Trip Planning: the early stages

C5D_0033How do you plan for a big trip? Do you go on a tour and let them take care of everything for you? Do you plan out an itinerary ahead of time? Do you just wing it and plan day by day? Do you always have a guide book in hand? Or do you use an app these days?

Although recently we have tested the waters by using app’s alone on a few trips, we still love to start our trip planning with a stack of guidebooks. There’s nothing like the excitement we feel when we lug home a stack from the library and spread them out between us with a glass of wine, a cozy blanket, and a big notepad. And there we can sit for hours reading side by side, discovering towns that sound spectacularly undiscovered, unusual, but creative museums or hard to reach but oh so amazing beaches.

Maybe we’ve already hit “purchase” on our airline tickets and now we want to start to finding the specifics about where we want to go, or maybe the trip is still just a vision, a hope, a dream, and we want to start honing in on making it a reality. Either way, once we have a guidebook in hand, there’s usually no stopping the momentum of the trip….we are going to go now, one way or another. How can you resist the urge to discover and explore that is generated when you read about the places to see, people to meet, culture to experience, and food to eat? That constant excitement of travel, of discovering things new to you everyday, is totally addicting and we have to get our fix as often as we can afford.Trip-planning-the-early-stages-1But even for the more practical things, guidebooks are still the easiest way for us to get all the essential info of a trip in one place. They provide a few photos, not always much (especially if you use Lonely Planet), but just enough to tease us and make us want to get there as fast as possible to see more. But they also include a little, or sometimes quite a lot, of background about the countries, the towns, the neighborhoods even. They tell us how to get around, if we need a visa, what average hotel and food costs will be so we can plan a budget, and they help us start to pick out the towns and sights and places we definitely want to see and to slowly come up with a route through the country.Trip-planning-the-early-stages-2We’ve tried a few trips lately without guidebooks, where we’ve booked a trip and left with little warning. For those we’ve often used Trip Advisor to find a hotel and Yelp to find a few restaurants we want to try (if we are going to be in a big city that Yelp covers). But for actual on-the-go touring when we are on the ground in those places, we’ve tried using online guides like the Trip Advisor City Guides app, (which is an app you can download with an offline guide, so you don’t have to use wifi or have an international data plan). The guides have restaurants and places to stay but also have walking tours that link to maps to show you where to go and  little bits of info about the highlights along the way. We’ve also tried Stay.com, an app that lets you choose from common places to see and eat in a location and compile them into your personal list of things to do in that city. You can see them in a list or on a map.

Between the two of those we were able to get around Europe pretty well, but they weren’t ideal. I still want an app where I can choose all the places I want to go, stay, eat, and see, organize those by day and time, and then only see one day at a time on a map. So for instance, if you were in Paris for three days, your first day map would show you all the places you are going to go that day and how to get between them, such as the airport, your hotel, a cafe for lunch, a museum, a garden, a store to check out, and a place for dinner, then directions back to your hotel. And it would do all of that offline using only the phone’s GPS (you would load all the info before you go) so that you don’t need an international cell phone plan. Basically you would pick all the places and it would generate an itinerary day by day with directions, hours for everything, and let you organize it by the order you want to go to everything within each day. Unfortunately I haven’t found that yet, but maybe it’s out there, and if not, I bet it’s going to be soon. Anyone have a perfect travel guide app they use?Trip-planning-the-early-stages-3Actually, it seems many of the traditional guidebook companies like Fodor’s, Frommer’s, and of course Lonely Planet, have really been struggling to keep up with and navigate into the digital age. No one can quite figure out how to do it best, or if an app can ever truly replace a book. I just read an article in Outside Magazine (BTW this is my new favorite magazine! I just read it cover to cover. I never do that. And every single article was great. It covers outdoor travel and sports, adventure anything, and suggested tours and hotels, with a little food and gear suggestions mixed in. It’s a perfect match for me). Anyway, I just read an article about Lonely Planet, which was recently acquired by a new owner and a 25-year-old photographer was charged with running the company. Their hope, with this very young CEO, I believe, is to redesign the company for the digital age, making it more interactive and allowing user-contributed material to play a bigger role like Trip Advisor and Yelp have done. They are trying to find a way to analyze and organize the massive amounts of data they have about every place on the planet to come up with an app similar to the one I’ve dreamt about. But, as far as I can tell, it’s still in process.Trip-planning-the-early-stages-5Lonely Planet has been our trusted guidebook for many of our big trips…it got us through Thailand, Chile, Argentina, Peru, Indonesia, as well was many cities both nationally and internationally. It’s definitely our go to for the witty writing and the unusual and usually affordable recommendations it makes for places to see, stay, or eat. But can they keep the witty charm their writers provide, while also incorporating more user-generated content? Will an app ever feel as easy to navigate as opening a book and flipping through it’s pages? So far for me, it still doesn’t compare.

