Changemaker Travel
Travel tips, guides, and inspiration for changemakers
Introducing Changemaker Travel | A Movement of Sustainable and Ethical Travelers
Are you looking for a more meaningful way to travel? Welcome to changemaker travel, a movement of global citizens who are passionate about experiencing the world & changing the world.
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Welcome to our very first episode of the changemaker travel show. So I wanted to take this first episode as a bit of an opportunity to introduce myself and just talk a little bit about what changemaker travel actually is and how it kind of fits into the broader humanitarian change makers network.
And I thought the best way to introduce myself and kind of tell you a little bit about my story and how I came to love travel is to redo a chapter of our social change handbook, the change maker in you. So this is the chapter called experience the world. One of the most pivotal events in my journey of becoming a change maker happened on my first solo overseas trip at the end of 2013, about a month prior, I graduated from high school and began an incredibly underwhelming transition into adulthood.
The highlight of which was schoolies, the Australian tradition where high school leaves celebrate with a week long holiday at the end of their final semester of high school, it’s kind of like spring break by. and a dodgy house party by night. Nevertheless, I’d decided to take a break instead of going straight to university.
The following year, I decided against my previous plan to study environmental science at university. After the sobering realization that I could pursue a career and have a positive impact in the world in an area that I was far better suited towards than the natural sciences, I just needed to figure out my next.
As it turned out, the inspiration for my next step came with an unexpected and last minute invite to a conference in Hong Kong. In December of 2013, the conference was organized by the Y M C a of Hong Kong with the theme youth’s determination to transform the world. And I was sponsored to go because of the work I had done for my queen guide.
I received an invitation and an offer for an expenses paid trip minus the money I needed for last minute flights, which would double the normal price. When I booked to the bond Christmas Eve to leave on the 28th of December. I dubiously paid for them with all of the savings I had left from working two casual jobs in high school, I took a financial risk spending.
Most of my savings on those flights when I was only three months away from turning 18 and was planning to move away from home. But it turned out that taking this trip would be one of the best decisions I’ve ever made. I announced to my parents, that I was heading to Hong Kong in a few days while my mom was skeptical.
She knew I was far too independent to be stopped from going. I had traveled overseas a few times with my family, but never on my own. I had no idea what I was doing and I hadn’t really thought much further than the flight. I remember reading a blog about catching a plane for the first time that said all I had to do was focus on following the signs throughout the airport.
I was so nervous up until the point when I boarded the plane. But once I found my seat, I was so excited that I couldn’t even concentrate on watching a movie. I browsed to the airlines music selection and listened to a one Republic album. On repeat to this day, I have a ritual of listening to that same album whenever I’m flying to a new destination, because the songs stir the exact feeling of excitement that I experienced on that first solo.
once I landed, I made my way to the hotel where the conference was held, navigating a foreign city was difficult. As I looked out the window of my bus, I was quite startled by the contrast of large shopping malls sitting amongst cramped side streets of apartments and restaurants for the first three or four years, I traveled, I never purchased a local SIM card because I was always on a super tight backpacking budget, which meant travel without maps, Google translate or access to realtime location.
Local public transport information. I honestly dunno how I did it because these days I can’t get around any country without being able to look up where I am. If I get lost. When I arrived at the hotel I checked in and registered for the conference and spent the evening making friends with other young change makers who really made the trip.
Incredible. I met so many young people from around the world who were taking action in their own communities to make a change. And they all shared. From their own cultures and traditions, which only made me want to travel even more. If that wasn’t enough to inspire me to travel the speakers and workshop hosts from across the world, shared a common theme at the conference, as they spoke about the incredible things they had accomplished in their industries, as they talked about their youth and addressing local and global challenges, their stories invariably pointed to travel and adventures.
as one speaker said, if you want to change the world, you have to experience it. First. I scribbled that sentence down in my notes. And at that moment, something inside me must have clicked. I knew that no matter where the next few years of working or studying would take me traveling would be a priority. I strongly believe that travel has the power to change the world because it has the power to change people and people change the.
There’s not a doubt in my mind that my trip to Hong Kong and every other trip that followed changed me in some way and made me a better change maker. There are a few fundamental things you should develop to have a positive impact on the world and the communities that you are working with, understanding different political systems and awareness of different culture.
Knowledge of history and a deeper connection with both humanity and the natural world. Since that is the essence of what you seek to serve as a change maker, travel takes all of these things and serves ’em to you on a silver platter with a side of adventure, emotions, challenges, friendships, and memories.
It gives you firsthand experiences beyond what any classroom screen or book could ever provide. Travel allows you to experience other cultures, new cuisines, etiquettes, and lifestyles, which can help you understand diversity and be more empathetic in your work as a change maker at the same time, you’ll understand how despite differences.
There are also many things that people have in common that bind us together regardless of our cultural differences. You may have learned about ancient civilizations and major events in history that shaped the world as it exists today, but there’s something extra special about experiencing firsthand, a historic landmark, visiting museums and galleries, and getting a taste for a group’s history through your own eyes.
It’s also much easier to learn about empires, historical figures, conflicts, and changes that have occurred throughout history. When you get to explore them. when you travel, you don’t just get a taste of what the world was like in the past. You also get to experience it as it is today, you gain an understanding of the current political situation, the natural environment, economic situation, and social structure of a place.
When you visit yourself often the way we perceive the world and the way other people live is influenced by what we see in the media. But visiting a place, lets us experience it firsthand without any prejudice or biased. traveling into nature allows you to experience just how wonderful and resilient the natural world is when tackling issues like climate change or environmental degradation, it allows you to fully appreciate what you are working to protect and save.
Perhaps one of the most important aspects of travel as a form of education is that it helps you learn about yourself. Travel helped me realize the things I truly love the skills I have and the person I. With a limited understanding of yourself. You’ll never be able to truly tap in. When I returned from Hong Kong and my dad picked me up from the airport, I told him about all of the people I’d met, where they were from and how I wanted to visit all of their countries.
He laughed at me in a slightly patronizing tone and said, ah, mate, you’ve caught the travel bug. Unfortunately you’ll probably never get to travel to all of those. Probably not, I thought, but at least I can try and I can proudly say that I’ve never stopped trying I’ve packed in almost every continent studied abroad and will likely reach my goal of visiting 50 countries by the time I’m 25.
Didn’t know about COVID when I was right. That one, lucky for me, I’m one of those people who are motivated by naysay.
I must stop and acknowledge the privilege that I’ve had in being able to visit so many countries, being an independent young person and being able bodied being cisgender white and a female with an Australian citizenship puts me in a position of privilege as well as offering me relatively easy access through most borders.
I often think back to when I was 17 and finishing high school, because I never had any plans to travel. The. At that point, travel wasn’t even on my radar at all. And it was only because I was offered a sponsored trip to Hong Kong that I was able to go and therefore, discover my love for travel. There are young people around the world, engaging in advocacy and taking action in their own communities.
Doing far more impressive work than what I had done for my Queens guide award, who get hardly any recognition, some lack, the opportunities that I had to attend an international event like that in the first. If you ever find yourself with the opportunity and means to travel, my advice is to go for it. I can tell you now that the only trips I’ve ever regretted were the ones I didn’t go on just because I’ve been privileged enough to travel so much.
Doesn’t mean it’s been without hard work either. I’ve had to opt for 24 hour bus rides across Peru because a one hour flight wasn’t within my. . I was scammed by a travel agency in India, which meant I had to cut my trip short, or I wouldn’t have had enough money in the bank to pay for my rent back in Australia while I was gone in Greece, I walked for an hour and a half at 3:00 AM on a poorly lit street with a 20 kilo backpack from my guest house to the airport because the taxi would’ve been too.
On a trip to Croatia with my youngest sister, I ate baked beans on bread for lunch and hiked up for two hours on a mountain while my sister ordered lunch and a drink at a waterfront restaurant and caught the cable car to meet me at the lookout because she had a much larger budget than me. I’m not saying that you have to rough it or sacrifice comfort or safety.
If it’s not something you wanna do, but I don’t wanna give off the impression that my youth has been filled with glamorous overseas trips. You also don’t need to travel overseas to benefit from travel. You can explore new parts of your own country or even city to begin to understand how other people’s lives may vary from your own and where any common ground.
You don’t need to travel to the developing world to experience poverty. You can likely find examples of injustice or inequality in your own neighborhood. Visiting a country is also not the only way to experience its culture. Find people who are willing to share stories, customs, or food with you from their culture.
You may not live near the most picturesque landscapes, but I’m sure that you can still find natural wonders in your own region that have creatures worth protect. So after I made that commitment to myself that I would travel the world as much as I possibly could. Over the next few years, I also continued to learn.
I figured out, uh, by actually purchasing a book at an airport for a trip that sociology was something that I wanted to study. And then I eventually went on to, uh, do a double major in sociology and pH. For my arts degree and also a bachelor of global studies, the bachelor of global studies had a compulsory overseas component, which I also thought was really important because something I had noticed in a lot of the classrooms that I was in was that we were talking about all these important topics like global health and, uh, development and environmental sustain.
and sometimes you could just tell that other students were so far removed from these concepts, that they had these very kind of like narrow understandings and definitions of them that had kind of come from maybe what you might see in the mainstream media. And so I’m really glad that the degree had a compulsory overseas component and it was that overseas trip that I did for my global.
Uh, degree that really kind of catalyzed, I think the early stages of my career while I was studying in Canada, I was selected to attend a conference at the United nations headquarters in New York. And from there I really kind of dived into the world of social change professionally. I started volunteering and getting involved in activism.
And a year later when I was finishing my two undergraduate. I kind of needed a way to put everything I’d learned over the years together and kind of conceptualize exactly what I’d learned about social change. And it was really important for me to do this, not only for my own sanity, but because at that stage, I was also getting invited to speak at events and particularly for primary and secondary schools.
And I wanted a way to kind of really clearly communi. Uh, the different types of social change and how young people can bring them about. And that’s, what’s led me to start the humanitarian change makers network, teaching our framework for social change, which is in essence, a theory of change that kind of helps people understand the four main types of social change and how they can bring them about, and the humanitarian change makers network kind of just very organically evolved from.
