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5 Tips for a Better Travel Experience
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sofia
Joined: Mon May 03, 2010 1:25 pm Posts: 17
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5 Tips for a Better Travel Experience
Hitting the road once will change your life forever. Fact. You will become more adaptable and thinking on your feet will become second nature. Confidence and self belief will blossom as you overcome the trials and tribulations engendered by life on the road, and you will evolve. Interaction with others, from all walks of life, will become a daily event. The people you meet and the situations you encounter, both good and bad, will slowly begin to define you. Some days may be magical, others may be tough - but each day will leave its mark, and the cumulative effect is life changing. Whether you travel for a month, a year, or ten years, you will be in for an experience like no other. But pause for a moment and ask yourself: - could it be even better? Here are five ways to enhance your travel experience.
Embrace the Weird and Wonderful - Don’t pass up a chance to try something a little out of the ordinary, be it new food, local customs, children’s games, or anything else. Chew betelnut (torrents of red saliva, anyone?) with little old ladies in Borneo, play Trompo (simple spinning tops) with kids in El Salvador, and cough and choke on samples of savage tobacco from Javanese street vendors. Get into the swing of it and make someone’s day.
Learn the Lingo – Even just the basics will lay the foundation for a better experience. A little goes a long way, it demonstrates that you are willing to make the effort and convey respect toward the people you meet. If nothing else it will raise a smile or two, and that’s always a bonus. Still need encouragement to reach for the phrasebook? A little of the local lingo may even secure a better price for transport, accommodation, or the little knick-knacks that you simply can’t pass up.
Go Slow – It’s human nature to not want to ‘miss out’ on anything, but by racing though too many countries in a given time you may miss out on so much more. Not only will you learn less about the places you’ve longed to visit, but one or two nights in each place also spells out buses, trains or boats at least ever other day, and packing/unpacking will almost become a daily event. Tiring? I should say so.
Be a One Bag Wonder – Travel light, travel happy. Less really is more. Less weight to lug between transport and accommodation, less size to be swinging around within the confines of a densely populated bus, and less stress as the smaller your luggage is, the less likely you are to be forcibly separated from it during a journey. In addition, it’s more likely you will be let on an already packed out bus if you have less baggage. This doesn’t ring true in Guatemala however, as you can always fit more people on the bus, no matter how full it is. And that’s it, more or less.
Keep a Journal – If writing isn’t your thing, then rest easy. A journal means many different things to different people. It could be a full scale daily diary or simply a child’s notebook from the market in which you put labels from local beer bottles (possibly with drunken scribblings below) – the choice is yours. For the geeks among us (me included) there is the option to travel blog, and for the lazy geeks among us (again, me included) it’s even easier to cut and paste excerpts from emails to friends and family and keep those as your e-journal. Whatever form your personal creation may take, the end result is the same. Long after your memory has faded there will be this well thumbed Opus, this testimony of your travels, waiting to take you once more through this wonderful chapter of your life.
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Mon May 03, 2010 3:06 pm |
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milky
Joined: Mon Apr 26, 2010 2:51 pm Posts: 41 Location: U.K
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Re: 5 Tips for a Better Travel Experience
Hello friends
1). Knowing the hotel and the address of where you are going helps to get the right shuttles. I receive 10-20 calls per week from guests trying to get our shuttle when they are going to another hotel. When quizzed, guests almost always insist it is our hotel they want until you make them provide an address or confirmation number. 2). Do not call for the hotel shuttle until you have obtained your luggage. Trying to "finesse" the system by calling before you even get to baggage claim will often result in a shuttle dispatched to the airport to pick up a "no-show". You will then wait an extra 30 minutes or more in most cases for the next shuttle. 3). Listen to the directions the hotel staff provides when calling for the shuttle. This may be the most important tip I could provide. Many people are so tired or in such a hurry they fail to hear what they are told. They may end up waiting at the wrong place or get on the wrong shuttle as a result. Write directions down if possible as they can be lengthy. Also, many shuttle names do not even match the given hotel, so writing it down helps both you AND the driver. 4). Understand that during normal times, hotels have a shuttle that goes out every 30 minutes. If you just happened to miss one, it may take 30 minutes for the next one. And if the next one was delayed for some reason, it may be 40-50 minutes.
Thanks
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Tue May 11, 2010 12:07 pm |
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alliya12
Joined: Thu May 13, 2010 2:51 pm Posts: 28 Location: U.K
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Re: 5 Tips for a Better Travel Experience
Hi
Here are some ways to enhance your travel experience.
1. Embrace the Weird and Wonderful - Don’t pass up a chance to try something a little out of the ordinary, be it new food, local customs, children’s games, or anything else. Chew betelnut (torrents of red saliva, anyone?) with little old ladies in Borneo, play Trompo (simple spinning tops) with kids in El Salvador, and cough and choke on samples of savage tobacco from Javanese street vendors. Get into the swing of it and make someone’s day.
2. Learn the Lingo – Even just the basics will lay the foundation for a better experience. A little goes a long way, it demonstrates that you are willing to make the effort and convey respect toward the people you meet. If nothing else it will raise a smile or two, and that’s always a bonus. Still need encouragement to reach for the phrasebook? A little of the local lingo may even secure a better price for transport, accommodation, or the little knick-knacks that you simply can’t pass up.
3. Go Slow – It’s human nature to not want to ‘miss out’ on anything, but by racing though too many countries in a given time you may miss out on so much more. Not only will you learn less about the places you’ve longed to visit, but one or two nights in each place also spells out buses, trains or boats at least ever other day, and packing/unpacking will almost become a daily event.
Thanks
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Thu May 13, 2010 4:48 pm |
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