88 Essential Travel Secrets
88 Essential Travel Secrets
88 Essential Travel Secrets
www.tripbase.com
Front Cover
Main Index
Foreword
Congratulations on downloading your Best Kept Travel Secrets eBook. You're now part of a unique collaborative charity project, the first of its kind to take place on the Internet! The Best Kept Travel Secrets project was initiated with just one blog post back in November 2009. Since then, over 200 of the most talented travel bloggers and writers across the globe have contributed more than 500 inspirational travel secrets. These phenomenal travel gems have now been compiled into a series of travel eBooks. Awe-inspiring places, insider info and expert tips... you'll find 88 amazing travel secrets within this eBook. The best part about this is that you've helped contribute to a great cause.
About Tripbase
Founded in May 2007, Tripbase pioneered the Internet's first "destination discovery engine". Tripbase saves you from the time-consuming and frustrating online travel search by matching you up with your ideal vacation destination. Tripbase was named Top Travel Website for Destination Ideas by Travel and Leisure magazine in November 2008. www.tripbase.com
Front Cover
Main Index
Photo by:albertopveiga
Front Cover
Main Index
Main Index
General
5 22 28 31 33 35
42 46 49 53 59
Gear
Accommodation
Health
Budget
Packing
Camping
Sightseeing
Driving
Contributing Authors
Flying
Spend more time embracing the kinds of activities that make you feel alive and part of the world
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General
Time = Wealth
By far the most important lesson travel teaches you is that your time is all you really own in life. And the more you travel, the more you realize that your most extravagant possessions can't match the satisfaction you get from finding new experiences, meeting new people, and learning new things about yourself. "Value" is a word we often hear in day-to-day life, but travel has a way of teaching us that value is not pegged to a cash amount, that the best experiences in life can be had for the price of showing up (be it to a festival in Rajasthan, a village in the Italian countryside, or a sunrise ten minutes from your home). Scientific studies have shown that new experiences (and the memories they produce) are more likely to produce long-term happiness than new things. Since new experiences aren't exclusive to travel, consider ways to become time-rich at home. Spend less time working on things you don't enjoy and buying things you don't need; spend more time embracing the kinds of activities (learning new skills, meeting new people, spending time with friends and family) that make you feel alive and part of the world. .
Rolf, Rolf Potts' Vagabonding
Photo by: Rolf
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General
Be Where You Are
A great thing about travel is that it forces you into the moment. When you're celebrating carnival in Rio, riding a horse on the Mongolian steppe, or exploring a souk in Damascus, there's a giddy thrill in being exactly where you are and allowing things to happen. In an age when electronic communications enable us to be permanently connected to (and distracted by) the virtual world, there's a narcotic thrill in throwing yourself into a single place, a single moment. Would you want to check your bank-account statement while exploring Machu Picchu in Peru? Are you going to interrupt an experience of the Russian White Nights in St. Petersburg to check your Facebook Photo by: Rolf feed? Of course not - when you travel, you get to embrace the privilege of witnessing life as it happens before your eyes. This attitude need not be confined to travel. At home, how often do you really need to check your email or your Twitter feed? When you get online, are you there for a reason, or are you simply killing time? For all the pleasures and entertainments of the virtual-electronic world, there is no substitute for real-life conversation and connection, for getting ideas and entertainment from the people and places around you. Even at home, there are sublime rewards to be had for unplugging from online distractions and embracing the world before your eyes. .
Rolf, Rolf Potts' Vagabonding
Unless you learn to pace and savor your daily experiences you'll be cheating your days out of small moments of leisure, discovery and joy
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General
Slow Down
One of the advantages of long-term travel (as opposed to a short vacation) is that it allows you to slow down and let things happen. Freed from tight itineraries, you begin to see the kinds of things (and meet the kinds of people) that most tourists overlook in their haste to tick attractions off a list. A host of multi-million-dollar enterprises have been created to cater to our concept of "leisure," both at home and on the road - but all too often this definition of leisure is as rushed and rigidly confined as our work life. Which is more emblematic of leisure - a three-hour spa session in an Ubud hotel, or the freedom to wander Bali at will for a month? All too often, life at home is predicated on an irrational compulsion for speed - we rush to work, we rush through meals, we "multi-task" when we're hanging out with friends. This might make our lives feel more streamlined in a certain abstracted sense, but it doesn't make our lives happier or more fulfilling. Unless you learn to pace and savor your daily experiences (even your work-commutes and your noontime meals) you'll be cheating your days out of small moments of leisure, discovery and joy. .
Rolf, Rolf Potts' Vagabonding
Photo by: Rolf
Incorporate your notebook/journal into daily activities like you do with taking photos
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General
Don't Separate the Telling of the Tale from the Experience
Don't leave the recounting of your travelling tales to an evening homework exercise! Incorporate your notebook/journal into daily activities like you do with taking photos. Keep it handy (i.e. with your wallet and camera). So when asking the concierge for directions, give them your small notebook to draw a mud map of how to find where you're going, and note the name of your accommodation (partly so you can find your way back!) When asking a local to take your photo, get them to also jot down the name of the location you're Photo by: Linda in (You'll be amazed how handwriting styles vary across the world). And when getting your wallet out at a restaurant, get your notebook/journal out too and ask the waiter to write the name of where you have just dined. (different scripts all add to the flavour)! With the outline of your day now recorded for you by other people, avoid filling in the gaps with wordy compositions of woolly fluff! Keep it simple and quick (there's travelling to be done!). You're only after memory triggers that will later help you recall the whole story. So... jot down the 'where' you are, or 'what' you're doing, and then checklist each of your five senses with a word or two that expresses how they are responding to the place/experience. For example: 'rainforest': epiphytes (what you see), whip-birds (what you can hear), composting leaf litter & humidity (what you can smell), soft-moss (touchy feely), rich leafy lushness (a taste that is in the air). I find the last one, what you can 'taste', often the most revealing! Incredible how atmospheres taste so different and are such brilliant scene-setters. .
Linda, Jouney Jottings
With time, I learned to enjoy my moments on the road the way I like them, not the way some perfect traveler archetype does
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General
Feel Free to Move at Your Own Pace
Sometimes, you feel that you aren't holding up to some standards of travel. You don't see enough must-sees, you kick yourself for lazing around, you don't engage with stangers as much as you wish you did, you move on faster than the guidebook says you should. Let go of the remorse. There's no point in trying to keep up with the backpacking Joneses. They're imaginary. And they're not you. A few years ago when I first went to Bali on a tight schedule, I got a lot of slack from my travel buddies for deciding to stay put one morning. They were going hiking in the rice paddies and checking out a batik studio. I stayed on the rooftop terrace of our guesthouse, drank some coffee and read a novel, while Photo by: ?eagan listening to the streets of Ubud waking up. But I felt bad. My two roommates made their opinion clear that travelers should be getting the most out of their limited time, that you have your whole life to read novels; don't do it when rice paddies are waiting. But you know what? I've never been a girl scout, I like my hikes in small doses. And as much as I like crafts, and you know I like them a lot, I'd rather read about batik making than attend a workshop for tourists. I absolutely understand that people have different tastes, and I now know that -of course- it applies to travel as well. With time, I learned to enjoy my moments on the road the way I like them, not the way some perfect traveler archetype does. What I like is to sit at terraces (and in bars and restaurants, and in trains, and in public gardens), to eat the local food, read and enjoy the world around me, slowly. I may not be able to tick most or even many items off the Lonely Planet, but I actually enjoy myself. It does not make me any less of a traveller. .