I started a blog for it because I kind of knew that I wanted it to be bigger than just myself. I didn’t want it to be like a personal brand type thing. And since then we’ve got our handbook, which, uh, teaches this theory of change. We run workshops and we partner with different groups and organizations.
We have a solutions focused news platform, the changing times. We also have a podcast network now, which this podcast is a part of. We are in the process of setting up our video platform, changemaker B, we have so many exciting things happening. And recently we made the decision to really niche down and set up separate initiatives.
Something that was kind of always a struggle was the fact. being an organization that is about empowering people to create social change and engage in social change meant that we wanted to be reaching and teaching everyone regardless of what issues they are passionate about at this moment, because we believe that if you can build, uh, your change maker toolkit, you’ll be able to apply the skills and things that you learn to any issue that might come up now or in the future.
and it was just really hard to kind of message and reach people in that way. And so what we’ve done is instead we’ve focused on setting up separate initiatives that also allow us to kind of focus on other theories of change that we teach and use those as kind of a way. really reach a target, a section of our kind of target audience.
And so one of the ways we are doing that is with change maker travel. So I decided to put my gosh, I feel so old when I say this, but almost a decade. It’s 2022. And that first overseas trip happened at the end of 2013 when I finished high school. So looking for kind of a way to put those years of travel experience.
Um, to use, I guess, and kind of inspire other people to travel other change makers, to travel, um, as a way to kind of broaden their change maker toolkit and doing so in a way that just to be very transparent, uh, kind of allows us to generate income. being able to fund the humanitarian change makers network has always been probably the most difficult thing and the most challenging aspect of it.
And so the reason I decided to, um, start a lot of these initiatives as well is so that they can all be used to fund the impact work that we do with the humanitarian change makers network. So with changemaker travel, for example, we have a whole bunch of different partner. booking.com hostile world, way away.
Get your guide rental cars. O we have all of these different partners. And by using those services through our referral links on our website, we can earn a small commission and that commission will essentially. Go back into funding, the impact work of the humanitarian Changemakers network and all of the proceeds from changemaker travel, just like all of our other initiatives, uh, go directly to funding the impact work of the humanitarian Changemakers network.
Um, but I guess the bigger picture goal is to kind of inspire people in the same way that I was inspired. When I heard those words. If you wanna change the world, you have to experience it first. And I genuinely believe that my experience abroad and traveling the world has taught me probably more about social change.
My PhD has taught me. I do not think any other way of learning compares to actually getting out there and experiencing the world. And I want to make travel something that is more accessible to young people, regardless of their background, their budget or their abilities. I wanna make sure that we are traveling in a way that not only minimizes negative impact.
Really kind of actively seeks to have a positive impact on the places and the communities that we visit. And then, like I mentioned before, really using travel as a way to educate ourselves and to have impact. I think that travel gives us so many soft skills that kind of help us to broaden our change maker.
Okay. So, yeah, that’s what, uh, kind of inspired me to start changemaker travel. We are officially launching on world tourism day 2022, and I’m really looking forward to kind of just using this platform to not only share my own stories from around the world, but share the stories of other young change makers.
And to inspire you to get out there and travel and experience the world. And of course, to support the work of the humanitarian change makers network.
Why you should consider planning your own trips | DIY Trip Planning
Planning your own trips can be a great way to save money and travel in a more sustainable, ethical way. Here are four reasons why you should give it a try!
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Check out our FREE DIY Trip Planning tool
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So welcome to episode one of season, one of the changemaker travel podcast. Now, season one is basically going to be a guide to planning your own travel adventures. This is something that I am super passionate about and something that I have lots of experience doing. So. Started traveling back when I was 17 and I made a commitment to myself that I wanted to travel to 50 countries.
By the time I was 25. And in order to do that, I needed to get pretty good at booking and planning my own adventures, predominantly budget and backpacking adventures, because I was still a full-time student living out of home. And. Unfortunately, I didn’t quite hit my goal. I am now 26 and I’m sitting at 49 countries.
And if it wasn’t for the COVID 19 pandemic, I definitely would’ve exceeded that goal. But in all honesty, that goal that I’d set myself back then was really just an arbitrary number that I picked. And the reason I picked it was because I felt like I needed to have some kind of goal to work. To kind of keep me committed and motivated to traveling because I very naively thought that I might lose interest in travel or I might start to prioritize other things.
And it was really important to me at that time to commit to this idea of experiencing the world before I started trying to change the world. Obviously, I didn’t realize that travel is very much addictive. I think the more you travel, the more you want to travel and it’s probably like the best addiction anyone could ever have.
And I’m really grateful that I never lost interest in travel. I’ve only wanted to travel more as I’ve gotten older and. At the same time, I’m also incredibly grateful for all of the opportunities that I’ve had and all of the places that I’ve been. So, like I mentioned, one of the reasons that I was able to travel to so many places.
Was because I got really good at booking my own kind of like budget travel adventures. And this is definitely not something I was initially good at. It’s definitely something that I learned over time. There are so many great tools and resources out there that I just didn’t know existed in the beginning.
Um, and what I. Season one is all about is teaching you those tools and tricks that I’ve used to book most of my travel so that you can do the same. And. I have also put together a online masterclass on the changemaker travel website. So basically if you listen to this podcast and also go onto our website, you can kind of work through, or at least look at the tools that I’m gonna kind of mention.
On the website and have a go at using them yourself. There’s no obligation to use those tools. Uh, but with those tools, they are companies that we have partnered with, which means if you do end up booking through our links, we can possibly earn a small commission and that’s not costing you. And that’s kind of coming out of the money that the company would normally take.
If you booked directly through them and giving us a little percentage for kind of referring you. And that is just money that helps us not only keep changemaker travel going, but really putting that money towards supporting the impact work of the humanitarian Changemakers network. So I do appreciate anyone who uses those links.
Even if you don’t use our little tool that we’ve put together, those links are at the footer of our website. And so if you are going to book a hotel somewhere and you know that you’re gonna use say booking.com, uh, it would really mean a lot to us. If you just went onto booking.com through our link so that we could earn a little commission.
uh, but enough of, uh, that I wanna just kind of go over some of the benefits, I think, and reasons of booking your own travel. So one of the biggest kind of benefits and reasons to do it is obviously the money component you in most circumstances, not all, but in most you can save so much money by booking your own.
This is because you are obviously not paying for like an organized tour where they’re arranging everything for you. And they’re also obviously trying to create some kind of profit because they are a business and they need to pay their staff. Uh, but also because you are going to have to kind of be responsible for getting from a to B and doing all of those things, organizing the logistics of it, which does take a little bit of work.
But I also think it’s a really great way to kind of research the place that you’re going before you go there and get a feel for it. And also. Kind of make sure that the trip you’re taking is a trip that you wanna take. You have the freedom to choose where you go, you have the freedom to choose where you don’t go and you can choose the activities that you do based on your own interests, which I think is super important for change makers.
If you are somebody who. Really doesn’t have much of an interest in say, history or culture, then you might only, you know, wanna do one activity where you’re maybe going to a museum or something. uh, and you might be somebody who’s really interested in say geology and you wanna get out and explore, uh, some of the natural landscapes there and do some hiking or whatnot.
Or on the other hand, you might be somebody who’s really interested in the culture. And you really just wanna kind of dive deep into learning about the history of the place that you’re visiting and maybe doing some organized tours where. You have a guide to kind of explain the history and share stories and take you places where you may not be able to go without a registered to guide.
So you kind of have that freedom to make sure the trip is catered to your interests and needs. Another great thing is that you can also travel on your own. And I am a huge proponent for solo travel. I started traveling on my own more so out of necessity than anything. I simply didn’t have any friends that either wanted to, or could afford to travel to the places I wanted to go.
And that kind of made me make the decision that I would just do it on my own. And honestly, I feel like I. Owe so much of my personal development and self growth that I went through from the age of 17 to 25, to the fact that I pushed myself outside of my comfort zone so much. And I put myself in situations and circumstances where I had no choice, but to really dig deep and get to know myself and question my assumptions and question my beliefs and question my values and you know, the stories and narratives that I’d been telling myself for.
So. . And I also think that solo travel kind of pushes you outside your comfort zone, probably more so if you are an introvert like me, I may not come across as much of an introvert online, but I am definitely somebody who likes to be alone. I’m currently living in India right now. I love just having my own room and spending most of my time to myself and being able to just dive into my books and my work.
I find social interaction, very draining. Um, but solo travel, I think really kind of pushes you and forces you to get out of your comfort zone and make new friends. And even just doing activities and more adventurous things that push you outside your comfort zone, you know, it’s very cliche, but there’s that saying?
Uh, growth begins outside your comfort zone. And I think that is so true and you’ll probably end up growing more on a one month solo trip than you would doing an entire year’s worth of self-development work. Finally, I think that organizing your own travel. Is kind of just a really useful, soft skill. It actually gives you, I think so much more patience.
when it comes to finding things online, because sometimes you do need to dig into the depths of the internet to find that really good blog. That’s gonna tell you how to do a particular activity or explore a particular site on your. Or it just gives you the kind of skills you need to plan and manage a project.
I think I owe a lot of my project management skills and my coordination skills and my organization skills to the fact that I’ve been able to organize my own travel and adventures. So I definitely think you will pick up some soft skills that you can apply to your life and also to your work as a change maker.
So, those are kind of like the main reasons I think, uh, solo travel or at least booking and planning your own trips is a really good idea. Of course you can book and plan your own trips with friends as well. And this is something that I have done, uh, but I’ve definitely had more solo, self planned trips, then group.
But in this season, we will be going through all of the tools that you can use to help you plan your own adventure. We’re going to be looking at some of the things you need to consider, how you can figure out your itinerary, how to compare and choose accommodation, uh, things to consider about hostiles or backpacking, uh, whether you should organize.
Do organize tools or not transport between places and how to prepare for your trip. So we’re gonna cover lots of things in this series, and I will kind of keep my storytelling to a minimum so that these episodes are nice and concise for you. So in our next episode, we will be going over all of the tools that you can use to help start planning your adventure.
