Air Travel Packing Tips

I focus a lot on helping the first time or inexperienced traveler head out prepared and confident in themselves. Starting out as a new traveler can be intimidating. How do you jump into the gigantic travel fray and survive? How can you learn to love delays and long lines?
Get prepared.
What exactly does that mean? It means being confident in what you are doing, where you are going and how you are getting there. Basically, it means being comfortable with yourself when you leave home.
OK, so what. How do you do that? Follow these quick tips:
Tip #1
Know your destination.
Do some kind of reading before you go. Know how long its going to take to get there, and the time zone. Understand how the currency converts and get a handle on local customs.
Tip #2
Be prepared before you leave home.
Make sure you have the essentials you will need, especially for a safe trip. This includes a hide away money belt, copies of your passport, one credit card, debit card, ATM card and travelers checks. Take no more than $500 cash. Make sure someone has your itinerary in case of an emergency.
Tip #3
Travel light.
Pack for only five days. Carry one bag. Your bag should be a soft sided, durable carry bag of ballistic nylon. It needs to have a padded carry strap to sling it over your shoulder.
Tip #4
Leave early.
Wherever you are headed, no matter what type of transportation, leave early for you departure terminal. It means less stress for you . . . a lot less stress for you.
Tip #5
Look like you have traveled all your life.
Appearance matters. If you do the above tips you will look and feel like a veteran traveler. Veteran travel pros DO get a higher level of treatment and service from people who work within the travel industry.
Tip #6
Expect things to go wrong.
Most things run pretty well in the travel industry. There are inevitable delays and cancellations. After all, its a dynamic industry and getting the mind boggling number of pieces to work all in sync is a real juggling act. If you expect delays you are better prepared to deal with them. If things go well, and they usually do, you get a nice mental lift as you travel. The more travel experience you get the better you get at knowing where delays usually occur and can either plan for them or try to avoid them.
Tip #7
Be polite.
This follows Tip #5 and #6. While it is your hard earned money that is paying for your travel you are one of thousands of travelers a day moving around the globe. Almost three-fourths of these people are inexperienced travelers. Many are stressed out, tired, cranky and rude. If you are polite you will feel better and get better treatment.
About the Author:
M.D. Robinson is the webmaster of several neat sites where you can find useful and Free information along with many how-to articles that cover a large variety of interesting topics. Visit,
http://cool-tips.com/travel/
Written by: M.D. Robinson
Article Source: ArticlesBase.com – Become A Travel Pro In One Easy Lesson
I need advice on traveling (by air) with a Wacom tablet.?
I will be traveling around the world almost continuously over the remainder of the summer, and need to bring my Wacom 6×8 Intuos3 drawing tablet along with me.
I’ve never traveled with a pen tablet before, but I realize that they can be quite fragile – much moreso than laptops.
They can break easily if excess weight/pressure is applied.
(though I’m speaking from my experience with a graphire tablet… I’m not sure if Intuos tablets are really much more durable)
I’m most worried about packing the tablet in luggage for air travel. (I’ll be going through multiple airports and airplanes… I’m definitely planning on bringing it as a carry-on each time).
I’m thinking of bringing it in a laptop carrying case… as I’ve heard bad things about the carrying pouch manufactured by Wacom.
—
Does anyone here have experience traveling by air with a pen tablet?
…Any tips on how to keep from destroying it?
Well i was going to suggest the wacom pouches, but if your not comfortable with it, dont use it.
I think a laptop case would work although just to be safe add some extra padding to the sides if possible and maybe a layer of bubble wrap?
Also, if your going to have some clothes in your carry on, you could always keep it in the middle of your clothes.
Good luck with the traveling
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