Aelle , Aelle Around the World
Postmarked envelopes are like passport stamps in that they mark where you were and when
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General
Buy a Local Journal and Send it Home
Don't take a generic tome type travel journal with you - they're heavy, they have no connection with the place you are travelling, and they are often hard to start writing in due to a fear of messing up that first pristine page and spoiling what is to follow! Do buy small thin notebooks (I like the A6 size) made in the area you are travelling -- or at the very least the country you are in! You'll have the associated story of its purchase from a local newsstand owner, stationery vendor or artisan at a market. Its cover and paper will also ooze with the local culture, language, design and unique feel.
Being small, it will quickly fill, which is just what you want, as it's now ready for popping in an envelope with a beautiful local stamp (or two), and posting home to yourself. Postmarked envelopes are like passport stamps in that they mark where you were and when. When you finally return home, each envelope will reveal a neatly parcelled chapter of your journey. .
Linda, Jouney Jottings
Google Maps
Google Maps. I'm not kidding. Some of the best surprises are waiting right there in plain view. It works like this: I pick a small nearby town and zoom in. Then I take note of the tiny symbols (typically a square or fork & knife) and click on those to get the info. Last month, one such "play the map game" honed in on Bigio L'Oster in the town of Albino (Bergamo) and netted us a great catch. It led us to a dinner club in an isolated spot up in the mountains, listening to the smooth tunes of guest musician Bobby Watson! It was fantastic -- especially since it's not very often that I get the chance to listen to an American jazz musician in Italy. .
Photo by: Rowena
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Traveling on local transport is the best way to meet, converse and mingle with the local population
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General
Take Local Transport
For us, the traveling itself is just as important as the destination. Traveling on local transport is the best way to meet, converse and mingle with the local population. Some of my favorite moments have come from a 10-hour chicken bus ride or hitchhiking in the back of a truck bed. Don't miss these moments! Sure, it's not always fun. In fact, most of the time it's hot, sweaty, smells bad, and you are pretty sure you will die at any moment, not to mention the allure of the nice air conditioned Volvo bus or the AC3 train. But when you take that kind of transport you are cheating yourself out of the very things you came to see. You did not travel to a faraway land to sit in a nice air conditioned bus with a gaggle of your fellow countrymen. You came to see, feel, experience and live in another land. I'm not saying boycott the nice Photo by: Saben and Lindsey transport - we upgrade all the time, but don't make a habit of it. Take the good with the bad and ride that chicken bus or horse cart or general class train. Good or bad, it's always a good story in the end. .
Saben and Lindsey, Saben and Lin
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I love how super confidential places make their way into the community through word of mouth
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General
Learn from Locals
Sometimes it's fun to go somewhere free of all preconceptions and completely wing it. But when you decide to get some groundwork done beforehand, the first source you should hit, after the unavoidable guidebook, are those who have walked the road before you. You will get so much useful information from fellow travelers. Better than travelers are the local expat' crowd, and even better than the expats are the country's nationals. When you strike up a conversations on how to plan your next month or what to do tonight, the great thing is the personal connection you get that doesn't happen with a guidebook. Depending on the gut feeling that person gives you, you will choose to follow their advice blindly, or do the exact opposite. It will put into perspective what you may have read until then. Also, unlike Photo by: Matt Murf publications, people don't prioritize or edit their favourite memories, so you may end up discovering a great little gem that couldn't make it to the current edition of the Lonely Planet. I love how super confidential places make their way into the community through word of mouth. Sometimes you can almost trace back their progression -- especially if you stay in the same place for a while. .
Aelle , Aelle Around the World
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Most banks offer lower exchange rates than you'll find at the airport
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General
Rip up Those Traveler's Checks
When traveling overseas do away with archaic traveler's checks and skip exchanging cash at the hotel, airport and exchange shops. Instead use your debit card at a bank's ATM machine to get quick cash. Sometimes not only is this a safer way to carry money with you on your travels, but it can actually be less expensive as most banks offer lower exchange rates than you'll find at the airport. Just be careful of extra fees that come with certain ATMs and always call your bank before traveling to make sure they do not charge a fee for taking out cash from a foreign bank.
Photo by: billadler
Many travelers use Twitter, not only to stay in touch back home, but also to reach out to other travelers to get tips and information. It turns out that many of my friends from home have done plenty of traveling and many of them have traveled to places we're now visiting. They told us of their favorites, their 'hits' and 'misses' and their do's and don'ts. Some of them have even taken the time to send us emails on the road as we near their travel niche - thanks guys!! .
Gillian and Jason, One Giant Step
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I find that shopkeepers give me better service and are more willing to negotiate with me when they see that I'm making an effort
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General
Learn a Few Foreign Words for Your Trip
Most locals do not expect us to speak their language fluently, but when I use a few simple words in their native tongue here and there, I am rewarded with a smile. Of course, I will never know whether the smile is due to appreciation or glee caused by my mispronunciation, but either way they're amused. Maybe it's my imagination, but I find that I am more apt to get the directions I request and that shopkeepers give me better service and are more willing to negotiate with me when they see that I'm making an effort. My husband and I once witnessed a street vendor in southern France charge a brash Australian man 25% more for the ham and cheese sandwich we helped him order. This man's reverse discount can be attributed to his bold assumption that he does not need to try to speak one word of French in order to get Photo by: Talekinker service. It goes without saying that these words -- hello, please and thank you -- are the rock-bottom minimum words you should know. Your experience in a new country improves with each word or phrase you learn. .
Diana, Dutch Baby
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Too many people overlook the simple things while traveling, and through simple things, much can be learned
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General
Take Time to People Watch
I have the luxury of living in a foreign country so I get to see how people live on a daily basis. However, for my first few weeks here I didn't notice many things because I didn't take the time to just look around. I found if you just take some time to look around, you can learn a lot. My tip is to take a few minutes, grab a coffee, tea, or your beverage of choice, and find a place to sit and relax to just people watch. I have found a corner Starbucks at a busy intersection where I can watch people not only walk down the street but, I can also see them crossing the street. I think you can learn a lot by simply watching how people cross the street. Do they wait for the light to go? Do they run or walk slowly? Do they drag their children behind them? Do they bump into each other, or do they show some courtesy? This does not even take Photo by: db*Photography into account how they drive where you are. So take some time, chill out, relax, and learn a little. Too many people overlook the simple things while traveling, and through simple things, much can be learned. .
Eric, A Man Nowhere
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If you are traveling alone and you get grilled with personal questions, you DON'T HAVE to answer these questions
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General
Don't Answer Every Question
As a solo female traveler, safety is always a concern for me. So when I was in Bali and a local guy asked me where I was staying, my 'safety radar' immediately switched on and I said "I'm not going to tell you that!" As I continued to travel, I realized that being questioned is part of being a traveler. I was constantly being asked very personal questions: How old are you? Where are you from? Where are you staying? Are you traveling alone? Are you married? Are you with friends? These questions tend to happen more frequently in developing countries for some reason. I think the cul ture and personal space issues tend to be quite different than our western culture. Plus, many of these Photo by: Sherry locals don't know much English and these types of sentences tend to be the first and only thing they learn so that's why they ask them. I can remember teaching all of my ESL students the phrases "Are you married?" and "How old are you?" Yet these are things I generally don't ask people! Regardless, if you are traveling alone and you get grilled with personal questions, you DON'T HAVE to answer these questions. In fact, assess the situation and use your head. If you don't want people to know where you are staying then don't answer the questions. Instead, start asking the person other things about their country or area. They are normally happy to share information about their country and culture, and you've changed the subject. .