All the tools you need to plan your own travel adventure | DIY Trip Planning
Planning a sustainable, ethical, and affordable trip doesn’t have to be hard. Find out everything you need to know here!
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Welcome to episode two of the first season of the changemaker travel podcast. So this season is all about giving you the tools and tips that you need to start planning and booking your own travel adventures. So last episode, we looked at, uh, the benefits of planning and booking your own. And in this episode, we’re just gonna briefly go over some of the really useful tools that I think can help you, especially if you have never booked your own travel before.
So on our website, changemaker travel, which is linked in the episode, show notes, you will be able to find our online, uh, self planning tour, uh, sorry, self planning trip, uh, guide. And that is under the tours section. of our website. And if you go onto that, it’s completely free to access. You will see that it’s broken down into three parts and all of the tools and resources that I mention in this episode will be, uh, linked inside that.
So you can just go to that one place and kind of see them. So the reason we use these tools is because they are really great comparison tools. They allow us to kind of compare our options and see what’s out there before we make any commitments. Now you could simply Google, you know, two of. X or hotel in X on Google, but the results that you get would likely vary depending on, you know, how much money they’ve spent on advertising or the SEO that the company has used.
And so these comparison tools are a really useful way to, for you to not only search where you wanna go. Um, but to see the availability that they have to compare prices, to compare the facilities, to see reviews from other people that have, uh, gone before. . And so I really recommend using these comparison tools.
These are definitely not things I used in the beginning. When I started traveling, I was definitely that person who would just Google things, because I really had no idea what I was doing. And I feel like I definitely could have saved myself a lot of hassle and a lot of money in the very beginning. uh, nevertheless, I’m gonna kind of go over these tools.
So the first tool I would recommend is a flight comparison tool. And there are two that I have used. The first is sky scanner. I used sky scanner for many, many years. And the one I use now is way away. We have a partnership with way away. . Um, but basically these are both flight comparison tools. So they allow you to search the origin where you’re beginning and the destination.
So where you wanna go, um, you can select the departure and return dates and the number of passengers, and then search for flights. Now, with these, you can also, instead of maybe putting a destination, if you don’t know where you wanna go, you can put your origin destination and you can put every. And it will show you kind of like the cheapest places you can fly in that month.
Uh, and that’s also kind of a really useful way to just decide where you wanna go. I’ve done that a few times. I went to Singapore for my 23rd birthday and my friend and I were like, let’s just go onto sky scanner and see the cheapest place we can fly from Brisbane on that particular weekend, because it was a very last minute trip that we were doing and Singapore was one of the cheapest.
So that’s how we made our decision. It’s also really useful when you are like long term traveling and you are in a city or a country, and you’re not really sure where you’ll go next. I’ve done this when I was overseas, I was in Italy. And the only thing I really needed to do was make sure I was in Serbia on a particular date to meet my grandmother.
And that was still like two weeks away. So I was like, okay, I can squeeze in another country before I go there. And Poland was the cheapest place for me to fly out from. I think I was in Milan at the time, so I decided to fly to Poland and that was a really fun way to kind of just go with the flow and kind of figure out how I could save money as I was traveling.
So flight comparison tools are really useful. You. Need to be a little bit careful. I would say a lot of the time, some of the best deals that you’ll find are not with the airline. So you’ll be booking through a third party website and the flight comparison tool will show you the rating from people who have used these avoid ones that have a really low rating.
I have only had a few mish. Over the years. Um, but they were pretty bad. So for example, uh, I flew from Brisbane to Mexico city when I was 21 with my partner via, so we flew Brisbane to LA LA to Mexico city, I think. And we may have had another stopover in between. I’m really not sure. Uh, but while I was in, I think it was.
Uh, we went to check in and we’d already, you know, checked in from Brisbane, but because of the ster visa process that they have in the us, you can’t just transit through, you have to go through, um, this process. So we had to check in for our flights and we went to check in and the person was like, you don’t have a flight.
I was like, what do you mean? And. I’d paid for it. I had the PDFs on my phone. I think I might have had a printout with me. And for some reason my flight was just not there. My partners was there, but mine wasn’t there and there was nothing they could do. I don’t know whether it was the, uh, website that I’d used to book it or whether it was actually the airline, but they said there was no record of my flight whatsoever, which was ridiculous because we had booked.
Together. It was the same booking I paid for them in the same booking. His was there, mine wasn’t, but somehow my flight to get me from Brisbane to the us had worked. So I think that may have been the airline. I’m not too sure. And that was really upsetting because I never actually got my money back for that.
And we ended up booking completely new flights because my partner didn’t wanna fly to, uh, Mexico on his own. So. I waited and my partner at the time and I had to book completely new flights. So that was kind of one bad story. The other ended well, uh, but I was flying with my sister from Indonesia to Nepal, and I think we had to fly through Qala Lumpa in Malaysia.
I had booked like the cheapest flights I could find, and I should have paid more attention to this, but I didn’t, I was going through a little bit of a time on that trip. Uh, a friend of mine had passed away and I had booked a flight. It was the connecting flight was with a completely different like carrier and it was self transfer.
So. You have to self transfer. It means that when you check in for your first flight, you aren’t going to be able to check in for your next flight because it’s with a different carrier. They don’t have the communications between each one. And so when you get to your layover destination, you need to physically go and check in for that flight again, which sometimes means you’ll actually have to go through customs and then back through departures.
It’s a whole process. Anyway, I didn’t realize that I’d booked this flight and my sister and I had a really small window of time in between these two flights. The first flight had been delayed. And if we’d missed that next flight, we would’ve had to pay for a new one because there was like nothing they could have done about it because.
The flights weren’t connected, so they couldn’t have done anything and been like, oh yeah, we can see that your first flight was delayed. So we’ve put you on this other one. It was completely different. So we had to run from one terminal to the next terminal. And these aren’t terminals where you can just walk from one to the other.
You’ve actually gotta like, get on a train and physically travel from one airport terminal to the other. And we just made our flight like just. and yeah, we got really lucky that time. So those are some things to be wary of when you use these flight comparison tools, have a look at the rating that other people have given the website that you’re booking through.
If you wanna be a little bit more careful, then you can always just book directly through the. , but if you pick a third party website that has a good rating, they are generally pretty good. I’ve done that for most of my trips and I very rarely had a problem when I book with a reputable website. So that’s flight comparisons, uh, when it comes to other kinds of transport, which will be going into in a lot more detail in a further episode, um, there are tools like Romeo.
O M I O, which basically help you look at your transport options between two destinations. So they can be specific train stations or bus stops or cities, or they can be cities in different countries. And it will show you basically the options that you have in terms of air road or rail transport. So that’s another really useful tour, sorry, tool.
Uh, there’s also the option of hiring a car, which again, I’ll discuss in the transport episode. Um, but something to consider, if that’s, uh, something that’s gonna maybe work for you next, we have accommodation. So there are two accommodation tools I would recommend using the first is booking.com. I still remember the very first ad on TV for booking.com.
When it first came out, when I was still in high school and it was this guy and he was like booking.com, booking dot. Yeah. And after nearly a decade, I cannot say the word booking.com without my brain going booking dot. Yeah, it’s ridiculous. anyway, uh, booking.com basically allows you to. A whole bunch of different accommodation options.
So it’s not only hotels. They also have some hosts in there and it’s getting a little bit more kind of like Airbnb ish in the sense that sometimes there are like Airbnb style home stays that are available on booking.com. So I would recommend using booking.com. Chances are, if you are planning your own trip and it’s a budget or a backpacking trip, you’re not gonna want Airbnb anyway.
But Airbnb is obviously an. Um, but I like booking.com because like I said, it gives you a whole bunch of different types of accommodations. You can filter out the ones that you don’t want. Um, you know, it’s the age old trick, but sort. Price low, high and you’ll get the cheapest ones come up first. And it’s really useful because you can see ratings, you can see all of the facilities, you can see photos.
Um, and so you can really get a good feel for where you’re gonna be going and choose your accommodation that way. If you want to stay in a hostile. I would definitely recommend using hostile world. It’s kind of like the world’s largest, uh, hostile comparison website. Host world is great because most of the time as well, you do have to pay a, um, like a booking.
When you book, you have to pay a small fee, uh, but you don’t have to pay front. You can usually pay when you get there. So it’s a good way to kind of just like reserve your accommodation. And don’t feel stressed if things change further down the line, uh, but hostile world allows you to search hosts all over the world.
Now, most tourist E places will have hosts. I think there’s only been a handful of cities that I’ve traveled to where I’ve wanted to stay in a hostile and they didn’t have any, uh, so I definitely recommend host world and I’ll be going in in more. to some of the things to consider. When you do book a host in our accommodation episode, uh, the final kind of tools I would also recommend are tour comparison tools.
So via tour, I think is how you say it, uh, is earned by TripAdvisor, which is the website that people use to go and leave reviews for all of their travels. Vita came out or I at least found out about it when I was traveling in Europe back when I was 19. And it was a really great website. I pretty much used it for a booking, all of the tours that I wanted to do, and they give you like a digital ticket and you just use that to.
Go and do all of your tours. The other one that I have used, and I’ve mostly used it in Australia is get your guide. The thing I love about get your guide is that they kind of have like an instant confirmation for most tours and I’ve used get your guide to book tours, literally like half an hour before they depart.
Um, and if the tour guide don’t have you on your, like, they don’t have you on your list, you just show them that you booked and. Or like, yeah, that’s fine. I did that when I was in Newcastle and I went sand boarding. I’ve done it a bunch of times. If , you are a bit of a last minute, go with the flow kind of person, get your guide is also great.
So those are all of the kind of like comparison tools I would recommend checking out, uh, and using when you do book and plan your own travel. Now, if you go onto our website and use our trip planning, there is a notion template. If you know me at all, you’ll know that I love notion. I use it for everything.
I use it to organize my entire life, my social enterprise, my PhD, everything. I have a life admin page on my notion, my personal finances. Everything is in my notion. And once I discovered notion back during, I think it was during COVID times. Uh, so I never got to use it for travel until recently, but it is an absolute godsend of an application and program.
