Lessons Learned from 2 years of full-time travel: 2 of 3
April 2024
Using Your Credit Card
- Before you leave make sure you are NOT near your credit limit!
- Hotels and car rentals will often put a HOLD for hundreds of $ on your card when you check in
- Bring more than one CC, AND you and your travel partner(s) should try to each carry different CC’s
- Whenever possible use it!
- We like to have the Bank’s Notification feature turned on:
- Will send an email or a text when there is a transaction
- Notification of a foreign charge
- Most major banks DO NOT need you to notify them in advance when you plan to travel
- Check to see if your Credit Card issuer is one of them
- ALWAYS pay in the local currency – do not let them use the “pay in $US” feature on some Credit Card Terminals!! It’s just a way to charge you a BAD exchange rate.
Travel Insurance
- Research what your Credit Card may provide, especially true for Premium Travel cards.
- Does it meet your needs?
- Depending on your needs you can get Travel Insurance Per trip or per Year
- Does it include Medical Coverage
- providers?
- What type of Insurance do you need?
- trip cancellation?
- delayed flights
- lost luggage
- medical coverage
- medical evacuation
- repatriation to home country?
Clothing
- just JK's Opinion
- Travel Pants = synthetic, knit, easy to wash
- I like merino wool for T-Shirts, socks,
- Shoes:
- leather shoes may not be the best choice
- you almost NEVER need true hiking boots or shoes, use runners
- Bring a Rain Jacket with a hood (a ball cap adds a nice extra way to shield your face)
- Or a small collapsible umbrella
- I don’t bring “formal” clothes
- LF travels with a little more elegance
- Laundry
- Think about the Length of your trip
- Bring some generic soap(Dr. Brommers works well, also dry soap sheets now)
- Hotel versus local laundry service
- Hotels are often expensive, $$ per item
- Local laundry services might be $1 per Kilo
- Look for laundromats
Luggage
- We love 4 wheel “spinner” style luggage
- Soft side versus plastic clamshell?
- make sure the clamshell is polycarbonate or ???
- Clamshells tend to be cheaper, but the ballistic nylon that a good soft side is made of can take a real beating
- Put Apple AirTags in each suitcase (remember: change the battery annually!)
- Guys: travel with a smallish “day pack” sized knapsack as part of your carry on gear
- Or Bring a small collapsible travel knapsack (folds up SMALL)
Electrical
- We like "Cube" style plug converters
- do NOT bring true power converters (aka transformers) they are too heavy
- Most electronics can use multi-voltages (computers, iPads, mobile phones, shavers,
- Power banks (aka rechargeable batteries)
- highly recommended: if you are out all day shooting photos and navigating with your mobile phone, it's a drag to have it suddenly die
- Airlines do NOT allow most battery products in checked baggage (they need to be with you in the cabin)
- Bring USB-A and USB-C power cables (on the source side)
- many rental cars and hotels still use USB-A style power plugs
- BUT - more new cars are supplied with only USB-C
First Aid Kit
- On most vacations you will have access to a local medical clinics
- 1st Aid Kit
- Assorted band aids
- Pain killers
- Anti-diarrhea
- Antiseptic ointment
- Throat lozenges
- Maybe:
- Sea sickness patch (scopoline)
- Bug bite itch releif
- Other medication: maybe ambien for sleeping? (jet lag)
Booking Transportation
- Flight Research Tools = Google Flights, Sky Scanner
- We prefer to book flights DIRECTLY with the airline
- no middle-man if there are problems
- This is not always possible: ie if you are using Airline Points to book a flight on a partner airline
- Smaller regional flights, ferries, busses and trains use web/app called Rome2Rio
- After Flights are booked:
- Get the App for the Airlines you booked and load your flights into the App
- We check in online and download Boarding Passes to the Apple Wallet on our phones
- But: at the airport we will usually ask for Paper Boarding Passes (just in case your phone dies)
Booking Rental Cars
- Costco Travel gives great deals for North America
- Online websites help get multiple competitive quotes
- QEEQ (my current favorite)
- AutoSlash
- RentalCars.com
- Many, many others
- check the big rental agencies (Avis, Hertz, Enterprise) especially ones that you have established a loyalty program membership
- go ahead and Book EARLY to lock in a good rate (many months is best! you can always cancel), check again later to see if the price has gone down – rebook as necessary.
- look into ONE WAY rentals if your travel plans require it. It's often free or pretty cheap to drop off at a different location.
- renting from a "non-airport" location is often cheaper
- BUT: these offices often have reduced hours for picking up or dropping off your rental.
- We never use the pre-pay price option far in advance. Prefer to pay “at the counter” with a credit card.
