Comments on: Thailand & Travel Books http://www.projectequator.com/thailand-travel-books/ A Family Gap Year Thu, 21 Jan 2016 13:59:36 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.26 By: Lisa http://www.projectequator.com/thailand-travel-books/#comment-107 Fri, 30 Aug 2013 18:34:23 +0000 http://www.projectequator.com/?p=625#comment-107 You are so right Katie! Sometimes in the world of tech we forget how we did it in the less-techie days! AMEX offices are a great resource! Thanks for reminding us!

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By: Katie Thompson http://www.projectequator.com/thailand-travel-books/#comment-104 Thu, 29 Aug 2013 03:46:47 +0000 http://www.projectequator.com/?p=625#comment-104 another old school idea – in some countries American Express offices have resources and guide books for members for free. When in India and Bali (many moons ago) I used to use these offices for similar services. Don’t know if they still have and are relevant, but may be worth a call or two if you all have an Amex card.

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By: Lisa http://www.projectequator.com/thailand-travel-books/#comment-99 Sun, 25 Aug 2013 18:43:32 +0000 http://www.projectequator.com/?p=625#comment-99 Cari, you always have such good ideas! I am totally checking this out! Thank you!

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By: Cari Johnson http://www.projectequator.com/thailand-travel-books/#comment-96 Sat, 24 Aug 2013 15:54:58 +0000 http://www.projectequator.com/?p=625#comment-96 You should start a Thailand Pinterest Board & open it to your friends to pin. It’s a good way to organize peoples recommendations. You should also check out Caterina Fakes new company the Findery. It may be an interesting tool during your trip.
http://techcrunch.com/2013/08/04/with-findery-caterina-fake-wants-to-create-a-lasting-community-around-stories/

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By: Lisa http://www.projectequator.com/thailand-travel-books/#comment-91 Sat, 24 Aug 2013 01:26:28 +0000 http://www.projectequator.com/?p=625#comment-91 Hi Ghia! Awesome to hear from you! I feel like we are living parallel lives as we are always taking the same vacations!!! Awesome, awesome recommendations! Thank you!!! Hi to the family!

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By: Lisa http://www.projectequator.com/thailand-travel-books/#comment-86 Fri, 23 Aug 2013 16:12:29 +0000 http://www.projectequator.com/?p=625#comment-86 So true Ashley! The adventure aspect is definitely something we don’t want to organize out of our trip!!!! I just love the tips on how to get tickets for museums cheaper, etc. I like the idea of scanning some of the important pages :) Thanks!

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By: Ghia http://www.projectequator.com/thailand-travel-books/#comment-81 Fri, 23 Aug 2013 01:12:03 +0000 http://www.projectequator.com/?p=625#comment-81 Lisa, I just discovered your Project Equator blog/website! Can’t wait to follow your travels. We literally just got back from 2 weeks on the Adriatic/Aegean (Italy, Greece, Croatia, Turkey) and went through the same issues you’re going through. Guidebooks were exceptionally heavy, but indispensable. We brought along 5 and they warranted a separate suitcase along with the electronics. Like you, I’m a slave to Fodors, but the best discovery I found this year was Rick Steve’s FREE Europe audio guide available on Android and IOS for guided walking tours and historical/cultural background. He also has accompanying maps in PDF. He has the full DVD, website, guidebooks, kindle edition, etc. He’s disrupted the travel guide market with downloadable apps that are really easy to use w/o Internet connectivity. I heard others with his audio tour on the Acropolis! This was the first trip I haven’t bought Fodor’s and only purchased Rick Steve’s guidebooks and FREE audio MP3 files supplemented by the portable, slim and easy-to-carry Eyewitness Top 10 in major cities to focus our limited time in each city that we stopped @. Rick Steve’s is only good for Europe. I agree with you that the Fodor’s/Frommer’s ‘If you only had x days’ is invaluable, but you can print those prior to the trip. I also printed the restaurant recommendations.

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By: Ashley http://www.projectequator.com/thailand-travel-books/#comment-80 Fri, 23 Aug 2013 00:00:38 +0000 http://www.projectequator.com/?p=625#comment-80 I have some thoughts, but I don’t think they are clever or anything you probably haven’t thought of. First, for guidebooks, they often have English bookstores around in various countries and have guidebooks there. Sometimes not the ones you might want, though. Second, make a copy of only the pertinent lists you mentioned and rely on the internet for the rest.

For Thailand, train travel is an interesting way to get around, and there are loads of buses. And plenty of drivers of van-type deals for hire. But last time I went I was age-appropriate for the Khao San Road, so I’m not sure how useful this is!

And it is so terrible to have more of an adventure? I say use your resourcefulness once you’re on the ground, can open up a lot of doors you never would have purposefully walked through (but then you’re glad you did).

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