Sherry, Ottsworld
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Knowing 'hello', 'thank you' and 'this is delicious' go a long way towards endearing you to the people you meet
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General
You Can Communicate Without a Common Language
Don't let the lack of a common language prevent you from engaging the people you meet! A smile and a nod go a long way. With a lot of patience and the ability to laugh at yourself, you can force your way through the language barrier. That's not to say it's not a good idea to pick up a few words of the local language. As a matter of fact, knowing 'hello', 'thank you' and 'this is delicious' go a long way towards endearing you to the people you meet. In a country where the local dialect differs from the official language (say, in Shanghai, where Mandarin is the official language but Shanghainese is the local dialect,) you'll entice a few belly laughs and big grins by saying 'thank you' in the local lingo rather than the official language.
Seventy percent of communication is non-verbal, as the saying goes. You may not be able to hold deep philosophical conversations this way, but you can still connect with your fellow humans on a personal, fundamental level. Try it! .
Daniel, Backpack Foodie
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Even better, and absolutely foolproof so far, is to call the place on your cellphone and put your driver on the line
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General
Don't Assume Taxi Drivers Ever Know Where They're Going
Even if they use navigation system, taxi drivers may not know where they're going. Through work and even voluntarily, I go to weird places. Really weird places. The last one I went to, off the industrial harbour of Incheon, I'd have benefitted from using a 4-wheel drive vehicle - quite the achievement in over-urbanized Korea. A few things will help you reach your destination. Try writing down (or better, print, as penmanships are quite culture-dependent and could confuse your driver) the name and address of your destination. Better yet, bring a map, either from the internet or from whoever is meeting you at your arrival point. Even better, and absolutely foolproof so far, is to call the place on your cellphone and put your driver on the line. This method has been a lifesaver many times when the taxi and I did not Photo by: kevindooley share a common language and they could not read the latin alphabet. .
Aelle , Aelle Around the World
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Main Index
General
Learn to Appreciate Your Partner's Travel Style
Learn to appreciate your mate's travel style. No, I don't mean his crazy Hawaiian shirts. I mean the way he likes to travel. For instance, my partner is a planner and I'm more of the spontaneous type. If we didn't give each other a little leeway on this, we'd be fighting even if we were in paradise (in fact, we have fought about this in both Paris and Maui). When you both adapt a little, you'll both have a great time - whether you are in Topeka or Timbuktu.
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All my hospital bills were reimbursed in full because I listened to my mother and got travel MEDICAL insurance
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General
Get Travel Medical Insurance
Assume everything will go wrong. Assume you will lose your passport. Assume you might need emergency surgery that will end up costing you $35,000. I haven't lost my passport yet, but I did need emergency surgery in Switzerland. As a foreigner, they estimated the cost of my surgery just before they wheeled me into the operating room and made me pay up front. So I charged it on my credit card. Thanking my lucky stars, all my hospital bills were reimbursed in full because I listened to my mother and got travel MEDICAL insurance. Read the fine print too -- just travel insurance probably won't cover medical expenses, and make sure you get comprehensive coverage if you are doing sporting activities. A few other bits of advice: 1. Learn how to drive stick shift. Automatic is a very American thing. 2. I fear motorcycles, but being familiar with motorbikes comes in handy in many cases, especially when visiting islands. 3. Bring earplugs for the plane and train (it seems like I'm always sitting next to the screaming baby). .
Adrienne, Gastroanthropology
Photo by: tm-tm
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Main Index
General
Try Not to Look Like a Tourist
Try not to look like a tourist. Take a map, but never look at it in public. This will automatically mark you as a tourist, therefore leaving you open to harassment by vendors, drivers, and anyone else. Don't EVER wear the typical American tourist outfit - hat, polo shirt (tucked in), khakis/jeans, sneakers, and a fanny pack of some sort. Or any kind of shirt with one of the other places you've visited on it, much less the location you are currently visiting. Again, it will automatically mark you as a tourist.
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I've scored $200 a night four star hotels for under $75
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Accommodation
Use Priceline to Find the Cheapest Deals
When I shop around for hotels/car rentals, I don't think there is any better place than Priceline to find the cheapest deal. Before I make a blind bid I log on to BiddingForTravel.com to see what other people's luck was with their bids. Their message boards shows how much people paid, for which date and will give you a pretty good idea which hotel you will end up with. I've scored $200 a night four star hotels for under $75. Keep in mind that if you cancel you won't get a refund.
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In many places of interest in Europe and further afield, you'll find convents and monasteries that provide excellent accommodation at budget prices
Photo by: (Bill and Mavis)
Main Index
Accommodation
Stay in a Monastery, Convent or Religious Guest House
In many places of interest in Europe and further afield, you'll find convents and monasteries that provide excellent accommodation at budget prices. This is not a secret amongst those with religious affiliations who are visiting as part of a pilgrimage, but others may not realise they can stay in accommodation that is so central, well priced and often in beautiful. historic buildings. Two examples of this are the Residenza Madri Pie where I stayed in Rome, which is a stone's throw from St Peter's Square, and professionally run, with excellent facilities such as a lovely garden and Photo by: Heather parking. You can find other religious accommodation in Rome and other Italian cities listed on the Santa Susanna website. Another was the Monastery of St Anthony of Qozhaya where I stayed for a night in June, while touring Lebanon with a friend. The Monastery is one of the places of interest in the UNESCO World Heritage Quadisha Valley, a rocky gorge with rock hewn churches, and grottos. This is a most beautiful place to stay and one that wasn't featured in my guidebook, but you can easily contact the monastery directly to book into their guest house. Of course, as a Catholic I feel at home staying in this kind of accommodation, and if you're looking for a party time on that backpacking round the world trip, then this won't be for you, but otherwise if you want simple, homely and moderately priced accommodation then give it a try. I've just ordered the Good Night, God Bless book with details of this kind of accommodation throughout Europe where I hope to find a few more hidden gems like these. .
Heather, Heather on her Travels
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As well as using Hospitality Club to meet the locals, when you've hosted a few people, you'll have a long list of invites from friends you've made who can't wait to show you their city
Photo by: (Bill and Mavis)
Main Index
Accommodation
Use Social Networking Sites to Meet Locals
For over a year I've been a member of Hospitality Club, a network of travellers who enjoy meeting other travellers and can offer free accommodation or advice. There are other well known sites like Couchsurfing that offer a similar service. It's no secret really that using these websites is a great way to find free accommodation when you're travelling on a budget. But the thing I believe is less well known is that you can join Hospitality Club, even if you don't plan to use it to find accommodation but just as a means of meeting the locals. I'm happy to have people to stay for a couple of days in my spare room, but to be honest, I'd rather find a nice hotel or pension to stay in comfort. But what I love is to be able to e-mail someone and say - "Hey I'll be in your city next weekend, can we meet up for drinks or dinner". That's how I met up with Sergio and Marco on our recent weekend in Lisbon - we'd visited the Castelo of So Jorge and then went for tea at their appartment nearby and talked about the things they love to do in Lisbon, how the city is changing and even got a tour of a little flat above theirs that we could rent if we wanted to come again.