I have it on all of my devices. It’s on my laptop, it’s on my phone, it’s on my iPad. And it just allows you to basically put anything on there so I can put text information in there. I can embed PDF documents. And have all of my tickets and booking confirmations there in my itinerary. I can plan it. I can add things to my calendar.
I can embed a YouTube video of somebody in a particular place for inspiration, like all of these things. So I’ve put together just a really simple. Downloadable notion template, uh, with our trip planning guide, if you wanted to use that, uh, it’s completely free notion I believe is free. So definitely check that out.
If you’re looking for a way and a program to kind of store all of the information, uh, while you’re planning your trip. So in the next, uh, few episodes, we will be going over these tools in a little bit more detail. And just talking you through the processes that I have used in order to plan my own travel adventures.
Things to consider before you start planning | DIY Trip Planning
Before you learn how to plan a trip that is budget-friendly and eco-conscious, in this episode we’ll be talking about all of the things you should consider before you start planning your own trips.
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Welcome to episode three of season, one of the change maker, travel podcast. We are talking all things, planning your own travel adventures in this season. And in this episode, I’m gonna walk you through a key things that you wanna consider before you start actually planning your itinerary. so I call this the kind of like the preplanning, which is all of the things that you should consider.
Um, and there’s kind of like three main things you wanna consider before you start planning. The first is, uh, the travel dates. So sometimes the travel dates are going to determine where you go or vice versa. Sometimes the destination is going to determine the dates that you travel. So. . If you have a destination in mind, you may wanna pick travel dates that will take you to that country or that place at a particular season, or, um, maybe whether it’s peak tourism season or low season, uh, see what the weather is like.
Or you may just wanna travel on dates that you know, you’re available. So you’ve got some time off work or, um, you’ve got some free. Whatever it might be, but the first thing you wanna consider is the travel dates. Um, if you’ve got your dates in mind or, you know, when you can travel, um, I mentioned in the previous episode that you can use comparison tools, uh, for flights to see the cheapest places to fly to during a particular time period.
So maybe that’s something you wanna use to kind of determine where you go. So depending on where you are going, the weather, the temperature, it’s all gonna vary pretty drastically. uh, from season to season and you don’t wanna get caught somewhere in terrible weather or a terrible season. Um, but at the same time, maybe going at an off peak season means it’s gonna be less crowded.
It means that things are gonna be cheaper. Um, so do a little bit of digging before you kind of confirm your dates and, you know, look at booking tickets or things like that. The next thing I think to consider is your travel style. Now your travel style is going to depend on for one, whether you are traveling with someone else, and this is definitely something that you want to chat to, the people that you’re traveling about.
If you are gonna be traveling with other people, Uh, traveling, I think is a really great way to not only bond and connect better with family or friends. Um, but it’s also a really good way of saving money by splitting the costs of accommodation and meals. Uh, but if you are gonna be traveling with other people, you should really have, uh, a discussion with them.
Before you set out to plan your trip. You don’t wanna assume that the people you’re traveling with are gonna be comfortable spending the same amount of money as. , they might have a much lower budget or they might have much higher expectations in terms of the standards that they want. So it’s really good to just avoid any awkwardness or disappointment further down the road by getting these details out of the way so that you can kind of focus on having a really good trip.
This is definitely not something I probably considered properly before traveling to the UK with my family. So I traveled through Europe, uh, on my own for a couple of weeks. And then my youngest sister met up with me and we were backpacking around together for a few more weeks. And then we’d organized a trip to the UK as like a surprise for my mom’s 50th.
And we met them over in London. So my mom and my other sister flew over to meet us. And it became very apparent pretty much from the beginning of the trip that we had very different travel styles. It wasn’t so much the budget. It was just more the style of travel. I was there with my 28 liter backpack and, you know, I had no makeup with me.
I had the same clothes that I’d been carrying around on my back for the last, uh, month or. And my sister was the same. She had a backpack that I’d lent her. And then my mom and my other sister rocked up and they had big suitcases, big like roller luggages, which we would soon find, uh, were not very good for rolling on the cobblestone pavements in whales.
Uh, but we just had very different travel styles. And while my sister and I were, you know, used to staying in hostels, so we were happy with really simple accommodation. My mom and my sister kind of wanted things that were a little bit nicer because, you know, for them, this was a holiday. They both worked full time for my sister and I, this was, you know, just another travel adventure and we were very comfortable with roughing it.
And so that was definitely something that we should have kind of had a discussion about beforehand. So knowing your budget and also knowing your travel style, I think is really important. Your travel style can also kind of depend on whether you are more of a go with the flow free spirit person or a planner.
And I definitely have been both. I think it depends on the trip that I’m taking. And possibly the season of my life that I’m in there have definitely been times where I was very much a go with the flow kind of person. And these are, tend, tend to be when I’m on like my bigger, long term trips when I was backpacking through Europe.
Uh, even when I was backpacking through south America, uh, when I’ve kind of gone to places and only booked a one way flight and I didn’t have a return ticket. So it was either fly home when I run out of money or. Figure out when my budget is getting kind of low and booking a flight and then figuring out how I get there by that particular date.
I have also had times when I have very much been a plan, everything research, everything, because I’m only in this place for X amount of days or X amount of weeks. And I want to make sure I get the most out of it. you might be a free spirit traveler or a planner just depending on your personality or like me, depending on the type of trip that you’re taking.
So that’s also something to consider again, if you are traveling with other people, I think it’s really important to have this discussion with your travel companions, because there’s nothing worse than having somebody who just wants to go with the flow. And then they’re with somebody who says, I wanna be here and I wanna do this, this, this, this, this, it can cause a little bit of tension.
another thing, uh, that kind of relates to being a free spirit or a planner is, uh, like I said, whether you wanna go slow or really fill your itinerary and. I think it’s really important to note that there’s no right or wrong way to travel. I think, you know, as much as we want to be having a positive impact on the places that we are traveling to, there’s no one size fits all approach for sustainable or ethical or responsible travel and tourism.
And some travelers are gonna advocate for things like slow travel that kind of allows you to see more of the world and have. What you might call authentic cultural experiences, but we know that this isn’t feasible for everyone. Some people are not gonna have the time to do that. They’re not gonna have the resources.
They maybe don’t have the. Uh, accessibility that we have that allows us to travel for as long as we want or wherever we want. And so they need to spend more money to make sure they can actually access the places that they wanna go and make sure that their needs are met. So there are all of these other factors that come into it.
And so I think it’s just really important to travel in a way that works for you. . So if you are traveling with other people, you know, discussing, you know, whether you want to kind of city hop from place to place and maybe travel to multiple countries on one trip, or whether you just wanna kind of go slow and, you know, spend more time in more smaller towns or cities in one country and make sure you’re both on the same page about that.
I think it’s also good to just be really clear. You can travel with other people and travel together, but not have to do everything together at the same time. And so making sure that, you know, maybe if you have a friend who wants to do more activities than you, or the opposite, they wanna just spend more time relaxing.
You have a conversation beforehand and you just say, look, I wanna do these things. I know that you probably don’t wanna go on this. 12 hour hike. So are you okay to just do your own thing or spend time at the hotel while I go off and do this and just making sure that you’re on the same page is really important.
So that’s the second thing kind of figuring out, um, firstly, your travel dates and your destination and then your travel style and your travel style is going to determine and be determined by your budget. The third thing you need to consider before you start actually planning your itinerary is just making sure you know, what the requirements are.
Believe it or not, there is more to traveling than just packing your bags and hitting the road or heading to the airport. And if you’re not careful, you can end up in a foreign country without the proper documentation, which can lead to all sorts of problems. This is thankfully not something that I have had to personally deal with, but I have heard some horror stories from people on the road.
So making sure that your passport is up to. and something else to be aware of is most countries require you to have six months validity on your passport before it expires. I’ve heard stories. And actually it happened to a friend when we were traveling to Fiji, she had five months left before her passport expired and they told her that she needed to have six months left.
That’s pretty standard all around the world. So making sure that your passport is up to date and. It’s not going to expire anytime soon, making sure that you are up to date with any vaccinations. There are certain countries that require vaccinations, like yellow fever, uh, and now with the COVID pandemic, that’s a whole other thing.
Some countries require vaccinations, some don’t, but it’s just really important to make sure that you are aware of what the requirements are and that you meet these requirements before you start planning your trip. So. If you are Australian, I would recommend using the government smart traveler website.
It gives you up to date, information about not only COVID and vaccine requirements, but also visas and any general travel advice for a country. So it’s important that you check to see whether you do need a visa for the country or the countries that you’re thinking of traveling to and what kind of visas they offer.
A lot of countries. These days offer people with Australian citizenship or an Australian passport visas on arrival, or you can apply for E visas online, but some do require you to go through a more formal process and submit documents. If you. Uh, particularly going for a non tourist visa. So if it’s a work or a study or a special visa that you need, so that would be the final thing to check.
Uh, so you can go to the smart traveler website, which is linked in our travel planning guide. So those are all of the things to consider. Before you start planning your. And in the next episode, we’re going to be going over what you need to do or what you can do to figure out your itinerary.
Figuring out your itinerary | DIY Trip Planning
In this episode we’ll be talking about all of the things you can do to figure out a rough itinerary when planning your own trips.
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Welcome to episode four of our DIY trip planning podcast season. I think this week’s episode is probably gonna be the most fun. I think that planning your itinerary is always the most exciting part of a trip. And in this episode, we’re gonna be kind of walking through the steps that I personally use.
That I would recommend to figure out a bit of a rough itinerary before you start looking into the details. It can be a little bit overwhelming when you wanna go somewhere that you’ve never been before. And you’re like, okay, I need to figure out how to do this on my own. But the process that I use is actually quite simple.
So what I would normally do is first of all, determine exactly where you wanna go. So. I’m assuming that when you get to this point, you’ve already picked a country, at least. Uh, so what I would normally do is I would go onto Google and I would also probably go onto YouTube and I would Google say new deli travel log or top things to do in new Del.
and I would have a look at what comes up on Google. I would look at travel websites. I would read people’s blogs and I would watch some YouTube videos just to kind of get a feel. Then I would kind of make like a list of the things that I’ve noticed that for me are non-negotiables. So you might see somebody’s gone to a particular location or done a particular tour when they visited this place.
