Don’t worry, I still have a few more posts I wanted to write about what I did on my trip to London, but I wanted to share some lessons I learned with you on my recent trip to the US (New York and Cleveland) and London. Some of these lessons are location specific, but mostly they’re good lessons for anyone traveling.

I’ve broken down the tips into a few different categories, to make them easier to find.

Phones and Directions

Transportation without a Car

Your Airline Ticket. Basically, Don’t Assume
  • Check Your Ticket. Check Your Tickets!!! I nearly botched things up terribly this time, because I assumed that there were only two airports in London, and since I wasn’t flying out of Luton airport, I assumed that meant Heathrow airport. Haha!!! Not! This happened to me on my second to last trip to the US, I ended up in one airport in Chicago, and my flight was at another, an hour drive, and I missed my flight. This time, fortunately, I realized with time to spare before my flight that my flight was from Standsted airport, which is a completely different location than Heathrow. And fortunately I was able to find public transportation there, which was completely different than the transportation I would have taken to Heathrow.
  • Check your emails! So this time, since I decided to pay for an extra suitcase that I didn’t pay for when I booked my ticket from London to my home country, I assumed that I would be checking in at the airport. So when I got emails reminding me to check in, I didn’t even bother opening them, even when I got multiple emails. Yea, don’t do that! Finally, I got an email saying that I missed check in time for my flight, and then I read it. Then I had to pay extra at the airport to check in there. Even if you’re adding a suitcase, that is a second fee. Don’t assume you should check in at the airport even if things changed about your flight. And with some tickets, you need to check in online at least 12 hours before your flight, so don’t wait with this.

England Specific Tips

I’m always learning, and these were just the lessons I learned on my last trip, and I wanted to share them with you so that you can learn from my lessons instead of just learning things the hard way.
Have you ever been to London, or visited NY? What lessons did you learn there that you’d like to share? Do you agree with the points I made, or do you disagree with some, and if so, which? Have you ever made any of the same mistakes that I did?



0 Responses

  1. Be careful with the Chinatown buses. They do not always have the best safety record, and several lines have been shut down in recent years due to accidents that revealed just how spotty their safety inspections/licensing processes were. Better alternatives are BoltBus and MegaBus.

  2. Be careful with the Chinatown buses. They do not always have the best safety record, and several lines have been shut down in recent years due to accidents that revealed just how spotty their safety inspections/licensing processes were. Better alternatives are BoltBus and MegaBus.

  3. About the Chinatown buses: I would never recommend going on one, even though I have done so regularly in the past and would probably still keep on using one if I were in a part of the country they served. But it's safety risk all the same, and while I'm willing to take that risk, it's not something I'd ever endorse.

    I would also recommend renting a car if you're traveling with kids/partner. It's one thing to travel alone, and easy enough to put up with annoyances like watching the bus pull out just as you arrive at the bus stop. But there's only so much you can expect from a kid, and only so much you can expect from each other, before the last nerve starts to fray.

    I respectfully disagree about not needing a phone when you travel, though that's mostly because our travel plans when we were in San Jose depended largely on my brother's and sister's plans, and they were apt to change at the last second. Luckily Starbucks has free WiFi and there's basically a Starbucks everywhere, but still – it was a major problem when my phone drowned halfway through our trip to the US. Not an insurmountable problem, but enough to be annoying and irritating and well worth the $30 from T-mobile not to have.

    As for London: I loved London when we visited. 6pm closing times are pretty standard throughout the whole of Europe, I find. In our town only the supermarkets and restaurants stay open past then. And disposables? Tsk tsk – don't you care at all about the turtles? (just kidding, but in all seriousness: Europe is in the midst of a plastics purge, so I always have a set or two of those cheap reusable plastic utensils from IKEA on me if there's a chance that we'll stop for food, and make it a point to carry a silicone straw as well)

  4. About the Chinatown buses: I would never recommend going on one, even though I have done so regularly in the past and would probably still keep on using one if I were in a part of the country they served. But it's safety risk all the same, and while I'm willing to take that risk, it's not something I'd ever endorse.

    I would also recommend renting a car if you're traveling with kids/partner. It's one thing to travel alone, and easy enough to put up with annoyances like watching the bus pull out just as you arrive at the bus stop. But there's only so much you can expect from a kid, and only so much you can expect from each other, before the last nerve starts to fray.

    I respectfully disagree about not needing a phone when you travel, though that's mostly because our travel plans when we were in San Jose depended largely on my brother's and sister's plans, and they were apt to change at the last second. Luckily Starbucks has free WiFi and there's basically a Starbucks everywhere, but still – it was a major problem when my phone drowned halfway through our trip to the US. Not an insurmountable problem, but enough to be annoying and irritating and well worth the $30 from T-mobile not to have.

    As for London: I loved London when we visited. 6pm closing times are pretty standard throughout the whole of Europe, I find. In our town only the supermarkets and restaurants stay open past then. And disposables? Tsk tsk – don't you care at all about the turtles? (just kidding, but in all seriousness: Europe is in the midst of a plastics purge, so I always have a set or two of those cheap reusable plastic utensils from IKEA on me if there's a chance that we'll stop for food, and make it a point to carry a silicone straw as well)

  5. My husband and I went to London as part of a trip over 20 years ago. We were there for 3-4 days, but on one of the first days there we went to a little shop to get some lunch. We bought our food and then tried to go sit at one of the indoor tables. Well, we were told we couldn't sit inside. It was like we ordered to-go food and we didn't realize it. It was a weekday and it was crowded with workers getting their lunches too. It was a little crazy. It was a rude awakening that although we were in an English speaking country there was definitely some cultural differences.

  6. My husband and I went to London as part of a trip over 20 years ago. We were there for 3-4 days, but on one of the first days there we went to a little shop to get some lunch. We bought our food and then tried to go sit at one of the indoor tables. Well, we were told we couldn't sit inside. It was like we ordered to-go food and we didn't realize it. It was a weekday and it was crowded with workers getting their lunches too. It was a little crazy. It was a rude awakening that although we were in an English speaking country there was definitely some cultural differences.