006, after a referendum, Montenegro declared independence. It was officially named the Republic of Montenegro in 2007.
Its credentials as a forward-looking highly progressive country have been underlined since then by such achievements as being classified by the World Bank as an upper middle-income country, becoming a member of the UN, NATO, the World Trade Organization and the Council of Europe. Not to mention seeing many of its resorts gaining a definite air of high-end sophistication.
The town of Budva, for example, once with a whiff of mass market Spanish Costas about it, is now filled with atmospheric bars and restaurants in the shadow of the ramparts, and there's a crescent-shaped beach, too.
Even more spectacular is Kotor, with its high city walls, tiny alleys, churches and Italianate mansions, all a reminder of Montenegro's Venetian heritage. Visit in the early evening, after the cruise ships have rounded up their passengers, order something at an outside cafe, and bask in its beauty.
For real luxury, try the island of Sveti Stefan, once home to fishermen, whose atmospheric houses now serve as guest rooms for the Aman Sveti Stefan hotel, reached by a pedestrian causeway.
Following local advice, I checked out the resort of Herceg Novi, just along the coast, where the modern beach-side Palmon Bay Hotel and Spa provides a good base from which to explore the coast and the black mountains. Service is slickly efficient - not always the case in this part of the world - and rooms are excellent, if a touch clinical.
Heaven knows where Montenegro is heading. It might not know itself. For the rest of us, it's well worth visiting a place that's in such dramatic transition.
First published in the Mail Online - March 2018
More articles below...
Not quite what you're looking for?
We can easily customise an offer to suit your exact requirements