And you’re like, okay, I absolutely must go. So kind of begin to write down what you think your non-negotiables might be. Now. We also have a growing library on our website. With, uh, travel tips and guides, uh, for specific locations that focus on budget travel and also travel for change makers. So we’ve got places that, uh, can kind of teach you about history or human rights or environmentally sustainable trips and locations.
So that’s also something to. now what I normally do is try and have an approximate timeframe in mind that I’m gonna be traveling for. And then what I will do is I will go onto Google and I will search for it, itineraries of organized tours or just itineraries, um, for that particular time period and where I wanna go.
I’m gonna use India as an example because I’m currently in India. So it’s all my brain can kind of think about right now, uh, in this heat. And I do apologize if there is a slight background noise in these podcast episodes, because I cannot sit here without my fan on. I’m already drenched in sweat as I record this.
And my fan is on the highest. Uh, but what I would do is if I say I knew I had. two weeks in India and I knew I would be flying into new Delhi. So I would go onto Google and I would look up top things to do in India or top things to do near new. and I would get a rough idea, I would say, okay, clearly deli, there’s a few things to do, but most people go from deli to ARA to see the Taj Mahal, and then they go to dry, poor.
So I would have an idea that the golden triangle as it’s called is something I would wanna do. And. I might wanna see what else is out there. So maybe I do a little bit more digging and I realize that I really like the look of Roger, which is the state that dry, poor is the capital of, so I’ve decided that during my two weeks, I want to see dry P and Roger, what I would then do is I would start Googling the itineraries of other tours or other travel bloggers.
So I might go five day. Deli itinerary. And I would just have a look at exactly what comes up. So if there’s organized tours, I would look at where they go, how many days they spend in each location. And I would also do the same with some travel bloggers, see what they recommend, where they’ve gone, what they’ve done.
And that would kind of be, I guess, like the bones of my itinerary. So I would use that to kind of get a rough idea. So I’d see. Okay. I probably need to spend about five days. Doing the golden triangle. So between deli ARA dry poor. And that gives me just under maybe 10 days to do RAR and get myself back to deli to fly home.
So then I would be looking at, you know, seven day RAR itinerary, and I would have a look at the different cities to go to and I would get kind of a feel for which ones I really wanna go to which ones I’d like to go to, uh, and kind of put. I would put that personally in my notion, just because notion is the best way to organize anything in my opinion.
Um, but otherwise just make notes of it. So that should kind of give you a rough idea and what I call kind of like the bare bones of your itinerary. Then what you can do is start kind of flushing things out a little bit. Something you would wanna look at is if you know that you wanna spend X amount of days in deli before you head to ARA, for example, you would then look at your transport tool and look at the different transport options because the distance is going to kind of play a key role.
Now, when you use these tools, you can have a look and see. I might want to get the overnight train here. And that means that you can maybe dedicate, say six hours to being on the train at night and you don’t have to kind of use that chunk of time during the day. So just going through and seeing how far away everything is from each other, you might find that, you know, you won’t get to go to say the city called GEK in RADA because it’s.
Far too far away on the train and you don’t have that many hours to kind of commit and you wanna keep your schedule a little bit more concise and, uh, timely. So you might have to cross that one off your list, unless it was say like a non-negotiable for you. In which case you could look at other areas that you might wanna make some sacrifices or cross off your list.
So just knowing the distance between places. and how you’re gonna get there can help you figure out exactly how long you’re gonna be spending in each location. Another thing as well is if you can afford flights, a one hour flight is obviously a lot more simple than taking an overnight bus or a 10 or 12 hour train.
um, so if you can afford that, that’s something to consider. And then, then you’ll kind of know that you’ve got more time to spend in these places because you don’t have to spend 16 hours of your day, uh, getting transport from a to B. So then what you would have is a rough idea of the places that you want to go to and how long you’re gonna be spending in each of them based on your transport.
Then the fun part comes, and this is where you can start to kind of figure out exactly what it is you wanna do in each location. So I would again go onto Google and be Googling, you know, top things to do in whatever city or I would be looking at YouTube videos. I would also consider some things like if you have a special, like particular interest, you might wanna, you know, Google top things to do in.
This location for nature lovers or top art galleries in wherever you’re going or street art trail in whatever. Top museums in wherever, and that can kind of help you kind of make sure that you’re gonna be able to go to the places that are gonna really kind of add new things to your change maker toolkit, which I think is a really important part of travel.
So just as an example, being in India, I have saved in my notion a, uh, list of the top Gandhi museums that I wanna go to here in India. I also just have a general list of top museum. I’ve been to the agricultural museum. There’s a woman’s museum I wanna go to, and these are all museums that relate to the areas of my PhD research, because I think it would be really cool to kind of go and immerse myself in a museum and learn about these things from a kind of different angle.
So that’s just an example of how you can kind of find special interest, uh, activities and tours. Another thing would be to just Google, you know, eco tours in wherever, and you don’t need to necessarily book any of these tours, but what it’s gonna give you is kind of an idea of the things and the options that you have, which can kind of help you in figuring out exactly what it is that you wanna do.
so that’s kind of the three part process that I follow. When I am planning a trip, we will go into more detail in the next episodes about organizing and planning, transport, and accommodation and activities. But I think in order to kind of have a rough itinerary in place, and maybe if you’re traveling with friends and you wanna kind of show them and get their feedback, this is kind of the process that I would go through to get those, uh, bare bones and the details that you need.
It is kind of an iterative and messy process. And unfortunately you probably won’t get to go to every single place that you wanna go. it’s just not possible. So it’s really about finding the places that most align with your interests and your values and making sure that you can go to those places. So after you kind of go through this very ITER cycle of research and looking things up online, you will have an idea of.
Exactly what places you wanna go to in that particular country, you’ll have an idea of how long you want to spend in them. Uh, also considering how long it will take for you to get from a, to B and travel between places. And then you’ll also have an idea of the activities that you’ll do, and you can begin to kind of spread them out across however many days you’ve got in that location, just for a rough.
so that is the process that I would recommend for planning your itinerary.
Transport between places | DIY Trip Planning
Unsure of how to get from place to place while you’re planning your sustainable, ethical trip? Look no further! This episode breaks down the many options available to you.
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Well, welcome to episode five. So in this episode, we are looking at transport, particularly transport in between the places that you’ll be visiting. This is kind of, I think the most complicated part of booking your trip, just because it’s one of those things that if you stuff it up or something goes wrong, it can really impact the rest of the.
So there are three kind of main transport options to get you between places. There is air rail and road. Air is fairly straightforward, so I won’t be going into it too much. We discussed in the episode, uh, number two, when I was discussing the tools that you can use to plan your trip, uh, the flat comparison tools and they are a great way to kind.
Get a feel for how much it would cost you to fly between two different locations, how much it would cost, uh, all of that. And I think your budget will largely depend on. Whether air travel is something that’s right for you. There have been trips that I’ve taken where I’ve caught flights between cities because it’s quite affordable.
Uh, I think a lot of Southeast Asian countries kind of come to mind. There are budget airlines, like air Asia, which allow you to, you know, kind of get between two places. And they’re very affordable. A. Between two cities is, you know, 60 Australian dollars. Similarly in Europe, there is, I think it’s Ryan air, which I think I needed to catch one flight when I was in Europe.
Uh, when I was backpacking when I was 19 and yeah, they’re very like basic budget airlines. They don’t really have like a business class or anything like that, but they get you from a to B they’re comfortable enough. They’re affordable. So, uh, air travel is definitely an option. In other countries, it might be a little bit out of your budget and you might wanna consider either traveling by rail or by road.
so rail travel, I think can be great, depending on the country that you’re in, depending on the region of the world that you’re in, there are parts of the world that have really nice and really well established, uh, railway systems as an Australian. This is not something that we have. We don’t really have, uh, intercity.
Railway lines, you know, you can’t just jump on a train and go from Brisbane to Sydney or Melbourne. It’s just not a thing. You know, the furthest you can get on a train from Brisbane. You actually, you can get past the sunshine coast. There is a train that goes up to kind of like the mid Queensland cars, I think maybe to like rock Hampton.
Um, but yeah, it’s not really a thing. Whereas, you know, you go to parts of the world like Europe, where there is an extensive railway system that, uh, kind of operates in between these countries. Uh, not like not just within the countries, but from country to country. And I traveled the first time I went to Europe using a UAL pass.
So Europeans use Interrail passes. The version of it for foreigners is UAL. And I basically bought an unlimited three month UAL pass. It was kind of expensive, but it was so worth it because I caught trains everywhere. I caught them within cities. I caught them between cities, between countries and it was super simple.
So I definitely recommend rail. Similarly places like India have a really great rail system. You can pretty much get to, you know, any. And I don’t wanna say any town, cuz there are like rural areas, but anywhere that has like a significant enough population will have a train station and you can get there.
And there are different classes of trains, uh, not only in India, but in other, uh, countries, rail systems. So you have like first class carriages, you have second class. Sometimes they might have air con or non-A con sometimes they’ll be sleep. Carriages where you can actually lie down. The first time I got a sleeper train was in Sri Lanka, I think.
And that was a really fun experience in the first time. Uh, so yeah, I definitely recommend rail as an option. Now you can use. Comparison tools like Romeo, which allow you to put in two different locations and compare all of your options. So that’s also something to consider using when you’re trying to decide what transport option.
I think Romeo is great because it also allows you to look at the carbon emissions that the particular mode of transport you’re taking would omit. So if you are, uh, conscious of, uh, your impact on the environment, I definitely recommend using Romeo to. so then we have road travel. Now road travel could be car.
It could be like a taxi or an Uber, or it could be a bus. So depending on where you are and where you wanna go, you know, any of those options could be more appealing or more budget friendly to you. There are certain places where there is no public transport. There is no like bus system between cities. Um, but they might have like an affordable taxi service, an intercity taxi service, or Uber might be affordable.
