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“He who would travel happily must travel light.” – Antoine de Saint-Exupery

Packing: Tips on making travel easier, safer, and more stress-free

If you’re tired of being mistaken for the Joads when you travel, you already suspect that traveling lighter would be traveling better. And yet, as this exhaustive site demonstrates, there’s a lot more to the art and science of traveling light than jamming as much as possible into one humungous handbag.

OneBag.com, a frequently updated reference guide to “going pretty much anywhere, for an indefinite length of time, with no more than a single carry-on-sized bag,” has a wealth of practical, field-tested advice for over-burdened travelers.

As author Doug Dyment writes, of  “all the travel skills you might acquire, learning to travel light is the one most likely to result in enjoyable, productive, stress-free travel experiences.” Less luggage means fewer opportunities theft, damage,  mis-routing or How NOT to pack your luggagefinding out the hard way that you have been the unsuspecting mule for drugs or contraband goods.

Carrying only one bag can be a real money-saver, too. You can use public transit more easily, cut back on tithing cabbies, bellhops and baggage handlers, and avoid the increasingly exorbitant airline luggage fees.

And with lighter traveling comes more flexibility:

Less stuff means greater mobility, which gives you more travel options. With no checked luggage to limit your choices, you can more easily deal with delayed transportation and missed connections (you can even switch to earlier flights when space is available). You needn’t arrive at airports as early, and you will be among the first to leave, while others wait for baggage delivery and long inspection queues. You can board trains, trams, and coaches with alacrity. You won’t feel compelled to take the first hotel room offered: you can comfortably walk down the street should the ambiance be unsuitable or the price unreasonable. You can sell your airplane seat (by volunteering to be “bumped”) on full flights. You can even travel as an air courier.

Among many useful pages on OneBag.com highlights include Using A Packing List,  a detailed analysis of every individual item on Dyment’s personal packing list, a checklist of things to take care of prior to leaving on a trip, contact information for suppliers of harder-to-find items he mentions, a short list of recommended books on related topics,  links to some carefully-chosen sites that OneBag enthusiasts are likely to find interesting, Dyment’s own compilation of travel industry links to airlines, hotels  and automobile rentals, plus the best metasearch engines, handy lists of country/airport/airline codes, and tools for checking real-time flight status, airport delay conditions, and aircraft seating arrangements.

Dyment keeps track of content changes here, and site updates can be followed also via Facebook, Twitter or RSS feed.

For travelers, OneBag.com may be the single most useful destination on the internet.

Site: OneBag.com

See, also: Packing Light Without Being A Minimalist

Readin’, Writin’ & Ramblin’: Travel Books & the Lit’ry Life

Since 1998, a lifetime in Web years,  Literary Traveler has anthologized travel books and essays with artistic ambitions, and arranged literary tours and literary events for readers who like to travel and travelers who like to read.

The many dozens of literary articles and travel profiles by and of famous writers are arrayed alphabetically from Louisa May Alcott to W.B. Yeats. A list of recently added authors, for example, includes Joseph Reading iconConradStephen King, Shirley JacksonEdward Gorey, Victoria Hislop, Che Guevara, Naguib Mahfouz and Mario Vargas Llosa. A sampling of recent articles – Of Dreams and Dolls: American Girls and the Spirit of Exploration; Colin McPhee’s Musical Life in Bali; Karl Marx’s Revolutionary Brussels; Jim Morrison & Lipstick Kisses at Oscar Wilde’s Pere-Lachaise; Origins of Crime & Justice in James Patterson’s Washington DC; The Real Story Behind Dickens’ A Christmas Carol; Shirley Jackson’s Outsider Perspective of Bennington, Vermont — reveals the range of interests explored by the site’s contributors.

In the nature of things, most of the familiar names are in the public domain, but so what?; there are endless hours of classic travel writing on the site, including a series on Ernest Hemingway and Ernest Hemingway’s Places, interviews with well-known writers like Alan Lightman, and links to recommended  volumes for purchase.

Primarily or at least most usefully a subscription site, Literary Traveler offers two types of memberships: free and paid. A free subscription provides limited access to many of the articles; an all-access premium account including a monthly newsletter costs $1.99 per month or $19.99 per year.

Site: Literary Traveler




Let Me Stay for a Day: an inspiration to detourists everywhere

If anyone deserves to be called The Godfather of Couchsurfing, it’s Dutch author Ramon Stoppelenburg. He grasped earlier than most the personal networking opportunities made possible by the world wide web.

One of the first Dutch bloggers, in early of 2001 Stoppelenburg started a website called Let Me Stay for a Day with the intention of cadging free places to crash as a means of underwriting his travel ambitions. Ramon Stoppelenburg, The Godfather of CouchsurfingThe plan worked out better than he could have anticipated: in short order, he had 3,577 invitations from 77 countries.  Leaving home with no more than “a backpack filled with clothing, a digital camera, a laptop, and a mobile phone,” for nearly two years, as he writes in Dutch-inflected English, he “traveled the world WITHOUT ANY MONEY, visiting people who invited me over through this website. I crossed distance with my thumb or with help of sponsors and supporters. In return for all support I wrote about this all in my daily reports on this website.”

