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Traveling Tips
Flying
to Europe
Tips
for Traveling
Finding
Fun Ways to Travel With Children
The Best 28 Traveling tips
Internet Access
Currency Exchange
Emergency Numbers
Languages In
EUROPE
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Ten Secrets to Enjoy Flying
Ten Tips How to Pack
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14 tips for better Photos
The
Value of Hotel Search Engines
Best Hotel Deals
Planning Your Vacation
On-Line
Saving
Money on Airline Tickets
Planning Your Trip to
Europe
Hotel Safety & Travel
Protection
Best +
Worst Times to Travel to Europe
6 Cheeky Ways To Get An Upgrade On Your Air Ticket
Your Travel +
Holiday money Opt.
Improve Your Vacation with 100 Foreign Words
Travel
Luggage for Special Needs
Planning Your Vacation
On-Line
Protecting Yourself During your European Jaunt
6
Tips for Paranoid Travelers
The Nuts and Bolts of Airfare Deals
Backpacking
Discount Travel and Internet Booking
Hotel Booking Is Easy Online
How To
Avoid Paying Inflated Airfares
During Holiday Season
How To Get The Right Travel Insurance And Save Money
Three Ways to
Get Travel Discounts
Turn Your
International Travels Into Lasting Memories
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6
Tips for Paranoid Travelers
by: Brad Kadinski
As fun as international travel may be there
are always obstacles and hidden dangers. Some of them may hit the unsuspecting
tourist by total surprise and can get you in alot of trouble when you are out of
your familiar environment. But most can be avoided with the proper preparation.
Passport & IDs
The proper document can save your life – or at
least keep you out of trouble. Always carry your passport with you when
traveling and make sure it is still valid at least 6 months by the time you
intend to leave the country you visit. Always keep some type of backup id – in
case your passport gets lost or stolen. This could be a personal ID cards
(drivers licenses don’t count much in most countries) or an official xerox of
your passport. Never put your passport in any bag or suitcase, always keep it
somewhere on your body (a body bag is the best thing here - although it might
feel ridiculous)
Money and Credit Cards
Always take multiple sources of foreign
currency with you and distribute them in several places – on your body, in a
bag, one in the suitcase. A source of foreign currency could be and
international credit card, traveler checks, cash in local currency or cash in
USD. Always be prepared that one or more of these things won’t work, or won’t
work in certain places at certain times of the day or days of the week.
Sometimes ATMs – that you usually depend on for obtaining local currency are
turned off at night, or for some unknown reason won’t accept your card. (Always
know your PIN – but never ever write it down anywhere). If you are afraid of
forgetting it, then try to hide it somewhere in your cell phone in a ways that
some other person would never find it (hidden as a phone number with one or more
digits in front of it that make it look like a phone number)
Some countries limit the amount of local
currency that you can take into the country – or even take out of the country.
Usually you should try to bring an equivalent of 100 USD in local currency with
you – and if you can’t bring 100 USD in small notes with you. However, your
first option should always be to get money from an ATM, since the exchange rate
is much better than when exchanging cash.
Taxi Drivers
The taxi driver is a predator and you’re the
prey! The friendlier they are the more they try to rip you off. Always insist to
be brought directly to your hotel – no extra trips – or „special deals“. Don’t
expect them to accept credit cards or traveler checks. In most countries cash is
still king, particularly with taxi drivers. Try to get the more expensive cabs
in the first row of an airport – not the cheaper ones in the second. At least on
the first day until you know your way around. Most taxi drivers will offer you
to take you around the next day or so. Pretend you are interested in asking for
their business card, but say that right now you just want to get to your hotel.
When they see, you have a general interest, they won’t rip you off that much. If
– for some reason they expect to never see you again, they will try to extract
the most out of you. If possible take a prepaid cab, if this is not an option –
watch out that they don’t turn off the taximeter, and they demand local currency
– not USD.
Children
When traveling with children, try to bring
their birth certificate with you. In some countries – if you are a woman - you
are not permitted to embark with your own children without a written permission
from the father. (This is to prevent kidnapping and child abuse). So please know
the regulations of the country you are visiting before you travel.
Luggage
Always be prepared that some of your luggage
will get lost. This is nothing special – it happens all the time. Usually you
get your bags within 24 hours. Just be prepared to spend a night in a hotel with
just what you have with you on the airplane. So take with you the most essential
things for 24 hours – just don’t include any knife or razor blade. Consider the
weather you expect in the region you are visiting. Another point to know about
lost luggage is that when your luggage gets delivered on another flight than you
were on it has to go through customs without you being able to answer any
questions. (All lone bags get opened by customs – no exceptions). So don’t
include any items that are somehow suspicious (self-made packages, unlabeled
bottles). Not all drinks or sweets that you take with you are known in all
countries. If they don’t know what it is they’ll open it and maybe taste it.
The Emergency Info Paper
Prepare a very small piece of paper and put
the most relevant info on it that you cannot memorize. This should include your
hotel address, the phone number of a contact person in that country. The phone
number of your credit card company and your credit card number (not the PIN).
Fold this piece of paper and put it in a very tight pocket of your pants (Jeans
usually have one on the right side). This is in case your wallet gets stolen
that you can at least call your credit card company and notify them of that
instance and to call anybody you know in the country. |
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