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Traveling can be fun and exciting, but it can also
be tremendous frustrating if you happen to be one
of the thousands of travelers who run across unexpected
problems each year. Fortunately, by keeping the
following travel tips in mind you can help to reduce
the possibility of running into any problems that
would prevent you from enjoying your trip.
Take a look at
these travel tips:
Security at hotels and
airlines is much more strict than it once was
and with very good reason. To make sure you don’t
become a patsy for someone who is up to no good,
make it a point to never accept a package from
a stranger. Similarly, be a pal and help everyone
out by reporting any items that appear to be unattended
in the airport or aircraft.
Traveling by air can present
many challenges and if you’ve booked a flight
recently you are probably well aware that this
area of travel can present the most challenges
and opportunities for something to go wrong. To
avoid the possibility of
mishaps, review
these travel tips:
No one likes turbulence
and while there’s nothing you can do to
avoid it except avoiding flights altogether, you
can reduce the discomfort by selecting a seat
located as close as possible to the wing of the
plan. This way, if you do run into any turbulence,
the bumps you feel will be minimized.
Reduce the possibility
of delays, and of having your items confiscated
by the airport by knowing the rules and abiding
by them. Don’t even attempt to travel with
items that have been prohibited.
Feel like catching up on
the latest release during the in-flight movie?
You can avoid getting a cramp in your neck by
selecting a seat located in the fourth or fifth
row from the screen.
If you know that
you have a tendency to get a little green around
the gills while traveling, be proactive about
it. Don’t wait to take a motion sickness
pill. Go ahead and take it before you even board
the plane. In many cases, this can help you to
avoid motion sickness altogether.
TIP 1: Understand
what adventure travel really is
Adventure travel is an active, unique exploration
of an exotic or remote destination with a small
group of like-minded people, guided by full-time
professional leaders. The typical object of your
exploration is a beautiful landscape, unusual
wildlife, or an intriguing foreign culture-often
all three. You'll probably travel by foot, safari
jeep, or dugout canoe and over rough roads or
trails in all kinds of weather. Exceptional physical
fitness usually isn't necessary; you can enjoy
some adventure trips at a fitness level only a
notch or two above that of a couch potato. But
you'll almost certainly get sweaty, dusty, and
tired at times, and you won't be eating much beef
bourguignon.
TIP 2: Don't panic
at the idea of camping
Accommodations on adventure trips range from two-person
tents to small rustic inns to luxurious lodges.
If you've never slept outdoors before, or if your
previous camping experience wasn't much fun, remember
that adventure-travel camping is ordinarily much
easier than the usual do-it-yourself, backpack-style
camping. Tented safaris in Africa can be downright
luxurious, with huge stand-up tents, real beds,
and hot showers. Even on more rugged camping-style
trips, porters or pack animals usually carry the
camp gear, your tent is often set up for you,
and the camp staff does all the cooking and cleaning
up. But if camping just isn't your cup of tea,
there are plenty of trips that offer lodges, rustic
inns, houseboats, or local homesteads.
TIP 3: First pick
a destination.
The vast number of adventure trips to choose from
can be a bit bewildering. To narrow down the choices
to a manageable number, decide early what part
of the world you want to visit. If you're new
at adventure travel and not quite sure where you
want to go, pick a trip that has a track record
of broad appeal over the years. Instead of, say,
hang gliding with cannibals in Irian Jaya, stick
to the classics: a safari in East Africa, a trek
in the Himalayas, or a visit to the Amazonian
rain forest.
TIP 4: Decide how
much physical challenge you want.
There's an adventure trip for virtually every
level of physical fitness, from Woody Allen's
to Arnold Schwartzenegger's. Companies usually
rate their trips as easy, moderate, or demanding.
Study the trip ratings carefully; different companies
use different rating criteria, based on physical
activity, altitude, and terrain.
"Easy" trips include African
safaris and cultural/nature-oriented trips, where
hikes are optional and the camping, if any, is
in a luxurious style. Rougher overland trips with
long driving days and more optional hiking might
be rated "easy/moderate." A full-fledged "moderate"
trip often entails at least four or five days
of camping and four to six hours of hiking per
day over not-too-difficult terrain at altitudes
below 15,000 feet. A "demanding" trek typically
involves longer days, steeper terrain, and altitudes
up to 19,000 feet. To enjoy a demanding trip,
you should have made exercise a regular part of
your life. Even on a demanding trek, however,
you usually won't be carrying anything more than
a light daypack.
