Anonymous wrote:Aggressive hustle hack: “Where are you from? / I’m homeless”
When the aggressive hustle progresses to “Where are you from?” (universal language for “I’m determined to hustle you despite your repeated ‘no thank yous”) we deliver “I’m homeless”.
“I’m homeless” disrupts the aggressive hustler’s hustle rhythm; they don’t expect it. This reliably works for us in the most hustle-heavy locations (Morocco, Egypt, Nepal, India, D Republic, etc…). Caveats are the obvious: you aren’t wearing a hotel wrist bracelet, displaying wealth, etc...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have a toiletry bag that’s always packed
Ziplock bag for chargers etc
One pair of sneakers that I can run in and walk around during the day.
Global entry
Bring ABX in case of food poisoning. Plus Benadryl, advil etc.
How do you get antibiotics? That is prescription only
when travelling, you can tell your dr about your plans and they will write the rx for the abx for jic situations.
i also get my travel immunizations done if i am going to certain parts of the world.
+1
My doctor wrote me a prescription for antibiotics just in case I got travelers' diarrhea on a trip to South America, and indeed, that is exactly what happened. I was so happy to have that medication.
Anonymous wrote:I always plan vacation from vacation days. No more than two or three sightseeing days in an in a row and then a full on nothing planned go to a beach relax at the hotel pool etc. day. I found that having too many sightseeing days in a row wipes out the group in the trip is much more fun when we plan nothing days.
Anonymous wrote:This isn’t the most exciting tip, but I’ve started traveling with a small CO detector that will detect even low levels of PPM. I’ve read too many sad stories in the news about people going to sleep and not waking up in a hotel or house rental, so this makes me feel better from a safety perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a stressful job. I always plan to take another day or two off after traveling so I don’t start dreading going back to work while I am still on vacation.
+1 and always get my house cleaned right before I go so I come back to a sparkling home
+1 to both of these. Makes a huge difference.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a carryon traveler.
Before longer trips, I often set aside the socks and underwear that are getting worn, toothbrush and mascara that need replacing, etc. Take them on the trip and just toss by the end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Avoid any type of gimmicky activities that pose as educational experiences. I include in this category food tours, pasta making classes, any staged activities in which the locals fight each other (Mexican wresting, Thai boxing, Japanese sumo, Bolivian chola wrestling, etc), chopstick making classes, and so many more. What a waste.
What's wrong with food tours and pasta making classes?
Ima guess you're one of these people who sneer at "tourists" and call yourself a "traveler?"
Anonymous wrote:Avoid any type of gimmicky activities that pose as educational experiences. I include in this category food tours, pasta making classes, any staged activities in which the locals fight each other (Mexican wresting, Thai boxing, Japanese sumo, Bolivian chola wrestling, etc), chopstick making classes, and so many more. What a waste.