escort diary® of Amity Addams: Why Prebooking Matters (And Why You Will Miss Out If You Wait)
There’s something about regional touring that I genuinely love. At the end of March, Alaska and I packed up the car and headed out—Coffs Harbour, Newcastle, Sydney, and most importantly the smaller towns like Dubbo and Tamworth. We travel together, share the driving, share the load, and offer duo time as well, which makes everything feel smooth, balanced, and honestly really enjoyable.
And this trip was so good. The people we met were warm, respectful, and genuinely a pleasure to spend time with. Regional visits always feel more personal—less rushed, more present. The conversations are better, the energy is softer, and it’s something I always walk away from feeling really good about. It’s something I want to keep doing more of.
But here’s the part you need to understand if you actually want to see me when I’m in your area.
The only reason places like Dubbo and Tamworth made it onto this tour was because of prebookings. Those early bookings are what give us the confidence to drive out, plan properly, and commit to being there.
And once we arrived? The demand was insane. Our phones were flooded, messages non-stop. We were fully booked, turning people away, and sticking to a schedule that was already locked in—when realistically, we could have stayed multiple extra days if that interest had been there before we arrived.
And that’s where people miss out.
Because in smaller towns, “I’ll message when you’re here” doesn’t work. By the time you message, we’re already booked, about to leave, or planned around the people who secured their time in advance. There’s no flexibility left—and I won’t compromise the experience for those who did prebook.
Regional touring isn’t the same as a city. We’re driving long distances, committing time, energy, and accommodation. There isn’t a huge pool of last-minute demand to rely on—it only works when there’s clear intention beforehand.
A perfect example—Orange. We cancelled that stop due to low prebookings at the time. It didn’t make sense to lock it in without early commitment. But after we cancelled, we were flooded with messages from people there wanting to see us. The interest was there—it just came too late to act on.
That’s why prebooking isn’t just helpful, it’s essential. It decides whether we come at all, how long we stay, how much availability there is, and whether you actually get to see me.
If you wait—you will miss out.
This tour proved it perfectly. So many of you reached out once we were already there and we just couldn’t fit you in. Not because we didn’t want to, but because the spots were already taken by those who planned ahead.
So if I’m ever coming near you—or even hinting at it—this is your cue. Don’t wait. Don’t assume there’ll be space. Don’t leave it until the last minute and hope for the best.
Because the ones who prebook are the ones who get seen.
And the ones who wait… miss their chance.
