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Hints & Tips
"Christopher
Elliott HINTS FROM CHRISTOPHER ELLIOTT
START WITH WASHING YOUR HANDS......CANNOT BE SAID ENOUGH.
While we’re at it, here are eight other things you should
never do when you’re traveling, courtesy of this column’s
readers and the lessons current events have taught us:
1. Never order tea or coffee on a flight
The water your airline uses comes from municipal water stored
in the aircraft’s water tank, according to my colleague,
flight attendant James Wysong. A recent test by the Environmental
Protection Agency found dangerous levels of bacteria on about
15 percent of planes. Better stick to bottled water.
2. Never eat what the natives don’t
Unless you’re Andrew Zimmern, the Travel Channel host who
is on a quest to find the world’s most bizarre foods, this
is a rule you’ll probably thank me for following. Stay
away from fried fire beetles when you’re in Thailand (a
man died several years ago after he consumed the poisonous insects).
Ditto for blowfish. A woman in Mito, Japan died recently after
the local fish market forgot to remove the poison. Why take your
chances?
3. Never dine at a restaurant recommended by someone with fewer
teeth than a two-year-old
That’s the advice of Randy McCleary, a project coordinator
from Grand Rapids, Mich., which is a no-nonsense way of saying
you shouldn’t ask for dining tips from someone you wouldn’t
be comfortable sitting next to in a restaurant. They might recommend
an establishment that is on the verge of being shut down by the
health department.
by Christopher Elliott
4. Never fly in economy class
“
The lack of leg room will bring your knee into your face — or the face
of the person in front who leans his seat all the way back,” says Irvine,
Calif.-based travel agent Tommie Imbernino. That can be hazardous to your health.
Cramped seats raise your risk of developing a potentially fatal blood clot. A
British parliamentary committee recently called for the minimum space between
seats to be increased by at least two inches for health reasons. If you’re
stuck in a small seat, don’t forget to get up and stretch. Your life could
depend on it.
5. Never forget to sleep
That’s an easy thing to do when you’re jet lagged or excited about
your vacation. But lack of sleep is thought to make you more susceptible to illness — not
to mention a little loco. In one study of 350 soldiers who were deprived of sleep
for 4 ½ days, more than two-thirds complained of auditory and visual hallucinations
and seven men had to be removed from the study because of bizarre psychotic behaviors,
according to the British Medical Association.
6. Never use the hotel bedspread
The thing that most people forget about their hotel is that someone slept in
the bed before they did. And hotel beds — from the roadside motel to the
five-star resort — can be a real germ confab. Bedbugs, cockroaches, infectious
diseases — they’ve got it all. Bedspreads are a likely hideout, but
so is the TV remote control and the phone. Esther Perica, a retired librarian
Arlington Heights, Ill., takes it a step further. “I never sleep on the
phone side of the bed,” she says. “That’s the most used spot
of the bed.”
7. Never assume the weather will be fine (it could be your last mistake)
This can be particularly hazardous to your health in extreme weather, says James
Little, a frequent traveler who used to live in a cold climate, and speaks from
experience. “In winter, carry enough blankets, sleeping bags or outdoor
clothing to survive a traffic jam of long duration, or a fuel outage,” he
says. Confession time: I’ve made winter road trips in short sleeves, and
this unfortunate couple made their final journey along a snowy road in eastern
Utah last year. (“Assume nothing” is also one of the cardinal rules
of journalism, and that I happen to be really bad at following — but more
on that some other time.)
8. Never wait to call for help.
“
If there is a disturbance outside your room, call 911 right away,” says
Jim Daniel, a salesman based in Stockton, Calif. “The hotel staff wants
to hush it up with as little fuss as possible, but you need to assure your own
safety and that of other travelers. The local police will do that. Waiting for
hotel security to do anything is usually a wasted effort.” He’s right.
I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve spoken with hotel guests
who have had a crime dismissed or covered up by hotel “security” — and
I use that term loosely — while they were on vacation.
Staying healthy while you’re traveling really boils down to one thing:
use your common sense. If you don’t have any — and really, there’s
no shame in that — you might consider staying home, or traveling with someone
who does.
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