There are places where you might wanna look at renting a car and generally that’s something that works. If you are over the age of 25 or you are traveling in a group and you wanna split the costs, uh, traveling by. Like a higher car can be a really good idea. I am a big proponent of buses as well. I think they are a super comfortable way to travel.
I think the longest bus I ever took was a 24 hour bus, uh, from must have been from Lima in Peru to Cusco where we were going to do the Inca trail. And I have also got overnight buses in. I remember Cambodia. And they had like a sleeper bus. So similar to a sleeper train where you actually had like a little kind of like little bunk bed type thing on the bus, as opposed to chairs that recline.
But there’s a whole bunch of different options. I know there are companies that allow you to travel, uh, across Europe, on bus. there is a pretty extensive bus network in the us. And also in Canada, I know that, you know, Greyhound buses are the ones that we’re all kind of familiar with, but there are other ones as well.
I used the Greyhound bus system to travel around Canada. When I was doing my semester abroad in Canada, I lived in a different town to the town that I worked. so I had my place in the Fraser valley and I would get the Greyhound bus from the Fraser valley to Vancouver pretty much every weekend to go to work.
So I definitely, uh, enjoy traveling by bus. You can sometimes have really good facilities and bosses as well. You might be able to get like a wall plug or at least a USB point to charge your phone. They often have toilets. and so these are all like important things to consider. So those are kind of like your options when it comes to traveling between cities.
And I guess the point I wanna make would be to use a comparison tool, something like Romeo, and, you know, don’t be freaked out by the thought of a 10 hour train or a 20 hour bus, you know, depending on the times that they depart and arrive a 10 hour. Overnight train is a really good way for you to save money on accommodation because you don’t need accommodation for that night.
And if you’re anything like me, you’ll be able to sleep on the train. So you go to sleep you’re in one place, you wake up, you’re at your destination. Uh, it’s kind of a no brainer for me. Bus travel. Very similar. I. I can’t really recall. what I did on most of the longer bus journeys, but they often have like a TV on the bus, but I’ve always typically traveled with books.
And if there’s like a charging point, then I can charge my laptop and I can get some work done. Um, I can charge my phone and, you know, listen to podcasts and audio books and all of those things. So I think as long as you are comfortable a sleeping on a bus or a train. and, you know, kind of just keeping yourself occupied if you’re not gonna have data or you’re not gonna be able to charge your device, then it’s worth considering, you know, downloading podcasts or audiobooks to listen to offline so that you can save battery and just little things like that to consider.
Uh, but this is a really great way to save money when you are traveling, you know, it’s gonna cost you a couple of hundred bucks sometimes to fly between cities. whereas a bus might only cost you $50. So it’s a really great way to save money. I know for some people that that might not be a lot of money, but for others, you know, that’s the difference between you cutting your trip two days shorter than you have to, because you’ve gotta, you know, fork out all of this extra money.
So it is definitely something to really consider and think about and discuss with your travel companions. If you are traveling with. So in our next episode, we will be looking at all of the things to consider when you are comparing your accommodation options.
Things to consider when comparing accomodation | DIY Trip Planning
When it comes to sustainable and ethical travel, price is only one factor you should consider. Here are four more things to think about when choosing your accommodation.
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Welcome to episode six of our DIY travel planning season of the change maker travel podcast. In this episode, we are talking about the things to consider when you are comparing accommodation. Now, I already mentioned the tools that I would use when planning my own travel in episode two. So predominantly booking dot.
and hostile world, of course, depending on the type of travel you have other options, you might have other websites that you like to use. You might wanna use something like Airbnb. Uh, if you’re traveling with a group or, you know, you wanna just nice place to yourself. Um, but in this episode, we’re gonna be really focusing on those comparison tools like booking.com and host world.
So there are kind of five things that I would consider when you are trying to decide. Which places to stay. So whenever I search, you know, I’m still at that stage in my life where I pretty much have to go sort price low to high . Um, but you know, one day I aspire to be able to book accommodation, not based on how cheap it is, but, uh, nevertheless, it’s the reason I’ve been able to travel so much.
obviously price is a huge thing to consider and not just going for the lowest price, but also kind of going for, I think, the best value. And so price is obviously kind of like the number one thing I would consider, but the next four things I think are gonna help you kind of determine whether or not it.
Is worth the money that you’re gonna be paying. So the first thing I would look at would be the traveler reviews and ratings. There is no point staying in my opinion at a, you know, three star hotel. That has a review, like average review rating of say six out of 10, when you could stay at a two star hotel that might not be as good, but the ratings are all, you know, like 9.5.
I think that what travelers say just says so much about a place and you know, don’t just look at the rating, but really go into the reviews, see what people have said, see what people liked about it. See what people didn’t like about. You know, you might really need wifi to get work done or connect with people because you’re not gonna have a local SIM card.
And if the reviews say that the wifi was a little bit dodgy and it always cut out, then that’s something to consider. You might wanna go somewhere where people have said the wifi was great. If you want to stay somewhere that you know, offers breakfast. And all of the reviews say that the breakfast was rubbish.
You know, maybe it’s not such a good idea to stay there. So I would definitely consider the user’s ratings and reviews and I would kind of hold them in high regard than whether it’s a one or two or three or four star hotel. The next thing I would then consider. And it’s something that will come up on, I think both booking.com and host world is how far away it is from the city center.
now you might wanna go one of two ways. You might want to make sure that you’re staying somewhere that is in the city center. It’s close to public transport. It’s close to all of the actions, the actions action, the places you wanna eat out, the places you wanna go, or you might wanna choose somewhere that is a little bit further out because you don’t wanna be, uh, in the midst of all of the hustle and bustle.
So again, The not only the distance from the city center, but also what people have said about the location is something to consider. I mentioned it just before that. Typically, if you are in the city center, public transport is going to be more readily available. So if you are relying on public transport, I would definitely consider staying somewhere in the city center.
You may also wanna look at how you’re getting to this location. So if you are flying in from somewhere and you are only spending one night there and you don’t really wanna explore it, you’re just there to kind of travel to your next destination the next morning. Maybe you’d feel more comfortable staying at a hotel that’s close to the airport.
So you don’t have to worry about traveling all the way into the city. So these are all things that you need to consider based on what you’ve got in your itinerary that you wanna get done. The next thing I would look at is what the facilities are like. So this is, I think, particularly relevant. If you are staying in a host.
uh, but also in a hotel. So, you know, things I look for in a host would be kitchen facilities. For me. That’s a, non-negotiable one of the reasons I like to stay in hosts is because I like to have the freedom to prepare my own food, because food is definitely something that can chew through your budget if you’re not careful.
So being able to, you know, go to the grocery store and buy some groceries and just pop them in the fridge and cook my own food is important to me. So having a look at the kitchen facilities that they have on offer. If I was staying in a hotel, something I’d try and look for which they don’t always have the information.
And sometimes the information is not accurate, but I like to know what facilities I have in terms of, uh, cooking. So I recently today road trip, uh, around the top end from Dharman to Lichfield and Katherine and Kaka. And I really wanted to stay in hotels because I was traveling with my sister and a friend.
I wanted to stay in places that would have really basic facilities though, like a bar fridge and ideally a microwave and a kettle. I like to be able to just boil water and make my own coffee when I need it. I like to keep my food cold in a fridge. And ideally a microwave is good because it just means that.
You’re opening up an entire window of possibilities, in my opinion, for food options, you know, you can buy a packet of F laughs and pop them in the microwave, and then you can have Faffel wraps. Uh, if you have a microwave, I think a microwave is, uh, something that I like to look for in a hotel. But again, if you’re not somebody who cares about that and you wanna be eating out, or you wanna be able to order room service when you’re traveling, just making sure that you look at the facilities that they have on.
I would also look at the photos that they have, because that’s gonna give you an idea of what the room is gonna look like, what it’s gonna have, how much space you’re gonna have, and you know, just little things to make a note of. So for example, if you have to work and you’re going to need to do some zoom meetings or whatever, maybe you wanna pick somewhere that has a nice big window, or it looks like it has, you know, lots of natural light.
You look presentable in your zoom meetings? I don’t know. These are all things to kind of consider. Another thing I would consider is I mentioned this one before. Um, but you know, whether it offers free breakfast, this is obviously common in hotels. A lot of hotels offer breakfast sometimes it’s, you know, something that you have to add on.
Um, but a lot of hosts also offer it again. Sometimes it’s included. Sometimes it’s something you have to add on. So if it’s included, you know, it might not be great. I’ve stayed at hostels. It included breakfast and it pretty much was just toast. But again, that’s free toast. That’s bread that you don’t have to pay for that’s breakfast sorted in the morning, or in my case, when I travel, my first breakfast is sorted.
Maybe not second breakfast. Uh, it’s also, I think, good to consider that if. Breakfast is an additional add on, you know, that might be worth the money for you because it means you don’t have to worry about going out and finding somewhere to have breakfast, especially if you’re staying in a hotel, but you might look at the price to add breakfast and you might think, mm, I could probably go to the, uh, Starbucks around the corner and have a coffee and a bagel for half of that price.
And that will do me. So again, just making decisions, um, based on that, the final thing I. Would consider. And this is something that I think personally is really important is whether or not it has a 24 hour reception. It’s really important for me to book places that have 24 hour service desks, because I have on numerous occasions had delayed flights, delayed bus journeys, uh, all of these things that meant I arrived.
The time I told them I would be there to check in and not everybody has someone there to, first of all, check you in, but also just to let you in the building when you get there that late. So something I always look for is a 24 hour reception. I obviously give them the time that I’m arriving, but you know, you never know what’s gonna happen.
And there have been times where I’ve had to book accommodation at the last minute and I’ve lost out on money that I’d already spent on another place. Uh, for example, when I was in France, I can’t remember the details exactly, but I remember calling this guy when I was on the train and I was telling him that my train was delayed and I wouldn’t get there till quarter past 11.
But the reception closed at 11:00 PM. And I don’t know if it was. The accent and the culture, or if it was him, but he was telling me, I don’t care about your train. Uh, I finish at 11. So if you’re not here by 11, you don’t get checked in. So I had to find another place I could stay at, which was stressful, especially because I didn’t even have a local SIM card then.
