Lis Sowerbutts

Wellington, NEW ZEALAND


Joined October 11th 2010

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I've been travelling for over 25 years - I've decided its a unique selling point rather than an embarrassing comment on my age!

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Quick question - who owns the copyright of my posts on orble? I am assuming Orble otherwise you wouldn't be able to reassign inactive blogs - but just like to check thanks
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I travel independently because its cheaper and it gives me more freedom. That's not always the case - but almost always is. The only times I can think that it may be cheaper to take tour is when you need local guides and/or specialized equipment - for example outback camping trips in Australia, or cruises in the Arctic.
Photo: John Kanningberg via Flickr.com

If you are thinking about booking a tour in Europe, Asia or the Americas - because its cheaper - think again. First off the the tour price is not the total price - there is all the stuff not included - do you really want to go to Paris and not climb the Eiffel Tower - well you can - but that's an extra tour ... Most tours will include breakfast - but not all the other meals - but they will probably stop somewhere for lunch - somewhere which is not so much cheap, or good value, or even good food - but good commission...

And they have you captured - many groups in Europe save money on staying on the outskirts of Paris - if you want to wander off and do your own thing - its going to cost more money and be a lot more difficult than if you were staying in the centre of town or near the local transport system.

The main reason to go on a tour is because you are scared to travel interdependently - that's not very sexy - but it just happens to be true.



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I once spent several, very, very frustrating and tiring hours walking around central Buenos Aires, Argentina with the a guidebook in hand - at the time Argentina was expensive and I was on a budget. I tried to find around 10 cheap hotels - walked for 3 hours and never found them.
Photo: Porphyria via flickr.com


Later talking to another traveller we figured out that the map had some of the street names swapped! Lonely Planet used to be notorious for inaccurate maps and lack of scale (when their maps were hand drawn!).

I never bother with maps anymore - and no I don't carry a smartphone that direct me to the nearest Lonely Planet hotel either!

If I am arriving late and night and/or after a long-haul flight which will leave me tired and jet-lagged a book a hotel- print out the address - figure out the public transport directions and if I get lost I hop in a taxi.

The rest of the time I head to the cheap hotel part of the city - in Asia I wait 2 milliseconds before a tout finds me and then let him do the hard work. In Europe I knock on a few doors and find a decent place and negotiate a rate.
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When I first started travelling I used to write away to the youth hostel at my destination with a international money order to confirm my accommodation. This was expensive and time consuming. But it was my only option other than having a travel agent book me into a very comfortable 4 star hotel - and very uncomfortable price.
Independent Travel is DIY thanks to the Internet


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Welcome to Independent Travel Tips

October 11th 2010 23:07
I have been travelling for a long time. I used to think that I would get rich and then be able to do the fancy tours. I guess I can afford them now - but I don't really have any desire to be whisked around in air conditioned comfort from one tourist site.
independent travel, Hanoi, Vietnam
The author, Hanoi, Vietnam


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That's a really good idea - though ex-NZ almost everywhere is a stop-over to somewhere else if you know what I mean!

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