And even though guidebooks control the information in a way that guides people all to the same “undiscovered” spot sometimes, there can be something rather charming about the way that brings fellow travelers together. You know, when you get to that cafe or beach or hostel that you thought only you would know about because the writer made it seem so unknown and special, but you look around and there are at least 10 other people holding their trusty Lonely Planet and glancing sideways at you with a look that says “Oh you found it too? But it was supposed to be my special find. Well, I guess this means we read the same guidebook. You have good taste. Ok, let’s be friends…”Trip-planning-the-early-stages-4User-generated content certainly opens up many more places to eat, stay and see than a single guidebook can ever print, so it provides more options and spreads out travelers more. But even though most seasoned travelers might say they want to discover and experience only the “real” culture and people and avoid other tourists, finding those fellow, like-minded travelers along the way because you were all guided there by the same guidebook is a special part of traveling and a “culture” to experience all it’s own. And it can make for great, spontaneous friendships or help you meet new travel partners.

For me, there’s still something extra special about reading that guidebook, even if I don’t take it with me. At least for now, it’s still the place I want to start my adventures.How about you? Do you have a guidebook or app that you swear by? How do you plan your trips? We are always happy to find and try out new suggestions…so please share!

{all photos by Pinneapple Tree of places discovered using Lonely Planet: La Boca, Buenos Aires, Argentina; Bo Sang, outside of Chaing Mai, Thailand; Jack Kerouac Alley, San Francisco, CA; Cremation Ceremony, Ubud, Bali, Indonesia; Julia Pfeiffer Burns Park, Big Sur, CA}

***none of these links or guidebook companies we mentioned are sponsoring this post, we’re just sharing our preferences and experience.

Long distance travel: get comfortable

Long-distance-travel-get-comfortable-1I’ve made 5 trips now between Easter Island and the U.S. in the last 12 months. Each trip was on average (and sometimes a lot more) 30 hours of flying and airport time. So what is that? 150 hours of traveling in the last year? And that was just the trips to Easter Island. That’s a lot of time in the air! So, I feel like I’m finally starting to get the hang of this traveling thing. We’ll, maybe not entirely. Sitting for hours on end cramped between strangers while the plane shakes and bounces through turbulence or is delayed on the runway for hours still makes me feel awful.

I’m always envious of those people that just look completely unaffected…you know, the ones with blank faces, that look utterly bored, reading their magazine, that move and dress with perfect style and poise and that look just as good when they get off the 10 hour flight as they did when they got on? That’s definitely not me. I’m the one whose contacts are dried out and can’t stop blinking, the with the matted hair from tossing and turning to get comfortable, while half of it sticks straight out from the static electricity of the dry air. I’m not a glamorous traveler. But, over the last 12 months I’d like to think I’ve finally got down the essentials that I need to be as comfortable as I can possibly be in flight. I’m not big on posting products here, because I don’t want anyone to think they actually need these things (you really don’t – they are all luxuries) and none of these are sponsored links…they are just products I’ve come to love and want to share. So here we go, my long flight travel essentials: Long-distance-travel-get-comfortable-2This collapsible lunchbox is the best. We have talked about making homemade meals to bring on trips and shared our favorite recipe, so I won’t go into it more here, other than to say: Just do it! Bring your own food. It tastes better and is less greasy and sugary than what you’d probably buy in the airport. This container is great because it can collapse down to the size of a book and make you feel better about your impact on the environment because you aren’t throwing away plastic or styrofoam food containers.

This blanket & pillow combo has been a lifesaver for me when the cold air starts blowing mid flight. It always seems like just as you get to a comfortable temperature, someone complains about the heat and suddenly its 40 degrees on the plane. So even though most long flights give out blankets and pillows, I still bring this one to supplement. The blanket is a little small to cover your whole body, so it’s better for just the upper or lower half. The case with the blanket inside is a pillow in and of itself, but if you are using the blanket, there’s a blow up pillow you can use to fill the case and make a separate pillow. I rarely use the pillow, but sometimes it’s helpful to have.

Any eye mask is essential. I actually use the ones they give out for free on the long flights, although you can get much more luxurious ones online. These help black out the TV screen of the person in front, or for when they turn the lights back on 2.5 hours before landing and you’d rather still use that time to sleep.

