TIP – less luggage, more speed

If you can get away with a day-bag of reasonable dimensions, then do so. Make sure you don’t pack anything dangerous (Bowie knife, TNT, bottled water, 125g tube of toothpaste) in case you have problems with customs/security and get mistaken for a terrorist.

Quite a few airlines will let you check-in in advance – often days in advance – if you only have personal luggage. As long as you can print out your boarding card, you can skip the whole check-in queue at the airport. This means you can get away with arriving later and have that bit less stress. Plus, your luggage can’t go missing, and you can walk straight out at the other end. No having to stand for 15 minutes at a carousel wondering if your rucksack is in Bahrain.

TIP – Get LOCATEd

LOCATE is a new service launched by the British Foreign Office today, and it seems a worthwhile one to register with. Paranoid freaks and those who wear aluminium pirate hats may as well stop reading now as you’ll assume it’s another way of the government keeping an eye on you… which it is and for very good reason.

We’ve all seen the awful events that have taken place in recent memory. The Chinese earthquake earlier this week, the cyclone in Myanmar/Burma, the Boxing Day Tsunami and more. The idea of LOCATE is twofold. First of all, the local embassies will know you’re arriving before you get there. If something bad happens, then know to look for you and make sure you’re safe.

Also, if relatives hear about a problem or if they need to contact you then they can use the LOCATE service to find out where you are and get in touch through the authorities. Peace of mine both ways.

It costs nothing, is a doddle to update and could make a huge difference to your safety in a foreign country. I’m just off to pop in the details of my next trip to Bangkok.

UK travellers – cheap mail home

A Penfold Hexagonal postbox. This was the standard design for UK Post Office boxes between 1866–1879.When travelling, one of the pitfalls is sending mail back to the UK. Some organisations just won’t accept an email, or even a fax. I’ve had to resort to emailing things to my parents or friends and asking them to kindly print stuff out and mail it for me. Do-able, but not ideal especially if the mail needs to be signed or something.

However, a new service has started up recently called PDQit. It’s a simple service – sign up and download a plug-in / driver for your laptop. Unfortunately there’s no way to use it without this program so it’s only really useful if you travel with your own machine or you’re residing somewhere abroad with access to a PC regularly. Worst case, you could always download the driver and install it on a machine in a cybercafé, but the security implications of that are up to you.

Anyway, what it does is effectively install a virtual printer on your machine. When you print, you select this “printer” and your printout is encrypted and passed to their servers. Back in the UK, they then print, envelope-stuff and post your missive for you. And as it’s a virtual printer, not a plug-in, it should work with any application that can send data to a printer. I just checked it and it works a treat with OpenOffice.

Including VAT it works out at 40p per single-page black and white letter (single-page includes printing duplex – the charge is per sheet of paper) plus 2.5p per additional page. This is near as dammit the same price as posting first class in the UK now, by the time you factor in the stamp, envelope, paper and ink.

Colour, obviously, costs a bit more but they very kindly default the software to over-ride colour as the print option, so that you don’t accidentally end up spending too much. Mail can also only be sent within the UK at present, though they say they’ll be adding overseas destinations soon – likely starting with the US.

As they use windowed envelopes, the first page of your mails have to be formatted in a certain way so that the address doesn’t overprint your text. Nothing too complex.

Sign-up is free and if you get in there soon you can get your first 10 sheets for nothing. After that it’s pay-as-you-go with a minimum credit of a fiver.

I can see this being useful for form-filling and so on. OK, so you might have to get things scanned in, but in places like SE Asia, South Asia and South America things like this cost a pittance in most cybercafés. The concern is usually due to overseas postage costs and worry about mail going missing. At least using this method you can skip the concern about getting the mail to the right country.

It’s just a matter of trusting the Royal Mail with the last few hundred miles.

Clambering up Fansipan

Photo taken by Iain Purdie, 26th April 2007. P...

By far and away the most popular page I’ve had on the blog is the one regarding my climb up Fansipan in Vietnam. I get a ton of comments on it, all asking the same questions. Hopefully this post will answer a lot of them to save me being asked them over and over! If there’s anything I missed, then please do ask and I’ll update this post.

Do note that I last visited Sapa in April 2007, so prices and so forth may have changed since then.

