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San Jose del Sur

Solo Remote Work Adventure

Solo Remote Work Adventure

There have been a few occasions where Stephanie and I have not traveled together, outside of work obligations. She’s taken trips to Paris and Italy with one of our daughters and her mom, and most recently, a cruise through the Norwegian Fjords with her mother. I, myself, have not. No particular reason, other than I do remember the feelings I had before we met, traveling the world without my previous partner, and then as a divorced father of 4. Not the most fun.

But when Stephanie discussed taking her mom with her on the cruise, I looked at my calendar and saw that my work obligations didn’t require any travel for a 3 day period, which meant that I didn’t have any constraints so long as I had a good internet connection and a timezone that wouldn’t break up my sleep pattern.

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I decided to look for somewhere that was within the central US timezone, reasonable airfares (or awards miles), and a flight table that wouldn’t disrupt my ability to not miss a beat of my 8-5 work day with travel.

The opportunity to scout out a future adventure is what I sought. There are several countries in Central and South America we haven’t visited yet, so that I set my sights on that area. I’d been to Costa Rica (interestingly, I was visiting San Jose when Stephanie and I first began conversing), so I took that off the list. Same with cities in countries we’d already visited together.

So, I decided to take a different approach and let airline miles make the determination. One of the credit card hacks we use is the fact that our American Express platinum cards (both personal and business) provide a $200 travel credit each year. Simply, you register the airline you want to use it towards, and it will credit certain fees up to that limit. But, with AA Platinum status and credit cards for the other US airlines, we don’t really find a need for checked baggage fee waivers, etc. The trick is that (and I hope I’m not jinxing this) United Airlines allows you to fund your United Airlines Travel Bank, and it codes in such a way that American Express credits it back to you. So, I did have $400 available with United Airlines.

With that knowledge, I began researching where I could go for ~$400 round trip between Chicago and Managua, and remembered that I had researched the beach town of San Juan del Sur in Nicaragua last year. So, I went back and looked to see what Airbnb prices were for a 4d/3nt stay, and found that I could get a very nice loft overlooking the beach for $358.

Bookmarking that I watched prices to find the optimal time to purchase. I settled on April but, because I don’t have any status with United, spent $85 out-of-pocket to upgrade to premium seating round trip. I used points I had with Enterprise to cover the cost of the rental car, as the town is a few hours drive from Managua.

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