Photo by: Heather
And as well as using Hospitality Club to meet the locals, when you've hosted a few people, you'll have a long list of invites from friends you've made, who can't wait to show you their city. I now have to find ways to visit Cologne, Malaga and Cagliari next year, and that's just from the folks I've met in the last couple of months. .
Heather, Heather on her Travels
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There is something comforting and grounding about having an apartment in a strange city
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Accommodation
Rent Serviced Apartments
Rent serviced apartments when staying for longer periods in a location. This is the one tip that I can't stress enough. Traveling is hard work, and there are times when sleeping in one more dorm or mediocre guesthouse may cause you to attempt chewing your arm off. There is something comforting and grounding about having an apartment in a strange city. You get to know the neighbourhood and markets. Eating at restaurants and hawker stalls can get old, so to be able to make a home-cooked meal with fabulous local ingredients is like chicken soup to the soul. We rented apartments in Italy, Turkey, and Spain. All were stylish, comfortable and fully stocked. They all had a washing machine (Hallelujah!!) and *gasp* one even had a dryer! And the best part, if you take for a week or more you can negotiate for a Photo by: sashafatcat price and we have gotten some amazing deals. These are some sites we used to find apartments: www.homeaway.com and www.homelidays.com. .
Lisa, Project Runaway
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Main Index
Accommodation
Live with Host Families
While many do stay with locals when they travel, study or work abroad, the most I ever learned about travel came while living under the roofs of the people who call those destinations home. When I was 18, I lived with four Italian women in Sorrento, the Santostasi family. My Italian quickly improved, but not fully. I still remember one of the Santostasi's friends making fun of my pronunciation of uscire, Italian for "to go out." I mastered the verb and returned to live with an elderly Florentine couple in Florence for a semester. Breakfasts, lunches and dinners turned into Italian conversation classes. I learned more about Italy, the Italians and their culture in those two settings than I ever did in a classroom. If you have the option abroad to stay with locals, do it. Put your privacy concerns aside. These locals will introduce you Photo by: Suzy to travel secrets about their part of the world, while giving you family outside of your home. This can be the perfect cure for homesickness on the road. .
Suzy, Suzy Guese
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Consider hostels if you are taking a week-long trip to Europe. Or even to a big city in the United States
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Accommodation
Hostel Accommodation
The world is in a recession. Folks are being laid off or worried about hanging on to what they have. Does that mean that you don't travel for the next year? Two years? Five years? Whenever the global recession ends? What happens if it takes ten years? Can't wait forever... Which brings me to HOSTELS. Longtime loyal readers know this is how I traveled around the world. But consider hostels if you are taking a week-long trip to Europe. Or to a big city in the United States. Why are you paying $200 for a hotel room when the majority of your time in the room will be spent sleeping, showering or brushing your teeth? Remember the last time you were in a hotel? What did you do there? Not much, I'm betting.
My favorite hostel when I traveled: Lub'd (means 'sleep well' in Thai) in Bangkok. Great modern look, fantastic location that is close to everything (but not so close that it keeps you up at night), bar on the ground floor, A/C in every room and a friendly staff. .
Brian, No Debt World Travel
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Before making your final purchase, google the hotel/airline name with the words "discount coupon code
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Budget
Secret Travel Discounts
Once you've determined which hotel or airline you wish to book through, before making your final purchase, google the hotel/airline name with the words "discount coupon code." You will often discover an additional discount that can be applied at the time of making the online reservation. For example, I just googled "discount coupon code hotels" and found RetailMeNot.com, which provided codes for 15% off Hilton Hotels and 20% off the lowest rates at Best Westerns, among other deals. (TIP: this works well for all online shopping, from Amazon.com to individual stores like Crabtree & Evelyn, and there are numerous sites that search the Internet and display all these discounts on a single site.) .
Photo by: Bramus!
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Make sure when planning your budget that you leave flexibility
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Budget
Don't Be a Budget Slave
It's no secret that I have had trouble with our budget, but I have realized that letting it rule our travel would be a mistake. Certainly there is always a budget, but there is usually a little flex room - we're just using that flex room. Make sure when planning your budget that you leave this flex - it can make the difference between being a budget slave and a happy traveler!
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Many organizations know their raffle prizes ahead of time and will happily tell you to pique your interest
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Budget
Enter a Charity Travel Raffle and Be Creative
For years we've attended the summer food-and-wine fundraiser for a wonderful organization: the Los Angeles Free Clinic. (We think it's a great idea to provide free - or at least affordable - health care to the working poor.) Their summer fundraiser, a literal extravaganza of food and wine excess, generally costs about $150 for both of us. One year, I saw that the big raffle prize was a trip to Paris (Air France flights and a stay at the Four Seasons Hotel George V) and decided to enter us into the big prize raffle for an additional $100, paying by credit card via fax.
I took a few extra minutes to doodle all over said fax page, scribbling cartoon renderings of Parisian monuments on every bit of white space. I also wrote "Oooh la la!" and "Oui, sil vous plait!" and, well, there was more, but you get it - I'm a dork. My reasoning was this: Whoever was on the other side of that fax machine was sitting in a busy, humorless office piled high with pieces of white paper. And who doesn't love a little funny in their day? Flash forward several weeks, and we were declared the winners! For $250, we had just nabbed that warm feeling you get from doing good, a fabulous horde of treats and the means to a kick-ass vacation. Surely there's an organization in your town that you admire? Do a little web research, make a call, see what events are out there. Many organizations know their raffle prizes ahead of time and will happily tell you to pique your interest. Who knows how far this could take you? .
Melanie, Travels With Two
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A bare-bones camping set-up can really enhance your journey and take some stress off your pocketbook
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Camping
Camping May Be an Option
Now, this really depends on the length of your trip and the destinations you have in mind, but a bare-bones camping set-up can really enhance your journey and take some stress off your pocketbook. For my upcoming RTW trip, I'm bringing a light one-man tent, an ultralight sleeping bag, and a slim Therm-a-Rest sleeping pad. By lurking around eBay and such, I paid a total of $350 for all of it, and it weighs less than seven pounds together. I will certainly be lugging all of this unused through many countries, but at other times I think it will come in quite handy. During an earlier trip through Italy, I camped one kilometer from the heart of Sienna for $12 a night and then spent a week at the water's edge on the coast of Sicily, drinking red wine and skinny-dipping at night while Mt. Etna glowed and rumbled in the distance. I spent two weeks camping one kilometer from Central Station in Amsterdam for less than the price of a hostel. All of these campsites had showers, laundry, and snack bars. On my next trip, I hope to spend a week camping on the Lido near Venice for about $15 a night and taking the vaperetto into the city in the morning. Other camping possibilities for this trip: Greece, trekking in Nepal, National Parks in any country, the Andes in South America, Central America, and the occasional "oh shit, I'm stuck in the middle of nowhere" moment.