- We NEVER take the Rental Car company extra insurance. Our Premium Credit Card provides primary insurance (see Credit Card Section)
- We NEVER pay for a GPS system (Apple Car play will connect the Google Maps App on our iPhones to many new cars, with a cable or wirelessly)
- In many parts of the world:
- Manual transmission: usually cheaper if you know how to drive one
- Diesel cars: better mileage and therefore longer drives times before refueling
- it makes sense to rent a small car:
- narrow roads, tiny parking spaces, expensive gasoline
- Electric Cars: I personally avoid renting EV’s for all foreign travel because I just don’t know about the availability of charging stations in those countries.
Booking Hotels
- Check availability of hotels in your Hotel Loyalty programs
- We use:
- Hotels.com,
- Booking.com
- there are many sites you can use
- also Contact the Hotel Directly to see if they will give you a better rate than the 3rd party websites
- Many hotels encourage you to book direct by offering a better deal
- Check the room price with an included Breakfast, this is often a good deal
- Suggestion: don’t only stay in big international chain hotels. Local 2 or 3 star hotels are often very good.
Booking Short Term Rentals (Airbnb, VRBO, etc)
- There are lots of horror stories online. Most are probably true, but we have NOT had any major problems.
- We try to use Airbnb when we plan to stay 3+ nights. We find the fees they charge often make a 1-2 night stay less attractive.
- ALWAYS look at the total cost of your stay
- The price per night can be misleading. There are usually cleaning fees or local taxes that need to be added in.
- Read the reviews!
- if there are negative reviews: did the person explain what the problem was and whether it was resolved?
- When searching for a place, Enter:
- Location,
- Dates you want,
- book “the whole place” (not just a room),
- do you want a kitchen?, we always want a kitchen.
- we always want Wi-Fi
- Options to filter the results:
- washer,
- drier (often you can get a washer but no drier)
- dishwasher,
- free parking
- We prefer a period of time where you can cancel for free (with no penalty), this is not always possible – depends on the Host of that property and when you are booking.
- We usually paid about 50% up front and 50% nearer the rental period – ALWAYS pay thru the Airbnb website and on a Credit Card.
- being super safe: when you book take screen shots of the photos the Host provided to help prevent any "bait and switch" tricks
- Always communicate with the Host via the company website or app so there is a “communication paper trail”
- You MIGHT be able to bypass Airbnb and get a better deal, but we like the theoretical protection provided by Airbnb or VRBO.
- sometimes the Host will suggest using WhatsApp for simple coordination items like:
- setting up a time to meet to let you into the place - that's fine
- after gaining entry to the apartment we PHOTOGRAPH anything that looks damaged or "marked up" just to be able to show we didn't cause the problem.
- if something isn't right - immediately contact the Host via the Short Term Rental Company's website.
Booking a Group Tour (aka a “Packaged Tour”)
- Think about your comfort level traveling un-aided in certain countries
- There are:
- Large Group tours > 15 people,
- Small group tours < 15 people
- Private tours: just you and your friends or family
- Review the typical Age Group & Activity level to see if the tour is suitable for you.
- Transportation: Some use big 40+ person Coaches, or small vans, or local public transportation
- Some provide a Local Tour “Manager” and supplement with Local Guides as you move from place to place
- You can book thru international Aggregators or directly with a LOCAL Tour Company
- Collette Travel
- G Adventures
- Audley Tours
- Kensington Travel
- National Geographic Tours & Tauck Tours (MUCH pricier, but provide 1st class services)
Photography
- Digital Cameras: Take a million phots and PURGE later
- We just use our mobile phones (iPhones)
- for us the small form factor is important
- General: take a quick photo of any ticket or reservation document you receive – you never know when you might need it.
- Upload digital photo files to the Cloud as a back-up
- Use Wi-Fi when you are in your Hotel
- Do NOT just leave the photos on your camera – a lost or damaged phone/camera means your photos are GONE!
- You can use Google Photos or Apple photos or several other Cloud Storage providers
- They offer facial recognition and mapping where your photos were taken
- If you plan to be "in the middle of nowhere" (no internet):
- look into bringing a USB Thumb Drive to copy photos
- other back up solutions
- Be sensitive that some cultures DO NOT LIKE being photographed – especially without you asking for permission. Some people have learned to ask for money.
- Also, some police, governmental and military installations are very touchy about being photographed
Sharing Expenses
- Use a FREE App called Splitwise. It is excellent for managing shared expenses
Hiking Trails
- We use an App called AllTrails
- The Free version has trail maps for hikes all over the world
- You can filter for: length, elevation change, biking trails, walking trails, etc.
- Paid Version = allows you to downloaded offline maps, great if you are in a remote area with no cellular service. You can still have the satellite GPS signals track your progress on the trail map.
- It will keep a record of the trails you have hiked
2 comments:
Priceless. I will share with many.
Joe, you are welcome to share the link to the blog. Linda
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