You already refresh three apps. "Irish Ferries: Booking Windows and Weather" is where prediction markets add a fourth signal: people willing to lose money if their disruption call is wrong.
Maps, apps, and mob panic
The best travel hack is still sleep — but a probability check stops you from buying the last £400 seat on a rumour.
Not a boarding pass — a consensus
It is usually a narrow event: flight operates, border rule holds, storm clears. If your holiday happiness depends on five things, one market only prices one of them — keep the rest in your spreadsheet.
- →Screenshot official notices — markets sometimes front-run, sometimes lag.
- →Pair with Met Office / NATS sources for weather and airspace.
- →Practice on Boromarket travel-adjacent questions to read spikes calmly.
If the crowd and the airline disagree for more than an hour, trust the airline first, curiosity second.
From odds to itinerary
Notice how often scary spikes fade — that habit saves money on rebookings. Boromarket puts crowd forecasts beside lighter games so you learn the rhythm without staring at futures terminals.
"The goal is not certainty. It is a better map of uncertainty than panic headlines give you."
— Boromarket