Welcome to my next trip report series, covering a recent trip we took to France, primarily motived by checking out a hotel that has long been on our radar.
In this series, you can expect flight reviews of Air France’s 777-300ER La Premiere first class, Air France’s A220-300 business class, Austrian’s 787-9 business class, and United’s 737 MAX 8 first class. On top of that, there will be reviews of a few pretty awesome luxury hotels.
In this post I’ll outline all the basics of the trip, and then I’ll publish the entire trip report series in the coming days and weeks.
In this post:
Why we took this trip
This trip was planned at the last minute, just a couple of days before departure. Ford hadn’t been anywhere in a few months, and we had a free weekend around Valentine’s Day, with everything going pretty smoothly at home. So we figured we might as well take advantage of that opportunity, and go somewhere.
This trip was largely about visiting a hotel that we’ve been wanting to stay at for a long time. Airelles is probably my favorite boutique luxury hotel group in the world right now. The properties are expensive, but the hotels really offer an incredible experience, with amazing service, food, and inclusions.
I’ve reviewed most of Airelles’ properties, including Les Airelles Courchevel, Airelles La Bastide de Gordes, Airelles Saint-Tropez Chateau de la Messardiere, and Airelles Val d’Isère. The one property of the brand we hadn’t stayed at yet is probably also the most intriguing. I’m talking about Airelles Château de Versailles, the 14-key property located on the grounds of the Palace of Versailles.
When it came time to plan this trip, all the stars aligned — the hotel had entry level room availability (the property is often sold out for anything but the top suites), and I found some good award options in both directions, which would allow me to try some airline products that have been on my list.
By my standards, this was one of the more straightforward trips I’ve taken in some time, as I flew a total of just four segments, spread across 10,619 miles.

The airlines we flew on this trip
I booked this itinerary as three separate tickets. While Ford and I flew the outbound together, I took a more roundabout return, to review some products that have been on my list (Ford flew back to Miami nonstop on American, and I even managed to find saver award availability).
To kick off the trip, we flew Air France’s Boeing 777-300ER La Premiere first class from Miami to Paris. Flying Blue greatly restricts first class awards — they’re only available to Flying Blue Platinum members, and award pricing is steeper than with just about any other program.
I booked the following for the per person cost of 236,000 Flying Blue miles plus $302.10 in taxes & fees (as you can see, this included a stopover in Paris, and my connection to Vienna in Air France’s Airbus A220-300 business class):
2/15 AF99 Miami to Paris departing 7:50PM arriving 10:45AM (+1 day)
2/19 AF1739 Paris to Vienna departing 3:30PM arriving 5:25PM


Next up, I flew Austrian’s Boeing 787-9 business class from Vienna to Washington Dulles. I booked the following for 70,000 Air Canada Aeroplan points plus $115.17 in taxes & fees:
2/20 OS93 Vienna to Washington departing 10:35AM arriving 2:35PM

Lastly, I flew United’s Boeing 737 MAX 8 first class from Washington to Miami. Somehow I hadn’t yet flown a United jet with the carrier’s new narrow body interiors, so I was looking forward to checking that out. There was no saver level award availability, but I booked the following in first class for $399.86:
2/20 UA1706 Washington to Miami departing 5:30PM arriving 8:26PM

There won’t be many lounge reviews with this trip report series, with one exception. I’ll be reviewing the Air France La Premiere first class arrivals lounge in Paris, which only recently opened.

The hotels we stayed at on this trip
During this trip, I stayed at three different hotels, so let’s go in chronological order. As mentioned above, our primary destination with this trip was Airelles Château de Versailles, where we spent two nights.
This is a unique, one-of-a-kind experience, and it exceeded my (high) expectations. It’s somewhere between a traditional luxury hotel, a history safari, and an immersive, performative experience. Yes, you get unparalleled access to the grounds of Versailles, and that’s great. But you also get woken up by having someone scratch on your door, come in with a lantern and music, address you as “king,” and then draw your curtains and make you a bath. So that’s kind of fun… or something. 😉

We then spent one night in Paris. Paris is arguably the world’s most competitive luxury hotel market, and I’ve made a point of trying to review just about all of the city’s top properties (most of which are non-points properties, unfortunately). This includes properties like Cheval Blanc Paris, Four Seasons Paris George V, Hotel de Crillon Paris, La Reserve Paris, Le Bristol Paris, Ritz Paris, and more.
This time around, we decided to check out the Bulgari Paris (or BVLGARI Paris, if you prefer). While not a French “Palace” hotel, I had heard good things about it, and was curious to visit.

