The Maison's travel office attends to the journeys of its members with a discretion the larger industry has long since abandoned. Aircraft, vessels, residences, and the people who staff them are arranged through relationships maintained over decades — many of them inherited, some of them rebuilt.
The work begins, almost always, with a conversation. The questions asked are not those of an itinerary planner. The Maison wishes to understand the disposition of the days, the company being kept, the books one expects to read on the journey, the foods the principal cannot tolerate. The arrangements that follow flow from that understanding, not from a brochure of options.
Members do not select from a catalogue. They describe the shape of the season they intend to live, and the Maison composes the means by which it is lived.
Members enquire through their dedicated office.