Travel Tips 2014 Edition
I'd like to share a very useful and interesting article I read from CNN.com (click link for the original article) entitled- Doh! 20 Biggest Travel Mistakes by Chuck Thompson (Aug 2013). This is interesting (and lengthy) because most of the points brought up here are actually true (some can be contentious but still useful). Most of the info here are written by CNN's travel team.Disclaimer : I do not own this article and simply sharing this to our travel readers.
Contents
1.
Overpacking
2. Not Buying
Something You Like Soon As You See It
3. Not
Checking Your Phone Plan Before Traveling Abroad
4. Trusting
Near City Center Descriptions
5. Taking
the Super Shuttle
7. Thinking
You Know the Perfect Time to Book A Ticket
8. Trying
Too Hard to Chisel Out A Bargain
9. Not
Changing Money At The Airport
10. Underestimating
The Hell That Is Heathrow
11. Buying
Cheap Flip-Flops
12. Fearing
Street Food
13.
Buying A Drum On The First Day Of A Three-Month Trek Across Asia
14. Over-Reliance
On Guidebooks
15. Not
Buying The Full Insurance Policy
16. Obsessive
Photography
17. Not Checking
Visa Requirements Before Departure
18. Attempting
Berlin In A Weekend
19. Using A
Credit Card To Get Cash
20. Not Printing
Out Reservation Details
1. Overpacking
At
home, with your complete wardrobe available, there's no reason not to run through work, workout and working-the-clubs outfits in a single day.
But
when your life is crammed into a couple bags, your fashion morality changes.
Those
socks you wore on the plane should be good for another go. The
purple tee you slept in ought to be alright for a third wear. Yesterday's
undies? Well ...
According
to a recent survey by Travelodge, two-thirds of travelers typically return from
a trip with at least six unworn outfits.
The
lesson: You don't need a new set of anything for each day of a trip. Figure on
at least two wears for (almost) everything.
2. Not buying something you like as soon as you see it
You
think you're gonna circle back to that shop.
You
think you'll see a cheaper, better version somewhere else.
You
won't.
That
evocative street painting or those Metallica nesting dolls you didn't buy? Now
not having them will haunt you for the rest of your life.
When
you see something you like, just buy it and live without regret.
Note: If you have no issue with your budget then this is fine, but in most cases you'll find that buying at once is not the best practice. Simply because you can get something cheaper- 100% sure.
3. Not checking your phone plan before traveling abroad
What
you call "international roaming" your phone carrier calls
"shareholder dividend!" A
week of texts from Singapore or St. Lucia shouldn't cost more and hurt worse
than open heart surgery. But it happens all the time to travelers who fail to
check their phone plans before departure.
Note: The best way to deal with this is to make sure that your smartphone or whatever gadget capable of Internet is close with you. Phones will be the last resort.
4. Trusting "near city center" descriptions
"Near
city center" is like a Bible verse -- open to vast interpretation.
When
you find the money you saved on your "near city center" hotel is
being spent on 30-minute commutes and outrageous taxi fares, you know you've
committed one of the cardinal sins of travel.
Related
note: Except by purely technical definition, if you're staying near the
convention center in Portland, Oregon, you're decidedly not staying
"downtown" (as is popularly advertised) by any local sensibility.
Note: There's always google maps to check the distance of the hotel from the airport PLUS forums and reviews which can provide vital info. And why not call the hotel directly and ask? Or email perhaps? Just a matter of doing your homework.
5. Taking the "super" shuttle
Wait
on the curb for a ride in a sweat-soaked van and risk being the last one
dropped off on a nine-hotel run, all in the name of saving a few bucks?
Your
time is worth more than that.
Adam
Carolla brilliantly sums up this classic travel blunder in his book, "In
Fifty Years We'll All Be Chicks."
"The
shuttle is the worst $20 you'll ever save. It adds 90 minutes to whatever a
Town Car or cab would have been. You have the unenviable choice between being
dropped off last or being dropped off first and having a bunch of losers who
can't afford cab fare and have no friends or loved ones with cars knowing
exactly where you live."
Note: In addition to taking the taxi, it's wise either to book it in advance with the hotel OR go out walk away from the airport so as not to get ripped off by taxi drivers.