Certain activities may
be rated differently. For example, river-rafting
trips are rated not by their physical demands
(you just hang on) but by the difficulty of the
most severe rapid. Class II and III rapids shouldn't
scare anybody, but Class IV demand great confidence
in your guides. Class V commercial trips are rare
and require extensive rafting experience.
Sea-kayaking trips in protected
waters are physically easy but usually include
camping, and they are generally rated moderate.
Backpacking trips are more demanding than treks
because you'll be carrying a heavy pack. Mountaineering
trips, involving of ropes, ice axes, and high
altitudes, call for the highest fitness level
of all.
TIP 5: Decide how
much variety you want.
Some people prefer to stay in one area so they
can get to know it intimately, while others like
to sample a wide variety of places and activities.
Overseas Adventure Travel offers both kinds of
trips: you can spend three weeks exploring one
corner of Nepal; or you can go to Borneo and climb
a mountain, hike in the jungle, watch orangutans
and sea turtles, explore caves, go snorkeling
and sea kayaking, and snooze on the beach-staying
at a range of places, from a luxurious seaside
resort to a jungle lean-to.
TIP 6: Decide on
your price range.
At minimum, you'll probably spend about $2000,
including airfare, for a ten-day trip. Longer
trips to destinations like Asia or Africa cost
$3,000-$6,000, including airfare. Truly exotic
adventures-climbing a mountain in Antarctica,
for example, or touring Africa by flying boat-can
cost up to $20,000 or more.
TIP 7: Shop around.
Call several adventure-travel companies and request
detailed daily itineraries for trips that interest
you. For similar trips by different companies,
compare trip routing and accommodations. Be sure
to ask about potential extra costs like internal
airfares, national-park fees, ore pre- and post-trip
hotels and meals. Is there a surcharge for small
groups? For travelers without tent-mates? Is discounted
airfare available? This information will give
you a feel for the level of service each company
provides.
TIP 8: Compare
cancellation policies.
Because of the more complicated logistics of planning
adventure trips, deposit/cancellation policies
are sometimes stringent. Is the Initial deposit
refundable? Are interim payments required? (On
most Overseas Adventure Travel trips, the deposit
is fully refundable up to 61 days before departure,.
and there are no interim payments). When is full
payment required? What refunds, if any, apply
if you cancel after that?
TIP 9: Talk to
people who've already taken the trip.
Ask each company for a list of previous customers
on the trip you're looking at. The long-distance
phone bills will pay for themselves many times
over in unbiased word-of-mouth information.
TIP 10: Check out
the trip leader.
The most important single factor on adventure
journeys is the trip leader, who simultaneously
fills the role of guide, interpreter, teacher,
mother hen, drill sergeant, and group psychologist.
A great leader can be an American expatriate or
a well-qualified local citizen, but he or she
should be a year-round resident of the country
or region and speak both English and the local
language well.
TIP 11: Ask about
responsible travel practices.
We're hearing more and more about the effects
of tourism on the environment and traditional
culture. Many outfitters talk about "eco-tourism."
Ask what it means on the trip you're considering.
Will you get information on local customs and
locally appropriate dress? On an ocean trip, is
refuse dumped overboard or carried back to port?
On a camping trip, how do the staff handle trash
and garbage? On a mountain trek, are the porters
provided with warm clothing? Let companies know
that these concerns are important to you.
PRE-TRIP
PAPERWORK
TIP 12: Check your
passport.
International convention says that passports must
be valid for at least six months after the date
of entry into a country and should contain a full
blank page for the visa of each country to be
visited. Don't put your passport in your check-in
baggage for flights.
TIP 13: Check visas
requirements.
Unlike many European nations, countries visited
by adventure travelers often require visitors
to obtain a visa before arrival. Your travel company
often will provide you with visa application forms,
which you then send to the appropriate embassy
or consulate. For some countries or areas, such
as Tibet (governed by China), it's best to let
a specialized visa service do the work for a modest
fee. One of the best is Zierer Visa Service at
800-843-9151.
TIP 14: Make photocopies
of important documents.
Passport, visa's, tickets, credit cards, traveler's
checks, drug prescriptions, and other critical
documents should be photocopied, and the copies
carried separately.
TIP 15: Read your
pre-departure information carefully.