So it was really hard for me to contact people and places. Uh, so whether it has a 24 hour service desk is also something to consider a final thing. I would also consider, I think most places. Like most hotels even hosts. They. At least provide you with some really useful information, uh, on what to do, but there are some that will also book tours for you.
So if that’s something that you have kind of said, oh, you know, I might do a tour of this thing, but I’ll decide when I get there finding, uh, a host or a hotel that does bookings for you can be really useful, especially if they are gonna be last minute bookings, because they can just help you get a really good.
on really good tours. So those are the things I would consider when you are comparing your accommodation. It’s not just a matter of whether it’s a good price and whether it looks good because I could tell you some, uh, stories of not so good places that I have stayed, because I didn’t know to look for these.
So, again, just being mindful of the reviews and ratings that people have left looking at how far it is from the city center and what your public transport options are looking at, the facilities that they offer, whether it offers added bonuses like free breakfast and when they’re open. So whether or not they have a 24 hour service desk.
The benefits of hostels | DIY Trip Planning
If you’ve never stayed in a hostel before, then this episode is for you. I’ll share the 5 things that I think are great about staying in hostels and why they can be an excellent travel choice.
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To tour or not to tour? | DIY Trip Planning
Are tours a waste of money? Or are they the best way to see a new place? This episode I’ll share my tips on how to decide whether or not to book a tour while travelling.
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Welcome to episode number eight to tour or not to tour. That is the question that we will be tackling in this episode. So if you’ve been following along and using our trip planning tool, or even if you’re just listening, uh, the next stage in planning your trip would be to figure out the exact activities that you’re gonna do.
This is super exciting. And. I really don’t think there’s a one size fits all approach or formula for this because the types of tours and activities that you do, and the reasons you choose to do things yourself, or to do an organized tour really vary. I think from context to context, I don’t think that there’s really a blanket statement that would describe my approach to tours.
There are sometimes when I will jump at the chance to do something on my. Whether that’s because of budget constraints or because I just wanna take the time to kind of enjoy it and experience it myself. Um, but there are also times when I will also choose to go on an organized tour. Maybe it is quicker and easier.
Maybe I would like to have the knowledge of a local guide to show me around and teach me things. Uh, and then of course there are things like budget constraints and time constraints that also play a. and depending on the trip that I’m on. So it really is a very contextual thing, I think. But what I will be going into into this episode is basically just some kind of tips and things that you can do.
And I would recommend when you are planning your own, uh, trip to always look at both options. So always look at the option available to you. For doing it yourself. And also look at the options available to you for doing an organized tour, whether that’s like a group tour or a private tour or a walking tour, whatever it may be.
Because you don’t really know what options are out there until you look. And you might think that you wanna do it yourself because you don’t have the budget to pay for a tour, but then you might actually find that there are really affordable tours out there and they might be, you know, worth spending that little bit of money so that you do have that knowledgeable guide to kind of show you around and teach you things that you wouldn’t be able to learn.
If you had just done it yourself. So for each activity or each thing that you wanna. in your different locations. I would definitely again, make sure you have a look at what your options are. So see what your options are in terms of guided tours, walking tours, private tours, using those, uh, tour comparison tools is really helpful.
So via, and get your guide are the two that I like to use. And I would also just have a quick Google. Top tours to do in wherever you can look at TripAdvisor and find, uh, reviews for things. You can also look at blogs that people have written, there will be travel bloggers and people who are kind of experts on things who might put up a blog post and tell you how to do everything that a particular tour does on your.
and that can be really useful if that’s something that you would rather do to save money. So have a look at your options, have a look at the organized tours, have a look at what they offer. Are they affordable? Do you think that they’re good value? Do you think that you are going to learn things and gain things from doing that tour that you wouldn’t get?
If you did it yourself, uh, and then obviously ask those same questions for when it comes to doing it yourself, be like, is it really. You know, me catching public transport to do this when I could get driven around in an air conditioned bus with a tour guide, or, you know, is it really feasible for me to go to all of these places in such a short period of time?
Or will I maybe miss out on learning some really kind of key things about this area. If I do it on my own and don’t do a tour, and these are things you need to consider. And if you were traveling with people, obviously discuss this with the people that you’re traveling with. So that you’re all on the same page.
so something else to look up. Uh, I mentioned walking tours, I think walking tours are great. If you wanna kind of see a bunch of different sites in a city, uh, but maybe not necessarily like tourist destinations per se, but you just wanna kind of get a better understanding of the city that you’re in and you can do a walking tour.
You can, you know, walk around with a guide, whether it’s a group tour or a private tour or a free walking tour. And they’ll be able to tell you some stories and things about the buildings and the places that you probably wouldn’t get. If you were to just walk around a city on your own. So that’s always something to consider because these often are quite affordable.
Uh, these tours, uh, you might be the kind of person who thinks, you know, I don’t really need to know the history of this particular building. You know, I’m not really phased by that. I’d rather just walk out and chat to locals and go find somewhere to eat and do all that, which is totally fine. You can do that.
Uh, there’s no one size fits all approach to travel. It’s about finding what works best for you and your interests. I did mention free walking tours, and if you’re not familiar with the concept of a free walking tour, they are essentially tours that operate in lots of different cities in the world. Uh, but not every city offers them in some parts of the world.
They are not legal. It’s not allowed for people to like offer tourism without being paid for it. Um, obviously the laws are different in different places. But essentially they are tours where the guide is somebody who is giving you the tour and they work purely for tips. So they might tell you at the end of the tour, like this is the average amount that people give as a tip, which I think the number they usually say is around 20 Australian dollars.
Um, but they say you can give whatever you feel is appropriate. And these are really good because a, you don’t actually have to give. No, I would, I wouldn’t recommend going on one of these tours and not giving anything. I mean, even if you are in a particularly tight financial situation, chances are, if you’re traveling and you’re exploring somewhere new, you can afford to give something.
Even if that means, you know, you have to sacrifice eating out. at breakfast tomorrow and instead opt for corn flakes at the hostel. I think it is, uh, a good thing to give them something, but it also means you don’t have to give them a set amount. And there have been times when I was traveling with myself and a partner or myself and a friend, and we had a really tight budget and we, because I was paying for everything I could only afford to, you know, give, they might say like the average person gives $20 and then I would.
20 Australian dollars, but for the two of us instead of each, and you don’t feel as bad about it, you’ve given what you can, you’re on a tight budget. Um, another thing to consider, I think is, you know, if you do these free walking tours, uh, I always like to. Support the organization in any way that I can. So if you know, you could tag them in your photos, on social media, just so that they have things that they can share and create more awareness for their brand.
That’s always a really good way to support them as well. So definitely, uh, consider doing those free walking tours because I think they are really good value. And, you know, there have been countries that I’ve gone to in, I think it was Chile. Uh, when I was backpacking around Chile with my then partner. We pretty much only did free walking tours.
There was a company that operated these free walking tours in Santiago, Val Pazo and San Pedro in the AMA desert. And we did. Every tour that they offered. So I think they offered like two different tours in each place. And we just did every single one of the free walking tours that they offered. It was a great way to learn about these places.
The guides were always really knowledgeable and really cool. They would tell you about good places to go and they’re super affordable. So I am a huge fan of free walking tours. If it’s something that is on. Another thing that you can always do. If you wanna do something yourself, you are maybe on a tighter budget is to Google DIY walking tour of, or DIY self tour of, and look at the place you’re going.
Whether it’s a city or a particular historical landmark, there are definitely places that you can go and catch public transport and get there yourself and pay the admission yourself and go around without having. A actual tour guide. And again, this is often a great way to learn about the place that you’re going to.
Maybe you will grab some brochures when you pay for your ticket or grab like an audio tour and do that as a way to kind of learn the history or learn about where you are. And you might be able to find information online and you might, you know, think that this is sufficient enough for me to learn about the history I’d like to then just go and see it and absorb it all while I’m there.
There are often bloggers who kind of have enough information on a blog post that will tell you how you can actually see it and do it yourself. So that is always an option as. sometimes of course, doing an organized tour is going to be better value. You know, you’re gonna get the knowledge. You’re gonna get driven around from a to B.
You’re not gonna have the hassle of having to catch public transport and do things yourself and figure things out for yourself. And sometimes if you do like a group tour where you are one of many people on like a big bus and you, you know, like the tourists get hurted around, sometimes they are good value and.
Yeah, you don’t wanna walk around looking like a dokey tourist on a big bus, especially when the tour guides hold up a flag, but sometimes that is the most affordable way to do it. And you will learn lots. These tour guides are very knowledgeable and they’re often very passionate about the places that they’re taking you.
So that is something to consider when you are deciding whether to tour or not to. so that’s kind of the, I guess, tips that I have and the process that I would go through when I’m figuring out whether to do a tour or not. Again, I always find that looking on like YouTube is a really good way to kind of see what something is.
Like. A lot of the times people will have like a travel vlog of them just doing a particular tour. You can actually watch the specific tour that you might be looking at booking to see if it’s something that you wanna do. and that’s a really good way to get a feel for it. So those are my tips on whether to tour or Octa tour.
So by the time you have gotten to this stage, you will pretty much have an itinerary. You’ll know where you’re going, when you’re going, where you’re gonna stay, how you’re gonna get from a to B. And now you’ll know whether to tour or not to tour. I would also. maybe just consider when deciding whether to tour or not to tour, uh, the, I think the length of your travel and your interests should also dictate whether you do a tour or not.
For example, I when I was in the UK with my mum and my sisters, we separated one day because I really wanted to hike up a particular mountain and go to a national park. And that was not something they were interested in whatsoever. So they went off and they did a historical tour. Of this particular town in Wales, they went to a castle, got to do all this cool stuff.
And I spent the day hiking up a mountain and that was a much nicer way for me to spend my time. I really love hiking. So. just considering, you know, what’s important to you. What are your values? Again? We separated in, I think it was in Liverpool. They went to the Beatles museum and I really wanted to go to the international slavery museum.