I booked my trip through the Hanoi Backpacker’s Hostel. I’ve been told they’re not the cheapest to go with, but they generally get you a really good deal, with a reputable company at the other en. This goes for their other excursions as well. The trip included all of the following:

  • 1st class return train travel to Lao Cai
  • return bus trip to Sapa from Lao Cai
  • guide
  • accommodation (train is overnight so includes bunks)
  • meals while on the trek
  • transport to the start point of the trek, and back to town after
  • transport to / from Hanoi railway station from the hostel
  • use of shower facilities back in town after the trek

The above cost me around $120 – I can’t recall the exact amount, sorry, but that’s about right. Note also that I did the trek in two days. The norm is three and I have met one person who did it in a single day and who heartily recommended against this.

I can’t recommend a good company to book with in Sapa as I didn’t do things that way. Likewise I can’t tell you the name of the company I went through as it was all booked via the hostel. Sorry.

It is possible to book the trip in Sapa itself, or in Hanoi or many other places in Vietnam. One thing to watch for is booking the train tickets – do not expect to get any “on the day”. Train tickets in Vietnam sell very quickly, especially on the major routes. They’re also usually bought up very quickly on release by various agencies, and Vietnamese do get preference over foreigners. Simply put – try and book a package from somewhere or at least book well in advance (a week or so).

The guide carries the food you’ll need. At the small village we stopped at, food was provided there. The next rest stop (the one I didn’t use) is just a shack / campsite higher up with no locals living there. The guy I went with wasn’t the best guide as he split the two-day trip in a bad place. Very short first day, VERY long second! I think it was just the 2-day rather than 3-day that threw him out of whack. He certainly knew the route and was great company in the evening.

The first stage of the walk is very light. Therefore if you want, you could carry packs to the village and then leave a lot of things there for collection the next day once you’ve done the peak. Again, though, I’d check with the agencies in town. Many will look after your kit there so you don’t even have to get it anywhere near the mountain. The one I used let me shower in the hotel next door when I returned as well – no extra charge – as my next stop was the train station to return to Hanoi.

You shouldn’t need any more equipment. I didn’t take my sleeping bag or anything. Again, I can’t vouch for the accommodation nearer the peak, but the village provides a wooden hut with bamboo “bedding” and blankets. It was bloody cold, so an extra sleeping bag may not be a bad idea. An inflatable mattress for comfort is personal choice, but if you’re used to sleeping on foam camping mats, then the bamboo suspended bed is about as “comfortable” 😉

Overall, just enjoy the trip. It’s hard work but well worth it.

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One of those days

This was so much one of "those" days, it made up for any amount of "not one of those days" that I may have had in the last month.

In common parlance: ARGH.

Sundays is airport transfer day. Things almost always go wrong, though usually only one or two small incidents per week. When you’re moving 1500 people around, things are bound to slip occasionally. This week, there were more slips than in a factory making flimsy underskirts out of banana skins. For once, though, very few were directly our "fault" which is in some way a little heartening.

As ever, when reporting on work stuff I’ll be honest. I know some employers don’t like you nattering about "behind the scenes" goings-on in public, but as ever I’ve not identified my employer and in honesty there’s nothing untoward here. In fact, I think at the end of the day we coped pretty well.

First off, we were forewarned that a coach from one of the resorts would be over an hour late. This is a worry, as check-in desks are at a premium in the charter terminal where we’re based and have a habit of closing on the dot. Late arrivals can cause a ruckus as the check-in staff and luggage handlers’ routine is disturbed.

The reason for the delay wasn’t good either. We serve two airports so two buses were on resort. The handbrake on one slipped off, it rolled down the hill and into the other. Which had some of our guests already on board. As far as I’m aware, damage was minor (buswise, anyway) and nobody was hurt. In fact, it’s a good thing the second bus was there, as otherwise the first one would have left the road (this I heard from one of the passengers, not officially). Luggage was offloaded and put onto a replacement coach (hence the delay) as the other coach was pronounced roadworthy and set off.

However, there was a mixup with the luggage. Most made it onto the coach for Geneva. Some of it meant for Geneva was put on the Chambéry coach, and one or two pieces left behind. By this time there were other buses arriving, picking people up for later flights so it just kind of happened. Unfortunate, but chaos – at times – reigns supreme.

At another resort, a coach problem resulted in two buses being swapped over – the later one replacing the earlier one while the earlier one was repaired to take its place. Simple enough, you think. But this had repercussions later. Bus B was due to come in from one resort, but deliver guests to another. Bus A was due to do a simple "there and back". Of course, this needed to change as well. But try explaining that to a French bus driver who’s paperwork says one thing while you try and tell him another.