Adventure travel usually requires more advance
preparation than you may be accustomed to. Your
trip organizer should send you a detailed pre-departure
info pack with advice on on visas, inoculations,
special clothing, medical tips, local customs,
and the like. It's not just fluff. Let it be your
bible and study it carefully.
TIP 16: Check to
see if your regular health insurance policy covers
illness or injury overseas.
If not, a short-term policy for the duration of
the trip will provide peace of mind. (Overseas
Adventure Travel offers one of the most comprehensive
insurance policies offered by the travel industry
at a low group rate) .
TIP 17: Consider
medical evacuation insurance.
An illness or accident in a remote area may require
a very expensive helicopter evacuation. (An emergency
airlift out of the Everest area in Nepal, for
example, costs about $8000). Your travel company
may offer coverage.
TIP 18: Learn the
World Wildlife Fund's guidelines on importing
wild-animal products.
In keeping with the spirit of ethical, responsible
travel, you should not plan to bring back ivory,
marine-mammal products, furs, coral, tortoise
shells, reptile skins, feathers, and certain other
wildlife products, For specifics, call the public
information office of the World Wildlife Fund
at 202-293-4800 and ask for the "Buyer Beware"
booklet. And bear in mind that the U.S. and most
foreign countries have laws banning the import
or export of most of these items.
FIT
FOR THE ROAD: FITNESS AND HEALTH CONCERNS
TIP 19: Get in
shape.
Physical requirements vary greatly according to
the trip, and you should follow the guidelines
in the pre-trip information that your travel company
supplies. But at a minimum, you should exercise
at least 20 minutes, three times a week, for two
months before departure. Walking or jogging is
ideal, but an exercise bicycle or treadmill is
a reasonable alternative. For hiking or trekking
trips, stretch your walks to a couple of hours
and spend extra time walking up hills, or join
a health club and use the stairs machine. Wear
your daypack (see Tip 33), and fill it with 10-15
pounds to simulate a typical load on the trail.
Another good exercise idea
is the roll-up, or crunch, which strengthens the
stomach muscles and thereby reduces the risk of
back problems. Lie on your back, with feet flat
on the floor and knees angled at 90 degrees. Then,
with hands behind the head, raise your torso as
far as you can. Repeat until you feel a good "burn"
in your stomach muscles (it won't take long).
TIP 20: If you
haven't had a dental checkup recently, get one
before you leave.
A toothache caused by a cavity or a lost filling
can turn into a painful ordeal when you're a five-day
walk from the nearest town.
TIP 21: Thoroughly
break in your hiking or walking shoes.
Many first-time adventure travelers buy new hiking
boots for the trip. You must walk a minimum of
20 miles in them, up and down hills, before departure.
This should be enough to get over the initial
break-in blisters and to ensure that they fit
properly. Wear your new boots or shoes during
your get-in-shape hikes (see Tip 19).
TIP 22: If you
wear contact lenses, consider disposables.
Removing and replacing contact lenses every day
on a camping trip can be a very annoying chore.
Extended-wear lenses can be worn overnight, which
cuts back on the hassle factor. Disposables are
even better for adventure travelers because you
need not carry along cleaning or storage paraphernalia.
Disposables have the additional advantage of being
very cheap; it's no big deal if you lose one.
All contact lens wearers, however, should be careful
at high altitudes. The lower oxygen level can
affect the cornea as well as the lungs. If you
see hazy rings or halos around bright lights,
take out the lenses for a while so that the corneas
can reoxygenate themselves.
TIP 23: For advice
on inoculations, consider visiting a travel clinic
or a physician specializing in travel.
Your family doctor probably isn't up to date on
the various strains of malaria or on whether you
really need a yellow-fever shot for Tanzania.
Travel specialists should have the latest scoop
from the Centers for Disease Control. You may
also call the CDC International Travelers Hotline
(404-332-4559) for computerized briefing. You
may also have information faxed to you.
TIP 24: If you're
traveling to a malaria-prone area, make sure to
take the proper malaria medication.
The classic malaria preventive is the cheap, well-proven
drug chloroquine, a derivative of quinine. Unfortunately,
the most dangerous strain of malaria parasite
has become chloroquine-resistant. The CDC currently
recommends mefloquin (trade name Lariam) for this
strain. Both pills are taken weekly (veteran travelers
traditionally pick Sunday as malaria-pill day)
and should be started one or two weeks before
departure.
