I know, this is a strange question, but when you're planning for a trip abroad, how many different guide books do you buy? If you're going to Prague, say, do you buy a book on the Czech Republic and a book on Prague and, say, a Czech-languge phrase book?
Just curious....
DawnSev
SPANISH CYCLEPATHS
How many guide books do you buy/consult?
23 posts • Page 1 of 2 • 1, 2
This really depends on how much of a planning mood I'm in. If I really feel like going crazy I will buy both book and then return one before I leave. Often for short trips I will buy several books, copy the pages I need and then return them all to save the money. Wikitravel is a really good source as well.
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Kathryn M - World Citizen
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- Joined: June 16th, 2005
I tend to just buy the lonely planet guide to a country - i have only ever bought one city guide. I tend to read it quite thoroughly and then rip out pages to take travelling with me.
Mich
Mich
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michey_b - Niagara Addict
- Posts: 1005
- Joined: November 20th, 2005
- Location: Niagara Falls, ON
I rarely buy a guidebook. I'll check out several from the library, look through all of them to get a broad sense of the places where I am going, xerox what I need, and then return them to said library.
I usually just make my own guide book with the pages that I have photocopied. It includes:
Little maps of the city/bus line/subway route
Key phrases in a language
Locations of what I hope to see
Any other hints that I may have gathered from other places, like BnA.
The nice thing about doing it this way is that it is inexpensive, has just what I need, and is very light weight.
I usually just make my own guide book with the pages that I have photocopied. It includes:
Little maps of the city/bus line/subway route
Key phrases in a language
Locations of what I hope to see
Any other hints that I may have gathered from other places, like BnA.
The nice thing about doing it this way is that it is inexpensive, has just what I need, and is very light weight.
___________________________________________________________________________
'It involved a squirrel, a dryer and a Scotsman doing the Haka in my kitchen.' - La Rosser.
'It involved a squirrel, a dryer and a Scotsman doing the Haka in my kitchen.' - La Rosser.
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AmazingJulesVerne - Mod Squad
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- Location: Tucson, Arizona
I will always try to buy one guidebook for a country, usually the LP. On the rare occasion where I've arrived without one, I found myself at a total loss for what to do and where to go. Since I like planning, I'll usually borrow a rough guide from the library as well before heading off.
Like everyone else, I'll also consult the boards, though I usually just email the advice to myself, or make a note in the front cover of my journal.
Like everyone else, I'll also consult the boards, though I usually just email the advice to myself, or make a note in the front cover of my journal.
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2wanderers - Extra Pages in Passport
- Posts: 3185
- Joined: August 20th, 2003
- Location: Edmonton, Canada
I, unfortunately, have the bad habit of buying and selling books every week, so I have tons of LP, rough guides, "places to see before you die", "mysteries of the world"...really anything that looks like it has some connection to traveling the world. I think(because i have not yet done this) that on the road, there's no better guide than experience and just doin it.
- Thompsonbd1
- Lost in Place
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- Joined: May 21st, 2007
I usually buy a Lonely Planet book on where I'm going...depends really on how long I'm going for, sometimes I just want to go and explore...
Lonely Planet also do City Guides so if you're going for a short break to some cities (like me) they are quite useful rather than buying, for example, a huge book on Morocco when I'm only going to Marrakech.
Lonely Planet also do City Guides so if you're going for a short break to some cities (like me) they are quite useful rather than buying, for example, a huge book on Morocco when I'm only going to Marrakech.
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DreamerHelen - Street Food Connoisseur
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- Joined: August 10th, 2005
Usually, I will travel with one guide book and my own notes from various sites.
I keep trying to get away from Lonely Planet, but they keep reeling me back. I even undertook my own experiment about a year and a half ago on a three week trip to SPAM (that's Spain, Portugal and Morocco). On that trip I took a Rough Guide, LP, and a Blue Guide. To cut this reply short, let me just say that I ended up refering to LP the most.
To critique LP however, I don't like their guides have become an "all things to all people" experience. I'd rather have a guide that is more tailored to the way I travel. By following the generic angle, LP skimps on some of the meat of travel that is useful to me. Also, I will no longer try to save a buck by buying a regional book (LP Central Europe, for example). Sure it's less to carry, but it is also much less informative on the lesser traveled regions that it covers. Finally, let me gripe about LP maps. They are nice graphically, but I have found several inaccuracies.
I wish that the Berkeley Guides were still around. They carried just enough attitude and local lore to make them the most insightful guides I have ever used. I think that they were discontinued in the late 1990s.
I keep trying to get away from Lonely Planet, but they keep reeling me back. I even undertook my own experiment about a year and a half ago on a three week trip to SPAM (that's Spain, Portugal and Morocco). On that trip I took a Rough Guide, LP, and a Blue Guide. To cut this reply short, let me just say that I ended up refering to LP the most.