Photo by: wili_hybrid
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This book is genius...it provides detailed maps and descriptions of campgrounds in a super easy-to-use format
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Camping
Ask Tom
Tom is my new very favorite best travel secret -- or not so secret. Some of my friends have their Tom-Toms, I have my Tom, or so I affectionately refer to my Moon Outdoors California Camping Guide: The Complete Guide to More Than 1,400 Tent and RV Campgrounds. It's written by Tom Stienstra, which is the whole reason I know about it (and, coincidentally, the reason I call it Tom). At a seminar last year Tom said, "Here's the situation. You're planning on going to a campground. You show up, it's full. What do you do? If you have this guide, you look up the area and find dozens of others nearby." At the time I thought, "Self promotion." I knew it was a necessary tool, but it wasn't going to get me to buy the book. Then I happened upon it in a bookstore and bought it on a whim. The next road trip I thanked Tom Photo by: Carina about a million times. This book is genius. It provides detailed maps and descriptions of campgrounds in a super easy-to-use format so you end up somewhere at 4 pm and go, "Where should we stay tonight?" Look at the book and you've got ten options! It gave my road trip an entirely different feel than any other I'd been on. And the best part, there are more of them! I'm not sure just how many, but I know he covers at least the West Coast with these awesome guides. Buy one for yourself or for a travelling, camping buddy. You won't regret it. .
Carina, My Miss Adventures
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Spend the money for a GPS or any device that will allow you to leave a breadcrumb trail (so you can confidently return to where you began)
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Driving
Spend the Money on a GPS
Spend the money for a GPS or any device that will allow you to leave a breadcrumb trail (so you can confidently return to where you began). For one day of your trip, take your wallet/purse, the GPS and a camera, leave your maps and guidebooks in the hotel room, and hit the streets. For an even more intense rush, leave your camera behind as well. Leaving the camera behind takes the most guts. No guts, no travel glories.
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Main Index
Driving
Take a Weekend Road Trip Within Your Home Country
Take a weekend road trip and stay within your county of residence.
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The best way to save on costs is to ship your bags ahead of time with FedEx, UPS, or a dedicated luggage-shipping company
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Flying
The Truth About Checked Bags
I have always said there are two kinds of luggage: carry-on and lost. But today, we're in even deeper trouble when we have to pay the airlines just so they can lose our luggage! There is a way around it. I haven't checked a bag on a domestic flight in more than ten years. Instead, I courier them. Before you start complaining about the costs, consider how much your time is worth. I save an average of two-and-a-half hours on every domestic flight: no schlepping bags to the airport, no waiting in line to check my bags, and certainly no waiting around the conveyer belt to see if they made it through. Instead, my bags are shipped door-to-door.
The best way to save on costs is to ship your bags ahead of time with FedEx, UPS, or a dedicated luggage-shipping company. A 40-pound bag shipped cross country with FedEx Ground's four-business-day service costs about $45. With UPS, it's about $50. Dedicated luggage shipping companies such as Luggage Forward and Luggage Concierge can be a little pricier, but they take the guesswork out of it and offer shipping guarantees and insurance policies. Shipping abroad can be prohibitively expensive, but for domestic travel, it's the only way I fly. .
Peter, Peter Greenberg Worldwide
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The best time to buy airline tickets is Wednesday morning at 12:01 a.m. (i.e. late Tuesday night), in the time zone where the airline's main base is located
Photo by: caribb
Main Index
Flying
Best Day and Time to Book Airline Tickets
The best time to buy airline tickets is Wednesday morning at 12:01 a.m. (i.e. late Tuesday night), in the time zone where the airline's main base is located. Sound crazy? Here's how it works: Airlines are still in the business of matching the fare discounts of their competitors, so if one airline starts a fare war, the others usually follow suit, and almost immediately. That usually begins on Friday, when an airline announces it's lowering fares on specific routes. Then competitors match it. That starts the undercutting, the matching and more undercutting. By Sunday night, the fares will probably bottom out. When you book a fare, you're given until 11:59 the next night to the purchase it, and that's where 12:01 am Wednesday comes in. All the folks who booked discount tickets on Monday have until 11:59pm on Tuesday night to purchase them. And at one minute after midnight on Wednesday morning, all the fares that were not purchased come flooding back into the airline's computers.
Photo by:
In the next two hours, that's when you strike -- NOT on the Internet, but by calling the airline directly. The notion that ALL discount fares are on the Internet is a myth. It's only the fares the airlines want to put in the web. And at one minute after midnight, a human being on the other end of the phone is your best bet. .
Peter, Peter Greenberg Worldwide
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You will be surprised how incredible your service will be and your seatmate will think you are a rock star
Main Index
Flying
Be Nice to Everyone
My best advice is to always be nice to everyone: reservation agents, gate agents, flight attendants, hotel clerks, etc. These people have the power to make or break your trip and a genuine smile goes a long way. To go one step beyond a smile, always carry a box of chocolates in your carry-on. I usually have two: one for the gate agent and the other for the flight crew. It doesn't have to be a bulky or expensive gift; lately I've been bringing an easy to pack bag of Hershey Kisses or mini Reese's Peanut Butter Cups (who doesn't love them?). The moment I step on board I say, "I got you guys a present!" Then I tell them I know how hard they work and how demanding some passengers can be so here's a little treat. You will be surprised how incredible your service will be and your seatmate will think you are a rock star. NOTE: Photo by: Richard.Asia If you aren't sincere or high maintenance, don't even bother - people can see right through you. .
Johnny, Johnny Jet's Travel Blog
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Why go to a museum when you can see great art at the airport?
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Flying
Hidden Artwork at Airports
Why go to a museum when you can see great art at the airport? Many airports have great collections and some of that art gets put in unusual places. In the baggage claim at Austin Bergstrom International Airport, the ladies room has several styles of "big hair" etched onto the mirror. In the men's room, it's hats. Try 'em on by standing in different spots in front of the mirror. The artwork is by Jill Bedgood. Two giant murals by Brazilian artist Caryb that had been in the old American Airlines terminal at JFK since 1960 were scheduled to be destroyed along with the building. A chance conversation between a Photo by: albany_tim Brazil-bound passenger and a skycap saved the murals, which can now be seen at Miami International Airport. At Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, Ross Palmer Beecher's pop-can quilts hang in several concourse restrooms. There are also six "Talking Fountains" by Jim Green scattered throughout the airport. .
Harriet , Stuck at the Airport
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I splurged on a Priority Pass before I left for my travels, and it gives me access to over 600 first-class lounges worldwide
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Flying
Get a Priority Pass Card
I am currently writing this post from the first-class lounge in Qatar, even though I only fly economy. Why? Because I splurged on a Priority Pass before I left for my travels, and it gives me access to over 600 first-class lounges worldwide. I do not always make use of the card. When travelling with others, when I don't have much time before boarding or when I want to sit back and people watch, I keep it in my wallet. However, these lounges translate into an endless supply of free food, magazines, newspapers, coffee, WiFi, spotless bathrooms and sometimes even a shower. And when you have eight hours to kill in an airport with few amenities, all of the aforementioned will be extremely exciting to you. At $99-$350 per year (depending on the membership you choose) the card is certainly not cheap. However, everyone has a splurge -- be it a night in a fancy hotel after months of hostels, expensive dinners or drinks, or clothes -- and this one is mine. I've found that it has more than paid its way over the course of my long-haul flights, and it has provided an oasis of calm and quiet during those times where I was too exhausted to think straight. An extra bonus: being the small, trailrunner-clad backpacker in a sea of business suits. Please let the record reflect that the hummus and lentil soup at Qatar's lounge are delicious. .