Which drug you should take
depends on where you're going; most malarious
parts of Asia, Africa, and South America have
the chloroquine-resistant strain. And in a few
parts of Thailand, mefloquine resistance has developed,
necessitating use of the antibiotic doxycycline.
Check with your physician, travel company, or
the CDC for current recommendations and possible
side effects and contradications.
TIP 25: Take along
medications for travelers' diarrhea.
With the right precautions, many travelers can
avoid diarrhea entirely - see our advice in Tips
75, 76, and 77. If these don't work 100 percent,
Pepto Bismol tablets are usually very effective.
But if symptoms, persist, switch to the prescription
antibiotic Cipro. In some situations, you can
seek temporary relief with Immodium. (Don't continue
use for more than two days if blood is present,
and avoid taking Lomotil.) Always check with your
doctor for side effects and contraindications.
TIP 26: If you'll
be traveling at high elevations, learn about altitude
sickness and take along the prescription drug
Diamox.
Altitude sickness often strikes travelers who
venture above 8,000 feet, and it affects almost
everyone who goes higher than 14,000 feet. Symptoms
include headache, nausea, and a general feeling
of malaise; some people compare altitude sickness
to a bad hangover. More severe but rare altitude
problems include pulmonary edema (fluid in the
lungs) and cerebral edema (a swelling of the brain
that can lead to confusion, hallucinations, and
coma).
The key to avoiding altitude
sickness is gradual, well-planned ascent, which
allows the body time to acclimatize. Diamox may
be taken prophylactically or for the relief of
symptoms that appear in spite of a gradual ascent,
but it must not be used to push beyond safe limits.
THE RIGHT
STUFF : HOW AND WHAT TO PACK
TIP 27: Instead
of a suitcase, carry a big, soft, rugged duffel
bag.
There aren't many bellhops on an adventure trip.
Your bag will be in for some rough treatment strapped
to a yak, tossed onto the roof of a jeep, squashed
by tie-down ropes, or pelted by spray in the bottom
of a dugout canoe .
Make sure that it's pliable
enough to easily be handled by porters, who may
lash two or three duffels into their own large
packs. Pack duffels within duffels.
Four smaller zipper duffels
can be neatly nested within the giant main bag.
Sort the smaller bags roughly according to function:
one for everyday stuff, one for cold-weather gear,
etc. Cotton "city" clothes can be wrapped in plastic
shopping bags within their duffel. Books, maps,
notebooks, etc., can be stored in Ziploc bags,
inside their own smaller nylon duffel.
TIP 28: Pack Light.
On safari or on the trail, you want life to be
as simple as possible, and you'll best accomplish
this by packing less stuff. If the clothing list
your travel company provides seems impossibly
skimpy, don't worry. Almost all first-time adventure
travelers quickly realize they've brought too
much. Fashion doesn't count much out on the trail,
and modern outdoor clothing is so versatile that
one garment can perform a variety of functions.
So don't take more than the packing list advises;
if you do, you and the porters will have to lug
that much more around.
TIP 29: Plan to
dress conservatively.
Traditional societies often have old-fashioned
standards of dress, especially for women. Inappropriate
clothing may not only offend your hosts, but cause
you embarrassment as well. Your travel company
will advise you about dress customs for your particular
destination, but in general, men should always
wear shirts and, usually, long pants. For women,
it's ordinarily best to avoid shorts, tight-fitting
or revealing dresses, and sleeveless blouses.
TIP 30: Women should
consider making their primary travel garment a
long, loose skirt.
Most experienced women travelers to developing
countries and remote areas adhere to the local
style of women's dress. A mid-calf, loose, comfortable
skirt is the best way to identify yourself as
a woman. A skirt is actually easier and more comfortable,
even for hiking. In hot weather, a skirt is cooler
than pants; in cold weather, you can wear long
underwear underneath and stay just as warm.
Also you may be far from
toilet facilities. If there are no bushes or rocks
nearby, it's easier to make a discreetly modest
"pit stop" with the tent-like cover of a long
skirt.
TIP 31: Keep take-along
trash to a minimum.
This not only lightens and simplifies your pack;
it is environmentally responsible, too. Throw
out film boxes and take new clothing out of its
package. Pack a couple of bandannas instead of
a dozen packs of Kleenex.
TIP 32: Bring along
a medium-size day pack.
The right size is about 1,500 to 2,000 cubic inches,
and it should have hip straps and several compartments.