6. Not tightening shampoo caps ... all the way
Those
cute, little trial-size shampoo and conditioner bottles are really handy --
until they magically burst open in-flight, spreading a layer of glycerol soap
snot all over your bag.
Note: Always put these toiletries in a plastic container. Even if it bursts, it won't spread out.
7. Thinking you know the perfect time to book a ticket
There's
an art to reading the tea leaves of the airlines' protean pricing schemes, but
there's some muddled science to it, as well.
According
to Travelers Today, research conducted by Kayak found the optimal timing for a
cheap-ticket purchase is 21 and 34 days before domestic and international
flights, respectively.
But
2012 analysis by CheapAir.com concluded that on average the cheapest fares are
found 49 days before a flight.
Meanwhile,
researchers at Texas A&M University simply found that Saturdays and Sundays
are best for finding discount fares.
The
golden rule?
There's
no golden rule. Tickets are cheapest when they're cheapest.
Editor's
note: The original version of this story reported that CheapAir.com claimed the
optimal ticket-buying time is 79 or 81 days prior to a flight. The error has
been corrected.
Note: I never knew that there's a 21/34 or 79/81 or Saturday/Sunday rules in ticket pricing. Well if there's some truth to it, then good for you.
8. Trying too hard to chisel out a bargain
There's
no faster way to become embittered with the locals than going toe-to-toe with a
market full of hungry sales people and shopkeepers.
Yes,
we understand there's principle involved, but do you really need to whittle the
equivalent of fifty cents off the price of an embroidered handbag that's going
to sit in the back of a closet anyway?
Just
buy the damn thing and spare your heart the cortisol burst for when it actually
needs it.
Note: Again for the well off this is fine. But for budget conscious, the rule when bargaining is to cut the price by 50% so the vendor can give you a price close to that. Say you're buying a thing at 100, ask for 50. For sure, if the vendor doesn't give in at 50, he will give it at 60. Tested and foolproof.
9. Not changing money at the airport
When
traveling internationally, the conventional wisdom is that only amateurs change
money at the airport, because the exchange rate for foreign currency will be
better in town.
It
usually is, but often not by that much.
A
recent check of the dollar-to-pound exchange rate in London Heathrow was $1.71
to £1 (with no commission for changes more than $300).
Near
Oxford Circus the exchange rate was advertised at $1.62 to £1, also with no
commission.
Using
these rates, converting $300 at the airport would get you £175.43 as opposed to
£185.18 on the street.
So,
you can hit the city like a cashless bumpkin and spend an hour hunting up an
acceptable place to change money or, for less than £10, arrive with some local
coin in your pocket.
Convenience
factor alone makes it worth changing at least a nominal amount of cash at the
"ripoff" place at the airport.
On
the plus side, you're also getting in your day at the gym.
Note: Agree to this. Better to change money outside of the airport. But if you have no cash, then exchange a small amount.
10. Underestimating the hell that is Heathrow
Speaking
of London, it's easy to underestimate the several hundred miles of concourse
you'll likely be obliged to traverse and the time-consuming security searches
that create jumbled queues and make travelers look more like internment camp
refugees than cosmopolitan jet setters.
Arriving
anything less than two hours before an international flight is risky, but even
a longer cushion can get dicey.
Imagine
walking across a football stadium and you start to get an idea of the Andean trek
from the Heathrow Express station to the swarm of travelers clamoring to get on
lifts that will take them merely to their start of the Oz-like journey through
Terminal 1.
Note: And for that, UK is out of my list.
11. Buying cheap flip-flops
You
think, "I'm only gonna wear 'em for a week, I might not even take 'em
home, why buy the good ones?"
The
answer comes when you blow out a toe strap and shred the bottom of your foot a
mile into a hike across the local lava beds.
And
now you have to go back.
Note: If there's one thing that a traveler should not leave behind, that would be a toothbrush, soap and slippers. Anything of the three missing will ruin your trip, I swear.
12. Fearing street food
No
one wants to get sick on vacation, but why travel all the way to Thailand or
Mexico and not eat the local grub?
