19.9.10

Websites for Cheapskates

www.airtreks.com - we used their route planner to find the cheapest hubs, routes and layovers

www.cheaptickets.com and www.priceline.com - useful for finding the cheapest dates for traveling or bidding on round-trip tickets

www.fly.com - to find the cheapest flights after we'd planned our routes and dates

www.workaway.info - to find places that will exchange a few hours of work a day for room and board (similar to http://www.wwoof.org/)

www.couchsurfing.com - to find free places to stay

www.craigslist.com and www.ebay.com - to find backpacking and travel gear

12.9.10

Vaccines and Health Info

Here is a list of vaccines that are recommended for the areas we'll be traveling to:

Measles/Mumps/Rubella - Two doses recommended for all travelers born after 1956, if not previously given

Tetanus-Diptheria - Revaccination recommended every 10 years

Polio - Recommended for adult travelers who have received a primary series with either inactivated poliovirus vaccine (IPV) or oral polio vaccine (OPV). They should receive another dose of IPV before departure. For adults, available data do not indicate the need for more than a single lifetime booster dose with IPV.

Typhoid - Vaccination recommended for all travelers at least 10 days before travel

Hepatitis A - Vaccination recommended for all travelers - 2 weeks before travel

Hepatitis B - Vaccination recommended for all travelers, especially those who may come into contact with bodily fluids - 2 months before travel

Yellow fever - Required for all travelers greater than one year of age arriving from a yellow-fever-infected area in Africa or the Americas. Not recommended otherwise. CDC yellow fever vaccination recommendation for travelers to Tanzania/Kenya/Ethiopia is for all travelers ≥9 months of age. Many countries require travelers arriving from countries where yellow fever is present to present proof of yellow fever vaccination. Vaccination should be given 10 days before travel and at 10 year intervals if there is on-going risk. See: http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/yellowbook/2010/chapter-2/yellow-fever.aspx#823

Meningococcal meningitis -Not required except for Ethiopia; recommended if you plan to visit countries that experience epidemics of meningococcal disease during December through June (see map).

Tuberculosis - Vaccination sometimes recommended 3 months before travel

Rabies -1 month before travel - Only recommended for certain travelers, including:

  • travelers with high occupational risks, such as veterinarians
  • long-term travelers and expatriates living in areas with a high risk of exposure
  • travelers involved in any activities that might bring them into direct contact with bats, carnivores, and other mammals, such as wildlife professionals, researchers, veterinarians, or adventure travelers visiting areas where bats, carnivores, and other mammals are commonly found

Cholera - Vaccination sometimes recommended - 2 weeks before travel

Japanese encephalitis - Vaccination recommended for travelers who may spend a month or more in rural areas and for short-term travelers who may spend substantial time outdoors in rural areas, especially after dusk - 1 month before travel

Malaria info

How to choose a malaria drug: http://www.cdc.gov/malaria/travelers/drugs.html

I think we'll go with doxycycline.

To prevent insect/mosquito bites, bring:
  • Lightweight long-sleeved shirts, long pants, and a hat to wear outside, whenever possible.
  • Flying-insect spray to help clear rooms of mosquitoes. The product should contain a pyrethroid insecticide; these insecticides quickly kill flying insects, including mosquitoes.
  • Bed nets treated with permethrin, if you will not be sleeping in an air-conditioned or well-screened room and will be in malaria-risk areas. For use and purchasing information, see Insecticide Treated Bed Nets on the CDC malaria site. Overseas, permethrin or another insecticide, deltamethrin, may be purchased to treat bed nets and clothes.
Other CDC Recommendations

Equipment Splurges

Spending a ton of money on stuff to take on a round-the-world trip is a bad idea. The goal is obviously to pack as light as possible to maximize mobility and minimize extra luggage costs. Plus the more nice stuff you take, the more nice stuff you stand to lose to theft, lost luggage, water damage, forgetfulness, or perhaps a stray hippo attack (you never know). But there are a few things that I decided were worth splurging on.

I got my dream backpack, the Osprey Womens Waypoint 85, on craigslist. It's still going for $279 on the REI website, but I found a "used" version of exactly what I wanted for $125 in Denver. The previous owner took it on a 2 week trip to Europe before deciding to sell it, so it's in practically perfect shape. Score.

I found a refurbished Canon PowerShot SD780 with a 3 year warranty on eBay for about $125. Kind of pricey for my budget, but a great deal for a 12 MP digital camera, and I wanted a tiny, reliable camera I could carry inconspicuously in my pocket.

I don't consider myself to be a girl who compulsively collects footwear, but it is a little difficult to fit all the types of shoes needed for almost an entire year into one little backpack. Instead of packing bulky athletic shoes for hiking, running, and trekking, I bought a pair of these glove-like Vibram fivefingers, which also double as slippers and watershoes. Probably not going to do anything for the reputation of weird traveling Americans, but they weigh next to nothing, supposedly reduce running injuries by encouraging barefoot running-like form, are very comfortable (once your toes get used to their new freedom), and are easy to wash. They're around $100, but I got a $75 gift certifcate to JAX from an award at work, so I got mine for the bargain price of $25 plus tax. I noticed some on eBay for around $40. At that price they're probably knock-offs, but considering the whole idea behind these babies is minimalization, I doubt it'd make too much of a difference. I would, however, recommend trying before buying to ensure a comfortable fit around the toes.

I'm jumping on the crocs bandwagon half a decade late, but these little shoes are awesome. So comfy and light as air. Plus they're not even that ugly. I found a used pair at Repeat Boutique for $6.

2.9.10

Committed Noncommittal

We bought our tickets!!! At least most of them. The idea is to commit to a few big flights now to save money, while leaving ourselves as much freedom as possible. So we just decided approximately how long we wanted to spend in each place, figured out the cheapest hub near the areas we wanted to visit, and booked flights on the cheapest day that week, which usually ended up being a Tuesday. Here's the flight itinerary:

Monday, January 17, 2011
Fly from Denver to Honolulu (around $300 each)
Alaska Airlines?

Tuesday, February 7, 2011
Depart Honolulu at 1:30 a.m. and arrive at Seoul at 7:20 a.m. on Feb. 8. Depart Seoul at 5:25 p.m. for Bangkok, arriving at 9:10 p.m. ($620 each)
Korean Air

Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Fly from Bangkok (departing at 9:20 a.m.) to Mumbai (arriving at 6:10 p.m.), with a layover in Kolkata from 10:20 a.m. until 3:35 p.m. (THB 15,920 total, which is around $260 each)
Jet Airways

Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Depart from Mumbai at 4:10 a.m. for Dar es Salaam, stopping over in Nairobi from 7:35 a.m. until 5:25 p.m. Arriving in Tanzania at 6:40 p.m. ($430 each)
Kenya Airways

Total so far: $1610 each

We still need to buy a ticket from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia to Frankfurt, Germany, which we've found through Yemenia Airlines for under $400 each, and we'll be doing a lot of smaller overland or roundtrip traveling (i.e. Honolulu - Kona - Honolulu, Bangkok -Cambodia - Laos - Bangkok, Dar es Salaam - Addis Ababa, Frankfurt - the rest of Europe) and then at some point we'll have to fly home from Europe, but we can worry about that later.