Use it on the airplane, as a carry-on bag for
all your indispensable items (documents, toiletries,
valuables, clothes to wear in case your checked
luggage is lost or delayed, etc). It has the decided
advantage of being easy to carry on long walks
down airport corridors. Once you arrive and the
trip begins, use it to carry all the things you'll
need during the day-water bottle, snacks, camera,
extra clothing. Your main duffel bag depends will
most likely be inaccessible.
As you select clothing
for a cool or cold-weather destination, your mantra
should be: "Layers are good, cotton is bad."
Your choice of travel clothes
obviously depends on your destination, but the
general strategy is to dress in layers that can
be quickly removed or replaced as the temperature
and your activity level vary. The best basic combination:
is an inner layer of polyester long underwear,
such as Polartec, or Capilene, that will wick
away perspiration; one or two middle layers of
fleece, Polartec, or other quick-drying, warm-when-wet
synthetic fabric (wool is okay, too); and an outer
shell that is windproof and waterproof, preferable
a breathable fabric such as Gore-Tex. Cotton (including
jeans) should be avoided; it becomes instantly
soggy from sweat or rain, loses virtually all
of its insulating abilities, and takes forever
to dry out.
If you're going on safari
in East Africa, cotton is fine. But avoid white.
You'll find it impossible to keep white clothing
clean because of the dust. Khaki color is light
enough to reflect the sun, but dark enough not
to show the dust.
TIP 33: Bring along
small toys to help break the ice with local kids
and adults
An inflatable glove, for example, is entertaining
and lets you point out where you live. Frisbees,
wiffle balls, hacky sacks, magic tricks, finger
puppets, and wind-up toys also enchant local kids.
Avoid electronic doodads like Gameboys, however,
whose high-tech allure will mesmerize the kids.
The toys are supposed to open up communication,
not close it off. At the end of the trip, you
can give the toys to your guide or porter for
his own children.
TIP 34: Slip in
some snapshots of your family, house, and hometown.
These are great icebreakers. Take along a Polaroid
camera this allows you to present locals with
instant pictures of themselves. If you have an
artistic bent, take along a small sketch pad or
water-color set.
TIP 35: If you'll
be camping, take along a Therm-a-Rest inflatable
air mattress.
These wonderful devices have in the past few years
revolutionized sleeping on the ground, and are
now virtually standard equipment among veteran
campers. The reason is simple: they are much more
comfortable than the old-style foam pads. Therm-a-Rests
are self-inflating, come in a variety of shapes
and sizes, and are durable. They're available
at most outdoor stores and mail-order companies.
TIP 36: Take along
a generous supply of Ziploc plastic bags.
They are invaluable for storing items that must
stay dry, for isolating wet and/or dirty clothes,
and for organizing luggage. For the compulsive
organizer, the sorting possibilities are endless:
emergency pills-Immodium, Diamox, etc.-in one
bag, daily vitamin pills in another. Or socks
in one bag, underwear in another. A bag just for
spare batteries. These see-through bags make it
easy to locate items.
TIP 37: Take along
a batch of trail mix.
Here's a recipe for an extraordinary tasty high-carbo
concoction that provides instant energy and staying
power along the trail. Simply mix dry-roasted
peanuts and chocolate-covered raisins .
TIP 38: Remember
the heavy-duty anti-sunburn gear for high-altitude
trips.
Severe sunburn is possible at high elevations,
because the thin air lets through more ultraviolet
radiation. At only 7,000 feet, UV radiation is
about 35 percent more intense than at sea level.
At 15,000 feet, it is nearly twice as intense.
And many adventure-travel destinations are in
tropical latitudes, where the sun is higher in
the sky than Americans are accustomed to. This
intensifies UV radiation even more. Large areas
of snow or water, which reflect UV rays, increase
exposure still more. Be sure to take along a wide-brimmed
hat, UV-blocking sunglasses with side panels ("glacier
glasses"), and lots of sunscreen (SPF 15 or higher).
TIP 39: For men
only: On a camping trip, take along a wide-mouth
plastic water-bottle to pee in during the night.
Assuming you have an understanding tent-mate,
this will save a possibly bone-chilling midnight
trip to the toilet tent. Be sure to mark the bottle
clearly with a skull and crossbones ore other
warning symbol so that you (or someone else) won't
mistakenly fill it with drinking water.
TIP40: Take along
skin moisturizer, even if you don't normally use
it.
High altitudes, dry air, and hot sun can combine
to really dry out skin.
