Travel Connections - Stay in Touch
Travel connections with home are easier than ever. New calling
cards, cell-phones, e-mail, satelite phones, and better phone
lines everywhere are making it a smaller world. Here are some
suggestions on how you can stay in touch - when you want to.
E-Mail: The Travel Connections Champ
Most libraries in the United States now have internet access.
When traveling the country, we often stop in small towns to use
this free service. We check e-mail and even check our bank
accounts. In other countries, finding internet accesss is even
easier. When computers are too expensive for most people,
there's demand for cheap internet access. The result is that, in
places like Quito, Ecuador, there's an internet cafe on almost
every corner.
Hotmail and Yahoo still offer free e-mail accounts. Sign up now,
if you haven't already. Then, wherever you are in the world,
your friends and family have a way to contact you and you have a
way to contact them. For some reason, even though the internet
largely operates by way of the same phone lines, it's more
reliable than phone service in many countries.
Snail Mail
You'll may still use the Post Office when you travel.
Pre-address and stamp your envelopes if you'll be writing
family, friends, or whoever. Usually, it's easy to find a mail
box, but a hassle to find stamps and envelopes. When you need
something sent to you while on a trip (in the U.S.) have it
addressed to your name, then "general delivery," and the city
and zip code where you'll be in a few days. The package should
be waiting at the post office when you arrive.
Phone Cards
Phone cards are a great help when traveling in the United
States. The best are not even cards, but accounts that you
recharge on the internet. The one we use costs just 2.9 cents
per minute to call anywhere in the U.S., with no connection
charge. It's only 15 cents to call my wife's family in Ecuador
(It cost me over $2 per minute just 4 years ago). The only extra
charge is 50 cents for pay phone use, which is mandated by law
for all cards now.
You use these accounts by funding them on the internet, using
any credit card. With most, you can open an account for $20. You
get a toll-free number to call, an account number (usually your
home phone number), and a 4-digit PIN. To place a call, you dial
the toll free number, then enter your account number, PIN, and
number you're calling. Many buttons to push, but then you can
call Paris, France for 3 cents per minute. That's cheap!
Recharge your account from anywhere there is internet access,
and you'll never have a phone bill, since you pay in advance.
Other Travel Connections Tips
E-mail a list of important information and numbers to yourself,
like the one to call if your credit card is stolen, or the
number of the U.S. Embassy where you're going. E-mail yourself a
copy of your passport, and other important documents. When you
need these things, they'll be available in any internet cafe in
the world.
Staying in touch is a mixed blessing. I find it less than
comforting to have the protection of a cell phone when my
brothers and I go into the Canadian wilderness. It means
constant calls, and worries that could have been forgotten until
the trip was over. My final tip then, is to call friends and
family when they're not home, and leave nice messages on their
machines. Then they'll know you're okay, and if they need to
contact you, they can e-mail you.