As an update to yesterday's post, I direct you to Fodor's 10 tips for becoming a carry on traveler. The absolute hardest one for me is the advice to carry one pair of shoes. How do you DO that??
I find that if the shoes are comfortable, they're generally not pretty. I like sneakers for walking, sandals for hot days, something decent looking for evenings. But I'm working on it...
Fodor's left out the most useful and effective tip: Don't fly. Buy some guidebooks and research your home town as if it were halfway around the world, and enjoy a staycation discovering the treasures you've overlooked in your own backyard. Take a road trip. Take a bus trip. Take a train trip. Ride your bicycle. Walk. And enjoy-- a great vacation doesn't have to revolve around arbitrary restrictions capriciously imposed by unaccountable pretend-policemen, as a prerequisite for the privilege of getting pretzeled into a middle seat for 14 hours on what was supposed to be an 8-hour flight.
I'm not suggesting giving up world travel permanently. I'm only reminding everyone that there are alternatives that may be just as satisfying. Enjoying a great trip that doesn't involve flying is the best way to tell the TSA and the airlines what you really think of the service they provide. I just got back from a wonderful solo road trip that has made me very excited about the longer one I'm planning for the autumn.
Posted by: Ted | June 23, 2009 at 11:24 PM
I like the idea of a road trip. It's always fun to get out and explore.
A "staycation?" Not so much. Unless I leave my house and home life completely, chores and errands creep in.
Posted by: Ellen | June 25, 2009 at 09:10 PM
It depends on how you do a "staycation." Taking well-researched day trips from home may be an excellent way for someone who is suffering with the current economic difficulties to nonetheless enjoy a fine vacation. But otherwise I think it's false economy to do that, for exactly the reasons you note (to which might possibly be added the unpleasantness of a lengthy "commute" to those day trips). A solo staycation in a nice hotel in another part of your home town can provide all the necessary elements of a "real" vacation, including escape from quotidian chores and routines. It's obviously not something you'd want to do every time, but it's surely good to enjoy a vacation without the restrictions, hassles, and discomfort air travel imposes. Again, the point is that there are worthwhile alternatives to the ordeal of flying.
Posted by: Ted | June 29, 2009 at 10:15 PM