The slavery museum was free. The Beatles museum was paid, and I think they might have done that as part of a tour. And I was happy to kind of skip that one because I was like, oh, I would much rather do this and just go for a little wander around. so don’t feel pressured to kind of always do like the touristy things when you are somewhere.
If there are things that are much more aligned with your interests and values that you would rather do. And if you are traveling with people, don’t feel pressured to always stick with them. So those are my tips for deciding whether to tour or not.
Preparing for your trip | DIY Trip Planning
A few things to consider when preparing for your sustainable and ethical travel adventure.
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Welcome to our final episode in our DIY travel planning season of the changemaker travel podcast. So in this podcast, we have gone over all of the essential things that you should consider when you are planning your own travel adventure. So we have looked at, uh, things that you should consider. When you’re booking your own trips, the tools that you might need to use and the tools that we recommend the things to consider before you actually start planning, how to figure out what goes into your itinerary, how to figure out some essential details like transport between places.
When you are comparing your accommodation, what things to look out for some benefits of hosts and whether or not to book an organized tour. In this episode, we will just be looking at some last minute things to consider when you are preparing for your trip. So assuming you’ve actually gone through the process of doing this by now, you will have an itinerary that is ready to be booked, so you can.
Those flights, you can book that transport. You can book your accommodation and book any flights. Now, when you’re getting ready to go on your trip, super exciting, but there are kind of like some really boring, important housekeeping things to consider. So one of those is travel insurance. I believe that travel insurance is a non-negotiable.
When you are traveling abroad, traveling within Australia is D. Of course just be mindful when you are traveling in different states. I am from Queensland where we don’t need to pay for ambulance services, but I know that in other states, uh, people are required to pay for an ambulance. If they need an ambulance.
I personally have health insurance, so I know that wherever I go in Australia, I have ambulance. uh, but that’s something to consider whether you are traveling abroad or not traveling abroad. Definitely, definitely, definitely have travel insurance. I cannot stress this enough people. I’m sure people are all aware of the importance of travel insurance by now.
Um, but they’re, you know, are stories that you hear of people who have had seemingly minor incidences happen to them when they’re overseas and. Because they didn’t have travel insurance. They, you know, couldn’t get out of a pickle or they got themselves into a pickle. I met somebody when I was traveling once who was staying at my hostel, who was unable to travel to the us because they needed to go to the emergency room.
For, I think it was a broken wrist or something. I’m not really sure what happened. Actually. I think it was a broken wrist, but they racked up a hospital bill as a foreigner without travel insurance of about $20,000. And they are unable to enter the us until that debt is paid off. He told me that he will never go to the us because he’s never gonna pay that off
Um, which you. Fair enough, but it is definitely something to consider. I have, uh, have always had travel insurance. And once when I was overseas with one of my partners, we hired a scooter and he was driving and crashed the scooter. The damages weren’t major. I think it was, there was like, we weren’t hurt.
It was just damages to the scooter. And I think they came to about 400 Australian dollars. And I thought that because we had travel insurance, we would be fine. We would be covered, but we had hired the scooter from our hotel that we were staying at and not like an official scooter rental agency. And we didn’t have, uh, neither of us had an international driver’s license.
So our travel insurance. Pay us back. So I had to pay for those damages out of pocket. So, you know, it is really something to not only consider having travel insurance, but also just being mindful of what your travel insurance covers you for. . I remember when I traveled to Cambodia with some friends, we were doing a Southeast Asia trip and, you know, told everyone, make sure you’ve got travel insurance.
One of the girls that we were traveling with didn’t have travel insurance and we were trying to drill into her why it’s so important. We were like, look. Babe you need travel insurance, even if something minor happens, you know, you’re not in Australia. If you end up going to the hospital for a sprained ankle, that can cost you thousands of dollars, because you’re not covered under the healthcare system, like it’s couple of hundred bucks that you pay for upfront.
And it just means that you’re covered, like, please do it. And she refused to do it anyway. She was out that night and she was with like one of our friends and myself and another friend were like in the. And we heard this like screech of a motorcycle and someone screamed like, oh, really loudly. And we were like, Ooh, what was that?
And we were like, that didn’t sound good. Sounded like some tourists getting in trouble. And then we were like, this is why she needs to have travel insurance. Anyway, 30 minutes later, they both walk in looking very distraught. Uh, it turns out that somebody on a motorcycle had tried to grab her bag as they drove past her.
And she ended up. She had her passport and everything in that bag. And she ended up getting the bag back. Somebody ended up kicking this person off their motorbike or something. I don’t know. I wasn’t there. Um, but we basically said to her, like, this is exactly why we tell you to get travel insurance. You know, you, would’ve not had your passport.
You would’ve lost your cash, your wallet, everything. And, you know, she actually was. So upset about the situation that she flew back to Australia. She didn’t even stay on the trip. Um, but that’s just, that’s another story in and of itself, but yeah, I cannot stress enough how important travel insurance is.
So another thing to consider is making copies of your documents, just like my friend, who could have lost her passport. It’s a really good idea to have a photocopy. Like a hard copy of your travel documents when you travel, but also to have a digital copy of them somewhere where you can access it. So for example, if all of your stuff was lost or even your phone was stolen, just knowing that you could log into your Gmail account and sitting in your inbox is an email to yourself with your visa and your passport and your documents as an attachment, something as simple.
is really important. If you are maybe younger or you’ve never traveled before, you may want to send a copy of your itinerary to somebody back home, just so that they know where you are. Um, that’s, you know, something that my mom made me do when I was 17. Uh, another thing to consider is how you’re gonna access your money.
So most banks, I believe I’m with Commonwealth bank. It’s one of the banks I’m with and I have a Commonwealth bank travel card. So previously I would travel and I would put money on a prepaid travel card. Now I have a travel card linked to my Commonwealth bank. and that allows me to take money out anywhere in the world.
I don’t need to alert my bank when I’m overseas, because if you don’t alert your bank, when you’re overseas, they might think that there’s fraudulent activity and they might actually cancel or freeze your cards. Um, and then you can’t access your money, which is really frustrating. another thing is that when you have an international, like a travel card, it just means that your bank won’t charge you ridiculous fees for getting cash out at an international ATM.
So you will still have to pay like the ATM fees, but you won’t be paying like an additional fee that your bank will charge you on top of what the ATM is already charging you. So that’s something to consider. Traveling with cash again, up to you. It’s something that I’ve done in the past. It’s something I have friends that like to travel and pay for everything with cash.
I’m not super comfortable traveling with large amounts of cash on me, but I do always have some of the local currency on me because you never know where you’re gonna be. And you may not have access to. An ATM or you may not be able to get cash out. There are certain ATMs in some parts of the world where for whatever reason, I can’t use my international card.
So even here in India, I know that there are certain banks like the state bank of India that does allow me to get cash out. But some of the small state branches, um, and banks don’t allow me to get cash out. So it’s always good for me to have a little bit of cash on hand so that I can pay my shore driver or pay for things when I’m out and about.
something else to consider is sorting out your health. I think before you travel internationally, if you’re gonna be gone for a long time, it’s a really good idea to kind of go in, get a checkup with your doctor, obviously, with COVID 19 COVID vaccinations, all of those things are something to consider. If you’re traveling for a long time and also helps to get a longer prescription and.
Go to the pharmacy and, you know, make sure you get one of the prescriptions where they say you can get multiple of them at once. That’s what I do for my antidepressants before I go overseas, I’ll stack up, uh, stock up on them. And also with other prescription medication that you might need, sometimes it can help to just get a letter from your doctor to.
you know, why you take a particular prescription medication, how long you’ve been taking it for what your medical history is just in case you need to go to a local doctor and get a prescription. So for example, I have all of my antidepressants here in India that I need until the end of the year. And then I have a letter from my doctor that explains that sometimes I suffer from eczema.
I take this particular eczema treat. and this is what I’ve taken in the past and what hasn’t worked and whatnot. And then if I do end up getting an eczema flare up, which touch would I won’t, uh, cuz that just sounds like it would be horrible in this heat. Uh, I can go to a doctor and say, I have eczema.
This is what I’ve taken. Can I please have a prescription? So that’s also something to consider. If you take prescription me. it also helps, I think, to have a letter from your doctor in case you are going through customs and you do have like a big supply of, you know, a controlled substance, finally staying connected.
So I never used to get local SIM cards when I traveled, uh, back in the day from memory, I think that they used to lock. So your phone would be like locked to a certain provider and you couldn’t just switch SIM cards like you can these days. So I think that was part of the reason why I never got local Sims.
The other reason I think it was just, I was on such a tight budget. It wasn’t something that I really considered, but these days I never traveled without getting a local SIM it’s. Super super, super important for me to just know that I can go onto Google maps. If I’m lost use Google translate, I can order an Uber when I’m out and about all of these things, like to me are super important.
They obviously weren’t a priority way back when, but looking back on the travels that I’ve had and some of the mishaps, I would definitely recommend getting a local SIM. Even if you either get a local SIM. And don’t necessarily use it. Like still keep your phone on airplane mode and then just turn it on when you actually need it or keep your regular SIM card in and just like, see if your service provider offers some kind of like deals when you’re overseas.
There are some providers that I know when you travel to certain countries, like for $5 a day or $10 a day, you can use your current phone plan while overseas. So that might be something to consider just switching to. But I do think it can be really helpful, uh, to just be able to Google things and search for things.
And now being able to listen to podcasts and audio books and things like that is definitely a benefit. so those are the things that I would consider before you head on your adventure. So you’ve got your itinerary ready to go when you’re preparing, just consider those things, travel insurance, making sure you’ve got copies of your documents and stuff.
Once you’ve got your visas, all sorted registering with smart traveler was something as well. Um, making sure you’re able to access your money, sorting out your health, and then being able to stay connected. So that concludes my little DIY trip planning, uh, masterclass, uh, and podcast series. I hope you found this valuable.
I would absolutely love to see any of the trips that you plan. Uh, any of the preparation stage, uh, feel free to tag me at Tiana T I Y a N a J or tag changemaker travel. on Instagram. I would love to see it. I would love to share it, uh, and see where you are going all around the world.