TIP 41: Take along
a mini-tape recorder.
Audio memories-children giggling, porters singing
around the campfire, the hubbub of a marketplace,
the roar of a lion-can be more fun than photographs.
And local kids are astonished and delighted to
hear their own voices talking back to them.
TIP 42: Bring a
pair of compact lightweight binoculars.
Even if you're not a bird-watcher, you'll get
a whole new perspective on your trip. In addition
to the obvious benefits for a safari or animal-oriented
trip, it's fun to watch the snow blow off the
summit of a 25,999-foot Himalayan peak, check
out the porters' progress behind you, or just
people-watch from afar. A 9x25 model is a good
compromise among magnification, lightgathering
power, weight, and size.
TIP 43: If photography
is a major goal of your trip, bring along a spare
camera.
You simply can't count on being able to repair
or replace a malfunctioning camera on an adventure
trip. A good combination would be a high-quality
single-lens reflex (SLR) camera as your primary
equipment and a small, lightweight automatic point-and-shoot
camera as a backup. But don't bring a huge assortment
of camera bodies, lenses and tripods; you'll find
all that equipment a burden to carry and disruptive
to operate. In fact, you may find, to your surprise,
that you end up preferring the small, unobtrusive
point-and-shoot to the fancy SLR.
TIP 44: For wildlife
photography, use a 70-210 mm zoom lens.
Your best shots usually develop very suddenly
and you won't want to be changing lenses constantly.
Lenses longer than 210 mm are rarely necessary
and difficult to hold still without a tripod,
which you'll rarely have time to set up.
TIP 45: Take extra
batteries for your camera
Cold weather takes a heavy toll on camera batteries,
and you may be a week's walk from the nearest
replacement.
TIP 46: Put a haze
or sky filter on your camera lens.
In addition to improving the picture quality slightly,
the filter will protect the lens from dirt, moisture,
and dings. This is particularly important in Africa,
where conditions are sometimes very dusty and
where often you'll be scrambling madly for your
camera after sighting animals .
TIP 47: Buy a lead-lined
storage bag for your film.
Despite those reassuring signs, airport X-ray
machines can damage film, particularly machines
at small remote airports that may have old equipment.
Even security people in "advanced" nations, like
England, have been known to refuse to hand-check
films and cameras, putting them through the X-ray
machines despite pleas to the contrary.
JUST
BEFORE YOU GO
TIP 48: Arrange
your flight schedule to minimize jet lag.
If your traveling eastbound, schedule your arrival
for morning, destination time. Westbound, shoot
for a late afternoon arrival. This will help your
body's internal clock get "in sync" more quickly.
TIP 49: Hold off
on exchanging dollars for insider foreign currency.
The exchange rate is almost always better overseas
than at U.S. banks, which take hefty commissions
and don't like to trade in small amounts. Traveler's
checks are safer than cash, but sometimes command
a lower exchange rate.
TIP 50: Budget
for tips to your trip leader, guides, and porters.
Like waiters and ski instructors, adventure travel
company field staff traditionally rely on tips
for a portion of their income. The amount is strictly
up to you, but if you feel the staff did a good
job, 5 percent of your land cost is a good ballpark
figure. Keep in mind that what appears to be a
trivial amount of money to you can be a big help
to a local staff member. On treks, local guides
and porters also appreciate surplus items of clothing,
like T-shirts, fleece jackets, boots, and baseball
caps.
TIP 51: Get used
to the idea that you will be out of touch with
the rest of the world.
Where you're going, there probably won't be telephones.
If there are phones, they probably won't work.
If they do, it will be 3 a.m. at home when you
want to call.
TIP 52: If you're
bring more than 30 rolls of film, pack them into
separate containers.
In some countries, customs inspectors who find
large quantities of film in your luggage may assume
you are a professional photographer and demand
extra fees or permits.
TIP 53: If you're
susceptible to ear problems from rapid pressure
changes during airline flights, take an antihistamine
pill an hour before your plane takes off.
This should open up your eustachian tubes and
make it easier to equalize pressure around your
eardrum. If your ear begins to hurt on the way
up, while the pressure is decreasing, try swallowing
repeatedly or better yet, have a good yawn. If
you feel pain on the way down, as pressure is
increasing, hold your nose and try blowing gently.
This will help equalize the pressure on the eardrum.
Swallowing and yawning also help to decrease the
pressure.
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