The wife and I have been travelling for the past year or so on a
fourteen month trip around the world. I was just reading
Nat Friedman's travel tips
so I was inspired to add a few of my own more back-packer-y tips.
-
For long trips use small bags within your luggage. We used
Eagle Creek Pack-It Cubes. It makes it so much easier to keep your luggage organized as you
move about. Repacking becomes a 30 second effort.
-
For power bring a single adapter (I've been using a universal adapter
similar to this one) and then a multi-adapter from your home country. I picked up a tiny
triple adapter like
this one. That way I can charge two computers and a phone with a single
(often scarce) wall outlet and a single adapter.
-
An unlocked GSM phone plus a cheap local SIM card is really handy if
you're going to be in a country for more than a week or so. You
can buy a low-end Nokia that can still browse the web (poorly, but
enough to check your email) for about US$30. We put our temporary
numbers on Facebook so that friends and family could call us, but
mostly we needed phones to call ahead to hostels and locals. Also, if
you're used to paying for phone service in North America you'll be
pleasantly amazed by how cheap it is in much of the world.
-
If you have to pay for wifi, but have two computers then an ethernet
cable plus internet sharing halves your costs. NetworkManager does the
internet sharing stuff trivially, I've rarely gotten it to work
through Windows and MacOS though.
-
AirCrack-NG is your friend.
Learn its quirks. Use it wisely. The documentation that comes in the
Debian / Ubuntu package probably isn't quite enough to get it working
so you should practice somewhere where you already have access to the
Internet.
-
A
travel clothesline
can be invaluable in extending the length of your wardrobe. Pick up
some
hand laundry soap
and you'll be able to wash shirts, socks and underwear pretty easily.
We found larger things like jeans harder to wash in hostel sinks, but
if you can visit a laundromat a couple of time a month and wash the
rest of your stuff a couple of times a week in your hotel or hostel
you'll have more time and money for fun while not turning into a
completely stinky hippie.