By the time he shut down the project in 2003, Stoppelenburg had visited The Netherlands, Belgium, France, England, Austria, The Isle of Man, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Scotland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, South Africa, Spain, Hong Kong, Australia  and Canada, with all expenditures — even airline tickets — sponsored or donated by his followers: the former student, then in his mid-twenties, had found a way to become a seasoned world traveler for the cost of a $35 website domain registration.

During his travels, Stoppelenburg published columns weekly in the Dutch daily newspaper Spits, in addition to the 7,000 photos and over 550 reports he posted to his website. You won’t be surprised that Letmestayforaday.com turned into a book that the author is currently translating into English.  Since June 2008, he’s been conducting walks up Mt. Kilimanjaro, Africa’s highest mountain. And in September 2010 he relocated to Phnom Penh, where he runs a movie theater showing American and European pictures and is organizing a European Cooking Trip for the summer of 2011. He posts updates on his activities to his current blog.

Some of the American media may think of Ramon Stoppenlenburge as “the notorious Dutch freeloader,” but out here on the road he’s a hero to detourists and armchair adventurers all.

Site: Let Me Stay for a Day

Hospitality Industry: “Let’s talk about hotels”

“Let’s talk about hotels” is the cut line for the blog where Guillaume Thevenot reports on topics associated with hotels, b&bs, and travel-related businesses. GuillaumeThevenot of Hotel BlogsHotel Blogs provides links to travel professionals, services and websites, plus tips on social media marketing for the hospitality industry. A regular feature is Q&As with CEOs of companies like Hotel Tonight, a company that offers same-day hotel bookings on iPhones, online marketing consultant for hotels e-conceptory, and menumodo, a hosted content management tool for creating, updating and distributing restaurant menus.

Site: Hotel Blogs

Airfares: You’ve got to start somewhere

Getting the best fares usually means visiting several often-overlapping sites, including those of the airlines servicing the route you’re researching, to see who is reporting the lowest fares. As a place to begin, The Detourist usually starts its searches with Airfarewatchdog, an automated fare-comparison site that offers easy access to information about specific routes, destinations and sales.

One section, Top 50 Fares, tracks special, usually time-sensitive deals. This morning, for example, the top offers range from $18 round trip between Los Angeles and Las Vegas (LAX-LAS) on Spirit, the flying bus line (actually, this is an unfair comparison, since buses are roomier, now usually provide wireless access, and have no hidden charges) to $158 r/t flight between Baltimore and Austin (BWI-AUS) on Continental, American, Delta and United. As always, watch for surprise fees.

Airfarewatchdog, part of the company that owns BookingBuddy, OneTime, SmarterTravel and the flash-sale travel site Sniqueaway, was created by George Hobica, a travel journalist specializing in consumer issues.

Site: Airfarewatchdog.com

Shopping: Pic of pickled peppers

Even the pickles are happy in Budapest:
Travel photo of Happy Pickles in Budapest's Central Market
Taken at the Central Market Hall (Nagy Vásárcsarnok) in Budapest, Hungary 2011-04-09

I’m just sayin’: No more Plugabaloo

Hey, Starbucks, all you need to fix this:
Plugabaloo at starbucks
is this:
Make Reddy Kilowatt happy
the “Smart Plug Multi Outlet,” available from Amazon for $4.98.

Dr. House Graffito (Passau, Germany 2011-03-28)

Dr. House in Passau, Germany 2011-03-28
It’s a small world after all.

Good Eatin’: Not so much

Tucson, Arizona

After hearing a bezillion times how great it is, I made a detour to the The Grill at Hacienda del Sol. Except for the setting — in the restored and renovated Hacienda del Sol Guest Ranch Resort that was once a Roaring 20s-era school for daughters of the super rich — the restaurant was otherwise remindful of St. Estephe, the legendary Southwest Fusion eatery of the 1980s that was unaccountably cloistered in a Manhattan Beach shopping mall. At a time when there were possibly six decent restaurants in all of L.A. County, St. Estephe conjured up sometimes delicious, often fanciful, always outrageously priced creations that took Hispanic-American food to places it had never been before.

(You might order “chips and salsa,” for example, and be served a dinner plate with a thin layer of red and green sauces deployed in the pattern of the holism symbol and graced with a single taco chip in the form of a dove. This was before anyone knew what a “plate” was, so the place definitely was cutting-edge, but as admirable as its efforts may have been as art, they left something to be desired as, well, food. And it was damnably expensive. You’d wonder what gave the boys in the back the bigger kick, sending out their latest caprice — or the bill.)

The Grill at Hacienda induced St. Estephe flashbacks. The menu is replete with components like shrimp chorizzo, parmesan foam, pancetta dust, micro egg yolk, jalapeno-blueberry jam, yam and smoked gouda gratin, charred tomatoes and, I kid you not, “heirloom” beans. Normally this kind of menu — small portions, unusual tastes — is right up my alley, but Hacienda del Sol’s eclecticism just comes across as pretentious. I can’t say the food overall is bad (although the chorizo con pappas was positively insulting), but it lived up to neither its aspirations nor its prices (and lets face it, when you’re blown away by a meal you don’t notice how much it costs).

There are plenty of first-rate restaurants in Tucson. You needn’t go out of your way for this one.

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