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Amenity Limousine – On Location

$150 for Two-Hour Limo Tour of Charleston for Up to Eight ($300 Value)

$150
Buy
No Longer Available
Thu Jan 31 04:59:59 UTC 2013
Value
$300
Discount
50%
You Save
$150
  • T460x279

In a Nutshell

Up to eight guests travel to six historic Charleston sites aboard a Lincoln Town Car stretch limousine

The Fine Print

  • Expires 150 days after purchase.
  • Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as a gift. Limit 1 per visit. Appointment required; subject to availability. 24hr cancellation notice required or fee up to Groupon price may apply.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Stretch limousines are the roomiest and most elegant way to travel, except for the Oscar Meyer Weinerjet. Get around in style with this Groupon.

$150 for a Two-Hour Limo Tour of Charleston for Up to Eight ($300 Value)

Up to eight passengers board a stretch Lincoln Town Car limousine en route to six Charleston landmarks including the historic City Market, the Battery, Hibernian Hall, Charles Towne Landing, the Old Slave Mart Museum, and the Waterfront Park.

Amenity Limousine

Charles Towne Landing’s historic wilderness grounds are one of the last places you’d expect to find a limousine, but the chauffeurs at Amenity Limousine are regularly found parked there. The site is one of the stops on the Six at Six limo tour, during which they drive passengers from one historic Charleston landmark to the next in "amenity style." In addition to taking guests on tours through Charleston’s past or to see holiday lights in the winter, the limos are available for passengers who need classy transportation to the airport, to elegant events, or to the future to see how much hair they have left at 65.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Typing Techniques

In grade schools, children are taught one way to type on a computer keyboard—with their hands and not at all with their tiny, perfectly suited for typing toes. Here are some other typing techniques not taught in America's learning rooms:

Hunt and Peck: One of the slower typing methods, it involves the typist "hunting" for each letter individually and then "pecking" the letter with a long cane.

Touch Typing: The same as the standard typing technique, but instead of touching the keyboard, let the keyboard touch you.

Fast Fingers: Standard typing technique, but a little bit faster.

Fancy Fingers: Pretty much the same as "fast fingers," but a little bit slower, and your fingers dance upon the keys like a dainty woman’s feet upon a wet dance floor.

No Fingers: Just throw a rock at the keyboard until you hit the key you want. If you end up breaking the keyboard, buy a new one and start over with a smaller rock.

I'm so proud of my son. He learned how to type with a cane.

Amenity Limousine