To critique LP however, I don't like their guides have become an "all things to all people" experience. I'd rather have a guide that is more tailored to the way I travel. By following the generic angle, LP skimps on some of the meat of travel that is useful to me. Also, I will no longer try to save a buck by buying a regional book (LP Central Europe, for example). Sure it's less to carry, but it is also much less informative on the lesser traveled regions that it covers. Finally, let me gripe about LP maps. They are nice graphically, but I have found several inaccuracies.
I wish that the Berkeley Guides were still around. They carried just enough attitude and local lore to make them the most insightful guides I have ever used. I think that they were discontinued in the late 1990s.
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The World is Wide ... Get Lost
www.heathcox.com
The World is Wide ... Get Lost
www.heathcox.com
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Heathbar - Holds PhD in Packing
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- Joined: August 28th, 2007
This may be blasphemy for many people on this site, but I normally use Rick Steves. I prefer his books over LP. If I'm travelling in a region (e.g. Hungary, CZ and Austria) I will use his book for the region and may buy a separate book for cities I'm particularly interested in getting "help" exploring. If my trip is limited to one country, I simply use the book for that country and normally do not buy books for particular cities unless I'm going to be in that city for more than a week.
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Bobo - Lost in Place
- Posts: 79
- Joined: August 22nd, 2003
I had never appreciated Rick Steve's style and travel coverage...until earlier this week. An article about village pubs in the Czech Republic, on CNN/Travel, of all places, peaked my interest. I was surprised to see, after finishing the article, that it was written by Mr. Steves. Cheers Rick! I promise to no long poo-poo your writing.
Crap, did I just use "poo-poo" in a sentence.
Crap, did I just use "poo-poo" in a sentence.
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The World is Wide ... Get Lost
www.heathcox.com
The World is Wide ... Get Lost
www.heathcox.com
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Heathbar - Holds PhD in Packing
- Posts: 107
- Joined: August 28th, 2007
A lot of the guidebooks have pretty much everything online that they have in their books. Lonely Planet online tells me just what I am looking for from the book - and its free - just hit print to take the bits you want with you. Same with Rick Steves and some others
Much cheaper than buying all the books and you can take the best of each one!
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Jacquie8981 - Armchair Traveler
- Posts: 39
- Joined: July 8th, 2007
Hey, I'm brand new at this and about to head out on my first big trip (booked Croatia one-way today!!)...so of course like a new traveller I went to the store and bought LP books on the first four places I'm planning to hit (Croatia, Greece, Thailand, Vietnam).
Since I am TERRIFIED of this trip, (terrified!), I can't imagine showing up in any of these places without these books surgically attached to my fingers. Yet, I think they weigh about 10 lbs total? And I haven't even gotten the Aussie or NZ ones yet....any tips on how to manage this heavy dilemma would be greatly appreciated.
I know people did this for decades before us with no travel guides and survived just fine...still, can't imagine it just yet. I'm not that brave.
Since I am TERRIFIED of this trip, (terrified!), I can't imagine showing up in any of these places without these books surgically attached to my fingers. Yet, I think they weigh about 10 lbs total? And I haven't even gotten the Aussie or NZ ones yet....any tips on how to manage this heavy dilemma would be greatly appreciated.
I know people did this for decades before us with no travel guides and survived just fine...still, can't imagine it just yet. I'm not that brave.
- PACKINGITIN
- Thorn Tree Refugee
- Posts: 8
- Joined: June 23rd, 2008
quote:Originally posted by PACKINGITIN:
I can't imagine showing up in any of these places without these books surgically attached to my fingers. Yet, I think they weigh about 10 lbs total? And I haven't even gotten the Aussie or NZ ones yet....any tips on how to manage this heavy dilemma would be greatly appreciated.
I know people did this for decades before us with no travel guides and survived just fine...still, can't imagine it just yet. I'm not that brave.
Congratulations on booking the ticket!! You have already passed through one of the scariest parts of any trip -- just deciding to go!
Are you planning on keeping your guidebooks as travel souvenirs? If not, dump them as you travel. Many big cities have used book stores that would be happy to trade your very new LP guide for something else, or just cash. If that seems like too much trouble, if you are staying in a hostel or other place with many other travelers with whom you become chatty -- and trust me, over time, you will become very chatty, you could trade your guide for another or some other good read.
Here is what I have noticed about travel: It becomes much less scary and intimidating with experience. The more times that you wander through a particularly foreign feeling city and find the hidden spot for which you were searching, the more courage you will have the next time you are out on your own, trying to find some place that has captured your attention. You will notice that you feel less attached to those guide books and start to see them more as reference material and less as life-saving buoys in a sea of strangeness.
The other thing that you could do, though, is take the parts of the book that you need. Will you be seeing all of Greece? If not, take only the parts of the book that have to do with where you will be traveling.
Good luck -- I look forward to hearing stories from your trip!
___________________________________________________________________________
'It involved a squirrel, a dryer and a Scotsman doing the Haka in my kitchen.' - La Rosser.
'It involved a squirrel, a dryer and a Scotsman doing the Haka in my kitchen.' - La Rosser.
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AmazingJulesVerne - Mod Squad
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