Here's the first thing you should do when you wind up lost, check into a hotel, 
enter 

a historic site, and other travel situations.


When you get out your suitcase:

Update the luggage tags. Remove your home address and add your cell-phone 
number.
Most of us dutifully write our full name, home phone, and home address on our 
tags, but 

that reveals too much personal information, says Anne McAlpin, a packing expert 
and the 

author of "Pack It Up: The Essential Guide to Organized Travel." 
Instead, print your first initial and last name — a safety precaution 

for women, since it doesn’t signal your sex or that you might have jewelry in 
your bag. 

Second, leave off your home address. It tells a potentially unscrupulous 
baggage 

handler, “No one’s home at this address.” Third, instead of including a home 
phone 

(which isn’t much use when you’re not home), include your email address and 
your cell-

phone number. Other information to include on the airline’s paper bag tags 
(which you 

can update for each trip): a phone number for (1) your first hotel and (2) a 
friend or a 

relative at home who can reach you. 

When your flight gets canceled:

Avoid the long line at the airline counter. Instead, call your carrier’s 

reservations number.
You may get faster help by contacting the airline directly, says Peter 
Greenberg, NBC’s 

travel editor and the author of "The Complete Travel Detective Bible. 
Politely ask to be rebooked on the next available flight. If it’s going 

to be a long wait, ask the representative to transfer your ticket to another 
airline 

with a more immediate flight. Although not all carriers are required to do 
this, some 

agents can work it out. Stranded overnight? Ask about meal or hotel vouchers. 
(Every 

airline has a different policy.) By the way, the possibility of a delay is a 
good reason 

to avoid flights later in the day, since there will be fewer same-day rebooking 
options, 

says Greenberg.
 

When your bag goes missing:

File an in-person report at the baggage-claim office right away. If your trip 
has 

just begun, ask for a toiletries kit or a voucher for necessities.
When you fill out claim paperwork, get a copy of it and write down the direct 
phone 

number for the baggage office; you don’t want to call the airline’s 800 number 
to follow 

up, says Marybeth Bond, the author of Best Girlfriends Getaways Worldwide.  
 Then carry on with your trip. “In most cases, it’s the 

airline’s responsibility to deliver your bag to you when it arrives — even if 
you’re 

hundreds of miles away from the airport,” says Bond.
 

When you check in to a hotel:

Request a room below the eighth floor, far from construction, and on a floor 
with 

a booster pump.
Why below the eighth floor? It’s a scary thought, but in case of, say, a fire, 
the fire 

department is equipped to reach you more quickly than folks on the upper 
floors, says 

travel editor Peter Greenberg. As for booster pumps, “high-rise hotels have 
trouble 

maintaining consistently great water pressure on all their floors, so every few 
floors 

they install booster pumps,” explains Greenberg. “You want to be on one of 
those floors 

so the pressure in your shower is as strong as a fire hose’s.”


When you enter a historic attraction:

Ask the staff for advice about special exhibits, must-see artifacts, and 
unusual 

features.
Staff — or, in a pinch, security guards — can often point out little-known gems 
the 

guidebooks miss. They might even suggest a way for you to tour the facility 
(“Go to the 

third floor and work your way back down”) without getting swept up in the 
crowds, says 

tour guide Dave Fox. Another tip: Hit popular sites at lunchtime, rather than 
first 

thing in the morning, when tour buses arrive.
 

When you walk into your hotel room:

Fully check it out (turn on the air conditioner, the shower, the TV) before you 

unpack, in case you need to switch rooms.
Better yet, ask to examine the room thoroughly before you register, in case 
something 

isn’t to your liking, says Jessica Singerman, a Trek Travel guide who leads 
group tours 

in Europe and Central America. This isn’t rude; it’s just savvy. Prefer a room 
that 

isn’t next to the elevator? Ask. Once you’re satisfied, Greenberg suggests a 
quick 

cleaning: Wipe the TV remote and the phone handset with disinfecting wipes. 
Finally, 

clean water glasses in hot water, in case the housekeeper forgot to replace 
them after 

the last guest checked out.
 

When you’re offered a local delicacy that makes your stomach turn:

Suck it up: Try a small bite.
Let go of preconceived notions and just try it, says travel guide Jessica 
Singerman. You 

might enjoy it. At worst, you can smile after tasting it and say, “My, that’s 

interesting.” The locals will probably appreciate your willingness to try 
something new. 

The only exception is when you’re offered food that may not have been stored or 
cooked 

properly — a common concern in street markets. Don’t risk your health; simply 
smile and 

say, “No thanks.”
 

When you find yourself lost:

Sit down or duck into a café so you can look at your map without looking like, 

well, a tourist.
Sitting down gives you a few minutes to get calm and avoid becoming a target 
for 

pickpockets, says Desiree Reyes of Backroads, who led cycling and sports-travel 
tours 

for six years. “I always attach a little compass to my belt loop so I can 
figure out 

which way is which,” says Reyes. If you still can’t get your bearings, ask a 
local for 

help. In a foreign country, college-age folks can be your best bet, since they 
have 

probably studied English.
 

When you get sick in a foreign country:

Enlist the help of your hotel concierge.
Hotel staffers often deal with ill guests and can help you get care more 
quickly — the 

name of an English-speaking doctor who makes room calls, a cab to the emergency 
room, or 

a suggestion for an over-the-counter drug for a minor illness. Many 
health-insurance 

plans also have overseas phone numbers of representatives who can provide a 
list of 

nearby doctors or pharmacists.
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