The first of the buses with problematic luggage arrived and the passengers whose stuff had been misplaced (not lost – we knew exactly where it was) were understandably miffed. We rang a couple of numbers, confirmed that we knew exactly what luggage was theirs and ensured it was labelled. They left somewhat angry, but mollified that their items would be couriered via DHL at the very beginning of one week. One girl complained that all her medication was in one of her bags and on this front I would give this advice:

TIP

don’t put all your medication on your hold luggage. Always have 2-3 days’ worth in your cabin bags. Contact lens stuff, pills, creams… whatever. Yes, I know we have these annoying regulations about pastes and liquids on flights now. However, I believe I’m correct in saying that with a doctor’s note, these can be waived for specified items. Worst case, get some small tubs and squirt some of the medications into them. Enough to do you a day or three in case the worst happens.

The second bus with absconding luggage arrived. This with just one bag astray and at the wrong airport. We did get the bag transferred over, but unfortunately too late for the guest who were touch and go with their flight time anyway. Another one to DHL, but labelled and safe.

As has happened every week except last week, we had a coach (un-repped, so no staff member on it) drop guests off at the main terminal for the flight home. No use when they depart from the charter… I’m not sure if the driver had been told or not. Some are just stubborn and insist on only dropping at the main one, which is strange as the traffic there is far worse than where we’re based. It took us a while to realise the guests hadn’t reached us – the drivers of unrepped vehicles rarely make themselves known to us. We send a staff member over and found them having just discovered they were in the wrong place. We escorted them along the short walk between terminals and squeezed them onto the flight at the last minute.

In amongst all this, we had a guest arrive with us who was deathly ill. It turned out he had cancer and had taken a turn for the worse overnight. Had we known, we’d have had him dropped at the main terminal where they can supply wheelchairs – they do a roaring trade during the snow sports season. However, we did the best we could with the limited facilities. The other guests happily let the party queue-jump and the staff booked them in very quickly, not even requiring him to stand at the check-in area. This meant he could sit elsewhere and rest.

After being rather stressed and angry when they arrived at the lack of care facilities, the family were very grateful and friendly when they passed through passport control. A bad situation turned round very well, I felt. Lovely people, and I could understand their frustration. Best wishes to the man in question.

By now we were approaching late afternoon and what was normally the last flight of the day. I’d managed to squeeze in a sandwich and some cake courtesy of the wonderful staff from Zermatt. Somehow they feed all their guests, stay well under budget and still have enough food to treat the transfer staff on a Sunday. Thanks, guys!

Then another problem, and one definitely out of our hands. The luggage all arrived fine at the charter terminal. But someone, somewhere, somehow had guided all the passengers off their plane into the main terminal. We had 144 bodies (plus infants) to locate, corral and herd around the airport. Half a dozen of us trekked over and – thankfully – were shortly greeted by a large crowd of people who took it in good humour. The chance to see a rare breakdown of traditional Swiss efficiency is probably worthy of a postcard in its own right.

Their luggage was collected and buses departed. Only one man had managed to collect the wrong luggage and headed for one resort, while another guest stood in the airport fuming at one of our reps for not running after the bus fast enough to stop it. Rather unkind and unrealistic, I thought. We’ll manage to get the bags swapped over by tomorrow morning, I’m sure.

Tip

Got a bag that looks cool… but looks like a million other bags that other people have? Make it individual. I sew patches on mine – not country flags, every backpacker does that. I sew on ones from obscure heavy metal bands. Or scrawl on it in marker pen. Who cares? It’s only a bag. And better a bag with your signature on it in 7" high letters that you get back than a clone that walks off with someone else.

Another family had left a kind of modern-day papoose on the plane which we’d located but knew it would take a while to get hold of. They were fine and even insisted on leaving us to sort it out so they didn’t hold the coach up waiting for them. Said item was located and returned to them in the hotel later on.

Our final flight – an extra one for reasons unbeknown to us or the guests on it – arrived at the main terminal where we simply weren’t used to working. The coach driver flailed his arms and yelled about there being no space to park. Not now, not in "trente minutes, quarante minutes, soixante minutes!" until I realised the guy was a right wind-up merchant and actually one of the best drivers we have. I could still have kicked his arse for it after the day I’d had!

Thankfully, things went pretty much smoothly after that. All luggage in the right place, a pleasant group of guests to take back. The driver even made an impromptu toilet stop with no complaints for one of the children. I’ve heard nightmare stories about some of the jobsworths who won’t even stop at services when they have 4 year-olds leaking pee everywhere. And then complain about the mess. No such problems with Jacky – top driving.

And so back to the hotel. Then McDonald’s for the first time in well over a month. My boss had said she’d let me pass a meal on expenses at the airport as I was working an extra couple of hours with that late flight. Only I didn’t get the time to eat there! I think I was justified in pocketing the receipt for the late meal instead.