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Weirdest travel agent requests

Rabbi-impersonating Elvis impersonators, air-conditioned camping, more

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Agent Paul Gilbert of Linden Travel in New York City was asked to find an Elvis impersonator impersonating a rabbi for a Las Vegas wedding.
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By Joshua Pramis
Travel and Leisurehr<!-- -->
updated 11:24 a.m. ET March 29, 2009

Traveling to Chihuahua, Mexico is a perfectly common request for a travel agent. Traveling with one’s Chihuahua? That’s easy, too. But taking the Chihuahua to Chihuahua, Mexico so he can “discover his roots”?

That was the request made of travel agent Steven Greenbaum of Pisa Brothers Travel in New York City. Greenbaum’s been an agent for 29 years, so he’s had his share of oddball requests — but this was a new one. He even managed to receive the explanation without a flinch. “I’m good at keeping a straight face.”

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Most requests that agents handle every day are pretty cut and dried: booking a long weekend in the Bahamas; finding the best animal-spotting retreat in Africa; finagling an affordable-but-luxurious excursion in Europe. But every once in a while, travelers push the boundaries of what’s normal — or even possible.

And it’s often difficult for them to stifle a laugh. In fact, that’s what Lynn Garfi of San Diego–based Protravel International had to do when a traveler called and asked for an oceanfront room — normally a no-brainer request — in the decidedly landlocked city of Orlando.

So how do travel agents deal with these odd asks — especially when, in the Orlando case, they can’t be fulfilled? Garfi explains that with these types of requests, the only option is to help the client understand that it simply cannot be fulfilled.
Image: Discovering roots
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Agent Steven Greenbaum of Pisa Brothers Travel in New York City was tasked with booking a trip with a pet Chihuahua — to Chihuahua, Mexico — so the animal could discover his roots.

Some off-the-wall requests, however, are do-able, no matter how crazy they sound. Take the traveler who wanted to camp in the Sahara Desert in the middle of August ... in an air-conditioned tent. Joel Zack, of Heritage Tours in New York City, made it happen. Of course, it took some effort, including buying a huge generator to power the air-conditioner.

But going to extremes is what it takes to become one of the world’s top agents, like the ones on Travel + Leisure’s A-List. So we asked these super-agents and their colleagues for the most unusual travel requests they've received over the years.

Here are their stories.

Copyright © 2009 American Express Publishing Corporation

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