Jodi, Legal Nomads
Photo by: JAGwired
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What makes Kayak different from other sites is that instead of being a booking engine it's a crawling engine, searching hundreds of different airlines and booking pages to find the absolute best itinerary and deal for your flight choices
Photo by: caribb
Main Index
Flying
Kayak Search Engine
Kayak is the only website out there that I use to purchase plane tickets. What makes Kayak different from other sites is that instead of being a booking engine it's a crawling engine, searching hundreds of different airlines and booking pages to find the absolute best itinerary and deal for your flight choices. Kayak also has features that tell you if the same itinerary has been searched for in your specific month (round-trip only) and what prices were found most recently. They also have a feature to find the cheapest destinations per continent from your home location on your chosen travel date. These are great tools, but what gets me going back to Kayak time and time again is the fact that I have never seen a price cheaper for international flights on any booking engine, anywhere, ever. Most of my friends don't believe Photo by: (nutmeg) me when I quote round-trip prices to Europe for $700 when they spent over $1200, and I have also converted my brother, who is an avid traveler to be and now a Kayak believer. Check them out. I guarantee they'll save you some money on your next plane ticket. .
Jeremy, Living the Dream
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Send your hotel the link or the PDF file of your e-ticket via email and ask them to print it for you
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Flying
Print Your Boarding Pass
Here's one of my favourite tips. E-tickets are the norm nowadays so it's easy to check in online before heading to the airport and it saves you quite a bit of time, especially without luggage to check in. If you've checked in using your laptop or mobile phone at your hotel and you have no access to a printer, save the link or the PDF file of your boarding pass. Then check out the hotel stationery for their email address. Send them the link or the PDF file via email and ask them to print it for you. Call the reception to let them know and ask to have your boarding pass ready when you check out. Works like a charm!
Photo by: alex-s
Keith, Velvetescape
Hydrate Yourself
Long haul flights are not always the most comfortable if you're not flying Business or First Class. What I've found most useful is to have my own bottled water with me so that I have instant access to water without having to call for it. I even tend to drink more than necessary when on long flights because of the dehydrating cabin air.
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Main Index
Gear
Bring a Dry Bag
If we were to provide one recommended piece of gear that might not be so obvious for long-term travel ,we would say to be sure to bring a dry bag. With its waterproof properties, a dry bag is essential. Its uses go well beyond keeping important stuff like laptops and cameras dry. We carry three dry bags with us. The two smaller ones are great for protecting our laptop and camera while traveling between destinations and also work great as beach and day bags. The larger, 20-liter bag is the most versatile. Its primary function is as a way to pack all of our liquids in our packs to ensure that if the bottles open they do not create a mess. One of the best uses for this large dry bag, however, is for laundry. When traveling for extended periods, it's often necessary to do your laundry by hand. Several attempts at doing laundry Photo by: Keith and Amy in our washroom sinks resulted in clothing that was only sort of clean and in a very messy and wet washroom. So we took to using the waterproof properties of the dry bag to do laundry. Simply add dirty clothes, laundry soap, and hot water. Seal up the bag and shake vigorously for 10-15 minutes. After a good agitation, drain the dirty water and refill the bag with clean hot water for a rinse "cycle." Not only do your clothes get much, much cleaner than hand washing in the sink, your washroom will not be a sopping wet mess. .
Keith and Amy, Green Around the Globe
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Main Index
Gear
Duct Tape is Your Best Friend
Oh, the many uses of duct tape. I've taped up the rips in my pack cover, incurred when my bag fell out of a bus and was dragged quite a ways before the bus driver heard me yelling at him to stop. I've taped up holes in the window screens in just about every country in Asia (mosquitos: 0; Jodi: 1). I've taped up the leaks in my tents on a variety of camping trips. I've taped up the hole that something chewed in my sleeping bag while I slept -- a hole that I discovered in the morning when I woke up awash in a synthetic, white fuzz. And finally, I taped up the cord to this very computer when rats chewed through it in several places in El Nido, The Philippines -- a cord that took a whole town to help me repair. You get my point: duct tape is important. To bring it with me, I wind it around itself until I get a decent sized roll. That way I Photo by: Jodi don't have to lug the whole large roll with cardboard centre around. When trekking with poles, I wrap the duct tape around the poles instead. You can also use a pencil. Bottom line: don't leave home without it. .
Jodi, Legal Nomads
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Main Index
Gear
The Wonderful Versatility of the Galabaya
The galabaya is the traditional Arab dress. It comes in different styles and goes by different names, but essentially it's a loose, flowing robe. A man-dress, if you will. Or if you are a woman, just a dress. Now, many people think galabayas are only for Ray Ban-sporting oil sheikhs and peasant farmers. Not true. The secret is, they're great for travelling. It all comes down to comfort, dignity and style. Galabayas are incredibly comfortable, and the ultimate lounging attire. If you don't fancy getting dressed up to mooch around your hotel or hostel, you don't have to. You can sleep in it (and won't have to worry about your modesty if you need to leg it to the toilet in the middle of the night). If it's cold, you can put Photo by: Nick one on over your other clothes as an extra, efficient layer of insulation. If it's hot and sweaty, and you've been slapped on the inner thigh with a bout of prickly heat, the last thing you want is clothing that's going to chafe you raw. Slip on your galabaya, and let it all hang loose. Galabayas are also great for helping to preserve your dignity. You can use it as a top layer that allows you to get dressed or undressed in public, without flashing your privates everywhere. If you are in the great outdoors and need the toilet, you can squat down and do your business without anyone copping an eyeful. (Note, remove your underwear first!) If you are at the beach, or by or on a river or lake, you can stick your swimming stuff on underneath. Whip your galabaya off when you want to jump in the water, and put it on again when you get out and want to cover up. Note, a sarong is emphatically not as good as a galabaya for this. Sarongs - take it from me - fall down. Galabayas don't. Finally, how many times have you been on the road, and ended up getting dragged along to some impromptu fancy dress party? Come on, we all know it happens. Well, with a galabaya, you'll never be stuck for a costume again. The Moroccan style ones with a hood are best. Monk, wizard, Jedi knight, ghost... the sky's the limit! .
Nick , Delicious Chaos
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I've used them a coffee filter, as a doo-rag to protect my bald head from the sun, as a mask in dust storms, and as a tourniquet when my arm was bitten off by a shark
Photo by: TheGiantVermin
Main Index
Gear
The Ultimate Travel Accessory, the Bandana
This is a simple one. Bring several of these bad boys - they can really save your butt at times. I've used them a coffee filter, as a doo-rag to protect my bald head from the sun (or hold in heat when it's chilly), as a mask in dust storms, and as a tourniquet when my arm was bitten off by a shark. True story google it (please don't). Run out of toilet paper? You'll be glad you brought extras.
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I love having a reason to go into a local, non-touristy drugstore to buy toothpaste or mouthwash
Main Index
Health
Buy Local Toiletries
Even before we were restricted to only one zip-lock bag of liquids, I never tried to pack all my toiletries for extended trips. I love having a reason to go into a local, non-touristy drugstore to buy toothpaste or mouthwash. I enjoy entertaining the local shopkeepers when I try to converse with my hands and feet while pointing to my spent toothpaste tube. When I get home, my Swiss dental floss sends me back to our memorable ride on the Golden Panorama train, and I have a good time trying to decipher the words on my Italian toothpaste tube.
Photo by: ellenm1
*like all remedies, even natural ones, do consult your doctor before using tea tree oil.