The
locals don't like food poisoning any more than you do. If they're in line,
consider the place vetted and assume you're going to be fine.
(Cue
angry commenters with the "I almost died from a tainted falafel" and
"the locals are immune to bacteria" histrionics below.)
Note: I'm not a fan of street food either, and personally I do believe that it's best to stay away from it. There are more sanitized places to eat 'em.
13. Buying a drum on the first day of a three-month trek across Asia
We
know, this is the antithesis of travel mistake number two, but there are some
balls and chains you really don't want to lug around the subcontinent.
Not
because you'll make instant enemies with everyone in your hostel when they spy
you struggling top-heavily into the dorm, but because a) you'll never play the
thing, and b) you'll get back home, walk into the new Authentic Beats music
shop that replaced your favorite bookstore while you were away and find 10
superior examples of your exact instrument.
Note: I guess it all boils down to common sense and prudence. Do not buy anything that you won't need.
14. Over-reliance on guidebooks
Making
a travel plan using only your guidebook is like making a plan to stand in line
at the bank for a week.
Guidebooks
are great -- we use them all the time -- but it's best to pull just one or two
suggestions per day from a guide that thousands of like-minded travelers have
read or downloaded.
Note: I prefer to get lost in the city itself, immerse in the culture and take things from there. The more spontaneous, the better. I get surprised that even without reading guidebooks, one can still explore successfully.
15. Not buying the full insurance policy
We're
not a bunch of free spenders -- except when the boss whips out the company
credit card at the pub -- but a lot of the mistakes on this list come down to
adding a significant amount of stress to your life in the name of saving a few
bucks.
If
you actually end up needing the travel insurance you purchased (a move a
significant percentage of our staff thinks is silly in the first place), you're
going to want the full coverage.
Just
because you're in a country where the beer is cheap, it doesn't mean the
healthcare is.
That
bargain insurance policy might pay for your flight home when you crash your
motor scooter on a winding road in some island paradise.
But
it won't cover the $5,000 in stitches and sponge baths you racked up during
your three-day international hospital stay.
Pity
the friends back home who'll have to scroll through the lot of them. Assuming
he has any.
Note: Okay, this is something I have to consider.
16. Obsessive photography
The
obsession/obligation to document every street scene, statue and starter course
kills the spontaneity and visceral experience that should be the backbone of
travel.
It's
now so easy to take photos that one click leads to another.
Before
you know it, you have 300 pictures on your phone comprising old buildings,
blurry sunsets and plates of food.
Congratulations.
Your trip is now defined by low-quality images on a handset that, trust us,
nobody back home wants to spend 20 minutes scrolling through.
Note: For personal satisfaction, I like taking photos. But only for a while. Then I keep my camera and actually enjoy the view.
17. Not checking visa requirements before departure
Carnival
Rio!
It's
a nightmare come true when you get turned away at the ticket counter on
departure day because you didn't realize Brazil requires citizens of your
benighted country to secure a visa before travel.
Note: Always check if visa is required!
18. Attempting Berlin in a weekend
At
344 square miles, Berlin is a metropolitan Goliath, larger than New York City
(301 square miles), and, as the first-time visitor quickly learns, with just as
many places to see, eat, drink, shop and get lost.
19. Using a credit card to get cash
This
is the fastest way of paying through the nose for the privilege of paying
through the nose.
Credit
card companies charge a high transaction fee (up to 15%) for using a card to
get cash.
These
special transactions also attract a higher associated fees than other
purchases: the ATM-owning bank will charge a fee; if you're withdrawing a
foreign currency the exchange rate will be miserly; and if you're not paying
off your balance each month, credit card companies in some countries will apply
your partial payments to normal purchases (with a lower interest rate, say 9%)
before applying them to those cash advances (which have a much higher interest
rate), milking your desperation for every pitiless penny.
Note: Away with your credit cards.
20. Not printing out reservation details
They're
already on your phone and computer, so why bother with hard copies of your
hotel name and address?
Because
your phone, computer, tablet and other electronics might not work with the
local network as soon as you land, especially after crossing oceans.
Now
where are you supposed to go?
Note: It's always a good idea to bring a folder and put all important documents inside so you know where to find them in case you need them.
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