Archive for the ‘What's In Your Mochila?’ Category

24.06.08 Keep bed bugs away, but do it light

I would say to every traveler: pack a sleeping bag liner. If you’re a hardcore outdoor-nut and plan on camping out a lot, a sleeping bag liner will help keep your sleeping bag clean and all you have to do is clean and change the liner. Or even if you don’t ever plan on camping out, it will give you fitful nights in budget hostels knowing that the bed bugs won’t get to you. And correct me if I’m wrong, but I think it also keeps the damn mosquitoes away as they can’t keep a hold onto the slippery silk. Best of all, a liner can fit easily into your pocket, so it’s incredibly light to carry. Jagbags New Zealand has them hand-dyed in single or multiple colours, and can even custom make one for you. International delivery available. Click here for more information.
27.10.07 Courier services in Antigua
The most conspicuous is DHL, located on 6a Avenida Sur 16 but there is another one before that on the same street called International Bounded Couriers (IBC) which is cheaper and allows you the option of not purchasing insurance (which costs about $USD 20) on your package. For a package of 5 kg to Malaysia, DHL charges $USD 280 but I asked for a discount and without much effort, got it down to $USD 210, insurance included (there is no option to exclude insurance). IBC charges $USD 170 for a package of the same weight without insurance.
I’m an enthusiastic amateur photographer and you would think that Guatemala offers a plethora of opportunities for documentary photography. But just yesterday I sent my gigantic Canon 10D SLR camera and similarly big lenses back home to Malaysia because it got too stressful worrying about being a potential target for armed robbers while I carried them conspicuously around town. I haven’t felt free to use them on the streets for the same reason so it’s actually been restricting me from taking as many photos as I would otherwise.
But the main reason isn’t my fear of being robbed. The other thing is that it affects my conscience when I take photos of the local people here. The children tend to ask you for a buck when you take a photo (anything for a buck here, seems to be the mentality) and I don’t like the idea of having to pay to take a photo, or the idea that I’m intruding. I don’t want to be taking pictures of people if people don’t welcome it. So I’ve bought myself a disposable camera instead to document my travels - it will do for now. I still have my writing.
So, unless you’re a very serious photographer, think long and hard about whether you want to bring all your photography equipment along. It’s a pain to carry and to worry about, and sure as hell it burns a hole in your pocket when you have to pay $200 to send it home!
This blog is edited by Emily Ding, a 23-year-old Malaysian who has just returned from spending a year in Central America & Cuba traveling, learning español, teaching English, dancing salsa, and working when she wanted extra money, so some of the information offered here will sometimes - inevitably - be informed by a Malaysian perspective, and perhaps also a bit of a Westernized outlook since she spent three years in London studying and three years in Melbourne before that. Feel free to dispute anything.
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