Francoise, Cult of Travel
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When you are traveling for a great length of time you are bound to get sick or hurt, it's just the law of averages
Main Index
Health
Be Prepared in Body and Mind
The Boy Scout motto is "Be Prepared." For the Scouts, this means in body and in mind. "In body" means to make yourself strong and active. For traveling that also includes staying healthy. "In mind" means thinking about potential situations and being prepared for them. When you are traveling for a great length of time you are bound to get sick or hurt, it's just the law of averages. We tend to like adventure and adventurous food so this is the contents of our emergency supply kit: Charcoal tablets to relieve flatulence, gassy bloating, heartburn and upset stomachs. Buscopan to relax the cramped muscles of the digestive tract, and therefore relieve the spasms that cause abdominal pain. Photo by: iStock Dramamine to prevent nausea and motion sickness. Claritin for allergies. Electrolyte drink powder. Penicillin. Throat Lozenges. Ibuprofen. Baby Wipes - the bathrooms in Asia can be shocking so these are always handy to have. Toilet Paper - see above! Hand Sanitizer - also part of above! Most importantly - a bottle of spirits 'XXX', research shows that it helps fight food poisoning and boredom. .
Lisa, Project Runaway
Tiger Balm
I do not joke. At my.. ahem.. place in life, muscle pulls and neck kinks occur rapidly, taking time to heal. Long days on the road punctuated by grueling walks in search of shelter and sustenance can aggravate physical ailments. This miracle in a jar can fit in a pocket, and only a dab is needed to alleviate aches or pains. Have a relaxing shower, and massage in this soothing, mint infused liniment before bedtime. I guarantee, you'll sleep like a baby does with thumb tucked in your mouth, soundly and deeply.
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I've always found it useful to get enough sleep -- whether on the flight or at the destination
Main Index
Health
Wake up Feeling Rested
While travelling is of course exciting and most want to cover as many places of interest as possible in the time they have, I've always found it useful to get enough sleep -- whether on the flight or at the destination. I get so much more out of the visit if I wake up fully rested and raring to go rather than completely jet lagged with my system out of sync. If I'm tired it dampens the senses and the information they receive when experiencing something new.
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Those Ziploc bags for your 3.4 oz liquids are fantastic and for virtually anything the travel gods might throw at you
Main Index
Packing
Ziploc Bags Are My Holy Grail
Ziploc bags are my Holy Grail. I knew one day I'd turn into my mother. Because I lack an appreciable degree of organizational skills, I had to learn how to keep my shit together as a traveling mom. Winging it is fine when you're flying solo. But there's something about maternal instinct (and fear of arrest) that makes you straighten up mighty quick for your child's well-being. Enter TSA and their anti-terrorism measures. Those Ziploc bags for your 3.4 oz liquids are fantastic and for virtually anything the travel gods might throw at you. I use them to group: first-aid items, lip balm and sunscreen, barrettes or scrunchies, pens, Photo by: alibaba.com business cards or notes, remnant soap pieces (because there are always soapless bathrooms on the road), important papers, sugar or lemon packets, loose napkins and electronic devices. I've used the smaller ones to separate shampoo and body wash when I didn't want to take any bottles at all on a day trip.I've even seen them used as drinking containers when cups or bottles weren't available. Sure, that sounds like a third-world Camelpack, but at the end of the day it's all about survival of the fittest.Yes, this means I have dozens of Ziploc bags on me during travel, but I don't care. The ease gained when rummaging through a stuffed backpack is so worth it. I suppose there might be a way to color-code the bags in order to speed up retrieval, but really, I'm not that OCD... .
Catherine , Mischief and Impermanent Bliss
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I know it's easy for me to say to not pack your hair straightener or makeup or five pairs of shoes...but trust me, you will be happier without these things if you are doing long-term travel
Photo by: Dr John2005
Main Index
Packing
Leave Your Vanity Behind
Since I've been back in NYC after being on the road for 15 months, I've been reflecting a lot on how I've evolved. More than three years ago, I was a hip business professional working for international retailers. I had more shoes, clothes, and handbags than there were days of the year to wear them; my life was about vanity. When I started traveling, I had a hard time accepting my new backpacker style. I tried to hang on to my vanity; I had a hair dryer and make-up in my backpack for the first few months...then I just let it go...and it felt great. I know it's easy for me to say to not pack your hair straightener or makeup or five pairs of shoes...but trust me, you will be happier without these things if you are doing long-term travel. You may find yourself feeling more free than ever - I did. I got comfortable seeing my face without Photo by: Sherry make-up, my hair without hair products, and flat shoes instead of heels. If you feel like you still want a bit of 'flash' when you travel, then I suggest that you add flash to an average outfit by accessorizing - jewelry is small and can be the focal point of an outfit. So are pashminas. Both of these things are plentiful in many developing countries for cheap...so just buy them there and don't carry them in your bag! Plus, it supports the locals win/win for everyone! .
Sherry, Ottsworld
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I travel with one backpack no matter how long I'm going to be gone, and it has saved my skin more than once
Main Index
Packing
Pack Light
Pack light. We probably won't be the only people to say this. I used to be the one at the airport with the big roller bag, more clothes than I could possibly wear ("but I need options!"), and books/iPod/magazines/food for the flight. Jeesh! Now I travel with one backpack no matter how long I'm going to be gone, and it has saved my skin more than once. Flight delayed or connection canceled? No problem; my bags aren't on the plane. I'm the easiest one to rebook. Tired after a long day of flying? I can bypass baggage claim and go straight for ground transportation. Feeling the need to overpack or overbuy once I get there? Hard to do with the limited space. It forces me to only buy the stuff I really want instead of everything that catches my eye.
Photo by: Stacy Bass
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I suggest stashing a few in every size (they take up next to no space) and keeping them handy while you're on the road
Main Index
Packing
Travel the World with Ziplocs
I never travel without Ziploc bags anymore. I suggest stashing a few in every size (they take up next to no space) and keeping them handy while you're on the road. I tend to pack smaller clothing items, like socks and bandannas, together in one, then suck out all of the excess air to keep them packed tightly together. I also frequently pack my shirts in a large Ziploc bag, just to reduce the amount of space they take up. Smaller baggies are helpful for keeping loose items - batteries, chargers, extra pens, jump drives contained and in one place. I always carry a few extra to separate items that might spill (like all those Photo by: JoAnna 3-ounce liquids that are allowed through security in the airport), and they also come in handy to bag items that are wet or particularly stinky (let's just say I was eternally thankful to have packed a few large bags on the Inca Trail when my t-shirts started to ripen on their own). .
JoAnna, Kaleidoscopic Wandering
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Main Index
Sightseeing
Independent Shore Excursions
If you've ever thought about cruising, now is the time to do it. Cruise line prices are still bordering on suicidal discounts. But cruiser beware -- cruise lines make their real money once you leave the dock. it's called onboard revenue, and it's substantial. The spa, the casino, the bar, the rock climbing wall, the onboard shopping, the art gallery. And last, but definitely not least, shore excursions are among the largest profit generators on any cruise line. But if you plan correctly, you can -- and you should -- do many of your shore excursions on your own. First, you won't be trapped on a bus being driven to ugly trinket stores. You can see a port at your own pace, and go where you want to go. And you'll save money. Lots of it, especially if you share costs with
another couple. Take the Mendenhall Glacier in Alaska for example. Cruise lines charge at least $40 to tour the glacier. But guess what? The city bus will also take you there! The big drawback is you have to walk a flat 1.5 mile road to the visitor's center. Otherwise, look for local shuttle buses that take you directly from the port to the glacier for about $10. If you're interested in taking a city tour, see if you can get into town on your own. Even in cities like Rome and Athens, where the cruise dock is a good distance from the city center, there is usually a subway or a train. On a Caribbean cruise, the docks are often close to the city center, but find out ahead of time if passengers have to be tendered to and from the ship, which can take about 20 minutes. If you're traveling with a group, you can often save by renting a private car or driver and splitting the costs. Of course, not all experiences are do it yourself. But you also have the option of booking directly with the local operator, or third-party resources like Viator and ShoreTrips.com, which often have more competitive prices. .