An infinity scarf, or any scarf really is a must for me on flights, again to keep my neck warm when the air gets frigid. I’m just always so cold! But this helps.

And fuzzy slipper booties make the flight so much more warm and comfortable. They take up a bit of space in my bag, but they keep me so happy. I still take them off and put my shoes back on when I go to the bathroom though (why are airplane bathrooms so gross? It’s like every time a guy goes into an airplane bathroom, terrible turbulence hits and they end up going all over the floor and the seat, which obviously, they then leave up.

This collapsible footstool has saved my legs and my back! It’s probably the best of all these items to get me through a long flight. I first tried it out on our last production trip and I slept better on my long flights than I ever have before. I have terrible restless leg syndrome when I fly and this all but cured it. Even though I have long legs, just getting them a little bit up off the floor took the pressure off the back of my legs and relieved all the nerve pain I get. Sure you can put your feet on your bag, but if you are like me and your bag is too big to fit under the seat and leave room for your feet on top of it, then this is a better bet. It even extends side to side to become almost 15 inches wide.

This F1 Seat Pak has been great for organizing all the things I need access to on a flight. Now when I have to fill out immigration info I know right where my passport is, and my headphones and phone I keep in there too, along with medicine, bandaids, hand lotion, lip gloss, my eye mask, ear plugs, a granola bar, gum, and hair binders. Really all the things I might need to grab on a moments notice while in flight. It’s great to not have to dig through my bag trying to remember where I put each of those things. I can just put the seat pak in the seat back pocket or even better, hook it to the seat back pocket using a carabiner and all my stuff is right there.

Obviously a phone is good to have in flight, so you can communicate with people back home while on the ground and use it for listening to books or podcasts or music. Or maybe play candy crush. Delta and some other airlines now let you use your phone in airplane mode during take off and landing so now you really can travel with only your phone for entertainment and it’s available all flight long. Not sure if that’s good or bad…I still like having a tangible book on hand as well.

These Bose noise canceling headphone earbuds are a huge huge splurge but they are oh so worth it. I first saw our cameramen with them on our last trip to Easter Island. They have a small battery pack to generate sound waves that cancel out all the base tones and steady white noise like airplane engines. It’s incredible how quiet a flight can be with them on. And the best part is they are advertised as just as good as the over the ear ones (I’ve never had over the ear ones so I can’t compare but I love these). After a 10 hour flight they did start to hurt in my ears a little, but they allowed me to lean against the sides of my seat headrest to sleep, unlike a pair of over the ears, so I vote for these for comfort in flight. The stress of all that noise on your body for such long periods can be really significant so reducing that in any way possible is a good thing.

This lo & sons O.M.G. bag was another big splurge of mine this past year, but I also love it. It has just the right amount of compartments, it’s a great size for just what I need on the plane, it looks professional but not too stuffy, and it even has a secret side pocket that fits shoes (or slippers) for easier access and to keep them separate from the rest of the things in your bag.

I love my bkr water bottle or any glass water bottle for that matter. Water just takes so much better in glass. Just make sure it’s empty when you go through security and then find a fountain to fill it up before you get on the plane. And don’t leave it in your bag with your computer because you never know when the pressure of the airplane is going to make it leak a little and lead to an $800 computer repair  (just for the record, while that did happen to me on our last trip, it was with a totally different water bottle that was much more leakable, but still, just to be safe, no matter how leak proof your bottle, keep it away from your electronics).

Our ipad mini with a rotating case has been great for movies, kindle books and game play (*cough candy crush *cough cough) because it can sit either horizontally or vertically on it’s stand. I often just watch movies on my phone, too, or on the longer flights we’re usually lucky enough to get planes with personal movie screens, but still it’s not bad to have another entertainment option, especially when there’s two of you. And if you get a head phone splitter you can share your movies with your travel buddy (if you are lucky enough to have one).

So, that turned out longer than I expected. But, there you go, the absolute essentials I travel with every single time now. But you know, if I got bumped to first class more often almost every single one of these items would not be needed……Ah well, got to keep it all in perspective. The fact I’m even flying at all is truly a gift…that I get to experience and enjoy these two drastically different worlds both of which I love so much is really what it’s all about.long-distance-travel-get-comfortable-3I hope that helps some other travelers out there get comfortable! As for me, I am back in Santiago, Chile (SURPRISE! I promise this is not an April Fools joke) and about to head to Easter Island again for a few weeks with another tour group. I’ll try to keep up posting as much as possible but may be MIA for the rest of this week.