草莓传媒

Make travel easier, more enjoyable with these 5 expert tips

Samantha Brown practically lives out of a suitcase.

In the last two decades, she has captured the cultures, cuisines and people of more than 60 countries and 250 cities on a number of travel TV shows, including her current PBS series, 鈥.鈥 And along the way, she has picked up a few tricks to make travel less stressful and more enjoyable.

Brown was recently in town for D.C.鈥檚 Travel and Adventure Show and stopped 草莓传媒 to share five of her favorite travel tips.

1: Create a travel ritual

Just like you do at home, Brown said it鈥檚 important to keep to a ritual, even while on vacation.

鈥淩itual is so important in our own daily lives 鈥 it鈥檚 where we get our coffee, it鈥檚 where we have lunch, it鈥檚 where we sit and read the newspaper 鈥 and my feeling is, that鈥檚 no less important when we travel,鈥 she said.

鈥淒o one thing, the same thing, the same time every single day.鈥

Brown’s go-to travel ritual is to start the day at a local coffee shop near wherever she is staying 鈥 “So I can feel the ebb and flow of a place better than if I just stayed in my hotel,鈥 she said.

Not only does this habit give her a better sense of the local community, but it also helps to break the hurried pace of the normal day-to-day grind.

鈥淲hat I love about creating a ritual is that it slows time down and it makes it your own,鈥 Brown said.

2: Pack shoes you don鈥檛 mind leaving

Have some old shoes ready for the trash or donation bin? Set them aside for your next vacation. When it comes to packing for your return trip, you鈥檒l be glad you did.

鈥淔irst of all, shoes are the nemesis of any packed luggage,鈥 said Brown, who recommends packing no more than three pairs 鈥 鈥渁nd you鈥檙e wearing one of those pairs.鈥

Be sure to include a pair that you don鈥檛 mind leaving (or tossing) at the end of the trip.

鈥淭hat then gives you 20 percent more space in your luggage to now pack the things you obviously bought on your travels,鈥 Brown said.

3: Get off the beaten path 鈥 but not too far

Lots of tourists know that in order to get a more authentic experience, it pays to get off the beaten path. But there鈥檚 no need to walk too far from the major museums and monuments for a taste of the local flare.

鈥淎ll you have to do is go right where every tourist is going 鈥 the main travel centers 鈥 but then just go one block over,鈥 Brown said.

鈥淭he parallel streets and the side streets are where the local shops are 鈥 the mom-and-pops.鈥

Brown said these smaller shop owners likely have more time to talk to you, and thus will recommend other sites, stores and restaurants to visit.

鈥淎nd you are going to have a much more authentic, more fulfilling and personal experience,鈥 Brown added.

4: Want that bag to make it on the plane? Sit in the back

Sky-rocking baggage fees have pushed more airline customers to opt out of checking their suitcases, and instead, crowd the overhead compartment of planes with carry-on luggage.

If you want to ensure your luggage makes it on the plane and not in the gate-check pile, Brown said choose your seat wisely.

鈥淎ll airlines board their plane from the back to the front; window seat, then middle, then aisle. So if you choose a seat that is on the front of the plane in the aisle and you鈥檙e Zone 5, you鈥檙e not getting your bag on,鈥 she said.

Select a window seat in the back of the plane, however, and you鈥檙e more likely to find a spot in the overhead bin.

5: Traveling with kids? Skip the pre-board

The only thing more stressful than boarding a plane is boarding a plane with kids. Brown, a mother of twins, said the best thing parents can do is skip the early boarding option that鈥檚 often extended to flyers with young children.

Instead, send one parent or traveling companion in on the pre-board with all of the bags, car seats, etc., while the other adult waits by the gate with the kids until the last person in the last zone called gets in line for the flight.

鈥淎nd when that line is halfway down the jetway, now I get on,鈥 Brown said.

鈥淭he boarding of a flight is the most awful, most stressful part of any trip; it is the worst part of travel. We, as humans, become terrible people. All we do is stress about our bag getting in. We now go from a big terminal to a tiny capsule, and the stress can be cut with a knife. A young child takes in all that stress and then we get to a cruising altitude of 50,000 feet and everyone else is calm, and now that child releases it. So, don鈥檛 subject children to that. We are awful people during a boarding process.鈥

To help distract kids from a meltdown, or to keep kids occupied during a delay, Brown packs 3-ounce containers of bubbles (she blows them by the gate or while waiting for baggage claim) and balloons, which kids can hit and chase in hotels without knocking over lamps, pictures and your well-deserved post-flight cocktail.

鈥淎 happy baby makes a happy flight and plane,鈥 Brown said.

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