Lastly, I had one night in Vienna on my own, on the return. I decided to stay at the Park Hyatt Vienna, since I hadn’t reviewed that in many years, and was wondering how it’s holding up.

Bottom line
While not a traditional review trip, we recently took a quick trip to France, to visit a hotel we’ve been wanting to stay at for a long time. This trip was planned at the last minute, and I did my best to incorporate some interesting flight reviews, including on Air France, Austrian, and United. Once I complete this trip report, my next series will be about our recent trip to Japan.
Thanks for reading, and stay tuned!
Well this is all super relatable!
Ooof... That decor at Versailles, I don't think I could deal with it. Ghastly!
"I even managed to find saver award availability"
I thought you usually booked saver awards?
I'm intrigued by the Bulgari review. While Bulgari is managed by Marriott and bookable through Marriott, it isn't a Marriott brand in the sense that it's part of Bonvoy. I've seen some disappointing reviews of Bulgari properties in London and Dubai, especially Dubai. Walk With Tim on YouTube's experience led me to conclude that Marriott is capable of managing very nice 4-star and average 5-star hotels, the company struggles to manage the highest caliber of...
I'm intrigued by the Bulgari review. While Bulgari is managed by Marriott and bookable through Marriott, it isn't a Marriott brand in the sense that it's part of Bonvoy. I've seen some disappointing reviews of Bulgari properties in London and Dubai, especially Dubai. Walk With Tim on YouTube's experience led me to conclude that Marriott is capable of managing very nice 4-star and average 5-star hotels, the company struggles to manage the highest caliber of luxury hotels.
Excited for this report! To all those who are going to question the curtains/bath/etc. - yes, this is optional and they ask your preference. Amazing property.
If you're the chairman of Paul, Weiss, you need this right now. You used to be a respected incarnation of Harvey Specter in real life. Then you capitulated to an administration with demonstrably no respect for the principles of jurisprudence. Every...
If you're the chairman of Paul, Weiss, you need this right now. You used to be a respected incarnation of Harvey Specter in real life. Then you capitulated to an administration with demonstrably no respect for the principles of jurisprudence. Every associate at every respectable law firm in the United States is disgusted with this state of affairs and the lack of backbone.
I am not the chairman of any law firm. Were I in such a position, I may have had no choice but to capitulate as well. But I am saying if I were in that position, having just been bent over, I would be booking Air France First Class straight away and waking up with a lantern and music the very next morning.
I had a feeling today was a rough day for you, former partner at Paul, Weiss.
Sidenote: great times smoking weed with some local kids and getting high as f**k on the grounds of Versailles Spring Break in 1995. Made lifetime friends.
Picture of UA 737 Max looks like old interior in F. Last weekend flew DCA-ORD (321Neo - yes a mostly empty 321N) and then ORD-DFW (320). Both had new interiors with the F seating having a shell around the back. Plus there is a curved partition between the seats. The spacing is wider on the 321N which allows for a built in wireless charging pad between the armrest and divider. The 320 the armrest is...
Picture of UA 737 Max looks like old interior in F. Last weekend flew DCA-ORD (321Neo - yes a mostly empty 321N) and then ORD-DFW (320). Both had new interiors with the F seating having a shell around the back. Plus there is a curved partition between the seats. The spacing is wider on the 321N which allows for a built in wireless charging pad between the armrest and divider. The 320 the armrest is next to the divider. The 321N also has a divider between the seat backs, so seat behind can't see user (if laptop). Both had new Displays with Bluetooth for headsheet. Surprising - no live TV.