Peter, Peter Greenberg Worldwide
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If you are traveling to meet the local population, eat local food, and live in a different culture, then leave your guidebook at home
Main Index
Sightseeing
You Don't Need a Guidebook
You do not need a guidebook: Oh yes, you heard me right. You do not need a guidebook. On this trip and previous ones, across 27 countries, spanning 13 months of combined travel, we have not carried a single guidebook. Guidebooks are great tools for reference but that is all they are: tools. They are not to be used as a step-by-step itinerary. There is no need to carry it, literally, in your hand everyday all day. For every hotel or restaurant that is in the book, there are thousands that are not. And I can guarantee you that nine times out of ten, they will be cheaper, cleaner, and nicer than the ones that are "in the book." Countless times we have seen tourists walking kilometer after kilometer past dozens of restaurants, guidebook in hand, trying to find that one restaurant that's "in the book." But you know who Photo by: Saben and Lindsey eats at the restaurants that are "in the book"? Tourists and only tourists. You know what (most of) the restaurants "in the book" serve: western food. If you want to eat bad spaghetti with a bunch of other foreigners, that's fine. But if you are traveling to meet the local population, eat local food, and live in a different culture, then leave your guidebook at home. .
Saben and Lindsey, Saben and Lin
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Nothing ruins a moment more for me than trying to sit and people-watch or enjoy a monolithic piece of architecture while someone is rambling random facts in my ear
Photo by: Ian....See
Main Index
Sightseeing
You Do Not Need a Guide
Here you are walking into the Taj Mahal or Tikal or The Great Wall and there they are -- an army of guides waiting to fill your head with non-stop useless facts and information for the low low price of $9.95. Sometimes a guide is great and we have had a few fantastic guides (on this trip and others), but we only get a guide when it is required (Tibet, for instance). Some people love going with a guide. They get tons of info and feel like they are learning something about the culture and there is absolutely nothing wrong with that. But I argue the opposite. We hate having a guide. Nothing ruins a moment more for me than trying to sit and people-watch or enjoy a monolithic piece of architecture while someone is rambling random facts in my ear that I don't care about or will forget in ten minutes anyway. If I am further Photo by: Saben and Lindsey interested in a place I visit, I will do a little reading about it before or after my visit, but while I am there I just want to be there and soak up the history and presence without the constant interruption. Secondly, going without a guide gives you such freedom. The guides all have a schedule and they all run the same route but what about all the other stuff not on your guide's itinerary? There are always hidden corners and alleyways, tiny back exhibits and small gardens. These are the beautiful places, not the bare meeting room that you and the 5,000 other tourists are climbing on top of each other to see. Sometimes a guide is a great idea but do take the time, even if it is after your guided tour, to see a place for yourself. I guarantee you will find something special. .
Saben and Lindsey, Saben and Lin
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Not only is it a money saver, but you wind up spending less time on long lines
Main Index
Sightseeing
A City Pass Can Save You Time and Money
While traveling in Rome a few years back with my wife, we decided to purchase a city pass to check out the top attractions. Now while I did feel a bit touristy at first for buying a pass, that soon went away once I realized how much I could see for less. Not only is it a money saver, but you wind up spending less time on long lines. For example, the Colosseum had a line wrapped around it with tourists, but I was able to skip it and enter in the VIP lane due to the pass. What would have been a 40-60 minute wait turned into a manageable 10 minute one instead.
Photo by: Torcello Trio
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By leaving the guide book behind, you can make it a truly unique and personal experience
Main Index
Sightseeing
Leave the Guide Book Behind
Do your research and plan your trip well, but leave your travel books behind. Every time I see a traveller visit a landmark or a museum, open guide book in hand, I cringe at the thought of what they're missing. On a recent visit to the Muse de Cluny in Paris, where medieval tapestries are beautifully displayed in a dimly-lit gallery and a stunning display of ancient stained glass windows fills a darkened room, a tourist walked around carrying a guide book, reading every passage aloud to her friend. When I visit a site, I want to be immersed in the experience. I like to go with the flow of emotions that are stirred within me when I see something new or re-visit a place that I've enjoyed in the past. I like to observe, touch (where Photo by: Ms. Gourmantic possible) and feel. I don't need to be lead on situ by published text. By leaving the guide book behind, you can make it a truly unique and personal experience. .
Ms. Gourmantic, Gourmantic
Photo by:
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Images help to conjure memories, but I've learned that our senses capture the best memories
Main Index
Sightseeing
Put Your Camera Down
I am sometimes so enthralled by a place that I take snapshots from every angle imaginable. Usually it's for my blog, but sometimes it's fear that I'll forget its magic. Images help to conjure memories, but I've learned that our senses capture the best memories. Now I put down my camera and use my five senses to experience. I find a place to sit, take a deep breath and close my eyes. What do I hear and smell? What does the ground under my feet feel like? Give it a try. Trust me, you'll remember the experience a lot better. Then, when you look at the photos later, you'll be reminded of the scents, sounds and feel of the place. .
Photo by: Miles
Keith, Velvetescape
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Front Cover
Main Index
Contributing Authors
This Travel Secrets eBook is the result of a unique collaborative project, the first of its kind to take place on the Internet. It would not have been possible without the amazing community spirit and unrivalled travel knowledge of the talented writers and bloggers listed below. Take a virtual world tour around their inspiring travel blogs. What are your Best Kept Travel Secrets? Join our team of travel writers and become a Travel Secrets Author.
Eric Aelle Candice Francoise Diana Adrienne Keith and Amy Barbara Wes JoAnna Jeremy Betsy Catherine Danielle Jeannie Sherry Nora Rolf Saben and Lindsey Harriet Andrew Melanie Nancy A Man Nowhere Aelle Around the World Candice Does the World Cult of Travel Dutch Baby Gastroanthropology Green Around the Globe Hole in the Donut Johnny Vagabond Kaleidoscopic Wandering Living the Dream Married with Luggage Mischief and Impermanent Bliss My Rose Colored View of This World Nomadic Chick Ottsworld Professional Hobo Rolf Potts' Vagabonding Saben and Lin Stuck at the Airport The Brooklyn Nomad Travels With Two What a Trip Monica Daniel Cheryl Marie Nick Anil Ms. Gourmantic Heather Johnny Linda Jodi Lisa Abbie Carina Brian A Pair of Panties and Boxers Backpack Foodie Cheryl Marie Cordeiro Delicious Chaos Fox Nomad Gourmantic Heather on her Travels Johnny Jet's Travel Blog Jouney Jottings Legal Nomads LL World Tour Miles of Abbie My Miss Adventures No Debt World Travel
Gillian and Jason One Giant Step Peter Peter Greenberg Worldwide Lisa Project Runaway Rowena Rubber Slippers in Italy Tammie Solo Road Trip Suzy Mara Keith Suzy Guese The Mother of All Trips Velvetescape
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